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EASTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
KENTUCKY
RICHMOND
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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/milestone1955east
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EASTERN KENTUCKY STATE COLLEGE
RICHMOND, KENTUCKY
1955
MILESTONE
This is Eastern. This is a small but progressive and growing college of seventeen
hundred students. Through its gates pass men and women from every part of the
state and from many miles beyond the Commonwealth. Our homes are as far apart
as Staten Island to Denver and from Detroit to Pensacola; from Burning Springs and
Honey Bee and Happy Valley to Richmond.
We come from large cities and small farms; from modernistic high schools and
one-room schools; from little rural churches and from city congregations; from the
mountains and the bluegrass; from the coal miner's family, the railroaders, the
farmer's, the business executive's.
We come with the marks of our community ways upon us. We speak the soft
and slow speech of our southern hills and mountains and the swift, clipped speech
of northern towns. We come with ballads on our tongues and fiddle tunes at our
finger tips, and with remembered symphonies in our ears.
We come believing and worshipping in our Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, or
Mormon faiths. We come with minds which have been exposed to many different
views, but have not always met a view on
life which we could accept as our own.
We come with biases and prejudices ac-
quired in our local communities or perhaps
we come with open minds, willing to con-
sider new opinions.
But these differences of background lose
their sharpness when we enter into our
new world . . . our one world, college.
Merely our presence here unites us into
one ... a person who has the love of
Eastern foremost in his mind.
We come with many goals. While here
our feet will pass through many doors,
climb many steps that lead through halls of
applied arts, science, fine arts, education,
health and physical educa.'/on, military
science, mathematics, social science.
Our feef travel many cam-
pus miles. They run with fall,
drag with winter, skip with
spring, play with summer.
Daily we travel over fa-
miliar paths. Our presence
creates centers of activity.
Over a cup of coffee, in a
history class, on the main
walk, or in a crowded car,
the campus furnishes activity.
Our steps will take us through beckoning doors which open into places of work
and play, study and recreation These avenues will provide to us a way of life which
at first has an air of strangeness, but gradually we begin to feel that we belong.
Our campus is our home. Within the dormitories of Sullivan, Memorial, McCreary,
Beckham, and Burnam we find a great portion of our college life. These buildings
provide us with the opportunities to meet people who will become life-long friends.
Stately columns invite us to enter . . . to share through days and midnight hours
of study and talk and carefree laughter all our hopes, all our ambitions, all our
fears. Dormitory life is an unforgettable experience long to be remembered and
cherished.
This is Eastern. Perhaps no campus
presents a prettier scene. Beauty is
radiant during each season here.
Eastern is a picture of serene loveliness
when fallen snow turns the campus into a white paradise
In winter the campus is covered with a sparkling blanket that almost brings an
atmosphere of majesty.
And the rains come
a new season.
seemingly never to leave, but sprinkling the promise of
Spring and summer bring budding trees and blossoming flowers which perfume
the campus with their fragrance. Leaves, wave on wave, begin to darken the still,
green grass . . . long shadows come . . . the amphitheatre is a vision of spellbinding
color reflecting the gorgeous multicolored pageantry of fall.
And through all the
seasons, the Student
Union in her nightly
beauty towers over the
campus. Seeing her
gleaming or shadowy
loveliness and hearing
the fen o'clock chimes
ring good night stills
the restlessness of day
and brings quietness
and peace.
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This is Eastern. Perhaps no car
presents a prettier scene. Beauty
radiant during each season hi
Eastern is a picture of serene lovelin
when fallen snow turns the campus int
In winter the campus is covere<
atmosphere of majesty.
And the rains come . . . seemin
a new season.
Spring and summer bring budd
the campus with their fragrance. Le
green grass . . . long shadows come
color reflecting the gorgeous multicolc
And through all the
seasons, the Student
Union in her nightly
beauty towers over the
campus. Seeing her
gleaming or shadowy
loveliness and hearing
the ten o'clock chimes
ring good night stills
the restlessness of day
and brings quietness
and peace.
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Dedication
III. Seniors
IV. Graduates
V. Administration
VI. Juniors
VII. Athletics
VIII. Sophomores
IX. Military Science
X. Freshmen
XI. Organizations
XII. Daily Life
XIII. In Memoriam
XIV. Index
1
9
JO
38
40
56
66
86
96
108
122
154
196
197
Among these favorite buildings, on this dear campus, students grow from shy,
awkward freshmen to confident, poised graduates. Remembering at all times that
knowledge is our goal, we realize also that "education is where you find it." Eastern
students are alive.
The friendly, informal campus environment doesn't permit anyone to conceal his
personality for long. And this quality more than any other is responsible for our in-
stitution being known hereabouts as "one of the friendliest colleges"
We are proud of EKSCs famed Southern traditions and folk-ways, but prouder
still of its outstanding scholastic position in the nation. We believe that the members
of our administration are among the most conscientious and understanding to be
found anywhere. Our instructors unceasingly strive to stimulate our self-development,
and to guide our sometimes reluctant and wayward feet along the never-ending road
of learning.
Eastern is growing. It will be larger and greater tomorrow. But the most cherished
memories of the class of 1955 will always center around the closeness of spirit and
friendly intimacy of the "Little" Eastern we knew. May its expanding program not
forget to retain these indispensable values as a part of its basic fiber and foundation.
May this 1955 MILESTONE retain, restore, and preserve in your heart and mind,
the Eastern we knew for all the years to come.
Edie and Peggy
Desiring only to better our class, thinking never of personal gain, working
diligently in any senior or campus activity, wanting to be an intimate friend with all
students, being one of the most capable and most efficient leaders of all time, im-
pressing all with her grace, charm, and poise . . . these are some of the limited
reasons why Dean Emma Y. Case, class advisor for four years, is accorded our
respect and praise.
We, the senior class, proudly dedicate our 1955 Milestone to our Dean Case.
s
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o^s
Senior Class president is Harry
Stigall. Officers are James Winn,
vice-president; Sue Appleton, sec-
retary; and Chester Raker, treas-
urer. Mrs. Emma Y. Case is class
advisor. Among the many senior
sponsored activities are the Thurs-
day evening bunny hops where
seniors gather to chat, to dance
and to have fun.
10
11
CHARLES VICTOR HENRY BERTHA ISAACS
Jamestown Wagersville
Sio/ogy, B.S. Elementary Ed., B.S
Biology Club 3,4
W. NEVERSTITCH
Cumberland
Hhl. — Phy. Ed., A.B.
Knights of Artillery 3
Newman Club 1,2,3
FRANKIE MOORES TUDOR JOHN L. CONN
Richmond Ivel
Elementary Ed., B.S. Commerce, B.S.
tfAfW-fLk
BILLY MELVIN WILDER
BETTY BRETT OGDEN
ROBERT EARL
BARTLEY
DOROTHY O. BICKERS
JAMES O. CROLEY
Kettle Island
Winchester
Corbin
Campbellsburg
Richmond
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Musk, A.B.
Chem. — Math
, 85
Biology, B.S.
Sociol Science, A.B.
Ind. Arts Club 1,2,3,4
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
B.S.U. 1,2
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Photo Club 1
Choir 1,2,3,4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music 3,4
Treas., 4
Math Club )
Biology Club 1,2,3,4
Caduceus Club 1,2,3,4
Sec, 3
Cwens 2
Collegiate Pentacle 1
Sigma Lambda 2,3
Y.W.C.A. 1
pre- medicine
12
SENIORS
H. R. WOLFINBARGER
KELLY PAUL DeSIMONE
EVA RUTH HADEN
ASA LOUIS HORD
ESTEN A. WEBB
Irvine
McRoberts
Richmond
Berea
Somerset
Biology, B.S.
Biology, B.S.
Horn.' Economics, B.S
Commerce, B.S.
Industrial Arts, B.
S.
Biology Club 1
Letcher County Club 4
Band 1
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Ind. Arts Club 1
,2,3,4
Caduceus Club 2
Vice-president., 4
Choir 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Physics Club 3
Knights of Artillery
2,3,4
D.S.F. 1,2,3,4
Y.M.C.A. 1
Home Econ. Club
Kyma Club 3,4
Messiah 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1
,2,3,4
THOMAS R. FORBES
CAROL A. JAC
KSDN
J
W. MULLIKIN
MARTHA LOUISE
LEEDS
M
/■-VIN
N. MCDONALD
Covington
Waco
Ewing
Richmond
Waco
Commerce, B.S.
History, A.B.
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Art, A.B.
Socol S
cience, B.S.
Kappa Pi 3,4
Choir 1
Ind. Arts Club 3
Kappa Pi 3,4
Pres., 4
Messiah 1,3
Photo Club 4
Sec, 4
Photo Club 2
Y.W.C.A. 1
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Newman Club 1
Orchestra 3,4
2,3,4
13
H. DWIGHT N1DIFFER
WILLIAM CAROL
DOAN
MARGIE ANN RASN1CK
ERNIE E. RIGRISH
RAY MITCHELL FANNIN
Tribbev
Cvnthiana
Cumberland
Portsmouth, Ohio
Whitley City
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Geo.-Hisf., A.B.
elementary Ed., B.S.
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Social Science, B.S.
Knights of Artillery 3
Cwens 2
"E" Club 2,3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 4
Y.M.C.A. 2
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Milestone 3,4
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3
Vice-pres., 3
F.T.A. 2,3
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Varsity Football 1,2,3,4,
Progress 4
EDWARD J. MARTIN
MARY K. NOLAN
Wayland
Harlan
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Elementary Ed., B
World Affairs Club 4
B.S.U. 1,2,3,
World Affairs C
RODNEY R. RATLIFF
ETHEL FRANCES
BURKE
DAVID J. THORNTON
Elkhorn City
Monticello
Lexington
Commerce, B.S.
Biology, B.S.
Industrial Arts, A.B.
Sigma Tau Pi 4
B.S.U. 4
Messiah 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 3
music
14
SENIORS
RONALD E. JOHNSON
CLARA R. PATTERSON
DANNIE
DEREN
GRANT
BETTY JANE RINESMITH
JAMES WARREN BOYER
Pineville
Woodlawn, Term.
Insull
Paris
Stearns
Commerce, B.S.
E/smanfory Ed.. B.S.
Indusfr
ol A,H, B
S.
Elementary Ed.,
B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Band 1,2,3,4
Little Theater Club 4
Kappa Delta P
4
Sigma Lambda 2,3,4
Messiah 4
Messiah 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Progress Staff 3,4
Wesley Foundation 3,4
F.T.A. 4
World Affairs Club 4
Y.W.C.A. 4
Milestone Staff
Newman Club
Sec. 3,4
Progress Staff
W.R.A. 2
World Affairs
Y.W.C.A. 1
F.T.A. 3,4
4
1,2,3,4
3,4
Club 4
BLAINE COX MARTIN
DIXIE DELLA TRAPP
JAMES T. SAMMONS
BONNIE G. SCHRAM
HOBERT FORD
Wayland
Butler
Raceland
Florence
Everts
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Home Economics, B.S.
Industrial Alls, B.S.
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Commerce, B.S.
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Drum and Sandal 2,3,4
Drum and Sandal 2,3,4
Cwens 2
Ind. Arts Club 1,2,3,4
Sigma Lambda 2
Home Ec. Club 1,2,3,4
Kappa Pi 2
W.R.A. 1,2
Pres., 4
Varsity Football 1,2,3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Varsity Track 1,2,3,4
15
PRESTON O. YOUNG, JR. MILTON L. MARCUM
Stanford
Salversville
Physical Education, D.S.
Commerce, B.S
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Sigma Tau Pi
P. E. Club 3,4
COETTA LUCAS
REGINALD L. BE"
Farraday
Lancaster
Commerce, B.S.
History, A.B.
Choir 1,2
B.S.U. 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Canterbury Club
W.R.A. 3,4
Messiah 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2
Choir 4
Letcher Ccunty Club
3,4
SHELBY F. K1NCAID
Beattyville
History, A.B.
Varsity Baseball Team 2,3,4
Coach 3,4
GLENN SCOTT MORRIS
Crab Orchard
Eng/ish, A.B.
Canterbury Club 4
Sigma Lambda 3,4
Varsity Track Team 2,3,4
W«-M Affairs Club 2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
SILLIE DAVIS CASEY
Richmond
E/rm:nlary Id., B.S.
Cwens 2
D.S.F. 1
Drum and Sandal 3
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Kyma 1,2,3
Messiah 3
Milestone 3
Off Campus Club 1
Sigma Lambda 1
FORD THOMAS POWELL
Sand Gap
Commerce, B.S.
Sigma Tau Pi 4
LLIE DIXON CAWOOD JOHN RONALD FRANK
Harlan
Ebmsntory Ed., B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Messiah 2,3
Milestone 3
World Affairs Club 2,3,4
Sec, 3
Y.W.C.A. 2,3,4
F.T.A. 3,4
Pres., 3
Huntington, W. Va.
Mafhsmotics, B.S.
Choir 1
Messiah 1
World Affairs Club 4
art
16
SENIORS
NELSON R. BALDR
DGE
LAURA E. TODD
JOE SHELTON
ELANCHE V. NEWBY
RALPH PRiC
Prestonsburg
Richmond
Junction City
Harrodsburg
Liberty
Commerce, B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Molhemolics, B.S.
Flem!n!ary Ed., B.S.
Socio/ Sc/enc
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
B.S.U. 1,2
Physics Club 2,3,4
B.S.U. 2,3,4
Off Campus Club
1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 3
World Affairs Club 4
Pres., 2
President 4
Math Club 4
WILLIAM H. BALDWIN
Richmond
lnduslr.nl Alls, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 1,
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Knights of Artillery 4
Progress 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
SAMMY JOYCE HACKER MELVIN C. MIDDLETON E. J. McDONALD
Richmond
Elementary Ed., B.S.
B.S.U. 1
Kyma 2
O'f Campus Club 1,2,4
Treas., 1
Pres., 4
W.R.A. 2
Y.W.C.A. 1,4
F.T.A. 4
Induslriol Arts, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 1,2,3
Williamsburg
Commerce, B.S.
B.S.U. 3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Messiah 3,4
Progress 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi
Student Counc
Treas., 4
ESTILL DARRELL BANKS
Whitesburg
Commerce, B.S.
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 3
Letcher Co. Club 3,4
Pres., 3
17
!. TURNER, JR.
Newport
Socio! Science, B.S.
World Affairs Club 2
CLIFFORD TRIMBLE
Nancy
Socio/ Science, A.B.
FRANCES WILBURN
Grayson
Home Economics, B.S.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2
Home Economics Club
1 .-2,3,4
Milestone 3
Westminister Fellowship
3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3
RANDOLPH DOZIER
Ravenna
Art, A.B
Kappa Pi 2,3,4
Treas., 3
CLAY REED WITMER
Winchester
History, A.B.
VENCIL DELANO ENGLE KATIE MILDRED HALL BOBBY JOE KITCHEN
Woodbine Ravenna East Point
Industrial Arts, B.S. Home Economics Commerce, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 2,3,4 B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Sec, 3,4 Home Economics Club
2,3,4
Y.W.C.A. 3
PATRICIA PLATT DAY
Harlan
Elemenlory Ed , E S.
Messiah 4
ff
'** ^ Ti%
ROY D. MITCHELL
Corbin
Socio/ Science, A.B.
B.S.U. 3,4
World Affaiis Club 3,4
industrial arts
SENIORS
REXFORD H. JONES
Corbin
History, A.B.
P. E. Club 3,4
Sigma Lambda 4
BILLY JOE CAWOOD
Cawood
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Knights of Artillery 3
F.T.A. 4
Harlan County Club 4
MARY T. WALLACE
Somerset
Elementary Ed., B.S.
BOBBY LEON ROSE REX EUGENE MILLER
Winston Sand Gap
Industrial Arts, B.S. Elementary Ed., B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 2
Knights of Artillery 3,4
*** f*s: 1
*■.** tlfcAftb
ROBERT B. DURHAM
Campbellsville
Elementary Ed., B.S.
B.S.U. 3,4
PATRICIA A. CALDWELL
Waynesburg
Home Economics, B.S.
B.S.U. 2
Home Economics Club
2,3,4
Photo Club 2,3
Sigma Lambda 2
World Affairs Club 2
BURLEY STEVENS
Ashland
Biology, B.S.
MARY RUTH CHILDERS JOHNNY HENRY BROWN
Omar, W. Va. Williamsburg
Elementary Ed., B.S. Commerce, B.S.
Kyma 3,4 Sigma Tau Pi 4
Messiah 3
W.R.A. 3
F.T.A. 3,4
19
WALKER M PARKE
MARY JO CAMPBELL
BOBBY LOUIS DEZARN
GRACE L. REYNOLDS
GENE RAY TOMPKINS
Union City
Pineville
College Hill
Buckhorn
Corbin
Social Science, B.S.
Eng/ish, A.B
Commerce, B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Physical education, S.S.
Cheerleader 3
Canterbury Club 1,3,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Math Club 1
Band 1
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Vice-pres. 3
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Milestone 3
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Kyma 1,3,3
Editor "Belles-Lettres" 4
Drill Team 3,3
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Treas., 3
Kyma 1,2
Westminster Fellowship
Choir 1,2,3,4
Milestone 4
1,2,3,4
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Progress 2,3,4,
World Affairs Club 4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Co-Editor 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Varsity Swim Team 1
Sigma Lambda 1,2,3,4
Sigma Tau Delta 2,3,4
Pres., 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Big Sisters Club 2
Sec, 2
Who's Who 4
Auk*
WILLIAM R. VAN PELT
NORVALINE C.
HALE
WAYNE T. TIPTON
JANE F. PARKER
HAROLD J. FRALEY
Kenvir
Paint Lick
Clay City
Somerset
Sandy Hook
Industrial Arts. B.S
Commerce, B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
ehmsntary £d., B.S
Geography, A.B.
Industrial Arts Club 3,4
World Affairs
Club 3
Photo Club 4
B.S.U. 2
Knights of Artillery 3
Sigma Tau Pi 4
Drum and Sandal 1
Varsity Basketball Team
1,2,3,4
t *
ome economics
20
SENIORS
JESSE ALLEN KELTNER PEGGY HELEN KRAUS
THOMAS RAY HOWELL
Somerset
Commerce, 8.S.
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Milestone 4
Sigma Lambda 2,3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Wesley Foundation 1
Y.M.C.A. 2,3,4
Sec.-Treas., 3,4
Louisville
History, A.B.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 3
Treas., 3
Choir 1
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Cwens 2
Kappa Delta Pi 4
Messiah 1,2
Milestone 4
Co-Editor 4
Music Club 1
Orchestra 1
Sigma Lambda 1,2,3,4
S. U. Music Council 1,2,3,
Westminster Fellowship
1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 3
Who's Who 4
Loyal!
B S
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 1
Drill Team 2, 3
POLLY L. JENKINS
Whitesburg
Music, A.B.
8.S.U. 1,2
Choir 1,2,3,4
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Treas., 4
Math Club 1,4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music Club 1,2,3,4
Treas., 3
Y.W.C.A. 1
Agriculture Club 1
"E" Club 2,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3
Varsity Baseball Team
1,2,3,4
World Affairs Club 4
Y.M.C.A. 2
WILLIAM T. McANALLEN SUE CARROL LEWIS
Winchester East Bernstadt
Physical Education, B.S. Horn? Economics, B.S.
"E" Club 1,2,3,4
Newman Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 2
Varsity Baseball Team
1,2,3,4
JOHN EDWARD YARBER JOE ANN NASSIDA
Mt. Sterling Berea
Biology, B.S. An, A.B
Kyma 4 Kappa Pi 3,4
EARL EUGENE JONES
Berea
English, A.B.
Class Officer 1
Pres., 1
Varsity Football Team 1
21
KENNETH L. MEADORS
Williamsburg
Commerce, B.S.
Sigma Tau Pi 4
DORIS S. MARCUM
Lynch
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Milestone 3
W.R.A. 1,2
Wesley Foundation
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Harlan Co. Club 4
PAUL LANDRUM
Lost Creek
Elemenlory fd . B.
ANITA ANN LANKFORD
Lebanon
Phy. Ed. — Art. B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Drum and Sandal 3,4
W.R.A. 1,2,3,4
JOHN DANIEL SEALE
Booneville
Health — Phy. Ed., B.S.
Phy. Ed. Club 3,4
WILLIAM L. REED
SUZY RAMEY
Salyersville
P.keville
Health — Phy. Ed., B.S.
Commerce, B.S
Phi lota 3
Progress 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
Sigma Tau P
Vice-pres., 3
W.R.A. 3
Phy. Ed. Club 3
ILLY
CALVIN TRACY
SUE COVINGTON CLORE
GLENN BROWN
Richr
nond
LaGrange
Yeager
Indus
trial Aril, B.S.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Chem. _ Bio., B.S.
Progress 1
Biology Club 1,2,3,4
World Affairs Club 4
Pres., 2,4
Y.W.C.A. 3,4
Physics Club 3
F.T.A. 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 2,3,4
Pres., 4
secondary education
22
SENIORS
JAMES W. HUMPHREY
Georgetown
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Ind. Arts Club 1,2,3,4
JUANITA LITTERAL
Jackson
Commerce, B.S.
WILLIAM ROBERT SNOW DALE MARIE WOODSON
Sherman
Commerce, B.S.
Alpha Psi Omega 4
Choir 1,2,3,4
Little Theater 2,3,4
Pres., 4
Winchester
Mathematics, B.S.
Math 1,4
Sigma Lambda 1
Y.W.C.A. 3
RALPH M. RUTLEDGE
Ironton, O.
Industrial Arts, B.S.
"E" Club 2,3,4
Ind. Arts, 1,2,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Varsity Baseball Team
1,2,3,4
Varsity Swim Team 2,3,4
SHANNON D. HATTER
Yosemite
Commerce, B.S.
Kappa Pi 4
Photo Club 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3, 4
Y.M.C.A. 2
JOANN BLAKELY
CO/T
nerce, B.S.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2
Messiah 1,2,3
Progress 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3
WILLIAM R. HENSLEY
Harlan
Chemistry, B.S.
Caduceus Club 1,2,3,4
Class Officer 1,2
Vice-pres., 1
Pres., 2
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Kyma 1
Progress 1,4
Y.M.C.A. 1,2
JOAN ROSE SCHOLLE
Covington
Ebmentory Ed., B.S.
Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4
Sec.-Treas., 2
Choir 1,2
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Little Theater 2,3,4
Treas., 2
Pres., 3
Messiah 1,2,3
Milestone 3
Music Club 2,3,4
Progress 2
S.U. Music Council 3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Westminster Fellowship
1,2
Y.W.C.A. 2
F.T.A. 3,4
Who's Who 4
LARRY JOE JAMES
Grayson
/Music, A.B.
Band 1,2,3,4
Choir 1,2,3,4
Little Theater 4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Orchestra 4
23
ALTON GAY BEST
Springfield
Mathematics, B.S.
WANNA FAYE BROWN
Siqn
nbda
Sec, 2
W.R.A. 3
Wesley Foundatii
World Affairs 4
Y.W.C.A. 1
GENE PAUL TAYLOR
Stanford
Socio) Science, A.B.
BONNIE B. BALDWIN
Campbellsville
Horn; Economics, B.S.
B.S.U. 3
Home Economics Club 3,4
World Affairs Club 3
Harlan County Club 4
Commerce, B.S.
Kappa Pi 3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Pres., 4
Westminster Fellowship 1
JERRY WRIGHT
Falmouth
Biology, B.S
Biology Club 1,2,3,4
Pres., 3
Milestone 4
Wesley Foundation
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
E/e
Ed , B S
Burnam W.R.H.O. 4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Milestone 3
Progress 1,2
Wesley Foundation 4
Westminister Fellowship 1
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
JAMES ROBERT WINN
Greensburg
Music, A.B.
Band 1,2,3,4
Pres., 3
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4,
Choir Director 2,3,4
Choir 1,2,3,4
Class Officer 4
Vice-pres. ,4
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music Club 1,2,3,4
Pres., 3
Orchestra 4
AMANDA S. APPLETON JOSEPH J. BALASSONE
Choir 3
Class Officer 4
Sec, 4
Milestone 4
Progress 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Wesley Foundation
Richmond
Biology, B.S.
Biology Club 3
"E" Club 3,4
Newman Club 3
Sigma Lambda 3
Varsity Football 3,4
Ten
is 3,4
College Quartet 1,2,3,4
secondary education Mmm^k
24
SENIORS
ARY LIONEL ARTHUR
Ashland
Socio/ Science, A. 8.
DOROTHY O. THOM;
Paris
Elementary Ed., B.S.
IS
GAIL E. GODSEY
Happy
Geography, B.S.
MARGARET P. KNEPPER
Clarksville, Ind.
Social Science, A.B.
CHARLES R.
Pineville
Physical Edu
BAUGH
•alion, B.
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Varsity Football Team 1,4
Messiah 3,4
Wesley Foundation
Y.W.C.A. 2,3,4
Vice-pres., 3
F.T.A. 4
Sec, 4
1,2,3,4
Choir 2
World Affairs 4
Y.W.C.A. 3,4
-
. ...
I M^ A
NORMA JEAN TEVIS
Richmond
English, A.B.
Canterbury 2,3,4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Kyma 2,3,4
Vice-Pres., 3
Off Campus 1
Sigma Lambda 2,3,4
Treas., 4
. A. GREYNOLDS
Loyal)
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4
Pres., 4
Debate Team 4
Industrial Arts 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 3
Pres., 4
Little Theater 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Kappa lota E psi Ion 2
Who's Who 4
NANCIE LEE STONE
Grayson
Horns Economics, B.S.
D.S.F. 4
Home Econ. Club 1,2,3,4
Treas., 4
Kyma 3,4
Milestone 3
Assistant Ed., 3
Y.W.C.A. 1,4
F.T.A. 3,4
NICK TOM DeSANTIS
Asbury Park, N. J.
Commerce, B.S.
Knights of Artillery 3
Newman Club 1,2,3,4
Progress 2,3
Sports Editor 2,3
Varsity Swim Team 2,3
Y.M.C.A. 1,2
EDITH ANN TAYLOR
Covington
Hist.— Pol. Sci.—Eng., A.B.
Canterbury 2,3,4
Pres., 4
Class Officer 2
Vice-pres., 2
Cwens 2
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Little Theater 2,3
Mardi Gras Queen 4
Messiah 1
Milestone 2,3,4
Co-editor 4
Miss Popularity 4
Progress 1,2,3,4
Club Ed., 1,2
Editor 3
Sigma Tau Delta 2,3,4
Sec. -treas., 3
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3,4
Pres., 2
Who's Who 4
World Affairs 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 2
Treas., 3
Big Sisters Club 3,4
Collegiate Pentacle 4
25
HARRY M. SMILEY
BARBARA N. WELCH
JAMES ALLEN SNOW
PATRICIA E. PERKINS
RONALD H. SMILEY
Berry
Irvine
Sherman
Danville
Prestonsburg
Chem. — Math., B.S.
Horn? Economics, B.S.
Hisf. — Phy. Ed., A B.
Art — History, A.B.
Chem. — Math., B.S.
Caduceus Club 2,3,4
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4
Kappa Pi 3,4
Caduceus Club 1,2
Math Club 4
Home Ec. Club 1,2,3,4
Debate Team 2,3
Milestone 3
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Messiah 1,2,3
Treas., 2
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Stateland W.R.H.O. 3
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Milestone 4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Little Theater 2,3,4
Wesley Foundation 2,3,4
Math Club 4
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3,4
Kyma 3
Vice-pres., 3
Sec, 2
Physics Club 2,3,4
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
Off Campus Women's
Sigma Lambda 3
Y.W.C.A. 3,4
Who's Who 4
Club 4
Treas., 3
Y.M.C.A. 1
Y.W.C.A. 2
Varsity Tennis Team
1,2,3,4
Co-capt., 3,4
JESSIE ANN HOBBS
Hazard
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Kyma 1
Little Theater Club 4
Messiah 1,2,3
WALLACE B. SULLIVAN
Stearns
History, A.£
"E" Club 4
Kappa Pi 3,4
Varsity Golf Team 3,4
MARTHA E. HARDIN
Tollesboro
Elementary Ed., C.S.
D.S.F. 1,2
Photo Club 2
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3
GUY ROWLAND STRONG MABEL DANIEL HAYS
Richmond Manchester
Phy. Ed. — Bio., B.S. Elementary Ed., B.S.
Varsity Baseball Team 4
Varsity Basketball Team 4
elementary education
26
SENIORS
KARL DEAN BAYS
FAY B. ROUNDTREE
DARREL W. WININGER
MARY ANN LEAR
CHARLIE CALVIN TRUE
Corbin
Cincinnati, Ohio
Corbin
Berea
Covington
Commerce, B.S.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Horn? Economics, B.S.
Geogiaphy, B.S.
Canterbury 4
F.T.A., 4
B.S.U. 3,4
B.S.U. 3
"E" Club 1,2,3,4
"E" Club 2,3,4
Messiah 3,4
Off-Campus 3,4
Varsity Football 1,2,3,4
Pres., 4
Phi lota 3
Little Theater 3,4
World Affairs 4
Varsity Football 1
2,3,4
,?
