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NOT TO BE TAKEN FROiVl LIBRARY
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2009 with funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/smcalumnibulleti166coll
Alumni Bulletin
The SMC Alumni Association welcomes the following seniors into the Association;
H. Elison Adams. Jr. — graduate study at
Andrews University. Darj'l Thora Andersen — teacher. Louisville.
Kentucky, church school.
Betty Carole Belew — home economist for Worthington Foods in Ohio.
Ruth Rose Bolton — teacher. Cross Plains, Tennessee, church school.
James Wilbur Boyle — assistant pastor Chat- tanooga church.
Paul Carlton Boynton — student, Loma Linda University School of Medicine.
Shirley Bremson Crowson — teacher, Loma Linda public school.
James Roy Buckner — law student, Mercer LTniversity, Macon, Georgia.
Gerry Cabalo — student. Loma Linda LIni-
versity School of Medicine. Jeanette Gayle Carruth — obstetrical nurse,
Washington Sanitarium and Hospital. Richard Park Center — auditor. Southern
L'nion Conference auditing department. Jean Kay Cherry — teacher, Macon, Georgia.
public school. Cherylc Ann Chisholm — teacher. Madison
Academy. Arnold Basil Clapp — accountant. ]. C.
Thames and Associates. C.P.A.'s. Micheal David Clark — information no;
available. Judith Ann Clausen — teacher, Lansing,
Michigan, church school. Patricio Vergara Cobos — teacher, Chatta- nooga public school and work with
Chattanooga Symphony. Vann D. Cockrell — student, Loma Linda
Lfniversity School of Dentistry. Harry James Colson — graduate student or
the army. James Wayne Coulter — dean of boys and
chaplain, Laurelbrook School, Dayton,
Tennessee. Marilyn Mary Crooker — graduate student.
University of Tennessee. Garland Ray Cross — principal. Jackson,
church school. Betty Joyce Cuilla — teacher. Greater Boston
Academy.
Nolan Bryant Darnell — teacher and head of maintenance. Highland Academy.
Carol Frances Dietrich — secretary. Knoxville. Tennessee.
Elva Adeline Dreos — Bible instructor, Mich- igan Conference.
Ina Mae Dunn — assistant dean of women at SMC.
John Charles Dykes — undecided.
Marchie Lee Edgmon — worker, communica- tions held, Chattanooga area.
Harold Eugene Elkins — graduate student. University of Tennessee.
Patricia McCollum Elliott — nurse, where husband is stationed in army.
Rae Elaine English — undecided.
\relvin Lloyd Erickson — graduate student. Andrews University.
Lloyd Herbert Fisher — accountant, Tide- water Memorial Hospital, Tappahanock, Virginia.
William Lowry Fulton 111 — graduate stu- dent or army.
Roger Leland Gardner — graduate student or
army. Kenneth Lloyd Garner — graduate student.
Andrews L'niversity. Zadie Magdalene Garner — nurse. Paul Henry Gebert — assistantship. Llniver-
sity of Florida.
Byron Gent Griffin — graduate student.
Wilber Neil Gritfith — information not avail- able.
lohn Davis Goodbrad — graduate student. LIniversity of Chattanooga.
Minon A. Hamm — teacher, English Depart- ment. SMC
Hilde Schaefer Hasel — teacher, Madison, Tennessee, church school.
Stephen E. Hayes — teacher or graduate student.
Bonny Koobs Heinz — assistant dietitian. Baroness Erlanger Hospital, Chattanooga.
Kenneth York Henderson — teacher, Green- Mile, South Carolina, church school.
Rebecca Stanley Hodges. — teacher. Banner Elk, North Carolina, church school.
Silas Wilson Hodges — teacher, Decatur. Illi- nois, church school.
Elizabeth Ann Holmes — undecided.
Grady McArthur Huff — social science teacher, Hamilton County.
Larry Patrick Kelley — information not avail- able.
Kenneth Alan Kirkham — teacher, Dalton, Georgia, public school.
Carolyn Louise Knight — accountant. Glen- dale Sanitarium and Hospital.
Clyde Gerald Kopp — biology teacher. Greater Miami Academy.
Ronald Eugene Lambeth — forestry service, Alaska.
