Celebration Saturday, May 2, honors Loyal Jones and Willis Weatherford Jr. – includes music by Billy Edd Wheeler and Berea College Bluegrass Ensemble
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4/28/09
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| A celebration on Saturday, May 2, 2009, at 2 p.m., will honor Loyal Jones and the late Willis D. Weatherford as part of the renaming of two College Centers after them. In addition to unveiling of plaques recognizing the honorees, a program will feature entertainment by Billy Edd Wheeler, Lee Morris, the Berea College Bluegrass Ensemble, and remarks by Loyal Jones and Anne (Mrs. Willis D.) Weatherford.
The event is free and the public is invited to attend. An enjoyable program is planned that features individuals and groups who have been connected with the Appalachian Center and the Campus Christian Center at Berea College. Billy Edd Wheeler, a 1955 graduate of Berea College, is nationally known as the author of songs such as Jackson, The Rev. Mr. Black, The Coming of the Roads, Ode to the Little Brown Shack Out Back, and Coward of the County, which was made into a movie. Wheeler also is an accomplished singer, musician, and playwright, who has authored a dozen plays, including four outdoor dramas, that include the long-running Hatfields & McCoys at Beckley, West Virginia, and Young Abe Lincoln at Lincoln City, Indiana. Wheeler also has authored several books of humor including Laughter In Appalachia, now in its 13th printing, which he co-authored with Loyal Jones. Other performers on the program include Lee Morris, who will provide some “preachments.” Morris was a Berea College Campus minister from 1979 – 2000. Al White and the Berea College Bluegrass Ensemble will perform a number of musical selections. The event will take place on the Berea College campus on the lawn between Union Church and James Hall. (In case of rain, the event will be held inside at Union Church.) Following the program, a reception with light refreshments will be hosted on the lawn to provide an opportunity for attendees to greet the Jones and Weatherford families. The event recognizes Willis D. Weatherford, former Berea College president, and Loyal Jones, renowned Appalachian scholar, both of whom now will have their names attached to programmatic Centers with which they were closely associated. Earlier this academic year, the Berea College Board of Trustees passed resolutions to rename the Campus Christian Center to the “Willis D. Weatherford, Jr. Campus Christian Center.” The Appalachian Center will be renamed the “Loyal Jones Appalachian Center.” These Centers reflect two of the College’s eight Great Commitments—to an inclusive Christianity and to the Appalachian region and culture. In passing the resolutions, the Board of Trustees cited the exceptional accomplishments each individual had made in connection with these Centers. Dr. Willis D. Weatherford, Jr. was the sixth president of Berea College, serving from 1967 – 1984. Prior to his tenure as president, his work in Europe, Africa, India, and Malaya on behalf of the American Friends Service Committee and other organizations had exemplified his Loyal Jones is a native son of Appalachia. He was born and grew up in the mountains of western North Carolina before attending Berea College. After graduating from Berea, Jones devoted his life to serving the Appalachian Region through his work with the Council of the Southern Mountains as well as his teaching and scholarship, which has documented the history and culture of the region through such important works as Appalachian Values; Laughter in Appalachia; Bascom Lamar Lunsford: Minstrel to the Mountains; Faith and Meaning in the Southern Uplands, and many other publications and presentations pertaining to Appalachian culture, humor, music, and religion. When the Appalachian Center was created by Berea College in 1970, Loyal Jones was its founding director. The Appalachian Center was the first such program in the southern Appalachian region and prospered under his committed and extraordinary leadership. Jones was central to both the shaping of the Appalachian Center and the Appalachian Studies Program at Berea College. After serving as Director of the Appalachian Center for 23 years, Loyal Jones retired from Berea College in 1993, but continues to be a well-recognized speaker and champion of Appalachian humor and values. His just published book is Country Music Humorists and Comedians from the University of Illinois Press. Berea, the South’s first interracial and coeducational college, focuses on learning, labor, and service. Berea charges no tuition, admitting only academically promising students, primarily from Appalachia, who have limited economic resources. All students must work 10 hours weekly, earning money for books, room, and board. Graduates from Berea go on to distinguish themselves and the College in many fields, living out the College’s motto “God has made of one blood all peoples of the earth.” |
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| CONTACT: Timothy W. Jordan, Director Berea College Public Relations (859) 985-3020 |



