Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 196

 

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1951 volume:

Oke 1951 Jb wroirci II lHanchester Lo eae f lorth V lancnedter sndi ictna J. WILLIAM NORRIS, Editor ROBERT WEIMER, Business Manager -β– w I In the United Nations, hope l lHanche ter i olleae considers a uear of Slrlmna world events .... In Truman, controls In Korea, chaos In baseball, the Yanks again In Bunche, a Nobel-prize 4Β£ J 2A A. W. Cordier, UN executive . . . M. E. Alexander, US Dept. of Justice Roy Blough, J eu alumni influence l In ail walks of life . . . . uence vital i65ue6 A. J. Brumbaugh, Pres. Shimer College . . . Ralph Lawson, TKA executive E. S. Garver, Truman ' s economic aide Glen Longenecker, Alumni pres Homecoming speaker Sentiment at the covered bridge Kroger ' s, downtown students find interests in the ' u new hometown .... lown .... The Singing Tower at the Peabody Home - -; ., -V β€” j- f Β T : _ β–  I J Dates at the movie Student Teaching at Central High. rp II Community . . . page 9 Highlights . . . page 65 Arnd dwell amid the sentinel ouhc to dtudu, wordnip, piau, live . . . . Music . . . page 10 ' Religion . . . page 121 Organizations . . . page 79 Athletics . . . page 131 J resident S chwaim President Vernon F. Schwalm is a Manchester man. Graduating in the class of 1913, he re- turned to his alma mater to serve as dean and professor of history from 1917 to 1927, and for the past ten years as her president. During his administration numerous curric- ular and physical improvements have been realized. With an ever forward look the presi- dent states, As a church college we should keep on strengthening the cultural, character building and spiritual aspects in every way we can. For twenty years Vernon F. Schwalm has served Manchester College. In this tenth anni- versary of his presidency at Manchester, the cam- pus community says, Prexy, well done. In college his wife-to-be called him Thun- der . Back at Manchester, Mr. Schwalm is known as Grandad to Judy, Peggy, and Jean Kimmel. 10 TRUSTEES, Back row: Orville NofFsinger, Fred Priser, Clay Syler, Leland Emrick, George Strausbaugh, Vernon F. Schwalm, T. A. Shively, Ray Petersime, N. B. Wine, Pres., Wilbur S. Barnhart, Secy. front row: Harold A. Hofif, Moine Landis, J. Roy Ohmart, Dwight Butler, Edith Dresher 5, rustees Working behind the scenes to promote the best interests of Manchester College are the trustees. Periodic meetings draw these admin- istrators from five states in the Central Region of the Church of the Brethren to do the too often thankless tasks of planning, organizing, and directing. Important decisions made this year included the selection of the new dean, the new college treasurer, continuing plans for the Winger Me- morial, and the acceptance of the social security system for faculty and staff. One is naive if he thinks a trustee is a bearded patriarch or some reactionary oblivious to the world today. On the contrary, while the ages of the trustees vary from 34 to 70, the average being 56, Manchester ' s trustees are outstanding leaders in many fields of accomplishment. Four are high school superintendents or principals, two are teachers in public high schools, three are ministers, one is an engineer, and five are manufacturers. These are the men and women who help plan for Manchester of tomorrow. 11 oDeun ji aruer Upon the appointment of Earl S. Garver to succeed Carl W. Holl as dean, President Schwalm declared, It has been a source of gen- uine pleasure for me to learn of the general and widespread approval which the appointment of Dr. Garver as dean has received. Young, short and lively, Dr. Garver is well qualified for his new position. Graduating with honors from Manchester College in 1933, Dr. Garver received his Ph.D. from Yale Uni- versity in 1943. He has held numerous teach- ing posts, including those at Trinity College, Yale, and Northeastern University, before be- coming head of the department of economics here at Manchester. He chose to return to Manchester because he felt that a small, co-ed, church related college could offer the best in educational oppor- tunity. Dr. Garver is a speaker and author with keen wit and sound judgment; the college commu- nity remembers his chapel address, In Defense 12 of High-Browism. He is author of a book, Puerto Rico, Unsolved Problem and is a con- tributor to a new college economics textbook. A versatile leader, he has held posts as a sum- mer camp counselor. Civilian Public Service camp director, and as director of international service and peace seminars. As director of last summer ' s international peace seminar in the Russian zone of Vienna, Austria, Dr. Garver concluded, We must in- crease our appreciation of the common man, and from the viewpoint of the economist, Fair business dealings, especially on the international level, is another step to peace. Dean Garver would also like to see the exchange student pro- gram enlarged and discrimination erased since Communism thrives best on the under-privi- leged minority groups. Students know the new dean for his provoca- tive economics classes, his confident manner, his skill at running up to third floor of the Ad building, his good-natured shoveling of em- bankments of snow, and his spirited games of tennis. The whole college community has recognized in Dean Garver a competent scholar, a man of sound judgment, agreeable and cooperative. He has won the confidence of the students, fac- ulty, and the administration. Short in stature, but big in accomplishments for a man of forty years, Earl S. Garver is a leader in many fields. He is a family man too, shown here with his wife, Winifred, and their children, Dai id and Caroline. 13 ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL: Russell V. Bollinger, Earl S. Garver, Charles S. Morris, David B. Yeatter, Car! W. Holl, Vernon F. Schwalm, Amos R. Eikenberry M. I rati miniitratwe Council Acting as a cabinet to the president, the ad- ministrative council passes on matters of policy affecting the college. They set tuition rates, and in general give administrative direction to the college. New to the council, as well as to Manchester, is the new college treasurer, Mr. David Yeatter. Mr. Yeatter assumed his post on January 1. For the past six years he has been assistant man- ager at Bethany Biblical Seminary, Chicago, and was briefly its treasurer and business manager before coming to Manchester. A graduate of Burnham, Penn., high school, Mr. Yeatter gained considerable experience as a bank employee, and as a student at Pennsyl- vania State College. Also, in 1949 he received his degree of Bachelor of Sacred Literature from Bethany Biblical Seminary. His wife, Mrs. Mary Yeatter, was a leader in the Recreational Conference held here in Oc- tober. The community heartily welcomes Mr. and Mrs. Yeatter and their two daughters into the college family. 14 Allen instructs in creative art. J4. n ma n i itied MAX I. ALLEN, M.F. A., Associate Pro- fessor in Art and Organ . . . MURL M. BARN- HART, M. Music, Associate Professor in Piano and Theory . . . RUTH COBLENTZ, B. S. in Library Science, Librarian . . . FRED R. CONKLING, M. A., Professor of English . . . SAMUEL L. FLUECKIGER, Ph. D., Professor of Music Education . . . PAUL HALLADAY, M. Music, Professor of Music . . . LLOYD M. HOFF, Ph. D., Professor of English . . . ARTHUR E. HOFFMAN, M. A., Assistant Professor of German . . . E. JEAN HOL- COMBE, L. S., Assistant Librarian. 15 ( . D β€’ i 7 !f. t,r|« nf H N. Wr Hoffman explains French grammar. L ' k J , umani itied CLYDE W. HOLSINGER, M. Mus., Asso- ciate Professor of Voice and Director of Choral Organizations . . . PAUL W. KELLER, Ph. M., Assistant Professor of Speech . . . ORREL E. LITTLE, M. A., Associate Professor of English . . . WAYNE MILLER, B. S., Assistant Pro- fessor of Speech . . . FORREST E. REED, M. A., Professor of French and Spanish . . . GE- NITA SPEICHER, M. M., Assistant Professor in Organ and Piano . . . VERNON H. STINE- BAUGH, B. Mus., Assistant Professor in Violin and Theory . . . SADIE I. WAMPLER, M. A., Associate Professor of English and Dramatics . . . ELEANOR YINGER, M. A., Assistant Professor of Dramatics and Speech. 16 ,. Niswamicr joins MC faculty. ' fa Iftfc telenet ERNESTS ABELE, M. A., Instructor in Physics . . . ISABEL BEERY, M. S., Assistant Professor in Home Economics . . . IRMA A. DARE, M. A., Associate Professor of Home Economics . . . JOHN E. DOTTERER, M. A., Professor of Mathematics . . . C. W. HOLL, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry . . . LA- VERNIA JORGENSEN, M. A., Assistant Pro- ' fessor in Physical Education . . . PAUL McPHERSON, B. A., Assistant Professor of Physical Education, Coach . . . HARRY MOORE, M. A., Head, Department of Physical Education . . . O. W. NEHER, M. S., Associate Professor of Biology . . . R. E. NISWANDER, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Biology . . . HARRY R. WEIMER, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry. 17 Von Ehr ' s marketing class visits Chicago. Social -3c cicnce EARL S. GARVER, Ph. D., Dean of College, Professor of Economics . . . O. STUART HAMER, Ph. D., Professor of Education . . . DOROTHY W. JOHNSON, M. A., Assistant Professor in Secre tarial Subjects . . . C. RAY KEIM, Ph. D., Professor of History . . . NEAL R. MERRITT, M. A., Associate Professor of History . . . GLADDYS E. MUIR, D. Litt., Pro- fessor of History and Peace Studies . . . DON- ALD ROYER, M. A., Assistant Professor of Sociology . . . G. WILLIAM SAYERS, M. S., Assistant Professor of Accounting . . . JACK VON EHR, M. S., Assistant Professor of Busi- 18 Miller lectures in redecorated classroom. (education, J hitoSonliu RUSSELL V. BOLLINGER, Ph. D., Dean of Students, Professor of Education . . . HOW- ARD A. BOOK, Ph. D., Director of Teacher Education, Professor of Education . . . ALICE A. DONER, M. A., Dean of Women, Associate Professor of Education . . . A. R. EIKEN- BERRY, M. A., Professor of Psychology . . . JOHN HENDERSON, M. A., Director of Housing, Instructor in Counseling . . . NETTIE N. LEASURE, Ph. D., Professor of Education . . . ROBERT H. MILLER, D. D., Professor of Religion and Philosophy . . . T. WAYNE RIEMAN, B. D., Student Pastor and Director of Religious Education. 19 X M i _ A M Public relations office inaugurated. Cv en era I -3 tall DOROTHY BAER, Manager of Cafeteria and Dining Hall . . . EVELYN BARR, Sec- retary to the President . . . VIRGINIA BOW- ERS, Secretary to the Business office . . . HER- MAN CONINE, Assistant in Purchasing . . . JANE DODRILL, Exchange Operator . . . MAXINE R. DOMER, B. S., Registrar . . . ANNA DUNBAR, Manager of College Book- store . . . JOHN HENDERSON, M. A., Su- perintendent of Calvin Ulrey Hall . . . MYR- TLE HENDERSON, Matron, Calvin Ulrey Hall . . . MILDRED KIMMEL, College Nurse ... J. A. MATHIS, Executive Secretary of the Central Region. 20 Mrs. Schutz keeps alumni informed. Ljenerat S taff LULU NETZLEY, House Director of Oak- wood Hall . . . PAUL NOFFSINGER, Field Representative for Finance . . . VIRGINIA PAINTER, Cashier, Business Office ... LU- CILLE ROBINSON, College Bookstore . . . LOLA SANGER, M. B. A., Accountant and Business Office Manager . . . SALENA SCHUTZ, Secretary of Alumni Records . . . VIOLET SCRIBNER, Secretary to Dean of Students . . . JIM TYLER, Superintendent of Men ' s Dorm . . . FAYE TYLER, Matron of Men ' s Dorm . . . ETHEL WARVEL, House Mother, Bollinger Hall . . . MATALEA WIL- HOYTE, Assistant Director of Oakwood Hall. 21 No bull . . . the seniors really ditched to Chi . . . where they tried Chinese food . . . but didn ' t forget the coffee and doughnut send-off by the juniors . . . nor the bus trip . . . and had more Chinese food between sightseeing jaunts to . . . Rockefeller Chapel, for instance . . . 22 s t en lord BMOC ' S and Big Wheels at last, the Class of 1951 ruled as much of college life as they could. In spite of the rising influences of the younger-classmen, the seniors maintained tra- ditional leads in community government, clubs, campus activities, and bull sessions. Rumblings of the Korean war and remobi- lization effected changes in many senior plans. Instead of getting interviews for jobs and plan- ning wedding days, senior men were taking physicals and preparing for induction β€” perhaps June 1, maybe in July. The future cast a shadow of war. But not all spirits were dampened. From the moment they came in third at the Camp Mack outing, through the day Class President Dick Plunkett and Bossie, the cow, announced that the seniors would trek to Chicago for their Ditch and this is no bull Day, till seniors on Ulrey Hall ' s third floor raided Oakwood and Dean Garver ' -i residence with snow, the juniors honored their elders at the formal reception at Wabash, and the boys tried to elect Lowell Anstine for May Queen, the Class of 1951 laughed, sang, cheered . . . and studied. To the future the seniors look with uncer- tainty. But for the present, there ' s graduation! Senior KywicerS Marlin Weaver Barbara Helser Norma Lou Barnhizer Dick Plunkett 23 Amstutz, David D. β€” Marshallville, Ohio; B.S. Music; A Cappella 1, 2, 3, 4; Civic Symphony 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 4; Skate Club, 1, 2, 3; Band 1,4; Workshop Band 2 Anstine, Lowell S. β€” Hartville, Ohio; B.A. Business; Community Government 3, 4; Class Officer 2, 3; Dorm Government 3; Oak Leaves 2; Business Club 4; Tri Alpha 2, 3, 4; Science Club 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Bailey, Ralph β€” Columbia City, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Intramural Athletics 1 Barnhart, Marvin β€” North Hampton, Ohio; B.S. Biological Science; Business Club 1,2; Hoosier Hikers 1, 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 4 Barnhizer, Norma Lou β€” Cicero, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Class Officer 3, 4; F.T.A. 4; Hoosier Hikers 1; Tri Alpha 2, 3, 4; Choral Society 1; W.A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4 Barr, Francis β€” Nampa, Idaho; B.A. Physics; Dorm Government 3; Math Club 3; Mu Pi Sigma 3, 4; Choral Society 2; Science Club 1, 2 Bauer, Richard β€” Celina, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; F.T.A. 2, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 2; Football 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 3; Community Government 4 Bauer, Robert G. β€” Celina, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; Football 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 3 Beach, Paul β€” Akron, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; A Cappella 1, 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 3; Men ' s Glee Club 3; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3; Tri Alpha 3; Junior Varsity Debate 1; Track 3 Beahm, Harriet β€” Chicago, Illinois; B.A. History; Community Government 2; Student Council 1; M.C.A. Cabinet 4; Religious Life Committee 2; I.R.C. 4; Mike Club 1; W.A.A. 1; Freshman Publications 1 Beckley, Wilma β€” Peru, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; A Cappella 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Workshop Band 1 ; Freshman Publications 1 Benner, Jane β€” Logansport, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Oak Leaves 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 3,4; CBYF Cabinet 2; F.T.A. 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1; Tri Alpha 3,4; W.A.A. 3,4; Choral Society 3; Junior Varsity Debate 1,2; Freshman Publications 1 ; Deputations 3 Bird, William β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Dorm Government 4; Kappa Mu Epsilon 3,4; Math Club 1, 2; Mu Pi Sigma 3,4; Skate Club 3 Bitzer, John β€” Lagro, Indiana; B.A. Chemistry; Oak Leaves 1; Al Kimia 3, 4; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 4; Science Club 1, 2 Blackburn, Gladys β€” Hudson, Indiana; B.A. Home Economics; French Club 3; Spanish Club 3 Blough, Dale β€” Polo, Illinois; B.A. Business; Community Government 3; Class Officer 2; Dorm Government 4; Aurora 3; Oak Leaves 2; A Cappella 4; Business Club 4; French Club 1, 2; Hoosier Hikers 1, 2; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Tri Alpha 2, 3; Freshman Publications 1 Bollinger, Lynn β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. Language Arts; Student Council 2; Men ' s Glee Clu b 1 Bowers, Elmer β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Student Council 1; U Cabinet 1; Mu Pi Sigma 1,3,4 Brandts, Jerome β€” Celina, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; Skate Club 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 Brightbill, David β€” Elgin, Illinois; B.S. Biology; Dorm Government 4; I.R.C. 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Ministry Fellowship 4; Band 1,2; Choral Society 2, 3,4; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 24 Class of 1951 25 Calhoun, Clara Marie β€” South Whitley, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Aurora 3; Colhecon Club 3; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4; WA.A. 1, 2 Campbell, Henry β€” Center Point, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Ministry Fellowship 2, 3, 4; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4; Mathea Rhetoria 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 Carnes, Helen β€” Poneto, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 1, 2, 4; Mike Club 1, 2, 4; Tri Alpha 2, 4 Carter, Rose β€” Monticello, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 3; Choral Society 1, 2, 4; Deputations 3 Caton, Carter β€” Middlebury, Indiana; B.S. Business; Business Club 1, 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Athletics 4; Golf 4 Chen, William β€” Canton, China; B.A. Chemistry; Dorm Government 3, 4; Al Kimia 3, 4; German Club 3; Hoosier Hikers 2; I.R.C. 1, 3 Childs, Cora β€” Marion, Alabama; B.A. English and Spanish; Hoosier Hikers 1, 2; I.R.C. 3, 4; Spanish Club 1, 3, 4; WA.A. 1, 2, 3 Cissner, Virginia β€” Covington, Ohio; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4; Skate Club 1; WA.A. 1, 2, 3, 4 Claudio, Gilberto β€” Adjuntas, Puerto Rico; B.A. Biology and Chemistry; French Club 1, 2; Spanish Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Hoosier Hikers 1, 2; I.R.C. 4; Skate Club 2; Science Club 1, 2; Missions Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Collins, Donald β€” Celina, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; A Cappella 3; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 3; Skate Club 4; Intramural Athletics 3, 4 Cool, Betty β€” Springfield, Ohio; B.A. Sociology; CBYF Cabinet 4; Colhecon Club 3, 4; Library Staff 3, 4; Wittenberg College 1, 2 Costello, Philip β€” Bluffton, Indiana; B.S. Business; Math Club 1, 2; Football 1, 2, 3; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Cripe, Caroline β€” Goshen, Indiana; B.S. Music; Aurora 3; A Cappella 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2; Mike Club 2, 3; Tri Alpha 2, 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Crouse, William β€” Johnstown, Pennsylvania; B.A. History; Spanish Club 3; Ministry Fellowship 3; Deputations 1; I.R.C. 1; Intramural Athletics 1 Denlinger, Gale β€” Dayton, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; Dorm Government 3, 4; Aurora 3; CBYF Cabinet 2; F.T.A. 2; Skate Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Tri Alpha 3, 4; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2 Dick, LaDean β€” Ashley, Indiana; B.S. Physics; Spanish Club 1, 2; Mu Pi Sigma 3, 4; Sigma Pi Sigma 4; Freshman Publications 1 Dormire, Lex β€” Uniondale, Indiana; B.S. Physical Education; F.T.A. 1; Skate Club 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Track 4 Downing, Lloyd β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Pasadena College 1; Olivet Nazarene College 2 Driver, Edward β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Indiana Technical College 1, 2 England, Gene β€” Girard, Illinois; B.S. Secondary Education; Dorm Government 2; Business Club 1, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C- 1, 2; Deputations 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2 26 Class of 1951 L 7 -T? --o 27 Erbaugh, Herbert β€” Dayton, Ohio; B.A. History; Student Council 1; Class Officer 1 ; Dorm Government 1; I.R.C. 2, 3,4; Tennis 2, 3, 4 Fair, Thelma β€” Franklin Grove, Illinois; B.S. Business; Math Club 2, 4; Kappa Mu Epsilon 2, 4; Mike Club 1; Tri Alpha 2, 4; Varsity Debate 2, 4; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 1, 2 Fast, Ruthβ€” Celina, Ohio; B.S. Elementary Education; A Cappella 4; Women ' s Glee Club 3; Skate Club 3, 4; 1A.A. 3; Deputations 3 ; Findlay College 1 ; Bowling Green State University 2 Flowers, Edwin β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education Fredrickson, Allen β€” Millersburg, Indiana; B.S. Physical Education; Choral Society 2, 3; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Garman, Robert β€” Claypool, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Business Club 4; Civic Symphony 2, 3,4; Band 1, 2, 3; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 3, 4 Garver, John β€” Youngstown, Ohio; B.S. Secondary Education; Skate Club 1 Glist, Virginia β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Tri Alpha 4 Graham, Ruth β€” Auburn, Indiana; B.A. Sociology; Student Council 2; M.C.A. Cabinet 4; U Cabinet 1, 2; A Cappella 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1,2; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4 Hammond, Miriam Rittenhouse β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education Harman, Ted β€” Leesburg, Indiana; B.A. Physics; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 4; Kappa Mu Epsilon 3, 4; Math Club 1, 2, 3; Mu Pi Sigma 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Pi Sigma 4; Skate Club 3; Science Club 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1 Hay, Ruth β€” Plymouth, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Tri Alpha 3; Colhecon Club 3, 4 Helser, Barbara β€” Thornville, Ohio; B.S. Elementary Education; Class Officer 2, 4; Aurora 3; Colhecon Club 3, 4; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1 Hershberger, Joan β€” Woodland, Michigan; B.S. Elementary Education; A Cappella 2, 3, 4; Colhecon Club 1; F.T.A. 4; I.R.C. 2; Women ' s Glee Club 1; WA.A. 1; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 2, 3,4; Missions Fellowship 3; Cheer Leader 2; Mathea Rhetoria 1 Hill, Dale β€” North Hampton, Ohio; B.S. Business; Class Officer 3; Aurora 4; Business Club 1, 2, 3,4; Kappa Mu Epsilon 3, 4 Hoehn, Robert β€” Silver Lake, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Kappa Mu Epsilon 4 Hoff, Janice β€” Mount Morris, Illinois; B.S. Secondary Education; Community Government 3; U Cabinet 1; Aurora 3; CBYF Cabinet 3 ; I.R.C. 4 ; Women ' s Glee Club 1 ; Ministry Fellowship 4 ; Tri Alpha 3 ; WA.A. 1,2,3,4; Deputations 3 , 4 Hong, Paul β€” Chong Joo, Korea; B.A. Chemistry; Kappa Mu Epsilon 3, 4; Math Club 2, 3; Science Club 1, 2 Hopkins, Marion β€” Peru, Indiana; B.S. Music; A Cappella 4; Civic Symphony 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3; Skate Club 1; Band 2, 3, 4 Hunt, Nancyβ€” Fort Wayne, Indiana; B.A. English; Spanish Club 3, 4; F.T.A. 3, 4; WA.A. 1, 2, 3; Choral Society 3 28 CL of 1951 29 Kesler, Donn β€” South Bend, Indiana; B.S. Business; Business Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club 2; Freshman Publications 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Kindy, Gerald β€” Elkhart, Indiana β€” B.S. Secondary Education; Intramural Athletics 1 Kintner, Emery β€” Bryan, Ohio; B.S. History; I.R.C. 3; Math Club 1; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Mike Club 2; Mu Pi Sigma 3; Skate Club 2, 3; Choral Society 2, 3; Science Club 1; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1 Kintner, Robert β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. Biology; Community Government 2; Aurora 2, 3; CBYF Cabinet 3; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Choral Society 2; Junior Varsity Debate 1; Science Club 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 Krudop, Alda Jean β€” South Whitley, Indiana; B.S. Home Economics and Art; Colhecon Club 2, 3, 4; Library Staff 2, 3, 4; Choral Society 1 Kuszmaul, Ross β€” Michigan City, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Math Club 3,4; Skate Club 1, 2 Lawson, Brucia β€” Chicago, Illinois; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 1, 2, 3, 4 Layman, Ruth β€” Peru, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Student Council 1 ; Dorm Government 2; Colhecon Club 1,4; Spanish Club 3; Women ' s Glee Club 3; Mike Club 2; Choral Society 1, 2 Lenon, Richard β€” Converse, Indiana; B.S. Business; Business Club 1, 4; Baseball 2, 3; Intramural Athletics 1, 3, 4 McFadden, Robert β€” Elgin, Illinois; B.A. Peace Studies; Community Government 3, 4; Student Council 1, 2; Class Officer 2; Religious Life Committee 3; Civic Symphony 1,2; Hoosier Hikers 1; Men ' s Glee Club 3; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3; T.K.A. 3, 4; Band 1; Varsity Debate 2, 3; Deputations 1, 2 McKee, Betty Lou β€” Fort Wayne, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Dorm Government 3; F.T.A. 2, 3; I.R.C. 2; Library Staff 2, 3; Skate Club 2 Mann, Carl β€” Elkhart, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Intramural Athletics 2 Meitzler, William β€” Los Angeles, California; B.S. Biology; Aurora 4; Click Clique 3, 4; Spanish Club 2; German Club 4; Hoosier Hikers 3; I.R.C. 4; Science Club 1; Intramural Athletics 2 Mansfield, Lois β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Business Club 4; F.T.A. 3, 4; Hoosier Hikers 1,2,3 Maxwell, Robert β€” Sedro-Woolley, Washington; B.S. Secondary Education Mertz, Robert β€” Fremont, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Kappa Mu Epsilon 4 Meyer, Alton, Jr. β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Intramural Athletics 3, 4 Miller, Gwendolyn β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Speech Miller, Richard β€” Ludlow Falls, Ohio; B.A. Peace Studies; Dorm Government 3, 4; Oak Leaves ' 1, 2, 3; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Choral Society 2; Cross Country 1, 2 Miller, Rose Marie β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2; Band 1; Choral Society 3, 4 30 ClaM of 1951 31 Mills, Sam β€” Lawrenceville, Illinois; B.A. Biology; Skate Club 3,4; Science Club 2; Intramural Athletics 3, 4 Mow, Merrill β€” Chicago, Illinois; B.S. Religion and Philosophy; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3,4; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3,4; Mike Club 1, 2, 3; Band 1; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4; Missions Fellowship 1; Track 1; Church School Cabinet 2, 3 Nelson, Barbaraβ€” Cutler, Indiana; B.A. English; Spanish Club 1, 2; F.T.A. 1, 2; Tri Alpha 2; 1A.A. 