*1h*tk
CHESTER
EASTERLING
SOPHIE J. WIEDEKAMP
ERNEST DURHAM
MARY LAKE McELROY
FRANKLIN D. ELLISTOt
Neon
Ashland
Richmond
Springfield
Middlesboro
Social Sc
ience, B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
History, A.B.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Letcher
Co. Club 4
Band l
Kyma 1,2,3,4
Messiah 3,4
Band 1,2,3,4
Burnam W.R.H.O. 3
Pres., 3
Photo Club 3
B.S.U. 1
Sec, 3
Vice-pres., 4
Progress 3
Industrial Arts Club
Drum and Sandal 1,2
Progress 1,2,3,4
Wesley Foundation
3,4
1,2,3,4
Kyma 2,3,4
Westminster Fellov
vship
Treas., 3
Treas., 3
2,3
Vice-pres., 4
Sec, 4
Vice-pres., 3
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Military Ball Queen 4
Y.W.C.A. 4
Little Theater 2,3,4
Progress 3
Big Sisters 3,4
Treas., 4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Pres., 4
Phi lota 2,3
Treas., 4
Sec-Treas., 3
Wesley Foundation 1
Track 1
Westminster Feilowsh'r)
27
HARRY B. STIGALL
VIRGINIA T. DURBIN
ROGER S. STEPHENS
RAMONA A. FLETCHER
BUDDY THOMAS CURY
Danville
Lexington
Gapville
Ashland
Neon
Chem. — Malh., B.S.
E/emsnfory Ed., B.S.
English, A.B.
Chem. — Bio., B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Band 4
Burnam W.R.H.O. 3,4
B.S U 1,2
B.S.U. 1,2
Knights of Artillery 3
Class Officer 4
Treas., 4
Canterbury Club 2,3,4
Caduceus Club 3,4
Letcher Co. Club 3,4
Pres., 4
Class Officer 3
Vice-pres., 4
Treas., 4
Newman Club 1,2,3,4
Math Club 4
Sec, 3
Debate Team 3,4
Class Officer 2
Pres., 2,3,4
Milestone 4
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Treas., 2
Progress 2,3,4
Wesley Foundation
3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Pres., 4
Collegiate Pentacle
4
Asst. Bus. Man., 3
Westminster Fellow
hip 1
Cwens 2,3
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Cwens 2
Business Manager, 4
Who's Who 4
Pres., 2
Pres., 2
Pres., 2
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
World Affairs Club
4
Jr. Advisor, 3
Little Theater 3,4
Kappa Delta Pi 4
Drill Team 2,3
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Phi lota 3
Messiah 1
Drillmaster 2,3
Pres., 3
Milestone 3,4
Miss Popularity 3
Stateland W.R.H.O. 1
Sec, 1
Y.W.C.A. 3,4
Big Sisters 3,4
Who's Who 4
Vice-pres., 3
Progress 3,4
Sigma Tau Delta 2,3,4
Pres., 3
Who's Who 4
World Affairs Club 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
Who's Who 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2
J
AtMJ*
mtm
PEGGY LEAH
YORK
BOBBY GLEN GIBBS
ANN QUINN LYEL
ARTHUR GENE
ROBBINS
WILMA JUNE WAGEL
Pikeville
Lothair
Ashland
Calloway
Brooksville
Commence, B.
5.
Chem. — Bio., B.S.
Elementary Ed , B S
Commerce, B.S.
Horns Economics, B.S.
World Affair
s Club 4
Caduceus Club 1,2,3
Class Officer 3
Treas., 3
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Knights of Artillery
3,4
D.S.F. 3,4
Messiah 3,4
World Affairs Club 4
Y.W.C.A. 4
D.S.F. 1,3
Home Econ. Club, 1,2,3,4
Messiah 3
Y.W.C.A. 1
elementary education
2 3
SENIORS
DOUGLAS G. H1BBARD
Covington
Commerce, B.S.
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Treas., 2
Math Club 1,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Varsity Track Team 2
MARY H. COLLINS
Maysville
Chem. — Bio., B.S.
Biology Club 1,2,3,4
Caduceus Club 1,2,3,4
Sec, 4
Cwens 2,4
Pres., 2
Sn. Advisor, 4
Kappa Kappa Sigma
1,2,3,4
Sec, 1
Pres., 3
Newman Club 1
Who's Who 4
FRANK R. NASSIDA
Duquesne, Pa.
Health — Phy. Cd., B.S.
"E" Club 2,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Newman Club 2,3,4
Varsity Football Team
2,3,4
PATRICIA A. POYMA
St. Ignace, Mich.
Geo. -Hist., A.B.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 3,4
Debate Team 4
Newman Club 3,4
Sigma Lambda 3
World Affairs Club 3,4
Pres., 4
LESLIE G. PURDOM
Gravel Switch
Commerce, B.S.
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Agriculture Club 1,2,3
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 4
F.T.A. 4
4MES EARL CAUD1LL
JANICE N. BURTON
L. A. LOVINGTON
CAROLYN G. TYE
VINCENT GILLEY
West Liberty
Dayton, Ohio
Staten Island, N. Y.
Ariay
Premium
Industrial Arts, A.B.
Commerce, B.S.
Social Science, A.B.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Prom King 3
Burnam W.R.H.O. 4
Varsity Basketball Team
B.S.U. 2,4
Photo Club 4
Industrial Arts Club 4
Sec, 4
2,3
Messiah 4
Sigma Tau Pi 4
Kappa Pi 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Wesley Foundation 4
Y.W.C.A. 4
Letcher Co. Club
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Sec, 4
Wesley Foundation
Prom Queen 3
29
VERNON J. CALHOUN
Palatka, Fla.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
World Affairs Club 4
F.T.A. 4
LITTERAL PAUL CLAYTON
North Middletown
B.S. Socio/ Science, A.B.
Knights of Artillery 3,4
KIRBY COLLINS
Maysville
History, A.B.
Kappa lota Epsilon 2,3
Kappa Pi 3,4
DAVID ARTHUR CAYLOR ALLIE JEAN TURNER
JAMES CLAYTON BURCH RACHEL ALICE KEENE
New Albany, Ind.
Music, A.B.
Band 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Student Conductor 4
Choir 1,2,3,4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Music Club 1,2,3,4
Orchestra 1,2,3,4
Varsity Tennis Team 3
Westminster Fellowship
1,2,4
College Quartet 3
Shelbyville
Home Econ,
B.S.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2,3
Home Economics Club
1,2,3,4
Sec, 2
Milestone 4
Sigma Lambda 2
Westminster Fellowship
3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1
Stamping Ground
English, A.B.
Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4
Canterbury Club 3,4
Cheerleader 3
Debate Team 2,3
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Kyma Club 4
Little Theater Club
1,2,3,4
Pres., 2
Newman Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 3
Sigma Lambda 3,4
Pres., 3
Who's Who 4
Mr. Popularity 4
Richmond
Chemistry, B.S.
Biology Club 3,4
Treas., 4
Drum and Sandal 3,4
Kyma Club 4
Messiah 3
Who's Who 4
JAMES DAYTON BAKER
Ashland
Music, A.B.
Band 1,2,3,4
Vice-Pres., 3
Choir 1,2,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music Club 1,2,3,4
physical education
30
SENIORS
DOUGLAS B. HUBER
South Hills
Chemistry, B.S.
>. D. SHACKLEFORD
Parksville
Horns Economics, B.S.
Home Economics C t
1,2,3,4
Messiah 1,2
Milestone 3
W.R.A. 1
Westminster Fellows1
2,3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3
CLAUD M. HUBBARD
Pineville
Commerce, B.S.
Band 1,2,3,4
Sigma Lambda 2,3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Y.M.C.A. 3,4
NORMA FAYE SIMMS
Waynesburg
Homa Economr
.S.
B.S.U. 1,2
Sec, 2
Home Economics Club
1,2,3,4
Photo Club 2,3
Sigma Lambda 2
Y.W.C.A. 1
BERNICE F. BRYANT, JR.
Lawrenceburg
Art, A.B.
B.S.U. 3,4
Vice-pres., 3
Pres., 4
Choir 3,4
Kappa Pi 3,4
Messiah 3,4
Photo Club 4
Varsity Track Team 1
World Affairs Club 4
Y.M.C.A., 4
WILLIAM H. BAXTER
LUISE HOLMAN
SMITH
CLARENCE M. NOLAND
CHLOE JEAN SLU3HER
PAUL B. HUGHES
Glasgow
Pineville
Richmond
Warbranch
Crystal
Socio/ Science, A.B.
Commerce, B.S.
Commerce, B.S.
Elementary Ed., B.S.
Elementary Ed., B.S
Varsity Basketball Team
Knights of Artillery 3,4
3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
31
WILLIAM PALAHUNICH
McKees Rocks, Pa.
Health — Phy. Ed., B.S.
"E" Club 2
Varsity Football Team
1/2
DOLORES JANE PAYTON DON DALY
Frankfort
English, A.B.
Canterbury Club 4
Big Sisters 4
Milestone 4
Progress 2,3,4
Sigma Lambda 1,2,3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Norwood, Ohio
Physicol Education, B.S.
"E" Club 1,2,3,4
Class Officer 1
Treas., I
Varsity Football Te
1,2,3,4
Varsity Track Team
1,2,3,4
MAXINE BAUGH HINES CARL EDWIN OAKLEY
Science Hill
Hsalth — Phy. fd., B.S.
Drum and Sandal 4
W.R.A. 3,4
Phys. Ed. Club 4
Corbin
Geography, A.B.
"E" Club 1,2,3,4
Varsity Football Team
1,2,3,4
ROBERT LEVI ROBY
Shepherdsville
Commerce, B.S.
"E" Club 2,3,4
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Sigma Ta
Pi 3,4
Varsity Baseball Tea
1,2,3,4
Y.M.C.A. 1
BEVERLY
WILSON
Richmond
Health — Phy. Ed., B.S.
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Drum and Sandal 2,3,4
Pres., 4
Kappa Delta Pi 4
Kappa Kappa Sigma 2,3
Pres., 2
Vice-pres., 3
Kyma 1,2,3
Off Campus Women's
Club 1
Progress 4
W.R.A. 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 2
Pres., 3,4
Phy. Ed. Club 3,4
Sec, 3
Who's Who 4
KENNETH M. JONES
D.S.F. 2,3,4
Pres., 2
Industrial Arts
Kyma 3,4
Messiah 2,3,4
THELMA JEAN PARKE
CHESTER RAKER
Richmond
Carrollton
Homi Economics, B.S.
Math. — Physics, B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Class Officer 4
Sec, 4
Treas., 4
Choir 1,2,3,4
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Vice-pres., 2
Cwens 2
Math Club 4
Vice-pres., 2
Milestone 3,4
Home Economics Clu
b
Asst. Editor, 3
1,2,3,4
Bus. Manager, 4
Treas., 2
Physics Club 2,3,4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Progress 3,4
Sec, 4
Y.M.C.A. 4
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Who's Who 4
Off Campus Women
s
Club 1,2
Who's Who 4
secretarial work
32
SENIORS
JANET A. CAMPBELL
Dayton
Math. — Comm., B.S.
B.S.U. 3,4
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Pres., 4
Kappa Kappa Sigma 2,3,4
Treas., 4
Kyma 2
Math Club 4
Messiah 4
Physics Club 4
Progress 2,3,4
JACKSON B. LACKEY
Richmond
Moth. — Physics, B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Choir 1
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Treas., 4
Math Club 4
Messiah 1,2,4
Physics 2,3,4
Sigma Lambda 1
PEGGY ANN CHANDLER
Louisville
Music, A.B.
Band 1,2,3,4
Treas., 2
Choir 1,2
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Cwens 2
Messiah 1,2,3,4
Music Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-Pres., 3
Pres., 4
Milestone 4
Orchestra 1,2,3,4
S.U.M.C. 1,2,3,4
Pres., 2
Westminster Fellowship
1,2,3,4
Who's Who 4
JAMES A. LANE, JR.
Richmond
Chemistry, B.S.
Biology 3,4
F.T.A. 3,4
Treas., 3,4
Varsity Tennis 2
Y.M.C.A. 2,3,4
BETTY L. GULLADY
Winchester
His!. — Eng., A.B.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2,
Pres., 3
Milestone 4
Sigma Lambda 2
W.R.A. 2,3
Who's Who 4
Student Council 4
Canterbury Club 4
NOEL EDWIN CUFF
Richmond
Chem. — Malh., B.S.
D.S.F. 1
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Who's Who 4
THRESEA H. THOMAS
Danville
Elemenlory Ed., B.S.
D.S.F. 1,2,3
W.R.A. 1,2
World Affair
Y.W.C.A. 4
JOHN C. WILLIAMS
Inez
Commerce, B.S.
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Ho
B.S.
Club 3
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Home Ec. Club 1,2,3
Stateland W.R.H.O. 3,4
Pres., 4
Y.W.C.A. 4
33
MERRELL LEE PATRICK
ANNETTE ENGLE
DOROTHY
CRADY
MARIAN D. CAMPBELL
JAMES E. ALLENDER
Cynthlana
Gatliff
Louisville
Maysville
Falmouth
Math. — Physics, E.S.
English, A. 6.
Horns Ecor
on-
ics
6 S
Horns Economics, B.S.
Art, A.B.
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
B.S.U. 1
Band 1,2,3,4
Class Officer 2
B.S.U. 1,2,3
Math Club 4
Canterbury 3,4
Milestone
4
Sec, 2
Canterbury Club 4
Pres., 4
Choir 1,2,3
Photo Club
2
Collegiate Pentacle 4
Kappa Delta Pi 4
Milestone 4
Messiah 1,2,3
Sec, 2
Sec, 4
Kappa Pi 2,3,4
Physics Club 2,3,4
Progress 4
D.S.F. 1
Drum and Sandal 2
Treas., 3
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3,4
Sigma Lambda 1,2,3
Home Economics Club
Milestone 1,2,3,4
Y.M.C.A. 4
World Affairs Club 4
1,2,3,4
Sec, 3
Kappa Delta Pi 4
Messiah 1,2,3
Milestone 3
Asst. Editor 3
Wesley Foundation 1,2,3,4
Who's Who 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,4
Photo Club 1,2,3,4
Pres., 2,3
Vice-pres., 4
Who's Who 4
Y.M.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres., 4
Progress 1,2,3,4
PRESTON H. HALL
Delphia
Geogrophy, A E.
DON FLOYD
Pineville
Industrie/ Ar
HALL
Is, B.S.
B. D. EARLYWINE
Covington
Elemmtory Ed., B.S.
WILLIAM DAVID
Stearns
Commerce, B.S.
HALL
CALMER C. HAYES
Crab Orchard
Commerce, B.S.
B.S.U. 3,4
Sigma Lambda 3
World Affairs Club
Vice-pres., 4
Y.M.C.A. 4
2,3,4
Progress 2
D.S.F. 3,4
Pres., 3
Messiah 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 3
Knights of Artillery
account1 /ng
34
SENIORS
ORIS G. JOHNSON, JR.
Vallonia, Ind.
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 7, 3,-1
Kappa lota Epsilon 2
Sec, 2
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Sigma Tau Pi 3,4
Vice-pres., 4
EULENE SPENCE
Sturgeon
ehmintory Ed., B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Messiah 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 3,4
F.T.A. 3,4
J. B. SOWDERS
Richmond
English, A.B.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Burnam W.R.H.O. 2
Caduceus Club 1,2
Canterbury Club 2,3,4
Choir 2
Little Theater Club 2,3,4
Messiah 2
Sigma Lambda 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2
JANICE TREADWAY
Barbourville
Horn; Economics, B.S.
Burnam W.R.H.O. 3
Choir 2
Home Economics C
1,2,3,4
Pres., 4
Kappa Kappa Sigma
Sec, 4
Messiah 2,4
Milestone 4
Wesley Foundation
1,2,3,4
Pres., 3
Who's Who 4
Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3,4
Big Sisters 3,4
E. E. BICKERS, JR.
Campbellsburg
Chem. — Bio., B.S.
B.S.U. 1,2,3,4
Biology Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres.,
Caduceus C
Vice-pres.,
Pres., 4
1,2,3,4
•&Pj&
f
/--jfe
PAUL D. HAOER
Auxier
Physical Education, B
Y.M.C.A. 1,2
Phy. Ed. Club, 1,2
"*r #J W #»1
f& *»ra
JARRELL C. JOHNS
Dayton, Ohio
Heallh — Phy. Ed., B.S.
"E" Club 1,2,3,4
Treas., 4
Varsity Football Team
1,2,3,4
Varsity Track Team 1,2
BETTY LOU SMITH
Attica, Ind.,
Elementary Ed., B.S.
GLENN E. JOHNSON
Burdine
Ehmsntary Id., B.S.
World Affairs Club 4
HAROLD L. JOHNSON
Pikeville
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 2,3
Knights of Artillery 3,4
35
DEAN RUBARTS
Dunnville
flemenfory Ed., B.S.
Class Officer 3
Vice-pres., 3
Collegiate Pentacle 4
D.S.F. 4
Kappa Delta Pi 3,4
Milestone 2,3
Progress 3,4
Y.W.C.A. 2,3,4
F.T.A. 3,4
Basketball Queen 3
PAUL GLENN COLLINS
Mayslick
Industrio/ A, is, 8.S.
Knights of Artillery 3,4
Newman Club 1,2,3,4
MARY L. HUFF
Liberty
elementary Id., B.S.
J. DAMONTE
ROY LEE KIDD
Corbin
Geography, B.S.
"6" Club 1,2,3,4
Vice-pres. , 4
Varsity Baseball Team
1,2,3,4
Cap!., 4
Varsity Football Team
1,2,3,4
Capt., 4
&S-M
JERRY H. SMITH
Calhoun
Socio/ Science, B.S
ROGER KIETH HOWARD
Insull
Commerce, B.S.
ROBT. A. WHITTINGTON
Richmond
Industrial Arts, B.S.
Industrial Arts Club 2
RAYMOND HORNE
Richmond
Biology, B.S.
Biology Club 3,4
Photo Club 2,3,4
pre-law
36
SECOND SEMESTER SENIORS
MADGE GAMBILL
Paintsville
Home Economics
JUNE SAWYER
Monticello
Commerce
Two hundred and fifty-one students are members of the 1955 senior class.
Many of this group have been together since September, 1951, and by the unity
created when freshmen, this class can claim to be one of the most active groups ever
to graduate from Eastern. Reminiscencing students can recall many activities sponsored
by the class of '55 . . . annual Christmas banquets . . selling Tuesday night movie
tickets . . . the 1953 Valentine Dance . . . bunny hops . . . the organization of
Kappa lota Epsilon . . . the beginning of the junior-senior men's honorary . . . the
reception last May for the seniors of ' 54 ... a spring picnic to Natural Bridge in the
junior year . . . helping with Vocational Conference and the Marriage Conference
Members of the class have shown outstanding qualities of leadership, scholar-
ship, and character which have been used for the betterment of the college
37
^4
administration
f^HifHl
33
GRADUATE STUDENTS
JOHN T. SOWDERS,
JR.
CYNTHIA E. JONES
Richmond
Sor
nerset
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39
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Eastern s administration is composed of the
Board of Regents, the President, heads of divisions,
heads of departments, and faculty. Our college
and students are guided by the many capable,
excelling leaders who are lead by the college presi-
dent, W. F. O'Donnell, shown with his wife, Mrs
ODonnell.
40
41
.
WENDELL P. BUTLER
State Superintendent of
Public Instruction
Chairman
W. E. BLACKBURN
Vice Chairman
A. C. JONES
KEEN JOHNSON
L
CECIL C. SANDERS
BOARD OF REGENTS
The government of the college is vested in the Board of Regents composed
of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, who is Chairman of the Board, and
four members appointed by the Governor. The term of office is four years but
the appointive members may succeed themselves. Since its founding in 1906,
Eastern has had only twenty-three regents.
The present Board consists of Wendell P. Butler, State Superintendent of
Public Instruction; Elmer Blackburn, mayor of Pikeville, banker, and a leading
citizen in his community; Keen Johnson, Richmond, former governor and lieu-
tenant governor of Kentucky, now vice-president and a member of the Board
of Directors of the Reynolds Metal Company; A. C. Jones, banker, business and
civic leader of Harlan; Cecil C. Sanders, lawyer, member of the state legisla-
ture, and public spirited citizen of Lancaster.
These men are keenly interested in the college's program and in the wel-
fare of the students and faculty.
42
A deeply sincere interest in anything concerned with Eastern; the drive and
ability to push Eastern ahead in years to come; a genuine love for college stu-
dents; a friendly smile for everyone; a concern for each minute's activity on
campus; an office always open to anyone who wants to talk with him— these
are the things which make President W. F. O'Donnell what he is — a man who
will be remembered by each Eastern student long after the college years are
past.
43
MOORE, Dean of the College
A conscientious interest in the individual
ability to meet any situation; an interest in
effort to aid each student — this is how Dean Moore w
warm smile and a dry wit; an
campus activity; and an able
be remembered.
G. M. BROCK
Business Agent
An industrious, busy air;
an efficient capable man-
ner in handling the busi-
ness affairs of the college;
a sincere interest in the
work he is doing — these
are the qualities which
characterize Mr. Brock.
44
EMMA Y. CASE
Dean of Women
MELVIN E. MATTOX
Registrar
Through the offices of the highly
trained and efficient administration, the
concerns and problems of the college
are directed toward a progressive goal.
D. J. CARTY
Director of In-Service Education
MARY FLOYD
Librarian
J. DORLAND COATES
Director of Laboratory Schools
45
WILLIAM STOCKER
Agriculture
FREDERIC P. GILES
Art
MEREDITH J. COX
Chemistry
WILLIAM J. MOORE
Commerce
D. T. FERRELL
Education
46
JANET MURBACH
Romance Language
SMITH PARK
Mathematics
L G. KENNAMER
Geography
RALPH WHALIN
Industrial Arts
COLONEL H. Y. GRUBBS
Military Science
KERNEY ADAMS
History
47
MARY KING BURRIER
Home Economics
THOMAS C. HERNDON
Science
PRESLEY M. GRISE
English
CHARLES T. HUGHES
Physical Education
JAMES E. VAN PEURSEM
Music
48
Students of varied scientific interests are able to find their particular fields
offered in the science departments of Eastern. Preparation for higher training
in the fields of medicine, pure science and mathematics, and engineering is
considered in the courses presented. Instructors are Clifton Basye, physics,
William Hopp, biology; A. L. Whitt, biology; Samuel Walker, mathematics; and
Alvin McGlasson, mathematics.
William Hornbeck, Louise Mcllvaine, Mary Barnhill, and Saul Hounchell are
members of the English faculty who instruct classes in freshmen English, litera-
ture of the Old Testament, the Age of Classicism, and History of the English
language. Absent from the picture are Calvin Huckabay and William S. Bowmer.
49
Instructing classes in the English de-
partment are Glen Wilson, Jr., Pearl
Buchanan, Victor Venettozzi, and W. L.
Keene, standing. Students are offered
courses in dramatics, speech, debate,
journalism, and literature.
Dean Gatwood and Mary Tarwater
are instructors in the art department
which offers to the interested student
courses in drawing, design, ceramics,
color, art appreciation, and public school
art.
Edson C. Perry, Elizabeth Gaither, and
Constance Conklin are members of the
music department which offers instru-
mental and voice instructions.
50
Brown E. Telford, Blanche Seevers,
Landis D. Baker, William H. Tarwater,
and Jane Campbell are music faculty
who offer classes in organ, harmony,
band, sight singing, ear training, and
music appreciation.
Jackson A. Taylor is a member of the
agriculture department which provides
classes in soils, dairy cattle manage-
ment, and farm management and ac-
counting.
Cabinet construction, metal work,
mechanical drawing, crafts, and
wood turning are courses found in
the industrial arts department where
John D. Rowlette, J. Homer Davis,
and T. E. Myers are instructors.
51
Henry J. Bindel, science; Virginia Adams, social studies; Ida
Pearl Teater, social studies; A. L. Wickersham, mathematics; and
Harold Rigby, music, are critic teachers of the secondary level.
Mamie West Scott, rural demonstration school instructor;
Ruby Rush, Latin; Cora Lee, English; and Alma Regenstein, home
economics, also contribute to the teacher preparation program
on the secondary level.
52
Mary Burnam Brittain, third grade; Mabel
Jennings, first grade; Ellen Pugh, fifth; Annie
Alvis, sixth; Germania Wingo, fourth; and Vir-
ginia Story, second grade; are critic teachers in
the elementary field.
Anna Gill and Margaret Moberly are com-
merce instructors who conduct classes in short-
hand and typewriting.
Evelyn Slater and Willie Moss offer to
students classes in dressmaking, per-
sonal relationships, child development,
interior decoration, tailoring and design,
and home management.
53
\
Alex Mcllvaine, Edith G. Ford, James Peel, and
R. R. Richards are instructors in the fields of account-
ing, filing, business English, auditing, and invest-
ments. Richard Chrisman, absent from the picture,
is a member of the commerce faculty.
Clyde Lewis, history; Mary Frances Richards, geog-
raphy; Paul C. Nagel, history; Virgil Burns, govern-
ment; and Robert C. Donaldson, history, are of the
social studies department. Faculty members absent
from the picture are Glenn McLain and Monroe Bi!i-
ington.
54
J. Dorland Coates, Gladys Tyng, and Fred A.
ffngle are of the education department which offers
fundamentals of elementary education, fundamentals
of secondary school methods, teachers' arithmetics,
human development and psychology, and supervised
student teaching. Instructors of this field absent from
the picture are R. E. Jaggers, James G. Snowden, and
William A. Sprague.
Students interested in coaching, teaching, or being
recreational directors may find appropriate courses in
Eastern's physical education department. Instructors
are Gertrude Hood, Martha Williams, Glenn Presnell,
John H. Cooper, and Fred Darling. Paul McBrayer
was absent from the picture.
55
v\)^
o*s
Highlighting the junior class activities is
the preparation and the success of the
Junior-Senior Prom. Class president is Bob
Zweigart. Serving with him are Ronald
Sherrard, vice-president; Juanita Whitaker,
secretary; Billie White, treasurer, and Mrs.
Blanche Seevers and William Hopp, ad-
visors.
56
57
RONNIE COFFMAN Richmond
DOLORES SAMSON Ashland
ROBERT GORDON ZWEIGART Maysville
CAROL BAKER Gray Hawk
ROBERT DOUGLAS McWHORTER Springfield
PHYLLIS COUNTS
RICHARD NORRIS
CAROLE SHROUT
CHARLES ROBERT SNAVELV
MARY ELIZABETH JOHNSON
BILLY ROY MURPHY
BARBARA ISAACS
RONALD SHERRARD
HERMA LEE ROBERTS
RONALD GENE PELLEGRINON
MARYLYN MULVANITY
CHARLES HARRIS
CAROL MELBURG KIDD
DAVID SENN
JOYCE BLEVINS
Raceland
Louisville
Ripley, Ohio
Springfield
Cumberland
Louisville
Harold
Portsmouth, Ohio
Atlanta, Ga.
Harlan
Ashland
Louisville
Ashland
CLASS OF '56
THOMAS DUNCAN THURMAN Springfield
BERNICE LITTLE Nicholasville
JAMES ROBERT HISCH Bellevue
CHRISTINE LITTLE Beattyville
BRUCE THACKER Phyllis
JOHN ZIMMERMAN
Louisvi
LINVILLE GALE REED
Bowen
MARLENE JOYCE TRACY
Richmc
HOMER RANSDELL
Hinton
JOE WISE
Neon
RUTH BIGGS
JIMMIE BERT TOLLIVER
JANICE HALLIDAY PRESSLEY
GENE ARVIN
ALICE ROSE BURKE
MYRA JEAN WALTON
BILL BOLTON
ARNOLD WHITAKER
BARBARA ELAINE SCOVILLE Londor
WALLACE RHEA NAPIER Hazard
Maysville
Corbin
Waynesburg
0#- r*\ /% n
ALAN PIPES
Lebanon Junction
TREVA BUTLER
Simpsonville
FARRIS DEAN ROSE
Winston
BILLIE JOAN WHITE
Corbin
FLOYD JOE WHITAKER
Frankfort
WILLIAM JACK ROBERTS
WANDA LINDON
GERALD WESLEY PIERSALL
SHIRLEY CLOUGH TAYLOR
KATHERINE ANN JOHNSON
KATHERINE PIERSALL
DONOVAN FAY REDFORD
RAY DAVIS
Danville
Gillmore
Winchester
Cynthiana
Winchester
Bellevue
Horse Cave
Maysville
GEORGE HARRISON WOLFFORD Grayson
MATHIAS WILLIAMS, JR. Path Fork
JAMES CECIL OSBORNE Harlan
ANNA MARGARET HOWARD Ivyton
FRANKIE OLDFIELD Mil-
FLORENE CONN Lancer
IVAN JACK POWELL McKee
f^ fO f>\ .-U1.
JUNIORS
?>
PAUL WATTS
WILLIAM CLYDE DOSCH
BILLIE JEAN BLACKBURN
JAMES RICHARD WELLS
JO RENE McKENDRICK
GLYNN EDWIN REYNOLDS
ALMA JEAN COX
THOMAS EDWARD ROMARD
FRANCIS RITCHIE
Lawrenceburg
Bellevue
Betsy Layne
Waynesburg
Richmond
Eatontown, r
Hindman
KENNETH HERBERT STEPHENS Whitley City
BRUCE EDWARD SMITH
ALMA DEAN HUDNALL
DELMAR SEBASTIAN
DELMAR LEE PLUMMER
SUE ELLEN CREECH
ARLIE SEBASTIAN
MARTHA EVELYN OWEN
MELVIN EARL NORTHCUTT
CHARLES HUGHES
JOHN PHILIP MAYER
Harlan
Barterville
Canoe
Greenup
Jeffersonville, Ind.
Canoe
London
Covington
Richmond
Cincinnati, Ohio
I4X
4^ ~
KENNETH EUGENE BUSH Irvine
EDITH MAE GRIFFITH Houston
JAMES KENNETH SWANNER London
FRANCES MILAM Wallins Creek
CLIFFORD MONROE EAGLE Corbin
SUE ANN SUTTON
Richmond
L. B. OLIVER
Lancaster
SHIRLEY SUE DUGGER
Corbin
JIMMIE JOE DUNBAR
Winchester
THOM McELFRESH
Brooksville
BOBBY VAN REACH Seco
ALMA JEAN BROCK Waco
NARLEY LEE HALEY Dayton
JANET GAYNOR HIBBARD Cumberland
ROBERT STEVENS BYERS Richmond
EDWARD LEWIS GROH Winchester
WALTER LEE ARNOLD Richmond
MARTHA ANN FLYNN Irvine
ROBERT ADAM KOLAKOWSKI Ambridge, Pa.
