Governors Academy - Milestone Yearbook (Byfield, MA)
- Class of 1978
Page 1 of 216
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1978 volume:
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'2 '.T' -iii -111 Q-'X ' ,y.,g-',' -Q,---,:Q:g:,s1': VZ, 1 -fri'f'i'Ff,R11T'i12Z -T'-if , ,. Wy, ,ji W 1,575 - ,Q ww, N . , . , .',5Q. '--ff. x x8 , X X V A X f , ' ff-,LV 1 , . X t X! -Iv Q. ,, ' , v 39 - J 1 F' 1 , 1 , NJ rm v W X..,,. '., w h x , 1:-VI A :JJ ' ve mac' t .b ' 'MGM'-s M ,A -..... A Princeton graduate joined the Governor Dummer faculty in Ianuary 1949. Except for a brief stint of military service during the Korean War, he has been establishing an enviable record as teacher, coach and dormitory master ever since. Few teachers in the history of the school command the kind of respect and loyal love that his former students and athletes exhibit. For many individuals, students and faculty alike, he is an enigma. Given his deep gruff voice and his demanding teaching, coaching, they are likely to find him an awesome, often frightening figure. But for any who have been fortunate enough to have him in Math class, play for a team he coaches, or live in his dormitory, they have found him to be one of the most concerned, gentlest people here at school. Once a student initiates the first step in getting extra help, there will be no stone left unturned. One of the keys to his success is that he knows his subject - be it math, wrestling, or lacrosse - with a thoroughness seldom achieved, he is a living example of the cliche, he wrote the book. Yet he is a diverse person. Many know of his interest in Springer Spaniels, but few people realize he is an authority on childrens' books and a white-water expedition canoeist of legendary stature in the northern woods of Canada. With many thanks for his great diverse contribution to Governor Dummer Academy, the Senior Class respectfully dedicates the 1978 Milestone to: G. HEBERTON EVANS III !., . '1 V. b 5?-Qf vii .M x I ,sw .Q .10 . 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' WZ 345119 1- 2 , 17:1 ff ff 'f ,' '?!f'. f1i:-fi? . 2 fy m.,,. 35.5. I .I , , . . . .Z ' 'I 5531... ' .11 .. ,' ,..I,4:f1x . x . .. Y .. .,.. , - 4 TA LE 0F CONTENTS DEDICATIQN FALL SPGRIS WINTER SPORTS SPRING SPORTS SENIGRS UNDERCLASSMEN JUNIORS SQPHGMORES FRESHMEN FACULTY CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS COMMENCEMENT ADVERTISEMENTS 2 5 11 31 37 62 67 91 127 128 132 13.5 141 157 168 189 . NV 1 FALL I I 1 1, I I1 ,J I, ,I 'I D1 H .F , I I. vi jj I' f if 'V ' 17' f Wg N f k f f ff . W f ' 1 fx Q, 'K R f in X' ff W Xb W, fl 37' fuk! f I -rn EY X X pgs, X is ij M 2: -f-'iQ- ' ' g' 'ig Q 3-X A l H Q -,1 x 1 !NQ X . I .- .4 :K :- -1 G5-LW, --Q Lf. -. Ny K, M M., f 'J Q SR uf me K L Dunmerk N, U 'Aff ' T, fi WI E ovu fo 1713 'i z ' V 5, A-'Qal5:l:3H-53914 Nwqi Ml Ii 39 YY W in LP E ' in 'Hn' M cf i-vgeh ' X'-Q x , w N Al 1 H sl, 'Q XM yx xl. 'g W 'bw lim 'Q 4. ' ' X X 'xx M ,fix QNX XXX qL'g'a'lEiq,h XX X' X. O '3f .rbiiiflifwzm W N rlmf, ' I XNQ in x 59' ' 1. Maw x v M ww ,ff 1. M or xxx XXUK I JN N W M W 4 g fiflqfii MVN' Q, X V Q! wi W, .'S15s'fpS'1zV7g,: 12 WX 1 Xu m L1 Q-L ww, xx : ,, X. aria -mw lkh A - J7 ,xyfn u vs Nfvf W E' ' , Q ' T 6 -V 1 f I' f? - ff Q-i Q3 3 Jjgffiigfajsgga,,4fi9+ '5f'1v,-fh ff- x X -Q fe1?2f2fEfqgiZ,4-f2f?ff1a if X , ',5TI -,:' ' fl' K 'T Y- A -, -' 4,-1 - ' ,. c ......,- S 1-2 I 5 6 . ,- 1 ,, .Ly ,: ,:- . !?z74,f,a4g5f, q aw 'f Q 101 f 'if4zg1p?,j'ff K ll' v Lv 5 02 1,0 , 3, W , s lil 25,6 k I-Vi: ,df lag? L5 A 5 Wg 1 l f . , V ,A x . New faces in old placesmold faces...The football team came on Saturday?.,.new room...old food...You do your summer reading?...l wanna go back to the beaCh!...First period math - you gotta be l4idding...old teachersmnew teachersmmore new teachersmmeet- tings! Co for it... Early risingmrubbery toast...piles of booksmand books...too much homeworl4...English papersmtests... Can't they lay off a little?...stuCly hallmpracticel.. sprintsmcold showers...mystery meatmand when can we get rid of these nametags?...evening study hall...the grill...What's the release? pep rally...danCes...the play ...Halloween night dinnerma record-setting Blood- mobile...Humanities...Saturday morningsmworlc squads...games...old movie...dull...Brunch!...papers... chapel...call home...next week. X Gradesmback in study hall...Parents' Day-Oli no! He's a very nice boy, butmlunclieon waiter...l1ome gamesmout for dinner...French Memorial ground- breaking... Seniors: class rank...senior day lClark takes a weeklmapplications with essaysmposition paper re- search...SATs...position paper due - l-low much sleep you get'?...more papers...all nightersmearly decision... Steph and Scott form cripples' union lAndy Linn admitted as junior member? End of term tests...tours...more papersmatlwletic dinnersmmore all nighters...volleyball-Fyrbergs Fleas win it all...Tl1anksgiving at lastl... I l l Northeast Regional + Red Cross Blood Program Bloodfmobile ,f rf' I Q I 1 ' ' g . X lv ' . f VT Q ' AA F, A, 'i,l.?B ' :SHA-lg: - .-Q . I. IN X f 1' Q9 fnzg 1.1 ' .5 I A ' 1 .4 .- J 1 , X-,V .lt- ,qfb . , -fs 'W Ny. 1. . . 'Ti- 61 P fi 345 f, ,f 3 FALL SPUR TS 1 4+ , . A . f 1 x . A p 4 -,,,..4..k, L x f X I Nl 1 . ' v . ' 4 J X ' . A 1 ' I , . n v f ,. 1 ,Nr 3 .AMW '5 A , n 1 x , L 1 M :.- N P If 1 g ,Q X 1 f' W 1- fl HI YH' 4 , val W M M ki' Q k ' Nj R W 'ra Mlm I 54 1. LQ ' . H ' . ll I' - - f Kg. ,i . x Il A ' 15' n ' x 1 ,- x M '4 - .lo - 'A' Al -' v ... ,U f ' ' lf ISFL ff' F f , f 'I 'I A If I , 'I 7 4,4 sf' 1 ff- - 'f. 4 Zlwjfl y - .f +f ' hz- -V .f i-4' X X f -- , A.-- 1 4 'L f ' , , ,fr ,Y X ' I , A - 'fy ' ' 'V '- . , ra Pff' 4' f - A ' -1 f ff-a a? .- .1 A f ' ' ' E S'f'4g ,ff-,'-11 if, ' ' , 7 f w zf?'f2 ' 'lf ' V W-f 4 11 f f U ' 7.91 1?p-.: ' ' 7 ' f' 4l7r,, f lg 11 1 app:-' sw 1 , 3 I K ' ,,.' fr-J. . ,, ., 'au ,UQ 3 ,il - t,,l,,l1 .,, . 3'-I , , .HW L- f - f - ,1 'f' ' r ' -If I., - . , 1 fF '1 3 K' ? f - 5 i Af Af 'Sims -V f':-flcfwff' ,Q-.f'f' f ,. - . 6 ' , , lf. iqsf . Ui, ,I -af. 1 -,,5 - -: mi Im -5' 91.19. 'Xie' gf , fag, 5. fy., 5i?.g5H'1y1,!,, g .53 H 595+ 4. as y t, 2, M' i t ,Q fl, 4,,. 1 .. A - 'f f-' 1 S., , ' .. ,gs t F.1'iW T 5. ' Wi' fx- 4' -.9 .19 al.-ff5,,'f rf ' . -. ,.t V . , -gl. .uf 4 V , f g'f2,g5g,g:,,1, 15.,2'ff,,,g5, it ., ,,f..L , 5v s1 f!.'iff, N9 '?Zif!i'r'vi rif f vQ Il ffffi '1 '7 !fFff3.'if: X721-' -are-2f'rf ' 2 V' M , f f f ?4iA8.2?3fvifEcr3 -shi.A-Wtiefffijttffarfiaitf faaiiff f2faff.?f1qf. : ff2 fi f ITALICS DENOTE VARSITY LETTERMEN - FIRST ROVV: R Cornwall Andcrson Clark Coodhart co captain Dr: coll co-cpatian Suggs, McDowell, B. Bowditch, Fulton, Willard. SECOND ROW Coach Rybicki Coach Mechem Ex Iones Tamposi 0'Keefe, LI71'1, Shea, M. Stephan, Spears, Thomas, Lindsay, Garnett L Whzttcn Kavxamura Nlarvin Coach Harrington Coach Beckett. THIRD ROW: Schipani, Theriault, R. Whitten, S, Miller C Cornttall Tr Dagrts Ronan P Vlorais Le'Nlaitre 'NI Palis, Lovejoy, Starr, Tomlinson. The varsity football team repeated its 3 - 4 record of a year ago, but this year's team was more successful. It was essentially a new team beginning with first-year head coach, Ed Rybicki. Although small physicaly, he possesses, as the team quickly learned, a heart much bigger than his body. Coach Rybicki, who was ably aided by assistants Beckett, Harrington, Mechem, and Radoccia, installed a new offense and defense along with such memorable drills as Perfect Play. A solid nucleus of senior lettermen led by co-captains Tom Driscoll and Ike Suggs along with Scott Anderson, Herzel Fulton, and Rick Willard led the team through reinitiation of double sessions, beginning early one Saturday morning, three days before school opened. Three impressive scrimmage victories over Exeter, Lawarence, and Middlesex led to great expectations for a winning season. High hopes and spirits, along with the new pirate mascot, were dashed in a 38-6 loss to St. Sebastians - a game marred by the excessive number of major penalties called. Following a spirited week of practice, the team regrouped tor a 26-10 victory at B-B 8: N, highlighted by Andy Linn establishing a new school rushing record. Needless to say, the offensive line, centered by Brad Clark with Bruce Lindsay and Tom Driscoll along with tight-end Troy Dagres on the strong side and Chuck McDowell and Ieff Garnett on the weak side, was outstanding. 12 A disappointing trip to Thayer for a battle in the mud saw the Governors return with a 26-6 defeat. One bright spot shining through the muck was the return of end Bo Bowditch to the program after not joining the team until the second week of the season. A discouraging 6-O loss to Brooks on Parents' Day saw tailback Linn lost for season with a broken arm. Monster Scott Anderson played with no casst onlhislbroken hand. Serious soul-searching by the team followed the Brooks loss, and they attacked their new season with renewed vigor and unity. Groton was the first victim as the Governors demolished the zebra-shirts 34-18. Highlights included Herzel Fulton's two touchdown receptions, the first on a half-back pass to open the game, and lim Goodhart, arriving late as usual, shattering Linn's record with his 285 yard, three touchdown performance. Goodhart ran behind the awesome blocking of fullback Derek Spears, the MVP as chosen by the team, and the offensive line. Noseguard Rick Willard scared the daylights out of the Groton quarterback, blasting into the backfield on nearly every play. An outstanding defensive perfor- mance highlighted the 6-O defeat of St. lVIark's as the team closed their home season. These two victories were especially gratifying for the seniors as the Governors had not defeated either squad in the last four years. 'PN is 13 The team closed the season in a heartening game at Belmont Hill,Although they lost 27-12, the score was 14-12 until well into the fourth quarter. The passing connection of Chris Shea to wingback Todd Dagres clicked for their second bomb of the season, the first coming against St. Sebastians, making Dagres the only player in the ISL to score against both of the league co-champions. Belmont Hill, who went unbeaten, admitted after the game that the Governors were by far their toughest opponent. This year's team differed from previous years in that was a team. Lacking an individual star, they pulled together to win respect throughout the league, some- thing that has been lacking in recent years. This respect was demonstrated by the numerous all-league choices, notably first-teamers Tom Driscoll and l-lerzel Fulton. Although they just missed their winning season, the seniors believe that they have established a solid foundation for the talented underclassmen, led by co-captains Linn and Garnett. Get that winning season! 14 .,.s hs J, Hffgylgt . A. 153:15- iii ' 4 A ic-:f ,B ' 1314 'W ' 4.79, , 1-, su Q1-is ': .it :LE ,I f M113 6,0 3' J X, 1.4 5, I . 1 - -A159 1, L l '1 v F x ' Q t cm 9' gd, ,I Hg- A'-1 ,.,.- - i vi 7-- 34.11.1-ws.17.i.,E.?:iig -iuifi-,,..!i.4:, -A 'A : 91 52 Q 4,.,,x-u ,- 1- Jf W . 'Wig' 3-f'l'l.5i51 ' mdlfgili?- ' fgfirgf Y x '2e'f1i' -1 1?a't v t 1. gtg, 31115 se K 5.84: 1, 1 ,v A t Jug A 1: 4 KJ s 9 S New Msn wyfb Wg iw , r UQ P' cw 'Q X, in 'ill THIRD FOOTBALL - FIRST ROW: Pratt, Carter, Booth, Page, lVIcCune, Tuthill, Whitney, Mahoney. SECOND ROW: Coach Williams, Kangis lmanagerl, Taylor, Reilly, Er. Iones, Griffin, Frost, Greaney, Robertson, Coach Anderson. THIRD ROW: McGhee, Aranosian, Shula, Swartz, Obadia, Lennon, Mason. I.V. Football 3 - 2 - 1 GDA Q Third Football 3 - 2 - 1 GDA Q Groton School 12 O Groton School 12 O Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 8 O Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 26 8 Phillips Exeter Academy O O Phillips Andover Academy 6 8 Brooks School 20 O Brooks School O 20 Belmont Hill School 6 12 Belmont Hill School 6 6 St. lVlark's School 6 7 St. Marlds School 16 O 15 ' ' .- r H1 . 9 1- .J-f', W.1a ...sf .' : vt.: a '.- -' , 512 Z, .f' QI-2wf'f'.1if'5?'5l3if't!.f5ff-.Hf'--Q?-f - I-:ff wif' lfi 1 .1 I Jw.: 4 ' ' 'f ' 1' . nie ' 1 . Y , vf 5.. fe V5 , ,J V2.3 Y. I H I+. : .f , , . 1 gg 'vez ift?2v4:fwa4.f:axgififi i4-!f?.:'f.,??ff'fv.ffff f-rf' 1- 4.1 '41 . .r . si: 4 rv' -i 5' Y i 1 A' 'E ig' ,f:45?5' , 755:37 'fn 1 ,hp - Y ' ,r 1, ',,,v.55-I t f r ifgfgikfrf. 17, .P .5 .f5:1lQ '12 'f',4 1 7 ','Al !f ' nfl' W?ff?9Z1.6.Q+.51-Szftiifafffallfiil t fv2f'.'f'f'.:7':wif- M1-tirfff' N11 . -. ,V ALL LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: P. Cook, Ienkins, Leahey, Feith, captain Slater, Ostheimer, Gwynne, L. White, Kaknes SECOND ROW: Coach Harlow, D. Smith, Williams, Stephenson, B. Cavanaugh, Nourizadeh, P, Cavanaugh, Metzger, C. Wall Coach Clunie. THIRD ROW: Ahari, Humphries, St. A. Woodworth, Lothrop, T. Rourke, Am. Forsat, Cawley. 