Janet K. Lauterhahn — library worker. Glen- dale Sanitarium.
Gladys Lee Lawless — secretary. Dean Cassell. SMC.
Sarah Janice Lee — accountant, Loma Linda, California, area.
John Earle Leitner — graduate student.
Marvin Gerard Lowman — graduate student. Andrews LIniversity.
Susan Dianne McBroom — secretary, Chatta- nooga area.
Charles Arthur McCutchen — nurse, Florida Sanitarium and Hospital.
Richard Laverne McKee — assistant publish- ing secretary, Carolina Conference.
Ronald Malloch — teacher Cleveland, Geor- gia, church school.
Jack Paul Martz — student. College of Oste- opathy, Kansas City, Missouri.
Darj'l L. Meyers — graduate student. An- drews University.
Rudolph Beniamin Mixon. Jr. — accountant. Gaffney, South Carolina.
Heide-Traude Susi Mundy — housewife.
Thomas Micheal Myers — teacher and main- tenance head, Bass Memorial Academy.
William Steen Nelson — graduate student.
Rice L'niversity. John Herbert Newbern — ministerial intern.
Georgia-Cumberland Conference.
Eleanor Dean Oaks — teacher, Memphis church school.
Frank Merriam Palmour — law student. Emory University.
Robert Leslie Potts — law student in Ala- bama.
Stephen Earle Powers, IV — graduate student in math., Andrews University.
Mary Ellen Purdie — dean of girls, Jefferson Academy, Texas.
Roger Nixon Rey — graduate student. Mull- igan State LIniversity.
James Leslie Roberts — teacher. Hamilton County.
Norma Jean Roddy — teacher of nursing. Oakwood College.
Dolores G. Rolls — teacher. Forest Lake Academy.
Margarete J. Rose — teacher.
Marion Susan Rozell — teacher, Poona. India.
church school. Dale Edward Solomon — student. L'niversity
of Tennessee Medical School Claude Earl Steen, III — student, Andrews
L'niversity. Donna Chalmers Steen — secretary, Berrien
Sprin.i;s area. H- Wayne Strickland — social worker in
Florida. Anne Jensen Swayze — teacher and assistant
dean. Highland Academy. Ann McGhinnis Taylor — information not
available. David Charles Taylor — teacher of history
and Spanish, Bass Memorial Academy. Linda Claire Thompson — nurse, Washing- ton, D. C. Janice Lee Thomson — nurse, Washington
Sanitarium and Hospital. Donnle Gay Vance — nurse, Washington
Sanitarium and Hospital. Polly Dunn Viar — teaching assistant in
nursing at SMC. Rex Michael Ward — graduate student,
Andrews L'niversity Daisy Innis Welch — housewife, nurse. Sharron June Wenger — elementary teacher
in California. Sarah Lynda Whitman — teacher in Loma
Linda. California, area. Thomas George Whitsett — graduate student,
Andrews University. Phillip Wayne Wilson — graduate student,
Andrews L'niversity. Beverly Ann Wingate — medical secretary.
Central Florida Cardiology Group. Richard William Winters, Jr. — graduate
student in biology at L'.T. William Lewis Wood — graduate student in
education. Andrews University. Judy Rene Woodruff — housewife and piano
teacher, Berrien Springs, Michigan. Martha Allie Woodruff' — piano teacher.
Georgia-Cumberland Academy.
TWO-YEAR GRADUATES
Jean Meyers Allen — information not avail- able.
Georgene Artith Gantz — secretary in Wash- ington, D.C., area.
Joyce Ilene Larcom — secretary in Loma Linda area.
Bonnie Jean Schwerin — student, secretary to Women's Dean, SMC.
Marlene M. Weigle — medical secretary, Takoma Park, Maryland.
Frances Gwendolyn Young — secretary to business manager. SMC.