VIOLA BENGE London
CLASS OF '56
DOROTHY JEAN QUISENBERRY Winchester
TOMMY JONES
Danville
DIANA LEE MILLER
Tway
BURNICE GRIFFITH
Houston
DORIS ROSE COX
Richmond
GLENN HYATT
KATHERINE A. CORNELISON
ROBERT EUGENE BILITER
ELIZABETH ANN CAMPBELL
JIMMIE HAYES JOHNSON
KENNETH BAILEY
HERBERT BYRD
EVELYN SUE HILTON
BILLY DOTSON MARSHALL
GORDON M. HENDERSON
BYRON BROOKS HALL
JOYCE WAYNE PATTERSON
PAUL POLLY
VIRGINIA BROWN
BOBBY EUGENE HELTON
Richmond
Richmond
Martin
Williamsburg
Bypro
Shepherdsville
Oneida
Mount Vernon
Stamping Ground
Corbin
S*J
Brodhead
Horse Cave
J&\
jfmsp
Mayking
f 1
London
Mount Vernon
L-« \
M^ ~~
/- >
M / •J;
V m
(?*>
r
_2"-
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ml i
> <— r
* ■=*> *
\*
JOHN MILTON BARRETT
CARLENE BABB
JAMES RALPH FLEENOR
SUE ANNA SEALE
WILLIAM DeVARY
AONA BURT BOWLING
CHARLES EDWARD BROWN
ELEANOR MARIE JOHNSON
ROY CARL MAUPIN
CHARLES RAY PIGG
HERSHEL LEE CASSADA
JAMES ALLEN FRANKLIN
BETTY JEAN WHITE
WILLIAM GRIFFIN MURPHY
MARY JO ISAAC
Berea
Ashland
McRoberts
Ravenna
Winchester
WILLIAM PEYTON KING
Paris
EMMA HOGG
Buckhorn
JAMES MARVIN DAY
Loyal 1
SUZANNE DOYLE
Shelbyville
BOYD GILLEY, JR.
Premium
DeMossville
Highsplint
Lawrenceburg
Berea
Fern Creek
Ferguson
Ashland
Louisville
Louisville
Cumberland
JUNIORS
t
CHARLES RONNIE SMITH
JAMES LITTLE
JAMES N. FLOYD, JR.
BOBBY PERKINS LANE
JAMES WARREN TUCKER
RAY GORDON MclNTYRE
BILLY FITZGERALD
BIDDIE ELIZABETH WORLEY
BOBBY ROY
WILMA SUE COLLINS
NORMA LOIS MOORE
GEORGE ELMER LONG
JACK KENDALL DANIEL
LOIS C. ELDRIDGE
LAYTON DOUGLAS SCALF
ELEANOR MERKLEIN
LINTON EDW. MONTGOMERY
CHARLENE AKERS
GEORGE FRANCIS
JAMES EDWARD COLEMAN
Louellen
Jackson
Carrollton
Lancaster
Danville
Ashland
Frankfort
Loyall
Pathfort
Deane
Liberty
Booneville
Lexington
Cheviot, Ohio
Pikeville
Louisville
Springfield
Lancer
Wiscoal
Somerset
m
ALTA KAY LINDON
Gillmore
GRIDER DENNEY
Cabell
GAYLE O'CONNELL
Concord
THORNTON LIPSCOMB
Winchester
PEGGY JOANN BROWN
Ashland
WILLIAM ROBERT LENDERMAN Pensacola, Fla.
BEATRICE HALL Burdine
JAMES THOMAS IRWIN Louisville
BETTY JOYCE CHRISTIAN Middlesboro
ROGER LEWIS ALEXANDER Owingsville
BETTY PACK Paintsville
JACK ADAMS Pittsburg
DORIS JEAN FREUDENBERGER Louisville
ROBERT WESLEY BROWN Irondale, Ohio
BETTY LOU CURETON Seco
DAVID LEE FLORENCE
ANN BETH HARDIN
GRANT BALES
ROSETTA ROADEN
MILWARD BEASLEY, JR.
Cvnthiana
Denver, Colo.
Richmond
Lovall
Versailles
CLASS OF '56
JOHN FORREST BROWN
Prestonsbi
MITZI SLOAN
Pippapass
JAMES R. LOVE
Clay City
BETTY JEAN McLOCKLIN
Richmond
ROBERT HATFIELD
Ashland
GRACE TURNER
DONALD RAY FELTNER
BETTY JIM ROSS
HUBERT RAMEY
NANCY ANN BATTEN
WANDA MAE COX
DONALD BLAINE BOYER
GERALD LEE MAYBERRY
JERRY JUDY
SANDRA LEE SHARPE
Talberf
Hazard
Richmond
Elkhorn City
Pike
LESTER BURNS, JR.
Oneida
CHRISTINA CALLAS
Ashland
JAMES DEWEY WITT
Holly Hill
EMILY WOLFE
Wildie
DENZIL ROYCE ELLIOTT
West Liberty
Winchester
Ironton, Ohio
Louisville
Cvnthiana
So. Ft. Mitchell
o
RANDALL PELFREY
JANE VARBLE
WADE LEO HOPKINS
JUANITA WHITAKER
JOHN WESLEY DUVALL
BARBARA ANN WILLIAMSON
JAMES SCOTT AKERS
WILMA JEAN JONES
LEE BUCHANAN
SHIRLEY ROSE PETTIT
RALPH HALL
IMO JANE RODGERS
CONLEY MANNING
NANNIE ANGLA PETERS
WILLIAM BASIL HALL
RUBY CUMMINS
JAMES CRAIG WILSON
CAROLYN BRANDENBURG
RANDELL LEE BREWER
JEANNENE FRALEY
Louisville
Mount Vernon
Winchester, Va.
Belfry
Stone
Bulan
Somerset
Fort Mitchell
Grayson
Ph. I
Whitley City
London
Burdine
Bradford
Warsaw
Beattyville
London
Sandy Hook
\ '^^ *?
JUNIORS
BOBBY JOE WHITAKER
Richmond
BETTY JEAN LAMB
Berea
HAROLD BREEDING
Price
NAOMI RUTH RICE
Danville
JOHN HELM
Richmond
JOY FRANCES MCCREARY
BYRON AMO WISEMAN
BETTY JEAN COMPTON
R. D. VAUGHN
ROBERT TAYLOR HOGUE
JOHN WHITNEY COX, JR.
MARY ANN MclNTYRE
JAMES HARDY BROOKS
MARTHA JANE DEATHERAGE
PAUL RAY McNEES
PATRICK LEE CRAWFORD
FREEDA WAGGONER
CHARLES ALLEN DAWSON
FREDA MAE RENNIX
MARLON TARTER
Waco
Richmond
Middleburg
Richmond
Monticello
Corbin
Richmond
Cynthiana
Athens, Ohio
New Albany, Ind.
Salvisa
Richmond
Norfleet
f^9 sJ IT?» K
mfc iC dt
JOHNNY BROWN TWEDDELL
Ashland
WENDELL LEROY DENNIS
Irvine
GLADYS CHILDRESS
Stanford
ROBERT ELV1N TAYLOR
East Bernstadt
PHENIS POTTER
Mouth Card
FINLEY HOLBROOK, JR.
FRANCIS REED TODD
PAT CURTIS WALLACE
VANDA LOUISE GRIFFITH
MacDWIGHT MORROW
m . %* j
Waco
Richmond
Somerset
Jackson
Richmond
EUNICE MAE ARNETT Ghent
JOHN HALL Richmond
VIRGINIA BAKER CAMPBELL Louisville
DON LITTERAL Somerset
IVAN LEE WOOD College Hill
ROBERT STANLEY SCHNEIDER Louisville
CHARLES WILLIAMS Whitesburg
JOAN KATHRYN HILL Cincinnati, Ohii
DOUGLAS McFARLAND Jamestown
ANNA LEE BROWN Pigeon Roost
CLASS OF '56
JAMES ALLEN MEEKS
SARA JONES BISHOP
DAVID GEORGE BALLARD
NANCY LOU JACKSON
JAMES THOMAS MURPHY
ATHELENE CORNETT
EVERETTE DEARING
ESTILL BOWLING
GILBERT MILLER
COLLEEN WETHINGTON
FLOYD BEECHER ALLEN
KATHERINE SHEPHERD
FRANKLIN MUSIC
ANNA PROCTOR INGLES
Mayslick
Mount Sterling
Nashville, Tenn.
Independence
Ironton, Ohio
McKee
Fleming
Conkling
Richmond
Louisville
Hueysville
Campbellsville
Prestonsburg
Hummel
Left to right are D wight L. Fields, Hazard; Betsy Stamper, Brooksville; Betty Mitchell,
Metuchen, New Jersey; and Joseph M. Hall, Myra.
SECOND SEMESTER JUNIORS
The junior class is being recognized on campus as a class full of zeal and beauty.
Throughout the past three years no other group can boast of the number of queens
selected from any membership as can the junior class. And with this beauty and poise
comes ambiiious and hard-working people who have made many junior sponsored
activities very successful. This year they were responsible for the Sadie Hawkins Dance,
the April Fool's Dance, and Junior-Senior Prom. Added to ihis is the class banquet
which was held at Benault Inn on Saturday, April 2.
Knowing that such an active class is following, the seniors are prepared to
leave the destiny of Eastern in the hands of the class of '56.
65
tf
*&
\C*
Eosfern's athletic department is outstanding in the variety
of sports offered. The college is fortunate in having the ex-
ce'lent coaches and instructors that direct our physical educa-
tion program. This has been a golden year, being OVC
champions of both football and basketball and last year's
champs of baseball
66
67
^^M^*A*
41
FIRST ROW, left to right: Charles Sammons, Bobby Thompson, Bill DeChurch, Walter Banyas, Eugene Correll, Bobby
Lenderman, Dutch Greene, Chuck Bell, Ernie Rigrish, and Ronnie White.
SECOND ROW: Assistant backfield coach Roy Kidd, Ed Miracle, Don Daly, Paul Thomas, Jerry Boyd, Horace Harper,
Don Boyer, William Castle, Ernest Marchetti, Jack Rodgers, Roy Hortman, Joe Balassone, and assistant backfield coach Bill
Bradford.
THIRD ROW: Head Coach Glenn Presnell, assistant line coach Carl Oakley, Henry Saylor, Mathias Williams, Fred
Winscher, Karl Bays, Bob Muller, Sonny White, Ralph Consiglio, Jerry Wilhoit, Ronnie Polly, Jim Patton, and line coach Fred
Darling.
FOURTH ROW: Jerry Johns, Frank Nassida, Don Hortman, Mike Hlad, George Griffin, Walter Nunn, Tom Sammons,
Tom Schulte, and Robert Tishue.
FOOTBALL
Coach Glenn Presnell attended the University of
Nebraska where he was an All-American halfback in
1927. From 1928 to 1936 he played professional
football, but returned to Nebraska in 1938 to be back-
field coach until 1941. He was named head coach at
that university the following year. After serving three
years as a Navy officer, Coach Presnell came to East-
ern in the fall of 1947.
Fred Darling has been line coach at Eastern since
1947. He played three years of football here where
he was chosen as honorable mention of the Little All-
American team. Darling was also selected as first
string tackle on the Kentucky Inter-Collegiate Athletic
Conference squad for three years.
COACHES DARLING AND PRESNELL
68
7954 Football Results
Won 8; Tied 1; Lost 1
Eastern
19
John Carroll
0
Eastern
26
Middle Tennessee
0
Eastern
25
Murray
6
Eastern
14
Tennessee Tech
7
Eastern
25
Youngstown
7
Eastern
12
Morehead
8
Eastern
13
Toledo
13
Eastern
21
Western
0
Eastern
20
Louisville
6
Eastern
6
*Omaha
7
* Tangerine Bowl Game
LEADING SCORERS
Total
Points
Don Daly 30
Jim Hanlon 30
Tom Schulte 24
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Avg. Per
Times Gain Attempt
Don Daly 110 716 6.35
Chuck Bell 55 350 6.13
Bob Mueller 52 269 5.15
FORWARD PASSING
No. Corn-
Attempt pleted Yards TD
Jim Hanlon .... 64 29 471 9
Jack Rodgers 5 1 14
PASS-RECEIVING
No. Caught Yards TD
Tom Schulte . 10 161 4
Fred Winscher 10 149 3
Dutch Greene 4 71 2
69
SEASON'S
The Eastern Maroon football team enjoyed the greatest season in the history
of the grid sport at the college, winning their first Ohio Valley Conference title
since the league was organized, and getting their first bid to a post-season event.
The Maroons with the touchdown help of Chuck Bell and Don Daly opened
the season with a 19-0 upset over highly-regarded John Carroll, then defeated,
in order, conference foes Middle Tennessee 26-0, Murray 25-6, and Tennessee
Tech 14-7. Two touchdowns by Jim Hanlon and one each for Jack Rodgers and
Bob Muller were the spark-plugs that gave Eastern an easy victory over the
Tennessee Raiders. The following game was the first time this year that an
opponent scored against the Maroons. Eastern's win over Murray was gained
by Ed Miracle and Daly, each counting for two touchdowns. Fred Winscher, Daly,
Don Hortman, and Ernie Rigrish were key-men in the scoring department for
Tennessee Tech being Eastern's fourth victim.
The following week, the locals journeyed to Youngstown, Ohio, to meet the
favored Penguins of that college, and, led by quarterback Hanlon, they soundly
thrashed the Ohioans by a 25-7 count for their fifth straight win which snapped
a seven game winning streak of the northern neighbors.
-V- \*.
70
RESUME
The Morehead Eagles were the next to fall, only after the Eagles had given
the overwhelmingly favored Maroons all they could handle before Eastern won
by a 12-8 count, with Hanlon and Tom Schulte scoring the TD's. Winning this
permitted the Maroons to retain the "Hawg Rifle" which Eastern has won nine
times to Morehead's six victories.
The University of Toledo came next and put the first blemish on the record
books, holding the Maroons to a 13-13 tie at the annual Dad's Game in Hanger
Stadium.
In the big game of the year, Eastern met arch rival Western before a home-
coming crowd at Bowling Green and soundly trounced the Hilltoppers by a 21-0
score to cop their first conference championship. Led by Schulte, Hanlon, and
"Dutch" Greene, the Eastern men handed this opponent their first setback of the
season.
In the season finale, the Maroons took the University of Louisville by a 20-6
score before the homecoming folks at Eastern to become only the second Eastern
team to go undefeated. The regular season ended with eight wins, no losses,
and one tie.
71
ALL O.V.C
JIM HANLON
Quarterback
TOM SCHULTE
End
BOB MULLER
Fullback
72
PLAYERS
JERRY JOHNS
Guard
DON DALY
Halfback
Captain All O.V.C. Teart
FRED WINSCHER
End
FRANK NASSIDA
Tackle
73
"Eastern Kentucky was chosen over several other of the eligible colleges and universities because
it has always been the policy of the Tangerine Bowl committee to select the two best small colleges
in the section."
This selection of the Tangerine Bowl Committee turned Eastern's campus into an exciting jubilation
in honor of this year's football team, winner of the OVC championship and first Maroon pigskin squad
ever to receive a bowl bid.
After hours of anxious waiting and hopeful dreams the student body, upon hearing the selection,
was like a chain reaction, shouting their joys, forming snake dances, and planning Christmas vacations
in Florida. In less than five minutes after Coach Presnell returned from the Sunshine State with the bowl-
bound news, the college and community were celebrating the Florida decision which had chosen the
Eastern Maroons to meet the University of Omaha Indians in the ninth annual Elks Tangerine Bowl classic at
Orlando on New Year's night.
The Maroons were destined to meet one of the two teams in the nation with nine winners and
no defeats. Besides leading the country in victories, Omaha had a 1 3-game winning skein over the last
two years. Eastern's opponents were also the leading scoring team in the nation, having scored 353
points, an average of better than 39 points per contest and their single game low was 26 points.
In preparation for the bowl game, the team started football practice during the second week of
December. Coach Presnell and his boys headed South on December 23 for a football bowl game, a
Florida Christmas, and ten days of sunshine.
The Maroons played a great game in Orlanda, although they dropped their first tilt in 15 games
including a tie contest in the '54 season by Toledo.
The Indians from Omaha scored with 5:23 remaining in the opening period when tailback Bill
Engelhardt, voted the game's most outstanding player, tossed to captain Rudy Rotella, who eluded
three Eastern would-be tacklers and raced the remaining 20 yards for the score. Engelhardt added the
extra point, which proved to be the deciding margin, and the Indians led 7-0.
The Maroons moved the ball from their own 21 to Omaha's 44 midway in the second period, but
were forced to kick, Tom Schulte booting the ball to Omaha's 8. The Indians advanced to the 41 where
Emil Radik lost possession of the pigskin after a bruising tackle by a host of Maroons and Eastern
quarterback Jim Hanlon pounced on the oval on Omaha's 48.
•>*
«p*i-."«a
*
X*>
Senior lettermen receiving tangerines from President O'Donnell are left to right, front row: "Dutch"
Greene, Bob Muller, Frank Nassida, Fred Winscher, Karl Bays. Second row: Ed Miracle, Jim Hanlon,
Tom Sammons, Jerry Johns, and Don Daly.
74
"^-r<i3j
A pair of off-sides penalties against the Maroons moved the ball back to the Eastern's 42. Three
rushing attempts failed to net the necessary 20 yards, but Omaha drew a 15 yard penalty for illegal
substitution, placing the ball on Omaha's 43. A pair of rushing thrusts netted nine yards before Don Daly
sped for 1 3 on a sweep to the left for a first and ten on the 21. Bobby Lenderman, playing his first game
since the season opened due to an injury, tossed to Fred Winscher for eight yards and Lenderman made
the first down on the nine on a sneak. The little junior signal-caller stepped back and hit "Dutch" Greene,
who was waiting on the four. The speedy Greene dashed over unmolested for the score to make the
scoreboard read 7-6, Omaha, with 3:19 remaining in the second quarter. Ernie Rigrish came in for the
all-important extra point attempt, but the kick was wide to the right.
And as far as score was concerned, the game was over.
Tangerine Bowl officials said that this year's clash was the most evenly-matched game in the nine
year history of the post-season bowl game.
Eastern's Don Daly was the hardest running back on the field as he racked up 68 yards in 1 1
carries, outgainin'g Omaha's Engelhardt some 21 yar^s. Fullback Bob Muller played an outstanding game
as the 205 pound senior
netted 34 yards, rushing
and teamed with 'Bozo"
Castel, Frank Nassida, Karl
Bays, Jerry Johns, Tom
Sammons, Tom Schulte
Fred Winscher, Jerry Boyd
and a host of other Ma
roons to turn in a tremen
dous defensive perform
ance.
Eastern Final Statistics Omaha
15
First Downs
15
133
Net Yards Rushing
103
19
Passes Attempted
23
7
Passes Completed
7
69
Yards Passing
104
1
Passes Intercepted
by 0
202
Total Offense
207
5
Number of Punts
5
162
Punting Yardage
142
32.4
Punting Average
28 4
3
Fumbles Lost by
1
45
Yards Penalized
30
6
Score
7
75
VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM
FIRST ROW, left to right: Roy Woolum, Jim Mitchell, Dick Culbertson, Ronnie Pellegrinon, Guy Strong, and Jim Kiser
SECOND ROW: Jack Adams, Clayton Stivers, Bill Baxter, Jim Floyd, Harold Fraley, and Paul Collins.
BASKETBALL
Since 1946 when Paul McBrayer came to coach the Maroon Basketball team, Eastern has,
in this field, made a steady climb from nowhere to national prominence. By 1949 McBrayer
had built Eastern's team to the point where it entered the select group classified by the N.C.A.A.
as "major" college basketball team.
Coach McBrayer is nationally known
as a master strategist, a strict disciplina-
rian, a basketball fundamentalist with
limitless knowledge of the game.
He is a native of Lawrenceburg, Ken-
tucky, and attended the University of
Kentucky where he starred in basket-
ball and baseball and was named on
the All - American basketball team in
1930. After coaching at Morton Junior
High in Lexington and at Kavanaugh
High in Lawrenceburg, McBrayer re-
turned to the University as assistant
coach for nine years. After serving two
and a half years in the service, he came
to Eastern in 1946.
COACH McBRAYER
76
FINAL NCAA. STATISTICS ON MAJOR COLLEGE
TEAMS SHOW MAROONS' HIGH NATIONAL RANKING
National
Average
Ranking
Team Offense (Points)
84.0
14th
Rebounding
58.2%
1 ltii
Free Throw Percentage
72.6%
8th
Field Goal Percentage
40.3%
28th
NINE NEW RECORDS SET BY
FORWARD JACK ADAMS
Season Records
Most Points 533
Highest Point Average 23.2
Most Free Throws Attempted 339
Most Free Throws Made 253
Most Rebounds 321
Single Game Records
Most Points (Against Loyola) 40
Most Free Throws Attempted
(Against Louisville) 28
Most Free Throws Made (Against Louisville) 21
Most Rebounds (Against Loyola) 27
1954-55 Basketball Results
Won 15;
Lost 8
Eastern
Kentucky
87
Centre
48
Eastern
Kentucky
77
Louisville
89
Eastern
Kentucky
80
(5 overl
Tennessee Tech
imes)
85
Eastern
Kentucky
53
N. C. State
66
Eastern
Kentucky
60
Xavier (Ohio)
46
Eastern
Kentucky
84
Virginia
74
Eastern
Kentucky
84
*Western Kentucky
81
Eastern
Kentucky
77
Houisville
93
Eastern
Kentucky
77
Toledo
70
Eastern
Kentucky
84
Tennessee Tech
68
Eastern
Kentucky
97
(Overt
Morehead
ime)
93
Eastern
Kentucky
78
Western Kentucky
84
Eastern
Kentucky
108
Middle Tennessee
84
Eastern
Kentucky
72
Xavier (Ohio)
86
Eastern
Kentucky
104
Murray
63
Eastern
Kentucky
76
Western Kentucky
98
Eastern
Kentucky
109
Middle Tennessee
69
Eastern
Kentucky
79
(Overt
Louisville
ime)
77
Eastern
Kentucky
81
Morehead
73
Eastern
Kentucky
120
Loyola (South)
91
Eastern
Kentucky
77
(Overt
Murray
ime)
83
Eastern
Kentucky
91
**Morehead
76
Eastern
Kentucky
76
**Murray
59
* Kentucky Invitation Tournament RUNNERS-UP.
** Ohio Valley Conference Tournament CHAMPIONS.
77
JILL BAXTER
Center
JACK ADAMS
Forward
RONNIE PELLEGRINON
Guard
The Eastern Kentucky Maroons, paced by their All-America candi-
date Jack Adams, breezed to the championship of the Ohio Valley
Conference Tournament after already exceeding all expectations dur-
ing the season. Coach Paul McBrayer was still rebuilding, having
started last year from scratch, but brought his squad along in mag-
nificent fashion and the record books were rewritten.
The br-lliant Adams, a 6-4 junior forward, acclaimed by sports
writers in this area as the best player in Kentucky and one of the
top in the nation, set nine new records himself, and as a team, the
Maroons broke almost as many.
Adams scored a total of 533 points, an average of 23.2 a game,
to rank 28th in the nation among major college players according to
final N.C.A.A. statistics, the only Kentucky College player in the
top 50.
No one player can do the job alone, however, and Adams had
brilliant support from Dick Culbertson, Ronnie Pellegrinon, Bill Baxter,
Jim Floyd, Guy Strong, Clayton Stivers, Harold Fraley, Jimmy Mitchell,
and a half dozen others, all stars in their own right, and each con-
tributing tremendously to the team's success. An early season injury
suffered by J. D. Brock, brilliant freshman of last year, sidelined him
for the rest of the year and left a big gap to be filled, but he is
expected to return to action next season.
The Maroons, in their 7th year of major college competition, aver-
aged 84 points a game, an all-time high, to rank 14th nationally;
they hit 72.6°o of their free throws to rank 8th; they grabbed 58.2%
of the rebounds— averaging 55.8 a game— to rank 11th; and hit 40.3%
of their shots to finish 28th in this department.
GUY STRONG
Guard
DICK CULBERTSON
Guard
78
CLAYTON STIVERS
Forward
JIM MITCHELL
Guard
in the Kentucky Invitation Tournament during the Christmas holi-
days, the McBrayermen knocked off arch rival Western Kentucky in
the first round, but bowed to the powerful University of Louisville
quintet in the finals, a loss which they later avenged with a 79-77
overtiine victory.
Preparation, determination, and desire paid off for the Maroons
as they racked up one of the greatest victories of the year in down-
ing Louisville. Only Marquette and the mighty Dayton Flyers, who
went on to the finals of the National Invitation Tournament, had
been able to accomplish the feat, and N.I.T. Champion Duquesne was
pressed to defeat the Cardinals by only 6 points.
Another highlight of the season was the 60-46 win over a strong
Xavier University outfit, a victory accomplished after a grueling 240-
mile, 8-hour bus ride through rain and fog from Bristol, Virginia,
where their plane had been grounded on the return trip from North
Carolina State, it was a courageous band of Maroons that took the
floor just three hours after arriving on the campus and completely
outplayed the Musketeers.
The best performance of the year was the 120-91 triumph over
a good Loyola of the South team on February 15. The Maroons
outrebounded the Wolfpack 84 to 39 in this romp, with Adams per-
sonally grabbing 27 of them in addition to pitching in 40 points.
Other wins over Virginia, Toledo, and Murray were impressive as
they went over the century mark four times to wind up with a season
record of 15 wins against eight losses.
The Maroons played brilliantly in their drive to the Ohio Valley
Conference Tournament Championship, winning with ease over More-
head 91-76, and downing Murray for the crown, 76-59, to add a third
championship cup to the four runners-up trophies already won in the
seven-year history of the conference.
HAROLD FRALEY
Forward
J. D. BROCK
Center
79
ALL TOURNAMENT HONORS
RONNIE PEUIGRINON
All O.V.C.
JACK ADAMS
All O.V.C.
All K.I.T.
DICK CULBERTSON
All O.V.C.
LARRY REDMOND
All K.I.T.
80
MEMBERS OF THE FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM are first row, left to right: Jack Brooks, Paul
Sears, Roy Woolum, Larry Redmond, John Ratliff, Herman Kearns, and Freshman Coach Tom Holbrook.
SECOND ROW: Carl Wright, Virgil Butler, Bill Florence, Bernie Kotula, Clayton Stivers, Jim Kiser,
and Freshman Coach Bob Mulcahy.
1954-55 FRESHMAN TEAM RESULTS
1954-55
8 Wins; 1 Loss
Eastern 85 Campbellsville College 79
Eastern 93 Sue Bennett 77
Eastern 85 Ashland Junior College 66
Eastern 97 Kentucky Bible College 31
Eastern 64 Ashland Junior College 74
Eastern 60 Cumberland College 54
Eastern 102 Sue Bennett 48
Eastern 91 Cumberland College 70
Eastern 87 Campbellsville College 72
8!
FIRST ROW, left to right: Manager George Griffin, Jake Rutledge, Don Boyer, Charlie Blackburn,
Jim Olde, Tom McAnnalen, and Assistant Coach Paul Tesla.
SECOND ROW: Jack Rodgers, Ronald Finley, Don Feltner, Alan Pipes, Dick Dudgeon, Ted York,
and Coach C. T. Hughes.
THIRD ROW: Charlie White, Rudy Bicknell, Bob Brown, Assistant Coach "Greenie" Kincaid, Jim
Mitchell, Bob Roby, and Don Richardson.
BASEBALL
Eastern's baseball team opened the
1955 baseball season as defending OVC
champs. In 1954 the baseball team won
16 games, losing only five, winning
both games from Middle Tennessee in
the play-offs.
The team this season played agoinst
such foes as Berea, Xavier, University
of Cincinnati, Western, University of
Louisville, Morehead, and Tennessee
Tech.
82
TRACK
Eastern's track team coached this year by Glenn Presnell is composed of
Don Daly, Jack Torline, Bill Rucker, Tom Sammons, Don Hortman, Chuck Bell,
Horace Harper, Ed Miracle, Alan Pipes, Bobby Thompson, Phil Morris, Larry
Coleman, Fred Campbell, Al Hatch, Jack Hissom, Jerry Wilhoit, Bob Garman and
Ronnie Polly.
Losing the 1954 O.V.C. title by a half-point, the track squad have gone
undefeated during the three previous years in regular season competition.
Key men on this year's squad boasting track records are Torline, holder of
the 220 yard record of 21.7; Rucker, holder of the 440 yard record of 51.4;
Sammons, shot put with 45 feet, 4 inches; Hortman, discus throw of 146 feet;
and the 880 relay team which holds the record at 1:36.2.
SWIMMING
MEMBERS OF THE SWIM TEAM are first row, left to right: Tom Mosgrove, John Payne, Eddie Charles, Paul Wilder,
and Bob Garman.
SECOND ROW: Bob Schneider, Chuck Myers, Don Weinhardt, Joe Thomas, and Al Hatch.
THIRD ROW: Assistant Coach Richard Fleck, Bob Sid ell, Danny Hatfield, Dick Dickerson, Bob Kolakowskl, and
Coach Bob Snavely.
33
TENNIS
§am i
MEMBERS OF THE TENNIS TEAM are left to right Tom Campbell. Jim Schneider, Jim Winn, Charles Hughes, and Dave Caylor
GOLF
MEMBERS OF THE GOLF TEAM are from left to right Wallace Sullivan, Jim McGhee, Bob Zweigart,
and Milton Martenson.