16 Heart failure was a common occurrence among players, coaches and fans of this year's varsity soccer team. More than half of the games ended with a difference of a goal or less, Milton was beaten with three seconds left in the game, and four games went into overtime, with CDA losing only once. An even spread of talent contributed to the team's exciting play, and this left few players to warm the bench, in contrast with previous seasons. Injuries hurt the team early, but another able body was always ready to play. Starting fullback Andy Stephenson tore some ligaments in the memorial ditch against Andover, but converted fullback Tom Rourke replaced him and played commendably for the remainder of the season. Lack of size also limited team play, but this resulted in an improved short passing game. With such giants as Amir Ahari, Steve Perry, Greg Kaknes and Luke White in the game at the same time, the ball had to stay on the ground or was headed away by the opposing team. These same shorties also provided most of the offensive punch of the team, led by Amir Ahari,and Steve Perry with five goals each. Varsity soccer was shut-out only twice during the season, a tribute to the quick inside work of the line and the booming crosses and long shots of Drew Iones, Tom Ostheimer and Curt Metzger. ,Q A - Q' M- .gunn- , A - 7 I 5-in WU. - ,. , -- - s,,,,. KZ- .., U ,,., .,.g,..3 , wtf-Nxfftr . ev fs,-'76 -' tiff' mf , ,f if . ,f amianzx' '75-V, 2'-.1 ::z5,1?,Qs i?:.:A'-QM r- :ff f?' W 5, mf? :psf-gg,-tea ',+.:...,Qf?-6 . fe ne, -' . A-Ad., vs ' 'an :ff .cfs 5-,:,1f.1.-. ., . .,, ,.,A,,,N-.4,.,,,.. , i z,.- -4 , r V Q., H45-5 l . - - 'WZ . 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V ' 4 A ' 214 qi , ,ar , Q84 J -- el Lallf -f - 'T The defense, anchored by captain and first team all-league fullback lim Slater and MVP goalkeeper Geoff Wlall, kept the team close throughout the year. After the Exeter game, the defense let in an average of less than two goals a game, a fine achievement considering that half of those games were played at home on a field of reclaimed marsh, which the marsh reclaimed early in the season. Navins Cup winner Scott Pope kept the team's spirit up throughout the wet season and contributed despite his Cobb Room injury. Excitement, balance and mud characterized this years varsity soccer team, not to mention the stereo during practice and post-practice dips in the field. VVith two starting fullbacks, a halfback line and some crazy Persians returning, coaches Clunie and Harlow and captain Dave Smith are wished more of the same for next year. 18 - ss. as .1-1 Umtsastittwxmtat 1.23 7 'Q -1' tl ' S551 5-1 flffff.-F fi i l E -7 'M liilif' I'Efifi9?E'5.f.. . , Lg.,- - I . I I P -ffv?i11fw:.eI12 'fed 'ii' W F2 5287 2:-fi'-1345? W -WS 624' f hi , if-1' I- 5 fg'f.wr-lswgifw t.-f !'lr.'s??ih-531111121 .ii'-1525 ' .'R-145' . .1 f it ., Ig, - -, ,L .-Q., :Q Q55-1i.3! ,' x4.g gag g-.qjygtipl --1 W 1 -. me 4 .5 4.4. 5 - 1 . , 11, gi-'f'-.g.-.,-gi f y- 5,11 1.a:,f, :v' ' file Y 3L.q5Y4r n -'zur -E .x .S ..1-L'.Htt'.4f-:1if.,. -tie..u-L1-451.1Q 41, ,Q A ' , ,- ' .Q .,-,ff ' .ff l . 1 1 vang-1 Lrg-xx wrW1'v,:f-.i 7 i 'ff .1 4- i4X.:.L- ' 1 w , KE! X Q L 1 Nj f.. ... 1 . FIRST ROW: Stafford, Moore, Pendelton, D. Iones, D. Bowditch, F, Wise, Sizer, Bigelow, Washburn, D. Van Etten, Martin. SECOND ROW: Coach Evans, Friend, Sperry, Perlowski, Queen, A, Minster, Cv. Wicander, S. Wall, I. Miller, Harrison, I. Wise, Gardner, B. Voelker, B. Rourke, Morrissey. THIRD ROW: Entekhabi, Savrinn, Benson, Schwartz, I. White, Winer, Fitch, Sterman, Morse, E. Wicander, Hall, Bailly, T. Heftron, Campbell, Nui Sinthavanuchit. I.V. Soccer 8 - 1 - 3 CDA OPP Third Soccer 6 - 3 - 1 G. DA 12 Roxbury Latin School 3 1 Beaver C.D. School 1 1 Phillips Andover Academy O 1 Phillips Andover Academy 1 O Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 1 O Pingree School 3 Z Thayer Academy 4 0 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 0 4 Brooks School 3 2 Brooks School 3 2 Noble Sc Creenough 3 1 Pike 4 3 Milton Academy 3 1 Lawrence Academy S 1 Groton School Z 2 Brooks School 5 O St. Paul's School 1 1 Fay School 1 4 St. Mark's School 2 1 Belmont Hill School 2 3 Middlesex School 1 1 Belmont Hill School 4 3 . - .Slime ta.. is... FIRST ROW: Hettler, Arguello, co-captian A. Mason, Bennett, Sutton, C. Bougas, Al. Forsat. SECOND ROVV: Laventis, Kennedy, Moheban, H. Woodworth, Brine, Critics, O'Dell, Mahler. THIRD ROW: Coach Tindall, Parkman, Nlanyliart, Morias, Sudduth, Welch, C. Atkinson, Leathem, Segil, Stark, Holmbraker, Horton, Coach Clagett. FOURTH ROVV: Sylvia, Adell, co-captain Brown, Long, Barett, Callahan, Kane, Cooke, Tallman, Parigian. 19 We practiced hard... ...we raced hard fizeifiaf-2?-,ah-rfiel 1 :wi . . . 521 20 1977 was a memorable year for the Varsity Cross Country Team. The performance which will be remembered is not the dismal 1-12 won-lost record but what is recorded in the hearts and minds of this year's runnersp that is, a season of constant adversity and ultimate triumph. It was not easy to take it in the teeth every meet after the opening victory over St. Sebastian's. But throughout the season occurred a process of growth and maturation. By the Parents' Days meet against Milton, the team had overcome a shaky start, and the chronic complaints about aches and pains and the long, tough practices had mostly died out. But it was in the last three meets that the excellent enthusiasm, personal achievements, and team unity were finally displayed, giving the fiber to this season and honor to the runners. ya 75? Coaches discuss tactics with H and M. ITALICS DENOTE LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: Cushman, Rose, co-captain Rosen, co-captain Gmlzam, Hatfield, Dalzer. SECOND ROW: Coach White, Rooney, C. Putnam, S. Putnam, Murray, G. Putnam, Kalliori, Lacey, Davis, Coach Foster. THIRD ROW: I. Voelker, Barnes, Reichter, I. Montealegre, Ryan, Diehl. Senior co-captain M. Phillip Graham was the team's number one runner and led the team in spirit and enthusiasm. He was followed very closely by tall newcomer Russel Cushman, who remained the team's solid second runner, although occasionally injured. Co-captain Hank Rosen and his Marblehead buddy, Jeff Hatfield, were the consistent third and fourth members of the squad. Together with Russel, they should form a strong, veteran nucleus for next year's team. Battling continually for fifth position were seniors Doug Beattie and Buffalo Bob Barnes and Mauricio Daher, the crazy Brazilian. One of the strongest aspects of this year's team was the first Varsity Girls' Team ever. Bolstered by the Putnam sisters, co-captain elect Sarah, Claire. and Gretchen, and Neda Kalhori, and senior Nancy Murray, the girls had a superb Z-2 record and finished second in the l,S.L. Championship, in which Claire won the fifth place trophy. They gave the team an impeccable example of confident maturity and spirit. Thanks to them, the boys, and our ever-faithful leader, Coach White, the 1977 Cross Country season may be remembered as a rewarding and fulfilling experience. The few faithful followers of the girls' varsity soccer team were rewarded with many hard-fought games by an exciting team. The second game of the season showed the girls that they had the fire power. This years MVP, Linda Miller, scored the first goal of a string of eleven in that game with Cushing Academy. At B-B 8: N, two games later, the defense, led by freshman goalie Sue Perry, played one of its best games, allowing only one goal, despite many chances by the B-B Sr N team. Qne of the high points of this year's season was the loss to St. Pauls. It was a tough game to lose, but out young team proved to their well-established team that G.D.A. is not an easy team to beat. Ioli Foucher's goal scared them, and they found it difficult to come back and win in overtime. The other high point was the 5-O win over Worcester Academy. After last year's battles and this year's loss against them in the first game, everyone was ready for a win. Captains Woodbury and Roorbach prepared the team in many ways, Abby supplied the pep talks and the tootsie rolls, and Gretchen made the notorious sign VVIPE OUT VVOR- GESTERL which may still be hanging on La Factorie. Something worked! Lisa Sapuppo found the right range and knocked in four goals, two of them with her head, a new and novel experience for girl's soccer. The passing in the front line was at its best, mainly because of the switching of Gretchen and Wendy Silin. Another part that clicked for the Governors was the play of the fullbacks. Kim Saunders, Wendy Bixby, and Sue Potter all played outstanding games. They were aided by an upcomer from the l.V., Karen Nault, who also gave the team its pre-game cheer. Sue Potter added to the offense with one of her booming drives from midfield, which ended up in the corner of the net. Patty Milligan, the only senior starter on the team, also kept up her steady playing from right half. Another reason for this year's success was the solid substitution core of the team. Nancy Merrill was the handyman in this respect, playing in both forward and halfback lines. To their stalwart coaches, Mr. Leith and Ms. Krall, who led them through many disappointing games and pushed them to win the next one, the players would like to express their thanks. It was a great season. 1 '5l,gq 23 f'2'p1 i i21'5.l ' ' .frgffwfi Cf .aw v.,fw,'ff'u- . 4 iiffigzlif3w.5sZeQ :'s1?iZi 'ffm' ' 1 fi'9:'7f'Mef'1'f-197 '1 wfizgtfff 4 'Y ,e A, 11 we ' f U7 1.:,wfr.n- ... .. . f . . ,. , l - ,. - .. , V' l 6 K-,--wif' 'zz 7 l J j '7 ' - v 'P ' lf'-'jnf' H ' lvwlt.. -'Z 22 -ff ' . Af?,,a'-'ff ' 1 ,iq by .4 ffygy .fig ,sf Vie...-44.25, .- Qfaf. I 44.5 -A. ,,1..f.Ifi di, rl.. ,fu as a wif! . iffy? 'Q lr 473- Ev: 'hf92gZ'f'fff2,f1'iZ,-Eff 56219-.. '- -- if ': '4 -vw u ' f . -fly . ' ...J 4 Mfr, 5. 5,-5,7 .gf'5,qf,,f4 ' ,f.i-gQgg,,-fm., ,fz.,A. . f A 44' ff ff'f4f '5c-if-'7l'fZ 'fc-r?5. 2 ef.55,G2f'ff12:.1'i!.m:,vrf1 fc :wi Hgfqf-ig- fr '2 ' 75,525 ff. .sfwf ff - 2-'L+ ,I . ' ee :f.2Zi2f2'EZ3f?aa.z 1151 1 lzfflfwfl '7'1'3 if5'., V f A 2 ff Q , Ml. 3 FIRST ROVV: Nault, Coues, E. McCarthy, Max, Hochschwender, Post, E. Baum, Zink. SECOND ROYV: Coach Krall, Holm, Lawson, Munro, Sullivan, Nid Sinthavanuchit, Skewes, E. VVilliams, Coach Leith. THIRD ROXT: A. Stephan, Kroos. Lazo. 2-6-2 Phillips Academy Pike School Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols Pingree School St. Paul's School Noble 8: Greenough Pingree School Pike School Phillips Andover Academy Lawrence Academy CDA OPP O 2 1 2 O O 2 O O 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 0 O O 1 . vu -,' ' 1- f '.-, ..: '.f-1' 1 ws -vs f-w..-' -.'.ts::A: -. -1f-'-::-- . .- 'f f.1 at f f '. 21' .2 1.-, l' ':. .i.'1'.':.t'ff b-fig?'l'5'u '1?:i5 :inf .'f'Zi'i sv'i'f'V'.'7'. . - '. ' - .w'- ' A -L ' ' 1 1 .':,'..- t ' .:. 'Q 0 .Y sjfx '-'N: 41fU W , ' . fi- V 4 - 1 -' if .9 -'l'lf.j'i, i .N ill 'i.1i:y,g:n-'5.3?ii'f'1. lil-:.'li:ti'l:f' ' 0 .- ' i ' 19 ci, 5 gf 'fTi'3f1:-'fflii ff,-.X 21,4 .-- - 1- '15 J, ,,--'-:-, 1252: -. 3- V- I .-4:3 ,,-1 .f. hzys,-.-Q-.-feng --2,1 Ml'g!3.,,,JY I. 1-Q ,W , .,- ., .A ,. 1 , . .x gy: 5..,.f,4,, . mtg,-..,,,. .Y , , K' . '.-'Ng' 1 - TQ 'fi ,,:'j.'.f,,y, t.,-' yn.: -1.1-,g-,v., ,az':-Qu1.-55,35 'j.x.tQ55 1: 1j,1Qx,.' Q ' it - '. '.f-'1'- ' . . :',-JP' al -ii - -i' N- 'WW'ix-'f'IS 'Ff!fiA-f-1ifthfi xl 'IS , 2 2 -9 ,- '-,fi f' H -' . ,' ' w 1.7 W --A-'N HAH ' '-'W-' -m' -1 -n A - ' ' 1 - fl , t,,, , ,. '-i...,..x I. J -W -,Lp ,yf-.,p.'