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1 Noe, Loisanne β€” Bloomington, Indiana; B.A. Psychology; Dorm Government 4; Colhecon Club 2, 3, 4; Band 2, 3; Psychology Club 4; Indiana University 1 Norman, Noreenβ€” Macy, Indiana; B.S. Music; A Cappella 4; F.T.A. 1; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 3, 4; Workshop Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Freshman Publications 1 Norris, J. William β€” Amboy, Indiana; B.A. Economics; Aurora 3, 4; Oak Leaves 3; A Cappella 2, 3; Men ' s Glee Club 1; T.K.A. 3, 4; Band 1; Varsity Debate 2, 3; Junior Varsity Debate 1 Null, Omer, Jr. β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.S. Social Studies; Oak Leaves 1; Spanish Club 1, 2; F.T.A. 2, 3; Math Club 1, 2; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Ober, Richard β€” Garrett, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; A Cappella 3, 4; Math Club 1; Men ' s Glee Club 3; Intramural Athletics 2 Petrie, Ernest β€” Ft. Wayne, Indiana; B.A. Speech; Dorm Government 1; Mike Club 2; Psychology Club 4; Track 2; Intramural Athletics 2 Pettit, William β€” Lansing, Michigan; B.S. Secondary Education; Oak Leaves 2; F.T.A. 2, 3; Skate Club 3, 4; Tri Alpha 3,4; Intramural Athletics 4 Plunkett, Richard β€” Covington, Ohio; B.A. Chemistry; Class Officer 3, 4; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 3, 4; Math Club 1,2; Mu Pi Sigma 2; Science Club 1, 2 Priser, Alice Mae β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. Biological Science; Aurora 3 ; A Cappella 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 3,4; Library Staff 1, 3; Women ' s Glee Club 1; WA.A. 1; Freshman Publications 1 Reckeweg, Donald β€” Columbia City, Indiana; B.S. Business; Business Club 3, 4; Click Clique 4; Skate Club 3 Reed, Lora β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.S. Home Economics; Purdue University 1, 2 Rees, Sara β€” Niles, Michigan; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 3; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; WA.A. 1; Deputations 2 Richardson, Jean β€” Flora, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Dorm Government 4; F.T.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 3 ; Choral Society 1 Rife, Georgia β€” Peru, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; F.T.A. 3; Colhecon Club 2, 3; Choral Society 1 Ritchey, Paul β€” Everett, Pennsylvania; B.A. Sociology; Dorm Government 4; German Club 3; I.R.C. 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 3; Ministry Fellowship 3, 4; Choral Society 2; Varsity Debate 4; Deputations 2, 4; Track 2; Intramural Athletics 2, 4 Robins, Mary Ruth β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 3, 4 Robinson, William β€” Millersburg, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Business Club 2, 4; Football 1; Baseball 2, 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 32 Class of 1951 33 Rohrer, Eula β€” Creekville, Kentucky; B.S. Home Economics; Colhecon Club 3, 4; Hoosier Hikers 1, 2, 3; Choral Society 1, 2, 3, 4; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4 Rohrer, June β€” Oak Park, Illinois; B.S. Secondary Education; Aurora 3; German Club 1; F.T.A. 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1; Tri Alpha 4; W.A.A. 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1 Sands, Carl β€” Silver Lake, Indiana; B.S. Physical Education; Dorm Government 3, 4; Football 2, 3, 4; Baseball 4; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4; Ball State 1 Sauders, Everett β€” Ft. Wayne, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Kappa Mu Epsilon 3, 4; Math Club 1, 3, 4 Sappington, Roger β€” Avon Park, Florida; B.A. History; German Club 2; Hoosier Hikers 1; Men ' s Glee Club 2, 3; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; String Symphony 1, 2, 3; T.K.A. 4; Tri Phi 4; Choral Society 4; Varsity Debate 2, 3, 4; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4 Sarber, Wayne β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 4 Schrock, Orlin, Jr. β€” Goshen, Indiana; B.S. Business; A Cappella 4; Business Club 4; Symphony 4; Skate Club 4; Band 4; Goshen College 1, 2, 3 Schroll, Gene β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. Chemis try; Al Kimia 3, 4; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 3, 4; Skate Club 1, 2 Schurr, Richard β€” Nappanee, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Indiana University 1, 2 Schwalm, Dean β€” Goshen, Indiana; B.S. Business; Business Club 1, 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Golf 2, 4 Scott, William β€” Peru, Indiana; B.A. Chemistry; Psychology Club 4; Science Club 1; Choral Society 2, 3, 4 Senseman, Daniel β€” Tipp City, Ohio; B.S. Business; Business Club 4; Science Club 1; Intramural Athletics 1, 3, 4 Shultz, Carl β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. Music; A Cappella 2, 4; Civic Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Skate Club 3; String Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4; Freshman Publications 1; String Quartet 1, 2, 3, 4 Shultz, Carole β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Music; Class Officer 1; Oak Leaves 1; A Cappella 1, 2, 3, 4; Civic Symphony 1,2,3,4; Skate Club 2, 3,4; String Symphony 1,2, 3,4; Tri Alpha 4; String Quartet 2,3,4; Deputations 1, 2 Simmons, Wesley β€” Chicago, Illinois; B.S. Secondary Education; Community Government 3; Student Council 2; Class Officer 1; Dorm Government 3; Aurora 3; A Cappella 3,4; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Mike Club 1,2; Skate Club 3, 4; String Symphony 3, 4; Tri Alpha 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Workshop Band 2; Freshman Publications 1 Smith, Mamie β€” Galveston, Indiana; B.S. Music; A Cappella 4; Colhecon Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Library Staff 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Band 1; Workshop Band 2, 3, 4; Deputations 2, 4 Smith, Robert D. β€” Chicago, Illinois; B. A. Chemistry; Band 3 Smith, Robert W. β€” Dayton, Ohio; B.A. Biology and Chemistry; Al Kimia 3, 4; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 3, 4; Civic Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Glee Club 3, 4; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Science Club 1, 2 Snider, Thyra β€” New Paris, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Colhecon Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3 Snyder, Graydon β€” Huntington, West Virginia; B.A. Chemistry; MCA Cabinet 4; Religious Life Committee 3; Aurora 3,4; Oak Leaves 1, 2, 3, 4; Al Kimia 3; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 3; CBYF Cabinet 2; T.K.A. 4; Choral Society 1; Varsity Debate 3, 4; Junior Varsity Debate 2; Science Club 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 4; Cross Country 1, 2 34 ClaM of 1951 35 Sollenberger, Donald β€” Curry ville, Pennsylvania; B.A. Religion and Philosophy; U Cabinet 1; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Deputations 2; Missions Fellowship 2, 3, 4 Sponseller, Harry β€” Plymouth, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Intramural Athletics 4 Stauffer, Mar garet β€” Polo, Illinois; B.S. Secondary Education; Aurora 3; Colhecon Club 1, 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 4; Choral Society 1, 2 Stephens, Jane β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Symphony 2; Colhecon Club 1; String Symphony 2 Summe, Tom β€” Silver Lake, Indiana; B.A. Physics; Kappa Mu Epsilon 4; Math Club 2, 3; Mu Pi Sigma 1, 2, 3, 4 Swinger, James β€” Pitsburg, Ohio; B.S. Elementary Education; Al Kimia 1, 2; Student Affiliate of A.C.S. 2; F.T.A. 3; Skate Club 1, 2; Freshman Society 1; Chapel Choir 1 Theobald, Sterling β€” Winona Lake, Indiana; B.A. Chemistry; Spanish Club 2 Tomlonson, John β€” Bristol, Indiana; B.A. History; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Psychology Club 4; Choral Society 2, 3; Deputations 2, 3, 4 Tomlonson, Veva β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; CBYF Cabinet 2; F.T.A. 3, 4; Library Staff 1, 2, 3, 4; Women ' s Glee Club 2, 3; Choral Society 1; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4 Turner, Mary Jo β€” Auburn, Indiana; B.S. Music; A Cappella 2, 3,4; Women ' s Glee Club 1; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A. 1, 2; Workshop Band 1 Tyler, James β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. History; Dorm Government 4; Ministry Fellowship 1, 3,4; Deputations 3; Intramural Athletics 2, 3 L ' lery, Nelda β€” Wenatchee, Washington; B.S. Secondary Education; Colhecon Club 1, 2, 3,4; F.T.A. 4; Library Staff 2, 3; WA.A. 1, 2, 3, 4 Ummel, Eldon β€” Claypool, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 4 Van Wagner, Esther β€” LaPorte, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; Butler University Walter, Franklin β€” Lagrange, Indiana; B.S. Secondary Education; F.T.A. 4; Intramural Athletics 3 Walton, Gloria β€” Elkhart, Indiana; B.S. Music; Aurora 3; A Cappella 3, 4; Alpha Psi Omega 3,4; Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1, 2; String Symphony 1, 2, 3, 4; Tri Alpha 2, 3, 4; Freshman Publications 1; String Quartet 1, 4 Weaver, Marlin β€” Wabash, Indiana; B.A. Chemistry; Community Government 3,4; Class Officer 4; Dorm Government 2, 3; CBYF Cabinet 2, 3; Men ' s Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Choral Society 4; Science Club 1, 2; Freshman Publications 1; Deputations 1,2; Basketball 1; Tennis 2, 3 Williams, Shirley β€” Fullerton, California; B.A. Philosophy and Religion; Community Government 4; MCA Cabinet 4; Aurora 2, 3; F.T.A. 4; I.R.C. 2, 3, 4; Ministry Fellowship 4; Skate Club 2; Tri Alpha 2, 3; Deputations 2, 3, 4; Occidental College 1 Wong, Alberto β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.A. History; Spanish Club 2, 3; I.R.C. 1, 2, 3, 4; Click Clique 3; Tri Phi 4; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Intramural Athletics 1 Wong, Larry β€” San Francisco, California; B.A. Philosophy and Religion; Aurora 4; Oak Leaves 1; Spanish Club 1, 2,- Men ' s Glee Club 3,4; Ministry Fellowship 1, 2, 3, 4; Tri Phi 3, 4; Choral Society 1; Deputations 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 1, 2; Track 1 Wort, Eugene β€” North Liberty, Indiana; B.S. Elementary Education; F.T.A. 3, 4; Math Club 2; Men ' s Glee Club 1; Band 1, 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 Wright, Barbara β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B. S. Business; Business Club 3,4; Colhecon Club 3; Hoosier Hikers 1,2; Skate Club 1, 3 Wright, William β€” North Manchester, Indiana; B.S. Biology; Hoosier Hikers 1, 2; Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4 36 5 Sv β€’Β β– Β£%β–  -- .- β€’β€’β–  ' iL iKk Au n ior VJflfi icers Dan Timmons Donna Pfolsgrof Claire Stine Harold Heeter untold Juniors like to be juniors. Theirs is a year of initiative, support, ingenuity, and leadership. They learned the ropes of college in the previous two years and aren ' t yet bogged down by stu- dent teaching and graduation headaches of seniors. The juniors showed their spirit by whooping it up with coffee and doughnuts as the seniors took off for Ditch Day, they guided campus opinion through the Oak Leaves, almost won first at the all-school outing, sifted out four from their multitude of beautiful women to be May Queen, Maid of Honor, and two junior at- tendants, and with all their other activities, still managed to keep their share of representatives on the honor roll. A special pleasure of the juniors was the re- ception for the Class of ' 51 at the Honeywell Center in Wabash. With an original ballet, a one-act play, and music sweet and low, the juniors extended hearty best wishes to the graduates. By spring the juniors were ready to accept the reins of campus leadership from the seniors. Uncle Sam planned to postpone a few fourth years, but the Class of 1952 was determined as ever to go forward β€” even if they had to elect a woman for their senior class president. 38 o β€’i. Frank Algate Philip Barnhart Richard Baer Mary Lou Beach Ron Backus Marjorie Blocher Mary Bagwell Bernard Blough Marcielle Bantz Mack Bowman Mary Bowman Wilfred Brill Nancy Bowman LeRoy Brubaker Wilbur Bowman James Brumbaugh Max Brand Glen Bryant Don Bright Wendell Bryant 39 Dorothy Jane Doris Buddy Barry Burger Burkholder Butterbaugh Butts Cavaghan Alice Richard Shirley Patricia Jean Clarke Coffman Conkling Conner Cooper Donald Alvin Gary Kenneth Gladys Craft Cripe Deavel Dilling Doerschuk William Wayne Wendell Jane Budman Dotson Eberly Edwards Enyeart Farrar 3L l MkkM jffift El : 40 Marcella Farrar Ernest Fike Kathleen Fike Bernadine Fisher Ferdy Fleshood Richard Frantz Howard Fredine Charles Frock Betty Fulton Joan George George Getz Robert Gohn Phyllis Goodmiller Lavon Hart Jean Hazzard Gordon Hedges Harold Heeter Robert Hess Dwight Hoffman Elizabeth Hoffman 41 Harry Jim Ellen Robert Ruth Hoover Horning Huffman Irick Jones Loren Robert Loren Keith Roger Karns Keller Kirkpatrick Langston Lantz Don Helen Clyde Russell John Lozier McConkey McDaniel Mclnnis Maphis Robert Olin Harold Don George larbaugh Mason Matthews Miller Miller 42 w Β L AYi Joann Nordan Nancy Robert Sam Miller Murphy Myers Neher Nelson Ardith Barbara William Wanda Tony Newcomer Newcomer Obenour Penrod Petriella Donna Clyde Gene William Loretta Pfolsgrof Ploughe Porter Puterbaugh Racop Ronald Reed Lettie Rentschler Marianne Rhoades Dorothy Rinehart Spencer Rodda 43 Keith Rouch Dennis Rupel Donald Ritchey Louis Sapp t k Lester Rouch Laverle Sappington ( u. f ?ph Howard Royer Elizabeth Schantz John Royer Don Schultz Charlotte Thelma Charles Helen Marvin Schutz Shank Shawler Sheller Sherman Lois Jim Jerry Jean Marjorie Shirky Shoemaker Smith Smith Smith 44 Martha Smith Philip Strycker Paul Smith Norma Sullivan Jesse Spurgeon Margaret Swank Claire Stine Don Tait Elinor Stine Rosalie Talley Dan Timmons Jeanne Via Gene Tovey Peggy Voorhees Don Trost Mary Wagoner Linda Ulrey Robert Wagoner Richard Ummel Jane Weber 45 Robert Weimer Forestine Weller Don Whitehead Herb Williams Bernita Yunker Off; oniofc icerS Lloyd Smith Betty Mishler Donna Krieg Al Deeter OK h r o mores No longer rhinies, high schoolish, uninitiated or naive, the sophomores were fully orientated to college routine when they began this school year. They could matriculate backwards, write a term paper in just a weekend and knew just where to find the Oakwood night buzzer. The sophomores flexed their muscles as early as the Camp Mack outing. Class prexy, Al Deeter, happily accepted the winner ' s trophy bat for his class, and from then on the sopho- mores were flying their colors high. They readily assumed positions of responsibility in campus activities. The class got nearly everything straight ex- cept for their class party. This was a turnabout little gem of entertainment, the DRAWKCAB party. They even cancelled class privacy and invit ed the campus in to finish the food. The sophomores and the freshmen halted cramming for spring term finals in order to stage their outing at Long Lake. Here sloppy Joes and swimming suits were the highlights of the day. With two years of college tucked under their belts, the class of 195 3 now looks forward to next year when they ' ll be juniors. 47 Phyllis Adams Clyde Alban Faith Alber Morris Alger, Jr. Patrick Allen Alfred Baker Howard Baldwin Lois Barkdoll Dale Barnard Morris Beeghley Rosalind Beeson Harold Bellamy Nancy Bender Barbara Bevington Robert Black John Bollinger Mary Bollinger Jack Bormuth Alene Borneman Beverly Bright Cyril Brooke Margaret Brooks Loren Bussert Patricia Butterbaugh 48 Shirley Cheng Donald Colvin Dorothy Cripe Kathryn Daugherty Keith Davis Lyle Davis Allen Deeter Joyce De Mond Thomas Dillman Frances Dunten Carol Eash Paul Eiler Henry Eshelman Paul Feaser Leatice Fike Joann Fisher Wanda Foust Phyllis Fourman Elaine Garber Lorraine Garber Mary Jane Garman Sally Garman Donald Gebert Frances Gibble 49 Phyllis Gibbel Arthur Gilbert Sharon Ginzel Rex Gosnell John Grady Gene Gressley Elizabeth Gurthet Joan Haley Flora Mae Hall Karleton Halladay Mary Lois Halsey Marcia Haney James Harold Edith Hartsough Alice Hatfield Richard Heckman John Heddens Wayne Hershberger Mary Lou Hershey Margaret Hilbert Donna Hollenberg Robert Hollenberg Lois Horning Albert Huston 50 Janet Jenkins Barbara Jordan Myron Kenned) ' Keith Kinney John Kinsey Philip Kinsey Lois Kintner Doris Kinzie John Kissinger Georgia Klondarls Susanne Knoop Donna Krieg Lyle Lambert Betty Lehman Dorothy Lehman German Lopez Robert McDonald Wilbur McFadden Harold Mack Delores Mahoney Harley Miller Roberta Manker Ann Meyer Violet Major Betty Mishler Muriel Morey %- € ' fi f 4 ' m , 51 Alma Morningstar Mary Moyer Wilbur Mullen Mary Mulligan Sheldon Mummert Thyra Neff Ann Norris Rosemary Oaks Lois Ogan Donna Olinger Walter Ott Joan Overmyer Willard Owen Elaine Parmerlee Abner Parson Elma Lu Paxton Ruby Pedersen Carroll Petry Gene Pickens Helen Place Wendell Plum Gene Plunkett Paul Prough Mary Rentschler Donald Rice Donna Riley 52 Harry Robe Ruth Robinson Roger Rogers Susie Rouch Roy Rumsey Ellen Russell Jean Ryan Michael Samilov Marlene Schroll Jean Seidler Florence Shady Daniel Shanbeck Richard Shearer Charlene Sheetz Gerald Shelter Waneta Showalter Jim Slabaugh Dorothy Smith June Smith Laurence Smith Lloyd Smith Joyce Snyder S3 Joanna Spitler Edna Steury Leon Stong Dorothy Strain Mary Stuckman Hilda Studebaker Wilma Studebaker Earl Traughber Joan Vanator Carol Vance VT i Robert Vore Ray Wagner Evelyn Wales Marie Walter James Walton Ronald Walton Richard Ward Carol Warner Richard Weick Sue Welborn Glade Weldy Paul Weller Conrad Wetzel Richard Whitaker Wanda Will Georgianna Willcox Vera Winger Linda Wright Ida Zunkel Wayne Zunkel 54 I reSnmen The process whereby some 244 bouncing babies of the crop of 1932 arrived at their pres- ent eminence as members of the Manchester College community is a painful and remarkable one. Those days of pablum, black eyes, electric trains and first dates are far removed from today ' s chemistry exam, communications option, intramural debate or diamond ring. College life β€” accompanied by its final grow- ing pains from adolescence β€” was met with bold determination by the freshmen of the Class of 1954. At first there were those bewildering days of the freshman mixer, that long line of profs at the formal reception, the painless initiation of street-painting before Homecoming, and a few wet initiations via the fountain. However, the frosh soon became full-fledged Spartans, proving their worth from the athletic field to the dorm council. They put their heads together and produced their own class party, with a swishing gala square dance called the Cotton Capers. Through a year of learning and achievement the class of 1954 became an integral part of Manchester College. And, best of all to them, next year they ' ll be upperclassmen! Offi iman icerd Paul Hoffman Madonna Fidler Ruth Anstine Art Hunn 55 Jack Amick Virginia Anderson Ruth Anstine Charles Armstrong Martina Bak James Baker Lowell Barnhart Robert Bauer Myrtis Becker Carole Biltz Norma Binkley Baiba Birzule Lynn Blocher Barbara Bodenmiller Gletha Bolinger Helen Bollinger Lowell Bollinger Charles Borland Delores Boswell Dick Bowman William Boyts Julia Bradway Joan Bright Patricia Brower Vera Brower Roger Brown Pauline Buck Wilma Burroughs Ralph Bushong Bernard Butt Patricia Byerly David Campbell Blair Carbaugh Roy Carpenter Robert Cherry 56 Jean Childs Christ Christon Richard Clark Theresa Clingenpeel Ernest Conley Rose Cool David Cooper Carl Coppock Don Corson Allan Cov Gordon Crates Florian Cripe Jane Custer Emerson Davidson Donna Dawald Pat DeBolt Karolyn Deeter Helen Delk Alice Dentler Paul Dougherty Forest Dunnuck Mary Durnbaugh Lowell Eberwein Don Emmons Phyllis England Eugene Fahs Jack Farling Madonna Fidler John Fike Phyllis Fish Floramae Fisher Gene Fogle James Folk Mary Forrer Irma Gall 57 Barbara Good Donna Good William Goshert Judith Grady Beverly Gunterman Adelheid Hammann James Hammond Vivian Hardman Arline Hawn America Headley Tom Heery Joe Heeter Phyllis Heeter Harold Heisey Rodney Helser Myrtle Henderson Lewis Hewlett Paul Hoffman Eugene Holbrook Carol Honeyman Robert Hoover Mary Hornish Dorothy Hummer Arthur Hunn Marjorie Hunt Bonnie Johnson Everette Johnson Jeanne Johnson Gabriel Katona Roger Reiser Priscilla Kester Delbert Rettering Gordon Rintner Marion Rintner Bette Rnarr 58 Paul Korns Joe Kurtti Pat Landen Norma Leedy Doris LefTorge Wilbur Lehman Don Leiter Glorene Leiter Joan Lingeman Donald Llovd Donna Loe Glen Long Doris Longardner Helen Lutz Mary McDaniel John Mack James Marks Lois Martin Don Mikula Barbara J. Miller Barbara R. Miller Ronald Miller Wayne Miller Betty Milo James Minear Rachel Moore Harry Mort Donald Mosher Myra Mow Keith Mullin Lois Musselman Eula Jean Myers Robert Neff Harriet Newcomer Joan Nord 59 Anna Norman Robert Ogan Joe Ogden Susanne Ogden Budd Olinger Mary Lou Oswalt Peggy Oswalt Muriel Overmeyer Dale Oxender Carolyn Parr Byron Phillips Paul Piper Robert Pittman William Ply Gene Pope Sam Pritchard Richard Reiff Morris Replogle Wretha Rhoades Melba Rice Burt Riley Jobie Riley Mary Roberts Sam Robins Wanda Roth Ellen Royer Marjorie Royer Don Rummel Barbara Rust William Salmre Jeanne Schrock Julian Schrock Fred Schroeder Alvin Schubert Don Shafer 60 Phyllis Shafer Mary Jane Shaffer Mary Shellabarger Betty Sherrick Katherine Shirk Richard Shock Dick Shoemaker William Siebert Miriam Skinner Harold Slater Brice Smith Fred Smith Roger Smith LaVerne Soales Robert Sollenberger Ted Sommer Philip Sprinkle Pat Stebbins Lois Storer Robert Stutsman Samuel Summe Richard Summers Richard Supinger Tom Swantner Ray Swihart Ellis Teach Herschel Teach Mary Teeter Phyllis Terhune Pat Thomas Harry Thompson Richard Thompson Margaret Thoss Robert Tillman Richard Tomkinson Cv y C! 61 Dorthea Traughber Lois Tuell Don Ulmer Max Updike Eva Utz Richard Vick Phyllis Walters ' Dorothy Ward Charles Weimer Dorothy Werkheiser Joy Werking Larry Wheeler Laverne Wheeler Lester Whitefield Marietta Whitehead Truman Wiles Charles Wilhelm George Wilson Velma Wolf Carol Wyse Yula Yohe David Zuck 62 63 β–  β–  Partners spit seeds between Virginia reels i ampud life id nianlianted bu biq week-ends , . . , bull deddions. vane Eldon Krieg gives observatory to MC The Camp Mack Outing stirs appetites Β« Β K β– = uΒ l m If] 4ING f Homecoming displays decorate the campus congratulates mediator Ralph Bunche oLa caiman f Re eiand ctd f Q(ueen of fv a Mothers, theme of 1950 May Day, was car- ried out amid gales of wind as String Symphony ' s huge baby carriage, Home Ec ' s log cabin, and Blokewood ' s story-hour survived to win top honors in the colorful Life With Mother parade. There were also Calendar Capers, a fish fry, baseball games, and a formal banquet to attract the crowds. But the center of interest f was Miss Ruth Layman, Queen of the May. In her court were Janice Hoff, Maid-of -Honor; Anna Mae Ehrmin, 1949 May Queen; Betty Samuelson and Helen Garner, seniors; Norma Lou Barnhizer and Marilyn Fidler, juniors; Donna Pfolsgrof and Mary Timmons, sopho- mores; and Margaret Farrington and Donna Krieg, freshmen. Jife Witk Wotk S tciaed 99 Joe Ebbinghouse, general chairman of the May Day events on May 5 and 6, saw to it that (21? there was never a dull moment. The Fort Wayne Civic Theater ' s presentation of Lindsay and Crouse ' s homely comedy, Life With Mother, ended the day with laughter, a clever but loving mother, four red-headed sons, and an explosive father ' s damnable outbursts. 