84
The main girls' sports offered at Eastern are hockey, basketball, and softball.
Miss Martha Williams is coach of these sports. Competitive games are scheduled
throughout the seasons with other colleges in the surrounding area.
GIRLS' SPORTS
One of the main activities sponsored this year by the girls' athletic program
was the hockey clinic held on campus last October. Miss Constance Applebee
who first introduced the game to the United States in 1901 was the guest. Other
Kentucky colleges and local high schools were invited to attend the all day
session.
During the basketball season, the girls played teams from the University
of Louisville, Morehead, Berea, Midway, Centre, Transylvania, University of
Cincinnati, and Nazareth. Members of the basketball team are Betty Jim Ross,
Joanie Mitchell, Dot Quisenberry, Pat Allison, Bev. Wilson, Florene Conn, Arlene
Isaacs, Arlene Black, Katherine Johnson, Sandy Sharpe, Nancy Ross, and Carol
Kidd.
During the month of March the girls' teams participated in a sports day at
the University of Kentucky. Eastern can also claim to be a member of the Ken-
tucky Athletic Federation of College Women.
Plans for softball season were to begin after the spring vacation.
85
so?
w°
*o
tf£
Cwens and Kappa loia Epsilon
are the sophomore women's and
men's honoraries which are honors
not only to their class but to the
school and community. Sherman
Creekmore serves as president of
the class. Thomas Clouse is vice-
president; Billie Sue Click, sec-
retary; Doris Edwards, treasurer,
and Victor Venettozzi, advisor.
86
87
SOPHOMORES
•^ f r~\ r% ^
DONALD RAY CROWE
Stanton
BARBARA JO G1 U NCH IGL I ANI
Richmond
FRED E. HELMOND
Bloomington, Ind.
MARTHALYN JO HOLLIDAY
Irvine
JAMES E. WELLS
Auxier
MARJORIEJEAN FLORENCE COX
Irvine
BRUCE BOCGS
McKee
JEFFREY D. BROCK
Corbin
JAMES EDWIN McGHEE
Pike vi lie
MARY M. BECKER
Louisville
WARREN G. COMBS
Seco
BETTY JEAN THOMPSON
Winchester
CLARENCE E. HORNBUCKLE
Ashland
NITA SUE MILLER
Jackson
JOHN C. JOHNSON
Louisville
ANN HOWARD ENNIS
Eliza bethtown
JAMES ROY HOLSCLAW
Lothair
TRUMAN TURNER
Bybee
RALPH CONSIGLIO
Duquesne, Pa.
SALLY SUE HOLBROOK
Pine Ridge
HAROLD BILLY CAUDILL
Carcassonne
WALTER REED AMMERMAN
Cynthiana
CHALMER C. HAYES
Ashland
JAMES N. DAVIS
Richmond
STANLEY GENE BONTA
Petersburg
BETTYE JEAN CLARK
Paint Lick
ROY BANKS
Whitesburg
JACKIE LEE BREWER
Vallonia, Ind.
THOMAS MOBERLY CAMPBELL
Richmond
VIRGINIA FUGATE
Mount Sterling
RALPH VERNON GILBERT
Pineville
BETTY LOU BANKS
Louisville
BILL JACK HUFFMAN
Pikeville
SHIRLEY JOYCE PETERS
Erlanger
LARRY MASON GARRET
West Irvine
SANDRA HAMPTON HANKS
Lawrenceburg
MORRIS LEON GROSS
Harlan
JIMMY CHEAK
Lawrenceburg
CHARLES HANSEL
Richmond
BARBARA ANN HEATHMAN
Nicholasville
88
EDWIN GAYLE SMITH
Albany
FLOY GAIL STEPHENS
Whitley City
JAMES E. SHARP
Newcomb, Tenn.
BETTY JEAN GIBSON
CARLENE WILLOUGHBY
Hazard
WALTER RAYMOND NUNN
Hazard
ADELE WILLETT SPEARS
Louisville
JAMES E. HUFF
Liberty
FRANCES LEE McMULLAN
Louisville
NORBERT B. SETSER
Somerset
ELIZABETH IRENE POINTS
Ashland
CHARLES EDWARD SUMMERS
McKee
DELILAH BELL BOYD
Sharpsburg
DARWYN WILSON
Cain Store
MARTHA ELLEN SHAHAN
South Hills
WILLIAM WALKER MALOTT
Old Washington, Ohio
MARGARET ANN SLATTERY
Richmond
BOBBY GLENN SHERRARD
Irvine
ELGENE WEDOLE
Somerset
GETHER IRICK
Stone
NORMA LEE PACK
Louisville
JAMES L. McFARLAND
Jamestown
WANDA ANN WAGERS
Corbin
JAMES EDWARD RHEIM
Dayton
BEVERLY JEAN SEXTON
Ironton, Ohio
GEORGE MERVIN CHAPMAN
Cynthiana
CAROLYN JOY RIVERS
Richmond
KENNETH GAIL SCROGHAM
Harrodsburg
FOSTEEN SPENCER
Lebanon, Ohio
HUBERT LYLE RICHARDS
Russell
IRIS JEAN SHELTON
Junction City
RUSSELL LOWEN WAGERS
Corbin
BETTY JOAN MITCHELL
Shelbyville
RODNEY SALISBURY
Martin
RAYMON E. MARTIN
Barbourville
GEORGE WILLIAM ROBBINS
Richmond
CATHERINE AMELIA NAGLE
Paris
HOLLIS ROBERTS
Bethlehem
BESSIE MARIE MORRIS
Lancaster
LENORE FAE CAHOON
Allock
CARL RUSSELL TOMLIN
Covington
RUSSELL ZACHEM, JR.
Greenup
HERBERT FRANKLIN PREWITT
Lancaster
CARL RAY MORGAN
Hazard
n f^ o £\
iS '.'" ■> J^~ 1.-- .-*■ r
C/ ^ p
,"<c
0,f*\OF\0
4*M
s-
89
SOPHOMORES
, f*^ f*\ 0*\
BILLY JEAN POTTER
Greenup
LLOYD PENDERGRASS
Jenkins
PAT LI5ENBEE
Cumberland
BILLY CECIL CARRIER
Wavnesburg
BARBARA KING EVANS
Paintsville
JACK LEE FORMAN
S. Ft. Mitchell
PATRICIA LOU MUSIC
Seco
JACK HOLBROOK
Kona
MARILYN JOYCE PAYNTER
May's Lick
ERNEST CLARK HALSTEAD
Wales
DONNA MINCEY
Melbourne
ALVA HANSON STONE
Berry
MARY FRANCES McCALL
Lexington
ROBERT N. LAWRENCE
Cumberland
EDITH FAYE MARCUM
Lynch
RONALD ANTHONY MAYER
Massapequa, N. Y.
CAROL JEAN LANG
Newport
CHARLES DAVID EVERSOLE
Richmond
JoANNE BRADEN
Greenup
JOHN WESLEY PEACE
Louellen
LULA GAY GRIFFIN
Stanford
CLIFFORD RONALD PARSONS
Kenvir
DONALD RAY THOMAS
Falmouth
THOMAS M. BERTRAM
Albany
ANGELA A. SETTLE
Louisville
JOE DONALD THOMAS
Corbin
CAROLYN TWEDDELL
Ashland
DONALD PAUL KING
Bypro
JOY ELAINE KITSON
Falmouth
JOHN KELLY JONES
Wheelwright
BILLIE JEAN PERCIFUL
Loyall
THOMAS DUANE MOSGROVE
Pikeville
RAY BRACKETT
Louisville
ROBERT LAWRENCE SMITH
Lexington
KATHLEEN MCQUEEN
Richmond
MARILYN LUCINDA DAY
Paris
WALTER LOUIS McNABB
Ft. Mitchell
GENE ROGERS CLARK
Whitley City
THOMAS PHILLIPS KNIGHT
Frankfort
CONSTANCE OLIVE McCORMACK
Dayton
90
CHARLES RAYMOND NOBLE
Beattyville
BARBARA ELLEN FAULKNER
Williamsburg
EARL HOWARD MOLEN
Frazer
MARIE W. WILLIAMS
Panco
RUSSELL OLIN COLLINS
Harlan
MAE JEAN HAMMONS
Stanford
CHARLIE RUBARD HISLE
Winchester
NORMA RAY BOURNE
Stanford
RONALD W. ROBINETTE
Pike villa
DORIS JUNE McKINNEY
Lynch
THOMAS DEAN SCHULTE
Newport
LOIS GERALDINE TAYLOR
Frankfort
JAMES DOUGLAS ADAMS
Martin
BETTY PEARL TUDOR
Paint Lick
CURTIS EDWARD DAVIS
Beattyville
PEGGY LOUISE BAKER
Alva
DENZIL WHITAKER
Cornettsville
BILLIE SUE CLICK
Martin
MILFORD L. SMITH
Harlan
JOAN DAWSON
Richmond
HENRY MELVIN MARTIN
Corbin
EVELYN DEAN BAXTER
Frankfort
WILLIAM LARRY VOCKERY
Pineville
NANCY LOUISE BOWLING
London
JIMMY DICK SPURLOCK
Prestonsburg
HORACE KEITH HARPER
Elberton, Ga.
BILLIE GAIL BURDINE
Alva
ROBERT OTTO MOTTL
Cicero, III.
MITZI CAROL MUELLER
Bellevue
PAUL DAVID FRAZER
Lynch
BALLARD N. MORGAN
Ermine
PATRICIA PETTIT WATTS
Nicholasville
JOSEPH WILLARD WILLIAMS
Whitley City
BARBARA JEAN MILLER
Barbourville
ISAAC K. MUSICK
Bristol, Va.
BETTY BROOK LAWRENCE
Winchester
ORVILLE JACKSON WHITAKER
Richmond
DARIUS RONDLE MAPLES
Freeburn
HOWARD WILLIAM MASTIN
Cynthiana
WAUTHALENA ROSE CRAMER
London
JERRY LEE HARRIS
Rockhold
RICHARD ANDREW FLECK
Berwyn, III.
JOE DAVIS MATTICK
Carrollton
BENNETT NELSON ASHER
Pineville
ROGER STINSON LOGAN
Stearns
r a o t
91
SOPHOMORES
CLARENCE T. COLLINS
Flatwoods
WANDA JOAN VINEYARD
Pineville
HERMAN EUGENE SMITH
McKee
MARGARET E. McFALLS
Hazard
CHARLES H. M. DICKERSON
Southgate
FREDA MAE SMITH
Hazard
DONALD RAY WILLIAMSON
McAndrews
GEORGIA JOYCE TRIMBLE
Harrodsburg
JIMMIE WHITAKER
Richmond
TOBY SHARON TRUE
Wayland
DOUGLAS MACE
Martin
JUNE ANN CHRISTOPHEL
Covington
BOBBY ROEBURN JENKINS
Richmond
MARTHA SPURLIN GRISE
Richmond
CHARLES WILLIAM PATRICK
Manchester
MILDRED ANN McLAIN
Louisville
CHARLES GARY GRIGSBY
Martin
NATHALEEN JO RANKIN
Winchester
JOHN PREWITT CREWS
Winchester
JANE HARRISON NIMS
Lancaster, S. C.
BOBBY JAMES THOMPSON
Wilmington, N. C.
DONNA TOLLIVER
Millstone
GENE FORMAN WORTHINGTON
Georgetown
CONNIE LEE MOORE
JANICE LAVONNE CAMPBELL
Corbin
FRANK JEMLEY, JR.
Harlan
WALTER HANSON PARK
Richmond
MICKEY DARREL PETERS
Harlan
WILLIAM EDWIN POGUE
Millersburg
GERALD VON OLIVER
Lyndon
BILLYE RAE TURPIN
Richmond
GRANT REED, JR.
Lily
W. LEE SANDERS
Louisville
PAUL D. SMITH
Seco
JAMES HANSFORD MULLINS
Science Hill
DOROTHY JEAN SEBASTIAN
Canoe
WILLIAM J. WILKINS
Owensboro
CHESTER WINFIELD HARRIS
Wurtland
92
JAMES L. CATLETT
Crittenden
BARBARA JEAN BALL
Harlan
THOMAS A. BURTON
Louisville
WILMA LOUISE BRAMMELL
Grayson
JAMES WILLIAM CLARK
Mt. Washington
RITA BLACKBURN
Covington
CHARLES RAY BROUGHTON
Richmond
CAROLYN CLAUDETTE CLONTZ
London
CLARENCE RAY DURHAM
London
DORIS EDWARDS
Richmond
ROBERT WAYNE ROSE
Ravenna
THERESA ELLEEN CALDWELL
Waynesburg
ROBERT CARTER HOVERMALE
Irvine
Joanna d. creekmore
Campbeilsville
PAUL EDWARD GRABLE
Baxter
JUNE CAROLYN FULLER
Eminence
WILLIAM J. CULBERTSON
Salyersville
PAMELIA CUNNINGHAM BLAIR
Ashland
ROBERT LEE BELLAMY
Berea
DELORIS YVONNE COOPER
Ft. Thomas
LEO COMBS
Irvine
VIVIAN CHLOE BRYANT
Phil
BILLY RAY DUNAWAY
Cynthiana
PHYLLIS MAE RIDDELL
Bellevue
HUGH MILTON COY
Richmond
MAVIS ANNETTE CURRY
Varney
VERLIN W. HUDDLESTON
Eubank
JOANN FARLEY
Jenkins
THOMAS CLOUSE III
Richmond
IRIS ROSE HELTON
Mount Vernon
VERNON BUNDY
London
ESTHER ANN BLACK
Winchester
JAMES CLEM
Evarts
BETTY LOU HAMMONS
Crane Nest
GAYLE DOUGLAS BABER
Winchester
OPHA THOMPSON
Juan
LARRY B. McCLURE
Mt. Vernon
ADA MARLENE HAY
Georgetown
JOHN THOMAS CLARK
Paint Lick
JACQUELINE LANE TEVIS
Richmond
HAROLD BEATTY JOYCE
Berea
DORIS JEAN BINDEL
Louisville
WINT DEPEW, JR.
Cumberland
VIRGINIA F. BALDWIN
Ashland
WILLIAM GLENN MURRAY
Burning Springs
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93
SOPHOMORES
GEORGE WILLIAM BROOKS
Berea
JANET BREEZE
Covington
JAMES EDWARD MITCHELL
Lexington
JEAN ELOISE RAVENSCRAFT
Cynthiana
BILL THOMPSON MALICOTE
Berea
LORA JEANNE FAIRCHILD
Monticello
ROY FREDERICK HORTMAN
Dayton, Ohio
MARY ALICE GASH
Salvisa
GEORGE WAYNE MITCHELL
Maysville
KAY COX
Berea
SAMUEL HAMILTON
Harlan
RUBY FRANCES BENTON
Richmond
WILLIAM DON CARTER
Danville
DORIS WILMER
Ft. Thomas
JOHN WILLIAM MASON
Paint Lick
ROSALIND RAY LEWIS
Springfield
MENDELL ELBERT HODGES
London
MARY THOMAS McMULLAN
Louisville
CHARLES MERCER
Louisville
MARCELLA RUSSELL
Liberty
WALTER BANYAS
Harlan
NORMA JO ANDERSON
Paint Lick
SAMUEL TOD LANTER
Cynthiana
NANCY CARROLL STAPELTON
Coeburn, Va.
OLLIE JEMLEWAY
Harlan
JOSEPH HAROLD CHEATHAM
Cox's Creek
BOBBY WINSTON ROBINSON
Richmond
94
SECOND SEMESTER SOPHOMORES
Sitting left to right are Janet Newsom, Wheelwright; Shirley Martin, Stanford;
Mary Lee Shockley, Wheelwright; and Charlotte Maggard, Cumberland. Standing
are Ruth Anderson, Stanford, and Rachel Marple, Campbellsville.
Last fall the sophomores were still untangling themselves from the newness of
the college world; this spring this same group was being caught in the spinning web
of activities which are an important part of college life. This is the year of honoraries
. . . Cwens and Kappa lota. This is the year when thoughts turn to money-making
projects in preparation for their junior year. Class activities are more regular and
more active than those of the past year. Movies are sponsored; parties are given.
A vivid picture taken from such an activity is that of the fun had by the freshmen at
the Freshman-Sophomore Party sponsored by this class.
95
"Learn today, lead tomorrow."
The Reserve Officers Training Corps is a large
division on Eastern's campus. Not only is the
ROTC "big" in number of men students enrolled,
but it is "big" as to the many activities into which
the group enters and participates. The basic pur-
pose of the military science department is to train
young men for the armed services, and by doing
this the ROTC instills leadership, craftmanship, and
character into the student. Members of the color
guard are Gene Bonta, Tom Schulte, George Griffin,
and Ralph Consiglio.
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97
ARMY STAFF
LT. COLONEL ALDEN O. HATCH
Assistant P M S & T
COLONEL HAYDEN Y. GRUB3S
CAPTAIN ERNEST H. MORGAN
Assistant P M S & T
Assistant instructors are left to right, first row, Master Sergeant John Sublovsky, Master
Sergeant Dill A. Christian, and Sergeant First Class Paul R. Huber; second row, Sergeant
First Class Victor Ashcraft and Master Sergeant Raymond Royce.
98
CORPS STAFF
JULIANE VVIEDEKAMP
Corps Sponsor
Cadet Colonel
RONALD H. SMILEY
Corps Commander
Cadet Major
JAMES A. SNOW
Corps Adjutant
Cadet Captain
JAMES E. CAUDILL
Corps S2
Cadet Lieut. Colonel
Cadet Captain
Cadet Colonel
NOEL E. CUFF
ERNIE E. RIGRISH
JESSE A. KELTNER
Corps Executive Officer
Corps S4
Corps S3
99
First Battalion staff officers are insert,
Cadet Lieut. Rudy G. Bicknell, Battalion
Commander; first row, Cadet Major Louis
B. Brutscher, Executive Officer; Cadet Ma-
jor Oris G. Johnson, Battalion S3; second
row, Cadet Captain James Burch, Bat-
talion Adjutant; Cadet Captain James
Baker, Battalion S2; and Cadet Captain
Robert L. Dezarn, Battalion S4.
Sponsors elected are insert, Janice Bur-
ton, Battalion Sponsor; Barbara Ball, "A"
Battery; Doris Edwards, "B" Battery; and
Jane Elder, "C" Battery.
As part of their advanced training ROTC
students have spent six weeks of the summer
between their junior and senior years at Fort
Sill, Oklahoma, where they live and learn
the true Army life.
100
"A" BATTERY
FIRST ROW: David E. Senn, Jerry E. Judy, Walker M. Parke, William T. Bradford, Hubert Ramey, F. D. Elliston.
SECOND ROW: Wallace R. Napier, Joseph W. Williams, William C. Carrier, Warren E. Perez, Car! R. Tomlin, Roger L. Alexander.
THIRD ROW: Lloyd L. Cain, William D. Adams, James D. Adams, Charles E. Andrews, James R. Albright, Cedric R. Anderson.
FOURTH ROW: Reuben J. Barber, Robert L. Smith, Tommy D. Wallin, William D. Bateman, Gerald W. Bottom, Nathan H. Brewster.
FIFTH ROW: Thomas M. Bertram, Rufford Warren, Mack D. Alexander, Fred F. Blair, Charles R. Broughton, Ed G. Smith, Thomas P.
Knight.
SIXTH ROW: Carl Little, Robert D. Baldwin, Jack H. Holbrook, Fredrick L. Blair, David T. Best, Charles W. Bower, Ralph H. Brandenburg.
"B" BATTERY
FIRST ROW: Melvin E. Northcutt, Ronald L. Coffman, James E. Caudill, Thomas R. Howell, Ernie E. Rigrish, Farris D. Rose.
SECOND ROW: William L. Ball, Herbert F. Prewett, John N. Combs, Franklin D. Crook, Johnny H. Westerfield, Charles E. Brown.
THIRD ROW: Walter Banyas, Gordon A. Bryson, Ronald K. White, Harley R. Taylor, Elmer E. Correl, John H. Brooks, William R. Buck.
FOURTH ROW: Donald R. Thomas, Billy R. Childress, Orville J. Whitaker, Billy R. Dunaway, Robert Creekmore, Dwight I. Cornell, David
M. Clephane, Bobby J. Bush.
FIFTH ROW: George M. Chapman, John D. Conyers, Robert L. Coleman, James M. Coy, Edward D. Conrad, Lowell T. Cornett, Clyde O.
Craft, Virgil H. Butler, Charles L. Brown.
101
"C" BATTERY
FIRST ROW: Homer Ransdell, William R. Lenderman, William R. Hensley, Donald B. Jett, Thorn
McElfresh, Paul R. McNees.
SECOND ROW: Donald P. King, Norman E. Jones, Wendell E. Sanders, Sherril Owens, Carroll M.
Fyffe, James T. Irwin.
THIRD ROW: Jerry D. Wilhoit, Thomas J. Gill, Bobby N. Garmon, Joe D. Elam, Alden E. Hatch, James
L. Davis, Bruce R. Dawson, Joseph H. Cheatham.
FOURTH ROW: Leonard C. Wilson, Fredric S. Giles, Ray A. Gravett, Harold L. Estes, Bobby R. Elswick,
James R. Durbin, George P. Hehr.
FIFTH ROW: C. C. Davis, Jim Day, Curtis C. Davis, James A. Franklin, Franklin P. Floyd, Gerald V.
Oliver, Robert B. Davidson, William L Vockery.
The Rifle Team competes with
ROTC units from Western, Uni-
versity of Cincinnati, University
of Louisville, Ohio State, Univer-
sity of Pittsburgh and other
schools throughout the year.
Victories over our opponents in-
dicate long hours of practice
necessary for the expert marks-
manship.
102
DR/LL TEAM
FIRST ROW: Ira J. Begley, Homer Ransdell, Jerry Judy, Ronald H. Smiley, Paul R. Huber, William R. Hensley, and David L. Florence.
SECOND ROW: Clyde O. Craft, William L. Vockery, William D. Adams, Alden E. Hatch, James D. Nobel, Ernest C. Halstead, and Stanley
G. Bonta.
THIRD ROW: Bruce R. Dawson, Bobby R. Elswick, Merwyn L. Jackson, Orville J. Whitaker, Frederic S. Giles, James L. Catlett, Billy C.
Carrier, and Russell L. Wagers.
FOURTH ROW: James T. Irwin, Jim Day, Charles S. Brown, Hollis Roberts, Franklin D. Crook, Cediic R. Anderson, Jr., Warren G. Combs,
Robert B. Davidson, Jr., and James C. Osborne.
RIFLE TEAM
FIRST ROW: Farris D. Rose, Paul A. McNees, Sfc. Victor Ashcraft, Charles E. Brown, Robert S. Schneider,
and William L. Ball.
SECOND ROW: Ernest C. Halstead, Tom H. Mink, Melvin E. Northcutt, Jim G. Longmire, Ira J. Begley,
Leslie J. Lambert, and William S. Smyth.
THIRD ROW: William L. Vockery, Paul W. Morgan, Rudy G. Bicknell, Ben F. Hord, Larry J. Johnson,
Ronald H. Hess, and Ernest L. Holmes.
103
Second Battalion Staff officers are in-
sert Cadet Lieut. Colonel Bobby G. Gibbs,
Battalion Commander; first row, Cadet
Major Glenn S. Morris, Executive Officer;
Cadet Major Harold J. Fraley, Battalion
S3; second row, Cadet Captain Asa L.
Hord, Battalion Adiutant; Cadet Captain
Calmer Hayes, Battalion S2; and Cadet
Captain Bobby L. Rose, Battalion S4.
Sponsors elected are insert Jane Parker,
Battalion Sponsor; Mrs. Wade Brock, "D"
Battery; Jonnie Sue Zookie, "E" Battery;
and Betty Sue Correll, "F" Battery.
This year Eastern's unit changed to branch
general. Beginning this summer training will be
conducted at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where
advanced skills in general military science will
be taught. Ft. Sill days are the past ... Ft.
Campbell days are the future.
104
"D" BATTERY
FIRST ROW: Charles R. Snavely, William R. Murphy, Wade Brock, Robert L. Roby, Robert S. Schneider, James R. Fleenor.
SECOND ROW: Larry J. Johnson, John P. Crews, Samuel T. Lanter, Stanley W. Campbell, Warren C. Combs, Robert J. Bellamy, John
L. Zimmerman,
THIRD ROW: Billy J. Jackson, Ralph C. Jones, Thomas M. Wilson, James L. Catlett, George H. Lusby, Paul D. Smith, Harold G. Marcum,
Jack C. Kennedy.
FOURTH ROW: Milford L. Smith, Herman W. Kerns, Ernest L. Holmes, Kenneth L. Bentle, Jennings B. Krahenbuhl, Carl D. Curry, Ralph
W. Marcum, Ronald H. Hess, Edward C. Hehl.
FIFTH ROW: Jackie W. Roberts, Samuel W. Jones, Robert H. Hutslar, Merwyn L. Jackson, James E. Kiser, James R. Lewis, Wayne K.
Idol, Jimmy G. Longmire, James H. Layton, Leslie G. Lambert.
BATTERY
FIRST ROW: David L. Florence, Robert C. Zweigart, Ronald G. Pellegrinon, Paul G. Collins, Ralph M. Rutledge, Ira J. Begley.
SECOND ROW: Raymond E. Martin, Walter R. Nunn, Henry M. Martin, Jack Brown, Hollis Roberts, Robert D. McWhorter.
THIRD ROW: Earl May, Silas L. Peace, Tommy H. Mink, James W. Mayfield, Donald Moore, James D. Noble, David R. Odor.
FOURTH ROW: Charles Bell, Donald F. Moore, Willie C. Parrish, Prewitt L. Pace, Lloyd H. Pendergrass, Bobby E. Glass, James D. Patton
FIFTH ROW: Thomas M. Campbell, Paul W. Morgan, Richcrd A. Perry, Ronnie D. Polly, John H. Ratliff, Lawrence R. Redmond, Walte
F. Miller.
105
"F" BATTERY
FIRST ROW: William H. Baldwin, Paul H. Clayton, Harold L. Johnson, Jack Adams, James C. Osborne.
SECOND ROW: Donald R. Feltner, Russell Collins, Bobby D. Roby, Edwin L. Wright, Gerald A. Boyd,
Thomas A. Bertram, Robert A. Koiakowski.
THIRD ROW: George W. Robbins, Charles E. Sammons, Henry S. Saylor, Paul B. Sears, Dean R. Shaw,
Ballard Morgan, William S. Smyth, Clayton Stivers.
FOURTH ROW: Johnny B. Tweddell, Robert W. Shaw, James E. Sharp, William B. Sholar, William D.
Shrvely, Russell L. Wagers, Ronald A. Turner, Robin D. Waggoner, George F. Griffin.
FIFTH ROW: W. S. Wainscott, Ernest C. Halstead, Winfred R. Sizemore, Ben W. VanArsdale, Bobby
R. Tumey, Pete E. Sidwell, Harold R. Smith, Thomas E. Thomas, Herbert S. Vescio.
Classroom training is an im-
portant part in the schedule of
the ROTC students. Freshmen
and sophomores meet twice
weekly plus the corps training
while junior and senior boys
meet four times weekly plus the
corps training.
106
Eastern's ROTC has been
training young men for the
Army since 1936 with exception
only during World War II. Head-
quarters for this department is
located in the Weaver Health
Building.
Instruction in the mechanics of the Mortc
At the present two hundred
and forty-four students are en-
rolled in the ROTC. Students
hold rank from the Cadet
Colonel to Private which is the
classification of freshmen stu-
dents. Promotions are from Pri-
vate to Private 1st class, Cor-
poral, Sergeant, 2nd Lieutenant,
1st Lieutenant, Captain, Major,
Lieutenant Colonel, and Cadet
Colonel.
First aid classes are a part of the ROTC program
The Military Ball which has
been given annually for seven-
teen years is perhaps one of
the greatest social events on
campus. The Drill and Rifle
teams which give shows and
represent the college in various
meets are also an important
part of the corps.
Learning to handle a Browning Automatic Rifle
107
ti
i^
^
Many, many months ago . . .
back in September, many fresh-
men students experienced the
act of registration. And then
second semester came and this
was repeated, although per-
haps in a different manner.
Registration recalls aches, hap-
piness, relief, joy, but the fresh-
men lives and college continues.
Elected class president of this
group was Dick Perry. Bill
Hayden is vice-president; Gerry
Pence, secretary; Emily Massey,
treasurer, and Mr. and Mrs.
R R. Richards are class ad-
visors.
108
109
FRESHMEN
ERNEST LEE HOLMES
Falmouth
DOUGLAS WAYNE ROBINSON
Covington
MIKELL ANN PRESTON
Allen
VERNON LAROY PONDER
Livingston
WAYNE SMITH
Bellevue
PAUL RICHARD THOMAS
New Boston, Ohio
CAROLYN ROSS HIBBARD
Covington
CHARLES WALLACE SMITH
Livingston
CHARLES ROBERT STOESS
Crestwood
BETTY JUNE REED
Burgin
ROBERT WRIGHT SHAW
Lexington
JOSEF WILLIAM SCHULTZ
Fort Knox
PATSY TOBIN
Harrodsburg
FRED ALBERT SCHEFFLER
Crab Orchard
WINFRED RAY SIZEMORE
Lothair
HAROLD R. SMITH
Gray Hawk
JOSEPH N. MOORES
Richmond
SHIRLEY ANN RUHL
Simpsonville
RONALD ROSS
Harlan
PRISCILLA JANE SHAW
Frankfort
DEAN RAY SHAW
Louisville
NELLIE FAYE SAYLOR
Beverly
WILLIAM B. SHOLAR
Hopkinsville
LAURA RUDENE RUSSELL
Liberty
JOSEPH CLARENCE RUSSELL
Msckvilla
GERALDINE LEE PENCE
Richmond
RUBEN JOSEPH BARBER, JR.