., .,.5- ,, N a With only three returning varsity players from last year's team, this year's team had a lot of work cut out for it from the start. Many of the girls had never played together as a unit, and few had ever played varsity level hockey before the season. The team experimented with a link system of play, in which there were four forwards, two links, three halfbacks, a sweeper and a goalie. Through this system and Miss Clark's instruction, the squad developed into an aggresive defensive team, but it lacked the drive to score. In the first game against Georgetown, the team battled to a 1-1 tie, giving up its victory in the last minutes of the game. This pattern seemed to take root as the girls then lost to a powerful St. Georges team in their second game, 1-O, with only seconds left on the clock. A highpoint in the season was the tie agianst Phillips Andover, O-O, in overtime. Although the girls were unable to score, they were determined to prevent their opponents from scoring either. The season culminated in the 7-O victory over Cushing Academy in the last game. The team viewed this as a preview for next year's play, and the win gave the team a needed boost after coming up with defeat after defeat in scoreless games for G.D.A. . n X 1 i x x K ALL LETTER WINNERS FIRST ROW Duff Malloy tri captain Webb, tri-captain Moseley, tri-captain Baker, Kurtz, Roome SECOND ROW Coach Clark B Iones Blake I Stephan Tye, Lynch,Lee, Coffin, Perkins. Miss Clark stressed skillful stickwork as a necessity for playing truly competitive hockey, and the girls worked towards this goal throughout the season. Improvement was evident in the team's play at the end of the season as it began to learn to play together as a team and put the ball in the goal. The three returning players from last year were Pam Webb, captain and the team's fearless leader, co-captain Debbie Baker, an aggressive, determined player, and co-captain Alice Moseley, a superb goalie and this year's MVP. Moving up from the IV and third teams were Martha Blake at left inside, Kathy Coffin, who plaed virtually every position, Beth Iones, another versitile player, Pam Kurtz and Laura Roome as sweepers, Felicia Lynch, playing a link position, Iohanna Ste hen and julia Malloy at the wings, and Randy Tye at halfback. New to the C.D.A. scene, but not to field hockey, where Iulie Duff, Heather Perkins and Sally Lee. Three of the players, Pam Webb, Alice Mosely and lulia Malloy will be graduating in the spring. The team will surely miss them, but hopes are high for the success of next years team. 26 . . s 'V ae. ff-QR v'.'1W QA if .af S, , Q . s v twig 'H 'XM 5' A 4 A x 51' S4 Q . -N N ,U ,M-g,vJ.v ' 'TZL.:..w 5+ ' 1,L,a.z..1 4' 'Y' . -, gm ,TV- 'WWF . .3 4. ug, Musa as: -ww -mm fizzliazsa. ix Y .Aavaas-am ,,,,.,M3.3W... 'W?75z:fff - 9' . ?52 514139 ' f 'ffxwgi A .f V -Wffgkiu ' 4352-if '-iff '+3:+,g, , X S. 2 f 'lu . 1 -4 2'-01 ' kv 1':' ,. jjj rms s if.. 5 7 0 Y QS S W 2, , aim 3 RYQWE' v-. Q. W 65 '7i '-ii. ., 4 35:23 :5 f 5? 5. 43 Q A LQ , A , f -,, ,Q-. if 1 ' - . , , ' 1 15 Q, rv - V ' M' -4, . , N fi ,- , ' I-21: p :fi 'fi- J1' ff- ' ' CQ t if aj 3 5 s fini 1 f K gg? , ' I ' - 1 f, 0 65.11 f if '. 'Q wwe! 919 5 Q. H -D , A , 1 u, ., if ,.,:y-ag 4 ., MW -. 5 14:1 f Yi, , ,. 1 ' vii. , , 27 Q. ZKV 9 K X , q'q ,','.'-'f ,Cry ,, '. , ,I V I ,i,'fm'.f,,.,. . rf ' 1 - . '..L:,.'.4,..- W' A - -, '. '. 4 . Z.,,fg' 4 vulgar I.. ,.. IV FIELD HOCKEY: 2 - 8 - 1 FIRST ROW: Quinn, Su. Miller, Leary, Bushell, Hildreth, A. Van Etten. SECOND ROW: Coach Marsolais, I, Cool-4, Chisolm, H Mackay-Smith, Sterge, Allen, Rosenthal, K. Neville, C. McCarthy, Devine, E. Evans. THIRD FIELD HOCKEY: O-6-1 FIRST ROW: VVoolf, Stern, Pfeiffer, Mulherrin, Bradley, Graf. SECOND ROW: Ingram, Markos, Sheffert, Dexter, McLaughlin, Coach Gould. THIRD ROW: Bruce, Dane, Plante, Kelley, Hamilton. 28 , 6 if gm, S 5 1 bw E ggihill p A I , .4-R, si -T.: ,ffl -H... siB r2f?. -95 Q 49 'Q fall lx V 9541 ! 1 52, ai 'n r YQ! 'D I 'H S - O 1544 , Yr ,S 1 Ab '22 WINTER fe? 4 if ' 5 'Z f if V V Zf we .4 ,X W M ,, 'pyfkfffy , , fm ,, ,457 W f 4 fwfwylll 'my ' 1 4' f .uf fav? W ,If 4, 4 Zi gf If I ,,, 17 AJ, ,, 'Y , ff of 1 , vgfaqw, M 2 il 9, 9 iv, 5 V Viz, A J, Q3 Zap. ' 4 f 'YQ 5? 5 'f-9 N'-.4 .s ,. 1. F' . if E . W www 4' x' fr 4 M R... -si A 1 X 15.5 A7 ,- , I .au x 1 J1- r ,,- 'S' '-Yi? . , U, , ' -.. 'N.. W x I L1 A5..g,!nQ,t'W?' 'N - s A'- Egw ng 'AQ me-X ,ini i , If X 592' 'fy ,f ,QQ ' 3'i ww 1' A ,- f Q G Z . 2 .fgggf . ' Z' rg Achievements and SATS again?...Early De- cision letters...Did ya get in'?...Senior slump... can't wait til vacation...l've got sooo much work to do...VACATION!!!...we're back... what did ya do?...night practices...Mr. Evans doesn't meet classes?!!...SNOW...school can- celled! ALRIGI-lT!...marking period extended? ...lVIlDYEARS: Popey's damn exams ...long weekend...MORE SNOW...but the E 8: R man makes it...where's the rink'?...school cancelled ...no school...no school...position papers due... another all-nighter!...how much sleep did you get?...Charlie Brown...anothe'r cast party...En- ergy Day... Talent UD Show: Short People, Damones, Bouncing Bean Boot Boys, and lVl ...another paper...Absolutely NO Exten- sions!...ugh, another all nighter...no towels in the gym...no snow?...the FLU strikes!...take some aspirin and go back to the dorm...one more week till vacation...more tests?...you'll get over it...ya mean we don't get out at 12:00 on Friday?...We started the term off wellg let's finish it that way!...Basketball's off to the playoffsmah, vacation!..'.and only ten more weeks!!! 9 5 ' E! if 52 ...., y , if 'K V 4 4 ...N ' v .:.. - Q ,.. .4- Q 'c . Ag 5-4 , 4 .Y V at -'AIX .Q -, , - V, ......g.f,4jQ X X - . .- -'V' A. N' ' ,0- - 4... ....-- ' ' U 4,,,M-M -'If1,ilzz'2,v,. , , 4 J. C I ' ll alll! 5 i- L-2 WINTER SPUR TS fjff f'?1 ., ., ,M ,E gg i , Q 'f' 'WWE -'Q fx 'ff xxx N 1 f M1 s4M iw Q AL ffm V ull.: '..N-.NX . S if , 1, N X K N5 ,I nf ,MMA-' lim 1 f !f 2W' 'f4-'f'fflM WX X2 !Wfr' mx W N kv i X NF' ',f, Il-, 1 'T IR ,.Y' ','y'N ,4 iff' 0 H 'I - t'M,fsfPb lm Q iw mxw. I 7261? I , 5yf,'n.l.'hQf. JN Xgxfxxxkxgxgh l. '4 ff f M W f ff 'Ulf l'n':.u-N W f f7fff fl ,mmfUQ ,f,,f'1Iff.sl',!'11WX Xi:.2e'?95 X 1'L1fFiff' . , .fL4mf 'f1?f.ff:,,ffzf'.:a'1z-pwsf A 'um fm N w lf 14 A ,ydf If 7l J7 L-' ,4,a,rTT f' 'I--ry X Q 'A 'Af V ,Xl ' , f X ZW W1 I 'fi 3' uk f, -X9 MN? I EGM 1 X, I I I4 1 V, ,VU 1, I :Il ral ll 'us 'n xx X ut-xxx M xi WVR 4 Q M W W W Q M A X 1 ' ff V ,Z I H1 -lyjl ' '1 ,f ff' W M ,,Q, M pdf- 'g 1 : 'Q 1, Q 'mr M L f , f mf ,f, . M f lm' . V I .Him K I H7 ry f-fin, f :bfgf t- ,lx-H, nm ll 1 fy '. :Vx xl. Ill. H +f, .f-f-.. -'11 MM 1. :.gfI.w:..ff ,Q HW -A s'.:,J I-71.3 A. 'l.Q5f'v'1f' t i,fg pA ,n l'7'f' ,-,7, '4wj'm- ' , f? 7? R , :.11':'-'ft 4 , ' xx X vxirix 1 z n - ' 4 - 1-Z-v J Au- T-g , Nw., V - -Q h xxx.f.Vx ,- .j:L.1-:f'.4---43 :T -' LJ--' 'f- f 1, ,- I 'f,lE -f- 'g EE :L-7 .-1LT:,i52'- ,511?r-1.-V. QQX ' ,V ,4 534 U 03,1 Q X 0 - . X R Ax I ' N T f -. r, 'rg'-ig, 1 ' X X ' . Nxj ixgsbx .nf 1 ., Sa Qi ' Xl, . I . X, xx fflf x N - -N ,fafy , ky X L A., -L ,, I 1 . si- N -,. mfg. --3 L I- . 5 w- I- .- :,' ,-' N V. 2 - -' NJ . I X It Xnx '- .N , X Y X . 14'f',.',l. . , 'WFT . Ng 7,271 - - , N X m f wqiltskxx-'h-, .' . . -xpxi 5 -A T P. .'m C- - x .. 5 xmsqq' ' ' . CN -'SR53f+. 37 1' ,,. .'f.5yy'y-1.4 ff - . - , . 1 ' .V -.' , . . -. J mfr .ivy .' wifi ,-f-G15 ' r , 4 .,2i- ,, '- I ., H., f f'-g,:r up fgyf, 11,5 :fit yqfglff ry 21.7 ' gi . V ' ryffj ' 'ig s, Alf: it: :ff f , - b II., , 1, V In 13-3 :j!,..,.,,IIf .f,4,g1 F13 'E , A-v 6.1. ,rf-L., It ,as ALL LETTER WINNERS - FIRST ROW: Sappupo, Saunders, captain M. Miller, A. Helfron, E. Evans, SECOND RCW: Lee, Woodbury, Coach Clark. The womens volleyball team had an excellent second season this winter. It won its first six matches and lost its last two. Compared to the team's winless first season last year, this year's record indicates a significant improvement. This achievement may be attributed to many factors: the players' experience, the coach's experience, the sincere practices and the new setting techniques. The girls are confident that these factors will continue next year. The team commenced its season by travelling to Dana Hall and winning. In volleyball the teams play the best out of three games. CS.D.A. beat Dana Hall two games to one using its new setting method for the first time. Abby Woodbury and Kim Saunders were the setters for the team, and coach Clark felt that having one of these girls at the net at all times would be beneficial. Indeed, the two setters proved this strategy to be quite effective and consequently the team made use of it during the entire season. The next match was at home against Lawrence Academy... home because all home games are played at the Newbury Elementary School. 38 T Varsity Volleyball 6 - 2 - O Dana Hall Lawrence Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols Pingree Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols Pingree Lawrence Milton 63 of Sl 2 9-2 3 2 'JZ 2 1 O if. The opponents were good, but with the majority of last year's squad along with new member Liz Evans, G.D.A. won the match easily. Liz's serve is an accurate and powerful overhand, which is an extremely useful weapon. The next game was away at B-B S: N featuring the closest score all season. A nerve-wracking 14-14 game made everyone edgey, but Tina I-Ieffron managed to concentrate enough on her serve to end the final and deciding game 16-14, G.D.A. the victor. Tina is a senior whose skills will greatly be missed next season. The next match was away at Pingree. The conditions were far less than perfect, the floor was unslideable, the official was not very good, and the crowd was rude, but despite these hindrances, newcomer Sally Lee made tremendous use of her fantastic serving ability to serve 26 of G.D.A.'s 42 total points. Needless to say, the Governors won the match with thanks to Sal, who continued to play with the varsity for the rest of the season. The next match was home against B-B Sc N, G.D.A. beat them for the second time. Senior captain and MVP Meredith Miller had an excellent match this day. Meredith's serve is the most powerful on the entire team, her setting precise and her bump accurate. Our team will certainly feel incomplete next year without Meredith. -. V fm ,V A .1 gg, .... ff 1. 4 . . 4 Z . I J .. -2 ,. 124 ff' 1 A -: ': ' fir. '- ae, -..'. L f fs iff' .a 3 ,f i l Wu. 4. 39 . 1-..vai-B52-'T 1:23-'ff PYDQINW f ,mm-A-W 9,-,,.. , ' ' ,',:-.filig ,i,,,.,,,.-.,..M.M-.---f-ew-e' ..,.,.....,,,-M4w,-v,,...,,.,.M ,-,rw Af - ' ,,,,. wiv- 161135-'SEV -4' osunmmn ,,.,mv.,a,, -,aww V. ,V 5.75 K 'f'f2-T555 1 V .1-1 ,,,,,,,.ww--vw ' 5985 vfW1'sfwf,, , ., , . , ..,, f,,,,, ' 'f 19Wf?1Yfl?evg4.4W Y g :GQ t wk X . 'X ' '- ' t QF? ht? 1'. 'FfS5 ,g 5--Igxvsc g -, '.fe5? N ,tim-V.. V M. mv 'vu ..,.,,. ' A f 55 . :mg 4,4951 ,ff W4 : H '34 get it 32255 Biff? EL: if ' 3135: 20 lien i se ' .ji Q AI 'i i we Qi: 1- 2 A f .4 The next match was home against Pingree. G.D.A. beat them easily two games to zero. Lisa Sappupo, a junior, whose skills in all areas of volleyball are excellent, played exceptionally well against Pingree. Lisa's skills are probably the most well-rounded of all, a great advantage considering volleyball's rotation. The last two games accounted for G.D.A.'s two losses. Lawrence Academy defeated G.D.A. as did a superb Milton squad. Everyone, players, coach and spectators alike, is optimistic for an undefeated season next year. --my , f Ml.-A Q ,,..s,,, s - ig. ' ' Y5! if'5 ff, 4715 Mn: ,W ,,.. .y ' .Q 1. ,' x R at , 'Y-Luis 4. Q .,..-.- ...Q-f-w.-t.. ---mg-- q 0 , 4 It Q 40 fx- ' ,-64 I ,,. e I I W.-:xi-gi - .q-J'--rw '.,, -3' -.i.:. -' ', , - I 1 ' - ' I Ad g,I?:-lvu'1f', .. ,fxjf-'. .:ir-b-., i. :,'f - ', 1 -, I- ,' 1- g' A I , . - I 11,11 yah. pn- iflgji . W . , '. . 45 -.I I 1 ,f . , f ' 'lg-E 'fliff Liz - Zniz' H ,' rv 'T 'I .r ,, ' ,l , . 5 - ' , 4,1-ri .114 . .. x f ..,,, R- '- f. m. D .' ,'. 4 .C I , . , . , - L .hi -if-E Rv: A 'r 1 ,XF iff 1' , f ' , ' I' . FIRST ROW: Ingram, Post, Allen, Bushell, Kalhori. SECQND ROIN: Coach Marsolais, Sterge, Dexter, Coach Clark. IV. Volleyball 5 - 3 - O CDA OPP Third Vollevball 0 - 3 - O CDA OPP Dana Hall O Lawrence 2 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 1 2 Pike School 1 2 Pike School Pike School Pingree 2 1 Buckingham-Browne Sr Nichols 2 1 Lawrence 2 O Pingree 2 1 Milton 1 2 , ' rf W we A P 'J y I All FIRST ROW: Sheffert, Munro, Lazo, Comes. SECOND ROW: E. McCarthy, Spoerl, Rosenthal, Dane, Coach Marsolais. 41 ,V ,' nrxw, ,513 'yuh ' 2.-fi' -.,.a':i...f1 L61 1.'.:n'A ,V . , ,mf 1' 3.57,-ift'7 'g5f rf1'g 'A,:f qrs'.Jf,51fwf 'f 'fy ff. :J - - .. . , i N2 Q L K fi -r if www. 4 J. , Y' 4,1 gf.. ' 5:.f'f 9' sfc v5z7 '26gGf1'-1: , 'T' f-11 'ff ' ' -' .5 , '- ,, ' , M - . 5 fff fffi1a1 ii'5.-iwfifzdi ffwfiiffeg-ifs4' if W ifi S 2644 ' -Q 4 V ,z xy :ffm - 5 Flys- I., ,Ag VV, . I V fy ,f ,A ,, ,aj .x 1 . A9 ,. a..,...tl4., Azs. f . -fx, .. 4Q,.,s,4-4 lv W if 1 f it 1. if -.te-f . fs fe - 1 wwf r V za 41 -1. . if ww' 5 . ' vi- .wif z 1 -' ff ff- , f -we ii! ji. .4 ,. 45. pn 4 . 1 1-fwggg Q V fg wt , - ' -f 'Lim if w 11 . fy eq 1-TYR.: a li. is-Z-' . if-f.u. 'EIA V - ' A fi' Nfif 4? 43' ,fmt ' 33.'.df'Mil-,1tl45Z'.f.5 --?.w -iLf.5sJl3i1-,.,,i5xQv ' .ff -it., W 'HF r'l ':, Z ,J-S Tx' .ft 1 ,- 'l ri'fr,g+vrfnr.-ye. 'A ,Q fn' ' ff frm . ii? 17 11.1.-ul ft 'un '15,'f.'1' 2,'?-'fP'c14f25f'z' .Qf9.iiZ?ff?i'X?k24l ALL LETTEIQWINNERS - FIRST ROW: Blake, Purinton, Moseley, Milligan, Casey tmanagerl, Lynch, Tye, Su. Perry, Coach Gosselin, Fox lmanagerl. 