SMC ALUMNI BULLETIN
Vol. XVI
August, 1966
No. 5
Published quarterly by Southern Mis- sionary College, Collegedale, Tennessee. Entered as second class matter February 12, 1951, at Collegedale. Tennessee, under act of Congress, August 12, 1912.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
Don Crook President
Douglas Bennett Vice President
Gladys Lawless Secretary
Lorene Ausherman Nelson, Asst. Secretary John Durichek Publicity Secretary
Larry McClure Treasurer
;iuummi\ uiiCiCiiuimtii uuLi^i^tcor
S IVI C ;4ium(€i ^uiietm
4, 5
VoLUMi; XVI
COLLEGEDALE, TENNESSEE, OCTOBER, 1966
Number 6
Homecoming Plans Include Wright, Holland
Annual Homecoming events will be- gin on Friday evening, November 4, in the new church sanctuary at South- ern Missionary College at 7:30 p.m.
Guest speakers will include Elder K. A. Wright, a former SMC president, and Elder Don Holland, MV secretary of the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference.
Honor classes are graduates of '41 and '^6.
The Saturday evening entertainment in the new Physical Education Center will feature Stan Midgley in the film lecture "Northwest Adventure. '' Midg- ley is known as one of America's out- standing humorous lecturers. Admis- sion will be complimentary to alumni families.
Acct)rding to Elder J. Don Crook, association president, the expected at- tendance indicates the largest Home- coming in SMC's history.
Madison Alumni Furnish Chapel
Madison College Alumni have re-
; cently given a gift to Madison Hospital
that will benefit Southern Missionary
College's Associate Degree Program
I students who are currently studying on
the Madison Extension Campus.
This is a gift of beautiful new furnishings for the hospital chapel, named for Dr. A. J. Sutherland, a former president of Madison College.
The beautiful chapel has a Baldwin organ, lovely church furniture, and wall-to-wall carpet.
The Alumni gift included the organ, pews, pulpit, Bible table, carpet, pic- ture screen, and 30 books.
The entire chapel is bathed with glorious light coming through stained glass windows which creates subdued, yet sparkling beauty. This dedicated area, open day and night, will be great- ly appreciated by the students of nurs- ing on the Madison Extension Campus.
Construction to On Sign for Co
Construction will begin shortly on the new entrance sign, a gift of the members of the Southern Missionary College Alumni Association.
College Hosts Alumni at GC
SMC administrative othcers were hosts to the following alumni at the General Conference reception and "Get-together:"
J. F. and Marcella Ashlock, '2'5, '46, George Ashlock, '30, T. M. and Betty Ashlock, '50, Charles A. Boykin, '27, Clyde F. Brooks, '51, Louise Gracey Brooks, '48, Fernando Cardona, '59, Donald E. and Diane Crane, '60, Joseph A. Crews, '46, Robert C Dar- nell, '48, Betty Davis, '62, Richard E. Green, '61, Burgess Goodbrad, '41, John Goodbrad, '38, Rainey Hooper, '51, Slylvia von Pohle Klein,' '65, Clif- ford Ludington, '41, Louis G. Luding- ton, '40, Edward and Ramona Mc- Coun, '59, '60, Carol Ann Meyer Mar- low, '62, JoAnn Miller, '63, Jessie Hawman Olson, '52, Roland Parker, '52, Mrs. R. H. Pierson, '50, Leslie and Barbara Shirley Pendleton, '59, Lamar and Felicia Phillips, '63, '65, John F. Pifer, '55, Herman C. Ray, '51, Wilfred Reyna, '60, Max and Kay Ritchie, '47, Susan Rozell '66, Fred Sanburn, '51, Rollin Snide, '40, Elmer and Marjorie Stone, '56, Arlene and Smuts van Rooyen, '64, '65, Fred Wil- liams, '58, Joann Winkler, '63, P. S. Young, '49.
Others present at the meeting were J. W. Cassell, John and Caroline Christensen, Otto Christensen, R. W. Davidson, Gerald O. Dunham, Betty and Charles Fleming, Mildred and D. C. Ludington, Elder and Mrs. A. C. McKee, Gordon Madgwick, Agnes and Robert W. Merchant, M. E. Moore, Dr. and Mrs. C N. Rees, Ardith and Wilbert Schneider, Edna E. Stone- burner, Ella May Stoneburncr, W. E. 'Vande'Vere, Edwin Zollinger, W. H. Taylor.
Begin mpus Mall
The sign will be located at the front of the mall between the two main auto entrances. It will be of brick construction, decorated at each end by a planter, and aluminum letters across the front will read:
Southern Missionary College 1892
A small placjue will be mounted, de- noting the sign as a gift of the Alumni Association.