67 1 if s ladd of 1950 KJraduated The class of 1950, largest in college history, accepted the Light of Manchester in the annual candle lighting service, and carried out the idea, really, by giving as their memorial new fluores- cent lights to the second floor of the Ad build- ing. On May 24 the 23 3 graduates were greeted by retiring alumni president, Dr. Roy Blough, challenged by Bishop Hazen G. Werner, and presented diplomas by President Schwalm. Swell- ing the rank of loyal alumni to 6,348, the class soon found significant positions. 68 kJIci KJradd s ome r4t Over 1000 alumni traveled from eight states for Homecoming, October 28. Chairman Robert Kintner scheduled a snake dance, the painting of the streets by the frosh, the annual Aunt Jemima breakfast, the alumni program, Man- chester ' s football victory over Earlham, the ome TKA dinner, the reunion of the class of ' 40, and the play, All My Sons. The sun broke through the fog to brighten the way as judges awarded display prizes to FTA ' s school-room welcome, Physics ' timely space ship, and Blokewood ' s hospitable servings of cheese and Quakers. ciin Breakaway is always an un- usual event, but this year it was unusually so. The first snow of the season greeted the gals who had planned the out- door breakfasts on Novem- ber 4. But with female ingenuity, the dates proceeded on sched- ule. A variety of lunch, foot- ball, and coke dates, and gang parties were eagerly attended during the day by the oppor- tunist women and the nabbed fellows. Jane Benner, chief planner of the feminine attack, made the day more unique by scheduling the evening event off campus. Seventy couples jaunted to Winona Lake ' s Westminster Hotel for a for- mal banquet by candlelight and Stardust. A rip Roaring Twenties extravaganza, produced by Gary Deavel, topped the eve- ning ' s entertainment. The first activity of its kind to be given off campus in some time, the banquet was enthusiastically accepted by the student body, and left the Oakwoodites eagerly awaiting next year ' s Breakaway. oLuceam Continued Julian Gromer, world trav- eler and lecturer, appeared October 10 with his stunning technicolor travelogue film, On the Shores of Lake Mich- igan, to open this year ' s Lyceum series. On January 16 Moritz Bom- hard directed a professional cast in two lilting one-act operas. Presented in English were Menoti ' s The Old Maid and the Thief and Puccini ' s Gianni Schicchi. The cam- pus responded favorably to the humor and sarcasm of the light operas, the male section of the audience heartily agree- ing with Bob, the thief, that What the devil can ' t do, a woman can, while the femin- ine fans sympathized with Lucretia ' s torch song, The curse of a woman is a timid man. Nationally known star of radio and stage, Lucile Cum- mings, contralto, sang on April 6 to gain hundreds of new fans. Also Maurice Eisen- berg, celloist, presented two concerts and gave helpful in- struction to various campus music groups. Jheu ame to a l ift ?? j y An exchange of air mail letters and telegrams with J. B. Priestley, famed English dramatist, secured for Tri Alpha the initial American col- lege rights to produce the moving idea play, They Came to a City. The nine widely vary- ing character roles in the play symbolize society in real life β€” the search of all for their desired goals. The play contends that if it were not for these Utopians who think that their idealistic cities could be a real city, there would be no progress. Jim Overholt, Louise Fox, Craig Cameron, Betty Lou Hershberger, Dorothy Earl, Bernita Yunker, Marcella Farrar, Bill Pettit, and Jim Shoemaker were members of the cast which thrilled audiences on campus, and at Dubuque, Chicago and Elkhart. George Kuebler ' s modernistic stage setting, original background music by Gary Deavel, and skilled use of lighting helped make The City a distinctive success for director Eleanor Yinger ' s first campus production. a m m s V wnS 99 Arthur Miller ' s prize-winning All My Sons, was presented by Tri Alpha as the Homecoming finale. The play punches out that responsibility to the world must come before that to one ' s family, much less to one ' s self. It speaks harshly against the callous American gospel of prac- ticality. The intensely emotional scenes were vividly portrayed by Karleton Halladay, Georgianna Willcox, Marvin Sherman, Hilda Studebaker, and Don Schultz. Adding variety and a pleasant familiarity were Phyllis Goodmiller, Dorothy Cripe, Jim Shoemaker, Gary Deavel, and nine year old Nelson Moore. Unusually scenic stag- ing by Gene Porter added to the play ' s realism. Miss Eleanor Yinger was director. Though there was mixed reaction from the 1500 persons in the audience, noted editor and critic Paul Hutchinson, who saw Friday ' s per- formance, considered it very, very well done. And the Wabash Plain Dealer reviewed it as One of the best amateur shows in recent years . . . professionally played. 73 lewd C vents Numerous people from on and off the campus made the headlines during the year. In the news were the cagey demonstrations in the GE House of Magic ; a champion track star ' s views on religion by Gil Dodds; Dad ' s Day, when fathers of students were made campus kings; and repre- sentatives from such Midwest colleges as Kala- mazoo for the Manchester Cross-examination Debate Tournament. 74 Dick Plunkctt and Carl Shultz repeated Outing his- tory to win the men ' s boat race for the seniors. Don Reckeweg ' s picture of the event won first prize in the Aurora photo contest. fc ..i ) AOft Pon Twelve of Manchester ' s seniors chosen to appear in the 1951 Who ' s Who in Amer- ican Colleges were Dick Mil- ler, Francis Barr, Dale Blough, Harriet Beahm, Bob Kintner, Jan Hoff, Lowell Anstine, Ruth Graham, Bob McFadden, Carl Shultz, Dick Plunkett ' and Graydon Snyder. Probably the most ap- plauded music program of the year was the versatile hour concert by the Indiana Phil- harmonic Orchestra. Director Ernest Hoffman promised to return next year for the de- manded encores. 75 Also . . . Hundreds go caroling . . . Ulrey Hall ' s front lawn gets a new look . . . Winger Memorial is begun . . . Glen Bryant ' s Roommates wins photo contest honorable mention . . . Merritt proposes to Domer at the WAA barn dance . . . Blokewood addition relieves cramped quarters . . . Gals play ball at the Outing . . . Winter brings snow, snow, snow . . . Chapel has speakers like Dr. S. A. Hamrin . . . Reed and Domer waltz at a square dance . . . Characters such as Shoemaker cut up at campus parties . . . 76 77 WAA sells mums to fatten the kitty r β€” xpfesslon, confidence .... IRC, in politics, hears Cong. J. R. Walsh Mike Club compose original scripts FTA holds ice cream fair Colhecons serve pancakes to alumni McFadden Leach Community Government Β£ ommuni Endeavoring to promote the ideals of the Christian-democratic tradition and to advance the interests of Manchester College, the Com- munity Government has successfully completed its second year as a campus organ. Inaugurated in the spring of 1949, it was the result of a common desire of the college students, faculty and staff for more effective community govern- ment on Manchester ' s campus. The representative agency of the government is the Community Council, which is composed of six faculty members, sixteen students, one general staff member and the president of the college as a member ex-officio. Elected to lead the council during 1950-51 were Bob McFadden, president; Professor Paul Keller, vice-president; Lowell Anstine, treasurer; Wanda Will and Margaret Brooks, respective secretaries for the fall and winter-spring terms; and Dan Timmons, additional member of the executive committee. Working through various committees, the council has efficiently helped to govern the re- ligious life, social activities, communication IL y Council agencies, intercollegiate contests, student organ- izations and campus elections. An interesting part of the year ' s program was a mock Com- munity Council meeting presented during chapel to inform the students of the way in which the community government operates and to picture for them the regular meetings held each Monday evening at 9:00 in the social room. At the instigation of the Council a cabinet radio-phonograph was installed in the social room, and an old work shack was remodeled into a concessions stand and placed near the football field. Sponsoring two benefit basketball games with McPherson College, the Council raised funds to establish new tennis courts, and, co- operating with the administration, it aided in forming plans for a park on the campus. The Manchester College community has seen its government representatives effectively carry- ing out their obligation to exercise a continuing concern and responsibility for the welfare of the total campus community. 80 M β€’ ml i COMMUNITY COUNCIL, top picture, Bar row; Paul Keller, Bob McFadden, Bob Keller, Tony Petriella, Wayne Rieman, Karleton Halladay, Lowell Anstine, John Maphis, Wesley Simmons, Marvin Sherman, Dan Timmons, Wayne Zunkel Front row: Marlin Weaver, Wanda Will, Margaret Brooks Isabel Beery, Lulu Netzley, Shirley Williams, Mary Bowman, Dale Blough COMMUNITY COUNCIL, bottom picture, Back row: Paul Keller, Bob McFadden, Bob Keller, Tony Petriella, Wayne Rieman, Marlin Weaver, Lowell Anstine, Dick Bauer. Marvin Sherman, Neal Merritt, Dan Timmons, Wayne Zunkel Front row: Barbara R. Miller, Barbara Rust, Joyce Snyder, Margaret Brooks, Isabel Beery, Lulu Netzley, Shirley Williams, Norma Barnhizer, Charlotte Schutz 81 82 Jau J uppa Tiphu To promote better speech and to honor those who have attained success in forensics are the aims of Tau Kappa Alpha, honorary speech fraternity. Organized in 1936 under the im- petus of Professor George Beauchamp, who is now associated with the American Council on Education, the local chapter of TKA boasts such famed past members as Professor J. Raymond Schutz, Dr. Kermit Eby, and Dr. A. W. Cordier. This year in addition to entertaining at a TKA luncheon at Homecoming and sponsoring state high school debate finals in the spring, the members were hosts at a cross-examination debate tournament held among Indiana and Michigan colleges. Long remembered by TKA pledges is the spring initiation. To qualify for membership, pledges must be in the upper one-third of their class scholastically and have had two years ' ex- perience in forensics. Directing the group were Bernita Yunker, George Getz, Roger Sappington, and Paul Keller, sponsor. TAU KAPPA ALPHA, Back row: Dale Barnard, Wayne Miller, Paul Keller, Lloyd Hoflf, Bob McFadden, Roger Sappington Front row: Graydon Snyder, Bill Norris, Bernita Yunker, George Getz, Bob Keller Aripha f- di vJi meaa f One of the highest honors an aspiring actor on Manchester ' s campus can achieve is election to Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary dramatics fraternity. Membership in the local chapter, designated as the Iota Psi cast, is obtained by earning a specified number of points in Tri Alpha by participating in dramatic events, serving on various committees, writing scripts and working on costumes and advertising. Memorable in any year ' s Alpha Psi program is the initiation of pledges into the organization. After the pledges have passed both oral and writ- ten tests, the initiation activities are climaxed by a day ' s characterization of a real or fictitious person. Occupying important offices in the fraternity were President Bill Pettit and Secretary Jane Benner. Miss Eleanor Yinger sponsored the or- ganization, and Mrs. Sadie Wampler was the honorary sponsor. ALPHA PSI OMEGA, Back row: Jim Shoemaker, Bill Pettit, Marcella Farrar, Gene Porter Front row: Thelma Fair, Bernita Yunker, Sadie Wampler, Eleanor Yinger, Gloria Walton, Jane Benner 83 J cippcL II H lu C pdilc tpp f Silon Last spring a new mathematics organization, the Indiana Alpha chapter of Kappa Mu Epsilon, was installed on Manchester ' s campus. Fostering a high standard of scholarship and professional training in mathematics, the club has the dis- tinction of being the first KME chapter in the entire state. Holding monthly meetings, the primary con- cern of the chapter this year was laying a good foundation upon which later members could build successfully. Sixteen initiates were given membership at the November formal banquet. These students met certain specified require- ments which included enrollment in at least the second year of math, holding an average B grade in this course, and a 1,000 word theme written on some topic pertaining to mathematics. Throughout the year various speakers, includ- ing Dr. Garver, dean of the college, and Profes- sor Dotterer, KME sponsor, gave informational talks to the group. Everett Sauders, Ted Harman, Dale Hill, and Thelma Fair served as initial officers of the chapter. KAPPA MU EPSILON, Back row: Loren Karns, Don Miller, Bob Hoehn, Don Trost, Phil Barnhart, Tom Dillman, John Kinsey, Keith Davis, J. E. Dotterer Row two: Lester Rouch, Bob Black, Thelma Fair, Doris Kinzie, Bob Weimer, Wendell Plum, Everett Sauders Front row: Paul Hong, Ted Harman, Howard Royer, Phil Kinsey, Dale Hill, Tom Summe Wu Pi Si [1 met The conception of a physics organization on Manchester ' s campus first took material shape in the formation of a chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, the national physics honor society. However, when the need for a more inclusive group was recognized, Mu Pi Sigma was formed for all students feeling a strong positive attraction toward the field of physics. The year ' s programs, consisting of a metric system play, reviews of the biographies of famous scientists, and talks and lectures on radiation heating, astronomical de- vices, plastics, and microwave optics, provided sufficient proof to support the theory that the club is a vital and necessary part of the college organizational machinery. Directing the club ' s activities were Elmer Bowers, Don Trost, and Francis Barr, with Dr. Morris and Mr. Ernests Abele, sponsors. Sigma Pi Sigma, whose members are elected in accordance with set standards and whose activi- ties are combined with those of Mu Pi Sigma, was led by Ted Harman and LaDean Dick. MU PI SIGMA, Back row: Bill Bird, Dan Shanbeck, Wilbur Bowman, Tom Summe, Phil Kinsey, Wendell Plum, Paul Smith, Bob Black, John Kinsey Row two: Wilfred Brill, Keith Davis, Ernests Abele, Francis Barr, Lavon Hart, Ted Harman front row: Don Trost, Elmer Bowers 84 85 AL KIMIA, Back row: Lois Shirky, Dr. Weimer, Gerald Sheller, Laverne Wheeler, Rex Gosnell, Bill Chen, Lloyd Smith, Phil Kinsey, Dan Timmons Front row: John Bitzer, Charles Weimer, Gene Fahs, Keith Mullin, Jim Baker, Don Deaton, Robert W. Smith jUJd imiu AI Kimia is based upon the theory that correct proportions of a genuine interest in the science of chemistry plus active participation in pro- moting this science on a college campus will yield a desirable product. Believing that all good chemistry organizations are in constant motion, the club bounded from talks and dem- onstrations on subjects such as plastics, elec- trolysis, and problems of graduate school to programs presented by several competent student experimenters. Favorable reactions were obtained from the college community when the General Electric House of Magic was brought by the club a nd Mu Pi Sigma to Manchester ' s campus for the stage presentation of the fascinating de- velopments made by GE scientists. Al Kimia officers for the year were John Bitzer, Bill Chen, and Robert W. Smith. Dr. Weimer served as faculty sponsor. Those possessing a special affinity toward the field of chemistry could also obtain membership in the Student Affiliates of the American Chem- ical Society. Meeting once each month, the group ' s activities this year included visits to industrial plants in Wabash and Indianapolis. Officers were Gene Schroll, Rex Gosnell, and Don Collins. 86 wu cu To .in honorable mention on the Maze Homecoming display, add an ice cream social, ciphering matches, films, and a talk on astrono- my by Dr. Morris. Multiply by 26 loyal mem- bers and an abundance of enthusiasm. The product? The Math Club. Meeting on alternate Monday evenings in the Administration building, the club brought to its members enlightenment and entertain- ment on problems dealing directly or indirectly with mathematics. Checking to see that the correct answer was obtained at all times was Professor Dotterer. Official tabulators were Gene Plunkett, president; Keith Davis, vice- president; Norma Leedy and Donna Dawald, secretary-treasurers; and Phil Barnhart, program chairman. MATH CLUB, Back row. Keith Davis, Alvin Schubert, Charles Weimer, Everett Sauders, Ray Swihart, Robert McDonald, Forest Dunnuck, Bob Hollenberg, Don Shat ' er, Tom Dillman, John Mack, Charles Borland, Wilfred Brill, Lavon Hart, John Kinsey Front row: J. E. Dotterer, Donna Dawald, Dick Shock, Thelma Fair, Don Trost, Norma Leedy, Gene Plunkett Β£ Β£ Β£ Β£ Β© Β£ f f Β« ' p p. t 3 W r jr Hj Q Ik i f 141 I L . If j itr β–  b BWC IB - 87 SKATE CLUB β€” BASIC GROUP, top picture, Back row: Mary Teeter, Betty Sherrick, Evelyn Shellabarger, Forestine Weller, Phyllis Shafer, Delores Boswell, Joan Nord, Arline Hawn, Elinor Stine, Norma Leedy, Phyllis Fish, Mary McDaniel, Helen Lutz, Pat Stebbins, Katherine Shirk Front row: Gene Fahs, Bob Black, Donald Rummel, Wilbur Lehman, Lowell Eberwein, Bernard Butt, Dick Tomkinson SKATE CLUB β€” BASIC GROUP, bottom picture, Back row: Katherine Ogden, Madonna Fidler, Jean Hazzard, Alene Borneman, Barbara Rust, Martina Bak, Lois Tuell, Ellen Royer, Norma Sullivan, Joan Bright, Vivian Hardman, Priscilla Kester Front row: Wilfred Brill, Harold Mack, Phil Strycker, Laverne Wheeler, Robert Pittman, Sheldon Mummert, Dick Summers, Wilbur Bowman 88 hate s iub The Skate Club provides recreation and re- laxation and improves the skating ability of those who so wish. It is divided into two sec- tions, the basic and the advanced, each meeting once a week. Climaxing the year ' s activities β€” a Christmas party, all-school skates, parties at Columbia City β€” was the annual Roller Revue held in the spring, in which the entire member- ship participated. Serving as president for both sections was Wilbur Bowman, and sponsoring both was Pro- fessor William Sayers. Basic section officers also included Wilbur Lehman, Helen Bollinger, Elinor Stine, and Mary McDaniel. Officers of the advanced section were Wayne Hershberger, Mary Moyer, Margaret Swank, and Ruth Fast. SKATE CLUBβ€” ADVANCED SECTION, Back row: Ida Zunkcl, Margaret Swank, Carole Shultz. Bernadine Fisher, Ruby Pedersen, Mary Moyer, Rosalind Beeson, Donna Riley, Florence Shady, Julia Bradway, Phyllis Walters, Evelyn Wales, Floramae Fisher, Ruth Fast Row tuo: Wayne Hershberger, Wesley Simmons. Wendell Plum, John Rover. Gene Porter, Don Craft, Alfred Baker, Sam Mills, Wilbur Bowman, G. W. Savers Front row: Don Schultz, Jim Brumbaugh, Bud Schrock, Joe Riley, Bert Riley, Gene Holbrook, Harry Robe, Bob Neher f f)0 r O r 3renck CU L ' etude de la langue Francaise dans les ecoles Americains est un plaisir. French songs combined with American hot-dogs at an autumn campfire, a French banquet a la cuisine at the Hoffman ' s, bricks bought for a new French school β€” these highlighted the year ' s activities of le Cercle Francais. The members tried to obtain a better understand- ing of France and its people by singing its songs and discussing its literature, history, and geography. A new rule of the club called for a ten-minute French only period at every meeting. Elected to serve as president this year was Heidi Hammann, a student from Germany. Other officers were Ted Sommer, Helen Bollinger, and Jim Harold. Professor Arthur Hoffman was the faculty sponsor. FRENCH CLUB: Jim Harold, Jeanne Via, Michael Samilov, Ted Sommer, Arthur Hoffman, William Dotson, Gerald Sheller, Heidi Ham- mann, Roger Smith S panidn ( tub pcim5 Si quiere vd. aprender la lengua espanola, nos de ensenarselo a vd. Meeting once every two weeks with their sponsor, Professor F. E. Reed, the Spanish Club members learned to know more about Spanish and also became better acquainted with their Latin American neighbors. In addition to singing and playing Spanish songs and games and seeing Latin American films, the group spent one-half of each meeting speak- ing the language. A Halloween party was held on October 31, and later in the year a Christmas party was enjoyed. Serving as officers were Gilberto Claudio, Peggy Voorhees, Chuck Reynolds, Nancy Myers, and Bonnie Johnson. SPANISH CLUB, Back row: Con- rad Wetzel, David Zuck, German Lopez, Dean Crouse Row two: Evelyn Shellabarger, Harriet Newcomer, Jeanne Via, William Dotson, F. E. Reed, Ray Swihart, Thelma Shank, Jane Cus- ter, Katherine Ogden Front row: Doris Longardner, Bonnie Johnson, Gilberto Claudio, Nancy Myers, Peggy Voorhees Kjerrnan i lub German Club members respond with an enthusiastic nod and a laughing Ja! Ja! when teasingly questioned, Sprechen sie Deutsch? To help them remember Deutsch zu sprechen, they had a piggy bank named Auf Deutsch Bitte; and during the meeting any person who offended the pig by speaking English was fined a penny per offense. Characteristic of the group ' s activities was the Christmas party held in the form of a German-style ham and sauerkraut dinner the week preceding the holidays. In the fall the club created the office of student sponsor, held this year by Ted Sommer. Other officers included Bill Meitzler, Tony Petriella, Flora-May Hall, Keith Kinney, and Professor Arthur Hoffman, sponsor. GERMAN CLUB, Back row: Michael Samilov, Bob Irick, Don Ulmer, Tony Petriella, Robert Stuts- man, Ted Sommer, Ron Backus, Keith Kinney, Keith Mullin front row: Heidi Hammann, Ar- thur Hoffman, Flora-May Hall, Bill Meitzler, Irma Gall, Jeanne Via 90 3.R.C. Established in 1929 by Dr. Andrew Cordier, the International Relations Club has continued through its years as an organization to stimulate students ' interest in current international prob- lems. It has played a small but significant part in helping to improve international relations and promote understanding through various projects. This year the emphasis of the club was placed upon action. In addition to giving packages and aid to the Brethren Service Center and inter- national work camps and sending boxes of cloth- ing to families in Germany, the IRC cooperated with the MCA in presenting an informational program on the life of Kagawa and in sponsor- ing lectures by Andrew Cordier and Paul Hutch- inson emphasizing the work of the UN. The club ' s programs included a talk by representative John R. Walsh, a UN banquet, and various debates and discussions concerning such vital problems as crossing the thirty-eighth parallel in Korea and rearming Germany. Officers were Bob Wagoner, Barry Cavaghan, and Jeanne Schrock. Professor Merritt sponsored the club, and Alberto Wong served as chairman of the college student organization of the UN. IRC, Back row: Paul Ritchey, Al Deeter, Dave Brightbill, Bill Salmre, Kaiser Cheng, Wayne Zunkel, Bob Keller, Don Ulmer, Dennis Rupel, Lloyd Smith, Wilbur McFadden, Herbert Erbaugh, Barbara Miller, Betty Lehman, Edith Hartsough, Heidi Hammann Row three: Lyle Lambert, Bob Marbaugh, Wilbur Mullen, DeVerl Kirkpatrick, Rachel Moore, Ted Sommer, Joanna Spider, Ohla Kryworuchko, Beverly Bright, Morris Beeghley, Dorthea Traughber, Shirley Williams, Helen Sheller Rotv two: Lois Horning, Patricia Brower, Robert Hess, Harriet Beahm, Lois Musselman, Phyllis Fish, Mary McDaniel, Margaret Brooks, Theresa Clingenpeel, Jean Childs, Joan George, Shirley Cheng front row: Barry Cavaghan, Bob Wagoner, Jean Roberts, Cora Childs, Bette Knarr, Wanda Will, Neal Merritt, Joyce Snyder, Jeanne Schrock, Roger Keiser, Janice Hoff 92 CLICK CLIQUE, Back, row: Don Ulmer, Jesse Spurgeon, Leon Stong, John Royer, Jobie Riley, O. W, Neher Front row; Ellen Royer, Lois Tuell, Barbara Newcomer, Phylis Walters, Norma Sullivan i lich ( li i ue Click Clique is still in knee breeches. Hardly more than a year old, the amateur photography club is struggling to secure adequate funds and equipment. Nevertheless, the club made con- siderable developments during the year, at the Halloween party, selling concessions at a football game and by sponsoring an all-school party in the spring. In addition, club members worked with the Aurora staff in securing snapshots for the 1951 Aurora. Photos on this page are repre- sentative work of the Click Clique. The picture of the new bridge was taken by Pat Meitzler, the snow scene, by Joe Riley and the potential foot- ball player, Carter ' s Sub, by Gene Tovey. Tovey ' s photo received second prize in the Aurora photo contest. Officers of the club were Phylis Walters, Don- ald Ulmer, Barbara Newcomer, and sponsor. Professor O. W. Neher. 