6-6-0 G ,?, .ai DA, , 've f , 1 . rw yer: , wx ? fi 44 A F36 46 Je , gi 6 42 48 me 32 . Y diva 39 56 12 This year's girls basketball teams deserve a lot of credit. Starting from nothing but players with potential in November, Coach Cosselin and hard work from the girls produced fine basketball teams at both the varsity and junior varsity levels. Mention must be made of the terrific play of the junior varsity team. Having only two returning players, the team succeeded in ending the schedule with an 8 -3 record. When the season began, Coach Gosselin was quoted as saying that this was a building year for the varsity team. At this time neither he nor the team could have imagined that the girls would do as well as they did. Losing four starters from the season before, the team seemed to lack the experience of playing as a unit, but the girls had the desire to shape into a team which they could be proud to play for, and this they did. A long season seemed ahead when they were overpowered by a strong Exeter team in their first performance, but better times awaited them in the future. The highlight of the season, as was the case last year, was the St. Paul's game, but the outcome was different and in the favor of CDA. 42 I + we X 5 The team was behind by ten at the half and it knew it either had to make its move or accept another defeat to the Paulies. The team chose the former and went out to battle in the second half. With minutes remaining in the game Sue Perry tied the game 48-48, and seconds later the game was won with a basket by Randy Tye. This sort of play typified the team. The girls would play a rather unimpressive first half and then come back in the second half to win. The team was not one to give up, and each girl played her hardest until the last buzzer in spite of the score. The team suffered at the hands of snow and sickness but managed to improve to a 6-6 record from last year's 4-8 season. This record was accomplished through the efforts of the entire team including the coach. Hopes are high for next season. Although the team is losing three players, ability is plentiful in the Iunior Varsity Team, and the positions will be filled. Much of the team intends to attend a basketball camp at Exeter this summer to improve its play for the coming season. W UTY' . M' 5311 I K. Lv ' V - . . '- u ' '. 'xf ' -.1g.. 'f','wc-fre-rrgw A ' 1 . f ' - v -1-cffhil sefffls-,.' K Mika:-amiga: '-'E 7. fi lf? ' Wt R452 .qw .Si ST? .V .' '- Q-'. y,.,',q1gQ,, ., 426--g:.5.. v - 'L'0'1 ' f-355'- IW'-'U'?'i',c-yyaqfj-wyggr gray- .2,wy.ff1,1,t,- , . FIRST ROW: Foucher, Silin, Duff, Sullivan, Zinc. SECOND ROW: Casey lmanagerl, A. Vanlftten, Cremer, K. Russell, Coach Gosselin, Fox lmanagerl. J.V. Women's Basketball 8 - 3 - O CDA OPP Third Women's Basketball O - 7 - O CDA. OPP Exeter 15 Pike Lawrence 8 Brookwood Noble 8: Greenough 17 Shore Country Day Pingree 5 Pike Groton 6 Brookwood Middlesex 16 Fay Andover 19 Pingree Pingree 33 St. Paul's 10 Thayer 24 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 29 FIRST ROW: Davis, McLaughlin, Su. Miller, A. Stephan, Hamilton, Bradley. SECOND ROW Cc ich Witherspoon, E. Baum trnanagerl, Nault, E. Markos, Kelly, Graf, Mulherrin, K. Neville lmanagcrl 45 Iflaf .' W ' ' 75,4 .'a'.3fK:frf2w ', ' 11, ,' 1: 41,717 ,, -1. aww '-324 L.,4jg,,y,,'L',, , f fig, Eff . I Hg' I n .'-'ifffwf' '!1 w,5 f 'PT'! Iliff'-f9f,fffiif?z f'-'fihffn' 1 f-'Q :', 1' jf. if . , , . , , , sl: ffwfap1'w.f'ff- :ffw ' I wfwffew W1 -www If . 4,-6, ,ff if ,63fA'fm-5222.1gm,'g,Ifs,z'f1:QQ ':1 1, 'ag'-'n . ' - T , ' 1 ' . iff, 1 ,GLA 431, QW' 2? jf:-gf, ?1?fh'2 'rf 1111 f 2 'Qin ,433 2 ,J S g ,fa .-an 4, ,L ,QL .',',1.yzfz, ei, 325,31 ffiiiu -jfs? iw, J as 3, f 15.3157 , - J ff .yn 3, -:ggi 44, 31? xfqfii-S'L-'f35'i'fazf3'fR:1lf?f1.'5L fg ' SIIG 14' ' f'Psf ' f f fui' ' f ' - 'I' - ,I wi , f f.- - V' C, ff-' rw- ,W I E rw- 'I W mfg z EIN Lliwgvfqf E , ,sg ff -1, 44 'v A ,' .wp V 195 .I II1:m?L45a,?eQ,fm4aQ5EfMfYW.5E'52?', .ff zefli we LETTER WINNERS ITALICIZED - FIRST ROW: P. A. Graham, D. Minster, co-captain Neville, co-captain ,NI P. Gnzluznz, LI7ILISL1y,LII171,SECOND ROW: Coach Abusamra, Am. Forsat, D. Van Etten. M. Palais, Rosen, Sterrnan, Enteklzabz' Coach Radoccia. THIRD ROW: Sapuppo, Theriault, SC. Miller, R. WIzittf'r1, T, Atkinson, Devine 46 The 1978 Winter Track season may be described as a perplexing mixture of both disappointing and commendable elements. The team got off to a slow start with a generally poor performance against the Andover I.V. in early Ianuary. The record jumped to 3-2, however at a meet at Methuen I-l.S. late in the month. This meet reflected the team's potential which had been noted before Christmas vacation. The long month of February then proceeded to take its toll. There were no meets during most of the month due to four cancellations. The team's enthusiasm and discipline suffered. However, the approach of the lnterscholastics, the most important meet of the season, revitalized the squad. ln this meet Governor Dummer's finish as second of the eight teams competing was accomplished by a group which, although it had no superstar, performed with dedication and class as a cohesive whole. The field events were led by Bruce Lindsay in the shot and Derek Van Etten in the high jump. Doug Minster ran the hurdles, Andy Linn and Roger Whitten sparkled in the sprints, co-captain Rick Neville and captain-elect Scott Miller were consistent performers in the middle distance events, while co-captain and MVP Philip Graham and Matthew Palais formed the distance crew. Although it had been a long and difficult season, coaches Radoccia and Abusamra's track men finished it on a triumphant note, leaving a very strong 9-3 season record on the books. , 1 47 'Nw ,I 5 E ' B SK TBALL ALI. LETTERWINNERS - FIRST ROW: To. Dagres, tri-captain Fulton, tri-captain Suggs, tri-captian Norton, VVillard SECOND ROW: R. Evans fmanagerl, Thomas, Spears, R. Cornwall, Shea, Paladino lmanagerl, Coach Tindall. New England Class C Champions Independent School League Champions 19-1 The 1977-78 men's varsity basketball team had its best season in history, finishing without a loss in Class C play: The team had much individual talent, but the season was characterized bv contributions from every member. The offense was strong, but the defense which helped to key a fast break offense, was stronger. f-Ierzel ---., ' Fulton's numerous steals prevented shots, Ike Suggs' quickness and tenacity forced outside shots which produced rebounds for the awesome inside trio of Derek Spears, Rick Willard, and Timmy Norton. This trio dominated the boards the entire season, gathering in the ball to set the offense, led by powerful Tony Thomas' inside moves into motion. Although Tony scored the most points, the total offensive output was spread evenly among the remaining players and anyone could heat-up during a given game. The resulting balance was devastating to ISL foes. -18 New England Prep Scffool Cl MARKS 4 5 :N N- 4 62 4 V 30 69. 47 ' 45 5 6 Ng . 4 4 31 33 ' I 4 I-fa' 2 .2 14 hayerl S L League Champ1o ,'A: 'E f X YE , N- .af 76 H M25 V Zfa ff 1 Q 1 .65 WWW W Q-T'T '57 M if , ., fv-, ,gn ,g,,f, , 'W 1 ,,g :f' YM 'N 1 ,.z ,ifZ4L,., f-, Y 49 si ,va li, 5 2 A F vm .2 , if F 'ai -V,', , W 0 I 1 ,W 'ff 4 ,,n,,gitf. The season was filled with highlights. Among the brightest was winning the second annual Independent School Holiday Basketball Festival prior to Christmas. A Friday night victory over Milton set up the ISL showdown with Thayer. Few will ever forget the sparkling first-half performance of co-MVP Tony Thomas on his way to a 43 point game. Strong rebounding by co-MVP Derek Spears and solid defense by Coach's Trophy winner Herzel Fulton enabled the Governors to hold on for a 4 point victory. The Big Red then cruised easily through the New England Class C. Tournament, including a victorious rematch with Thayer in the finals. Despite the loss of five seniors, there is a multitude of talent returning to defend the two championships. ,.a ' ,M A,,,. , . , V' . .' ,U-V: -.-.5-,:'uc.-,'.','-',,.:g-1.'-V.-.Q .V-'t-f 1- -.',s.q,,, 4, hp. , g ,., Q ,A,,..w:,.,,. . mi.. ,W , . g..,.!h5a-f.-.!,t.i Ft' N-P-xi. Q X Al Y 'Y Q-N 1 A .. . ,i . 'f-.- .. .w-.F,.1.-.fe.-- V -on, '...,yr L W Q L , , p 1 j-ix 5:5 a n- :.,3 -,fy-1ft :':,'a,. 1 f-7531 , 'Jr 4 , 4 'A I fk5'i'.,g,,q.: '. --,n-r. .' - a -- ,.. - ' '-.HCM 1' ' - ' '. . ', 1. I 1 7 v' .f- , 's'il E 'il 1r,lJ.-'r' L24-..5'f V-M-.1 fi. .Vik 'mia' 'J ,rS7J'l ' 2' Nl, an ..1.r-Q.-4 av, m.,.,,1,-.....- e .1-H v-.1 '. . .. - e. . -'1 1 -Zi in-1.2-f,'W -ff 22 -SF lcv- 1YfJi'x' 'J ff W 'M-v E? - . 'ff ff i . 5 'f :. f'U.. :'t ?: ',j'r3k1 .'Y'1'i- rd' ' '-falg-'- x :'-ffl' -.'vi'1,lk -:ss ' 'VY '- 'Qf' ,1...':. 1 Q . '- - ' 'fm 1.-5'--AS? -.2-ev '-'rf,f.,.s.r'i?'f2--J? stEf:..-.:- -'W 21.4.-5 'f . ,:,-..-MQ Ab.-.f1.:i'i!'i'?'B?.ff?f.i :asia -. f --..' f t1,-r.-Nm''--5g..':.p-wi --:g ,' 1.119. 511 L+.-hatvw,-1:5 ,tiger iw:'.'351:f.zfaigrwi-'.'p:2'. - --'31 ' 1-M' V -e 84'-,ft-...Fi-fuE-4-.mv,ftis?1:fNs,...-sire:Sifivgisv-'Q-111.513, Q A.., Q:sxf:5Z1iif.E.4':. H ,r 1 in 5 mfg: FIRST ROW: Al Iones, Hatfield, Tr. Dagres, Perlowski, Garnett. SECOND ROW: Coach Leith, Nourizadeh, Callahan, A. Minster, Page, Winer fmanagerl. LV. Basketball 13 - 1 - O GDA Q Third Basketball 4 - 5 - O GDA OPP Groton 49 19 Groton School Lawrence 59 33 Shore C.D. School Noble 8: Greenough 55 27 Buckingham-Browne Sr Nichols Belmont Hill 48 39 Brooks School Rivers School 45 18 Belmont I-lill School St. Mark's School 48 31 Shore C.D. School Middlesex 38 20 Brooks School St. Sebastian's 49 39 Pike School Brooks School 66 65 Fay School Roxbury Latin 68 64 St. Paul's School 51 69 Milton 69 49 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 65 61 Tabor 64 43 FIRST ROW: Horton, Laventis, Booth, C. Atkinson, Hetler, Griffin. SECOND ROW: Coach Ufema, Menyhart, Carter, Shula, Barrett, Mahoney, D. Bowditch frnanagerl. 51 'f'?l f,Wf7t 7?-4'5f tZ'3gsf7 f'W'Y.' wt'1fjMfAf'W2Wf?g4l if'11'1wzfizeffgfgfy' vi- 'ff - - :aff L - .2 QQ , 6 iff ' 45'-2 5,-ggv r f fvgeg 2 31 gQqf,fQysg.4,'Jf. Q3,s'.gaf,,yQ,2,f:f gf.. .:,3v'? ,J ,, ,f 7- f f5'7'1'fl1-2.3 Eifftfiffrz1M ifcv3fv'ffaf ' ' -V Q 'mmf wa ag . W 45 - J f-- - . ,f,v .Y ,-If v sie gf ' ' ' . , Q 'V 1 V. 0,4 '. .f,-, ff . ...ffm r .9391-I f. ww, It . r . A ,inf ,. , .J s,.A f. 1 , ,Q . , 5 - . f' ,. 4, , t.. 'a'gg ,.f, .K 4' ,, .gif -, ' ,, ,avr V X A ' 4: -wi rf.i5,?F'.:fSw'q11,'fi.apgJ,f,a,i4 gf J fi ff .' 'flak' Www 5 N If fax ,-'Fic m -, 1 X-., Z'gr.1 f rf , , mf ,- ,ff A f- 'ii l'.f1'f5514,2'5'h?.-fif-i3'1e'Q'2qfJ.'?' 'WX 54lHlQM2:':i?Aa:5 2277 if Qfii , I ,,,l,,,3r,ag ..'n'.L,z,f',+'3,-fi 1 1 . 'Lf-'+.. 1 fgffmir. ??f.ff:Zf: Q2 ,Z I .I X, 'F' flu? H ALI, LETTERMEN - FIRST ROYV: Lothrop, Anderson, tri-captain Coodhart, tri-captain Webster, tri-captain Clark lenktm Wise. SECOND ROVV: Coach Beckett, Whitneyf, St. Perry, Sudduth, P. Morais, B. Cavanagh Queen D Smith Ban-on Schwartz, Pratt, Ohadia tmanagerb, Coach Harrington. 5 'Q Q 52 s.. 1- ' gg ix i :G xl! G I JY' 'sk F2 ul , it'Q..- R' , V iii! E. ?3s The 1977-1978 varsity hockey team suffered through a disappointing 6-12-O season. Coaches Harrington and Beckett greeted a team filled with high hopes and expecta- tions based upon a strong defense anchored by High - School All - Americans Iohn Webster and Brad Clark and a solid netminder in Dave Lothrop. These high hopes were quickly dashed by three losses in the first week of season. K, ee ' 2 5 'V A if Lawrence 1 4 St. Geor l' . 4 9 un . u ' 1 lui' . a W 3 WW,,4 ,-,..m ,CW 1 5 4 'ckH.S. 3 1 ' ,Q Cigoton ff'-Q. , 4 , f 4 1 M ,r Q Middlesex Af- 2 3 mf? 'W St. Sebastian's 2 X -6-N 1 U iv ' Brooks 4 O G St. Mark's 1 4 - St. George's 2 3 i n B-B sf N 1 9 '.'V ' fgjrgpfl St. Pauls O 8 1 'le' ,--A , Middlesex 4 1 ,ff y,. ' Groton 3 4 ' St. lVIark's 4 6 Brooks 3 4 X ' 53 A victory over Newburyport High School just before vacation gave a preview of the streak of fine play which was to follow. Highlights of this streak included Peter Ienkin's hat trick versus Groton and great hustle by winger Brad Cavanagh. These victories and near losses are particularly impressive when one realizes that the team missed nearly half of its practices during this period because of snow. Especially gratifying was the impressive three goal outburst during the second period of the first Brooks game, probably the finest period ever played by a Governor Dummer hockey team Unfortunately as the month of Ianuary wore on,a lack of scoring power hurt the squad, many disheartening losses ensued. Bright spots included outstanding penalty - killing by senior forwards Scott Anderson and Paul Cook along with solid defensive play by Brad Clark. Then came the Blizzard of '78 which covered Frost Rink for nearly a week. The team bounced back from the lay-off by giving Coach Harrington a 4-1 victory over Middlesex as a birthday present. Unfortunately, injuries began to seriously deplete the forward ranks as Steve Queen was lost with a broken leg, to be followed by Carl Schwartz against Groton. Three disappointing losses closed the season despite some out- standing play by juniors Dave Smith, Steve Perry, and Brad Cavanagh. There were bright spots to emerge, however. Defensemen Webster and Clark along with goaltender Lothrop were unanimously chosen to the All - League team. For senior tri-captain Iohn Webster, a four - year letter - winner, it was his third year to be so honored, he was awarded the MVP for the second consecutive year. He now holds nearly every individual hockey record at Cwoverner Dummer. Brad Clark and Scott Anderson were awarded Coach's Trophies for their consistant hustle and outstanding attitude which they displayed throughout the season. ui ,'x ' 54 'IUFEXWXF-Fti5fP'ti45B5f2kn PZRYQFZ1 'GS'- v te uv: v fr 1' 'W- AW I lx 3. Niki: 1 A te B . : t:,!:.,i.' .ahwj ,'1,IflY:?j:,,:-, 3,1-,j A q.'