We are printing the letter of thanks from Dr. C. N. Rees, president of the college, written to the alumni officers and members of the association:
"At a recent meeting of the Board of Trustees, the architect's drawing of the college entrance sign was presented to the members of the board. They were told that the Alumni Association was raising money to make this sign and to provide the necessary funds for it.
"The board wished me, as secretary, to convey to you, as president and the officers and members of the Alumni Association, that they were most appre- ciative of your thoughtfulness in mak- ing this fine contribution to the plan of the campus.
"Possibly, some time in the future you will have the opportunity to ex- press this appreciation to the alumni for their contribution."
Most cordially yours,
C, N. Rees, President, SMC
Alumni Make Overseas Trips
SMC; Alumni who made trips to Europe this summer are as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Sauls, '56 and '63, Mrs. Minon Hamm, '66, Betty Davis, '62, Mrs. Jerome Clark, '61, Ingrid Christiansen, '66, Libby Holmes, '66, Marchie Edgmon '66, Darlene Davis, '64, Lloyd Erickson, '66, Flora Savelle, '57, Henry Fish, '64, Nat Halvorsen, '63, Ralph Hendershot, '62, Mrs. Juan- ita Coble Sparks, '54.
Alumni Bulletin
Those Who Walked These Halls
1931
W. A. Sowers is the new principal of Madison Academy. He comes to Madison from the principalship of Oak Park Academy, Nevada, Iowa.
1942
Thyra Bowen Sloan has returned to Collet;edale to teach at the Arthur W. Spalding School.
1946
Elder J. A. Crews, speaker for the "Amazing Facts'' broadcast, joined Elder Robert East, '54, in a series of meetings in Denton, Maryland, this past summer.
1947
Jack E. Griffith writes that this is his third year teaching 7th grade at White Memorial Union School in Los An- geles. They have three children, Michael 13, Carmen 7, and John 3.
Elder O. R. Henderson has moved to Clearwater, Florida, to be pastor there. Elder Joel Tompkins, '55, former Clearwater pastor, has accepted a call to the Northern New England Conference as ministerial secretary and conference evangelist.
1948
Elder Wayne Thurber has moved from California to Weslaco, Texas, to be principal of the 'Valley Grande Academy.
Elder Jack Just from Portland Union Academy, Portland, Oregon, was a summer visitor to Tennessee.
1949
Manuel M. Carballal has recently been appointed to serve at the General Conference Insurance Service as head accountant and insurance counselor for overseas denominational property.
1950
Elder James Fulfer has recently moved from Trinidad to Port-au- Prince, Haiti. He is the new president of the Franco-Haitian Union. Bob and Nancy Fulfer are back in college at SMC this year.
Dr. Paul M. and Ruth Risetter Wat- son, '49, and family flew from Los Angeles on July 3 for Thailand. He will resume his work at the Bhuket Mission Hospital, West Thailand. They have three children, Linda, James and Cindy.
195!
W. D. Brass, Alabama-Mississippi conference evangelist, and George Green, Huntsville, Alabama, pastor, have completed a meeting in Hunts- ville held in an air-flow tent. Twenty- seven individuals have already been baptized as a result. Associated with these brethren in the meeting was Philip Wilson, a ministerial intern.
1953
Elder H. C. Brownlow has been ap- pointed to the conference ministerial staff as a revivalist to be associated with pastors in evangelistic crusades in the Southeastern California Conference.
Lilah L. Lilley, assistant professor of education at SMC, was a member of the General Conference Curriculum Revision Committee which met at An- drews University this summer.
Elder T. J. Harper is the president of Montemorelos 'Vocational and Pro- fessional College in Montemorelos, Mexico, He was formerly president of the Central American 'Vocational Col- lege in Costa Rica.
Robert and Betty Jo Boynton Mc- Millan, '51, are back in Alexandria, 'Virginia, after spending a year in Salt Lake City, Utah. Bob took course work at the University of Utah and Betty Jo stayed busy as a mother and housewife.
1954
W. F. Wright, conference evangelist, and Elder Raymond Roberts held three weeks of evangelistic meetings in Oneonta, Alabama, a city where there is no Adventist Church. Three have been baptized and other interests are being followed up.