93 rwoodier rrih er5 A trip to Salamonic State Park, a pre-Halloween wiener roast, a hike to Liberty Mills β€” events such as these highlighted the year ' s activities of the Hoosier Hikers. Included on the agenda was a tour through the Schutz Brothers ' leather factory, where all types of leather and leather goods manufacturing processes were shown to the group. Searching for adventure and beauty in woods and fields, the hikers received a liberal education in the study of nature through first-hand observation. Serving as officers were Jim Harold, Edith Hartsough, Marie Walter, and Vera Winger. Co-sponsors of the Hikers were Professor O. W. Neher and Dr. Emerson Niswander. HOOSIER HIKERS, Back row: Carol Honeyman, Dorothy Lehman, Alice Hatfield, Charlene Sheetz, O. W. Neher, Jean Seidler, Loretta Racop, Mary Lou Oswalt, Vera Brower front row: Bill Ply, Conrad Wet- zel, Jim Harold, Gordon Crates, Dick Deafenbaugh, Glen Long j Sucnotoau L lub n Faced with the growing interest of MC students in psychology and the need for more informal study in that area, last year Bill Scott and Rosalie Talley began building the framework for a new campus organi- zation. This year, with Bill Scott, Rosalie Talley and Jean Hazzard as officers, the Psychology Club became a recognized campus activity. Under the guidance of Professor A. R. Eikenberry the group analyzed books, held discussions and took lie detector tests. Climaxing the initial year of the club was the all school program given during the spring term. PSYCHOLOGY CLUB, Back row: Mack Bowman, Nancy Bow- man, Jan Jenkins, A. R. Eikenberry, Shirley Conkling, John Henderson, Ernie Petrie front row: Spencer Rodda, Lois- anne Noe, Jean Hazzard, Bill Scott, Rosalie Talley, Jane Weber, John Tomlonson (JSusineSS L lub Organized to stimulate interest in the field of business and to present to its members the most recent trends and practices in this field, the Business Club meets once every two weeks in the administration build- ing. This year the club members voted to have one social meeting each month; and so in addition to listening to outside speakers and taking field trips, the group enjoyed such activities as a scavenger hunt and a hamburger fry at Warvel Park. The officers of the club were Don Reckeweg, president; Bill Robin- son, vice-president; Barbara Wright, recording secretary; Bud Schrock, treasurer; and Don Bright, publicity chairman. BUSINESS CLUB, Back row: Bob Garman, Jesse Spurgeon, Lowell An- stine, Donn Kesler, Bill Robinson Row three: Arthur Gilbert, Gene England, Dick Tomkinson, Don Bright, Kenneth Dilling Row two: Don Reckeweg, Dale Blough, Dale Hill, Dwight Hoffman, Robert Gohn Front row: Dorothy Johnson, Barbara Wright, Lois Mansfield, Rosemary Oaks, Thelma Shank, Bud Schrock 94 FTA, top picture, Back row: G. Wort, G. Alger, A. Clarke, C. Alban, S. Williams, A. Calhoun, G. Pope, G. Walton, J. Shaffer, J. Rohrer, A. Priser, B. Yunker, H. Carnes, J. Nord, R. Cool, K. Fike Row two: C. Frock, M. Smith, L. Sappington, J. Binkley, W. Rhoades, W. Foust, M. Wagoner, V. Tomlonson, J. Jenkins, B. Lawson, J. Overmyer, E. Steury, I. Gall, V. Anderson, B. Fulton, B. Miller front row: F. Dunten, M. Smith, P. Fourman, C. Vance, D. Lehman, L. Racop, J. Eash, N. Sullivan, J. Bright, M. Rhoades, M. Oswalt, B. McKee, J. Weber FTA, bottom picture, Back row: B. Milo, P. Landcn, G. Hedges, D. Shock, B. Obenour, J. Brumbaugh, D. Bright, D. Bauer, J. Folk, F. Cripe, H. Royer, D. Trost, N. Ulery, J. Richardson, K. Davis Row two: P. Adams, B. Jordan, M. Becker, B. Rust, W. Studebaker, D. Werkheiser, E. Paxton, A. Headley, V. Wolf, B. Newcomer, T. Neff, D. Burger, E. Huffman, M. Bantz, P. Oswalt, N. Leasure Front row: R. Miller, D. Boswell, E. Stine, M. Hilbert, M. Blocher, A. Morningstar, J. George, J. Haley, N. Hunt, M. Stuckman, B. Mishler, M. Haney, B. Bodenmiller, J. Fisher, J. Hershberger 96 sruture JecicherS of Ari With a ten year record of superior recom- mendations based upon past achievements, the local FTA chapter, the first to be organized in Indiana, again presented itself for enrollment among campus activities at Manchester College on September 6, 1950. To help prospective teachers learn more about their future profession and to provide activities and programs that would help prepare the stu- dents for teaching was the three-term project that was assigned to the organization by the school administrators. In working on this project, the club asked Professor Allen to present an art demonstration, invited critic teachers and pupils of student teachers to give talks to the FTA members, and showed movies and presented plays on the theme of education. menca During the first week of school an all-school ice cream social was sponsored, and in the spring a book fair featuring children ' s books was held. In the fall the club won first place among the Homecoming displays. Chapter members served as hosts to over 140 high school students attend- ing the FTA conference held on campus during National Education Week. Directing the organization in its many activi- ties the first half of the year were Jean Richard- son, Howard Royer, Betty McKee, and Brucia Lawson; holding offices during the second half were Rose Carter, Edna Steury, Marcy Bantz, and Clyde Alban. Don Bright served as club treasurer throughout the entire year, and Dr. Nettie Leasure was the chapter sponsor. cJLibraru tafP Quietly chuckling over such requests as, I ' d like to have the red book I saw in here a couple of days ago, or Where can I find a poem by a Negro? I know it ' s on page 76 of some book, the library staff cheerfully and efficiently serves the Manchester College community. The officers of the staff organization this year were Veva Tomlonson, president; Donna Riley, vice-president; and Betty McKee, secretary. Ruth Coblentz and Jean Holcombe were the sponsors. In addition to a wiener roast in the fall and an annual Christmas party, the group held a banquet in the spring, honoring the seniors on the staff. LIBRARY STAFF, Back roil-. Jean Holcombe, Ruth Coblentz, Fern Pegg, Geor- gians Willcox, Velma Wolf, Betty Cool, Pat Landen. Donna Riley, Veva Tomlon- son Row two: Mamie Smith, Mary Jane Garman, Marjorie Blocher, Phyllis Fish, Joan Overmyer Front row. Kathryn Daugherty, Alda Krudop, Katherine Shirk, Betty Mc- Kee, Shirley Cheng 97 Β£ )( (% r r rs WAA, Back row: Jan Jenkins, Pat Conner, Lois Tuell, Julia Bradway, Donna Riley, Jeanne Johnson, Dorothy Ward, Faith Alber, Margaret Thoss, Lea Fike, Betty Gurthet, Rosalie Talley Row three: Pat Brower, Nelda Ulery, Jean Childs, Kathryn Daugherty, Joan Haley, Floramae Fisher, Jean Ryan, Phyllis Fish, Elizabeth Schantz, Ellen Huffman, Marcielle Bantz, LaVernia Jorgensen Row two: Muriel Morey, Lois Martin, Lois Ogan, Phyllis Terhune, Barbara Bevington, Carol Warner, Ida Zunkel, Joan Overmyer, Norma Barnhizer, Elizabeth Hoffman, Loretta Racop, Melba Rice Front roiv: Donna Loe, Marietta Whitehead, Kay Deeter, Jane Benner, Marjorie Blocher, Gladys Doerschuk, Irma Gall, Mary Forrer VUomen 5 rthleuc TSSoclatlon To further interest in all sports and to foster the best sportsmanship among all girls are the aims of WAA. Led by Janie Benner, Marge Blocher, Liz Hoffman, and Muriel Morey and refereed by Miss LaVernia Jorgensen, the girls bounded through a series of basketball, Softball, soccer, tennis, ping pong, and badminton tour- neys to achieve a good fellowship victory. Goals successfully reached were camping at McClure Lake, sponsoring an all-school square dance, and playing host to WAA members from Indiana colleges and universities at a state meeting. 98 K Olll Take three stuffed toys made at Christmas, add a reception for the May Queen and attendants, sprinkle with petals taken from a demonstration on corsage-making, and salt well with an Aunt Jemima Breakfast for Home Ec alumni at Home- coming. Cover with a dinner prepared for dates. Bake well. Remove from the oven and garnish econ with a skit on etiquette. Serve immediately. Results: Colhecon β€” CWlege Home Economics Club. Chief menu planners were Margaret Stauf- fer, Jane Burkholder, Loisanne Noe, and Alice Hatfield. General supervisors were Miss Beery and Miss Dare. COLHECON, Buck row: Margaret Stauffer, America Headley, Sharon Ginzel, Eula Rohrer, Alice Hatfield, Jean Seidler, Rachel Moore, Nelda Ulery. Ruth Hay, Mamie Smith Row thnc: Betty Cool, Marjorie Smith, Marjorie Blocher, Mary Bagwell, Phyllis Gibbel, Dorothy Rinehart, Joann Miller, Jane Burkholder Row two: Irma Dare, Dorothy Werkheiser, Susie Rouch, Jean Roberts, Dorothy Burger, Eva Utz, Eula Myers, Marjorie Royer, Alda Krudop, Isabel Beery Front row: Katherine Shirk, Pat Butterbaugh, Loisanne Noe, Wilma Burroughs, Miriam Skinner, Bette Knarr, Barbara Bodenmiller, Susanne Knoop II If TRI ALPHA, Back row: Ronald Walton, Wayne Hershberger, Gary Deavel, Marvin Sherman, Wesley Simmons, Bill Pettit, Karleton Halladay, Jim Shoemaker, Bob Neher, Don Schulcz, Rosalie Talley, Phyllis Goodmiller, Clyde McDaniel Row three: Marcella Farrar, Bernita Yunker, Mary Alice Bagwell, Helen Carnes, Clyde Alban, Jim Slabaugh, Dick Coffman, Mary Mulligan, Muriel Morey, June Rohrer, Charlotte Schutz, Gene Porter Row two: Marianne Rhoades, Thelma Fair, Gloria Walton, Caroline Cripe, Hilda Studebaker, EHzabetli Hoffman, Lettie Rentschler, Edna Steury, Edith Hartsough, Eleanor Yinger Front row: Jeanne Via, Pat Butterbaugh, Donna Pfolsgrof, Jane Benner, Marjorie Blocher, Dorothy Cripe, Martha Smith, Ardith Newcomer, Betty Mishler, Mary Stuckman Jrl rwhci r Starring approximately fifty enthusiastic members and directed by Miss Eleanor Yinger, Tri Alpha, Manchester ' s dramatics organization, again drew the curtain on a colorful, entertain- ing year on the college campus. Leading roles were played by Marcella Farrar, Gary Deavel, Bernita Yunker, and Thelma Fair. The opening scene of Tri Alpha, 1950-51 took place in the autumn of 1950. It was cen- tered about thirty beaming students who had successfully passed their try-outs, which con- sisted of giving a short poem, skit, or dramatic excerpt and who were awaiting the formal initiation ceremonies. Scene two depicted the excitement and anticipation surrounding the forthcoming fall production, All My Sons by Arthur Miller. A short flash-back recalled to many the preceding spring ' s presentation, Priest- ley ' s They Came to a City, which was still re- ceiving applause from the MC audience. As the curtain rose on scene three, the entire Tri Alpha cast was on stage, presenting various one-act plays both on and off campus and receiv- ing practical experience in the fields of costum- ing, make-up, producing and stage management. Receiving special attention was the poetic drama, A Child Is Born, which was presented during chapel the week preceding the Christmas holi- days. As the year ' s production ended and the cur- tains closed, the cast, receiving numerous cur- tain calls and many congratulations, promised a return Tri- Alpha performance in 1951-52. 100 2U u ale Jri J- hl Resolved: That the non-Communist nations should form a new world organization. The varsity debate squad, coached by Professor Paul Keller and composed of those participating in intercollegiate debates, took part in eight tourna- ments plus a number of dual debates. Six of the group participated in four discussion conferences based upon the question, What role should the federal government play in providing for the welfare of its people? Tri Phi β€” Forensics For Fun. Meeting once a week, this two-year-old organization gave those interested in forensics an opportunity to develop and extend their skills in this area. Oratories, extemporaneous speeches, interpretive readings, dramatic presentations, radio speeches β€” all were included in the year ' s program of activities. Otficiating over the Monday evening meetings were Jack Bormuth, Bob Keller, Pat Thomas, and Wayne Miller, sponsor. DEBATE, Buck row: Robert Weimer, Keith Mul- Un, Charles Armstrong Robert Keller, Ted Somnier, Wayne Eberly, Roger Sap- pington, Paul Ritchey, Dale Barnard Front roll: Paul Keller, Georgianna Willcox, Pat Thomas, Jack Bormuth, Thelma Fair, Bernita Yunk- er, Wayne Miller TRI PHI, Back row: Charlotte Schutz, Larry - Wong, Roger Sappington, Wayne Eberly, Charles Arm- strong, Vivian Hardman Front row: Robert Keller, Beverly Gunterman, Lois Tuell, Jack Bormuth, Ellen Royer, Pat Thomas, Wayne Miller 101 MIKE CLUB, Back row: Harold Matthews, Joseph Kurtti, Don Corson Roiv jive: Dan Shanbeck, Dick CofFman, Jim Brumbaugh Row four: Jack Kissinger, Paul Smith, Helen Carnes Row three: Roger Smith, Harry Robe, Phyllis Goodmiller, Robert Neher Row two: Ernest Petrie, Mary Mulligan, Bernadine Fisher, Eleanor Yinger, Donald Schultz, Peggy Oswalt, Martina Bak, Sharon Ginzel Front row: David Zuck, Gene Holbrook, Jack Bormuth Ike i tub Serving and entertaining the college com- munity through the medium of WMIB, the cam- pus radio station, the Mike Club provides oppor- tunity for interested students to receive educa- tion both in the field of radio broadcasting and in the area of radio speech. Club members plan the schedule of programs for WMIB, broadcast all sports events, and present radio plays at various times throughout the year. WMIB has been a trial member of the Intercollegiate Broad- casting System for the past three years, and this year it was given full membership. Official broadcaster Don Schultz was in charge of the club meetings, while Phyllis Goodmiller took over in case of an unavoidable delay. Helen Carnes recorded minutes, and Miss Eleanor Yinger sponsored the organization. 102 OAK LEAVES, Upper left: Jane Benner, Society; Donna Pfolsgrof, Reporter; Gladys Doerschuk, Reporter; Wilbur Bowman, Photographer; Jerry Durnbaugh, Sports U ppcr right: Mary Moyer, Reporter; Keith Kinney, Associate Editor; Don Bright, Business Manager; Howard Royer, Editor Lourr left: Margaret Brooks, Reporter; Charlotte Schutz, Reporter; Marvin Sherman, News Editor; Shirley Conkling, Proofreader; Jim Harold, Reporter Lourr right: Kathryn Daugherty, Reporter; Graydon Snyder, Circulation; Joyce Snyder, Reporter; Betty Lehman, Reporter; Wilbur McFadden, Circulation Jak oi ectveA In publishing the school newspaper weekly, the Oak Leaves staff has succeeded in informing students, alumni and MC friends of current cam- pus events and in stimulating their thinking on questions of world importance. Through the past thirty-seven years Oak Leaves has developed from a small, monthly, 20 -page paper featuring poems, essays and a joke page to a large, weekly, 4-page newspaper. Reddv Squirrel, the gossip column, has been replaced by Under the Oaks. Feature stories concerning Manchester College have taken the place of essays written on topics varying from Ethnocentrism to Circuses and Sunshine. Even the Oak Leaves office itself has changed. Besides installing a telephone and buying a type- writer this year, staff members freshly painted the office walls in brilliant blue and yellow, re- arranged furniture, and added such finishing touches as painted book shelves and red drapes. 103 AURORA, top picture: Shirley Conkling, Community; Charlotte Schutz, Community; Elma Paxton, Literary; Marcella Farrar, Highlights; Loretta Racop, Organizations; Wayne Eberly, Organizations; Roger Lantz, Subscriptions; Norma Barnhizer, Subscriptions; Jerry Durnbaugh, Literary; Charles Weimer, Advertising; Mary Bowman, Art Bottom: Marvin Sherman, Literary; Karleton Halladay, Subscriptions; Bill Norris, Editor; Bill Meitzlcr, Staff Photographer; Larry Wong, Photography; Graydon Snyder, Religion; Bob Weimer, Business Manager; Doris Kinzie, Treasurer; Donna Pfolsgrof, Secretary; Dale Hill, Advertising .A urorci Time waits for no one β€” not even the Aurora staff . . . Early in the year staff members begin planning for and dreaming of a year book that will excel and outsell all others . . . Students are urged to subscribe early: For only $4.25 we ' ll cash your work check β€” and give you a free subscription to the 1951 Aurora. . . . Contracts are drawn up and signed . . . Wilbur Bowman is chosen 1952 Aurora editor . . . Subscriptions are again enlisted. Only 14 more shopping days for your Aurora at bargain prices. . . . Photographers work busily β€” and somehow in the scramble Staff Photographer Joe Riley and Sports Editor Bud Farrar fail to get pictured with the Aurora staff . . . Blurry-eyed copy writers frantically try to turn back the clock . . . And the time finally arrives when the Aurora staff gladly shoves a yearbook into your hands and begs, Please like it. We did it for you. 104 O A K C ' O O D DORM COUNCIL, Back run : Mary Bowman, Joanna Spitler, Dorthea Traughber, Jean Richardson, Lorecta Racop Front row: Loisanne Noe, Betty Lou McKee, Betty Mishler BLOKEWOOD DORM COUNCIL, Back row: Paul Riichey, Gerald Sheller, Claire Stine, Harold Heeter, Richard Miller Front row: David Bright- bill, Ernest Petrie, Wayne Eberly, William Chen, Wil- liam Bird CALVIN ULREY HALL COUNCIL, Back row: Bud Farrar, Carl Sands, Myron Kennedy, Dale Blough Front row: Marvin Barn- hart, Marvin Sherman, Gale Denlinger, Jim Shoemaker, Art Hunn, Gene Plunkett 105 The Melotones attain Barber shop fame I V ludic of maedtroA and metodied of minstrels accent campud harmon 1 Flueckiger and Stinebaugh hold the baton Percy Granger plays Shuhzes stage senior recital The band steps off the measures l Uomen $ Ljiee s iub Singing for high schools, churches, and the local college community and giving winter and spring concerts in cooperation with other MC choral organizations, the Women ' s Glee Club gives its members musical experience and an opportunity to sing representative material in their own field. During the Christmas season the group took part in the combined choral con- cert, singing familiar carols, classical Christmas melodies, and choruses from the MESSIAH. Pro- fessor Clyde Holsinger directed the group. During the fall term the officers were Wilma Beckley, president; Jeanne Schrock, vice-presi- dent; Phyllis Heeter, secretary; and Marjorie Royer, treasurer. Upon Miss Beckley ' s resigna- tion as president, Miss Schrock was elected to fill that position for the remainder of the year, and Jean Ryan was selected as vice-president. WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB, Back row: Peggy Oswalt, Joanna Spitler, Carol Wyse, Lois Ogan, Barbara Good, Julia Bradway, Barbara R. Miller, Carolyn Parr, Phyllis Goodmiller, Dorthea Traughber, Charlene Sheetz, Sally Garman, Velma Wolf, Lois Kintner, Donna Olinger, Jeanne Schrock, Wanda Roth, Violet Major, Jean Yohe Row three: Joan Durnbaugh, Carole Biltz, Marianne Rhoades, Wretha Rhoades, Madonna Fidler, Lois Martin, Donna Dawald, Rosalind Beeson, Phyllis England, Martina Bak, Helen Bollinger, Edith Hartsough, Virginia Anderson, June Smith, Vera Brower, Waneta Showalter, Mary Halsey, Heidi Hammann Row Two: Myra Mow, Margaret Swank, Jean Ryan, Pat Butterbaugh, Sara Rees, Margaret Brooks, Priscilla Kester, Phyllis Heeter, Wilma Studebaker, Marjorie Royer, Patricia Thomas, Alene Borneman, Betty Lehman, Floramae Fisher, Mary Hornish Front row: Ann Norman, Mary Teeter, Marietta Whitehead, Kay Deeter, Joann Miller, Beverly Bright, Wilma Beckley, Dorothy Cripe, Lois Barkdoll, Mary Forrer, Theresa Clingenpeel, Vivian Hardman, Marcia Haney II II len 5 KJtee L iub Growing spontaneously at the request for a men ' s group to sing at the May Day festivities in 1947, the Men ' s Glee Club has operated as a college sponsored organization since the school year 1947-48. This year in addition to singing at high schools and churches in the surrounding community and furnishing entertainment at various campus activities, the club cooperated with the other MC choral organizations in giving Christmas and spring concerts. Directing the group was Professor Clyde Holsinger. Bernie Blough served as president during the year, while Don Collins and Gordon Hedges acted as vice-president and secretary-treasurer respectively. MEN ' S GLEE CLUB, Back row: Loren Kirkpatrick, Emerson Davidson, Myron Kennedy, Merrill Mow, Bob Marbaugh, Wayne Hershberger, Phil Barnhart, Leon Stong, George Miller, Art Hunn, Don Collins, Bernie Blough, Gene Fahs, Florian Cripe Row two: Carl Coppock, Bob Keller, Tom Swantner, Dick Heckman, Bill Obenour, Phil Strycker, Paul Korns, Larry Wong, Jim Slabaugh, Ralph Bushong, Charles Weimer, Bernard Butt, Harold Mack Front row: Richard Whitacre, Gordon Hedges, La Verne Soales, Dick Bowman, Dick Shock, Dick Summers, Delbert Kettering, Don Corson, Joe Ogden, Wade Bollinger, Jim Baker, Bob Smith Accompanist: Gary Deavel 108 109 A CAPPELLA CHOIR, Back row: Bob Hopkins, Ralph Bushong, Bud Schrock, Lowell Eberwein, Paul Eiler, Wesley Simmons, Gary Deavel, Karleton Halladay, Ronald Walton, Paul Beach, Clyde Ploughe, Dale Blough, Sheldon Mummert, Jim Brumbaugh, Joe Ogden Roil ' three: Don Tait, Dick Coffman, Ellis Teach, Sam Robins, Dave Amstutz, Jean Smith, Pat Conner, Gloria Walton, Dick Ober, Carl Shultz, Clyde McDaniel, Conrad Wetzel, Wayne Zunkel, Gordon Hedges Row two: Phyllis Fourman, Ruth Graham, Bernadine Fisher, Marcella Farrar, Ellen Russell, Mary Lou Beach, Alice Priser, Wanda Penrod, Lois Horning, Georgianna Willcox, Caroline Cripe, Betty Fulton Front row: Joan Hershberger, Joan Fisher, Myra Mow, Thyra NefF, Carole Shultz, Noreen Norman, Mamie Smith, Mary Jo Turner, Ruby Pedersen, Ruth Fast, Wanda Will _y(r s appeiia C n w oir Great music of the ages, skilled direction, and mature singing by 60 voices combine to make the A Cappella Choir outstanding at Manchester College. The present group was organized in 1946 by Professor Clyde W. Holsinger who has continued to foster the tradition of Manchester ' s fine choral singing. A Cappella is one of the most closely knit or- ganizations on campus. Meeting for practice three hours each week, the members not only develop musical precision, but long-lasting friendships as well. Rating top interest for most choir members is the spring tour, a hilarious, yet serious and effec- tive week spent, this year in Ohio, singing before church and school audiences. Such activities serve not only as an outlet for students to give individual and group expression, but also to provide a vital connecting link between Man- chester College, its friends and its alumni. A Cappella has a busy home schedule too, the Christmas concert, winter concert, and The Requiem being the main campus appearances. Proving that its friendly spirit is genuine, the club let down its cultured hair and romped through a Roaring 20 ' s annual party. In a more serious vein, the group held its yearly ban- quet when awards were presented, thus ending another year. Officers this year were David Amstutz, Olin Mason, Ruby Pedersen, and Karleton Halladay. 