.,..4-Ph xx-1 , -z Q 1 , - -H A . ' 5 A ' :fin L .ii Jubjigrlgs 3 ,., r f it I- ' Q-HQ 'ri-i rf..-:lam-1:-+e 'ff'f 4. fn' . .- :mms H . . '- . wma ' 1' 5 if mfs' -Q.-0 ld- .. :fr f'f'5.',: flf:-.f.'ff17i'fEtrseffmff-'f ef. f 'M fr 'il f. :I ir.: g, .. .,:.1..cvi-V.. gm..1.gt-95..,,,,:2 .-if, -,fha - I. M -. . A 'Qs N .-I x Mx.. Mfg.. .. , . .. .- . I . 5 V9 ,'f:' MM ,gQ2,Q,Yflv'.:2.X'i-,':fQ5A:x2:5S I Zigi: .M GF i Q ,I 9 :L 1. 42, ' V 3. gg ? W, .I 3 - 4..l ' 1. ': 'VAL' 1.4 L' Z-.de 9, -- Y ' 'X : -f ' 1 .3 A .r :'x' -N 'Q .' Vi' ?..f-1, 3.3 y Y H , L 53 -14. -.,- 4 Lf xgykef .. I Ar .2 A V I 'L -1 -3 -- . I Q H x - iw' 'fl 't ' ti : - 1' . ff:g'Q'1r'i9a'fl'M'!d4h'21'lFQQ' wil-fff1:?mrf .tw 13:1 .I 1 . Java I fwfzl. xf.fwrf:I.:.ff..f.s3c.m:fz:4L-.-f. .fe VIP 7 ' . 4 5'TVf7 '7 ' I 3F'7 ?f.-75'-'T9 TSW ...Inf 572' ' i I 'Ti sw.-as ..S?ul' ...'- J.. rise HI iii: NIV''3'.'7..1-'.f -flif I 't Wiiihw? 5 '? E,+,..5z... Q.. NLR! FIRST ROW: Starr, Weldon, Beattie, Damman, Ogden. SECOND ROW: Kaknes, T. Rourke, Monaghan, McKelvy, S. Metzger, Coach Mechem, Higgins. THIRD ROW: Manwaring, Matthews, Moheban, I.. Whitten, Schipani, Humphries, Iudson. l.V.Hockey 9 - 3 - O GDA OPP Third Hockey 1 - 7 - 1 GDA OPP Lawrence 3 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 3 St. George's 3 Brookwood 4 Groton 2 Brooks O St. Sebastian's 5 Buckingham-Browne Sn Nichols 1 Brooks 3 Pike O Middlesex 2 Shore Country Day 1 B-B 8: N 2 Middlesex Country Day 1 St. Paul's 3 Groton 2 Middlesex 2 Brooks O MIT FrfIV 2 Andover Irs. 5 Brooks Z FIRST ROW: I. Montealegre, Bailly, Moore, B. Rourke, Gardner. SECOND ROVV: Reilly, M. Morais, E. Wicander, H. Woodworth, Brown, Adell, Coach Fyrberg. THIRD ROW: Morissey, Aranosian,McGhec, Arguello, Pendleton. S,fV'ffJ1?If3l5'fi'fif,51?ll 5, 52' h' 'Lf f 1 2 f QQ..-3,', W, f . - -, f . ,,,-h, x V, , . 7 ,.,,L-, ,1,,,',,,,. V ,V :,3o,,, ,,4 I. f?5fQ'4'.f',, 6:2 , K ',e'. 'fCv ff3 fl l ! 'HT?7? :viii'vliiili-- f,2115557 f' . '- 1' ' ' .' Li' fr' all - - gg: :,,,,,,,- ,,.. . , ,V , , ,-ii Y., 4 ,,,. .,,..,1, , ,, - ,' .tw li- -- L f ' '45 ' V 2-:nr f,v,f, s '-A, S, I ' L' iifzr. zyfi' 4, , ,E li-2? R 5f 'zl'21 -QW ?9gZw f'f.42zm 5514, -'fiif Z-,iii :f',3.1fi.g, fy A W' '- ' 6 '. ' ni if . 4 ' , Li, ,Lag 'g'1'g,fie,2E? ip -ii:-1 .' 'LZ-1, fx, 1:-wsimerfftQfiam 'f '1 4 ' V 3 - L 'M- fw1a'ffffffw'2' Q. . -2fieifzfyzyjifihf1w4.,f?A1NmQg'f5,7fgY1 F, PM . .iff 591,-5v:.,,,piQfQ, ,ijggi-C,,',f4,l 552, tgffs, .'5,,zf, ,.Lfr:v4si,f:4faxi2t' iu,i'..':1l.f.+f2. , 5. J . Ji' W :-.'- '11 - . lm an Q , - F, 2- ' F ,gba ,.,, gc., .. '. 1 , ,P , ,141 ' ' wj,V ,VX w QW-1 .- if fyfff ff r 4v1f,',.f, . , 4- ' ,5 I 710 L ' Q' mfg, ,fff fi, r f 'fig M' fx A, 611 1W,w:'3't.fv fx- C . .. f ALL LETTERWINNERS - FIRST ROW: S. Mason, Cawley, captain Bendetson, Dirslane Ahari. SECOND ROW: Coach Mulligan, Kastan, Rooney, Cushman, Sizer, Stafford, Coach Evans. THIRD ROVV: Bennet, Drulcker, Callan, Bigelow, l'X'alsh Mahler lmanagerl. will Lz.vw ff'tma4' ankixamuhw 30 Milton Academy 15 49 Northfield-Mt. Hermon 13 48 Phillips Exeter 25 32 56 Dedication is perhaps the most essential attribute of a good wrestler. Starvation diets, running after practice, early morning weigh-ins, and pre-match nervousness are eviden- ce ofthe sacrifices made by members of the wrestling team. A big addition to this year's wrestling team was the arrival of another wrestling coach, Mr. Mulligan. A former New England Wrestling Champion as well as co-captain of the 1971 G.D.A. squad, he taught the team some new moves and some improvements and variations on others. Mr. Mulligan's help was greatly appreciated by Mr. Evans and all ofthe wrestlers. Although expectations for this year's team were not very high because ofa shortage of experience, the wrestlers gave an impressive showing at the Christmas Tournament. Second place medals were won by Dave Drukker in the 145 pound class and Tom Bigelow in the 152 pound bracketp Captain Andy Bendetson won the 133 pound class. 57 ll! a, 124,44 , 2 w Y , Af f40:f,?Qi1' ' 3' ' 5' 4374 J 9,31 ' f' f ' Wx ,, ff, Q A uh X V21 ff The dual-meet season record was a respectable 4-6, surprising even Mr. Evans. The season started auspiciously with a win over Belmont Hill. Following a loss to Phillips Andover, the team edged Thayer 34-33, featuring a demonstration of Mr. Evans' formidable knowledge of the rules in assuring the victory with his successful arguing of a technicality. After two wins in a tri-meet with B-B 8: N and Holderness, the going got tougher with the team losing some close matches to some very strong teams. Due to many cases of the flu and injuries, notably to MVP Andy Bendetson, who had an undefeated season until his shoulder injury, the Class A tournament was a disaster. Chris Stafford's fourth place was the best the team could muster. Andy Bendetson compiled a trememdous record and will be sorely missed by next year's team. Consistently strong performances were turned in by Chris Stafford and co-captains elect Stu Cawley and Tom Bigelow. Special thanks must be given to first- year letterman Scott Mason, Amir Ahari, Adam Kastan, lack Rooney, Bray Walsh, Steve Wall, Dave Callan, Ieff Bennett, Mauricio Daher, and Russ Cushman tby ascending weight classesl, many of whom had never done any wrestling prior to this year. Best of luck to Mr. Evans, Mr. Mulligan, and all of next year's team! 58 - - f'!1 1 f F '- a t 'f'-'fiwamrwvfxtwiaeiw ' 1' - ww? x 1 1' F95 3 M -tiffifif 'A ' .. . .. . 1'1J,1.s gl. 'I . 'x , 5 I' ,, -' i.',1-. ..'-Hi-'l'J'1 'v '-2' 2 aiif' R. .!5..' ff L 1 . gtg 'ff ml wi' ff35'?'!2 -Zb S1Rf f1 ,Sv -'i iT'1:5Y'-i i 7'f1f3.l tl'f'E 9T' lil dw? ffl ..f.. ,'f-',1-i',l,5 ,T-1 1 a -1' . -3 - ' -- W- Fu 1 ., , ,, ,, J. 1.4. .is -, ,lp , . v N. Q., 5 . wi' gfalwli-gfislli' -lf gi A , .1 is f ,tif '9 . i,.'i.p?-- :fi 4 - ii l' f' l'i- f :yy f..3if:-Aff e- .1 1. 5 5133-4 Jw ,g--,,z',9 5'-'-1 W- Q z'ErJg1i:.M' 'Q'f'llfL'C,l1C: -.iv.ff.fE.f..i.v.. l'is9.1.2-'L5v4E'2f-.,. C126 6 '. ,fl wg., nga ,a 'tiff ' 75 ' F'7 'h ',f+ ,T'5'TJ!.4-4: TV' 5 Z '5' 'I r I 'K' 'I 6 H Q-N ,192 1. Y AQ I 14?l'QfL.tl'a ZZ'g'lT if 'xlllfllf E' 4 X i 1 I Alu: Ll FIRST ROW: Parigian, Marvin, Tallman, O'Dell, Al. Forsat. Second Row, Coach Mulligan, Robertson, Kane, Leathem, Ev. Jones, Martin. THIRD ROVV: A. Mason, Lennon, S. Wall, lerome, QWNNAW 5 9 Sylvia, Tomlinson. l.V.Wrestling 3-5-1 CDA Q2 Belmont Hill 33 27 Phillips Andover 37 15 Thayer 6 6 Cushing Academy 30 38 Brooks School 21 13 St. Paul's School 10 16 Fessenden School tthirdsl 15 56 Mt. Hermon 16 6 Exeter 15 40 VII X 1 il fux'vf23r11'!u5 wfzfi 1 tg gxfzfff 'M f 45.5 iii: ff f,fr1f?ml12fE?sz K T56 '7 in .0 f W, . , W 'Z ,wg ,v'-'J-'fi ,,-' 2 L 'aff' muff Q,',,-elif SM' , V1 . 'ff f Ji- we 5021 -, 'S' :ff -'T' ' ' w Aff fi -'- U . Z - , ta f l',w',gff ,4 I .' uf I rv ' C. BWV. VARSITY LETTERWINNERS ITALICIZED - FIRST ROW Tamposz I Miller L Miller captain Latlmm captain S Putmmzm Smvrmzn, Morse. SECOND ROW: Coach Clagett, C Putnam Frost Segll Welch Kennedx Rxan Woolf Farlex Cooke Rossignol, Bartlett, C. Bougas, C. Putnam, Coach White THIRD ROW Fitch Critics Pouer Brine LeN'la1tre lf 3 ' , , W I V . , Q ' L l . .,,. ., . -2, , . V- , I -i , X V , ,A x if , Varsity Cross Country Skiing O - ISSA Championship Middlesex ffl? Groton School 7 .. ' ' - Q 3-' .gi C o n c o rd Ac a dem ff , ff Lawrence CBoy5 l N A ISSA champt ' jfagt Concord I. 1 1 .bliz .4 I 'A 1 I 'Z Omffrfffig ' 0 5 'Mt hi' f C -f i4f'?ZZ:Q ':-i, ' ff WA ' nshms Ix41dQLtg3' j L .ff i cms ' moi AA Academy V 'f iffasit' ,V ,, . . V 5 '43 ffsw am lOnShl ' ' ' ,l ,, P K Concord Academy M, -XV! 1 W S Q, - YQ th of 8 2.4 15 43 13 43 26 33 Z4 7th of 8 20 16 ti 4th of 7 23 14 sf ' will C' 26 of 6 S3 1 sf The winter of '78 gave the cross-country ski team some of the ost beautiful snow ever. However, it snowed out two meets at ie same time. As in previous years, the results were sappointing when compared to the team's expectations. This ear involved rigorous training for the skiers, who became :customed to practices of six to eight miles long by the end of the iason. Other variations of the training schedule included bike ices to Plum Island, sprints on the hills, and the annual :onehenge race. Team spirit was high during practices, although 'oaning could be heard as Mr. White and Mr. Clagett wnounced daily workouts. Many people may have noticed the .D.A. Ski posters hanging in all of the buildings, and the skiers Jpreciated the few loyal fans who skied, snowshoed, or sledded Jer to the golf course to cheer them on. The newly-formed girls' am competed alongside the boys against archrival Middlesex, 4 well as Concord or Lawrence. The high point of the season ight have been the l.S.S.A. meet at Groton when the boys did at come in last and the girls were only three points behind the awrence girls. Overheard during the season: Boogie! Captain and MVP Kit Latham, dauntless, except hen it came to the flu, and who also kept the team's spirit up. The girls can make things for a ski team bake sale, and You ta girl beat you? Steve Tamposi. I lthink we ought to klister and feather Tamposi. Emily 'oo f. I think we should do a few more laps. Captain and MVP irah Putnam who, following the Groton's coach's directions in a ce, got lost. Well, my sister and I were playing soccer ..., and You see, I epped in a pothole... lohanna Stephen, who managed to sprain fr ankle twice during the course of the season. 'Do you see that conifer on the other side of the field? Coach 'hiteg who kept the team on its toes. The team looks forward to next year and the return of the itire team, excluding senior Kit Latham. They will be led by v-captains lim Miller and Sarah Putnam. 8 f SPRING X X K N58 X X f fx x X rf , , , XXX 1 h hx X X 62 X Spring f?!...nice tan...rain...serious...sliding... rain...cold...rain...lax...classes...bummer... Scorpio...Varsity Club school meetingmtrack meets...college notification day...Where ya going?...baseballmfrisbee in the quad...Invita- tional Weekend...position papers next week?... oh no!...a one-night wonder...nice days... classes outsidemrelandscaping Ingham Cliamesl Bowl...the French Building going up fast... juniors take Achievementsmclasses...serious... cases of summer fever...PAP's...only one more English paper...you mean we should study to finals?...two weeks...Senior Pranks: backward library, rowboat on the roof, caged truck, goldfish punch...one wee-k...Field Day...Finals fgulp!D...Alumni games...comrnencement...the mad dash, M flattened...lt's over!!! -8333 ffl eff f A A -1 . ,J-y Y. ffvfwa 7' f ' 1' 1 63 in 'hh INVITATION AL 'QEP c 'l.! 'Qrf We . X 4 ' 4 PM Afix, 5325, zalfff iii? NIJ! ?:5i1l2if'fZgff 941 f'x:, ., H , Q ' , 'V I 'fp wa 0 ' 9 . H . -,,, .. , . 3 af - wg 1 Q y Q, , Y 1 , Y AW aww umm R4-ff ls..... Lf H if in .m 57 '3 nA N.. f one A 'po 'WX oo ow O8 000 O 0 3,30 . Q 0 000338 5 Je l x 523 SW 0 05 o 00 'vu 0 00 0 0 000 V S Q0 Q0 d gw d. SPRING SPOR TS r,' -...-.x. - .i:.x. -' Yrl 2 ' Lv,-.'.-:A..,'.. , -IA. 'L 5 HOWDYVIT1 A SHDTPVT XX 5 - . ' , - , 1, 4, : 1. . A -. . x .' 2 A . - , - 1 A . . I , l 0 ,., -. . t - - N , I K .4 -.uf ' ' ' ' L 5 ' ' - ' . . . f '. lt x, :XXX a I 1 L , E I 1 -x., ' b Q.. 53. ' yi h - , A . Q. V , V QKIN, ,V X 1 i, xi.. ' ' Y-f'-'ar . :--REQ ..- - - . , .1 ' - - ,1.m4,I:.gN',- v. I X- -41.1,-. L.. A V . A 'ff',:':tv. J. , -' 'xr-rc, , V . .- 1..,. -- xxgglrij 'diff 'EY 'I' we ,ln VFW' --I1 Y , e 1 5 1 5 f'!Ef',gN4J, -JA 1' T 1 f 1 ful r ,sat 1 ,,:.. - 'fu l ,1:': . - jg: ,ri ilgtll. JL ,.,,,d'-,'-H.4l,.s ' ' Q' inn '-,' 1. , A 1- ' . , . , , ' li? -, ?.k3 - . '. fl 'W' -117.- '--..' '- .:f4? -'v'f'i'i' :J-!.'...f.'llf-J'-'i'-1 i' ' -' .V rl' '1':.- . ' ' ' . 4 5 ' ' -p ,' - ' W 2.1.11- .un-.. .,--5-v f'-.e,-'.-cf, -' f., --: - .1 , .. ', V ' :1 , 4:-'Q , , 5-'.'g1f,f11w' ,uzsggaf-..1..-issg,:1.2e::,f..wf'ze5f1iiMr.a-gf.-1 -.,' '- -. ' . . . . r ' L J. .1 . ' Q If .. T171 ',.'51 '2l:f 'ffl 'tai 'NAW44 lf'-if -' 1. '- U ' - rg 1, ...fm A '-fa' ff' , I wi, 'iff '. .-2,-.9 lf-7753 1, -. -zip. ' ' .1 ' ' , ' - ... g-1' izflhgi. ,WE 'fy ,f.,-4' 15' ,,,', .wi - -. - ' O 'Q'h1,', .f,2fgi1izj1g'.'p , :I jjf,,j4 ', , ' ' 'V , ' I. ' - J ' . ,ff --, on ,Ty ,, - ,R-1h3'vf ...'