1956
Dr. 'V. Wilfred Stuyvesant has com- pleted a three-year fellowship in ini- munopathology at the U.S.C. School of Medicine in Los Angeles. He will be associated with the Loma Linda Uni- versity Surgical Research Group, lo- cated at the Los Angeles County Gen- eral Hospital. Wilfred is certified by the American Board of Pathology.
James Duke is the classroom super- visor for the Florida Conference. Jimmy received his master's degree from Rollins College in Orlando last year.
Kenneth Vance was a recent visitor to the SMC campus. Mr. Vance is now the purchasing agent at Paradise Valley Sanitarium.
John Thurber was ordained April 2 to the gospel ministry. He is second tenor in the King's Heralds Quartet.
1957
Dr. LaDon W. Homer is taking a residency in pathology at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Little Rock, Arkansas.
1958
John T. Durichek and wife Helen Case Durichek, also of the class of '58, live in Portland, Tennessee. John is the new principal of Highland Acad- emy.
1959
Dr. George A. Delony has com- pleted two years with the U.S. Air Force, during which time he was sta- tioned at the Air Force Hospital, Max- well Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala- bama. He has started a residency in internal medicine at Emory University Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia.
Paul L. Jensen and family have re- cently moved to Charlotte, N.C., where Paul is the publishing secretary of the Carolina Conference.
I960
Barbara Jean Beavers has just com- pleted the orientation course for U.S. Air Force nurses. She is now a captain and is assigned to the Tactical Air Command, MacDill AFB, Florida.
1961
Dr. Orville W. Swarner, Jr., has finished interning at Baptist Memorial Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, and is \ now taking a residency in pediatrics at the City of Memphis Hospital.
Dr. W. Richard Toler has com- pleted his internship at Washington Sanitarium and Hospital, Takoma Park, Maryland. Dick has now gone to Loma Linda University Medical Center tor a residency in internal medicine.
Randall H. Fox is the 8th grade teacher and elementary supervisor for the Mile High Academy Elementary School. Randall has taught for six years in the Florida Conference. The Foxes have two pre-school children.
John Baker received the master of arts degree from George Peabody Col- lege for Teachers in August. John, who is the first grade teacher in the
Ai.iiMNi Bulletin
demonstration school at SMC, was awarded his masters with a major in education.
1962
Galen A. and Ann Davidson Pettey, '59, and family ha\e moved from Napa, California, to Madison, Ten- nessee, where Galen is the chief thera- pist in the physical therapy department in the new Madison hospital.
Nancy Reid is teaching in the Sligo Elementary School in Takoma Park.
1963
Helen Esther Sauls was graduated by the University of Iowa this past summer with a master of arts degree. Her husband Lynn, '56, has been work- ing toward a Ph.D. in English at the University of Iowa for the past 15 months. He is back on the staff at SMC this year.
1965
Herbert (Bert) E. Coolidge, Greene- \ille, Tennessee, who is studying at Michigan State University, visited the College recently. He has just com- pleted his master's in Business Admin- istration and is going on with further \\ ork.
Robert and Linda Mundy Pumphrey, hiith '65, are now in Dunlap, Tennes- sLL Robert is pastor of the Dunlap district, and Linda is working hard at being a pastor's wife.
Dianne Tennant was a recent visitor on the campus. She is teaching grades 2 and .^ in the Madison Elementary Sehool.
1966
Shirley Bremson Crowson is second grade teacher in the Graysville, Geor- gia, public school.
Frances I. Carroll is overflow teacher in Graysville, Georgia. Her husband is one of the conference associate pub- lishing secretaries.
Elaine English writes that she has been teaching 5th and 6th grade Art on the federal aid program in Raleigh, N.C. She is working on her master's at Andrews University this fall.
An evangelistic campaign was held during June in Silverdale, Tennessee, by four ministerial students. Wayne Bolan, '66, and Rex Ward, '66, were the speakers. They are now at An- drews University and will return as ministerial interns to the Georgia- Cumberland Conference.
SMC Placement Reports Positions of ^66 Graduates
Mrs. Christine Bartram — ttaclicr in Gc<)r>;i,i-
Cumberland Conference. Jerry E. Bartram — accountant with [. C.