110 Amstutz, Prof. Holsingcr, and Walton share interpreta- tions of a musical score before rehearsal. Teach, Pedersen, Smith and Schrock look rhythmically for Blue Skies at the Roaring Twenties A Cappella party. Showing that those concerts are rugged, Shultz, Pederse n, and Priser relax during a con- cert halftime. Combined Choral ji roupd wl Everyone likes to sing. Over 150 of Man- chester ' s singing student body combined vocal chords to present three outstanding music con- certs during the year. The A Cappella Choir, Men ' s and Women ' s Glee Clubs, were joined by all others who wished to sing. In a traditional Yuletide appearance, Decem- ber 17, the Combined Choral Groups presented a colorful array of Christmas music including favorite selections from Handel ' s The Messiah , carols, and novelty Christmas songs. It was a concert which put just the right gay note into the Christmas season. The three choral organizations polished up their best concert numbers for the Winter Con- cert, March 1 1. But the peak of their season was the masterful Choral Society presentation of Brahm ' s oratorio, The Requiem, May 6. The May Day crowd heard with enthusiasm the sing- ing of professional soloists and the accompani- ment by the Civic Symphony. A cabinet formed by the officers of the three component organizations chose David Amstutz as their leader. Professor Clyde Holsinger was the director of this large music body. 112 STRING QUARTET: Carl Shultz, Dorothy Smith, Carole Shultz, Gloria Walton Merino. {Quartet Playing for high schools, colleges, universities, and the local Manchester community, the college String Quartet has provided musical entertain- ment throughout the year for those who enjoy listening to string music. The quartet was com- posed this year of Carl Shultz, first violin; Dorothy Smith, second violin; Carole Shultz, viola; and Gloria Walton, ' cello; and was spon- sored by Professor Vernon Stinebaugh, who chose its members at a special audition. Having a wide repertoire of classical, semi- classical, and popular numbers, in the past the quartet has presented formal programs at several high schools and given formal concerts for audi- ences at Taylor University in Upland and Bethany Biblical Seminary in Chicago. This year they played at the Dad ' s Day Banquet held on campus in the fall, presented a chapel program, entertained at various high school commence- ments, and were on deputation trips to schools in the surrounding community. 113 STRING SYMPHONY, Back row: Gary Deavel, V. H. Stinebaugh, Wesley Simmons, Clyde Ploughe, Phyllis Heeter, Jeanne Schrock, Virginia Anderson, Margaret Swank Row two: Dorothy Smith, Margaret Brooks, Priscilla Kester, Theresa Clingenpeel, Myra Mow, S. L. Flueckiger, Mary Lois Halsey, Barbara Miller, Dorothy Cripe S trina S umphonu The String Symphony Orchestra was organ- ized in 1946 by its present conductor, Professor Vernon H. Stinebaugh, for the purpose of study- ing and playing classical and modern music scored for a small string ensemble. This year the group appeared in two formal concerts. The winter concert, which was held in the college auditorium on December 8, 1950, featured piano soloist Gary Deavel playing Mac- Dowell ' s Piano Concerto No. 2 in D Minor. In its spring concert on April 21, the symphony was assisted in part of the program by approxi- mately thirty-five selected string students from the nearby high schools. Each spring awards in the form of six-inch chenille emblems are given to those who have played with the orchestra for two years; and a gold pin, a special service award, is presented to the senior judged as making the most valuable contribution to the symphony. Officers for the year were Carl Shultz, presi- dent; Wesley Simmons, vice-president; and Mar- garet Brooks, secretary-treasurer. Included as members of the symphony but not pictured were Jane Stephens and Ann Meyer. 114 Front row: Carl Shultz, Ronald Walton, Gloria Walton, Ellen Royer, Carole Shultz, L. M. Hoff, Gletha Mae Bolinger, Phyllis Gibbel Gary Deaiel, winter con- cert soloist 115 CIVIC SYMPHONY OFFICERS: Don Tait, librarian Carole Shultz, vice-president Bob Garman, president Doris Kinzie, secretary- treasurer Back row: Louis Durflinger, Howard Unger, David Amstutz, Waneta Showalter, Phyllis Hecter, Roger Kelly, Dean Van Tilbury, Joanna Spitler, Doris Kinzie, Samuel L, Flueckiger, Samuel Pritchard, Robert Garman, Gerald Miller, Genica Speicher, Percy Grainger, Santos Zaccone, Richard Bollinger Row three: Ronald Walton, Paul Sollenberger, Rozella Hinton, Donald Tait, Kenneth Miller, Betty Fulton, Gordon Hedges, Myrtis Becker, Myra Mow, Kathleen Tigner, James Brumbaugh, Robert Bauer, Robert Smith, Ralph Bushong, Gene Porter, Marion Hopkins, Anita Bollinger, Dorothy Cripe 116 i iuic umplt U nip I ion t m t y In addition to providing music.il enjoyment both for its members and its audience, the North Manchester Civic Symphony serves to promote friendly relationships and understanding be- tween the college and the surrounding com- munity. Composed of college students, profes- sors, staff members, and town citizens, the sym- phony is truly a community project. Each year a series of three concerts are pre- sented. This season the first of these, which was given both at North Manchester and at Hunt- ington, featured as guest artist Percy Grainger, noted pianist and conductor. Besides Tschai- kowsky ' s Concerto No. 1 in B-Flat Minor, Mr. Grainger, whose music is full of vitality and energy, played one of his own compositions, Youthful Suite. Other programs were a concert for children and young pe ople on February 25 and a presenta- tion of the Brahm ' s Requiem with the college choral society in May. Dr. S. L. Flueckiger and Professor Vernon Stinebaugh served as conductor and associate conductor respectively. Rolf two: Carl Shultz, Dorothy Baer, Betty Shultz, Frederick Perfect, Clyde McDaniel, Nina Flueckiger, Lowell Coats, Joann Miller, Paul McClain, Jane Stephens, Dorothy Rautenkranz, Phyllis Gibbel Front row: Vernon Stinebaugh, Virginia Coats, Gloria Walton, Priscilla Kester, Carole Shultz, Lloyd Hoff, Margaret Brooks, Dorothy Smith 117 VARSITY BAND, Back row: Charles Shawler, Charles Armstrong, Bud Schrock, Joanna Spitler, Ann Norman, Wesley Simmons, Allan Coy, Clyde Ploughe, S. L. Flueckiger, Dorothy Lehman, Jean Yohe, Caroline Cripe Row three: Priscilla Kester, Jean Ryan, Violet Major, Joe Ogden, Donna Dawald, Ralph Bushong, Bernadine Fisher, Richard Whitacre, Gene Porter, Marion Hopkins, Richard Coffman, Phyllis England, Joe Fredrickson, Bernard Butt, Sam Pritchard, Bob Garman ( and Adding spirit to the home basketball games with its pep band, increasing the enjoyment of football games with its marching and playing, and providing entertainment for the entire col- lege community at annual concerts, the Varsity Band lends musical color and spice to campus activities. In addition to the winter program, eagerly anticipated is the outdoor twilight con- cert given near the fountain in the spring. Officers this year were Marion Hopkins, Noreen Norman, Bernadine Fisher, and Don Tait. Dr. Flueckiger was the conductor for both the Varsity and Workshop Bands. The Workshop Band is for music majors who are learning secondary instruments and for all other students who desire to learn the funda- mentals of various band instruments. Its members take part in the pep band and the spring concert given by the Varsity Band. Serving as officers were Don Tait and Thyra Neff. 118 Row two: Don Ulmer, Nina Flueckiger, Clyde McDaniel, Myra Mow, Don Tait, Jim Brumbaugh, Bob Bauer, Bob Smith, Gordon Hedges, Sally Garman, Waneta Showalcer Front row: Betty Fulton, Jane Enyeart, Joann Miller, Myrtis Becker, Cleon Marsh, Noreen Norman, Mary Jo Turner WORKSHOP BAND, Back row: Beverly Bright, Clyde Ploughe, Carole Biltz, Ellen Russell, Mary Halsey, Thyra Neff Row two: Dick Summers, Noreen Norman, S. L. Flu- eckiger, Richard Whitacre, Charlene Sheetz, Ruby Peder- sen, Bob Black Front row: Jane Enyeart, Gary Deavel, Joan Overmy- er, David Sand, Don Tait, Nina Flueckiger. Lois Martin 119 wM MCA introduces Manchester to the frosh I ' β–  ideals, worship, snarina .... r eliaion vitalizes vpus our campus communil The campus points toward politics, economics Missions Fellowship looks ahead Hornell Hart talks man to man MCA, Back row: Paul Keller, Claire Stine, Olin Mason, Graydon Snyder, T. Wayne Rieman Front row: Harriet Beahm, Bob Keller, Lois Horning, Shirley Williams, Wayne Zunkel, Ruth Graham WCA R-LΒ« Β£C ep Last spring the Religious Life Committee proposed for the Manchester College community a new type organization which was to be called the Manchester Christian Association. The pur- pose of this new organization was threefold. First, it was to unify the religious organizations into a single organization. Secondly, it was to evaluate the religious program and to determine the direction which should be taken. Lastly, it was to originate any programs which seemed necessary in light of the evaluation. Any member of the Manchester College com- munity could become a member of the MCA by accepting the national Student Christian Asso- ciation purpose as their own, by pledging to support through time, talent and material con- tributions, the program of the MCA. This sup- port was to be given through the various activities of the MCA program such as Church School, Ministry Fellowship, CBYF, MSM, Deputations, Campus Conferences, MCA mass meetings and retreats. Those interested in this program elected a cabinet whose purpose was to direct the projects of the MCA and carry out its purpose. In order to coordinate the religious program the various members of the cabinet then joined in planning the different aspects of the community activities. The MCA executive committee included: Ruth Graham, treasurer; Shirley Williams, secre- tary; Bob Keller, vice-president; Graydon Snyder, president; and T. Wayne Rieman, fac- ulty advisor. 122 S wondorS l onfe ere need During the year the MCA supplemented the regular religious program with several all school conferences. Last spring Kermit Eby, professor of sociology at the University of Chicago, and Cameron Hall of the Federal Council of Churches led the Religious and Political Responsibility Confer- In late January, Joseph Haroutunian, profes- sor of systematic theology at McCormick Theo- logical Seminary, caused M.C.ers to re-examine their thinking during the Religious Emphasis Conference. This spring Jesse Ziegler, professor of mental hygiene at Bethany, and Raymond Hatch, pro- fessor of psychology at Michigan State, were the visiting leaders in a conference on mental health. Haroutunian stresses theo-ccntric world. Hutchinson urges UN support. Hall pleads for religion in politics. Haroutunian advises Ministry Fellowship. Students are taught metal ivork. Don Snider gets an idea. The committee plans the party. Prof. Allen gives some instruction. P. romoted u f ec i onPe erence Following the inspiration of several M.C. students who attended a Rec-Lab at New Windsor the Christmas of 1949, the MCA spon- sored Manchester ' s first all-school Philosophy of Recreation Conference. One of the leaders for this conference was Don Snider, Youth Director of the Church of the Brethren, who spoke in chapel and directed classes in leadership training. Song leader and instructor in camping was Edythe Weaver, Director of Religious Activities at the Chicago First Church of the Brethren. Bob Tully, coach of Bethel College, Kansas, led classes in social planning and directed the big Saturday night party. Mary Yeatter, wife of the new college treasurer, helped M.C. students learn the rudi- ments of leather and metal work. Campus leaders were Max Allen and his assist- ants who gave instructions in weaving, decorat- ing and other crafts. Coach Harry Moore taught classes in quiet and active games. 124 MCA writes letters to Washington. BVSers learn about crafts IRC sponsors clothing drive. MCSC com in it fee spearheads drive. i lnclertahed f roiectd A vital part of the MCA ' s program is to find outlets for the students ' desires to serve others. During the summer months many worked in international work-camps, hospitals, underprivi- leged communities of voluntary service. Others served as pastors and assistant pastors in assigned churches. Many others worked diligently in their home communities. Upon returning to school, individuals, cells and organizations found time to help the local church program, to send workers to regional churches, to sponsor clothing drives, to send CARE packages, to write letters to Congress, and in general, to help others. An important part of the service program was the Manchester Community Chest Drive which divided its total proceeds so that 60 per cent went to the World Student Service Fund, 25 per cent went to the aid of local foreign students, 5 per cent to the Japanese Christian University, 5 per cent to the National Student Service and Scholarship Fund for Negroes and 5 per cent to be determined. Members of the committee were Bob Neher, Dale Blough, Jane Benner, Ed Owen, Tim Rieman, Jean Hazzard and Dale Barnard. 125 Worship center represents highest good. The retreat comes to an end. Chapel worship β€” the Hands of God. A cell group searches. Arid5 VUordkip J- i roaramd ' 9 The heart of the religious program is the encouraging of worship experiences. Such is the purpose of the Wednesday chapel which has provided such meaningful programs as the Hands of God. The Church School, too, offers an opportunity to find God through wor- ship. The other aspects of the worship experience enter many different parts of the students ' activities. The MCA attempted to encourage the cell movement, so that Manchester College us- ually had ten to fifteen groups of students meeting together in common concern. During the year there were six retreats spon- sored by the MCA, which many community members attended for the serenity and quietness of a week end away from the hurry of regular college life. Besides the regular worship programs spon- sored by the other MCA organizations, there were student planned meditations in the chapel every Monday and Wednesday evening from Thanksgiving to Easter. 126 o -or dinettes ezDeputati mi A traditional and very important activity of Manchester College is the deputation program. It serves to give the churches of the Central Region some stimulating programs and at the same time gives the student an opportunity to develop talents in several phases of church lead- ership. An attempt was made this year to decrease the number of journeys and increase the quality of the work. To administer the program the MCA Uond appointed a committee headed by Henry Campbell. Assisting him were Joyce Snyder, in charge of personnel, Jim Slabaugh, treasurer, and Ruth Graham, worship advisor. The types of services included recreational programs, forums, and discussions. These pro- grams were concerned with such topics as Abundant Living , The Simple Life , Is Peace Possible? and Prayer, the Mightiest Force in the World. Student speaker urges peace on earth. W orship center is supplied. Dep team leads song-fest. Cabinet selects dep groups. 127 MINISTRY FELLOWSHIP, Back row: D. Leiter, A. Huston, J. Horning, D. Ritchey, M. Mow, S. Rodda, L. Wong, R. Miller, A. Hunn, R. Mclnnis, J. Tomlonson, P. Ritchey, D. Brightbill Row two: E. Kintner, D. Kettering, R. Hess, F. Cripe, D. Ulmer, D. Sollenberger, H. Campbell, O. Mason, E. Traughber, R. Keiser, M. Beeghley, J. Slabaugh, R. Sappington Front row: J. Hoff, J. Snyder, S. Williams, L. Horning, D. Traughber, M. Teeter, N. Sullivan, L. Racop, G. Doerschuk, A. Newcomer, K. Fike, B. Bright, J. Miller CHURCH SCHOOL CABINET, Bob Keller, Bob Wagoner, Elma Lu Paxton V IHinistru reilowship (church School v T The Student Ministers of previous years was expanded to take in all those interested in Christian Service. The various activities were planned by a cabinet led by Al Huston, assisted by Larry Wong, vice-president, Merrill Mow, secretary-treasurer, and Lois Horning, MCA representative. The Manchester College Church School fur- nished the students with an opportunity to worship God, find fellowship with other stu- dents, to be instructed in Biblical matters and discuss current problems and events. Bob Wagoner headed the cabinet. 128 msm The Church of the Brethren Youth Fellowship was that arm of the MCA which furnished a vital relationship for the Brethren students. The varied Sunday evening programs included out- ings, parties, visits to faculty homes and sing- spirations. Jane Burkholder was president and Don Royer served as adult advisor. The Methodist Student Movement functioned as a Sunday evening fellowship group for the many Methodist students. Their program in- cluded hayrides, wiener roasts, discussions, lec- tures, inspirational worships, and sings. Pat Conner was president and the Rev. D. Charles Elson served as adult advisor. CBYF, Back row: Harold Heeter, Donald Royer, Kath- leen Fike, Wilbur McFadden Front row. Jane Burk- holder, Joan George, Doro- thy Rinehart, Claire Stine. Mary Moyer, Betty Cool MSM, Don Mosher, Spen- cer Rodda, Muriel Morey, Pat Conner, Bob Weimer, Doris Kinzie, Vera Winger, Kath- ryn Daugherty, Rev. D. Charles Elson 129 Kennedy wins a high jump I Vlen ol muscle balance brawn and brain with to produce a co-ordinated athletic proaram .... proa Fans observe the game ( adebali 50 ? Zenith of 1949-50 sports activities was the sharing of the Hoosier College Conference baseball championship with Taylor Univer- sity. The Spartan diamond nine won 13 and lost 3 games during the season. The wins were over Indiana Tech, 3-2 and 8-1; Rose Poly, 15-6; Huntington, 13-2, 10-4 and 7-0; Franklin, 9-0; Anderson, 6-4 and 9-6; Earlham, 7-4; Tri-State, 12-4; Can- terbury, 7-6; and Indiana Central, 6-3. Defeats came from Franklin and Hanover, each 10-8; and Taylor, 13-12. BASEBALL, Back row: G. Bryant, W. Beck, R. Capin, D. Hostetler, W. Garner, W. Robinson, P. McPherson Row two: D. McKee, W. Puterbaugh, L. Fasick, A. Meyer, C. Petry, A. Deeter Front row: A. Windmiller, R. Rolston, B. Butts, S. Miller, J. Cook, H. Matthews 132 Jrack 50 Construction of a home track gave Spartan thinlies a place to run last spring, but the squad could win only one meet on the new oval. Ted Eilts, miler, and Myron Kennedy, broad jumper, were the consistent winners for MC. By the end of the season, the Spartans had won two meets, lost five and placed ninth in the HCC. Wins were from Indiana Central, 73-58; and Huntington, 78-25. Losses were to Can- terbury, 86-45; Ball State 149 ' j, Taylor 42 ' 4, MC 30; Taylor, 79-52; Anderson, 71-60; Valparaiso, 67-64. . TRACK, Back row: D. Lozier, E. Mills, T. Eilt G. Bryant, H. Moore Row two: R. Lutey, B. Farrar, C. Sands, R. Walt L. Bussert, J. Garver Front row: G. Hedges, E. Petrie, G. Sheller, R. Ward, M. Brand, M. Kennedy, D. Mosher, G. Pickens 133 v , s ... 1 TENNIS, Back row: Coach William Sayers, Bernie Blough, Dennis Rupel, Mar- lin Weaver Front row: John Garver, Bob Vore, Herb E r b a u g h , Don Collins CT7 u Β Unpredictable weather and an almost con- stant rain produced a belated tennis season last spring. But despite the poor practice conditions, the Spartan racketeers won two of their sched- uled contests and tied another. The net men showed their might in the Hoosier College Con- ference tournament, placing fourth. Scores of the games were: MC 4, 4β€” Indiana Tech 5, 5; MC 3, Tri State 6; MC 6, 6β€” Taylor 1,0; MC 1, Earlham 6; MC 3, Indiana Central 4; MC 3, Anderson 3; MC 1, Ball State 6. Future plans occupy much of the current talking time in tennis circles. With the con- struction of the new Winger Memorial Arts building, only two of the tennis courts remain in useable condition, thus greatly curtailing Manchester ' s favorite campus sport. Plans call for the construction of at least four new all- weather courts at the present location of the trailer-town. Proceeds from the Manchester- McPherson basketball tournament started the new tennis ball rolling. 134 CROSS-COUNTRY. Back run-: Clyde Ploughe, Pat Allen, Frank Algate, Max Brand, Harry Moore Front row: Fred Schrocder, Don Shafer, Ernest Conley, Dick Ward CHEERLEADERS Jim Shoemaker Barbara Good Norma Barnhizer Clyde Alban .- ' Jr .-.β€’ r Β£jw -v β–  L ro33-( ountt Β₯ Although they didn ' t win a complete meet, the Manchester cross-country team kept trying and were able to take a seventh place in the Hoosier College Conference cross-country meet run at Earlham. Don Shafer proved to be the most consistent of the runners. Eight of the varsity harriers received their major awards. The team ' s five losses were to Taylor, 18-37 and 24-31; Ander- son, 21-34; Earlham, 27-28; and Indiana Cen- tral, 17-39. s neerleacli erd All four classes were represented on the 1950- 5 1 cheerleading team composed of freshman Barbara Good, Ashland, O.; sophomore Clyde Alban, LaPorte, Ind.; junior Jim Shoemaker, Dayton, O.; and senior Norma Lou Barnhizer, Cicero, Ind. The three upperclassmen were members of last year ' s tonsil-squad. In all types of weather β€” and it got a little rough toward the end of the football season β€” the four were there to lead the yells. 