., in V '- 7 ii wf2f :.sf 'fff f :a 'fP.!?1i,lf6' :S4?'fii- -' -. fl. . v. .- I ' f l H y I 5 f e ALL LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: lenkins, P. Cook, Coodhart, B. Bowditch. co-captain Higgins, co-captain Ostheimer Pope, Suggs, Spears, Schwartz. SECOND ROW: Coach Evans, Lothrop, A. VVoodworth, VVilliams. Stephenson. Sizer Driscoll, Garnett, Coach Anderson. THIRD ROW: Taylor lmanagerl. Pendelton. Stafford, T. Rourke. D. Bowditch Lindsay, Hey, F. Wise, Marvin, Ev. lones. ,a-uv. as f 3' was-.ia 'L 2 - wpen- , -f ,. M W' i ' . .fn . sqm fd.. A . W , ,. like? ' 1 ' X 4-ik' . . -w- 68 -- .1 , 1 , , .. - - ' 's , nip 1, . , V Q ,.A,, The 1978 varsity lacrosse team opened the season with four quick victories, including a 21 -2 romp over Rivers. An Unexplained slump ensued. Having trouble handling passes and picking up ground balls, the Governors dropped games to Exeter and St. Mark's, two games which they feel should have never have been lost. The team was perhaps lacking depth and balance at the midfield position. In an attempt to restore balance Ike Suggs was moved from first to second midfield, a change which helped considerably. Ike supplied the leadership, experience, and scoring that the second group needed, while the starting trio still had veterans Iim Goodhart and Paul Cook. The team quickly got back to its winning ways with another four game winning splurge. Highlights included a seven goal performance by high-scoring Peter Jenkins versus Winchester and the winning tally against a strong Pinkerton squad by Ike Suggs with only two minutes remaning. A strong Andover team provided a big challenge in the next contest. After playing even for three quarters, fatique set in and the visitors exploded in the final twelve minutes to take a 12-7 victory. The Governors bounced back to win three of its final four games, including an exciting overtime victory versus the alumni, to close the season with an 11-4 record. Sophomore goalie Carl Schwartz played consistently well throughout the season, and he can be credited for keeping the Governors in many ball games with his brilliant saves. All-American attackman Tad Higgins was also key with his deft passing, giving him many assists, many of which were to Peter Jenkins who broke several school scoring records. Congratulations to the entire team for their maintain- ing the Governor Dummer tradition of winning lacrosse 69 ,V ,V .-, ,ff f1f3',?W'y32f- , ? 'Wfv4sWZX'4'2 tim' QA? ,VV, .4 WMM Q Q A-it-fx 1. wa: xt '70 .-X of 1 , ,A cv- 2+ 5 fm-, -ww,-.-,-f,1-.'-,- 1.-... 1 . 121 .1 E an e:P:i1.H31.fLtFa'.fA' f'Qga.,lL- ' -if 4 1 xi, ,tfl .,, ' 1:'.,.' -E, ff, xg' Nix - 1, 1-1: A f 1'i.!1N'.? ffv,4. N'4!.' , ' me qw?r'.fC 'T't ' I ' ff 11- K M 1 v v - .' lx' .'L rxrffff- --.-H17 ul, tffw- fl dt.: .Ti .11 ,. ' - his ' 25.51.-A3 ' ,A ,Q Q 'Q 'if 'lfAr1 4 It ,. .-.z,,.-- -1,11-'-.--,,. ..,.'zii'?.- -I .41 v.?,'jg11-.-' 11 .731 I-..1:g.,fa.s.A.sJf ' '-1.3:-15 35,51-1g ',,,t, 1, 5' 2 , .3 , 1 , 1 1 qw.-:1.r,.?.':':.p'f-,-gmrgf'-Qf.u':Q11kcst,,t'g,,s.1fh2-i',-f..:3::t, 35453112-. I5 . '?3i,JFJ 5'-V 'f A 11 -Er XY' 1 l 4, '- 1 11, ,lg 511,-11 ,.,.1,11:wg5g'F:,?jx-1-4 3,',i5.-. if :,55.,L:: pgs gtg- 1 ya .sv J, 'f 1 me 11 if L 1, By U. rf ' , ftp! 9 'i.-- v .- ',gfL,-'S fr, ' A--' -.-.-2 me ffl ,W .,.' 1 -1-Pg ig,f.jgritiaLfirefffffftfatf' lst' Hifi? -it .- few 'S' . f W, 1 ' I-14.-:give ',.t--.A ' 5- -X-tiki. .vw-Af -.,'.1:w' ,I-re ..Tfw.f-s:1,,1'f:-'T Z 42 , - ' J, t. ' . . ,U ,, 1 ,. mu , ,, , 1 f tiff '- ef1af:?'1s'iZ'tf'..sliif't?'elffcL1.tfaft ' 'Qi ' L 1 t 1 . 2 1 4 1. . ,,. , - X 1 5 'M Nttt Www .wiq-12t.1w51.1mmf 'U FIRST ROW: Thomas, Bailly, Benson, H. Woodworth, Pratt, Morse, Horton, B. Rourke, Sudduth, Humpheries. SECOND ROW: Er. Iones tmanagerl, McCune, Kawamura, Schipani, Manwaring, M. Palais, P. Cavanagh, Fitch, R. Whitten, Creany, D Van Etten, Brine, C. Bougas. THIRD ROW: Al. Forsat, Laventis, Cooke, I. White, L. Whitten, Swartz, D. Iones, Bigelow, Hall Segil, Whitney, LeMaitre, Brown, Parigian. l.V. Lacrosse 7 - 1 CDA OPP Rivers Country Day Phillips Exeter St. Mark's School . Winchester High School Lawrence Academy Pinkerton Academy Noble 8: Greenough Tabor Academy Third Lacrosse 5 - 1 Phillips Andover Phillips Exeter Pike School Phillips Exeter Phillips Andover Fessenden School 8 o 2 4 7 3 3 2 6 4 5 1 6 2 7 2 CDA Q13 5 o 14 o 11 2 fs 2 1 2 6 2 F ...fu-. 'Q ms -4-Zvi -l,-f::fff:'1z2 ww.-f-f'f 'z vf'L'-' A-.',.1' L fy .,f,'.l. .22a7 'ff'1fa1aJ,ilc1'i2'74.fi?gf+'51 ,Q 'M - ww -f .X '-Q ' 4 1.f. f-'f 'wv 'rf.Q.1 avg! c . rn ,ll . r 1 lf I' V V ,-.v , f f f f 1. as 1 A, 1 M I 4:1 -dial, , Z :i j V gi , J .25 u .. 1:69 ff? I, Qfif L ' f 1 EX .- 1 :a2'?Tf 1 lf,-, j,1',z' 1, . 5:51 Ww,.',:2L ff ffafndrw, '4 ALL LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: Cushman, co-captain Feith, Gwynne. SECOND ROW: Coach Harlow, Harrison, A, Iones. '---u-...,,. -.xi V 5 . f , f,. 1, Rwers c.D. School V Y St. Marlds School -9' ' St. Pauls School ' ' 4 Milton Academy Broolcs School --Belamo fl' 13 5 14 4 6 6 13 5 11 7 3 15 The 1978 varsity tennis team was a highly skilled, well-rounded, enthusiastic squad with a superb record to show for its attributes. The team played according to Coach Harlow's wishes: do not look too far ahead, play one match at a time. This advice proved to be valuable as the team was never over-confident, although they did exude a sort of sureness which was a helpful attitude. Coach Harlow emphasized the need for tough practices which paid off throughout the season. Mr, Harlow was also the basis for unification and this concept, aided by co-captain Peter Feith, provided the necessary spirit to carry the squad through some tough matches. Evidence of this spirit was particularly evident at Rivers where the score following the singles matches was quite close. The team gathered and the unity felt by all was the advantage which gave the Governors an easy victory in the doubles. f 4. -.- 1 s. R. XZ tx 4-. No single individual dominated the team, and each player exerted 10092: effort at each match. Senior Greg Rose played the number one position, and--as shown by his winning record--he could compete with anyone in the league. Whenever co-captain and MVP Peter Feith stepped on the court, the team was sure he would leave with nothing less than a win. junior Russ Cushman, probably the team's hardest hitter, played the difficult number three position and his long reach proved to be too much for most of his competitiors. Drew Iones and Dean Harrison shared the fourth and fifth positions. Dean had one of the squad's best records and could beat just about anyone at either position. Drew demonstra- ted the team's best finesse with his professional type strokes. For most of the season Drew did not play doubles, but he provided invaluable support and enthusiasm. Rounding out the team's singles players was Geoff Gwynne who gave the team depth that other schools simply did not have. Although number seven Ieff Hatfield never competed in the singles, he supplied solid doubles play in paring with Russ Cushman at the number two slot. The number one doubles team of Rose and Peith were undefeated and could unquestionably be considered the best doubles duo in the league. The third doubles pair of Harrison and Gwynne again provided the Governors with great depth, suffering only one league loss through the course of the season. Co-catain Ray Casey's season was stunted by an early eye injury from which he never truly recovered. But he supported the team with his spirit and contributed his wealth of knowledge of the game to other team members. 1978 was a most successful season, in spite of the loss to Belmont Hill, and was enjoyed by all. Best wishes to next year's team! , . ff' 1 G l B , Q .:1' 7if 'fJ - uf 1 ' vm if e. lp If :K a l i n 'L if e ' re 1f i 1 , , I . 3, f - f -' jfff-af 5, 2 Wffftv-2??'f. fm' 'lfiiiff ' iff .l f f-ff-M4 iw fuk ,-ift - ' ,I l,.'1?f'ffmi ff: --, .2-1jif'gi'f'f ff , M3191-Ll ' ,pk ,. fl 4 rt? 'f if . ff H7 vf55'C3eY' FIRST ROW: Bennett, Silin, Cawley, Morrissey, S, Mason. SECOND ROVV: Coach Liss, Bartlett, Sterman, Barett, Washburn, Tomposi. 4 1 4 L '74 I.V. Tennis 4-6-O CDA OPP Exeter IV 2 7 Middlesex School 10 8 Brooks School 3 15 Groton School 3 15 Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols 13 5 Rivers C.D. School 13 5 St. Marlds School 7 11 Brooks School 5 13 Belmont Hill School 5 13 St. Sebastian's Varsity 11 7 1 x 4' 1 g N- asv ...t ,,v'.1.' :, T 1 is 7 '.- K .. 'O . '- A 0, - 9 ' A I 1 f . -- -, . 3 A , .' ', 1. .i ,11-fji1'.-'zrmifaaa-e-..-at-..f:1-gym '-yup'-' ' '- - -X 1: !!:sglJsI1E2?'..'fxZ'f5.z:',nafswlf.,:nf-':A :s5ul.n.txg?i.!,n'-.xnqf if P .. ' ' g QRAC Ks - ,f -A A R- - .A 2, Q. ant, Fa -.1-. 83- 351254. . . aiilix zi33isSus4. 5a'4r:'1-:Q L. ' ns 1 'mal if .fav L'-i'rv'f-5 H-,-' -2-,,. L-.--N-,L , ,.-f '. V , 'Qtifflalfrig-QIZXAIELCCEQSJ .5afga'Uf'CY? 5l-'?-fs- ..3R1,.f5z.ff'5.:ff? 1. gl ' . . FIRST ROW: Ciampa, R. Neville, Hersey, tri-captian Anderson, tri-captain Fulton, tri-captain D. Minster, Daher, C. Wall, M.P. Graham. SECOND ROW: Coach Bill Sperry, Tallman, Lennon, Shula, R. Cornwall, A. Minster, Willard, Nourizadeh, C. Cornwall, Reichter, Turner, Critics, Coach Abusamra, Coach Rybicki. THIRD ROVV: Ahari, Am. Forsat, S. Sperry, I. Montealegre, Callahan, S. Wall, Linn, Voelker, Sutton, Aranosian. New England Class B Champions 1. f. a, , , x x. ,L . .a 'Jig m ' .S :sriflx .f,. s Mc. p mf CDA QQ Mascono 47 98 5th ' 12 : 71 Q4 74 Cus ing A104 41 Belmont 70.5 9574.5 Milton 80.5 ,1.85.5 B uclk Pa PNK. 'nav - .A,, . . tn.- K 1-i-f'f'Zi.q-.sas-is B ca.- 4' I 'P v 3 . e , v 1 .. ' ' ' '. -,-h -4' ' ,,-ff. 4,- af A S .aff 75 80.5. . 5 ? 1P ,oils M Every so often a season comes around that makes one stop for a minute when it is all over and say, Boy, that was a memorable season. What is really special about the 1978 Spring Track Season is that people were saying that in spite of a dismal season record of three wins and four losses. The record is not fantasitc, it is true. But there is so much more to be said about this team that one is very tempted to overlook the record. lt might be noted that three meets, against Thayer, Belmont Hill, and Milton, were lost by a total of twelve points, a highly unusual circumstance in track. How could a team come so close and yet not win? The answer is that the team had excellent top performers in each event but not enough men who placed in those events to get the team enough points to win. The field events were led by Mauricio Daher in the shot put and discus, and Kash Nourizadeh and Rick Willard in the long and triple jumps, Rick established a new school record in the latter. Doug Minster was super in hurdles, setting a new record in the 330 intermediates. Herzel Fulton, the team MVP, ran incredible times in the 440 and 220 while anchoring the best 440 relay team in New England. Meanwhile, Scott Anderson singlehandedly ran the distance events, doing well in all of them. Although the team could not seem to win dual meets, it had enough talent to win the New England Prep School Class B Interscholastic Meet at Vermont Academy. The victory was truly a great triumph and, as Mr. Sperry said, made the season very worthwhile. lt was a fitting tribute also to Mr. Sperry who retired as head coach after twenty four very successful spring track seasons. Thus it was that the stars and records, the Interscholastic Championship, and the departure of Mr. Sperry makes one look back and say, Boy, that was a memorable season. I' '44--qs sl' 44 G.. . f-,VL r- 1.5-vxwg .F .l 511,-w': -Qi li-L .-av Q. Q '-1 . ....,..c. , A w,,,,,,,,,,,-f N- W' 440,197 , 1, .,.. ...wif , h f ' ff ,, , M5 1, f., f,,,fiA'f 'Mi if ...gf 1 201 .1 I ,MLW f,-.... ,fs, ,f 1 'LIUNC 11 Y 4 x .., A hiunwi. l ,i,swu '- M ' ' if 1, in f M mfswzf ww A 'sv mwf-.we '77 HH ..,nwww Ei' Mp N X ,..vkxw M , Y xv 4 ,gif WV V NY' Y 4 1. r,.'g-1 ff.g'y,7l,2'ff :--' ' Q 'jfiw-A Wtsyf 'ff-1 'f rf' ' .' ' fa . - - 4.4 , sg - 1- j'.' : :'. v . L 1, fin' f'Tf!lfvi.lf .'4.r . . fill? it- W Cfyfffzg 92'-'5-5'-711-'f 'QI' 5, f .ff '?,f41?'7-'i'j'f fr5'IH.+' '?flCaf'fff'.'?'fRf:'fHii?ff'fi leffsiffffifi' L' . ' N 've 3 , HF fa? iii s r , AV, - 4? if 14, 1 ,gr g -I2 '53-1 f 4.16, f , 15, La' 514572, iff' r 1.5 g, . ' 1. ,sy , ff, 5' . fy - fp! TL - ', , Q, ' fe -y'5'g,',-5 q f 'gg gk' i fj Hg -I - wk ' Ti , '1'f..r'1. . 4, if - . ,- '. Y .I -,l'L.:5+'.7 ' -T. - : . 'f:'ff7'2,i1,: 1',,,f . -,,C2grfwQf, zf'Sak? fu ,gy '11z5'1lf,if.gyg,g,:g Q,ffV'.Q, , 1 , Fi,7s-J-521' ? -lp? V1 ...,.. -.., .,s,,,,,,..,'-..,-.,!Q..f.'f... , .,....'