Thames and Associates, C.P.A.s Benton Basham — stat? nurse. Memorial
Hospital. Chattanooj^a. Wayne Bolan — graduate student, Andrews
University.
Miss Kallar Tells Of Pioneer Days Of Junior College
Miss Addie Mae Kaller writes from Caldwell, Idaho, about the opening of Southern Junior College in 1917. She says that was really a pioneer year. There were three seniors, and the grad- uation was held at the old yellow house with chairs on the lawn.
Miss Kallar, who has served more than 30 years as a Bible instructor, re- calls that she lived in #1 of the new girls' dormitory. They had no doors and no heat, only a small oil heater. Those were really pioneer days.
WEDDINGS
Ina Mae Dunn, '66, and Ihomas Roy McFarland, August 21, Jackson, Mississippi.
Frances Gwendolyn Young, '66, and Donald Lane Piatt, August 21, Bloomington, Indiana.
Daisy Innis Welch, '66, and Micheal David Clark, '66, August 28, Char- leston, S.C.
Carolyn Jeanette Wilkinson, '63, and Gary L. Reese, July 17, Orlando, Florida. They are now living in Coudersport, Pa., while Gary attends Lock Haven State College. Carolyn was employed for two and one-half years by the Florida Conference M"V Department.
BIRTHS
John David, born April 26, to Dr. and Mrs. C. David Henriksen, '51, Los Angeles, California.
Stephanie Jean, born March 16, to Dr. Orville, '61 and Julia Boyd Swarner, '61, in Memphis, Tennessee.
Mrs. Frances I. Carroll — teacher, Graysville Elementary School, Graysville, Georgia,
Ingrid Christiansen — teacher, J. N. Andrews School, Takoma Park, Maryland.
Phyllis Jean Chu — undecided.
Willard J. CiapF^teacher, ColleKedale Elementary School.
Marc Denis Cools — under appointment to mission field, cither South Africa or Mid- dle East.
Barbara Kay Friesen — teacher. Redwood Empire Junior Academy, Santa Rosa, California.
Carol Margaret Futcher — teacher. Cascade S.D.A. Elementary School, Atlanta, Geor- gia.
D. Nancy Grotheer — unknown presently.
Miriam Judith Burke Heald — teacher, Ca- toosa County School
Jeannette Reid Hayes — nurse, Moccasin Bend Hospital, Chattanooga.
Jerry Donald Hoyle — teacher in Catoosa County Georgia.
Irma E. Hyde — teacher, Dalton. Georgia, church school.
Jimmy 'V. James — teacher. Phoenix, Ari- zona.
Leslie Jennings Knight — unknown presently.
Joanne 'Wassell LaFever — teacher, Ringgold, Georgia.
J. C. Linebaugh — teacher, Columbia Junior Academy, Columbia, S. C.
Irene Johnson McDonell — teacher, Miami, Florida.
Joseph Michael McDermott — teacher, Al- bany, Georgia.
Dean Ellis Maddock — teacher-registrar. Highland Academy, Portland. Tennessee.
Donald Kenneth Maples — teacher, Ozark Academy, Gentry, Arkansas.
Herbert Louis Marchant — undecided.
John Edward Mayhew — principal, Orlando Church School.
Marshall Gene Mitchell — teacher. Brake- worth Academy. Birmingham, Alabama.
Harry Arthur Rhodes — teacher, Bass Me- morial Academy, Lumberton, Mississippi.
Helena JoAnn Schuler — medicine, Loma Linda Lniversity.
Sandra Gayle Sievert — nurse, Chattanooga.
Kenneth Edward Spears — director of stu- dent finance, SMC.
Henry Arthur Swinson — associate pastor of Sanitarium Church. Orlando, Florida.
James Earl Thurmon — graduate study at Andrews University.
Barry Gustave Ulloth — associate publishing secretary, Carolina Conference.
Betty Jeanne Walker — teacher, Lexington, Kentucky.
TWO-YEAR GRADUATES Janice Hilton Jackson — unknown presently. LuWana Jean Lyle — working at Hinsdale Hospital.