Ashland
PATRICIA RUTH PHILLIPS
Threelinks
WETZEL PAUL SHEPHERD
Hazard
WANDA LEE SCOTT
Somerset
HENSLEY C. SPARKS
Buckhorn
CHARLOTTE ANNE SILER
Middlesboro
BILLY LEAR MAYES
Mackville
PHYLLIS ARLENE HOLT
Portsmouth, Ohio
EDWIN LARUE WRIGHT
Falmouth
BARBARA ANN TOOMEY
Lexington
HARRY HALE RANIER
Prestonsburg
SHIRLEY JOANNE SINGLETON
Kings Mountain
BILLY BAIN OSBORNE
Crab Orchard
ROBERT RAY MILLER
McAndrews
110
LOIS GAIL THOMAS
Foster
WILLIAM DAVID SHIVELY
Georgetown
DORCAS ANN LUKER
Louisville
CLARENCE OTIS NELSON
Richmond
CLAUDIA MAE WASSER
Newport
LEROY BAKER
Laurel Creek
PAULA PAYNE
Louisville
LEONARD BALL
Harlan
KAY SMITH
Louisville
DICK ALLEN PERRY
Bellevue
SHIRLEY FRANCES TIREY
Beattyville
ROGER SMITH
Grove City, Ohio
BOBBIE ANN WILLIAMSON
McAndrews
EDDIE RAY CHARLES
Pineville
INA CHARLES ROBY
Shepherdsville
BOBBY GENE PARKE
Richmond
FREDA MAY ROBINSON
Richmond
JAMES FRANKLIN DURBIN
Irvine
PATRICIA ANN BARKLEY
Georgetown
BOBBY GENE BABS
Richmond
FREDA MARIE MELTON
Hazard
JAKIE A. HOWARD
Pineville
JOSEPH JOHN HEINK
Cincinnati, Ohio
RALPH HAMPTON BRANDENBURG
Richmond
MARY ELIZABETH STANLEY
Cynthiana
GARLAND DEAN TAYLOR
Danville
MARLENE JOYCE ASHCRAFT
Ravenna
HERMAN KEARNS, JR.
Paris
NORMA LOiS LUSBV
Williamstown
SAMUEL G. ROBERTS
Irvine
BERNARD LOUIS KOTULA
Ambridge, Pa.
JANICE BOND O'BANION
Owenton
JAMES A. SINGLETON
Winchester
BETTY LOU MINK
Williamstown
JIMMY LONGMIRE
Cox's Creek
GEORGE HOWARD LUSBY
Georgetown
ULYSSES G. HORN
Inez
EMILY VERONA MASSEY
Lynch
BILL JOE TAYLOR
Danville
CLIFFORD SMITH
ROBERT LAWRENCE COLEMAN
Florence
BETTY JEAN TARKINGTON
Harrodsburg
FREDERICK LANE BLAIR
West Liberty
HELEN KATHERINE NAYLOR
Buena Vista
THOMAS MADIN WILSON
Sparta
111
FRESHMEN
&&*,<?•■ &\o
CALVIN EUGENE SMOTHERS
Texas
MARY FRANCES THOMPSON
Winchester
CLYDE O'BRIEN CRAFT
Richmond
PEGGY LOU WELLS
Seco
ROBERT LOGAN PURDOM
Texas
WILLIAM ROBERT BURK
Shelbvville
PHYLLIS ANN SPEARS
Seco
BOB R. BARKER
Harlan
EARL MAY, JR.
West Liberty
BARBARA LOU TINCH
Richmond
FRANK JOHN BLACK
Danville
ROSE MARIE ROSE
Winchester
RUFFORD WARREN
Green Road
PAUL E. PERRY
Middlesboro
JAMES DONALD PATTON
Lexington
RICHARD GARY WILLS
Brocksville
YVONNE WORTH
Valley Station
W. S. WAINSCOTT
Williamstown
MARY JO TREADWAY
PETE EDWARD SIDWELL
Richmond
JAMES DOUGLAS NOBLE
Lexington
PHYLLIS ANN WILSON
Richmond
ROBERT DONELSON BALDWIN
Hopkinsville
MARY LOGAN FORBES
Richmond
JAMES RICHARD ALBRIGHT
Georgetown
JAMES DELBERT BOWLING
Blue Ash, Ohio
JANET HARKLEROAD
Richmond
KIMBEL LANE VESCIO
Vicco
JAKIE FAYE PARKE
Richmond
WILLIAM DOUGLAS ADAMS
Richmond
DONALD WAYNE BOW
Dan
. lie
ARLINE ELEANOR BLACK
Ashland
JERRY ELDON ABNEY
Newport
JANE STUBBLEFIELD ELDER
Richmond
THOMAS RICHARD MARSHALL
English
EDWINA JOYCE PETERS
Irvine
WILLIAM A. ALEXANDER
West Irvine
LAURA LEE BELL
Hazard
GLENN EDWARD PARKS
Corbin
EDWARD DONALD ARNSPERGER
Covington
112
BARBARA JEAN RELIFORD
Ashland
SIE MILLS, JR.
Pineville
KATHLEEN ROBERTS
Richmond
JAMES PAUL SANDERS
Richmond
PATTY SUE STANIFER
Richmond
RANDALL B. MOORE
Frankfort
VAUGHN DeLEATH ROBERTSON
Pleasureville
MERWYN LEE JACKSON
Richmond
MARIECE BOWLING
London
JOHN NICK COMBS
Columbus, Ind.
hazel Mcdonald
Richmond
KARL F. FUGITT
Portsmouth, Ohio
JONNIE SUE ZOOCHI
Fonde
GERALD SMITH PSIMER
Waynesburg
ELOISE MORROW
Monti cello
JOHN HOUSTON BROOKS
Augusta
ARLENE ISAACS
Louisville
RALPH WARREN MARCUM
Sand Gap
ETHEL B. SESLINE
Waverlv, Ohio
HAROLD GENE MARCUM
New Zion
MARY CAROLYN BILITER
Martin
JAMES EDWARD KISER
Mayslick
PATRICIA ANN PRATT
Hindman
FRANKLIN DELANO CROOK
Grays
LENA FRANCES NORTON
Spiro
KENNY SELBERT TUTTLE
Irvine
DORIS RAE TURNER
Drift
JAMES WINSTON MAYF1ELD
Cumberland
BARBARA ANN HOFFMAN
Ashland
JAMES ROGERS LEWIS
Covington
BONNIE HUME
Lawrenceburg
KARL GILMORE WEDDLE
Niles
EVELYN GAYLE WITHERS
Cynthiana
RALPH CARLISLE JONES
Ashland
RICHARD R. HUTTON
Cumberland
PREWITT LANE PACE
Winchester
OLLIE EARLENE WHITE
Richmond
PAUL W. MORGAN
Danville
BETTY ANN LUCAS
Georgetown
DORRIS D. REECE
Irvine
WILLIE C. PARRISH
Winchester
DAVID R. ODOM
Williamstown
BONNIE FAYE HUMPHREY
Georgetown
OVERTON CROCKETT PARRENT, JR.
Frankfort
JACK G. HORNER
Jenkins
#^ / v'«* J**% /^\ /**K
113
FRESHMEN
JACK RONALD HISSOM
Portsmouth, Ohio
JOHN M. SIZEMORE
Roark
RUTH WINONA BASS
Cincinnati, Ohio
TEDDY CLYDE HATFIELD
Belfry
CHARLES ERNEST SAMMONS
Raceland
NELLIE MAE WHALEN
Paris
LYNETTE WILDER
Middlesboro
BOBBY D. ROBY
Cox's Creek
TOMMY HAROLD MINK
Mount Vernon
PATRICIA F. WALKER
Louisville
DONALD GENE MOORE
Orkney
BILLY H. WELLS
Albany
WILLIAM PRESTON BAKER
Causer
BARBARA DOW WHITE
Moreland
CHARLES EUGENE BLANTON
Waynesburg
ERNEST RALPH BENTLEY
Greasy Creek
ANITA PEARL WILSON
Rock Cave, W. Va.
BOBBY REID TUMEY
Danville
JANE ELEANOR WATKINS
Stanford
RONNIE DALEWOOD POLLY
Lexington
ANNA RUTH WALLACE
Son
rset
GEORGE MANSFIELD STOKES
Hcpkmsville
NAYDA MARIE WILHELM
Louisville
BILLY JOEL TERRELL
Alva
JAMES WILLIAMS
Salyersville
JAMES W. ROBERTS
Hyden
BONNIE NEWMAN
Hi Hat
THOMAS EDWARD THOMAS
Greenup
JANICE L. COFFEY
Berea
WILLIAM A. WYLIE
Berea
EVA WATTS BABER
Winchester
RONALD ADDIS TURNER
Price
LORETTA MAYES
Jeremiah
WILLIAM STANFORD SMYTH
Gieely
SALLIE RATLIFF
Pikeville
ROBIN DAILY WAGONER
Paris
CHARLES MAURICE WILSON
Dayton
BETTY ALICE BOSSHAMMER
Covington
CHARLES WILLIAM BOWER
Cynthiana
HERBERT SULLIVAN VESCIO
Vicco
114
JAMES WALTER SKAGCS
Louisville
PEGGY JO PIGMAN
Allock
GILBERT EDWIN EMENEGGER
Louisville
MARY JOYCE KELLY
Falmouth
HENRY STEWART SAYLOR
Alva
JOYCE ANN KENNER
Falmouth
GARY DOUGLAS KINSER
Winchester
WAYNE KEITH IDOL
Middlesboro
ROBERT A. MARTIN
Middlesboro
JOAN ELYSE KITSON
Falmouth
JENNINGS BRYAN KRAHENBUHL
London
DAVID ALBERT RIDDLE
Vicco
PATRICIA ANNETTE JOHNSON
Louisville
PHILIP CHESTER MORRIS
Wheeling, W. Va.
MARION NEELEY III
Prestonsburg
MIRIAM JOYCE HOLMES
Somerset
WILLIAM ALLEN CARTER
Danville
OTAS RAY SHELTON
Richmond
VIRGINIA LEA RICHIE
Ritchie
MELVIN ELBERT SMITHERS
MARLIN KEITH SINGLETON
Berea
WARREN E. PEREZ
Louisville
JOANN ROBERTSON
Harlan
BILLY JOE JACKSON
Lothair
SANDRA KAY HORGEN
Ashland
JACK KEITH RODGERS
Covington
FREDA FLORENCE HOPPER
Williamstown
CARROLL MORRIS
Bondville
PATRICIA JO RAKER
Carrollton
EUGENE LITTLE
Nicholasville
ALICE ANN HELMAN
West Palm Beach. Fla.
JOHN B. PAYNE
Disputanta
HELEN MARIE MURRAY
Crestwood
CHARLES A. MACFARLANE
Louisville
FANNIE R. HERNDON
Russellville
WILLIAM THOMAS TODD
Richmond
JOYCE LORENE MARTIN
Wayland
BILLY HUGHES PERKINS
Shelbyville
FRANCES EVELYN HACKWORTH
Salversville
JAMES HYATT LAYTON
Lancaster
ELMER EUGENE CORRELL
Neon
LESLIE GARTH LAMBERT
Erlanger
LOIS MARILYN HUDSON
Georgetown
CHARLES ELVIN PAMPLIN
New Albany, Ind.
LARRY JOE JOHNSON
Vallonia, Ind.
r.>i.-i
115
FRESHMEN
BETTY JEAN NORTHCUTT
Lexington
ARTHUR HERMAN LOONEY
Linefork
JANICE ROSE WEST
Irvine
EDWARD ALAN HERRINGTON
Cynthiana
BARBARA CAROL WEBSTER
Erlanger
THOMAS ALLEN WHITAKER
Roxana
LAURA JO STEPHENS
Cynthiana
KENNETH LEE BENTLE, JR.
Falmouth
BONNIE LOIS ROSE
Stanton
HUBERT LEON WILSON
Naomi
DRUSIE ANN HUDNALL
Carlisle
GERALD W. BOTTOM
Mackville
BARBARA ANN NORHEIMER
Louisville
BOBBY DALE HENSON
Cynthiana
ELIZABETH PASLEY
Winchester
GLENN LEWIS ARMSTRONG
Mount Washington
NANCY LEE ROSS
Richmond
JACK COLIN KENNEDY
Georgetown
JEAN COLE PARKER
Barbourville
RICHARD HAROLD MARTIN
Middlesboro
GENEVA MAE HOWARD
Richmond
WILLIAM HOLTON HAYDEN
Nicholasville
PATRICIA LEE TUCKER
Irvine
ROBERT HOWARD HUTSLAR
Milltown
LOIS SAMSON
Ashland
RAYMOND WAYNE McGEE
Cynthiana
MARILYN JO WARREN
Perryville
ALDEN EVANS HATCH
Richmond
SANDRA JEAN BEATTY
Louisville
PAUL DANIEL WILDER
Pineville
PEGGY JO SPENCER
Lawrenceburg
JOHNNY H. WESTERFIELD
Fogertown
BONNY JO OSBORNE
Richmond
MACK ALEXANDER
Mount Washington
SHIRLEY WINIFRED REED
Stanford
BEN WESLEY VanARSDALE
Richmond
SHIRLEY LEE NORHEIMER
Louisville
CHARLES NEVILLE MYERS
Harlan
JAMES ANTHONY BRADLEY
Beattyville
DORIS JEAN MOHR
Happy
116
SALLI ANNE EMRICK
West Liberty
DAVID THOMAS BEST
Maysville
JANE ELIZABETH GROSS
Anchorage
HOLLIS JACKIE HARRELL
Middlesboro
THELMA MAE ARTHUR
Dover
RUPERT DEAN BURKETT
Naomi
EDNA EARL FAIRCHILD
Mont. cello
RONALD EDWIN GARNETT
Hebron
BILLY T. HACKER
Richmond
PHYLLIS ANN GREENLEE
Somerset
NANCY ANN CHILDRESS
Ashland
CHARLES E. GOSS
Harlan
JOYCE ANN BURGESS
Somerset
SARA JOYCE CLARK
Richmond
SAMUEL WORTH JONES
Louisville
REVA MAE HOWARD
Mousie
GEORGE PAUL HEHR
Cynthiana
CHARLENE MULLINS
Covington
FRED FRANKLIN BLAIR
Harlan
SHIRLEY ANN MULLINS
Greendale
FRED ISON
Louellen
MAXINE LaMARR
Alexandria
GEORGE BURNETTE DOBBS
Monticello
BETTY SUE CORRELL
Neon
JACK WALLACE BRIGHT
Corbin
BEVERLY SUE CARROLL
Belfry
BILLY RAY CAMPBELL
Lynch
NANCY E. HUBBARD
Cynthiana
ANDREW JACKSON FLANARY
Benham
MARTHA ANN DeWITT
Melbourne
ROY RAY CARPENTER
Shepherdsville
JAMES ARTHUR GAMMON
South Portsmouth
MARGARET JEAN FOX
Ashland
HAROLD HATTER
Yosemite
BOBBY LEE HORINE
LaGrange
STUART WESLEY HODGES
Alva
WILLIAM DAVID BATEMAN
Barbourville
DONNA LEE BAILEY
Bedford
HEYBURN L. HALL
Loyall
CEDRIC ROSS ANDERSON, JR.
Elkhorn City
BILL DULANEY
Burdine
JAMES MELVIN COY
Cynthiana
PATRICIA ANN DEAL
Wheelwright
JAMES RICHARD DURBIN
Richmond
PATRICIA ANN FRANKLIN
Louisville
117
FRESHMEN
9^1^?
JUDY ANNE CROSE
Ashland
DAVID FREDERICK CAMPBELL
Beech Bottom, W. Va.
MARGARET JOYCE ROYALTY
Bondville
LAWRENCE GORDON DAVIS
Portsmouth, Ohio
WANDA GERALDINE JACKSON
Highsptint
LARRY ALBERT SAYLOR
Wallins
BRUCE RAY DAWSON
Richmond
WILMA ATHY
Beattyville
ROBERT BATSON DAVIDSON, JR.
Richmond
ORVEL WILLIAM GALLIMORE
Louisville
GWINDOLLA LEWIS
Maysville
BOBBY RAY ELSWICK
Elkhorn City
HARRIET HANKS HARRIS
Stanton
JAMES LINDSEY DAVIS
Stanton
BEVERLY ANN DANIEL
Hazard
LESTER HOMER CREEKMORE
Newport
ELISSA ANN EVANS
Richmond
CHARLES EDWARD ANDREW
Lynch
OMALEE COOK
Elias
HAROLD LEE ESTES
McKinney
DELILAH ELIZABETH GARRETT
Eubank
GUY EDWIN DAINES
Newport
DWIGHT CORNELL
Bardstown
BOBBY NALL GARMON
Owensboro
VICTORIA J. MATTOX
Jenkins
HAROLD DARWELL
Taylorsville
ROBERT KEITH DENNY
Stanford
MABEL CAROL CURRY
Richmond
CARL DEW CURRY
Louisville
JIM DAY
Richmond
PATRICIA ANN DOWNEY
Danville
FRANKLIN P. FLOYD
Lynch
HARLEY T. EMMONS
Richmond
HENRY RICHARD DUDGEON
Erlanger
JOYCE ELIZABETH JENKINS
Valley Station
SHIRLEY ANNE DILLOW
Vanceburg
JOE MORRIS CLOUD
Crummies
JOE DONALD ELAM
Crab Orchard
MARJORIE LOUISE ELVOVE
Paris
BILLY RONDALL CHILDERS
Ashcamp
118
MICHAEL THOMAS HLAD
Duquesne, Pa.
DONALD W. ESTES
Winchester
JUANITA JUNE MOORE
California
RONALD KLOPP WHITE
Erlanger
RONNIE HAROLD HESS
Lynch
GRACE HOWIE PACK
Louisville
RAY ALEXANDER GRAVETT
Winchester
JAMES DONALD ADAMS
Lynch
CURTIS CARROLL DAVIS
Richmond
MARIAN SULVIA DICK
Mayfield
JERRY DALE WILHOIT
Harlan
FARLESS ELWOOD DICKERSON
Winchester
ERNEST FRANKLIN MARCHETTI
Mobile, Ala.
EDWARD CHARLES HEHL, JR.
Louisville
GORDON ALLAN BRYSON
Covington
JAMES WILLIAM BURNS
Oneida
MARGARET ANN BUTLER
Jeffersontown
THOMAS JAY GILL
Pikeville
BILLY JANE OSBORNE
Kermit, W. Va.
THOMAS DARRYL WALLIN
Lexington
DONALD LAYNE FREEMAN
Honey Bee
ROBERT WILLIAM HEISLER
Louisville
DANIEL R. HATFIELD
Covington
DAVID MINTER CLEPHANE
Fort Thomas
WILLIAM KING BROWN
Lexington
DON KENNETH WEINHARDT
Louisville
SHARON CLAUDETTE BROWN
Paris
HERBERT HOOVER BUCKLES
Moores Creek
BETTY JO DYE
Waynesburg
NOEL A. COLYER
Alcalde
CARROLL MORRIS FYFFE
Maysville
ROGER HAROLD JOHNSON
Hazard
NATHAN HALE BREWSTER
Richmond
LEONARD CARROLL WILSON
Lothair
DONALD FRANKLIN MOORE
Pleasure Ridge Park
ANNA LOLA COOPER
Fonthill
LEWIS DENVER EVERSOLE
Richmond
WILLIAM KELLY COPE
Hardburly
JAMES RUSSELL WILSON
Eubank
BERNICE G. MASTERS
Waco
VERMONT OWENS
Middlesboro
KENNETH PEARL ROBERTS
Burning Springs
JIMMY THOMAS CHANDLER
Shelbyville
DANIEL CARY HENDERSON
Berea
DONALD GENE HAHN
Cox's Creek
O .P C* £S P
119
FRESHMEN
ZONA BETH BROCK
Kettle Island
CHARLES JAMES EVANS
Dar.v;ile
BARBARA ANN PRESTON
Lexington
ROBERT E. JOYCE
Berea
MORTREC1A BRUNER, JR.
Nicholasville
HOBERT K. HARMON
Conwav
JOYCE ANN CORNELIUS
Harrodsburg
VERNON DANIEL
Brutus
SYDNE SUE BROWN
Ashland
JAMES SIMPSON
Coalgoal
PHYLLIS DEAN MARTIN
Hi Hat
CHARLES L. BROWN
Paint Lick
JANET SUE ADAMS
Salyersville
FREDERICH S. GILES
Richmond
HELEN E. BRANSCUM
Somerset
JAMES BURNS
Oneida
DOROTHY JEAN CLARK
Louisville
VIRGIL HOMER BUTLER
Butler
EDWARD D. CONRAD
Be
WILLIAM THOMAS FLORENCE
Lexington
HENDRICKS D. CAUDILL, JR.
Richmond
DAVID H. SIMONTON
Erlanger
BOBBY JOE BUSH
Richmond
EUGENE FAY EGNEW
Foster
120
SECOND SEMESTER FRESHMEN
WW
PI
■ ft I r\
Bt 'fi
mi 'V
[yc>l
rf
FIRST ROW, left to right: Joanne Dudgeon, Erlanger; Jo Ann Lincks, East Bernstadt; Huda Bing-
ham, Mummie; and Lenora Hayden, Sulphur.
SECOND ROW: Betty Hurst, Waltersville; Nina McCoun, Smithfield; Sue Bohanan, Perryville;
Shirley Gentry, Mt. Washington; and Sue Freiberger, Cincinnati, Ohio.
THIRD ROW: John Cowan, Richmond; Philip Evans, Danville; and Lester Jones, Corbin.
The unity and co-operation admired in the three higher classes had its be-
ginning in the freshman group. The freshman class is the foundation of what the
future college years should contain. Much time is spent in this group in becoming
acquainted. Class officers are elected only when members are familiar with the
outstanding characteristics which will insure good officers for the freshman group.
Activities sponsored by this class are limited in preference to the wider field of
education. Freshmen are encouraged to become acquainted not only with students but
with their books, the use of the library, the campus, profitable study habits, wise
management of money, and the proper use of time. Freshmen are being schooled
for their coming college life.
m
o^G
K^
<,&
o^s
Over fifty organized clubs ore offered fo the various interests and abilities that
students possess. Although every person is encouraged to be a member of an or-
ganization, the campus prefers that a student doesn't belong to too many clubs. The
campus is proud of the national honoraries and departmental clubs which have
chapters at Eastern and is equally as proud of the many fine activities and projects
which result from all the college organizations.
Memories from membership in an organization are a vivid picture in our mind.
Installations, first meetings, weiner roasts, banquets, elections, committee meetings,
announcements, posters, officers . . . combine to make organizations a very definite
part of our school life.
122
123
honoraries
WHO'S
Among Students
Colleges and
Seated from left to right; Beverly Wilson and Alice Keene; standing, Mary
Helen Collins and Ronald Smiley.
Twenty-four seniors from Eastern
were chosen by a joint committee
of students and faculty to appear
in the 1955 edition of WHO'S WHO
AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES.
Requirements for this d i s t i n -
guished honor are that the student
have a scholastic standing of 1.5,
Seated from left to right; Peggy Kraus,
Mary Jo Campbell, Ramona Fletcher,
and Virginia Durbin; standing, Roger
Stephens and Harry Stigall.
WHO
In American
Universities
be active in extra-curricula activi-
ties and show future promise to
society, and that he be a graduat-
ing senior or junior with eighty or
more semester hours.
Members not pictured are Joan
Scholle, James Allender, Thomas
Mayo, and Bob Mueller.
Seated from left to right; Janice Treadway and Thelma Parke; standing,
Chester Raker and Denyse Campbell.
Seated from left to right; Chester Grey-
nolds, Louise Gullady, Edith Ann Taylor,
and Peggy Chandler; standing James
Burch and Edwin Cuff.
125
CWENS
Cwens is a national honorary for sophomore women which has as its pur-
pose to sponsor leadership, scholarship, and service among freshman and
sophomore women. Activities include the annual sponsoring of the freshman
women's banquet at Christmas, co-sponsoring the "B" Average tea and the
women's honor day program with the senior women's honorary. Each month
Cwens has one major activity, usually a school service. Officers are Mary
Becker, president; Joy Kitson, vice-president; Rosalind Lewis, secretary; and
Doris Wilmer, treasurer.
Q *L$J& ft
COLLEGIATE PENTACLE
Collegiate Pentacle is the senior women's honorary on the campus. Mem-
bership is achieved by excelling in leadership as well as scholarship. Activi-
ties of the organization include the "B" average tea, a tea for junior women,
sandwich sales, and sponsorship of a dance. Dean Emma Y. Case is sponsor
and the officers are Janet Campbell, president; Virginia Durbin, vice-president;
Denyse Campbell, secretary; Polly Jenkins, treasurer; and Billie Cawood, chap-
lain.
126
© f?
KAPPA DELTA PI
Kappa Delta Pi, an Honor Society in Education, is an international organi-
zation which has as its purpose to encourage high professional, intellectual,
and personal standards and to recognize outstanding contributions to educa-
tion. Activities include presenting an annual scholarship award to the sopho-
more student who shows a sincere interest in the teaching profession and send-
ing representatives to national and regional convocations. Delta Alpha Chapter
officers are Roger Stephens, president; Edith Ann Taylor, vice-president; Thelma
Parke, secretary; and Jackson Lackey, treasurer. Miss Ida Teater is counselor.
ALPHA PSI OMEGA
Alpha Psi Omega, national dramatic fraternity, empowered a chapter in
1937 under the direction of Miss Pearl Buchanan. The purpose of the organi-
zation is to honor outstanding achievement in the theater and to aid students
to gain more knowledge and understanding of the arts. Officers are Chester
Greynolds, president; James Snow, vice-president; and Jim Burch, secretary-
treasurer. The club advisor is Glen Wilson.
127
SIGMA TAU DELTA
The purpose of Sigma Tau Delta is to endeavor to advance the study of
the great literary masterpieces, encourage worthwhile reading, promote the
mastery of written expression, and foster a spirit of fellowship among stu-
dents specializing in the English language and literature. Major activities
include an annual banquet and inviting guests to speak at the monthly meet-
ings. Officers for this year are Mary Jo Campbell, president; Thorn McElfresh,
secretary; Roger Stephens, treasurer; and Edith Ann Taylor, historian. Miss
Pearl Buchanan is advisor.
KAPPA PI
The purposes of the National Kappa Pi Art Fraternity are to promote
interest among college students in art, to recognize potential and professional
ability in art, to bring art departments of various colleges closer together
through activities, and to know the work of other students through exhibits
and the SKETCH BOOK which is the national society's journal. Activities
include the annual exhibit of members' work and entering a float in the Home-
coming parade. Officers are Thomas Forbes, president; Pat Bell, vice-president,
Martha Leeds, secretary; and Betty White, treasurer. Dr. F. P. Giles is sponsor.
128
KAPPA IOTA EPSILON
Kappa lota Epsilon is the honorary fraternity for sophomore men and
was organized in 1950 for the purpose of promoting leadership, scholarship,
and citizenship on the campus and in the community. Among the many activi-
ties sponsored by the fraternity are the annual smoker for faculty men
members, a monthly banquet for both active and associate fraternity mem-
bers, and the Honor's Day program for men students. Club advisor is John
Rowlett. Vernon Bundy is president; Denver Wells, vice-president; Jim Cheak,
secretary; and Carl Tomlin, treasurer.
THE OAKS
On March 2, 1955, twenty junior and senior men students were inaugurated
into Eastern's first junior-senior men's honorary. These men were elected by-
faculty vote and students were chosen on scholastic standing, leadership, and
character.
The group of men students selected the Greek letters Omicron Alpha Kappa
to be the name of the honorary.
Charter members of Oaks are Roger Alexander, James Allender, David
Caylor, Ronald Coffman, Noel Cuff, Jackson Lackey, Thornton Lipscomb, John
Mayer, Merrell Patrick, Paul Polly, Hubert Ramey, Homer Ransdell, Charles
Smith, Roger Stephens, Guy Strong, Jim Tolliver, William R. Van Pelt, James
Winn, Preston O'Bannon Young, and Robert Zweigart.
Co-sponsors are Victor Venettozzi and Glen Wilson.
129
departmental
& Jl Q *3 s §
S/GA1A 7AU PI
Sigma Tau Pi of the Society of Commerce has as its purpose to promote
a feeling of unity and fellowship among its members, to aid the general
welfare in the department of commerce, and to provide opportunities fcr social
and educational growth. The officers are Pat Bell, president; Oris Johnson,
vice-president; Janice Burton, secretary; and Juliane Wiedekamp, treasurer.
Dean W. J. Moore is sponsor for the group.
BIOLOGY CLUB
The Biology Club strives to stimulate individual and campus interest in
biology and to promote friendship and the exchange of ideas among students.
The club sponsors informative discussions about things of the living world,
as well as sponsors instructional and recreational outings. Officers are Glenn
Brown, president; Mitzi Mueller, secretary; and Alice Keene, treasurer. A. L.
Whitt serves as club advisor.
130
PHYSICS CLUB
The purpose of the Physics Club is to promote the interest in physics and
the related sciences on the campus and to better prepare the members for
their jobs in this field after graduation. The club's lectures are given by
instructors of the different science departments of the college. Officers are
Joe Shelton, president; Roger Alexander, vice-president; and Ronald Smiley,
secretary. Dr. J. G. Black is advisor.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION
The purpose of the Physical Education and Recreation Club is to pro-
mote a better understanding in the field of physical education and to create
a feeling of fair play in everyday life. Major activities include the sponsor-
ing of play nights, dances, picnics, and other physical education events which
will promote team spirit. Officers for this year are Bill Marshall, president;
Joyce Blevins, vice-president; Carlene Babb, secretary; and Bill Fitzgerald, treas-
urer. Charles T. Hughes is sponsor of the club.