135 FOOTBALL, Back row: T. Heery, H. Heisey, P. Hoffman, R. Bowman Row fire: J. Klinger, W. Puterbaugh, R. Sollenberger, G. Fogle, J. Grady, L. Brubaker, G. Bryant, T. Swantner, L. Whitefield Row four: P. McPherson, R. Shock, C. Caton, J. Heeter, M. Updike, R. Supinger, J. Walton, J. Tennant, H. Moore, W. Sayers Row three: C. Christon, A. Schubert, J. Zeman, J. Amick, K. Rouch, J. Minear, W. Goshert, J. Maphis, J. Beam Row two: E. Umfnel, D. Schwalm, K.. Langston, G. Wort, G. Denlinger, B. Butts, L. Blocher, R. Bauer, J. Landing Front rote: J. Fading, R. Shearer, C. Sands, R. Bauer, R. Hoover, R. Elsmere, J. Gillin, B. Olinger, B. Farrar rootbuit OUTSTANDING LETTERMEN The 1950 gridiron Spartans sparkled with a number of outstanding football personalities. A three year veteran of Manchester grid play, Carter Caton, was chosen by his teammates to captain the squad. Caton received deserved off- campus recognition also, placing on the defense platoon of the Indiana inter-collegiate all-state team, as well as being named to the Hoosier College Conference second team. Jim Minear, a freshman playing his first year of college football, was honored by teammates as the Most Valuable Player. Jim was one of the top leather-toters in the state until he was forced to the sidelines by an injury suffered in the Huntington game. However, in seven games he carried the ball 123 times with an average of 6.39 yards per try. Another high mark in the state was his 42 points made on seven touch- downs. He was named to the HCC second team. 136 Four-year lcttermen who will graduate are Carter Caton, Bob Bauer, Dean Schwalm and Eldon Ummel. Other major letter winners who will graduate are Dick Bauer, Carl Sands, Gene Wort and Gale Denlinger. Other outstanding freshmen included Budd Olinger, who carried the ball nearly 150 times, averaging 4.6 yards per try; Jim Klinger, who didn ' t play until the final game of the season when he carried the ball 2 5 times, averaging 7.8 yards; and Bill Goshert, who called the plays and was key man on defense and offense. COACHES Paul McPherson completed his second year as football coach at Manchester last fall. His charges, in winning three games and dropping six, passed last year ' s 1-6-1 mark. McPherson is a graduate of Tarkio, Mo., col- lege, and recently received his master ' s degree from Indiana University. At Tarkio he was a four-year member of the football, basketball, track and swimming teams as well as a two-year member of the tennis, boxing and wrestling squads. After graduation, he played semi-pro basketball, baseball and softball. Also in his second year at Manchester is athletic director Harry Moore. In actual sports participation he is track coach and assistant foot- ball and basketball coach. An athlete at Wittenberg College, Moore ob- tained his M.A. degree from Ohio State. Prior to coming to Manchester, Moore was superin- tendent of schools at Bradford, Ohio. Another assistant on the gridiron is tennis coach and business professor, William Sayers. He is also a two-year man, having served as freshman football coach. John Henderson, graduate of Juniata College and Michigan State College, assisted Coach McPherson in the backfield. Dick Shock, STUDENT MANAGER COACHESβ€” Harry Moore, William Sayers, John Henderson, Paul McPherson 1 Jack Beam ' - - . H. ? β–  - Bob Hoover Bob Bauer Strange as it may seem, last fall ' s gridders had everything they needed to win games but the scoring punch. Statistically, the Spartans won all but two games out of nine. MANCHESTER 13 TAYLOR 26 The Spartans first bared their teeth against Taylor, who doubled the Black and Gold score by winning 26-13. But the Spartans had proved their stuff by racking up 13 first downs to Taylor ' s 11, and out-rushing them in yardage, 204-134. MANCHESTER ANDERSON 7 Manchester ' s only blank of the season was suffered at the hands of HCC foe, Anderson, who spilled the Spartans, 7-0. It was also one of the two games in which the winners out-did Manchester in statistics, Anderson going for 210 yards and 1 1 first downs as compared to Man- chester ' s 173 yards and 8 first downs. MANCHESTER 20 FRANKLIN 12 Finally getting into the swing of things, Manchester clinched a victory over Franklin, 20-12, when Dick Supinger threw a touchdown pass to Dick Bauer, then kicked the extra point. Dick Bauer Bud Farrar 138 kl Jack Amick Buddy Butts ' Moose Sands Jim Tennant Dean Schwalm MANCHESTER 27 INDIANA CENTRAL 3 1 The largest statistical margin of the year was piled up by the golden warriors when Indiana Central beat them 31-27 at Indianapolis. The Spartans played circles around the winners, get- ting 19 first downs on 422 yards while IC had 1 1 first downs on 25 8 yards. MANCHESTER 13 HANOVER 34 Hanover pulled away from a 7-7 tie at the end of the first quarter and a 13-13 deadlock in the fourth quarter to beat Manchester 34-13 in an amazing fourth canto recovery. MANCHESTER 20 EARLHAM Beneath sunny skies and before a packed stadium, Manchester whitewashed Earlham 20-0. A touchdown by Supinger and two by Minear kept the Homecoming crowd cheering. MANCHESTER 27 HUNTINGTON 18 Coming back immediately to make it two victories in a row, Manchester beat Huntington 27-18 in a mid-week game. Hit a fter he crossed the goal-line, Jim Minear, Manchester ' s leading ground-gainer, was put on the injured list for the rest of the season. His 3 3 yard run, however, produced the winning TD. Jim Landing Gene Wort t 140 Ks jr. ' ' , J β€’β– β–  vΒ - Carter Caton BaknwE Bob Elsmere Eldon Ummel 11% iMi ttjSJHgH| ' Β£.β– . ftmSSf .O- ?Β£ : Β β–  Jack Gillin John Maphis Budd Olinger MANCHESTER 6 WILMINGTON 20 Manchester lost to Wilmington both in score and on paper. The 20-6 game was a good one to see, even though there were few to watch it. The season ' s first snow-storm hit northern Indiana that day, turned the playing field into a mass of mud and chilled the Breakaway crowd that braved the cold. MANCHESTER 38 NORTH CENTRAL 52 Closing their season against North Central College of Naperville, 111., the Spartans really let themselves go, steamrolling to 24 first downs on 506 yards. It wasn ' t enough to win the game, however, and North Central won by the biggest score of the year, 52-3 8. North Central had 20 first downs and a 462 yardage gain. The season ' s record of three wins and six losses, though not impressive, still tripled the previous year ' s victory count. Keith Rouch Gale Denlinger 142 ff . β€’ ' -- 4J -.Β« Bill Gosherc Jim Minear Dick Supinger W ! FOOTBALL NOTES INDIVIDUAL RECORDS At the conclusion of the footba! following awards were presented: the Jackets (6 inch letters) : Robert Bauer, Carter Caton, Dean Schwalm, Eldon Ummel. Sweaters (8 inch letters): Gale Denlinger, Keith Langston, Keith Rouch, Dick Shearer. Sweaters (2 chevrons): Jack Beam, Jack Gillin, James Landing, Richard Supinger, James Walton. Eight inch letters (2 chevrons): Richard Bauer, John Maphis, Carl Sands. Eight inch letters (3 chevrons): Budman Farrar, Jack Grady. Eight inch letters: Jack Amick, Lynn Blocher, Christ Christon, William Goshert, Robert Hoover, James Minear, Budd dinger, James Tennant, Joe Zeman, Eugene Wort, Buddy Butts, Glen Bryant. Four inch letter: William Puterbaugh. Times Carried Gain Loss TD Minear 123 786 38 7 dinger 148 680 68 4 Goshert 32 100 21 3 Supinger 39 152 61 2 Maphis 35 137 1 2 Beam 12 10 36 Klinger 25 195 18 3 Christon 3 117 Blocher 15 47 4 1 Amick 10 47 Fading 1 D. Bauer 1 Total 442 2165 254 24 FOOTBALL STATISTICS MC Opts. First downs passing 23 31 First downs rushing 97 80 First downs penalty 6 2 Net gain rushing 2165 1661 Pass attempts 82 103 Passes completed 32 49 Passes intercepted 12 13 Yards gained passing 553 857 Punts 55 42 Fumbles 37 23 Yards lost, penalty 305 405 Net yard gain 2423 2113 TRACK RECORDS The following records were established on the new Manchester track in 1950: Event Record Holder Mark Mile run Eilts, MC 5:00 2 -mile run Eilts, MC 11:14.5 8 80 dash Thallman, Valpo 2:14 440 dash Petrie, MC 56.3 220 dash Williams, AC 22.8 100 dash Williams, AC 10.2 L. hurdles Smith, AC 25.0 H. hurdles Smith, AC 16.0 Mile relay Valpo 3 49.2 High jump McGrath, IC 5 ' 8 Bd. jump Smith, AC 22 ' 63 4 Pole vault Garver, MC 11 ' 10 Discus Sands, MC 121 Vi Javelin Piper, MC 164 ' Shot put Amling, Valpo 39 ' 5 4 144 VARSITY BASKETBALL, Back row: Coach McPherson, Don McKee, Gene Plunkett, Lowell Barnhart, Paul Prough, Carl Sands, Don Hyde, Coach Moore Front row: Myron Kennedy, Don Lozier, Harold Heeter, Bill Goshert, Gene Pickens, Claire Stine, Paul Hoffman (ISasketbcill With six major award winners, Sands, Lozier, Irick, McKee, Piper and Hyde, returning this year, the Spartan basketball team had high hopes for the ' 50-51 season. Manchester opened with a victory march, felling the Huntington Forest- ers, 51-48, on the home floor on November 28. Four days later the Spartans won again when they played a fast, aggressive type of ball and tromped the host Indiana Tech team, 90-61. Dick Piper set the scoring pace with 30 points. Basketball spirits across the whole campus were raised to unprecedented pre-game heights as the game with Western Michigan drew near. Though the Broncos had no surprise attack on this December 7, the big school competition succeeded in staving off Manchester ' s valiant teamwork. Piper scored 23 points and Carl Moose Sands hit for 21, but the Spartans were edged 70-71. This defeat was followed by a 92-53 trounc- ing two days later by the Indiana State Teachers. However, December 12 found the team re- bounding to their home court with a 77-65 Hoosier College Conference victory over Can- terbury, Don Hyde leading the team with 29 points. The Spartans set confident sights on the two- game tourney December 15, 16, with the sister college from McPherson, Kansas. But the west- erners, led by the Blickenstaff brothers, were not to be denied. The Bulldogs played it cool, kept a tight defense, and took advantage of the Spartans ' poor rebounding and inability at the free-throw line to win both tilts, 54-5 8 and 53-59. 145 Paul Hoffman Bill Goshert Don McKee A December 21 game with the Bobcats from Peru, Nebraska, soured the Spartans on the West. The home team suffered their third straight defeat 69-73, giving Manchester a mediocre pre-holiday record of three wins and five losses. The New Year brought in 1951, but little in the way of MC hardwood victories. The vacation found ace-scorer Dick Piper among the large number of college men who enlisted in a post-Christmas rush for the Air Force. And in ten games played from January 6 through Feb- ruary 13, only one was a victory for the Spartans, the January 9 repeat win over Huntington, 77-70. The home team tried various starting lineups; Sands became the team ' s leading scorer; and the style of play became slower and more deter- mined. But continued free-throw misses, second half slumps, and the opposing teams kept Man- chester out of the winning column and skidded the Spartans into the HCC cellar. Losses suffered were to Hanover 56-82, Indi- ana Central 69-84 and 47-57, Franklin 5 3-63 and 68-8 5, Taylor 75-90 and 70-79, Ball State 43-57, and Anderson 66-73. 146 1 Carl Sands Harold Heeter Don Hyde Sparked by Sands ' 21 markers, the Spartans snapped their long losing streak and gained a post-Valentine 65-58 victory February 15 at Ball State, setting the long-standing basketball rivalry now at 28 wins for Manchester to 30 for Ball State. MC took a 72-49 leap out of the HCC cellar as they swamped Earlham on February 17, pour- ing in the shots to pull away from a 25-33 half- time deficit to win by 23 points. The spirited offense was led by Hyde ' s 18 tallies and the whole team saw action. The hardwood finale with Anderson made it three straight victories in six days β€” the best record of the season as MC thumped the Ravens 59- 5 5. Close all the way, the Spartans tucked the game away in the win column in spite of continued misses at the keyhole, hitting only 40 per cent of the free throws. The team thus finished with a sweet taste in their mouths, elected Carl Sands the season ' s captain, worked their way from the HCC cellar, gloried in the three eleventh hour hoop wins, and salvaged the cage season with 7 victories against 14 defeats. 147 s 14 S β–  h I n G 13 4 Claire Stine Don Lozier B TEAM, Back row: Lowell Barnhart, Gene Plunkett, Forest Dunnuck, Art Hunn, Coach Glade Weldy Front row: David Wheeler, Myron Kennedy, Eldred Weddle, Jim Minear B TEAM Manchester ' s whole basketball force was so hard hit by the draft, enlistments and drops that in mid-season the frosh and B teams were merged into one B team. Together they bested their senior Spartan teammates by winning over half of their basketball skirmishes with college B teams and numerous independent teams. Con- sistent high scorers were Gene Plunkett, Lowell Barnhart and Forest Dunnuck. Granting that the draft won ' t halt inter-collegiate sports next year, Manchester ' s coaches are expecting valuable varsity replacements from this season ' s B squad. INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Name Yr. Games Points Ave. Sands Sr. 21 283 13.5 Hyde Sm. 19 245 12.9 Piper Jr. 8 143 17.9 Goshert Fr. 19 132 6.9 Heeter Jr. 21 123 5.9 Hoffman Fr. 20 115 5.8 Pickens Sm. 15 85 5.7 Prough Sm. 13 65 5.0 McKee Jr. 10 53 5.3 Stine Jr. 15 40 2.7 Lozier Jr. 14 39 2.8 Barnhart Fr. 4 10 2.5 148 Lowell Barnhart Paul Proush Gene Pickens VARSITY BASKETBALL RECORD MC MC MC. MC. MC MC MC MC MC MC 51 Huntington 48 90 Indiana Tech 61 70 Western Mich. 71 53 Indiana State 92 Canterbury 65 54 McPherson, Kan. 5 8 53 McPherson, Kan. 59 69 Peru, Nebr 73 56 Hanover 82 Huntington 70 MC 69 MC 53 MC 75 MC 43 MC 70 MC 66 MC 68 MC 47 MC 63 MC... ...72 MC 59 Indiana Central 84 Franklin 63 Taylor 90 Ball State 57 Taylor 79 Anderson 73 Franklin 85 Indiana Central 57 Ball State 58 Earlham 49 Anderson 55 149 I kotoaraphu S reditd . . . . Winners in the 1951 Aurora Photo Contest were: First β€” Don Reckeweg β€” Camp Mack Boat Race page 75 Second β€” Gene Tovey β€” Carter ' s Sub page 93 Third β€” Norma Sullivan β€” Morning Meditations page 128 Honorable Mention β€” Norma Sullivan β€” Crowd page 130 Honorable Mention β€” Glen Bryant β€” Roommates page 76 Photos of the following contestants appear in the 1951 Aurora: Dale Hill, pages 22, 46; Don Collins, pages 22, 52; Don Reckeweg, pages 46, 77; Glen Bryant, page 46; Norma Sullivan, pages 5 3, 63, 143. Division pages: Large division page pictures were taken by Bill Meitzler, page 3; Jobie Riley, page 131; Lloyd M. Hoff, pages 7, 121; James Davis, Jr., pages 5, 9, 65, 79, 107. General credits: Current event photos on pages 2 and 3 were furnished by Wide World Photos, Inc. Harris Ewing Studios furnished the portrait of A. J. Brumbaugh on page 4. 150 srcicuitu and taff eJ-Ji i reel or, i, Β₯ Allen, Max, 607 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind. 15 Abele, Ernests, 403 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind. 17, 84 Ashley, Esther, 705 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. Baer, Dorothy, 702 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind 20, 117 Barnhart, Murl, 704 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15 Barr, Evelyn, 601 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 20 Beery, Isabel, 907 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind 17,81,99 Bollinger, R. V., R. R. 2, North Manchester, Ind 14, 19 Book, Howard, 701 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind 19 Bowman, Paul, 1209 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. Coblentz, Ruth, 1006 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind 15,97 Conine, Herman, 509 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. Conkling, Fred, 722 N. Mill St., North Manchester, Ind. 20 15 Cussen, Robert, 605 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind Dare, Irma, 702 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind 17, 99 Dejong, Martina, 702 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind. Dodrill, Jane, 503 E. Third, North Manchester, Ind. 20 Domer, Maxine, 609 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind 20 Doner, Alice, 906 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 19 Dotterer, John, 404 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind. 17, 84, 87 Dunbar, Anna, 511 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 20 Eikenberry, A. R., 606 E. Seventh St., North Manchester, Ind. 14, 19, 94 Flueckiger, S. L., 1207 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15, 114, 116, 118, 119 Garver, Earl, 703 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 12,14,18 Halladay, Paul, 1204 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15 Hamer, O. S., East St., North Manchester, Ind. 18 Hipskind, Mrs. Homer, Wabash, Ind Henderson, John, Calvin Ulrey Hall, North Manchester, Ind. 19, 20, 94, 137 HofF, Lloyd, 718 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15,83,115,117 Hoffman, Arthur, 1116 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15, 90 Holcombe, Jean, 1007 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 15,97 Holsinger, Clyde, 310 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind 16 Holl, Carl W., 718 Bond St., North Manchester, Ind 14, 17 Johnson, Dorothy, 704 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 18,94 Jorgensen, LaVernia, 502 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 17, 98 Keim, C. Ray, 701 E. Miami St., North Manchester, Ind. 18 Keller, Paul, 504 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind. 16, 81, 8 3, 101, 122 Kimmel, Mildred, 612 N. Walnut St., North Manchester, Ind. 20 Leasure, Nettie, 502 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 19,96 Lehman, Galen, 601 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 151 Little, Orrel, 108 S. Market St., North Manchester, Ind 16 McPherson, Paul, 408 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind... 17, 132, 136, 137, 145 Mathis, Jeff, 505 Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind 20 Merritt, Neal R., 508 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind 18, 81, 92 Miller, R. H., 606 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind. 19 Miller, Wayne, 502 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind 16, 83, 101 Moore, Harry, 603 E. Miami St., North Manchester, Ind. 17, 133, 135, 136, 137, 145 Morris, C. S., East St., North Manchester, Ind. 14 Muir, Gladdys, 706 Bond St., North Manchester, Ind 18 Neher, O. W., 608 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind 17, 93, 94 Netzley, Lulu, Oakwood Hall, North Manchester, Ind. 21, 81 Niswander, Emerson, 1005 Harrison, North Manchester, Ind. 17 Noffsinger, Paul, 721 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind 21 Painter, Virginia, 502 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind 21 Reed, F. E., 715 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind. 16, 90 Rieman, T. Wayne, 611 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 19, 81, 122 Royer, Donald, 502 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind 18, 129 Sanger, Lola, 601 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 21 Sayers, William, 1204 N. Wayne St., North Manchester, Ind 18, 89, 134, 136, 137 Schutz, Salena, 503 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 21 Schwalm, V. F., 701 Bond St., North Manchester, Ind 10, 11, 14 Scribner, Violet, R. R. 3, North Manchester, Ind 21 Speicher, Genita, 602 N. Bond St., North Manchester, Ind 16, 116 Stinebaugh, Vernon, 701 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind. 16, 114, 117 VonEhr, Jack, Bond St., North Manchester, Ind 18 Wampler, Sadie, 609 College Ave., North Manchester, Ind 16, 83 Warvel, Ethel, 601 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind 21 Weimer, Harry, 719 N. Sycamore St., North Manchester, Ind. 17, 86 Willhoyt, Matalea, Oakwood Hall, North Manchester, Ind 21 Yeatter, David, 508 E. Ninth St., North Manchester, Ind. 14 Yinger, Eleanor, 505 Miami St., North Manchester, Ind 16, 83, 100, 102 152 student Direct irecior Β₯ Abbott, Wilbur, Fulton, Ind Adams, Phyllis, 120 No. Vine St., Elkhart, Ind 48,96 Alban, Clyde, 3 14 J St., La Porte, Ind 48,96, 100, 135 Alber, Faith, R. R. No. 2, Walton, Ind. 48, 98 Algate, Frank, 559 E. Greenlawn, Lansing, Mich. 39, 135 Alger, Morris, R. R. 1, Box 184, Michigan City, Ind. 48,96 Allen, Patrick, No. Webster, Ind 48, 135 Amick, Jack, 593 Miami, Wabash, Ind 56, 136, 139 Amstutz, David, Marshallville, Ohio 25, 110, 116 Anderson, Virginia, Hoytville, Ohio 56,96, 108, 114 Anstine, Lowell, 351 W. Maple, Hartville, Ohio 25,81,94 Anstine, Ruth, 351 W. Maple, Hartville, Ohio 55,56 Armstrong, Charles, Akron, Ind. 56, 101, 118 Armstrong, Mary, 178 N. Huntington, Wabash, Ind. Ayers, Harmon, R. R. 4, Plymouth Ind Backus, Ronald, 612 Delaware Ave., Dayton 5, Ohio 39, 90 Baer, Richard, Idaville, Ind 39 Bagwell, Mary, 610 N. Front, No. Manchester, Ind 39,99,100 Bailey, Ralph, Pierceton, Ind 25 Bak, Martina, 410 Maryland St., Bremen, Ind 56, 88, 102, 108 Baker, Alfred, Box 15, Sidney, Ind. 48, 89 Baker, James, R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind 56, 86, 108 Baldwin, Howard, Claypool, Ind 48 Bantz, Marcielle, 43 1 E. Grand, Decatur, 111 39,96,98 Barkdoll, Lois, Copemish, Mich 48, 108 Barnard, Dale, 707 Bridge, Portland, Mich 48, 83, 101 Barnes, Richard, 215 E. Silver, Bluffton, Ind Bamhart, Lowell, Syracuse, Ind 56, 145, 148, 149 Barnhart, Marvin, No. Hampton, Ohio 25, 105 Barnhart, Philip, 5702 E. Michigan, Indianapolis, Ind 39, 84, 108 Barnhizer, Norma, R. R. 1, Cicero, Ind 23, 25, 81, 98, 104, 135 Barr, Francis, 512 Eleventh Ave. So., Nampa, Idaho 25,84 Bauer, Richard, Walnut St., Celina, Ohio 25, 81,96, 136, 138 Bauer, Robert E., 113 N. Oak, Columbia City, Ind 56, 116, 119 Bauer, Robert G., Celina, Ohio 25, 136, 138 Beach, Mary Lou, 1240 Arnold, Akron, Ohio 39,110 Beach, Paul, 182 Canton Rd., Akron, Ohio 25, 110 Beahm, Harriet, 404 S. Homan, Chicago 24, 111 25,92, 122 Beam, Jack, 820 Leland Ave., Dayton, Ohio 136, 138 Becker, Myrtis, 319 James, Elkhart, Ind 56, 96, 116, 119 Beckley, Wilma, R. R. 2, Peru, Ind 25, 108 Beeghley, Morris, 1204 Seneca Dr., Dayton, Ohio 48, 92, 128 Beeson, Rosalind, 120 J4 No. Main, Columbia City, Ind 48,89,108 Bellamy, Harold, Main St., Butler, Ind 48 Bender, Nancy, 293 Falls Ave., Wabash, Ind 48 Benner, Jane, R. R. 2, Logansport, Ind. ... 