Annual Homecoming November 4 and 5
Alumni Bulletin
The new sign for the college, being provided by the Alumni Association, will be placed at the head of the campus mall (see artist's sketch above) between the automobile entrances. The
mall stretches out in front of the new administration building (building in center with tall columns).
This building, now under construc- tion, will be finished in early 1967 and
Absentee Ballot
for
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
Check one name for each office.
President Vice President Secretary
Associate Secretary Treasurer
n
D
n n
D
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Publicity Secretary Please cut on dotted line and mail to:
n
Andrew Chastain DeWitt Bowen, D.D.S.
Kenneth Spears Floyd Greenleaf
Ruth Higgins Lilah Lilley
Carolyn Luce Inelda Hefferlin
Wallace Blair Norman Peek
Doris Crandell Gladys Lawless
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Southern Missionary College Collegedale, Tennessee 37315 RETURN BEFORE OCTOBER 31
will alleviate the classroom and office shortage in Lynn Wood Hall, the present administration building.
The artist's sketch also shows the new dormitory on the left of the mall; this structure is also under construc- tion. Footings have been run, and the walls are going up on this building, which will eventually be used for the young women.
The new alumni sign, in the midst of these improvements, identify the fastest growing college in the de- nomination— SMC.
Annual Homecoming November 4 and 5
SMC ALUMNI BULLETIN
Vol. XVI October. 1966 No. 6
Published quarterly by Southern Mis- sionary College. Collegedale, Tennessee. Entered as second class matter February 12, 1951, at Collegedale, Tennessee, under act of Congress, August 12, 1912.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS
Don Crook President
Douglas Bennett Vice President
Gladys Lawless - Secretary
Lorene Ausherman Nelson, Asst. Secretary
John Durichek . Publicity Secretary
Larry McClure Treasurer
S M G"''9ilum*U SuUetU
Volume XVI
COLLEGEDALE, TENNESSEE, DECEMBER, 1966 '- ( . ' ' "^ i- NUMBER 7
Bowen Plans Alumni Year
On behalf of the new Alumni of- ficers for 1967, I would like to extend greetings to all graduates and former students of Southern Missionary Col- lege. It is with a deep sense of re- sponsibility of serving as your newly elected officers that we assume our duties.
SMC has now become the fastest growing college in the denomination, thus the Alumni Association must give ever-increasing help to its college at this time of rapid expansion.
As we formulate plans for the com- ing year, there are three areas that will receive our special attention. They are:
(1) Up-dating Alumni records as to member activity, new degrees received, new members to fam- ilies, etc.
(2) Local chapter activities and or- ganization.
(3) Early plans for 1967 Alumni Homecoming.
Dr. Dewitt Bowen
SMC Alumni Go As Missionaries
Robert W. and Ann Maxwell Burcharil, '59 and '55, business man- ager, Tokyo Sanitarium. Returning after furlough.
SusM! Rozell. '66, teacher, Salisbury Park School, Poona, India.
Elder and Mrs. F. C. Petty, '41 and '65, chaplain-pastor of the Guadalajara, Mexico, English church.
(Continued on page 4)
Outgoing Alumni President J. Don Crook congratulates incoming officers: Dr. Dewitt Bowen, newly-elected president; and Wallace Blair, treasurer.
Homecoming Draws Crowd
On Friday, November 4, registration took place in the Women's Residence Hall and the Collegedale Church.
Elder Kenneth A. 'Wright, former president of SMC, was the featured speaker for the Vesper Service at 7:30 P.M. The title of his sermon was "Am I My Brother's Keeper, or Am I My Brother's Brother." He used as his text Genesis 4:9 — the story of Cain and Abel. He stated that one should be a brother to someone who
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doesn't have a brother. The greatest thrill in the world is being of service to someone else. He related the story of the talents and how they were used. Everyone has at least one talent, and it is his responsibility to use it in the right manner. AH God asks of us is to do our best with whatever we have. Man may be in active service for God while engaged in ordinary everyday duties. The mother who is training her children for God is doing as great a job as the minister in the pulpit.
On Sabbath, November 5, Elder Don Holland, MV secretary of the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference, was the featured speaker for the Sabbath service. He spoke on "Atomic Power," using as his text, Isaiah 40: 26-29. One cannot look to other men for power. All are capable of doing the will of God, he didn't make us in-
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