131
CADUCEUS CLUB
Caduceus Club was organized in 1936 by Dr. J. D. Farris who was at
that time college physician at Eastern. It fosters premedical interest of stu-
dents who are interested in medicine, pharmacy, medical technology, dentistry
and nursing. The club meets twice each month. Informative lectures are given
by doctors and occasionally medical films are shown. Officers are Everett
Bickers, president; David Eversole, vice-president; Mary Helen Collins, secre-
tary; and Ramona Fletcher, treasurer. Faculty advisor is M. J. Cox.
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB
The Home Economics Club was organized by Ruth Dix in 1931 to create
a closer relationship among its members and the department. Activities which
help the members develop a closer relationship are formal dinners, picnics,
and educational meetings. For membership one must be a home economics
major or minor and take an active part in the club. Officers are Janice Tread-
way, president; Joy McCreary, vice-president; Barbara Williamson, secretary;
and Nancie Stone, treasurer. The club sponsor is Miss Mary K. Burrier.
132
INDUSTRIAL ARTS CLUB
The purpose of the Industrial Arts Club is to promote interest in the indus-
trial aspects of our civilization and to provide a means for promoting fellow-
ship among the members of the industrial arts department. Social and educa-
tional experiences are provided for the members with bimonthly meetings.
Officers are Chester Greynolds, president; Dee Elliston, vice-president; Vencil
Engle, secretary; and Bob Roy, treasurer. Thomas Myers is club sponsor.
[) U«4 mm **5S
MATH CLUB
The purpose of the Mathematics Club is to increase interest in mathematics
and to interpret to others the importance of and the benefits to be derived
from the study of mathematics. The club's programs consist of guest faculty
speakers as well as speakers from the club membership. Officers for this year
are Merrell Patrick, president; Ronald Smiley, vice-president; Betty Joyce
Christian, secretary; and Janet Campbell, treasurer. Alvin McGlasson is advisor.
133
FUTURE TEACHERS OF AMERICA
The purpose of the Future Teachers of America is designed to develop
ideals and power in the lives of its members; to enrich the spirit of college
life; to advance the interests of the teaching profession; and to foster the educa-
tion of all people. The club sponsored a series of educational and informa-
tive programs throughout the year for the entire student body. Officers are
Sue C. Clore, president; Bill Marshall, vice-president; Dorothy Thomas, secretary;
and James Lane, treasurer. Dr. D. T. Ferrell is sponsor.
SOCIETY OF THE PLOW
This organization of agricultural students was formed in 1927. The pur-
pose of the club is to study diligently the economic and social problems that
pertain to farming and to devise measures whereby the economic status of
the farmer may be improved and his standard of living elevated. Activities
include sponsoring a basketball team, presenting programs to local high school
F.F.A.'s clubs, and showing movies on latest developments in agriculture to
members. Officers are Orville Whitaker, president; Tommy Mink, vice-president;
James Huff, secretary; and Floyd Allen, sentinel.
134
"-V
_^ _
CANTERBURY CLUB
Canterbury Club was organized on campus in 1924 and is an honorary
society for English majors and minors who have a scholastic standing of B
or more. Since 1934 Canterbury has published a magazine of student writing
called BELLES LETTRES. Activities include an annual picnic and guest speak-
ers chosen from the faculty. Officers are Edith Ann Taylor, president; Roger
Stephens, vice-president; Billie Click, secretary; and James Burch, treasurer.
Dr. P. M. Grise is club advisor.
SIGMA LAMBDA
The promotion of a truer and more expansive understanding of foreign
countries is the prime activity of Sigma Lambda. Officers of 1954-55 are C. T.
Hughes, president; Ann Hardin, vice-president; Diana Miller, secretary; and
Norma Tevis, treasurer. Dr. Janet Murbach is advisor of the club.
135
THE MARCHING MAROONS
136
The Marching Maroons entertain with special half-time programs at all
the home football games and were chosen this year to perform at the Tangerine
Bowl game in Florida. Other activities of the band include playing for basket-
ball games, appearing in assembly programs and parades, and giving con-
certs to the public. Officers for 1954-55 are Bob Schneider, president; David
Caylor, vice-president; and Donna Mincey, secretary-treasurer. William Tar-
water is director.
137
MUSIC CLUB
This organization of music enthusiasts was founded to promote good will
and fellowship among the musicians, to develop greater interest in the fine
arts, to secure more privileges for the musicians of Eastern, and to offer more
opportunities to the college musicians Although the club sponso-s many musi-
cal events during the year, its most outstanding activity is the production given
in the spring. Officers are Peggy Chandler, president; Larry James, vice-presi-
den*; Kitty Piersall, secretary; and Betty Brett Ogden, treasurer. James E. Van
Peu-sem is advisor.
KNIGHTS OF ARTILLERY
The Knights of Artillery was organized in 1952 to give advanced mem-
bers of the R.O.T.C. an association which would give them contact with one
another in a military atmosphere and to promote an interest in and an appre-
ciation of the R.O.T.C. Activities include sponsoring a float and queen in the
Homecoming celebration, the annual Military Ball, and informal dances through-
out the year. Officers are Ronald Smiley, president; Bobby Gibbs and Bill
Hensley, vice-presidents; James Caudill, secretary; and Oris Johnson, treasu'e'.
138
publications
MARY JO CAMPBELL
Co-Editor
MARY ELIZABETH JOHNSON
Co-Editor
PROGRESS
The Progress is the college newspaper published by students. The purpose
of the newspaper is to present the news of the campus to students and
faculty as well as to alumni and friends of the college.
BILL BALDWIN
Business Manager
-™ sBi8 M
3UDDY CURY
siness Manager
FIRST ROW: left to right, Sallie Ann Enrick, Ethel Seshine, Doris Wilmer, JoAnne Braden, Mary McCall, Edie Taylor, Athalene Cornett,
Betty Jane Rinesmith, Dean Rubarts, Jane Nims.
SECOND ROW: Dolores Samson, Marylyn Mulvanity, Sharon Brown, Sue Appleton, Jacquelyn Tevis, Shirley Norheimer, Joyce Patterson,
Martha Shahan, Billie Jean Park, Beverly Wilson, Joan Dawson, June Christophel.
THIRD ROW: Mr. Kene, Miriam Holmes, Barbara Norheimer, Ernie Durham, Roger Stephens, Suzy Ramey, Diana Miller, Chester Raker,
Carl Tomlin, Ruth Patterson, Jane Payton, Bert Bowling.
139
EDITH ANN TAYLOR
Literary Editor
CHESTER RAKER
Business Editor
PEGGY KRAUS
Photo Editor
MILESTONE
The Milestone is the college yearbook
published by members of the sopho-
more, junior, and senior classes. Editors
of the Milestone and editors of the spe-
cial divisions are selected from quali-
fied members of the senior class. The
primary purpose of the annual is to pre-
sent to the reader a pictorial history of
college during a year.
Dr. LaFuze, sponsor of the publica-
tion, is greatly responsible for the year-
ly success of the Milestone. By his
knowledge and experience, he advises
the editors and staff so that they may
each spring present to Eastern a Mile-
stone of which the college may be
proud.
H. H. LaFUZE
Sponsor
140
Jean Turner, freshman editor; Peggy Chandler, adminis-
tration editor; Margie Ra snick, junior editor; Louise Gullady,
senior editor; and Dorothy Crady, sophomore editor.
Janice Treadway, paste-up editor; Merrill Patrick, sports
editor; and Nick McWhcrter, military science editor.
Morris Gross, artist; Betty Jane Rinesmith, organization co-
editor; Harry Stigall, daily life co-editor; Virginia Durbin, daily
life co -editor; and Mary Jo Campbell, organization co- editor.
Joe Chapman, Jim Allender, James Huff, and Beverly Sex-
ton, photographers.
0 rs
FIRST ROW: Wilma B ram me 1 1, Barbara Heath man, Jane Varble, Mary Alice Gash, Mary Becker.
SECOND ROW: Bob Snavely, Norma Moore, Angie Peters, Billy Roy Murphy, Bert Bowling, Carl Tomlin.
THIRD ROW: Peggy Brown, Christine Little, Treva Butler, Marylyn Mulvanity, Suzanne Doyle, Dolores
Samson, Dean Rubarts.
141
religious
Y.WX.A
Members of the Young Women's Christian Association unite in the desire
to realize full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God and
they are determined to have a part in making this life possible for all people.
Among the activities of the YWCA are weekly vespers, Hanging of the Greens,
Religious Emphasis Week, Easter Sunrise Service, Community Center Work, and
a continuous campus recreation program. Officers are Colleen Wethington,
president; JoAnne Arnsperger, vice-president; Dolores Samson, secretary; and
Shirley Pettit, treasurer.
The purpose of the Young Men's Christian Association is to create a Chris-
tian relationship on the college campus by providing leadership in religious
programs, social, and special community programs. Activities include weekly
religious programs, week-end socials, and assistance to the YWCA in special
programs such as Hanging of the Greens, Easter Sunrise Service, and in com-
munity service. Officers are Jerry Wright, president; Glenn Morris, vice-presi-
dent; and Jesse Keltner, secretary-treasurer.
142
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Wesley Foundation is a campus organization primarily for Methodist
students and has as its purpose to encourage and promote social and spiritual
guidance needed by the college student who believes firm convictions are
necessary in our world of today. During the school year the Wesley Foundation
visits Methodist organizations at nearby colleges as well as being host to other
chapters. Social activities include cook-out suppers, a boat cruise, and a spring
banquet. Officers are Betty Brock Lawrence, president; Mitzi Mueller, vice
president; Joy Kitson, secretary; and Faye Marcum, treasurer.
WESTMINSTER FELLOWSHIP
The purpose of Westminster Fellowship is to promote Christian fellowship
among its members and a more Christian attitude throughout the campus.
Main activities include regular meetings on Sundays and on Tuesdays; dis-
cussion and Bible study groups, parties, state and local retreats, boat rides,
working in the community, and seeing various religious films. Officers for
this year are Jane Nims, president; Warren Perez, vice-president; Dolores
Samson, secretary; and Hubert Ramey, treasurer.
143
D.S.F.
The Disciple Student Fellowship is on campus to offer Eastern's students
a Christian Fellowship and a religious program through the unity of the organi-
zation and local Christian Church. An annual outing and picnic, the Kentucky-
Tennessee conference retreats, entertainment groups to the Veterans' Hospital
in Lexington, and interesting and informative programs and discussions are
among the activities of the D. S. F. Officers are Alma Dean Hudnall, president;
Wanda Lindon, vice-president; Grant Reed, secretary; and Fann Herndon, treas-
urer.
m I
B.S.U. COUNCIL
The Baptist Student Union serves as the connecting link between the col-
lege student and the local Baptist church. The purpose of this group is to enlist
students in the religious activities that are necessary for Christian development.
Activities include daily devotional services on the campus, BSU choir, various
social events and service opportunities in the community and surrounding area.
Officers include Floyd Bryant, president; Jimmy Brooks, Harold Smith, Ann
Ennis, and Jane McDonald, vice-presidents; Thelma Parke, secretary; and Glynn
Reynolds, treasurer.
144
NEWMAN CLUB
The purpose of the Newman Club is to promulgate the ideals of Catholicism
through spiritual, intellectual, and social programs on the campus, and when-
ever possible, to practice the Catholic Apostolate to the greatest honor of God
and personal sanctification of the members. Major activities include biweekly
meetings and instructions, an annual initiation and breakfast, and attending
the Ohio Valley Conference meetings. Officers for this year are David Senn,
president; Fred Scheffler, vice-president; Geraldine Pence and Dorcas Lukas,
secretaries; and Catherine Nagel, treasurer.
RELIGIOUS EMPHASIS WEEK COMMITTEE
Religious Emphasis Week, sponsored by the YWCA and YMCA and other
religious organizations is becoming an annual event on campus. This year
Dr. Allen G. Wehrli, professor from Eden Theological Seminary, was the guest
speaker and appeared on campus February 16-17. Your Life in God's Plan was
the theme. Committee persons were, seated left to right, Dorothy Thomas,
Miss Willie Moss, YW advisor, Shirley Pettit, Janice Treadway, co-chairman,
Dr. Wehrli, Harry Smiley, co-chairman, William Stocker, YM advisor, and Colleen
Wethington. Standing are Harry Stigall, Ruth Patterson, Jane Nims, Betty Jane
Rinesmith, and Alma Hudnall.
145
interest
STUDENT COUNCIL
The Student Association and Student Council was formed to foster worthy
traditions, encourage high ideals of conduct, promote a richer cultural experi-
ence, secure within our institution unity, cooperation, and mutual understanding
and respect, and provide a larger opportunity for the practice of democratic
principals. Major activities include sponsoring clean up week, providing cafe-
teria music, erecting a campus entrance sign; and decorating campus for Home-
coming. Officers are Ronald Coffman, president; George Wofford, vice-presi-
dent; Katherine Piersall, secretary; and Jane McDonald, treasurer.
KYMA
The Kyma Club is on campus to stimulate school spirit among the students.
Kyma acts as the connecting agency between the athletic department and the
students and through concession stands at the games, it provides funds for the
athletic program. Major activities of the year include the sponsorship of the
Homecoming parade and the Snow Ball Dance. Officers are Don Jett, presi-
dent; Ernie Durham, vice-president; Juliane Wiedekamp, secretary; Janet Hib-
bard, treasurer; and Bill Robbins and Don Williamson, try-out managers.
146
A
Q ©
W.R.A
The Women's Recreation Association provides an opportunity for all girls
who are interested to acquire new skills and to develop a better understanding
of recreation through learning how to live and work with one another in good
fun and fellowship. Throughout the sports seasons the club provides instruc-
tion and opportunities to advance in skills and techniques which are a necessity
for close team work. Main sports include hockey, volleyball, basketball and
softball. Officers are Beverly Wilson, president; Sandra Sharp, vice-president;
Ray Davis, secretary; Dorothy Quisenberry, treasurer; and Florene Conn, busi-
ness manager.
^ H Jfi o . . 9 n
PHOTO CLUB
The purpose of the Photo Club is to promote interest and skill in photog-
raphy among its members. Instruction is given on the use of cameras, flash
guns, and in the printing of pictures. Much of the work done for the college
annual and newspaper is done by Photo Club members. The officers are David
Nesbit, president; Jim Allender, vice-president; Beverly Sexton, secretary; James
Huff, treasurer; and Dr. H. H. LaFuze is advisor.
147
LITTLE THEATER CLUB
The Little Theater Club was organized in 1921 by Miss Rucie Miller of the
speech department. This club gives the student practice in the study and pres-
entation of plays and promotes an interest in, and appreciation of, good
drama. Major productions presented by the club this year are MALE ANIMAL
and THE GLASS MENAGERIE. Officers are Bill Snow, president; Chester Grey-
nolds, vice-president; Thorn McElfresh, secretary; Dee Elliston, treasurer; and
Glen Wilson, advisor.
DRUM AND SANDAL
The purpose of the Drum and Sandal Club is to study dance with accom-
panying arts, and to promote general interests, personal satisfaction, and under-
standing of the dance itself. The first event in this year's activities was the
participation in the contata, Mary The Rose. The club's annual dance concert
is produced in the spring. Officers are Beverly Wilson, president; Joyce Blevins,
vice-president; Katherine Johnson, secretary; and Ray Davis, treasurer. Miss
Martha Williams is sponsor.
148
t i r i »
CLUB
The purpose of the "E" club is to work toward a betterment of conditions
for athletics, and to further the cause of athletics at Eastern. Activities through-
out the year are ushering at all athletic events, sponsoring the basketball queen
contest, and giving "E" rings to all members eligible. Officers are Karl Bays,
president; Jack Adams, vice-president; Bobby Linderman, secretary; Jerry Johns,
treasurer; and Ernie Rigrish, sergeant-at-arms.
KAPPA KAPPA SIGMA
The purpose of the Kappa Kappa Sigma is to create a greater interest in
the skills of water safety, rhythmic movements, and group synchronization so
as to provide a greater enjoyment through the relationship of working with
others in the aquatic field. An annual water show presented in the spring is
the major activity of the group. Officers are Billie White, president; Ray Davis,
vice-president; Katherine Johnson and Janice Treadway, secretaries; and Janet
Campbell, treasurer.
149
:
BIG SISTERS
The purpose of the Big Sisters' Club is to better acquaint the freshmen
women with Eastern and make them feel at home on the college campus.
Activities of this club begin during the summer by the members writing to
the next year's freshmen girls. Big Sisters strive to help freshmen girls through
the first week of "newness." Officers for this year are Mary Lake McElroy,
president; Peggy Baker, vice-president; Jane Varble, secretary-treasurer; and
Mrs. Emma Y. Case, sponsor.
DEBATE TEAM
The purpose of the Debate Team is to promote and further forensics at
Eastern. The team is very active in inter-collegiate debating. C. T. Hughes is
captain of the team. Members include Jim Burch, Lester Burns, Gene Goss, Patti
Poyma, and Betty White. Victor Venettozzi is debate coach.
150
STUDENT UNION MUSIC COUNCIL
The Council's objective is to promote musical and other cultural activities
in the Student Union Building on the campus. The Council plans activities
ranging from informal dances to recitals and readings for holiday enjoyment.
Sunday afternoon programs throughout the year are provided by college
students majoring in music. The group is advised by Mrs. Katherine Chenault.
The officers are Freeda Waggoner, president; Joan Scholle, vice-president;
Frances Milam, secretary; and Frances McMullan, treasurer.
WORLD AFFAIRS
The purpose of the World Affairs Club is to create an interest in and an
understanding of world problems and international relations. Activities of the
year include an assembly program on the United Nations, Homecoming festivi-
ties, sponsorship of a mock senatorial election and participation in state,
regional and national International Relations Clubs conventions. Officers are
Patti Ann Poyma, president; Preston Hall, vice-president; Darrell Wininger,
secretary; Hubert Ramey, treasurer; Dr. L. G. Kennamer, sponsor; and Glenn
McLain, advisor.
151
OFF-CAMPUS CLUB
The Off-Campus Women's Club was organized in 1949. The purpose of
this organization is to unite the off-campus women students so that they can
be recognized as a group on the campus. This club wants to bring each off-
campus woman in closer contact to the activities on the campus. Officers
include Joyce Hacker, president; Martha Flynn, vice-president; Alma Brock,
secretary; and Francis Todd, treasurer. Mrs. Katherine Chenault is club sponsor.
ft ft
W.R.H.O.
The Women's Residence Halls Organization provides for the government
and the social direction of the residents of the women's dormitories and pro-
motes better fellowship, scholarship, and citizenship at Eastern. The house
council is composed of a student representative from each corridor in Burnam
Hall and two representatives from Stateland Hall. Officers are Jean Walton,
president; Peggy Brown, vice-president; Janice Burton, secretary, and Virginia
Durbin, treasurer. Mrs. Nancy Hagan is the sponsor and Mrs. Emma Y. Case is
advisor.
152
HARLAN COUNTY CLUB
The purpose of the Harlan County Club is to promote fellowship and good-
will among students who are from Harlan County; to assist them in their edu-
cational endeavorments and function as a unit in recreation and extra curricu-
lar activities. Activities include picnics, field trips, dances, and the sponsorship
of the most popular instructor election. Officers are Ollie Jemleway, president;
Morris Gross, vice-president; Janet Hibbard, secretary; and Diana Miller,
treasurer. Dr. L. G. Kennamer is club sponsor.
1 i &3K
LETCHER COUNTY CLUB
The Letcher County Club is a club of students from Letcher County who
strives to foster the social interest of students into a common union and to
assist the college and its students whenever possible. Activities include initiation,
sponsoring Homecoming queen and entering parade, Christmas dinner and
dance and various parties throughout the year. Officers are Joe Wise, presi-
dent; Kelley DeSimone, vice-president; Patricia Music, secretary; Coetta Lucas,
treasurer; and Sue Collins, parliamentarian.
153
0*
\tf
v\^
From September ro June, life on Eastern's
campus is seen and expressed in many
varied ways. Daily life is hours of happi-
ness, worry, joy, sorrow, and gayness.
Being a part of the campus, students find
doors to knowledge, romance, fellowship,
social culture, and specialized interests
opened to them. There is an abundant
amount of living at Eastern college.
! jH* ■
Bj """^
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i
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11
154
155
College . . . Eastern . . . the
first day ... a new v/ay of living
. . . familiar faces ... a world
of surprising activity. Students
come for one semester, for two
years, for four years.
The freshman enters into a thrill-
ing life of different exper:ences.
fill ft '
Larry, Beth, and Bobbie are greeted by President and
Mrs. O'Donnell.
Freshman week is in itself a com-
plex, thrilling adventure. With this
first week comes many other
"firsts" . . . firsts that will never
be erased from dear college
memories. After arriving on cam-
pus among suitcases of loneliness,
strangeness, determination, and
eagerness one of ffie initial
"Big Sister" Mary Lake extends a helping
come to freshman Shirley.
thoughts for new students will be
an interest to meet the President
and Mrs. O'Donnell. Coinciding
with this desire will be the wish
of being settled. Favorite photo-
graphs, tennis rackets, a tiny
slu'fed panda, high school an-
nuals, a baseball glove . . . all
will be unpacked to take their
places in a new room.
Pat "unpacks" home atmosphere into her college roon
156
Greetings continue but classifi-
cation tests, identification pictures,
afternoon teas, roommates, coun-
sellors enter into an expanding
world.
Counsellors' guidance is needed
to answer inquiring questions of
first time bewilderment. The fear
and dread of long registration
Joe asks the assistance of his freshmen counsellor, Mr. McGlasson
line is combatted by gathering on
the Ad. steps before the doors
extend an open invitation. Sched-
ules are changed; classes are
closed; room assignment cards are
forgotten; check books are mis-
placed. Registration is an emotion
of confusion, satisfaction and
tiredness. The first main step has
Registration lines prove to new students that college has officially begun.
been taken and college life
promises each freshman an amaz-
ing year. Friendly upperclassmen
are flocking back; the campus is a
scene of renewed friendships; sum-
mer stories are exchanged; the
contagious spirit of hospitality is
breathed, even by Mo who wags
his tail of friendship.
Upperclassman Shirley is met by old and nev
Jack, J. W., Walter, and Paul.
157
And Sunday comes . . .
the firsi Sunday of this col-
lege year . . . Students are
anxious to become affiliated
with the local church of their
choice, and all of the de-
nominations rejoice in the
contributions played by stu-
Weekly Sunday breakfast at the Christian Church is an hour of fellowship and spiritual gr
dents. Church life has a wholesome part in the
completeness of the freshman girl or the senior boy
The days pass to weeks and activities begin,
elections, membership campaigns, retreats, and in-
stallations. Annuai.y in Burnam Hall is the beautiful
impressive installation of the House Council . .
organization demands meetings aid the four classes
Louise installs Jean as presiden
House Council.
Senior class meetings present many problems to soon-to-be-graduates.
158
are eager that their leaders
be chosen and plans for the
coming months be made.
Perhaps no class is busier
than the seniors . . . gradua-
tion, school gift, class ring,
applications, . . . all have to
have early fall attention.
Histology labs find Vic, Raymond, and Mary Helen staining
slides and cutting sections for microscopic study
Mr. Burns presents to his sociology class many problems
concerning the influences of environment and heredity and the
part each plays in society.
Labs . . . lectures . . . library . . . research . . . studious life is part of the
development. Knowledge surrounds the small world of a college campus. Knowledge
is ours if we are willing to search, to inquire, to work. Knowledge . . . education is
our ultimate goal.
T^y
Eastern's library offers to the student a place to study, to
do research, or to read the current newspapers and magazines.
Hud a, Ann, and John find this to be the place of quietness.
Ernie and Joyce take advantage of the Inter-
national Center and the vast amount of material
on reserve there. This is the first year the cam-
pus has had such a center.
159
A dial of the number ... a telephone ring . . .
Burnam Hall ... a request for a special girl
. . and Jim is happy.
A room buzz ... a walk to the main desk
. . . "Back phone, Joanne" ... a hello ... a
call from a special boy . . . and Jo is happy.
Telephone calls ... a touch of a hand . . . walks on Saturday afternoons . . .
precious memories to be cherished as the future of a boy and his girl is planned.
This too is a part of our education. This too is our life.
An afternoon walk . . . a smile and a faraway
look . . . and Bill and Jenny plan for the years
ahead.
A pretty day, a tree to lean against . . . and
Pat and Jack suddenly find lots to smile about.
160
Halloween provides the students with funny looking hats,
rattling noise makers, tasty apple cider, sticky donuts, and a
marvelous evening of fun.
Halloween
student recitals . . . dramatic plays
community concerts.
Falling leaves usher in the month of October that quickly passes into November.
Now the days are not only filled with mid-semester tests, late book reports, ca'.culus
problems, student teaching, but they are filled with invitations to attend the "best"
party of each year, to hear senior friends in their student recitals, to see a well-
selected and well trained student cast perform, and to be entertained by nationally
known talented persons of the stage.
"The Male Animol," starring Roger, Joan, and Nick, was the first
dramatic production of the year.
Community concerts are scheduled throughout the year.
Among the many students who usher regularly is Nancie.
161
The Grille . . . Few words in Eastern's
vocabulary recall as many happy, as many
varied memories as do the words, the
grille. The grille and the recreation room
provide students with enjoyment and mem-
ories in playing pool, ping pong, and
cards, dancing, listening to music, chatting
with friends, sipping a coke, eating a coney
island, peeping one more time into an
empty post office box, and mailing the
weekly letter home to the family. On
special occasions the shuffling of the cards
heard any da:ly hour resound in the musical
melodies of danceland.
Marvin, Bob and William in a game of billiards.
Nick and Joyce enjoying a dance in the g
Glenn and the weekly mail.
Jim and Joyce select a song at the juke-box.
162
Mr. Van, Barbara, and Mr. Niles pause to fit music with dance.
The third month of first semester
finds many organizations preparing
for coming events. The band, practic-
ing since September, continues long
hours of rehearsals for the Home-
coming presentation. Swimmers begin
the daily sessions of instruction and
improvement. Musical organizations
and the modern dance club prepare
the first stage production of John
Jacob Niles' cantata, "Mary, the
Rose." Each campus group chooses a
float theme; finds working space in
barns, dormitories, garages; begins
to hammer, to paint, to stuff napkins
Early mornings, late afternoons find the band practicing.
Coaches Bob and Rich instruct Dick and Johnny
Float work means Homecoming is nearing.
163
Weeks before the great day arrives the campus is lost in an atmosphere of
Homecoming festivities. The long awaited day arrives . . . attractive candidates are
queenly atop gaily decorated floats . . . and from the thirty-nine beauties, one is
to be selected as Homecoming Queen. The alumni committee, judging on beauty,
poise, and appearance chose Miss Betty Pack, junior from Paintsville, to reign over
the annual Homecoming festivities.
-
164
HOMECOMING QUEEN
165
Harlan County
Biology Club
mm
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^JLlutMl^
Westminster Fellowship
A beautiful, sunny, November day provided the setting for the annual Home-
coming Parade. Floats which had caused students to skip classes, to miss the Home-
coming dance, to make endless trips to town, and to forget the comforts of sleep
now took their places to add to the grandeur of the parade. Floats of various
descriptions showed the onlooker that students never spend a dull moment at Eastern.
An alumni committee awarded the first prize honor to the Harlan County float.
UOWTmi-THSm
Letcher County
Home Economic
166
\j£^&»4k.
Majorettes Joyce, Betty, Juanita, Dorcas, and Betty provide outstanding half-time
performances at the football games.
Once again students settle down
to an average campus day . . .
until Sadie Hawkins. At the dance
Dean and Lee were selected as
the most representative of the true
Dogpatch style.
167
Frances and Ramona stuffing the suitcase full in preparing
for the Thanksgiving Holiday.
A typical Friday afternoon scene
. . hitch-hiking. Eddie Ray on the
vay to PinevIIIe.
College living . . . whether it be
in Burnam, Sullivan, or Vets Vil-
lage . . . recalls fun-loving minutes.
The roommate, the girls in the
suite, the boy next door, the
neighbors across the street . .
are friends v/e can never forget.
Wally and Pat "cleaning up" for the coming day.
An evening at the Guy Strong home.
Dot and Everett studying . . . Rex . . . wondering.
168
A practice fire siren, a rush to the outside.
Jim, Denver, Donnie, and Stan spend the night in study-
ing and playing checkers.
Hiich-hiking on Friday . . . Pack-
ing for the week-end at home . . .
Monday morning shaves . . . study-
ing while the children p'.ay . .
unexpoc'.ed fire drill . . . talking
with the gang . . . the campus' first
television set . . . a midnight
party ... a good night to an-
other exciting day.
A turn of the knob, a flash on the screen, television in Sullivan.
Joanne, June, Pattie, and Ginny enjoying midnight chats
late hours, early morning . . . Merrell calls this day over
until tomorrow.
169
Miss Betty Bosshammer, fresh-
man from Covington, was selected
at the Tangerine Ball to represent
Eastern in Orlando, Florida.
,y-*:
***
Tangerine Queen.
vyfc
Barbara and Ted, Betty and Bob.
The Pastels, a college orchestra.
The Maroons football team, undefeated and OVC champs, received a bid to
play in the Tangerine Bowl held on New Year's Day in Orlando. Excitement ruled
the campus weeks ahead in preparation for the big trip. Students can re-call special
assemblies to honor the team and coaches, snake dances, pep rallies to celebrate
the deserving news concerning the boys of which we were so proud.
170
Jim buys Lou a tangerine to help the bond fund.
The band and ROTC sponsored
dances, sold iangerines, and
raised money in various ways to
pay for the Florida trip. Was it
worth the work? Florida talk con-
tinued throughout this year . . .
and will live as long as Eastern
does. The band and ROTC Drill
Team left Richmond in chartered
buses on December 30 and ar-
rived in the Sunshine State in
time to enjoy the beach, the
sights, and the people. Even the
long trip home was enjoyable and
is part of the holiday trip to be
remembered.
