Published by the Washburn-Crosby Company in 1909, this 80-page booklet serves as an advertisement for Gold Medal brand flour and includes a wide variety of recipes. It comes complete with time tables, a table of contents, and illustrations.
Berea College -- Students -- Yearbooks; College Yearbooks
A woodcut illustration by Frank Long appears in this volume. Two Jesse Stuart poems are also included: "Give Me Again the Spring" and "This is the Schoolhouse". For the first time the Dean of the College was not pictured beside the Dean of Labor;...
Berea College -- Students -- Yearbooks; College Yearbooks
There is a memoriam for Mr. Benton Fielder on page 15. The retirement of Mr. J. Wesley Hatcher is recognized on page 39. The Life Service Club reappears in this issue. There were a few clubs created this year: the Sociology Club, the Cosmopolitans,...
Berea College -- Students -- Yearbooks; College Yearbooks
This was the year that Jessie M. Reasor (Zander), the first black student accepted into the college after the discontinuation of the Day Law graduates. There was another group of international students in the graduating class of the Upper Division:...
Banjo Music--North Carolina; Stalcup, J. Roy; Free Little Bird;
J. Roy Stalcup playing banjo, singing, and talking about banjo tunings and the sources of his repertoire. Recorded by Lee Knight at Martin's Creek, Cherokee County North Carolina on 3-13-79.
Song sung and played on guitar by Pleaz Mobley and recorded by Bill Parker at the American Folk Song Festival in Ashland, Boyd County, Kentucky In June 1966.
Celebration of Traditional Music--Berea College; Old-time music -- Appalachian Region, Southern; Banjo music--North Carolina; Folk; songs, English -- Appalachian Region, Southern; The Cuckoo Bird;
Song sung by Riley Baugus at the 2010 Berea College Celebration of Traditional Music.