..,. -F I-fi V. -- V' rf .glg .U . . .4 .mira ':,'g-wm ,faf.gefi,-1 ws 'e4i,-'fin'-fr+f 'fa'-1 - f 1' I - T 5 LETTER WINNERS ITALICIZED - FIRST ROW: Sapuppo, Esposito, Coffin, captain I Stephmi. Roome, I. Cook, Plante. SECOND ROW: Mulherrin, S. Putmzni, Kullzori, G. Pntrzam, Tye, Post. Spoerl, Saunders, Hamilton. THIRD ROW: Lawson tmanagerl, C, Putnam, Stern, Su. Miller, Coues, C. McCarthy, Coach Marsolais. This year women's track had an outstanding season. The 5 - 3 - 0 record illustrates the tremendous talent displayed on the team. In fact, the only losses were against much larger Exeter and Andover Academies. The excellent output from this team may very definitely P X be accounted for by its very' willing and able coaching Q .' staff. Mrs. M was the coach and she worked mainly with the sprinters. Mr. Abusamra coached the distance runners while Mr. Sperry shared some of his field events secrets with the girls throwers. Mr. Rybicki was a : master with the jumpers and Mr. Ufema ran a multitude of stopwatches. - This year's sprinters did very well competitively as - well as in relation to previous school standards. MVP f Kathy Coffin broke records in both the 220 and 440. Sue Miller set a record in the hurdles, since this is a new event this season, she was often resetting her own E record. The 440 relay team, consisting of captain TL' Iohanna Stephan, Sue Miller, Katherine Post, and Lisa Sapuppo, tied the school record at the Interscholastics. This group should be even better next year. The distance runners were also strong this year. Neda Kalhori broke the record in the mile run and Claire Putnam, who bettered her time in every race, set the . f two mile record. Sarah Putnam came within five 4 J 3 seconds of the 880 record. These girls love their running ifslrylf' iv: .. as shown by their I0 mile run with Coach Abu 'Q - following the season. All of these girls will be back next ' - - r ' year as well. 78 X f. X , ,,.' L 'f . 'F ,' L ' . 'Ai .... . r - 5 -Ni: ixts, lj: E ,-K ,.v,,,. H 'Q wi ,Q . , .i 'l',,q-. ,3 .5 -if ,.,- . ,,,f., 5 --,N-af 1. ly- rims .. , -K -A w? fl'i- ll? ' V' f f'l .- i. lsr,-1-:,. W A fe, STVGQI ' . 1 H , ., f 5.11.-give ..: viz.-. '. 1-' - i w Q.J'f:41 Af., . . .-sr J' 4, gi if ff Sr K 1 4 X J Q- . .wr g 'Ri r K K I A M if A gi V .er 2 Q W v a Q 5 s iw f I' nv-,ww - -'Q 'A sw . A I Q Q ,,-.,.c,,4a,.-ia-,....4w1-1s -1 'A W 4' Field events were very popular this season. Randy Tye participated in the shot put, javelin, discus, and high jump. Katherine Post established a school record in the high jump and Kim Saunders did likewise in the shot put. Johanna and Kate both did very well in the long jump. Laura Roome broke a record in the shot and was a very strong competitor in the javelin until an arm injury put her out for the season. The team is very fortunate to graduate only one member and looks forward to an even better season under co-captains Iohanna Stephan and Neda Kalhori. 'ig A 32' H 'f,'f'? , 5 ,ti K NH- - V -1-fig: 1. K' X - .ax '-'rid '79 ,x' 1 if Q , 't -' W-2 -f,-.w 1i- 'Q 'Fw ' ,ft 'ff -1 ' ff' fu- ,a ,A -, . ff'iS?QL5fffQf.i!ufTf?42,:.ifofkfffigifdzlw 77 ' -iff' '?5i 5 51071 fffiif , ff .1 - A 'off-V? je ff' .' '14 1 3 -- ' f 1-' ,, rf -.f -- ' -f 'ul 5 ,, , . ,V , ,',,'::, ,,- f ,fy ,la - .- -. A . f f,wg2'-WLQ? ff,1-iZU'? i'Qf'5w' - gf fir 142' 23555 at flfffiy' Jfgffffgifl 'f2Qfg:f72113i5'55gzf5wf pq a -j mv ff ,314 :gi 51 -. 47:4 gf , 219, 4 f 4, ,S 3 Q? 2--' 37-,IQ ,wi int, y,1!f': 1-Q4 -1 1 , ?'1,,i9,?p fy. . ' I Q., J V A in fi! -.I is ffi?,2,1,fj - - , f's W4.w'1.zf 'va-Q' w w, - w' , w - ,,. 1 . -- ' -.4 A-4 'vb -- fo' 1 T ,liffrifpa,513wf,:f,f,Avfffrmrf-.f'f:xa,,Mm f y Mwffff a Le if. ft 1 2- Q1 1, z 14, A: V :yy .rzmxv '.f,:gf,f W 1-ff? Z-l1'1i'ivlf',l4jf,'ifY'3',-3ff:-,'1,5?f!g ff f -mf f - , Pf ,f 3,4713 ,gn . .,,,,ff.1 4 17 w f' iahafm ifg!1i5.'M47L1'.fr5L'm . ALL LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: Tr. Dagres, Theriault, Bloom, Mathews, St, Perry, Starr. SECQND ROKNI Coach Beckett, Moheban, Page, Sc. Miller, captain To. Dagres, M. Stephan, O'Keefe, Holmbraker fmanagert, Coach Moonves. ,Fam ff.-1 .KIA 'QT 1 K 2 ,., .. ' , ww 4 5 5 ae.. 5:5 if? ' '. 'k-J! A , - x X Q 7 4 AFX xl' r- -. .,- I , M, - t , i M ' D., .rw H W 4f,4l3M,3 1 1.54 'Q W ..-..-t N l, , I., 3, .3 ,gg - 2, W YR lwwfwhv - v.I:S?'TN'1l'F ' - V K ' X V- X X ,vt Ag J K in ywxt QP, .N F Mx , . ., . Y. ft . - X - -' -- ' , ' ,, A. -if X5 wk ,fz a. ' .. . le-'-,-'f 3-'S ff-' wt G49 ee V ' Y' .wi..r'?:'1,2-AEA?-I'x'r.. 1' NF W-if' A - S '- - - J 80 The 1978 varsity baseball team celebrated an overall winning season, a feat which has not been accomplished in many years. A 4 - 8 league mark, equal to last season's record, proved to be somewhat of a disappointment for the team. As in the past, injuries hurt the team at most inopportune times. The loss of catcher Steve Perry and the pitching of Todd Dagres brought about major line-up rearrangements. A brilliant four game sweep of the Providence Country Day Tournament and a victory in the league opener over Thayer got the Governors off to a fast start. This was the first league opener the Big Red had won in a dozen years. Following an upsetting loss to Groton the team regrouped to demolish Roxbury Latin after the dedication of the Howard Buster Navins Field. The Governors were only able to defeat Brooks in the next nine games as a slump ensued. A Troy Dagres two-hitter and Curt Metzger's two-run blast made the difference in that one. Inspired by Coach Moonves pep talk, the team pulled together to gain its winning record. The team had bright spots both offensively and defensively. Two members made the league batting stats: Todd Dagres, who finished fourth, and Tom Mathews. MVP Dagres was also among the league leaders in Home Runs and RBI's. junior Troy Dagres joined his brother in the RBI leaders as well as pitching many fine games. Overall the team had a pleasing season. Four members--MVP Todd Dagres, Coaches' Award winner Ken Bloom, Tom Mathews, and Curt Metzger will all be missed next season. But nine returning veterans coupled with the help of a solid IV squad leave the Governors with high hopes for next year. Good luck! 11 7 ', 4 y ,fl ,f.e.. l .' B7,Q . 4-w, -4 -4 - . , 7 X - -- a . . r . . -.- f I Jn- -' , Nm, v . N .- -1 im. FIRST ROW: Tomlinson Reilly Rosen Martin Tuthill Arguello SECOND ROW Coach Fyrberg Robertson, Murray C Atk1nson Winer Obadia Welch Carter Parkman Coach Raddocla FHIRD ROW: Adell, Stark M MOTBIS Moore P Morals Griffin Kennedy Hettler l.V. Baseball CDA OPP Andover Groton School Buckingham-Brown Noble 8: Greenough Brooks School St. Mark's School Milton Academy Middlesex School Andover Rivers Country Day Third Baseball CDA OPP Exeter Buckingham-Browne 8: Nichols Middlesex School Phillips Exeter Pike School Belmont Hill School Pike School Middlesex School 5'?, i?Wi?W1f 44 ' Vw 'L gg? 3 I Qifyuf QL fQl's'fh 4 Q. 11' ,I 'Wi V' RW 1' ,ul 519' f' w?Q!35j'?' 3 f jf: 1 J' f .aw 4 4 , -' 14511 fl ,,, . . V . .x.',4:.e' f. , L wx H: fa L f ' ggaf flfw .f ,f,5f3,'g. ' H 4 ui-I Nz' -' , ' f - 1' -f vffiifdrfsfifsziffilw f ALL LETTER VVINNNERS HRST ROVV L Russell lames Cocaptam Baker cn captam Lxncl' Nloselex Malloy. SECOND ROW Coach Clark Duff L Mlller Roorbach Lee Su Perm Blake Ierlkms Habla WooclbL1ry. ,.,, L wa l 1 gpm'-jg, . Y . 1 4' 5 1. if M-3E'.m. ' 4 'f After losing fourteen seniors from the varsity women's lacrosse team of last year, this year's teams were not expected to do well against their consistantly strong opponents. The Governors, however, surprised many people by finishing with a respectable 5 - 7 record. Theoutstanding aspect of the team members was their attitude and perseverance. Although they knew that beating some of the teams would have been a major upset, they tried, even when down by a large margin. A preseason jamboree at Law- rence Academy showed the girls what they were up against. Although Felicia Lynch was able to charge from the defense wing position to score twice in one game, and other members of the attack tallied their first goals of the season, the Governors came home three losses and a tie in four twenty minute games. In their first full game, against B-B 8: N, the girls persevered to win, with Iulia Malloy leading the attack with two goals. Gretchen Roorbach scored her lone goal of the season in the first half and spent the rest of the season getting everyone else psyched to score. The second game was lost to Groton as a threatening pattern developed. With only one exception, in every game one person from the other team scored at least half of the goals. It was never the same position, but there always seemed to be an extra player or two swarming around the goal mouth. The Pingree game was one of the best. Although they lost, the Governors were proud of their effort. The defense played an excellent game and the offensive passing was at its best. Three days later the team was rudely pulled off of cloud nine at St. Georges. After a tiring bus ride to Rhode Island, the red and white found that they had to play in the hot muggy air and on a slanted field. A furthur blow came when Iulia sprained her ankle, eliminating her for the remainder of the year. Kelly james finished up the game at first home. At Middlesex the Governors put forth a tremendous offensive effort. Pam Webb scored four times and assisted once. Iulie Duff had three goals and two assists. The passing in front of the net was superb, finally they were seeing the open player. The team was ready for its next game against Thayer. It was late in the first half before the offense got started. A goal by Linda Miller set things in motion. Alice Mosely, newly converted to first home, and Debbie Baker, a defensive player until this season, scored two goals apiece. lNhile Alice was perfecting her over the top shot at one end of the field, Heather Perkins and Abigail Woodbury were playing an excellent defensive game. The next four games were disappointing, to say the least. Although the other team did not always seem any better, nothing seemed to click for CDA. Sally Lee added more goals to her steadily growing pile during the Exeter game. An example of the stellar goaltending which the team received all season from Sue Perry came against St. Pauls when she recorded 22 saves. Martha Blake again played a consistent game, always going 1005 all-out. The team closed the season with a win over the alumni as Leslie Russell put in her long sought goal. 46 fr 5 WEEHYWXL 1.4 , . ' . . ,I ,'g - A- , - - , ' 1-A w :-- ' ., 1 , ' .f ' rl '11-xr .f.. --v-vc' in J' 1 -r, -1:.-f.,f- wx -.si , y, Vs .A -- - H' -ir, ,-ffl-N . .- ', M. ,rp , .m.-.- .,A.-. 4 -1' :IN +u,,f,,- Q.,-4 .pug ,. 1 ' ' -' - :V '-1 ws -- 2 ff- ' -v-f5-f1'--- PL 1 1 X 1: 5,-il-'92 --...:.-1'.iiim.i'1f1-.3 QiJ...fu:?.9h..v-',....f-2-slf' Hit: , i. g ,, -5 j, i,.r , . . - . '- f- Y - - -L -:vw a ' ,qw wwgf- 1- ,- -- 1 F 1, FI.--, -f,.,- ,, ,V ffl . A ,p 1 , ,. . 1. rf, 2:-125514 Afeiixgw. -,,i?'5:g3gS57f:lftfi51'f'E-,, M.,-Pg . .1 -. -11 .wi , 1 11 - - ' J .1'--91..'-,,fzt-,,r1,:- 4--1, ' Y . . f. - f 1 H N, ,l,.'.lV1fk,?E-tyklbz 1.4 Q ,I Y. iii? ,K 9 . ,if .7 5 f 5 i L ,. 1 . ' -- . ur. ,-,-:- J. - M . , ff . 'v:' .s. , ,' in x 1 s 1 - l . gy-34 7 4,5 Tags, , ,v,A,u'l.i,, .Q fi,-.925 1-:,' . '...,..gi1gg A 1 ..,: 5i1,fkil's-wa, sZaq,,?.,.i5i3l? 'i, .-yjgfg, ,E 55:5 ,n -- A-, in 1,-1, , N ' f f . - ' 5-f, 1- ' ' -1t'.?ff',.'4?'li5.!t-42-9-i.'2 H, :Hx M51 - 'Q :ii'L...,, - 2M.?.fki-..iL.L-..t..wa1LZL:g 25-L11.'1zn42:,..,51? 'f'L-.a',.a-LLL'-if' . FIRST ROW: Cremer, Lazo, Van Etten, Rosenthal, Evans, Bushell. SECOND ROW: Ms. Clark, Bruce, Sullivan, Bixby, Hildreth, Woolf. I.V. Girl's Lacrosse 1 - 7 - O CDA OPP Third Girl's Lacrosse 2 - 3 - 1 CDA OPP Groton 3 6 Brookwood 3 11 Pingree O 7 Pingree 7 Z Si. G6Ofg6!S O 6 Brookwood 1 12 Phillips Adover 2 5 Pingree 4 5 Groton 0 5 pike 6 5 Phillips Exeter 1 4 Pike 4 4 St. Paul's School 1 6 Lawrence 3 2 FIRST ROW: Kroos, Munro, Dane, E. McCarthy, Pfeiffer. SECOND ROW: Ms. Krall, Stephan, K. Russell, Kelley Quinn, Ms. Mullen. 87 F ifw ns- ff,-if iw- '-2-'iff 'Lf ' L41 .. ,. ,. .gi gq 42.jj,f1Z+,1,Yfi1?52,52jQ?9,'7?2g '?f.f3,Qg , .:' in Eff ., ,i i.fQ q!,,',', I2-jf .fL, 4:.4j ' . 5,1 .,!y,vI'1',1'u 1.2-gm:-XM an '-',f 1-J ills ?7.ifgQf' H3251 if' rm? Hi.-Qflb t 5 .. '.