;
Ray and Frances enjoy the ocean and sunshine in December
Bus trips, although long and tiresome, can be lots of fun.
171
annual presentation of Handel's Messiah is one of the many Christmas season activities.
Decorating the Student Union
lobby with evergreen wreathes at
the Hanging of the Greens
The holiday season ... a dec-
orative tree . . . Yuletide songs
. . . students gather in Burnam to
express their holiday spirit by
singing Christmas carols.
December 12 was the dafe of the twenty-third annual
performance of Handel's Messiah. Approximately two hun-
dred fifty students and townspeople participated in the
chorus. The orchestra was a combined group of Eastern and
Berca musicians. Mr. Van directed the Messiah.
Another annual Christmas tra-
dition which has lived through
twenty-five years of Yuletide cele-
bration is the Hanging of the
Greens, sponsored jointly by the
YW-YMCA. During this program,
ihe lobby, ceiling, windows, and
d~>ors of the second floor of the
SUB are decorated with the as-
sistance of over sixty girls.
AH the campjs Christmas events
are beautiful impressions that are
re-tived many times during college
memories.
172
The fourth annual freshman women's dinner spon-
sored by Cwens is a scene of Yuletide atmosphere.
Completing the holiday activities is the
annual freshman women's dinner, the senior
class Chris'.mas dinner, the Burnam Hall party,
a home economics club party, and caroling
by church organizations and dorm groups.
The college is always proud of its many
students and the honors which they bring to
themselves and to the campus. Throughout the
school months, many students receive recogni-
tion, both local and statewide, in the various
fields in which they participate.
Madge, an International 4-H exchange student, re-
turns to campus study and shares her adventures and
souvenirs with Sue, Dot, Peggy, and Miss Moss.
Targets of brick walls, black bark, wool jackets are
found by flying snowballs as college students enjoy the
campus snow.
Snow-covered Eastern presents a picture of
beauty but even college students are eager to
throw the firs'; snowba.l or to enter into a
childhood snowball fight.
173
SNOWBALL QUEEN
174
THE QUEEN AND HER COURT.
January is the month of the annual Snowball Dance sponsored by Kyma club.
Voting for Queen is conducted by campus election and this year's honor was given
to Miss Joyce Patterson, junior from Horse Cave, who reigned as Queen of the Dance
CeUy Jean and Herbert
Jean and Bob
Janice and Chuck
175
Jim and Mis. Abrams, housing secretary for men's dormitories.
Douq, Carol, and Miss Colley, secretary to the President.
Jackie, Mrs. Adams, secretary to the Dean; and Mrs. Vc
Pelt, stenographer. Dean's office-
Mrs. Hill, assistant supervisor of cafeteria; Mrs. Durham,
assistant to supervisor of cafeteria; Miss Mcllvaine, cafeteria
supervisor; and Jackie.
Mrs. Gumbert, dormitory assistant; Miss Wingo, assistant
to the Dean of Women; and Bonnie.
Important issues concerning student
problems or applying for a dorm/for/ room,
a house in Veterans Village, scheduling
club meetings on the school calendar,
applying for a campus job are situations
handled with the greatest ability in the
various administrative offices.
Mrs. Perry, assistant to the
Director of Personnel.
176
Buying mealbooks, purchasing books and
supplies, arranging for Sunday afternoon
musical programs, working in the music
department, checking ROTC records are
pari of college life. Capable, efficient
leaders are willing to serve the students'
needs.
Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Kennamer, clerks; and Theresa; Doris, Charlie
and Mr. BaMou, book store manager.
^^■>.Vi /. »V,Vr*.*-
Mrs. Chenault, Student Union hostess; and Frances.
Mrs. Younce, department of music secretary; and Harris.
George and Mrs. Canfteld, ROTC secretary.
177
Mrs. Wickers'' am, secretary to the business agent; and Nellie.
Ann and Mrs. Duncan, secretary, In-Service Edu-
Administrative offices, the col-
lege hospital, library and dormi-
tory staffs, and the museum are
important parts of our college
system.
Miss Broaddus, recorder; Miss Potts, secretary, Registrar's office; and Naomi,
Mrs. Gate wood, assistant to college nurse; Dr. Mahaffey, college
physician; and Mrs. Vescio, college nurse.
Mrs. Deniston, secretary, Alumni office.
178
Mr. McConnell, bookkeeper, and Mrs. Allen,
assistant to bookkeeper.
Mrs. Griggs, information c!e
Dr. Dorris, museum director, ad Ken
Mr. Ault, superintendent of buildings and grounds, and
W. C. Forston, Jr., chief engineer.
Mrs. Miller, Miss Hansen, Mrs. Dickerson, Mrs. Park, Mrs. White-
head, library staff; and Miss Floyd, librarian.
t.J^P
„ J|
El=\
jff'35
i / v *^?
IL
m TlM- '■• '
' — ■"»_
X
Mrs. Hagan, social director, Burnam Hall, and
Barbara.
Mrs. Kathryn Allen, secretary, de-
partment of health and physical edu-
cation, and Don.
179
Miss Jane Parker, senior from
Somerset, and Oris Johnson, senior
from Valionia, Ind., were selected
as the Sweetest Sweetheart Couple
at the Sweetheart Dance spon-
sored by the Progress.
Jane and Oris.
The Sweetest Couple and attendants.
Intermission finds Chris, Tom, Betty, and Ches-
ter relaxing in the Grille . . . Dance over . . .
all too soon . . . Perez helps Freeda with her
coat.
180
Pete and Pat meeting second semester new
English instructor, Mr. Huckaby, and wife.
Queen Edie and Ki
February . . . second semester
. . . Burnam Hall's Valentine Party
. . . Mardi Gras . . . Edie and
Bob were elected to reign as
Queen and King of the first Mardi
Gras Dance.
Ronnie, Barbara, and Billy Roy at the cafeteria jukebox.
After only one semester beneficial results
of Student Council which were to create a
closer and more binding campus spirit
were witnessed by the student body. For
the first time in the cafeteria history, stu-
dents now were enjoying music with their
meals. Student Council has taken a big
step toward college improvement and we
should be proud of the capable leaders.
The Council ct a regular semi-monthly meeting.
181
BASKETBALL QUEEN
182
The spirit of football and basketball games is largely determined by the
enthusiasm of the cheerleaders. This year's cheering squad has been one of
the best of all times as Bob, Jonnie, Barbara, Jim, Carlene, Jo Rene, and
Ronnie lead the spectators in winning yells and praising songs.
Annually a Basketball Queen is chosen by the
penny-a-vote method. This year under the sponsor-
ship of the "E" club each of the four classes
submitted a candidate; freshman representative
was Barbara Relirord; sophomore, Dolores Cooper;
junior, Phyllis Counts; and senior, Janice Burton.
Miss Counts of Raceland was crowned Basketball
Queen.
The ref, Barbara, and Ronnie
Basketball Queen and her Court.
183
MISS EASTERN CANDIDATES
VIRGINIA DURBIN
SUZY RAMEY
MISS POPULARITY CANDIDATES
^&ms
JOYCE PATTERSON
DEAN RUBARTS
The three highest honors an-
nually bestowed upon students by
campus votes are Miss Eastern,
Miss Popularity, and Mr. Popu-
larity. Miss Eastern was the title
given to Miss Betty Pack, junior
from Paintsville, elected for her
beauty and poise. Miss Pack will
represent Eastern at the annual
Kentucky Mountain Laurel Festival.
Miss Edith Ann Taylor, senior from
Covington, was chosen Miss Popu-
larity, an honor second only to
Miss Eastern, on the qualities of
personality, popularity, and leader-
ship. Both are representatives of
the ideal co-ed. James Burch,
senior from Stamping Ground, was
elected Mr. Popularity, the highest
campus honor for men. Mr. Popu-
larity is selected for outstanding
personality, popularity and leader-
ship.
MR. POPULARITY CANDIDATES
HARRY STIGALL
BOB ZWEIGART
184
MISS EASTERN
185
MISS POPULARITY
186
MR. POPULARITY
187
"This is the Eastern Round-table com-
ing to you over station WEKY." Dr.
Jaggers with the cooperation of stu-
dents presents to the radio audience a
weekly Sunday evening broadcast of
events currently happening on campus
Participating in a radio program are, left to right, Jerry, Carlene, John,
Dr. Jaggers, Wilma, Frank, Carolyn, and standing, Suzanne.
Town girl students find the off-campus
room to be a place where they may meet
friends, study, eat a sandwich, leave books,
or just make themselves comfortable.
Last week of February . . . first few days
of March . . . warm, balmy afternoons . . .
spring time . . . tennis weather . . . a
chance to enjoy the ouiside ... to read,
to study, to be together.
Charlene and Jim studying for that coming test.
188
Many of the religious organizations
were provided with rooms this year
where their meetings and activities were
held and where their members could
find fellowship any school hour.
Mary Ruth and Grant are caught saving nickels.
Karl, Mary, and Tony spend an evening at a Y party playing Scrabble.
Favorite couples are seen daily around
the campus ... of dances . . . in the
library . . . in weekly chapel . . . at or-
ganizational meetings ... a pause to
share a coke . . . a yawn that says good-
night.
Mid-semester . . . Vocational Conference
. . . week-ends at home . . . Marriage Con-
ference . . . Spring term . . . April Fool's
Frolic . . . flying snow flakes . . . the "B"
overage fea . . . the college year con-
tinues . . . summer approaches.
Smiling Carolyn receives a good-night yawn from Harold.
189
THE MILITARY BALL QUEEN AND HER ROYAL COURT.
The Military Ball . . . breath-taking memories lingering past the hour of one . . .
beautiful, flowing formats . . . impressive uniforms . . . military dignity . . . climaxed
by the coronation which was the highlight of the dance . . . Miss Juliane Y/iedekamp,
senior from Ashland, was elected by the senior ROTC Corps to be Queen Barbara
of the seventeenth annual event.
GRAND MARCH.
190
MILITARY BALL QUEE
191
Janice Burton
James Caudill
7954 JUNIOR-SENIOR PROM
QUEEN AND KING
Elected by last year's junior class to be the Queen and King of the Junior-Senior
Prom were Miss Janice Burton, senior from Dayton, Ohio, and James Caudill, senior
horn West Liberty. Attendants to the royal pair were Denyse Campbell, Suzy Ramey,
Dean Rubarts, Juliane Wiedekamp, Wade Brock, Chester Raker, Lowell Sallee and
Harry Stigall. This dance sponsored by the junior class is one of their main, annual
activities.
192
Easter Sunrise Service.
Easier . . . Sunrise Service . . . Mother's Day . . .
banquets . . . visiting parents . . . conferences . . .
Honor's Day . . . Burnam Beach . . . Boonesborough
. . . ROTC graduation . . . events which symbolizes the
few remaining weeks of another college year. The
Sunrise Service sponsored by the YW-YM is presented
in the beauty and splendor of the amphitheater. Al-
though every year during the month of May the
women's organizations sponsor a Women's Honor
Day, last year witnessed the first Honor's Day Pro-
gram for Eastern's men students. The annual Mother's
Day program brings Mr. and Mrs. Harris to campus to
visit son Charlie, to meet faculty and friends, and
enjoy the afternoon activity. Mothers, wives, friends
pin military honors on their boys at the annual ROTC
graduation.
or *
The first Men's Honor Day Progran
Charlie Harris entertaining his parents.
Ann Carol proudly participates in
ill's ROTC graduation.
193
THE PROCESSION LINE APPROACHES HIRAM BROCK.
May 29 . . . Baccalaureate . . . marching with a friend . . a prayer . . . a
Sunday of gayness . . . June 7 . . . ten o'clock . . . long lines . . . bits of worthless
conversations . . . anything, to laugh, to build up courage . . . The Academic Festival
March . . . marching into a quiet auditorium . . . alphabetical order . . . uncomfortable
high heels . . . heavy, hot robes . . . hats too big . . . serious concentration to the
speaker's talk . . . four years flashing through your mind . . . thoughts of happiness,
sadness, joys, regrets . . . tears of proudness . . . anxiously awaiting, yet fearing the
call of your name . . . a humble thank-you as the diploma is placed in your hands . . .
the tassel moved to the left side . . . "Hail to thee our Alma Mater" . . . congratulations
- . beaming parents, smiling relatives . . . good-bys . . for how long'!'
Peggy receives her diploma.
Ruthie displaying a smile as Dean Moore calls he
194
The parents of Norma Tevis and Billie Davis Casey express heartiest congratulations to the girls.
A new beginning . . . not an ending . college is too dear . . the thankfulness,
the honor of being here can never be lost . . . soon we w/7/ be teachers, doctors,
graduate students, second lieutenants, coaches, secretaries, farmers, lawyers, business
executives . . . we love Eastern . . . next Homecoming, first basketball game we will
return . . . Alumni Association will connect us . . . reunions on busy street corners,
ov educational meetings, by a three
cent stamp . . . we leave with a part
of Eastern, v/e leave a part of our-
■iKiM!a«;»Bfc.« »-i i— ,vnam «^ m^— selves cur backs now are turned
to many college atfairs . . . just once
again we want to walk the familiar
campus paths . . . the future . . . we
are prepared . . . no looking back
. . . we see only each other . . . and
tomorrow.
s
College . . . Easiern . . . the first
day ... a new way of living . . .
No looking back . . . Pat and Larry face each
other and the future.
195
IN MEMQRIA
DR. NOEL 3. CUFF
December 22, 1901 - December 12, 1954
Professor of Psychology
Director of Personnel
CHARLES EDWARD BLACKBURN
May 19, 1935 - July, 1954
Member of the 1953 Freshmen Class
JOE ED SLUSHER
April 29, 1931 - December 17, 1954
Member of the Junior Class
JAMES HACKNEY WRIGHT
February 28, 1934 - December 21, 1954
Member of the Junior Class
May these join the choir invisible
Of ffiose immortal dead who live again
In minds made better by their presence; live
In pulses siirred to generosity,
In deeds of daring rectitude, in seem
For missrable aims that end with self.
In thought: sublime that pierce the night like stars,
And with their mild persistence urge man's search
To vaster issues.''
George Eliot
196
-A -
Abney, J. E 112
Abrams, Mrs. L. A. 176
Adams, Jack 62, 76, 76, 106, 80
Adams, J. Donald 101, 119
Adams, J. Douglas ....91
Adams, J. S 120
Adams, K. M 47
Adams, Mrs. Lucian 176
Adams, V. B 52
Adams, W. D 101, 103, 112
Akers, Charlene 61, 188
Akers, J. S 63
Albright, J. R. 101, 112
Allen, F. B 64
Allen, Kathryn M 179
Allen, Mabelle 179
Allender, J. E 34, 141, 160
Alexander, M. D 101, 116
Alexander, R. L 62, 101, 161
Alexander, W. A 112
Alpha Psi Omega 127
Alvis, Annie 53
Ammerman, W. R 88, 157
Anderson, C. R. 101, 103, 117
Anderson, N. J 94
Anderson, Ruth 95
Andrew, C. E. ... 101, 118
Appleton, Sue . . 11, 24, 139
Armstrong, G. L 116
Arnett, E. M 64
Arnold, Walter L 60
Arnsperger, E. D. 112
Arnsperger, J 24, 160
Arthur, G. L 25
Arthur, Thelma M. 117
Arvin, G. W 58
Ashcraft, M. J Ill
Ashcraft, V. E 98, 103
Asher, B. N 91
Athy, W. G 118
Ault, W. A 179
- B -
B. S. U. Council 144
Babb, Carlene 61, 183
Baber, E. W. 114
Baber, G. D 93
Babs, B. G. Ill
Baiiey,
L.
117
Bailey, K. M. 60
Baker, C. D. 58
Baker, J. D 30, 100
Baker, L. D 51
Baker, L. N Ill
Baker, P. L 91
Baker, w. P 114
Balassone, J. J. 24, 68
Baldridge, N. R 17
Baldwin, B. B. 10, 24, 176
Baldwin, R. D 101, 112
Baldwin, V. F 93, 160
Baldwin, W. H. 17, 106, 139, 160
Bales, Grant H. 62, 189
Ball, B. J 93, 100, 183
Ball, L. C Ill
Ball, W. L 101, 103
Ballard, D. G 64
Ballou, Fred 177
Banks, B. L 88
Banks, E. D 17
Banks, Roy 88
Banyas, Walter 68, 94, 101
Barber, R.J 101, 110
Barker, B. R. 112
Ba-kley, P. A. Ill, 156
Barnhill, Mary 49
Barrett, J. M 61
Bartley, R. E 12
Basham, J. w 38
Bass, R. W 114
Basye, Clifton 49
Bateman, W. D 101, 117
Batten, N. A 62
Baugh, C. R 10, 25, 162
Baxter, Bill 76, 78
Baxter, E. D 91
Bays, K. D 27, 36, 68, 74
Baxter, W. H 31
Beasley, Milward 62
Beatty, S. J 116
Becker M. M 86, 88, 141
Begley. I. J 103, 105
Bell, C. C 68, 105
Bell, L. L 112
Bell, P. R 24, 167
Bellamy, R. L. 93, 105
Benge, Viola 60
Bentle, K. L 105, 116
Bentley, E. R 114
Benton, R. F 94
Bertram, T. M. 90, 101, 106, 180
Best, A. G 24
Best, D. T 101, 117
Bethel, R. L 16
Bickers, Dorothy O. 12, 168
Bickers, Everett E. 35, 168
Bicknell, R. G 21, 82, 101, 103
Big Sisters' Club 150
Biggs, Francis R 58
Biliter, M. C 113
Biliter, R. E 60
Bindel, D. J 93
Bindel, H.J. . . 52
3-ngham, Huda 121, 159
Biology Club 130
Bishop, S. J 64
Bivins, C. H 38
Black, Arline 112
Black, E. A. 93
Black, F. J 112, 159
Black, J. G 48
Blackburn, B. J 59
Blackburn, Elmer 42
Blackburn, Rita 93
Blair, F. F 101, 117
Blair, F. L 101, 111
Blair, P. C 93
Blakely, Joann 23, 32
Blanton, C. E 114
Blevins, Joyce 58, 162, 167
Boggs, Bruce 88
Bohanan, Sue 121
Bolton, B. W 58
Bonta, S. G 88, 97, 103
Bcsshammer, B. A 114, 170
Bottom, G. W 101, 116
Burns, J.
120
Bourne, N. R.
Br.w, D. D. ...
91
112
Bower, C. W 101, 114
Bowling, A. B. 56, 61, 139, 141
Bowling Estill 64
Bowling, Nancy L 91
Bowling, J. D 112
Bowling, Mariece 113
Boyd, D. B 89
Boyd, G. A 68, 106, 188
Boyer, D. B 62, 68, 82, 155
Bover, J. W 15
Brackett, Ray 90
Braden, JoAnne 90, 139
Bradford, W. T. 38, 68, 101
Bradley, J. A 116
Brammell, W. L. 93, 141
Brandenburg, Carolyn 68
Brandenburg, R. H Ill
Brarscum, H E 120
Breeding, W. H 63
Breeze, J. L 94
Brewer, J. L 88
Brewer, R. L 63
Brewster, N. H. 101, 119
Br ght, J. W 117
Brittain, M. B 53
Brcaddus, Louise 178
Brock, A. J 60
Brock, L. B 120, 156
Brock, G. M 44
Brock, J. D 79, 88
Brock, S. M 104
Brock, Wade 105
Brooks, G. W 94
Brooks, Jack 81
Brooks, James H. 63
Brooks, John H. 101, 113
Brcughton, C. R. 93, 101
Brown, A. L 64
Brown, C. E 61, 101, 103
Brown, C. S 101, 103, 120
Brown, Glenn 22, 162
Brown, Jack 105
Brown, J. F 62
Brown, J. H 19
Brown, P. J 62, 141
Brown, R. W 62, 82
Brown, S. C 119, 139
Brown, S. S 120
Brown, Virginia 60
Brown, W. F 24
Brown, W. K 119
Bruner, M. J 120
Brutscher, B. L 100
Bryant, B. F 31
Bryant, V. C 93
Bryson, G. A 101, 119
Buchanan, Pearl 50
Buchanan, L. M 63
Buck, W. R 101
Buckles, H. H 119
Bundy, Vernon 86, 93
Burch, J. C 30, 100, 125,
155, 183, 187
Burdine, B. G 91
Burk, W. R 112, 162
Burke, A. R 58
Burke, E. F 14
Burkett, R. D 117
Burns, J. W 119
Burns, Lester 62
Burns, Virgil 54, 159
Burrier, M. K. 48
Burton, J.N. 29, 100, 183, 192
Burton, T. A 93
Bush, B. J 101, 120
Bush, K. E 60
Butler, M. A 119
Butler, Treva . 59, 141
Butler, V. H. . 81, 101, 120
Butler, W. P 42
Byers, R. S 60
Byrd, Herbert 60
- C -
Caduceus Club 132
Cahoon, L. F 89
Cain, L. L 101
Caldwell, P. A. 19
Caldwell, T. E. 93, 177
Calhoun, V. J. 30
Callas, Christina 62, 180
Campbell, B. R 117
Campbell, D. F. 113
Campbell, E. A. 60, 178
Campbell, Jane 51
Campbell, J. A. 10, 33, 176
Campbell, J. L 92
Campbell, M. D. 34, 125
Campbell, M. J. 20, 124, 139,
141, 155
Campbell, S. W. 105, 169
Campbell, T. M. 84, 88, 105
Campbell, V. B. 64
Canfield, Mrs. Kenneth 177
Canterbury Club 135
Carpenter, R. R 117
Carrier, B. C. . 90, 101, 103
Carroll, B. S 117
Carter, B. D 94
Carter, W. A. 115
Carty, D. J. 45
Case, Emma Y. 9, 11, 45
Casey, B. D 16, 195
Cassada, H. L 61
Castle, W. F .68
Catlett J. L 93, 103, 105
Caudill, H. B 88
Caudill, Hendricks 120
Caudill, J. E 29, 99, 101, 192
Cawood, B. D 16
Cawood, B. J 19
Caylor, David 14, 30, 84
Chandler, J. T. 119
Chandler, P. A. 14, 33, 125,
141, 161, 194
Chapman, G. M. 89, 101, 141, 177
Charles, E. R. 83, 111, 168
Cheak, Jimmy 86, 88
Cheatham, J. H. 94, 102
Chenault, Katherirte 177
Childers, B. R. 101, 118
Childers, M. R. 19, 189
Childress, G. L 64
Childress, N. A 117
Christian, B. J 62
Christian, D. A 98
Christophel, J. A. 92, 139
Clark, B. J. . 88, 175
Clark, D. J. 120
Clark, G. R. 90
Clark, J. W. 93, 176
Clark, J. T 93
Clark, S. J 117
Clayton, Paul 30, 106
Clem, James 93
Clephane, D. M. 101, 119
Click, B. S. . . . 87, 91
Clontz, C. C. 93, 189
Clore, S. C 22
Cloud, J. M 118
Clouse, Thomas 87, 93
Coates, J. D. . . 45, 55
Coffey, J. L 114
Coffman, R. L. 58, 101, 181
Coleman, J. E 61
Coleman, R. L. 101, 111
Collegiate Pentacle 126
Colley, Lois 176
Collins, C. T 176
Collins, Kirby 30
Collins, M. H. 12, 29, 124, 159
Collins, P. G 36, 76, 105
Collins, R. 0 91, 106
Collins, W. S 61
Colyer, N. A. 119
Combs, J. N 101, 113
Combs, Leo 93
Combs, W. G. 88, 103, 105
Compton, B. J 63
Conklin, Constance 50
Conn
Conn
Florene 59
J. L 12
Conrad, E. D 101, 120
Consiglio, Ralph 68, 88, 97
Conyers, J. D. 101
Cook, Omalee 118
Cooper, A. L 119
Cooper, D. Y. 93, 183
Cooper, J. H. 55
Cope, W. K. 119
Cornelius, J. A. 120
Cornelison, K. A 60
Cornett, Athalene 64, 139
Cornell, D. I. 101, 118
Cornett, L. P. 101, 120
Correll, B. S. 104, 117, 167, 170
Correll, E. E 68, 101, 115
Counts, P. A. . 58, 182, 183
Cowan, John . 121
Cox, A. J 59
Cox, D. R 60
Cox, J. D 101
Coy, J. M. 117
Cox, J. W 63
Cox, Kay 94, 154
Cox, M. F 88
Cox, M. J 46
Cox, W. M 62
Cov, H. M ,93
Crady, D. A 34, 141, 173
Craft, CO.. 101, 103, 112
Cramer, W. R 91
Crawford, P. L 63
Creech, S. E 59
Creekmore, J. D. 93, 169
Creekmore, L. H 118
Creekmore, R. S 87, 101
Crews, J. P 92, 105
Croley, J. 0 12
Crone, D. R 88
Crook, F. D. 101, 103, 113
Crose, J. A 118
Crowe, Shelby 120
Cuff, N. E 33, 99, 125
Culbertson, Dick 76, 78, 80
Culbertson, W. J 93
Cummins, R. L. 63
Curaton, B. L.
Curry, C. D.
Curry, M. C
Curry, M. A
Cury, B. T.
Cwens
Daines, G. E.
105, 118
118
32, 68, 73, 74
Damonte, W. J
Daniel, B. A.
Daniel, J. K
Daniel, Vernon
Darling, Fred 55,
Darwell, H. C.
Davidson, Robert
118
103,
118
102,
119
91
Davis, J. L 102,
Davis, J. N
Davis, L. G
Davis, Ray
Dawson, B. R. 102, 103,
Dawson, C. A
Dawson, Joan 91,
Day, J. M 61,
Day, Jim 102, 103,
Day, M. L
Day, P. P
Deal, P. A
Dearing, E. M
Deatherage, M. J
Debate Team
DeChurch, Bill
Deniston, Mrs. N. G
Denney, C. M
Den
ey, G.
64
93
25, 161
Depew, W. N.
DeSantis, N. T.
DeSimone, K. P. 13
Devary, W. B 61
DeWitt, M. A 117
Dezarn, B. L 20, 100
Dick, M. S 119
Dickerson, C. H. 83, 92, 163
Dickerson, F. E 119
Dickerson, Mary 179
Dillow, S. A. . 118, 156
Doan, W. C 14
Dobbs, G. B 117
Donaldson, R. C 54
Dorris, J. T 179
197
Dosch, W. C 59
Dawney, P. A 118
Doyle, Suzanne 61, 141, 188
Dozier, Randolph 18
Drum and Sandal 148
D. S. F 144
Dudgeon, H. R. 82, 118
Dudgeon, Joanne 121
Dugger, S. S 60
Dulaney, B. D. 117
Dunaway, B. R. 93, 101
Dunbar, J. J. 60
Duncan, Rachel 173
Durbin, J. F. Ill
Durbin, J. R. 102, 117
Durbin, V. T. 28, 124, 141, 184
Durham, C. R. 93
Durham, Ernest 27, 139, 159
Durham, Mrs. J. P 176
Durham, R. B 19
Duvall, J. W. 63
Dye, B. J. 119
"E" club 149
Fagle, CM. 60
Earlywine, B. D. 34
Easterling, Chester 27
Edwards, D. E. 87, 93, 100
Egnew, E. F. .120
Elam, J. D. 102, 118, 157
Elder, J. S 100, 112
Eldridge L. C. 61
Elliott D. R 62
Elliston, F. D. 27, 101
Elswick, B. R. 102, 103, 118
Elvove, M. L 118
Emenegger, G. E. 115
Emmons, H. P 118
Emrick, S. A. 117
Engle, F. A 55
Engle, P. A 34
Engle, V. D 18
Ennis, A. H 86, 88
Enrick, S. A. 139
Estes, D. W. 119
Estes, H. L 102, 118
Evans, Barbara 90
Evans, C.J. ...... 120
Evans, E.
ns, Philip
.118
.121
Fairchild,
Fairchild,
Fannin, P
Farly, Jo;
Faulkner,
Feltne
B. E.
D. R.
Ferrell, D. T.
Fields, D. L.
Fitzgerald, B. J.
Flanary, A. J.
Fleck, R. A.
Fleenor, J. R.
Fletcher, R. A.
Florence, D. L.
Florence, W. T.
Floyd, F. P.
Floyd, James
Floyd, Mary
Flynn, M. A.
Foley, J. V.
Forbes. M. L.
Forbes, T. R.
Ford, E. G.
Ford, Hobert
Forman, J. L.
Forston, W. C, J
Fox
M. J.
Fraley, H. J.
Fraley, Jeannen
Frances, George
Frank, J. R.
Franklin, P. A.
Franklin, J. A.
Frayer, P. D.
Freeman, D. L.
Freiberger, Sue
Freudenberger,
Fugate, V. G.
Fugitt, K. F.
Fuller, J. C.
F. T. of Ameri
Fyffe, C. M.
Gaither, E. C.
62, 82, 106, 179
61
117
83, 91, 163
61, 105
28, 124, 168
62, 103, 105
81, 120
102, 118
61, 76, 79
45, 179
60, 188
20, 76, 104, 79
Gallimore, O. W. 118
Gambill, Madge 37, 173
Gammon, J. A 117
Garmon, B. H. 83, 102, 118
Garnett, R. E. 117
Garrett, D. E 118
Garrett, L. M 88
Gash, M. A 94, 141
Gatewood, Anna 178
Gatwood, D. D 50
Glass, B. E. 105
Gentry, Shirley 121
Cibbs, B. G. 10, 28, 104, 170
Gibson, B. J 89
Gilbert, R. V 88
Giles, F. P. . 46, 102, 103
Giles, F. S 120
Gill, A. D 53
Gill, T. J 102, 119
Gilley, Boyd 61
Gilley, Vincent 29
Godsey, G. E 25
Goss, C. E 117
Grable, P. E 93
Grant, D. D 15
Gravett, R. A 102, 119
Greenlee, P. A 117
Greene, P. D. 68, 74
Greynolds, C. A 25, 125, 180
Griffin, George ., 68, 82, 97, 106
Griffin, L. G. 90
60
Griffith, Burnic
Griffith, E. M.