25, 83, 98, 100, 103 Berends, Kenneth, R. R. 2, Meddleville, Mich Bevington, Barbara, R. R. 3, Troy, Ohio 48,98 Biltz, Carole, R. R. 1, Warsaw, Ind 56, 108, 119 Binkley, Norma, 980 W. High, Lima, Ohio 56,96 Bird, William, 42 W. Maple, Wabash, Ind 25, 84, 105 Birzule, Baiba, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind 56 Bitzer, John, R. R. 1, Lagro, Ind 25, 86 Black, Robert, R. R. 1, Leesburg, Ind 48,84,88,119 Blackburn, Gladys, R. R., Hudson, Ind. 25 Blocher, Lynn, R. R. 4, Greenville, Ohio 56, 136 Blocher, Marjorie, R. R. 4, Greenville, Ohio 39,96,97,98,99,100 Blough, Bernard, Tabor, Iowa 39, 108, 134 Blough, Dale, Polo, 111 25,81,94,105,110 Blue, Larry, R. R. 4, Columbia City, Ind Bodenmiller, Barbara, 1303 South St., Piqua, Ohio 56, 96, 99 Bolinger, Gletha, 3 10 W. Main, Greenville, Ohio 56, 115 Bollinger, Helen, 3 14 S. Elmwood, Oak Park, 111 56, 108 Bollinger, John, R. R. 1, So. Whitley, Ind 48 Bollinger, L. Wade, East St., No. Manchester, Ind. 56, 108 Bollinger, Mary, R. R. 1, So. Whitley, Ind 48 Bollinger, W. Lynn, East St., No. Manchester, Ind. 25 Borland, Charles, 883 Sheridan Rd., Marion, Ohio 56, 87 Bormuth, Jack, 1114 Wayne, No. Manchester, Ind 48, 101, 102 Borneman, Alene, R. R. 1, Leaf River, 111 48, 88, 108 Boswell, Delores, Denver, Ind 56, 88,96 Bowers, Elmer, College P. O., No. Manchester, Ind 25, 84 Bowman, Mack, 837 S. Humphrey Ave., Oak Park, Illinois 39,94 Bowman, Mary, 244 S. East Ave., Oak Park, Illinois 39,81,104,105 Bowman, Nancy, Weaver Ave., East Petersburg, Pennsylvania 39, 94 Bowman, Richard, Middlebury, Ind. 56, 108, 136 Bowman, Wilbur, R. R. 1, New Paris, Ind. 39, 84, 88, 89, 103 Boyts, William, R. R. 4, Goshen, Ind 56 Bradway, Julia, R. R. 5, Warsaw, Ind 56, 89,98, 108 Brand, Max, Ashley, Ind 39, 133, 135 Brandts, Jerome, Mercelina Hotel, Celina, Ohio 25 Bright, Beverly, R. R. 1, Vandalia, Ohio 48,92, 108, 119, 128 Bright, Don, R. R. 3, Arcanum, Ohio 39,94,96, 103 Bright, Joan, 418 Waverly, Royal Oak, Mich 56,88,96 Brightbill, David, 23 S. Edison Ave., Elgin, III 25,92, 105, 128 Brill, Wilfred, 415 No. Oak, Albion, Ind 39,84,87,88 Brooke, Cyril, Claypool, Ind 48 Brooks, Margaret, Vyara, Surat District, Bombay Prov., India 48,81,92,103,108,114,117 Brower, Patricia, R. R. 1, Ludlow Falls, Ohio 56,92,98 Brower, Vera, R. R. 1, Macy Ind 56,94, 108 Brown, Roger, R. R. 7, Columbia City, Ind 56 Brubaker, W. Leroy, 50 S. Du Bois, Elgin, 111. .39, 136, 140 Brumbaugh, James, R. R. 1, Markle, Ind 39, 89,96, 102, 110, 116, 119 Bryant, Glen, 1002 Franklin Ave., Rochester, Ind 39, 132, 133, 136 Bryant, Wendell, Pierceton, Ind 39 Buck, Pauline, 4604 Euhelberger Ave., Dayton, Ohio 56 Burger, Dorothy, New Paris, Ind 40,96,99 Burkholder, Jane, 16609 Ernadale Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 40,99, 129 Burroughs, Wilma, R. R. 1, Argos, Ind 56,99 Burrous, Joyce, R. R. 4, Peru, Ind Bushong, Ralph, Syracuse, Ind 56,108,110,116,118 Bussert, Loren, 731 23rd St., South Bend, Ind 48, 133 Butt, Bernard, 344 Columbia, Peru, Ind 56,88, 108, 118 Butterbaugh, Doris, 1104 So. East Ave., Oak Park, III 40 Butterbaugh, Patricia, R. R. 1, Poplar Creek, Rd., Vandalia, Ohio 48,99, 100, 108 Butts, Buddy, R. R. 2, Akron, Ind 40, 132, 136, 139 153 Byerly, Patricia, R. R. 6, Byerly Hills, Peoria, 111 56 Calbeck, Richard, Cromwell, Ind Calhoun, Clara Marie, State Street, South Whitley, Ind 27,96 Campbell, David, R. R. 2, Center Point, Ind 56 Campbell, Henry, R. R. 2, Center Point, Ind 27, 128 Campleijohn, Kathleen, Mentone, Ind Carbaugh, Blair, Waterside, Penna 56 Carnes, Helen, Poneto, Ind 27,96,100,102 Carter, Rose, R. R. 3, Monticello, Ind 27 Cassiday, Arlie, R. R. 2, Gladwin Co., Mich Caton, Carter, R. R. 1, Goshen, Ind 27, 136, 141 Cavaghan, Barry, 445 W. Amerige Ave., Fullerton, Calif 40, 92 Chen, William, 3000 Dent Place, N.W., Washington, D. C 27,86,105 Cheng, Shirley, 3 021 Edwin Ave., Apt. 4 A Fort Lee, New Jersey 49,92,97 Cherry, Robert, R. R. 5, Wabash, Ind 56 Childs, Cora, R. R. 2, Box 4, Marion, Alabama 27,92 Childs, Jean, R. R. 2, Box 4, Marion, Alabama 57,92,98 Christon, Christ, 118 McDaniel St., Dayton, Ohio 57, 136 Cissner, Virginia, 794 W. Pearl St., Covington, Ohio 27 Clark, Richard, R. R. 2, Middleville, Mich 57 Clarke, Alice, 809 E. Main, Muncie, Ind 40,96 Claudio, Gilberto, 76 W. 92nd St., New York, New York 27,90 Clingenpeel, Theresa, R. R. 4, Box 152, Vienna, Virginia 57, 92, 108, 114 Coffman, Richard, Lincoln Way, Dalton, Ohio 40, 100, 102, 110, 118 Collins, Don, 324 E. Wayne St., Celina, Ohio 27, 108, 134 Colvin, Donald, 806 N. Main St., Salem, Ind 49 Conkling, Shirley, 722 No. Mill, No. Manchester, Ind 40,94, 103, 104 Conley, Ernest, R. R. 1, Pierceton, Ind. 57, 135 Conner, Patricia, R. R. 3, Peru, Ind 40,98, 110, 129 Cool, Betty, R. R. 3, Springfield, Ohio 27,97,99, 129 Cool, Rose Marie, Fifth Street, Auburn, Ind 57,96 Cooper, David, Mentone, Ind 57 Cooper, Jean, 1701 Newark, St. S., St. Petersburg, Fla 40 Coppock, Carl, 39 Virginia Ave., Dayton, Ohio 57, 108 Corson, Don, 1617 Prairie St., Elkhart, Ind 57, 102, 108 Costello, Philip, 125 E. Washington, Bluffton, Ind 27 Couser, Don, 52 3 3 Wilmington Ave., Dayton, Ohio Coy, Allan, 2021 Cardinal Ave., Dayton, Ohio ....57, 118 Craft, Donald, Ohio Street, Culver, Ind 40, 89 Crates, Gordon, Eleventh Street, Winona Lake, Ind 57,94 Cripe, Alvin, R. R. 3, Goshen, Ind 40 Cripe, Caroline, R. R. 3, Goshen, Ind 27, 100, 110, 118 Cripe, Dorothy, 504 First St., Wenatchee, Washington, 49,100,108,114,116 Cripe, Florian, 504 First St., Wenatchee, Washington 57,96, 108, 128 Crouse, William, 225 Cliff, Johnstown, Penna 27,90 Custer, Jane, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind 57,90 Daugherty, Kathryn, R. R. 5, Rensselaer, Ind 49, 97, 98, 103, 129 Davidson, Emerson, R. R. 2, Tipp City, Ohio 57, 108 Davis, Keith, R. R. 7, Box 304, Anderson, Ind. 49, 84, 87, 96 Davis, Lyle, R. R. 1, Hamilton, Ind 49 Dawald, Donna Lee, R. R. 1, Macy, Ind 57, 87, 108, 118 Deafenbaugh, Richard, 311 So. Columbia, Warsaw, Ind 94 Deaton, Donald, R. R. 2, Silver Lake, Ind 86 Deavel, Gary, Box 81, La Paz, Ind 40, 100, 108, 110, 114, 115, 119 De Bolt, Patricia, 3514 Maryland, Midland, Mich 57 Deeter, Allen, 1260 No. Main, Dayton, Ohio .47, 49, 92, 132 Deeter, Karolyn, 3 33 W. Fourth St., Greenville, Ohio 57,98, 108 Delk, Helen, 4125 Drummond, East Chicago, Ind 57 De Mo nd, Joyce, R. R. 2, Woodland, Mich 49 Denlinger, Gale, R. R. 10, Dayton, Ohio 27, 105, 136, 142 Dentler, Alice, 2739 Homer Ave., Elkhart, Ind 57 Dick, La Dean, R. R. 1, Ashley, Ind 27 Dilling, Kenneth, 2130 No. Clinton, Fort Wayne, Ind 40, 94 Dillman, Thomas, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind 49, 84, 87 Disler, Willis, 427 E. Rudisill Blvd., Fort Wayne, Ind Doerschuk, Gladys, R. R. 8, Canton, Ohio 40, 98, 103, 128 Doran, Marshall, Burket, Ind Dormire, Lex, Uniondale, Ind 27 Dotson, William, Sidney, Ind 40,90 Dougherty, Paul, R. R. 1, Bremen, Ind 57 Downing, Lloyd, 203 5 Taylor, Fort Wayne, Ind 27 Driver, Clifford, R. R. 5, Lima, Ohio Driver, Edward, 508 N. East, No. Manchester, Ind. 27 Dunnuck, Forest, R. R. 2, Etna Green, Ind 57, 87, 148 Dunten, Frances, Box 81, Huntertown, Ind 49,96 Dumbaugh, Jerry, 723 W. Hill, Wabash, Ind 103, 104 Durnbaugh, Mary Joan, R. R. 8, Box 289, Dayton, Ohio 57, 108 Eash, Carol, R. R. 1, Argos, Ind 49, 96 Eberly, Wayne, Brethren Service Center, New Windsor, Maryland 40, 101, 104, 105 Eberwein, Lowell, R. R. 2, Arcanum, Ohio 57, 88, 110 Ecker, John, R. R. 3, Walkerton, Ind Edwards, Wendell, 437 Dewey Ave., Goshen, Ind 40 Eiler, Paul, R. R. 2, Nampa, Idaho 49, 110 Elsmere, Robert, 4572 Pierce St., Gary, Ind 136, 141 Emmons, Don, Franklin St., Mentone, Ind 57 England, Gene, 402 So. Seventh, Girard, 111 27,94 England, Phyllis, 402 So. Seventh, Girard, 111. 57, 108, 118 Enyeart, Jane, 521 State St., Wabash, Ind 40, 119 Erbaugh, Herbert, R. R. 4, Box 200-1, Dayton, Ohio 29, 92, 134 Eshelman, Henry, 747 No. Cushing, South Bend, Ind 49 Fahs, Eugene, 222 So. Blair St., Virden, 111 57, 86, 88, 108 Fair, Thelma, R. R. 2, Franklin Grove, 111 29, 83, 84, 87, 100, 101 Fading, Jack, R. R. 1, Covington, Ohio 57, 136 Farrar, Budman, R. R. 3, Box 98, Walkerton, Ind 40, 105, 133, 136, 138 Farrar, Marcella, R. R. 3, Box 98, Walkerton, Ind 41, 83, 100, 104, 110 Fast, Ruth, R. R. 3, Celina, Ohio 29,89,110 Feaser, Paul, 447 W. Williams, Fort Wayne, Ind 49 Fidler, Madonna, 644 Vine Street, Brookville, Ohio 55, 57, 88, 108 Fike, Ernest, 215 Madison Ave., Dixon, 111 41 Fike, John, R. R. 1, Rock Falls, 111 57 Fike, Kathleen, 73 W. Columbia, Springfield, Ohio 41, 96, 128, 129 Fike, Leatice, R. R. 1, Rock Falls, 111 49,98 Fish, Phyllis, 1056 Sherwood Drive, Dayton, Ohio 57, 88, 92, 97, 98 Fisher, Bernadine, R. R. 9, Huntington, Ind 41, 89, 102, 110, 118 Fisher, Floramae, Hebron, Ind 57, 89,98, 108 Fisher, Joann, R. R. 1, Bradford, Ohio 49, 96, 110 154 Fleshood, Ferdy, 540 N. Wabash, Wabash, Ind 41 Flowers, Edwin, 205 E. Ninth, No. Manchester, Ind. 29 Fogle, Gene, R. R. I, Medway, Ohio 57, 1)6 Folk, James, Cromwell, Ind. 57,96 Forrer, Mary, R. R. 1, Rittman, Ohio 57,98,108 Fourman, Phyllis, Box 86, Palmyra, Mich 49,96, 110 Foust, Wanda, R. R. 6, Box 227, Dayton, Ohio 49, 96 Franklin, Albert, Laketon, Ind. Irani , Richard, No. Wayne, No. Manchester, Ind 41 Fredine, Howard, 601 E. Fifth, No. Manchester, Ind. 4 1 Fredrickson, Allen, Warm Springs, Ark. 29 Frock, Charles, 1332 Canal St., New Haven. Ind. 41,96 Fulton, Betty, R. R. 5. Huntington, Ind. 41,96,110,116,119 Gall, Irma, R. R. 1, Syracuse, Ind 57,90,96,98 Garber, Elaine, R. R. 5, Evansville, Ind 49 Garber, Lorraine, R. R. 5, Evansville, Ind. 49 Garman, Mary Jane, 3 862 Summit Park Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 49,97 Garman, Robert, Claypool, Ind 29,94, 116, 118 Garman, Sally, Avilla, Ind 49, 108, 119 Garver, John, 8430 Market St., Youngstown, Ohio 29, 133, 134 Gebert, Donald, Pierceton, Ind. 49 George, Joan, College St., Covington, Ohio 41, 92, 96, 129 Getz, George, 218 W. Southern Ave., Springfield, Ohio 41,83 Gibbel, Donald, 653 Harrison Ave., Greenville, Ohio Gibbel, Phyllis, 653 Harrison Ave., Greenville, Ohio 50,99,115,117 Gibble, Frances, Astoria, 111 49 Gilbert, Arthur. Milford, Ind. 50, 94 Gillin, Jack, 302 W. Kilbuck, Tecumseh, Mich 136, 142 Ginzel, Sharon, R. R. 2, Ossian, Ind 50,99,102 Glist, Virginia, 402 E. Ninth, No. Manchester, Ind 29 Gohn, Meredith, 507 W. Fifth, Rochester, Ind Gohn, Robert, 507 W. Fifth, Rochester, Ind 41, 94 Good, Barbara, 645 Buena Vista, Ashland, Ohio 58, 108, 135 Good, Donna, 39 So. Smith, Alexandria, Ohio 58 Goodmiller, Phyllis, 1432 Walnut, Huntington, Ind 41, 100, 102, 108 Goshert, William, 927 E. Main, Warsaw, Ind 58, 136, 143, 145, 146 Gosnell, Rex, 500 Seeman Ave., Akron, Ohio 50, 86 Grady, Jack, Franklin Grove, 111 50, 136 Grady, Judith, Franklin Grove, 111. 58 Graham, Ruth, 1902 So. Wayne, Auburn, Ind 29, 110, 122 Gressley, Gene, 314 S. W., Bellevue, Ohio 50 Grindle. John, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind Grossnickle, Richard, 407 N. Walnut, No. Manchester, Ind. Gunterman, Beverly, 1602 Saginaw, Midland, Mich 58,101 Gurthet, Elizabeth, R. R. 4, Plymouth, Ind 50,98 Haley, Joan, R. R. 2, Andrews, Ind. 50,96, 98 Hall, Flora-May, 3 13 W. Crawford, Elkhart. Ind. 50, 90 Halladay, Karleton, 1206 N. Wayne, No. Manchester, Ind 50, 81, 100, 104. 110 Halsey, Mary, R. R. 3, Ligonier, Ind 50,108,114,119 Hammann, Adelheid, Hohenrode Bei Rinteln, Weser, Germany, 58,90,92,108 Hammond, James, 712 N. Mill, No. Manchester, Ind 58 Hammond, Miriam 29 Haney, Marcia, R. R. 1, Box 199, Bremen, Ind 50,96,108 Hansen, Andrew, 1136 Middle Street, Wabash, Ind. Hardman, Vivian, R. R. 1, Urbana, Ind. 58, 88, 101, 108 Harman, Theodore. Leesburg, Ind 29,84 Harold, Norman James, 205 McCollum St., LaPorte, Ind 50,90,94,103 Hart, Lavon, Spencerville, Ind. 41,84,99 Hartsough, Edith, R. R. 2, North Liberty, Ind. 50, 92, 100, 108 Hatfield, Alice, Ossian, Ind. 50,94,99 Hawn, Arlinc, R. R. 1, Columbia City, Ind 58,88 Hay, Ruth, R. R. 1, Plymouth, Ind 29,99 Hazzard, Jean, 205 W. Main, Mount Morris, 111. 41, 88, 94 Headley, America, R. R. 1, New Carlisle, Ind 58,96,99 Heckman, Richard, 517 So. Broad, Lanark, 111 50, 108 Heddens, John, Box 101, North Webster, Ind 50 Hedges, Gordon, 13 16 Monroe, Rochester, Ind. 41,96,108,110,116,119,133 Heery, Tho mas, 239 Wilbe St., Dayton, Ohio 58, 136 Heeter, Harold, 219 Cleveland Ave., Elkhart, Ind 3 8,41,105,129,145,147 Heeter, Joe, 1601 E. Third St., Mishawaka, Ind 58, 136 Heeter, Phyllis, 219 Cleveland Ave., Elkhart, Ind 58, 108, 114, 116 Heisey, Harold, R. R. 2, Myerstown, Penna 58, 136 Helser, Barbara, R. R. 1, Thornville, Ohio 23,29 Helser, Rodney, R. R. 1, Thornville, Ohio 58 Henderson, Myrtle, College Post Office, No. Manchester, Ind 20,5 8 Hershberger, Joan, Woodland, Mich 29,96,110 Hershberger, Wayne, 1231 Portage Trail, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio 50, 89, 100, 108 Hershey, Mary Lou, Third Avenue, Lititz, Penna 50 Hess, Robert, U.S.N.A.A.S., Monterey, Calif 41,92, 128 Hewlett, Lewis, Hanna, Ind 58 Hilbert, Margaret, R. R. 2, Hagerstown, Ind 50, 96 Hill, Dale, Box 37, North Hampton, Ohio 29, 84, 94, 104 Hipskind, Richard, 2358 A. South Thirteenth, St. Louis, Missouri Hoehn, Robert, Silver Lake, Ind 29, 84 Hoff, Janice, 309 E. Center, Mount Morris, 111 29, 92, 128 Hoffman, Dwight, R. R. 2, Pierceton, Ind 41, 94 Hoffman, Elizabeth, Roann, Ind 41,98, 100 Hoffman, Paul, Roann, Ind 55, 58, 136, 145, 146 Holbrook, Eugene, Lincoln Acers, Dixon, 111 58, 89, 102 Hollenberg, Donna, 552 Cajon, Redlands, Calif. 50 Hollenberg, Robert, 4123 Oliver, Fort Wayne, Ind 50, 87 Honeyman, Carol, R. R. 1, Clayton, Ohio 58,94 Hong, Paul, Sur Cheong, Cheong Ju, Chung Cheong Pukto, Korea 29, 84 Hoover, Harry, Glenford, Ohio 42 Hoover, Robert, 32 E. Babbitt, Dayton, Ohio 58, 136, 138 Hopkins, Marion, R. R. 1, Peru, Ind 29, 110, 116, 118 Horning, James, 3515 W. Congress, Chicago, 111 42, 128 Horning, Lois, 3515 W. Congress, Chicago, 111 50,92, 110, 122, 128 Hornish, Mary, R. R. 3, Defiance, Ohio 58,108 Huffman, Ellen, Box 85, Liberty Center, Ind 42,96,98 Hummer, Dorothy, R. R. 1, Dunkirk, Ind. 58 Hunn, Arthur, R. R. 6, Box 85, Dayton, Ohio 55,58,105,108,128,148 Hunt, Marjorie, R. R. 1, Laura, Ohio 58 Hunt, Nancy, 317 E. Pontiac St., Fort Wayne, Ind. 29,96 Huston, Albert, 570 Park St., Elgin, 111 50,128 Irick, Robert, R. R. 2, Frankfort, Ind 42, 90 Jenkins, Janet, 507 N. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind 51,94,96,98 155 Johnson, Bonnie, 717 N. Mill, No. Manchester, Ind. 5 8, 90 Johnson, Everette, 823 W. Jefferson, Ottawa, 111 58 Johnson, Jeanne, 411 W. Fifth, No. Manchester, Ind 58,98 Johnson, Robert, Mill Street, No. Manchester, Ind Jones, Ruth, R. R. 3, Warsaw, Ind 42 Jordan, Barbara, 1623 Wood St., Elkhart, Ind 51,96 Longardner, Doris, R. R. 2, Auburn, Ind 59,90 Lopez, German, Ensanche Gonzalez, Lares, Puerto Rico 51,90 Lotz, Arthur, Lanark, 111 Lozier, Donald, R. R. 1, Warsaw, Ind 42, 133, 145, 148 Lutz, Helen, 207 Shady Lane, Dayton, Ohio 59, 88 Karns, Lcren, Urbana, Ind. 42, 84 Katona, Gabriel, 360 Meuse Argonne, Hicksville, Ohio 58 Reiser, l.oger, No. Liberty, Ind 58,92, 128 Keller, Robert, R. R. 5, Greenville, Ohio 42, 81, 83, 92, 101, 108, 122, 128 Kennedy, Myron, 1012 S. Seventh, Goshen, Ind 51, 105, 108, 133, 145, 148 Kesler, Donn, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind 31, 94 Kester, Priscilla, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind 58,88,108,114,117,118 Kettering, Delbert, R. R. 3, Ashland, Ohio 58, 108, 128 Keyes, Worden, Fremont, Ind Kindy, Gerald, Middlebury, Ind 31 Kinney, Keith, R. R. 1, Silver Lake, Ind 51,90, 103 Kinsey, John, Lower Salem, Ohio 51, 84, 87 Kinsey, Philip, R. R. 1, Silver Lake, Ind 51,84,86 Kintner, Emery, R. R. 4, Bryan, Ohio 31, 128 Kintner, Gordon, 454 Hill, Wabash, Ind 58 Kintner, Lois, Bryan, Ohio 51, 108 Kintner, Marion, Alvordton, Ohio 58 Kintner, Robert, 1004 East, No. Manchester, Ind 31 Kinzie, Doris, 1107 N. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind 51, 84, 104, 116, 129 Kirkpatrick, Loren, R. R. 1, Pierceton, Ind 42, 92, 108 Kissinger, John, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind 51, 102 Klinger, James, 1621 W. Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind 37 Klondaris, Georgia, 3 1 1 E. Market, Warsaw, Ind 51 Knarr, Bette, 424 N. Market, Winamac, Ind. 58, 92, 99 Knoop, Susanne, Claypool, Ind 51,99 Korns, Paul, R. R. 1, Dayton, Ohio 59, 108 Krieg, Donna, Box 1, South Whitley, Ind 47, 51 Krudop, Alda Jean, R. R. 1, South Whitley, Ind. ... 31,97,99 Kryworuchko, Ohla, Leipheim, Germany 92 Kurtti, Joseph, 403 S. Homan Ave., Chicago, 111 59, 102 Kuszmaul, Ross, 207 Hendrick St., Michigan City, Ind 31 Lambert, Lyle, Box 228, R. R. 1, Dayton, Ohio 51 Landen, Patricia, 1517 N. O ' Brien St., South Bend, Ind 59, 96 Landing, James, 402 So. Half St., No. Manchester, Ind 136, Langston, Keith, 706 N. High St., Covington, Ohio. .42, Lantz, Roger, 901 Princeton, Elkhart, Ind 42, Lawson, Brucia, 10135 So. Avenue L , Chicago, 111 31, Layman, Ruth, R. R. 1, Peru, Ind Leedy, Norma, Pierceton, Ind 59, 87 Lefforge, Doris, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind Lehman, Betty, 602 No. Mulberry, Hartford City, Ind 51,92,103, Lehman, Dorothy, 1265 Peters Rd., Troy, Ohio 51, 94, 96, Lehman, Wilbur, 1216 W. Market, Orrville, Ohio 59 Leiter, Donald, 631 W. Main Street, Ashland, Ohio 59, Leiter, Glorene, 63 1 W. Main Street, Ashland, Ohio Lenon, Richard, Converse, Ind Lingeman, Joan, 2687 Chile Avenue, Rochester, New York Lloyd, Donald, 115 N. Wayne Street, Columbia City, Ind. Loe, Donna, 1907 Harshman Blvd., Springfield, Ohio 59 Long, Glen, R. R. 3, Warsaw, Ind 59 ,92 , 97 140 136 104 , 96 31 59 118 , 88 128 .59 31 59 59 98 94 McConkey, Joy, R. R. 6, Logansport, Ind 42 McDaniel, Clyde, R. R. 1, Cable, Ohio 42, 100, 110, 117, 119 McDaniel, Mary, So. State Street, Andrews, Ind 59, 88, 92 McDonald, Robert, R. R. 5, Wabash, Ind 51, 87 McFadden, Wilbur, 787 W. Highland, Elgin, 111 51, 92, 103, 129 McFadden, W. Robert, 787 W. Highland, Elgin, 111 31, 80, 81, 83 Mclnnis, Russell, 609 E. Sawyer Street, Rice Lake, Wisconsin 42, 128 McKee, Betty, 13 3 W. Lexington, Fort Wayne, Ind 31, 96, 97, 105 McKee, Donald, 441 So. Main, Culver, Ind 132, 145, 146 Mack, Harold, R. R. 2, Bradford, Ohio 51, 88, 108 Mack, John, R. R. 2, Bradford, Ohio 59, 87 Mahoney, Dolores, 1814 Glenmore, Elkhart, Ind 51 Major, Violet, 4151 Homelawn, Cincinnati, Ohio 51, 108, 118 Manker, Roberta, Vermontville, Mich 51 Mann, Carl, 1104 Home Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 31 Mansfield, Lois, R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind 31,94 Maphis, John, Greene Memorial Hospital, Xenia, Ohio 42, 81, 136, 142 Marbaugh, Robert, 516 W. Market, Celina, Ohio ....42, 92, 108 Marks, James, 28 Olive Street, Norwalk, Ohio 59 Marsh, Cleon, 1 ' . No. Washington, Warsaw, Ind 119 Martin, Lois, N. Bridge Street, Gettysburg, Ohio 59, 98, 108, 1 19 Mason, Olin, Bradway, Penna 42, 122, 128 Matthews, Harold, 1842 E. Seventy-second, Chicago, 111 42, 102, 132 Maxwell, Robert, College Post Office, No. Manchester, Ind 31 May, Kenneth Lamar, 1009 Thirty-third Street, South Bend, Ind Meitzler, William, 1883 So. Curson, Los Angeles, Calif 31,90,104 Mertz, Robert, 803 Indiana Ave., Auburn, Ind 31 Meyer, Alton, 1137 E. Third, Mishawaka, Ind 31, 132 Meyer, Ann, R. R. 1, Box 195, Lewisburg, Ohio 51 Mikula, Donald, R. R. 1, Tipp City, Ohio 59 Miller, Barbara J., R. R. 1, Battle Ground, Ind 59, 96 Miller, Barbara R., 410 King, Polo, 111 59, 81, 92, 108, 114 Miller, Donald, R. R. 1, Columbiana, Ohio 42, 84 Miller, George, 410 King, Polo, 111 42, 108 Miller, Gwendolyn, 1778 Seyburn, Detroit, Mich 31 Miller, Harley, 1101 Wilson Ave., Goshen, Ind 51 Miller, Joann, R. R. 4, Box 3 67, Dayton, Ohio 43, 99, 108, 110, 119, 128 Miller, Richard, R. R. 1, Ludlow Falls, Ohio 31, 105, 128 Miller, Ronald, Claypool, Ind 59 Miller, Rose Marie, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind 31, 96 Miller, Wayne, R. R. 3, Kewanna, Ind 59 Mills, Samuel, 503 No. Seventh, Lawrenceville, III 33, 89 Milo, Betty, 816 Ridge Street, La Porte, Ind 59, 96 Minear, James, 319 W. Center Street, Warsaw, Ind 59, 136, 143, 148 Mishler, Betty, R. R. 1, Nappanee, Ind 47, 51, 96, 100, 105 Moore, Rachael, Hollansburg, Ohio 59,92,99 156 133 128 119 129 ,92 101 102 110 ..43 Morey, Muriel, 503 N. Mill, No. Manchester, Ind 5 1,98,100,129 Momingstar, Alma. R. R. 1, Howe, Ind. 52,96 Mort, Harry, Box 3 15, Pierceton, Ind. 59 Mosher, Donald, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind. 59, 129, Mow, Merrill, 3450 Van Buren Street, Chicago, III. 33, 108, Mow, Myra, 704 No. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind. 59, 108, 110, 114, 116, Mover, Mary, 836 So. Humphrey Ave., Oak Park, III 52,89,103, Mullen. Wilbur, 911 Main Street, Windber, Pcnna. 52 Mullin, Keith, R. R. 3, Delphi, Ind 59, 86, 90, Mulligan, Mary. E. Washington, Huntington, Ind. 52, 100, Mummcrt, Sheldon, 742 W. Philadelphia St., York, Penna 52,88, Murphy, Nordan. 508 ' , E. Ninth, No. Manchester, Ind. Musselman, Lois, R. R. 3, Musselman Rd., New Carlisle, Ohio 59, 92 Myers, Jean, R. R. 1, Laura, Ohio 59, 99 Myers, Nancy, Wakarusa, Ind. 43, 90 Nash, Charles, 3930 Indiana, Fort Wayne, Ind Neff, Thyra, R. R. 5. Goshen, Ind 52,96, 110, 119 Neff, Robert, Colorado Springs, Colo 59 Neher, Robert, 60 8 Miami, No. Manchester, Ind. 43, 89, 100, 102 Nelson, Barbara, Box 53, Cutler, Ind 33 Nelson, Samuel, Cutler, Ind 43 Newcomer, Ardith, 113 3 So. Van Ness, Santa Ana, Calif 43, 100, 128 Newcomer, Barbara, R. R. 4, Bryan, Ohio 43,93,96 .Newcomer, Harriet, R. R. 3, Bryan, Ohio 59, 90 Noe, Loisanne, R. R. 3, Bloomington, Ind 33, 94, 99, 105 Nord, Joan, R. R. 7, Fort Wayne, Ind 59,88,96 Nordenskjold, Orrin, 1011 So. Park, Redwing, Minn Norman, Anna, Box 81, Macy, Ind 60, 108, 118 Norman, Noreen, R. R. 2, Macy, Ind 33, 110, 119 Norris, Anna, 3552 Congress, Chicago, 111 52 Norris, William, Amboy, Ind 33,83,104 Null, Omer, R. R. 3, Wabash, Ind 33 Parr, Carolyn, R. R. 3, Amity Road, Brookvillc, Ohio 60, 108 Parson, Abner, R. R. 1, Lagro, Ind. 52 Paxton, Elma Lu, R. R. 2, Warsaw, Ind. 52, 96, 104, 128 Pedersen, Ruby, 3 526 W. Congress, Chicago, 111 52, 89, 110, 119 Pegg, Fern, 137 Bank Street, Elkhart, Ind 97 Pcnrod, Wanda, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind 43, 110 Peterson, Arthur, R. R. 2, Rochester, Ind. Petrie, Ernest, Box 49, Hayden St., Fort Wayne, Ind 33, 94, 102, 105, 133 Petriella, Anthony, 2200 Penn Ave., Elkhart, Ind 43,81,90 Petry, Carroll, 725 Darrow Rd., Akron, Ohio 52, 132 Pettit, William, 512 Samantha St., Lansing, Mich 33,83,100 Pfolsgrof, Donna, 12925 Monitor Ave., Worth, 111 38,43,100,103,104 Phillips, Byron, Burlington, Ind. 60 Pickens, Gene, R. R. 6, Rochester, Ind 52, 105, 133, 145, 149 Piper, Joe, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind Piper, Paul, 608 W. Fourth Street, No. Manchester, Ind. ... 60 Piper, Richard, R. R., No. Manchester, Ind. Pittman, Robert, R. R. 1, Astoria, III. .... 60, 88 Place, Helen, R. R. 2, Box 50, Rochester, Mich. 52 Ploughe, Clyde, 73 21 Ideal Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind 43, 110, 114, 118, 119, 135 Plum, Wendell, 507 E. Hill St., Mount Morris, 111. .. 52, 84, 89 Plunkett, Gene, 325 So. Barron, Eaton, Ohio 52,87,145,148 Plunkett, Richard, R. R. 1, Covington, Ohio 23, 33 Ply, William, 488 N. Allen St., Wabash, Ind 60,94 Poff, Ralph, 415 E. Sixth, Peru, Ind Pope, Gene, Markle, Ind 60,96 Porter, Gene, 619 Park Ave., Piqua, Ohio 43, 83, 89, 100, 116, 118 Priser, Alice, No. Manchester, Ind 33,96, 110 Priser, Daniel, 501 N. Washington, No. Manchester, Ind. Pritchard, Sam, 213 N. Oak, Columbia City, Ind 60,116,118 Prough, Paul, Shipshewana, Ind 52, 145, 149 Puterbaugh, William, 1506 Locust St., Sterling, 111 43, 132, 136 Quirk, Max, Sharpsville, Ind. Obenour, William, Belle Center, Ohio 43, 96, 108 Ober, Richard, R. R., Garrett, Ind 33, 110 Oaks, Rosemary, R. R. 4, Lafayette, Ind 52, 94 Ogan, Lois, R. R. 5, Wabash, Ind 52,98, 108 Ogan, Robert, 985 Pike St., Wabash, Ind 60 Ogden, Joe, R. R. 1, Roann, Ind 60, 108, 110, 118 Ogden, Katherine, R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind. 60, 88, 90 Olinger, Budd, 1836 Mary Street, Fort Wayne, Ind 60, 136, 142 Olinger, Donna, 2516 Catalpa, Dayton, Ohio 52, 108 Oswalt, Mary, 392 E. Main, Wabash, Ind 60, 94,96 Oswalt, Peggy, R. R. 1, Poneto, Ind 60,96, 102, 108 Ott, Walter, 2018 Curdes St., Fort Wayne, Ind 52 Overmyer, Muriel G., R. R. 1, Leesburg, Ind 60 Overmyer, Muriel Joan, R. R. 1, Leesburg, Ind 52,96,97,98, 119 Owen, Willard, 4009 Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111 52 Oxender, Dale, Constantino, Mich. 60 Parmerlee, Elaine, 613 E. Fifth, No. Manchester, Ind. .52 Racop, Loretta, R. R. 1, Flat Rock, 111. 43,94,96,98,104,105,128 Reckeweg, Donald, 332 No. Main, Columbia City, Ind. 33,94 Reed, Lora, 8 E. Maple St., Wabash, Ind 33 Reed, Ronald, Wabash, Ind. 43 Rees, Sara, 723 Hickory St., Niles, Mich 33, 108 Reiff, Richard, 302 So. Buffalo, No. Manchester, Ind 60 Rentschler, Lettie, R. R. 6, Rochester, Ind. 43, 100 Rentschler, Mary, R. R. 6, Rochester, Ind 52 Replogle, Morris, Rossville, Ind. 60 Reynolds, Charles, 1113 Regent St., Niles, Mich Rhoades, Marianne, Astoria, 111 43,96, 100, 108 Rhoades, Wretha, R. R. 1, Union City, Ind 60,96, 108 Rice, Donald, 1733 Linden, Mishawaka, Ind 52 Rice, Melba, 713 No. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind. 60,98 Richardson, Jean, R. R. 2. Flora, Ind. 33,96, 105 Riley, Bert, Mounted Rt. 52, Springfield, Ohio 60, 89 Riley, Donna, 1130 E. Second St., Dayton, Ohio 52, 89, 97, 98 Riley, Jobie, 915 Clifton Ave., Springfield, Ohio 60, 89, 93 157 -53 132 129 .53 , 99 100 108 142 , 84 , 99 115 103 , 89 108 . 