Griffith, V. L.
Grigsby, C. G.
. 86
Griggs, B. H.
Grise, M. K.
Grise, P. M.
Grise, R. N.
Groh, E. L.
Gross, J. E.
Gross, M. L.
.88,
Grubbs, Col. H
Y
. .47
Guinchigliani, B
J
Gullady, B. L.
33,
25,
141,
Gumbert, Mrs.
George
Hacker, B. T.
Hacker, S. J.
Hackworth, F.
Haden, E. R.
Hagan, N. P.
Hager, P. D.
Hahn, D. G.
Hale, N. C.
Haley, N. L.
Hall, B. J.
Hall, B. B.
Hall, D. F.
Hall, H. L.
Hall, J. W.
Hall, J. M.
Hall, K. M.
Hall, P. H.
Hall, R. C.
Hall, W. B.
Hall, W. D.
Halstead, E. C.
Hanks, S. H
Hanlon, J. D.
Hansel, Charles
Hardin, A. B.
Hardin, M. A
Harkleroad, Janet
Harlan County Club
Harmot
Harper
H. K.
H. K.
Harrell, H. J.
Har
H
Harris, J. L.
118
91
Hatch, A. E 83, 102, 103, 116
Hatch, Lt. Col. A. 0 98
Hatfield, D. R. 83, 119
Hatfield, R. R. 62
Hatfield, T. C. 114, 170
Hatter, Harold 117
Hatter, S. J 23
Hay, A. M 93
Hay, B. A 38
Hay, B. P 38
Hayden, W. H 109, 116
Hayden, Lenora 121
Hayes, Calmer C 34, 104
Hayes, Chalmer C 8fl
Hayes, M. D 26
Heathman, B. A. 88, 141
Hehl, E. C
105,
119
Hehr, G. P.
102,
117
Heink, J.J
111
Helm, J. M.
.63
Helman, A. A.
115
Helmond, F. E.
88
Helton, B. E.
.60
Helton, 1. R.
93
Henderson, D. C.
119
Henderson, G. M.
60
Henry, C. V.
12,
159
Hensley, W. R. 23,
102,
103,
193
Hensan
B.
1 16
He.ndon, F. R 115
Herndon, T. C 48
Herrington, E. A 116
Hess, R. H. 103, 105, 119
Hibbard, C. R. 110, 176
Hibbard, Douglas 29, 176
H.bbard, J. G. 60
Hill, Mrs. J. W 176
Hill, J. K 64
Hilton, E. S 60
Hines, D. J 39
Hines, M. B. 37
Hisch, J. R. 56, 58
Hisle, C. R 91
Hissom, J. R 114
Hlad, M. V 68, 119
Hobbs, J. A. 26
Hodges, M. E 94
Hodges, S. W 117
Hoffman, B. A 113
Hogg, E. S 61
Hcgue, R. T 63
Holbrook, Finley 64
Holbrook, Jack 90, 101, 160
Holbrook, S. S 88
Holbrook, T. A 81
Holliday, M. J 88
Holmes, E. L. 103, 105, 110
Holmes, M. J. 115, 139
Holsclaw, J. R 88
Holt, P. A. . 110
Home Economics Club 132
Hood, G. M 55
Hopkins, W. L. 63
Hopper, F. F. 115, 180
Hopp, W. B. 49, 57
Hord, A. L 13, 104
Hord, Ben 103
Horgen, S. K. 115
Harine, B. L 117
Horn, U. G. Ill
Hornbuckle, C. E 88
Home, Raymond 36, 159
Hainer, J. G. 113
Hornbeck, W. B 49
Hortman, D. L 68
Hortman, R. F. 68, 94
Hounchell, Saul 49
ale, R. c.
Howard, A. M.
Howard, G. M.
Howard, J. A.
Howard, R. M.
Ho«
rd, R.
K
Howell, T. R.
Hubbard, C. M.
Hubbard, N. E.
Huber, D. B.
Huber, SFC P. B
Huckabay, Calvin
Huckabay, Mrs
Huddleston, V.
Hudnall, A. D
Hudnall, D. A.
Hudson, L. M.
Huff, J. E. ..
Huff, M. L. .
Huffman, B. .
Hughes, C. T.
Hughes, C. T.
Hughes, P. B.
Hume, Bonnie
Humphrey, B.
Humphrey, J.
Hurst, Betty
Hutslar, R. H.
Hutton, R. R.
Hyatt, Glenn
C.
- I -
Idol, W. K. 105, 115
Industrial Arts Club 133
Ingles, A. P. 64
Irick, Glther . . . . 89
Irwin, J. T. 62, 102, 103, 188
Isaac, B. J. 58
Isaac, M. J 61
Isaccs, A. M. 113
Isaacs, Bertha 12
Ison, Fred 117
Jackson, B. J. 105, 115
Jackson, C. A 13
Jackson, M. L 103, 105, 113
Jackson, N. L 64
Jackson, W. G. 118
Jaggers, R. E 188
James, L. J .23
Jemleway, O. H 94
Jemley, Frank 92
Jenkins, B. R 92
Jenkins, J. E. 118
Jenkins, P. L. 21, 157
Jennings, M. W 53
Jett, D. B 102
Johns, J. C 35, 68, 73, 74
Johnson, E. M 61
Johnson, G. E. 35
Johnson, H. L. 35, 106, 189
Johnson, J. H. 60
Johnson, J. C 88
Johnson, K. A. 59
Johnson, Keen 42
Johnson, L. J. 103, 105, 115
Johnson, M. E 58, 139
Johnson, P. A. 115
Johnson, O. G. 35, 100, 180
Johnson, R. H. 119
Johnson, R.
es, A.
Jon
es, C. E.
Jones, E. E.
Jones, J. K.
Jones, K. M.
Jones, Lester
Jones, M. L.
Jones, N. E.
Jones, R. C.
Jones, R. H.
Jones, S. w.
Jones, Tommy
Jones, W. J.
Joyce, H. B.
Joyce, R. E.
Judy, J. E. ..
62, 101, 103
Kappa Delta Pi 123, 127
Kappa Kappa Sigma 149
Kappa lota Epsilon 129
Kappa Pi 128
Kearns, H. N 81, 111
Keene, R. A. 30, 124
Keene, W. L. .. 50, 139
Kelly, M. J 115
Keltner, J. A 21, 99
Kennamer, L. G 47
Kennamer, Mrs. L. G 177
105, 116, 157
115
36, 68
16, 82
90, 102
Kennedy, J. C.
Kenner, J. A.
Kerns, H. W.
Kidd, CM.
Kidd, R. L
Kincaid, S. F.
King, D. P.
King, W. P.
Kinsey, G. D.
Kiser, J. E.
Kitchen, B. J.
Kitson, Joan E.
Kitson, Joy E.
Kittrell, H. L
Kneppers, M. P.
Knight, T. P.
Knights of Artillery
Kolakowski, R. A.
Kotula, B. L.
Krahenbuhl, J. B.
Kraus, P. H. 8,
Kyma
Lackey, J. B. 33
LaFuze, H. H. 46, 140
Lamarr, Maxine 117
Lamb, B. J 63
Lambert, L. G. 103, 105, 115
Landrum, Paul 22
Lane, B. P 61
Lane, J. A. 33, 171
Lang, C. J 90
Lankford, A. A 22
Lanter, S. T. 94, 105
Lawrence, B. B 86, 91
Lawrence, R. N 90
Layton, J. H 105, 115
Lear, M. A 27
Lee, Cora 52
Leeds, M. L 13
Lenderman, W. R. 62, 68, 102
Letcher County Club 153
Lewis, Clyde 54
Lewis, J. R 105, 113
198
Lewis, Gwindolla 118
Lewis, R. R 94
Lewis, S. C 21, 173
Lincks, J. A 121
Lindon, A. K 62
Lindon, W. F 59
Lipscomb, N. T 62
Lisenbee, P. L 90
Litteral, Juanita 23
Litteral, Wanda 30
Little, Bernice 58
Little, Carl 101
Little, Christine 58, 141
Little, C. E 115
Little, J. B 61
Little Theatre Club 148
Littrell, D. E 64
Logan, R. S 91
Long, G. E 61
Longmere, Jimmy 103, 105, 111
Looney, A. H 116
Love, J. R 18, 24, 62
Lovington, L. A. 29, 195
Lowry, M. M 30
Lucas, B. A 113
Lucas, Coetta 16
Luker, D. A Ill, 167
Lusby, G. H Ill
Lusby, N. L 105, 111
Lyle, A. Q 28
■ Me -
McAnallen, W. T 21, 82
McBrayer, Paul 76
McCall, M. F 90, 139, 189
McConnell, E .P 179
McCormack, C. 0 90
McCoun, Nina 121
McCreary, J. F 63
McClure, L. B 93
McDonald, E. J 17
McDonald, Hazel 113
McDonald, M. E 39
McDonald, M. N 13
McDowall, I. K 39
McElfresh, Thorn 60, 102
McElroy, M. L 27, 156
McFalls, M. E 92
McFarland, J. L 89
McFarland, M. D 64
McGee, R. W 116
McGhee, J. E 84, 88
McGlasson, Alvin 49, 157
Mcllvaine, A. G 54
Mcllvaine, E. L 176
Mcllvaine, Louise 49
Mclntyre, M. A 63
Mclntyre, R. G. 61, 171
McKendrick, J. R 59, 183
McKinney, D. J 91, 169
McLain, M. A 92
McLocklin, B. J 62
McMullan, F. L. 89, 171, 177
McMullan, M. T 94
McNabb, W. L 90
McNees, P. R. .63, 102, 103, 157
McQueen, Kathleen 90
McWhorter, R. D 58, 105
141, 162
• M -
Mace, R. D 92
Macfarlane, C. A 115
Maggard, Charlotte 95
Mahaffey, Dr. Hugh 178
Malott, W. W 89
Malicote, B. T 94
Manning, C. L 63
Maples, D. R 91
Marchette, E. F. 68, 119
Marching Maroons 136, 137
Marcum, D. S 22, 26, 177
Marcum, E. F 90
Marcum, H. G 105, 113
Marcum, Milton 16
Marcum, R. W 105, 113
Maple, Rachel 95
Marshall, B. D 60
Marshall, C. R 177
Marshall, T. R 112
Martin, B. C 15
Martin, E. J 14
Martin, H, M 91
Martin, J. L 115
Martin, P. D 120
Martin, R. E 89, 105
Martin, R. H 116
Martin, R. A 115
Martin, Shirley 95
Mason, J. W 94
Massey, E. V 109, 111
Masters, B. G 119
Mastin, H. W 91
Math Club 133
Matlick, J. D 91
Mattox, M. E 45
Mattox, V. J 118
Maupin, R. C 61
May, Earl Jr 105, 112
Mayberry, G. L 62
Mayer, J. P 59
Mayer, R. A 90
Mayes, B. L 110
Mayes, Loretta 114
Mayfield, J. W 105, 113
Meadors, K. L 22
Meeks, J. A 64
Melton, F. M Ill
Mercer, C. B 94
Merklein, Eleanor 61
Middleton, M. C 17
Milam, F. E 60, 168
Milestone 140, 141
Miller, B. J 91
Miller, D. L 60, 139
Miller, Gilbert 64
Miller, Mrs. Lester 179
Miller, N. S 88
Miller, R. E 19
Miller, R. R 110
Miller, W. F 89, 105
Mills, Sie 113
Mincey, D. L 90
Mink, B. L Ill
Mink, T. H 104, 114
Miracle, Edward 68, 74
Mitchell, Betty 65
Mitchell, B. J 89
Mitchell, G. W 94
Mitchell, J. E. . .. 76, 79, 82, 94
Mitchell, R. P 18
Moberly, M. H 53
Mohr, D. J 116
Molen, E. H 91
Montgomery, E. L 61
Moore, C. L 92
Moore, D. F 105, 119
Moore, D. G 105, 114
Moore, J. J 119
Moore, N. L 61, 141
Moore, R. B 113
Moore, W. J 44, 46, 194
Moores, J. N 110
Morgan, Ballard 91, 106
Morgan, Capt. E. H 98
Morgan, C. R 89
Morgan, P. W 103, 105, 113
Morris, B. M 89
Morris, Carroll 115
Morris, G. S 16, 104
Morris, P. C 115
Morrow, Eloise 113
Morrow, M. D 64
Mosgrove, T. D. 83, 90
Moss, Willie 53, 173
Mottl, R. 0 91
Mueller, M. C 91
Mulcahy, R. L 38, 81
Muller, R. W 68, 72, 74
Mullikin, J. W 13
Music Club 138
Mullins, Charlene 117
Mullins, J. H 92
Mullins, P. P 38
Mullins, S. A 117
Mulvanity, Marylyn ..58, 139, 141
Murbach, Janet 47
Murphy, B. R. .58, 105, 141, 181
Murphy, J. T. 64
Murphy, W. G 61
Murray, H. M 115
Murray, W. G 93
Vtusic, F. D 64, 188
Music, P. L 90, 160
Musich, I. K 91
Myers, C. N 83, 116, 175
Myers, T. E 51
• N -
KJagel, P. C 54
Nagle, C. A 89
Napier, W. R 58, 101
Nassida, F. R 29, 68, 73, 74
Nassida, J. A 21
Naylor, K. H Ill
Neeley, Marion 115
Nelson, CO Ill
Neverstitch, J. W 12
Newby, B. V 17
Newman, Bonnie 114
Newman Club 145
Newson, Janet 95
Nidiffer, H. D 14
Niles, J. J 163
Nims, J. H 92, 139
Noble, C. R 91
Noble, J. D 103, 105, 112
Nolan, M. K 14
Noland, C. M 31
Noland, E. B 177
Norheimer, B. A 116, 139
Norheimer, Shirley 116, 139
Norris, R. L 58
Northcutt, B. J 116
Northcutt, M. E. .59, 101, 103, 181
Norton, L. F 113
Nunn, W. R 68, 89, 105
Oakley, C. E 32, 68
O'Banion, J. B. 11, 175
O'Connell, G. G 62
O'Donnell, W. F 40, 43, 74,
156, 194
O'Donnell, Mrs. W. F. 40, 156
Odor, D. R 113, 105
Off Campus Club 152
OgJen, B. B 12
Oldfield, F. D 59
Oliver, J. V 92, 102
Oliver, L. B 60
Osborne, B. B 110
Osborne, Bill J 119
Osborne, Bonnie J. 116
Osborne, J. C. 59, 103, 106
Osborne, J. F 175
Owen, M. E 59
Owens, Sherril 92, 102
Owens, Vermont 119
Pace, P. L 105, 113
Pack, B. D 62, 165, 167, 185
Pack, G. H 119
Pack, N. L 89
Palohunich, William 22, 32
Pamplin, C. E 115
Park, N. R 179
Park, Smith 47
Park, T. J 32, 125
Park, W. H 92
Parke, B. G Ill
Parke, J. F 112
Parke, W. M 20, 101
Parker, J. F 20, 104, 180
Parker, J. C 116
Parks, G. E 112
Parks, M. A 92
Parrent, O. C 113, 189
Parrish, W. C 105, 113
Parsons, C. R 90
Pasley, Elizabeth 116
Patrick, C. W 92
Patrick, M. L 10, 34, 141, 169
Patterson, C. R. 15, 139, 194
Patterson, J. W. .... 60, 139, 159,
174, 175, 184
Patton, J. D 68, 105, 112
Payne, J. B 83, 115, 163
Payne, Paula Ill
Paynter, M. J 90
Payton, D. J 32, 139
Peace, S. L 105
Peel, James 54
Pelfrey, R. F 63
Pellegrinon, R. G. ..58, 105, 76,
78, 80
Pence, G. L 109, 110
Pendergrass, L. H 90, 105
Perciful, B. J 90
Perez, W. E 101, 115, 180
Perkins, P. E 26, 195
Perkins, W. H 115
Perry, D. A 105, 109, 111
Perry, E. C 50
Perry, Helen 176
Perry, P. E 112
Peters, E. J 112
Peters, M. D 92
Peters, N. A 63, 141
Peters, S. J 88
Pettit, S. R 63
Phillips, P. R no
Photo Club . . . . 147
Phy. Ed. and Recreation 131
Physics Club 131
Piersall, G. W 59
Piersall, K. W 59
Pigg, C. R 61
Pigman, P. J 115
Pipes, A. G 59, 82
Plummer, D. L 59
Pogue, W. E 92
Points, E. 1 89
Polly, P. W 60
Polly, R. D 68, 105, 114
Ponder, V. L no
Potter, B. J 90
Potter, Phenis 64
Potts, Carrie 178
Powell, F. T 16
Powell, I. J 59
Poyma, P. A 10, 29, 169
Pratt, P. A 113
Presnell, Glenn 55, 68
Pressley, J. H 58
Preston, B. A 120
Preston, M. A 110
Prewitt, H. F. 89, 101, 175
Price, Ralph 17
Progress 139
Psimer, G. S 113
Pugh, Ellen 53
Purdon, L. G 29
Purdom, R. L 112
Purnen, Grace 62
Quisenberry, D. J.
Raker, Chester 11, 32, 125,
139, 140
Raker, P. J 115
Ramey, H. D. 62, 101
Ramey, S. B 22, 139, 184
Ranier, H. H 110
Rankin, N. J 92
Ransdell, Homer 58, 102, 103
Rasnick, M. A. 14, 141
Ratliff, J. H 81, 105
Ratliff, M. S 114
Ratliff, R. R 14
Ravenscraft, J. E 94
Reach, B. V 60
Redford, D. F 59
Redmond, L. R 80, 81, 105
Reece, D. D 113
Reed, B. J 110
Reed, Grant 92
Reed, L. G 58
Reed, S. W 116
Reed, W. L 22
Regenstein, Alma 52
Reliford, B. J 113, 183
Rennix, F. M 63, 188
Reynolds, G. E 59
Reynolds, G. L 20
Rhein, J. E 89
Rice, N. R 63, 178
Richards, H. L 89
Richards, M. M 54, 109
Richards, R. R 54, 109
Richie, V. L 115
Riddell, P. M 93
Riddle, D. A 115
Rigby, Harold 52
Rigrish, E. F 14, 68, 99, 101
Rinesmith, B. J. 15, 139, 141
Ritchie, F. M 59
Rivers, C. J 89
Roaden, Rosetta 62
Robbins, A. G 28
Robbins, G. W 89, 106
Roberts, H. L 58
Roberts, Hollis 89, 103, 105
Roberts, Jackie W 105, 176
Roberts, James W 114
Roberts, Kathleen 113
Roberts, K. P 119
Roberts, S. G Ill
Roberts, W. J 59
Robertson, Joann 115
Robertson, V. D 113
Robinette, R. W 91
Robinson, D. W 110
Robinson, F. M Ill
Roby, Bobby 82, 106, 114
Roby, I. C Ill
Roby, R. L 32, 105
Rodger, I. J 63
Rodgers, J. K 68, 82, 115
Romard, T. E 59
Rose, Bobby L 19, 104
Rose, Bonnie L 116
Rose, F. D 59, 101, 103
Rose, R. W 93
Rose, M. R 112
Ross, E. J 62
Ross, N. L 116
Ross, Ronald 110
Roundtree, F. B 27
Rowlett, J. D 51
Roy, Bobby 61
Royalty, L. A 39
Royalty, M. J 118
Royce, M/Sgt. R. E 98
Rubarts, Dean 36, 139, 167,
184, 141
Ruhl, S. A 110
Rush, Ruby 52
Russell, J. C 110
Russell, L. R 110
Russell, M. L 94
Russo, R. J 39
Rutledge, R. M 82, 105, 23
199
Salisbury, Rodnev
Sammons, C. E.
Sammons, J. T.
Samson, D. M.
Samscn, Lois
Sanders, C. C.
Sanders, J. P.
Sanders, W, L.
Sawyer, June
Saylor, H. S.
Saylor, L. A.
Saylor, N. F.
Scalf, L. D.
Scalos, Harry, Jr.
Scheffler, F. A.
Schneider, R. S.
Schoen, Harris
Scholle, J. R.
Schram, B. G.
Schulte, T. D.
Schulti, J. W.
Scott, M. W.
Scott, W. L. .
Scoville, B. E.
Scrogham, K. G.
Seale, J. D.
Seale, S. A.
Sears, P. B.
Sebastian, Arlie
Sebastian, Delmar
Sebastian, D. J.
Seevers, Blanche
Senn, D. F.
Sesline, E. B.
Setser, N. B.
Settle, A. A.
Sexton, B. J.
Shackleford, Peggy
Shahan, M. E.
Sharp, J. E.
Sharpe, S. L.
Shaw
Shaw
Shaw
Shelton,
Shelton,
Shelton, O.
Shepherd, K
Shepherd, W
Sherrard, B. G
Sherrard, J. R.
Shively, W. D.
Shockley, M. L.
Sholar, B. B.
Shrout, C. L.
Sidell, R. B.
Sidwell, P. E.
Sigma Lambda
Sigma Tau Delt
Sigma Tau Pi
Siler, C. A.
Simms, N. F.
Simonton, D. H
Simpson, J. T.
Singleton, J. A.
Singleton, M. I
Singleton, S. J.
Sizemore, J. M.
Sizemore, W. R
Skaggs, J. W.
Slater, Evelyn
Slattery, M. A.
Slone, M. G.
Slusher, C. J.
Smiley, H. M.
68, 114, 106
IS, 68, 74
58, 139, 141
92, 102, 167
51, 57
58, 101
113, 139
P. J.
R. W.
Joe
M.
128
130
110
Smith, K.
Smith, L.
Smith, M.
Smith, R. J Ill, 154
Smith, Wayne 110
Smithers, M. E. 115
Smothere, C. E 112
Smyth, W. S. 103, 106, 114
Snavely, C. R. 58, 83, 105,
141, 163, 181
Snow, J. A 26, 99
Snow, W. R 23
Society of the Plow 134
Sowders, J. B 35
Sowders, J. T., Jr 39
Sparks, H. C 110
Spears, A. W 89
Spears, P. A 112
Spence, Eulene 35
Spencer, Fosteen 89
Spencer, P. J 116
Spradlin, Kizzie 33
Spurlock, J. D 91
Stamper, Betsy 65
Tolli
B
Stanife
P. S.
113
Stanley, M. E Ill
Stapleton, N. C 94
Stephens, F. G 89
Stephens, K. H 59
Stephens, L. J 116
Stephens, R. S. 28, 124, 139
Stevens, B. B 19
si, .i. ill, H. B. 11, 28, 124,
141, 184
Stivers, Clayton 76, 79, 81, 106
Stocker, William 46
Stoess, C. R 110
Stokes, G. M. 114
Stone, A. H 90
Stone, N. L 25, 161
Story, V. F 53
Strong, R. R. 26, 76, 168, 78
Student Council 146, 181
Sublousky, J. F 98
Sulli
J. T.
Sullivan, w n 26, 84, 168
Summers, C. E 89
S. U. Music Council 151
Sutton, S. A. 60
Swanner, J. K. 60
- T-
Tarter, M. K 63
Tarkington, B. J Ill
Tarwater, M. K 50
Tarwater, W. H 51
Taylor, B. J. Ill
Taylor, E. A. 8, 25, 125, 139,
140, 181, 186
Taylor, G. D Ill
Taylor, G. P 24
Taylor, H. R. 101
Taylor, J. A. 51
Taylor, L. G 91
Taylor, R. E 64
Taylor, S. C. 59, 157
Teater, I. P 52
Telford, B. E 51
Terrell, B. J 114
Tesla, Paul 82
Tevis, J. L 93, 139
Tevis, N. J 25, 195
Thacker, Bruce 58
Thomas, D. R. 90, 101, 169
Thomas, D. G 25
Thomas, J. D. 83, 90
Thomas, L. G Ill
Thomas, P. R. 68, 110
Thomas, T. E. 106, 114
Thomas, T. H 33
Thompson, Betty J. 88
Thompson, Bobby J. 68, 92
Thompson, M. F. 112
Thompson, Opha 93
Thornton, D. J 14
Thurman, T. D 58
Tinch, B. L 121, 181
Tipton, W. T. 20
Tirey, S. F. Ill
91, 105
92, 105
90, 101
T.shue, R. D
Tobin, Patsy
Todd, F. R.
Todd, L. E.
Todd, W. T.
Tolliver, D. !
68, 175
Tomlin, C. R
Tcmpkins, G
Toomey, B.
Tracy, B. C.
Tracy, M. J
Trapp,
89, 101, 139, 141
D.
adway, Janice
imble
ue, C.
G. J.
35, 125, 141
92, 162
27
True, T. S 92
Tucker, J. W 61
Tucker, P. L 116
Tudor, B. P. 91
Tudor, F. M 12
Tumey, B. R. 106, 114
Turner, A. J. 30, 141, 155
Turn
rner, Mr
R.
. J. T.
113
177
Turner, R. A. 106, 114
Turner, Roosevelt, Jr., 18
Turner, Truman 88
Turpin, B. R. 92
Tuttle, K. S. 113
Tweddell, Carolyn 90
Tweddell, J. B. 64, 106
Tye, C. G 29
Tyng, Gladys 55
VanArsdale, B. W.
VanPelt, Mrs. W.
VanPelt, W. R.
Van Peursem, J. E.
Varble, J. M.
Vaughn, R. D.
Venettozzi, Victor
Vescio, H. S
Vescio, Mrs. Herbert
Vescio, K. L.
Vineyard,
Vocke
W. L.
91, 102, 103
Wagoner, R. D 114, 106
Wagel, W. J 28
Wagers, R. L. 89, 104, 106
Wagers, W. A. 89
Waggoner, F. E 63
Wainscott, W. S 106, 112
Walker, P. F 114
Walker, Samuel 49
Wallace, A. R 114
Wallace, M. T 19
Wallace, P. C 64
Wallin, T. D. 101, 119
Walton, M. J. 58, 158
Warren, M. J. 116
Warren, Rufford 101, 112
Watts, P. P . 91, 181
Watkins, J. E 114
Watts, P. A 59
Wasser, C. M. Ill
Webb, E. A. 13
Webster, B. C 116
Weddle, Elgene 89
Weddle, K. G 113, 189
Weinhardt, Don 83, 119
Welch, B. N 26
Wells, B. H. 114
Wells, H. D. 169
Wells, J. E 88
Wells, J. R 59
Wells, P. L. 112
Wesley Foundation 143
West, J. R 116
Westerfield, J H. 101, 116
Westminster Fellowship 143
Wethington, C. C. 56, 64
Whalen, N. M. 114, 178
Whalin, R. W 47
Whitaker, Arnold 58
Whitaker, B. J 63
Whitaker, Denzil 91
Whitaker, F. J 59
Whitaker, Jimmie 92
Whitaker, Juanita 57, 63, 167
Whitaker, O. J. 91, 101, 104
Whitaker, T. A. 116
White, B. D. 114
White, B. E. . . 179
White, B. J. . . 61, 180
White, Billie J. 57, 59
White, O. E. 113
White, R. K. 68, 101, 119
Whitehead, Mrs. Guy 179
Whitt, A. L 49
Whittington, R. A. 36
Who's Who 124, 125
Wickersham, Aileen . .178
Wickersham, Arthur L 52
Wiedekamp, S. J. 27, 99, 190, 191
Wilburn, S. F 18
Wilder, B. M. 12
Wilder, Lynette 114
Wilder, P. D. 83, 116
Wilhelm, N. M 114
Wilhoit, J. D. 6B, 102, 119
Wilkins, W. J. 92
Williams, C. W. 64
Williams, James 114
Williams, John C 33
Williams, J. W. 91, 101
Williams, M. W 91
Williams, M. J 55
Williams M., Jr 59, 68
Williamson, B. A. 63, 170
Williamson, Bobbie A. Ill, 156
Williamson, D. R 92
Willoughby, C. V. 89, 188
Wills, R. G 112
Wilmer, D. A. 94, 139
Wilson, A. P. 114
Wilson, B. D. 32, 124, 139
Wilson, C. M. 114
Wilson, Darwyn 89
Wilson, G. M., Jr 50
Wilson, H. L 116
Wilson, J. C 63
Wilson, J. R 119
Wilson, Leonard 102, 119
Wilson, PA. 112
Wilson, T. M. 105, 111
Wingo, Eunice 176
Wingo, Germania J. 53
Wininger, D. W. . 27
Winn, J. R 11, 24, 34, 84
Winscher, F. L. 30, 68, 73, 74
Wise, Joe 58
Wiseman, B. A. 63
Witt, J. D 62
Withers, E. G 113
Witmer, C. R. 18
Wolf, E. M 62
Wolfford, G. H 59
Wolfinbarger, H. R. 13
Wood, J. L ». . .64
Woodson, D. M 23
Woolum, R. G. 76, 81
Worley, B. E 61
World Affairs Club 151
Worth, Yvonne 112
Worthington, G. F 92
W.R.A 147
W.R.H.O 152
Wright, C. D 81
Wright, E. L 106
Wright, R. J 10, 24
Wylie, W. A. 114
Yarber, J. E.
Younce, Mrs. W
Young, P. OB
York, E. F. .
York, P. L.
Zachem, R., Jr.
Zimmerman, J. L.,
Zoochi, J. S.
Zweigart, R. G.
105, 183, 18
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Class photos by McGaughey Studio, Stanifer Studio, Richmond, and Osborne Photographers, Cincinnati.
Feature photos by McGaughey Studio.
Engraving by Indianapolis Engraving Company.
Printing by Masonic Home Journal.
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