53 134 Rinehart, Dorothy, R. R. 6, No. Sycamore, Hagerstown, Ind 43,99, 129 Ritchey, Donald, R. R. 1, Hollansburg, Ohio 44, 128 Ritchey, Paul, R. R. 2, Everett, Penna 33, 92, 101, 105, 128 Robe, Harry, 811 Pine Lake Rd., La Porte, Ind 53, 89, 102 Roberts, Mary, White Pigeon, Mich 60,92,99 Robins, Charles Sam, R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind 60, 110 Robins, Mary, R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind. 33 Robinson, Elizabeth, 119 So. Argonne Rd., Warsaw, Ind. ... Robinson, Ruth, 119 Argonne Rd., Warsaw, Ind Robinson, William, Millersburg, Ind 33, 94, Rodda, Spencer, 2071 San Jose, Alameda, Calif 43,94, 128, Rogers, Roger, 1026 Belford St., Johnstown, Penna Rohrer, Eula, Creekville, Ky 35 Rohrer, Mary June, 3 04 So. Grove, Oak Park, 111 35,96, Roth, Wanda, 450 E. Oak Street, Wanseon, Ohio 60, Rouch, Keith, 4316 E. Franklin, Huntington, Ind 44, 136 Rouch, Lester, 431 E. Franklin, Huntington, Ind 44 Rouch, Susie, R. R. 3, Bremen, Ind 53 Royer, Ellen, R. R. 2, Elmhurst 111 60, 88, 93, 101, Royer, Howard, R. R. 2, Arcanum, Ohio 44, 84,96, Royer, John, 329 Summit St., Fostoria, Ohio 44 Royer, Marjorie, Arcanum, Ohio 60, 99, Rummel, Donald, R. R. 1, Box 214, Tarentum, Penna 60 Rumsey, Roy, R. R. 2, Lafayette, Ohio Rupel, Dennis, 553 Osburn Place, Riverside, Calif 44, 92, Russell, Ellen, 255-19 Seventy-third, New York, New York 53,110,119 Rust, Barbara, West Manchester, Ohio 60,81,88,96 Ryan, Jean, 406 W. South St., No. Manchester, Ind 53,98,108,118 Salmre, William, 3 73 Park Place, Brooklyn, New York 60,92 Samilov, Michael, 2185 Amsterdam Ave., New York, New York 53,90 Sand, Ronald, 219 So. Wood, Warsaw, Ind 119 Sands, Carl, Silver Lake, Ind. .35, 105, 133, 136, 139, 145, 147 Sapp, Louis, 500 No. Walsh, Garrett, Ind 44 Sappington, LaVerle, R. R. 2, Box 24, Apple Creek, Ohio 44,96 Sappington, Roger, 117 E. Pleasant St., Avon Park, Florida 35,83,101,128 Sarber, Marion, 926 E. Milton, South Bend, Ind 35 Sauders, Everett, 2019 St. Mary ' s Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind 35,84,87 Schantz, Elizabeth, 2322 Miami, South Bend, Ind 44,98 Schrock, Jeanne, R. R. 1, Box 204, Goshen, Ind 60, 92, 108, 114 Schrock, Julian, R. R. 1, Middlebury, Ind 60 Schrock, Orlin, 604 So. Fifth Street, Goshen, Ind 3 5, 89, 94, 1 1 0, 1 1 8 Schroeder, Fred, 3400 So. Hamilton, Chicago, 111 60, 135 Schroll, Gene, No. Manchester, Ind 3 5 Schroll, Marlene, R. R. 3, No. Manchester, Ind. 53 Shubert, Alvin, R. R. 1, Fostoria, Ohio 60, 87, 136 Schultz, Don, 513 W. London, Peoria, 111 44, 89, 100, 102 Schurr, Richard, Box 213, Wakarusa, Ind 35 Schutz, Charlotte, 503 College Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 44, 81, 100, 101, 103 , 104 Schwalm, Dean, South Seventh, Goshen, Ind 35, 136, 140 Scott, William, 462 E. Fifth, Peru, Ind 35,94 Seidler, Jean, R. R. 4, La Porte, Ind 53, 94, 99 Senseman, Dan, R. R. 1, Tipp City, Ohio 35 Shady, Florence, Box 504, Waterloo, Ind 53, 89 Shafer, Don, 617 E. Buckeye Street, Miamisburg, Ohio 60, 87, 135 Shafer, Phyllis, R. R. 2, Peru, Ind 61, 88 Shaffer, Mary Jane, Box 241, Andrews, Ind 61, 96 Shanbeck, Daniel, R. R. 1, Warsaw, Ind 53,84, 102 Shank, Thelma, R. R. 4, Box 197, Dayton, Ohio ... 44, 90, 94 Shawler, Charles, 508 Miami, No. Manchester, Ind 44, 118 Shearer, Richard, 3 10 Heikes Ave., Dayton, Ohio 53, 136 Sheetz, Charlene, 213 Fulton, Rochester, Ind 53,94, 108, 119 Shellabarger, Mary, R. R. 8, Box 663, Dayton, Ohio 61, 88, 90 Sheller, Gerald, R. F. D., Eldora, Iowa 53, 86, 90, 105, 133 Sheller, Helen, 311 W. Whiting, Fullerton, Calif 44,92 Sherman, Marvin, 520 S. Walsh, Garrett, Ind 44, 81, 100, 103, 104, 105 Sherrick, Betty, R. R. 1, Middleton, Mich 61, 88 Shirk, Katherine, R. R. 3, Auburn, Ind 61,88,97,99 Shirkey, Lois, R. R. 2, Elmhurst, 111 44, 86 Shock, Richard L., R. R. 1, No. Manchester, Ind Shock, Richard O., R. R. 7, Box 3 00, Anderson, Ind. 61, 87, 96, 108, 136, 137 Shoemaker, James, 316 Brooklyn Ave., Dayton, Ohio 44, 83, 100, 105, 135 Shoemaker, Richard, Claypool, Ind 61 Showalter, Waneta, R. R. 1, Dalton, Ohio 53, 108, 116, 119 Showers, Barbara, Kunkle, Ohio Shultz, Carl, 603 College Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 3 5, 110, 113, 115, 117 Shultz, Carole, 603 College Ave., No. Manchester, Ind. 35, 89, 110, 113,115,116, 117 Siebert, William, 518 Prytonia, Hamilton, Ohio 61 Simmons, Wesley, R. R. 2, Kewanna, Ind 3 5,81,89,100,110,114,118 Skinner, Miriam, 819 W. South, Bremen, Ind 61, 99 Slabaugh, James, R. R. 1, Durand, 111 53, 100, 108, 128 Slater, Harold, R. R. 2, Claypool, Ind 61 Smith, Brice, R. R. 1, Bristol, Ind 61 Smith, Dorothy, R. R. 10, Box 325, Dayton, Ohio 53, 113, 114, 117 Smith, Fred, 1126 E. Seventeenth, Denver, Colorado 61 Smith, Jean, R. R. 1, Box 379, La Porte, Ind 44, 110 Smith, Jerry, 215 So. Washington, Warsaw, Ind. 44 Smith, June, 715 No. Wayne, No. Manchester, Ind 53, 108 Smith, Laurence, Burket, Ind 53 Smith, Lloyd, 408 So. Division, Flora, Ind 47, 53, 86, 92 Smith, Mamie, R. R. 2, Galveston, Ind 35,97,99, 110 Smith, Marjorie, 113 Maryland Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 44,96,99 Smith, Martha, 113 Maryland Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 45,96,100 Smith, Paul, R. R. 10, Dayton, Ohio 45, 84, 102 Smith, Robert D., 440 So. Broadway, Peru, Ind 35 Smith, Robert W., R. R. 10, Box 380, Dayton, Ohio 35, 86, 108, 116, 119 Smith, Roger, 1309 E. Market, Warsaw, Ind 61,90, 102 Snider, Thyra, New Paris, Ind 35 Snyder, Graydon, 158 Cedar St., Huntington, W. Va 35, 83, 103, 104, 122 Snyder, Joyce, R. R. 2, Plymouth, Ind 53, 81, 92, 103, 128 Soales, La Verne, Bremen, Ind 61, 108 Sollenberger, Donald, 404 E. Ninth, No. Manchester, Ind 37, 128 Sollenberger, Robert, 4077 Colorado Ave., Dayton, Ohio 61, 136 158 Sommer, Theodor, I Mozartstrasse, Schwaeb Gmueud, Germany 61,90, 92, 101 Spitler, Joanna, R. R. 1, Bringiiurst, Ind. 54,92, 101, ITS, 116, 118 Sponseller, Harry, 1061 Lincoln Way E., Plymouth, Ind. .37 Sprinkle, Philip, R. R. 7, Muncie, Ind. 61 Spurgeon, Jesse, R. R. 3, Winamac, Ind 45, 93, 94 Stauffer, Margaret, 407 So. Division, Polo, III 37,99 Stcbbins, Patricia, R. R. 6, Box 369, Dayton, Ohio 61, 88 Stephens, Jane, R. R. 1, Wabash, Ind 37, 117 Stcury, Edna, R. R. I, Box 53, Berne, Ind 54,96,100 Stine, Claire, R. R. 4, Goshen, Ind 38, 45, Id ' s, 1 22. 129, 145, 148 Stine, Elinor, Adel, Ind 45, 88, 96 Stokes, Stanley, 428 Perry, Warsaw, Ind Stong, Leon, 1424 Union, Lafayette, Ind. 54, 93, 108 Storer, Lois, R. R. 1, Eaton, Ohio 61 Strain, Dorothy, R. R. 4, Lafayette, Ind 54 Strycker, Philip, Macy, Ind. 45, 88, 108 Stuckman, Mary Lou, R. R. 1, Nappanee, Ind. 54, 96, 100 Studebaker, Hilda, Ossian, Ind. 54, 100 Studebaker, Wilma, R. R. 2, Springfield, Ohio 54,96, 108 Stutsman, Robert, R. R. 2, Goshen, Ind 61, 90 Sullivan, Norma, 1111 Park Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind. .... 45, 88, 93, 96, 128 Summe, Samuel, R. R. 2, Akron, Ind 61 Summe, Tommy, Silver Lake, Ind 37, 84 Summers, Richard, R. R. 2, Greentown, Ind. 6 1 , 88, 1 08, 1 1 9 Supinger, Richard, 112 . Broadway, Covington, Ohio 61, 136, 143 Swank, Margaret, Wolcottville, Ind 45,89,108,114 Swantner, Merle, R. R. 2, Peru, Ind. 61, 108, 136 Swihart, Ray, R. R. 4, Box 56, Goshen, Ind 61, 87, 90 Swinger, James, Box 77, Pitsburg, Ohio 37 Tait, Donald, R. R. 2, White Pigeon, Mich 45,110,116,119 Talley, Rosalie, 471 N. Thirty-third, Decatur, III. 45,94,98,100 Teach, Ellis, R. R. 2, Springfield, Ohio 61, 110 Teach, Herschel, North Hampton, Ohio 61 Teeter, Mary, 472 Locust St., Elgin, III 61, 88, 108, 128 Tennant, James, 1621 E. Washington, Fort Wayne, Ind 136, 140 Terhune, Phyllis, R. R. 2, Bluffton, Ind 61, 98 Theobald, Sterling, Strongfield St., Sask., Canada 37 Thomas, Patricia, 423 W. Madison, Paris, III. , 61, 101, 108 Thompson, Harry, Astoria, III. 61 Thompson, Richard, 1311 No. Hickory, Champaign, III. 61 Thoss, Margaret, 206 W. Third, No. Manchester, Ind. 61, 98 Tillman, Robert, Claypool, Ind. 61 Timmons, Daniel, R. R. 1, New Paris, Ohio 38, 45, 81, 86 Tomkinson, Richard, Lockhart Street, Waterloo, Ind. 61,88,94 Tomlonson, John, Bristol, Ind. 37,94,128 Tomlonson, Veva, 825 W. Hill Street. Wabash, Ind. 37, 96, 97 Tovey, Gene, Box 381, Columbus, Ind 45 Traughber, Dorthea, 3938 E. Marietta, Decatur, 111 62, 92, 105, 108, 128 Traughber, Earl, 3938 E. Marietta, Decatur, 111 54, 128 Trost, Donald, W. Monument Ave., Pleasant Hill, Ohio 45,84,87,96 Tuell, Lois, 911 Third Ave., Rockford, III. 62, 88, 93, 98, 101 Turner, Mary Jo, R. R. 4, Auburn, Ind. 37, 110, 119 Tyler, James, Riverside Drive, Dayton, Ohio 21, 37 Ulery, Nelda, 714 Washington St., Wenatchee, Wash 37, 96, 98, 99 Ulmer, Donald, 1208 E. Donald. South Bend, Ind. 62, 9 0, 92, 93, 1 19, 128 Ulrey, Linda, R. R. 2, No. Manchester, Ind 45 Ummel, Eldon, 1104 Home Ave., No. Manchester, Ind 37, 136, 14 1 Ummel, Richard, R. R. 1, Claypool, Ind 45 Updike, Max, 1438 Kiebourn, Elkhart, Ind. 62, 136 Utz, Eva. R. R. 5, Greenville, Ohio .62,99 Vanator, Joan, Leesburg, Ind. 54 Vance, Carol, 1 1 5 W. Grove St., Mishawaka, Ind 54,96 Van Wagner, Esther, 904 Jackson, La Porte, Ind 37 Via, Jeanne, 524 So. Pearl, Covington, Ohio 45, 90, 100 Vick, Richard, Hanna, Ind 62 Voorhees, Peggy, 600 Fulton St., Rochester, Ind 45,90 Vore, Robert, No. Michigan St., Plymouth, Ind. 54, 134 Wagner, Ray, H.I.S. 29, Hershey, Penna 54 Wagoner, Mary, R. R. 4, Delphi, Ind 45,96 Wagoner, Robert, 1011 No. Central, Chicago, III. 45,92,128 Wales, Evelyn, E. Oregon, Polo, III. 54, 89 Walter, Franklin, Spring St., La Grange, Ind. 37 Walter, Marie, R. R. 1, Lakeville, Ind 54 Walters, Phylis, 1009 E. Jefferson, South Bend, Ind 62,89,93 Walton, Gloria, 2019 So. Main. Elkhart, Ind 37,83,96,100,110,113,115,117 Walton, James, 111 So. Maple Ave., Warsaw, Ind 54, 136 Walton, Ronald, 2019 So. Main, Elkhart, Ind 54,100,110,115,116 Ward, Dorothy, 714 Bond, No. Manchester, Ind. 62,98 Ward, Richard, 720 E. North, Lima, Ohio 54, 133, 135 Warner, Carol, R. R. 1, Union, Ohio 54, 98 Weaver, Marlin, 82 Stitt Street, Wabash, Ind. 23, 37, 81, 134 Weber, Jane, R. R. 1, Huntington, Ind. 45,94,96 Weick, Richard, 2110 Ontario, Fort Wayne, Ind 54 Weimer, Charles, 719 No. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind. 62, 86, 87, 104, 108 Weimer, Robert, 719 No. Sycamore, No. Manchester, Ind. 46, 84, 101, 104, 129 Weitzel, Ardith, Laketon, Ind. Welborn, Sue, 251 No. Clark, Nappanee, Ind 54 Weldy, Glade, Wakarusa, Ind 54, 148 Weller, Forestine, 325 So. Linden Ave., Vermillion, South Dakota 46, 88 Weller, Paul, Decatur, 111 54 Wells, Charles, R. R. 1, Roann, Ind. Werkheiser, Dorothy, Corunna, Ind. 62, 96, 99 Werking, Joy, R. R. 2, Richmond, Ind 62 Wetzel, Conrad, R. R. 3, Colchester, III 54, 90, 94, 110 Wheeler, Larry, 705 Ridgewood Ave., Hamilton, Ohio 62, 148 Wheeler, Laverne, Middleville, Mich. 62,86,88 Whitacre, Richard, Box 26, Bippus, Ind 54, 108, 118, 119 Whkefield, Lester, R. R. 3, Troy, Ohio 62, 136 Whitehead, Donald, R. R. 1, Warsaw, Ind 46 Whitehead, Marietta, R. R. 1, Warsaw, Ind 62,98, 108 Wilcoxson, Robert, Pierceton, Ind Wiles, Truman, R. R. 1, Sterling, Ohio 62 Wilhelm, Charles, 604 E. Ninth, No. Manchester, Ind 62 Will, Wanda, 3560 Congress St., Chicago, 111. 54, 81, 92, 110 Willcox, Georgianna, 403 No. Wayne, No. Manchester, Ind 54,97,101,110 Williams, Herbert, 3416 Springle Ave., Detroit, Mich 46 159 Williams, Shirley, 629 N. Drake, Wright, William, No. Manchester, Ind 37 Fullerton, Calif 37, 81, 92, 96, 122, 128 Wyse, Carol, R. R. 3, Wauseon, Ohio 62, 108 Wilson, George, 395 Alena St., Wabash, Ind 62 Winger, Vera, 5338 W. Tenth, Indianapolis, Ind 54, 129 Yohe, Yula, R. R. 1, Laura, Ohio 62, 108, 118 Wolf, Velma, R. R. 5, Peru, Ind 62, 96, 97, 108 Yunker, Bernita, Bringhurst, Ind 46, 83, 96, 100, 101 Wong, Alberto, c o Dr. O. S. Hamer, No. Manchester, Ind 37 Zemen, Joseph, 3806 Deal Street, East Chicago, Ind 136 Wong, Larry, 1033 D St., Zimmerman, Amelia, 427 Garden Street, Kendallville, Ind Fresno, Calif 37, 101, 104, 108, 128 Zuck, David, First Chestnut Streets, Wort, Eugene, North Liberty, Ind 37,96,136,140 Winona Lake, Ind 62,90,102 Wright, Barbara, No. Manchester, Ind 37,94 Zunkel, Wayne, 158 Wilcox, Elgin, 111 54, 81,92, 110, 122 Wright, Linda, 105 So. Wayne, Ligonier, Ind 54 Zunkel, Ida, 421 Clinton Street, Oak Park, 111 54,89,98 160 1951 -A UVOPCl rdvertlserS 161 COMPLIMENTS OF WABASH PRODUCE CO. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE 4 ♦ Corner of Allen and Canal Phone 1071 Wabash, Indiana 162 MANCHESTER COLLEGE, loyal to you-! THE NORTH MANCHESTER NEWS-JOURNAL YOU ' RE ALWAYS WELCOME AT Landis Drug Store WALGREEN AGENCY Most Complete Line Of Drugs and Sundries NORTH MANCHESTER THE NEW WIBLE SHOE STORE Nationally Advertised Shoes For the Entire Family Jarmaii - Weather-Bird American Girl 130 E. Main Phone 318 NORTH MANCHESTER 163 6ftSV TO S 8R.V6 L. J. YODER 114 N. Walnut NORTH MANCHESTER, IND. Phone 673 INSURANCE Fire Bonds Casualty Automobile RALPH R. BAGOTT β–  l !1 MANCHESTER The Halting Furniture Co. The Friendly Furniture Store N. MANCHESTER, IND. Phone 593 164 YOURS... A brighter future through ELECTRIC LIVING Public Service Company of Indiana, Inc. PRISER AUTO SALES DE SOTO PLYMOUTH G-M-C TRUCKS Quick, Complete Repair Service 24 Hr. Wrecker Service NORTH MANCHESTER Member Of A A A 801 W. Main Day Phone 361 - Night Phone 347 165 COMPLIMENTS OF SHIVELY ' S DAIRY Homogenized Milk Serves the College 209 South Mill Phone 14 166 GRIFFON CLOTHES CAMPUS SPORTSWEAR LEE HATS ARROW SHIRTS FREEMAN SHOES SUPERBA CRAVATS We feature these and other fine brands of clothing, shoes, furnishings and luggage. Come in and look around. You are always welcome at Brady ' s. YOU ' LL FIND OUR PRICES AS LOW AS (Satisfaction guaranteed or vour monev cheerfully GOOD MERCHANDISE refunded) WILL PERMIT BRUCE KRAMER COMPANY DEPENDABLE DRY CLEANING WARD ' S JEWELRY STORE FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS We Feature Nationally Advertised Brands of Watches - Clocks - Silverware also Fine Diamonds Expert and Complete Watch Repair Service BIG FOUR ELEVATOR Grain - Feed - Coal Seeds, Etc. NORTH MANCHESTER, INDIANA Telephone 160 Cleaning Pressing SUITS MADE TO MEASURE HILL, THE TAILOR CLEANER Phone 126-1 Dyeing Repairing 167 Sensational Service of Taste Delight If you cannot purchase thi in your home town β€” write uΒ« β€” P. O. Box i. S., Chicago (90) Sexton COMPLIMENTS OF HUNTINGTON LABORATORIES, INC. HUNTINGTON, INDIANA Manufacturers of Fine Quality Sanitation and Maintenance Products NEARLY EVERYBODY WHO READS READS NEWSPAPERS EVERY DAY β€’fr β€’!β€’ 4 WABASH PLAIN DEALER and TIMES STAR OVER 7,000 A. B. C. Net Paid Circulation 168 JS APPLIANCES V Slaughtering - Proces sing - Storage 1 v Frozen Food Lockers xl 7 Complete Home Freezer Supplies WEIMER LOCKER CO., Inc. PHONE 73 NO. MANCHESTER, IND. CULLIGAN SOFT WATER SERVICE Saves Soap Saves Linens Saves Plumbing Saves Effort Saves Money WEIMER SOFT WATER Co., Inc. PHONE 718 NO. MANCHESTER, IND. 169 America ' s Headquarters FOR Food Service Equipment Baking Needs Chinaware Coffee Making Eqpt. Display Cases Electric Fans Floor Coverings Furniture Glassware Grills Broilers Janitor Supplies Kitchen Utensils Linen Cotton Goods Ovens Food Service Equipment Paper Goods Ranges β€” All Types Refrigerators Sanitation Supplies Scales Silverware Steam Tables Twines Vending Machines Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back 2201 S. LaSalle St. Phone CAlumet 5-1300 v Β£ COMPANV CHICAGO I nLLINOIS With Very Best Wishes RANDALL FUEL COMPANY, INC. Atlanta 1 Georgia 170 CHICAGO TRANSFORMER DIVISION ESSEX WIRE CORPORATION MANUFACTURERS OF ELECTRICAL TRANSFORMERS AND COILS NORTH MANCHESTER INDIANA 171 FORD SALES AND SERVICE CLIFF SNYDER MOTORS Genuine Ford Parts Phone 34 SCHEERER ' S BOTTLING COMPANY Bottlers of Quality Pop Orange Root Beer Lemon Lemon Lime Cream Soda Grapefruit Lithiated Lemon Cherry Chocolate Milk Grape Fruit Punch Ginger Ale Orange Pineapple Strawberry ALL FINE FLAVORS 87 E. Market Street WABASH, INDIANA WESTAFER ' S SERVICE Waxing and Washing Lubrication Atlas Tires, Tubes, Batteries WESTAFER ' S STANDARD SERVICE Lawrence and Clem Westafer Owners Mill and Main NORTH MANCHESTER Unit Monthly Tests For Elementary Grades COMPLIMENTS OF BUREAU OF TESTS MANCHESTER COLLEGE Semester End Tests For High School 172 America ' s Largest Selling Ice Cream N. MANCHESTER FARM BUREAU ELEVATOR Grain - Feed - Seed Feed Grinding Mixing Fence Posts Fertilizer Coal - Field Tiles Phone 135 NORTH MANCHESTER N. MANCHESTER FARM BUREAU LUMBER YARD Brick - Cement - Lime Hardware - Roofing Paint Millwork Native Lumber Phone 4 NORTH MANCHESTER 173 WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF THE NORTH MANCHESTER FOUNDRY DIVISION M. H. DETRICK CO. + + Heating and Laundry Stoves Also High Grade Grey Iron Castings NORTH MANCHESTER INDIANA 174 HOUSE OF HARTER Athletic Equipment GOSHEN INDIANA FEDEWA APPLIANCE STORE General Electric Ironrite Ironers Perfection Oil Heaters 203 E. Main St. Refrigerators Ranges Water Heaters Dishwashers Disposals Phone 806 Lloyd Thelma Smelser formerly SAM ' S RESTAURANT THE SPARTANS EAT HERE 604 W. Main St. Phone 581 NORTH MANCHESTER MERRICK EVANS CO. Machinery, Tools Equipment, Supplies Telephone Harrison 2202 511 W. DeWald St. Ft. Wayne, Ind. 175 COMPLIMENTS OF Hardware - Sporting Goods Electrical Plumbing Supplies Automotive 137 E. Main St. N. Manchester FAUROT ' S GROCERY COMPLETE FOOD MARKET Groceries - Meats - Vegetables Dietetic Foods PHONE 291 N. MANCHESTER CARL JOHNSON Marathon Service Station Phone 20 N. MANCHESTER INDIANA WETZEL INSURANCE AGENCY Where Insurance Is a Business Phone 76 Distinctive Printing We won National honors on an outstanding letterhead design the past year. Let us help you with any type of printing you may desire. Al- so we have in stock gift stationery and office supplies. And for free service with a smile β€” always. A. V. COLEMAN Colemans - Manchester Printing 121 East Main Street THE TASTE WILL TELL F R E S H C R I S P EASY - DIGESTED LEAST - FATTENING ASK BY NAME Q-MAN 176 BEST WISHES WUUe Swan Jlaun uf, WARSAW, INDIANA COMPLIMENTS OF THE INDIANA LAWRENCE BANK TRUST COMPANY Member of Federal Reserve System Total Assets Over $5,000,000 177 Lasco - Afco - Allen ' s Pride - Alben Brands ALLEN FOODS INC. 1141-51 S. SEVENTH ST. - ST. LOUIS, MO. Finer Foods for Hotels and Institutions WHOLESALERS - DISTRIBUTORS - MANUFACTURERS COMPLIMENTS OF THE WARNER BROODER AND APPLIANCE COMPANY NORTH MANCHESTER, INDIANA β€” Mfg. of β€” A complete line of Poultry and Hog Equipment That Satisfies THE BARNHART - VAN TRUMP CO. ROCHESTER, INDIANA STATIONERY ANNUALS MAGAZINES PAMPHLETS BUSINESS FORMS CARDS - PLACARDS - BOOKLETS Write us for samples of our work. We will submit estimates and layouts at your suggestion 178 LET ' S GO ALL OUT GENERAL TIRE J Whether in peace or times such as the present, when dangers from without threaten us β€” it has always been the American way β€” and our way β€” to go at it with a determined, super-hu- man, all-out effort. Whether we shall be called upon in the future to devote more and more ingenuity and capacity to the defense program, only time can tell. Whatever the demand, General shall always stand ready to contribute every ounce of production ability and effort to the Nation ' s needs. We shall always keep in mind our tremendous responsibility to our employees; and the obligation that is ours of providing them with more and better jobs under constantly improving working conditions. When normal times return may we pick-up where we left off and push forward to new horizons through the combined and co- ordinated efforts of the General Tire management, employees and the community; believing and knowing full well that many new and changing β€” but ever present β€” opportunities lie ahead for all of us. The General Tire Rubber Company Mechanical Goods Division WABASH, INDIANA 179 COMPLIMENTS OF FREEZE JEWELRY STORE Next Door to the City Hall EVERYTHING FOR YOUR CAR Truck or Tractor Metered and Ticket Printed Tank Wagon Service ONCE TRIED ALWAYS SATISFIED Central Oil Company Phone 555 701-703 W. Main ajBnbg au.1 uo Xjn ueQ ja jBnQ ' ONI ' H31S3H0NVM HXHON dOOl HH! NI 3DIAH3S anvaMvxs S,a IIM COMPLIMENTS OF KOTHE, WELLS BAUER CO. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA KO-WE-BA PRODUCTS Distributors KO-WE-BA WHOLESALE HOUSE WABASH, INDIANA 180 DEERWOOD Quality Foods Q k a m aft THE BLUFFTON GROCERY CO. BLUFFTON, INDIANA COMPLIMENTS OF EMPIRE FIRE BRICK COMPANY T. E. ROONEY A. P. Green Fire Brick Products 219 Murray St. Fort Wayne, Indiana Phone H-3222 IRISΒ£ ' 5 W0ME-325 gjgjgK 181 CONGRATULATIONS to the Aurora Staff for a job well done. The James Davis, Jr., Studio of Photography is indeed proud of its part in producing this fine yearbook. o o o 1006 Hugh Street Ft. Wayne, Indiana BROTHERHOOD MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Home Office Fort Wayne, Indiana Legal Reserve WM Non-Assessable Protection and Security for Loved Ones Bear ye one another ' s burdens and so fulfil the law of Christ Gal. 6:2 182 FOR Service - Quality - Variety Shop At MORRIS 5 - 10 - l 00 STORE 210 East Main Street Pleasing You Means Pleasing Us Everything for the Builder TRICK LUMBER CO. Try Trick for Lumber and Brick Phone 11 Yours for Friendly Service at the HIPPITY HOP CAFE Rt. 13 North of College Campus Complete Dinners Daily Short Orders EMERSON AND MARY FIKE OVERHOLT QUALITY SHOP Plumbing and Heating Phone 468 No. Manchester RAMSEY ' S GROCERY For Those College Snacks Groceries and Soft Drinks Open until 10:00 P. M. Phone 220 Cor. 7th and Wayne INSIST ON BREAD BAKED BY BURNS THE BAKER AND - HAVE - THE - BEST Best Wishes to the Class of 1951 BURN ' S BAKERY NORTH MANCHESTER, IND. Phone 634 183 rdvertidina esDirect a oLJirecioru Allen Foods Inc. 178 Barnhart- Van Trump Co. 1 7 8 Benton Review Publishing Co., Inc. 187 Big Four Elevator 167 Bluffton Grocery Co. 181 Brady ' s 167 Brotherhood Mutual Life Insurance Company 182 Bureau of Tests 172 Burn ' s Bakery 1 8 3 Central Oil Company 180 Chicago Transformer Division 17 1 Coast to Coast Stores 176 Colemans-Manchester Printing 176 James Davis, Jr., Studio of Photography 182 Edward Don Company 170 Empire Fire Brick Company 181 Faurot ' s Grocery 176 Fedewa Appliance Store 17 5 Fort Wayne Engraving Co. 186 Freeze Jewelry Store 1 80 General Tire __ 179 Harting Furniture Co. 1 64 Hill, the Tailor .. 167 Hippity Hop Cafe 183 House of Harter 175 Huntington Laboratories, Inc. 168 Indiana Lawrence Bank Trust Company 177 Carl Johnson 176 Kothe, Wells Bauer Co. 180 Bruce Kramer Company 167 Kuehmann ' s Potato Chips 176 Landis Drug Store 163 Merrick Evans Co. 175 184 -Ardvertisinci oDirecL a oLJirecioru Mike ' s Standard Service 180 Morris 5-10-$ 1.00 Store 183 North Manchester Farm Bureau Elevator -173 North Manchester Farm Bureau Lumber Yard β€”173 North Manchester Foundry 174 The News- Journal - 163 Oppenheim ' s β€” 166 Overholt Quality Shop . _._ ..183 Priser Auto Sales 165 Priser ' s Quality Cleaners 18 1 Public Service Company of Indiana, Inc. .165 Ramsey ' s Grocery 183 Randall Fuel Company, Inc. ....170 Scheerer ' s Bottling Company ..172 Sealtest Ice Cream 173 Sexton Quality Foods 168 Seyf ert ' s _ _. ..164 Shively ' s Dairy 1 66 Lloyd Thelma Smelser 175 Cliff Snyder Motors 172 Trick Lumber Co. .. 183 Wabash Plain Dealer 168 Wabash Produce Co. ..162 Ward ' s Jewelry Store 167 Warner Brooder and Appliance Company __ 178 Weimer Locker Co., Inc 169 Weimer Soft Water Co., Inc ..169 Westafer ' s Standard Service 172 Western Auto .1 64 Wetzel Insurance Agency _ ___ 1 76 White Swan Laundry 1 77 Wible Shoe Store ...163 L. J. Yoder 164 185 Β«f : β€’% FORT WAYNE ENGRAVING CO 120 W. Superior St. Fort Wayne, Indiana r G k3 Printed By BENTON REVIEW PUB. CO. Incorporated Fowler, Ind. (TK3 187 ' Β£ ' %i 4 .. i M % - β–  Β« β–  β€” Z t . 4f Β« V( Β£r ' - WINGER MEMORIAL AR.TS BUILDING MANCHESTER COLLEGE NORTH MANCHESTER. INDIANA WALTER SCHOLE.R. Β£ ASSOCIATES


Suggestions in the Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) collection:

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Manchester College - Aurora Yearbook (North Manchester, IN) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954


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