-,- .nu ff-, ,fe . fzfk 455244-'2,,z'7f1f'l?f.1!5-iff' if fm' fyrf 'i ' f- . v y, ,., ,47 ., , . Sf 'ff' . .5 29 it f-zf':fa.f fi i fd ALL LETTERMEN - FIRST ROW: co-captain Leahey co captain Vtebster SECOND ROW: Fox, Slater, Campbell, Coach Witherspoon Weldon Bendetson Nlenyhart Dammann. This year's varsity golf squad had expectations of a strong season, but the result was somewhat disappoint- ing. With the loss of only one player from the previous squad and co-captains Al Leahy and John Webster playing their fourth varsity seasons, hopes were high, but they were not realized. The final record was 3 - 5 - 1 and a fifth place finish in the ISL Tournament. Despite this less than stellar showing, some fine individual efforts came through. Al Leahy played from the number one spot for most of the season and shot the team's best round in the final tournament. His personal record was 6 - 3, and because of his effort received the MVP. Iohn lNebster also had a fine individual record, finishing with a 5 - 4 mark. Playing most of the season from the number two position with two starts in the number one slot, his game added strength to the top of the ladder. Remembered for throwing his clubs into a tree during his junior year, lohn will also be missed for his on-course play. The loss of Leahy, 19 - 16 for his CDA career, and Webster, 16 - 13 over the same span, will leave the team shorthanded at the top, and their talent will be sorely missed next year. ln the number three spot was Mike Weldon, co-captain elect for next season. Although he did not have a winning record, the experience he gained will be invaluable next year. The other co-captain elect is Doug Campbell, who played right behind Weldon for most of the season. Following them was freshman Floridian Mike Menyhart who will be the base for solid teams in the future. Number six Andy Bendetson will be remembered for his determination in finishing a match in the dark, a white scarf tied around the flagstaff. Seniors lim Slater and Rolf Dammann split the number seven duties, Rolf finishing with a 3 - 1 personal record. Next year will be a rebuilding season for varsity golf with all but three players lost to graduation. But despite this obstacle, the team and Coach Witherspoon are hoping for a more successful season next spring. Varsity Golf 3 - Triton High School Worcester Academy Noble Sr Greenough Tabor Academy Rivers Country Day Middlesex School Triton High School Lawrence Academy Brooks School FIRST ROW: Sylvia, Jerome, Holm, Frost. SECOND ROW: Coach Witherspoon, Lovejoy, G. Wicander, Voedisch, Long, Paladino. 5-1 OPP 4 6 3 1 4 1.5 3 1.5 4.5 CDA 4 1 4 6 3 5.5 5 5.5 2.5 Jg,Jg5igQi1?Eg5i,j.fl,:igf:?vz,1ugg??,-:5Zi14gkfLi5v ,.j:f: , ,f.,i- 1 4 j K . 5 A . ,za F 4 Qimggfvg' ' .4 4261256 fJ if'i2g '?:Qf.i' Qff1f5'2l . . ' ' A 5135. 5 U ., . ,.V, , ,, , A cL'T' 11e.fZZf4::fsf??fii'i,i'9?L'ZMff!?, Lf,-T . 1-. ' . f M? W' 5 gf' Wg.-,,, 7 , of '33 1 W If ,f ,, - , f ' i 'f 5,7 My far , V., gg 'J 11, ,, U, 5 AW I-'Q' wt X N. 90 p-5 it xx C -,-ssg Q - QQ Q 'fsz -Q .71 Of 9 sl Q Q s'vsi 0 -s..' 'QBJ -.sss,9 s Q 5-x 0' 6 3 I n ,I f 35 XX kk , , ll'.'1 .Q -1 rg. rwl rf f f -' SENIORS I' l lu wif. , '11-1qi '1J hi 'f' . X ff 'lm X' ,K J t X ly' Ny V1 Y , 1 H' V W4, -i Q, ll 'Q 5 Q ' 1 1 N W MW X! W hw X 'fx I r. 11 x X' 'L X XXX 5 x N fzhuulxl H 'fl 1 M N ' N W 'xx .X L s N x A W 5 E I XX ww M X X N 91 KMA I Laurie Altschuler Scott Anderson Bob Barnes Q'-2' Jody Baum Doug Beattie LAUREL ELLEN ALTSCHULER Laurie UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE We're captive on a carousel of time We can't return we can only look behind from where we came, and go round and round and round in the circle game. C.S. van rides...Bentley...P.IVl.'s Party...towny friendly's...M.Z.'s You're busted ...angus' house...Salisbury...Wednesdays, Pinball, McDonalds...Passing Out...B.C .... I'll get by. . SCOTT ANDERSON GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Third Football I, Varsity Football 2, 3, 4. IV. Hockey 1, Varsity Hockey 2, 3, 4, Coach's Trophy 4. Varsity Track 1, 2, 3, -1. Tri-captain 4. High Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, 4. Ir. Milestone 3, Milestone Editor 4. Cum Laude Tutoring Program 4. Varsity Club 3, 4. Weight-Lifting 1, 2, 3, 4. Whitteniore Award 2. Harvard Book Prize 3. A mans reach must be higher that his grasp. 92 ROBERT MIDDLETON BARNES Bob SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY I.V. Cross-country , Varsity 4. I.V. Track 3. Community Service 3, 4. Ir. Milestone 3, Milestone 4. Bloodmobile Library Committee 4, Outdoor program 4. DOUGLAS DUANE BEATTIE Doug GETTYSBURG COLLEGE Cross-country 1, 3, 4. Varsity Hockey 3. Track 3. Radio Club 3, 4. Honor Roll 3. Tutor 4. Beekeeping. Committee 4, Day IODY REGINA BAUIVI Iod, Iods, Baumer MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE Our doubts are traitors And make us lose the good we oft might win By fearing to attempt. --Shakespeare x K KISSONS I IIUOI HOUSI I I iii H54 Uiltlill if 1 IU! Ili 93 .-,ID H .4, ti FSU' lg wt! ,, ,fi f-2, ANDREW PAUL BENDETSON Rx Laila? Andy, Bendy f:i'Er' ' ,Zi 'f ' r+'...i57:?ff'1 f5f I , TUETS UNIVERSITY 'iaiiipf l PM X 3 iff ' ,VVV 'l Varsity Wrestling 2, 3, 4, Captain 4, MVP 4. Governor Staff 3, .,.' U I Co-photography Editor 4. Student Tour Guide 2, 3, 4. Photography 'Z Club 2, 3, 4. Community Service 3. Day Library Committee 4. Honor I Roll 2, 3. 1 if ,if I It 4-m..,,, The Ninety - Ninety Rule of Project Schedules: the other 9096. Zymurgy's First Law of Evolving Systems Dynamics: use a larger can. --The Book of Lists H undertaker will be sorry. --Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calender KENNETH CHARLES BLOQIVI 1 Ken, Bloomer NQRTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY The first 90921 of the task takes 90f7o of the time, and the last 105570 Once you open a can of worms, the only way to recan them is to Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the Andy Bendetson Ken Bloom lami Bougas Bo Bowditch Ray Cagey 94 IAMI MARIA BOGAS WHEATON COLLEGE Drama Club 3, 4. Ir. Milestone 3, Milestone 4. Community Service 3.Bloodmobile 3, 4. Girl's Tennis 4. I.V. Field Hockey 3. Varsity Lacrosse 3. Tour Team 4. Headwaiter 4. But remember Don't look down Take as much as you think you ought to - ik Give as much as you can Dor1't forget what your failures have taught you Redd 'Q' Or else you'll have to learn them All over again. --D. Fogelberg EBENEZER FRANCIS BOWDITCH, III Bo GETTYSBURG COLLEGE Honor Roll...back to football...Winter Veg...ELP...Snow storm... shovel-shovel-shovel...position paper and snow...What a drag. . .hold on, lax is coming...bombing midtermsmholcl on. lax is coming...Go for it! Motor city this yearmmessing with the Moogmbadminton games sixth period. The crux ofthe bisquit is the apostrophyf' --Frank Zappa RAY ANTHONY CASEY HOWARD UNIVERSITY 22 Varsity Tennis 2, 3, 4, Co-captain 4. Third Football 2, I.V. Football 3. Winter Track 2, 3. Varsity Club 3. Grill Committee 3, 4. 95 GINA IVIAUCERI CHIARA UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE CTHOMPSONJ Chapel steps, Bishops, you're still the one, Friendlies, EEE , Beach House, Trinity Weekend, don't let it bring yous down, Boynton: Huffnagle and Benjamin Franklin, Ie m' apelle Cathy, bike rides and Newbury flags, did you know a lock can't keep us out of our room? Andover Inn Steps - Tracie, are you alright? Classes with Suzi, the Five Rings, wicked noodles, walks with Steph, The March Vacation, Chinese food with Frenchy and lim, S.B. parties, Leahey's and you're busted, athletic team pictures, New Year's Eve and Amy it's been four years and Iim. Rolf and the window sill, good laughs with Spoerl. Even when it seems like the end As long as you can laugh and be with a friend It'll all be okay. --Gina Ghira U54 9 and Coach. 1 1 Univ R , MH 96 Youre A Good Man Charlie Brown 4. STEPHANIE CHETSAS GOUCHER COLLEGE Thespian Society 4. Drama Club: Assistant Director Mousetrap Be! .Q BRADFORD DUFF CLARK LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Sl In 3 Lights out...the demerits...A-yah really...You don't hear me...Sun- apee...IO:3O...T.T's...Fiesty weekends...Beach...Molsons...Fanuel Hall...Bowdoins...Pizza and Proctoring...Take it easy...Thanks alot The tools of the mind become burdens when the enviroment E ,F ' which made them necessary no longer exists. Henri Bergson Stephanie Chetsas Gina Chira Brad Clark Paul C0014 Todd Dagres Cookie TODD ANCLEO DACRES PAUL JOHN COOK, IR. JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY It had gone beyond everything. He had thrown himself into it with a creative passion, adding to it all the time, decking out with every bright feather that drifted his way. No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart. F.S.F. Mouse, Toy Cannon TRINITY COLLEGE Third Football 1, Varsity Football 4. Third Basketball I, I.V. Basketball 2, 3, Varsity Basketball 4. Varsity Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain 4. Honor Roll 1, 2, 3. Headwaiting Committee 4. 97 1 g EI,f1i.Q?t'4?iw5i W Q' ROLFE I-IEINZ DAMMANN, IR. GUILFORD COLLEGE What's the release?...Perkins 2..TED NUGENT...What are you saying??? I.V. Hockey...Oggie, Ya lost out...the Ramones Damones ...Exskewes me...the grades are brutal...Radio Station...Concerts... AHHHH!!! 1975-7, Weickert and Flynn...I'm IRATE...I-Iolly's teabag. . .Penalty - Mechem I didn't do anything!! The windowsill. BREAKFAST without TED NUGENT is like a day without sunshine. What do you want from life? Someone to love and somebody to love and somebody you can trust. What do you want from life? To try and be happy while you do the nasty things you must. --The Tubes I-IERMAN THOMAS DIEI-IL, Ill Dealy BATES COLLEGE All I really want to dooo Is baby be friends with you --Bob Dylan On those occasions when the higher law of conscience comes into conflict with the law of the land, it is one's duty to obey the higher law and deliberately violate the law of the land. The sun is up The sky is blue Its beautiful And so are you --The Beatles Y , 0 I V, ,, .- rc, 5,3 1 - 1 . X , 1 ,MW :Wah ff' V. ' V44 ' al, 1- ff .' sf. W , 'Zag , ifas ' ' ' cm n sf .' YIS'i':a ,. . - 5 V, - mga: f. , f 5 a. ' , f-. Qasfgwg , ,wa-rgimfz., f,,..ff'j,', , . Wexl, 4 at . M ,ty ,ulgq ' ,-ag, ,km-.i , 1 A., , ,y .WWI-V A -we Q' ,,,,gi.,4Vx.i2:.5,1, 1 .541 ff f V I-F DQME' .. iw' f- 5 J --I-Ienry David Thoureau THOMAS HENDRICKS DRISCOLL, IR. Driscy BATES COLLEGE Varsity Football 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain 4, All-ISL 4. Varsity Lacrosse 3, 4. Perkins Il proctor 4. Milestone Advertising Manager 4. Varsity Club President 4. Earth to Feith...There is a Rabbit on the lawn...Callan go to bed!!! Cottage '76...VVinter Depression 1, 2, 3, 4...VVhat did you say Suggs?... I'd rather laugh with the sinners Than cry with the saints Sinners are more fun And only the good die young --Billy Ioel 98 WILLIAM FRANCIS DRISLANE Il Bill CORNELL UNIVERSITY I.V. Cross-Country 2, 3. Varsity Wrestling 2, 3, 4. Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Computer Club 2, 3, 4. Drama Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Photography Club 2, 3, 4. Ir. Milestone 3, Business Manager 4. Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, High Honor Roll 4. National Merit Finalist 4. DAVID ROBERTSON DRUKKER NEW ENGLAND COLLEGE The comment on whale fishing in America: A bed of feathers, a bed of sharks - we all end up the same. --from The Log ofthe Nihilo and Other Stories Captain Paul Lundberg, editor S.C. in Nbpt, I.F., R.R. Bridge Saturdays, SPURT, Brabrook, Ramone, The Hot Box, Chuck, Veg Soccer, V. Vfrestling, Veg Softball, five weeks Pro, ponytail, Bluegrass and Dixieland. 1 1 ,f f Rolf Damman Tom Diehl TOTY1 DI'iSCOll Bill DI'lSlaY16 Dave Drukker 99 5, , 1 I I Peter Feitb Curt Fox Herzel Fulton lim Ciampa lim Coodhart PETER Juuus PEITH ig 5 -' -fs ' 5 1 I ' ' L i If E L Ivggnff K ,E SAINT LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY A I - E 4- 1 1 . If you walk on my side of the court I will have to kill you. 'E+ . 5.43. ,-.17 '. -Ilie Nastase . 'M . fs' - V FREDERICK CURTISS FOX, III Curt URSINUS CCLLEGE Ingham 76-77: the best...Big IVIac...faII parties 77...I.adies B-ball... the big R .... Damn right its DISCO ... Rolf, clean-up your act ...Cood times with David R. Drukker and friends...C.C. on the rocks, all the timempeoplez be the releasemcatch ya... Its been realg its been nicep but it hasn't been real nice. --Holly Spoerl, '77 100 HERZEL VERMONT FULTON ll A DARTMOUTH COLLEGE f Varsity Football 3, 4, All ISL 4. Varsity Basketball 2, 3, 4, captain and MVP 3, tri-captain, All ISL 4. Varsity Track 2, 3, 4, tri-captain 4. Governor Feature Editor 4. Hale Schlorship 3. Society of Disting- uished American High School Students 4. IAMES COVINGTON GOODHART Goodie UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS Varsity Football 4. Varsity Hockey 2, 3, 4, tri-captain 4. Varsity Lacrosse 3, 4. Dorm Proctor 4. Discipline Committee 4. Ride the wind before it's gone. --James Gang IAMES MARK GIAMPA UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE The beach house...Rolf's...hey squirt...here I am, Huff...its over...it over. Lady Luck play your hand l've got a life for you to play with. --Dan Fogelbert 101 PHILIP ALVIN GRAHAM IR. NORTHERN ESSEX COMMUNITY COLLEGE Varsity Winter Track 2, 3, 4. I.V. Baseball I, 2, 3. Trout Fishing Club, Radio Club. Geoff Gwynne MALCOLM PHILIP GRAHAM HM., HARVARD UNIVERSITY Varsity Cross-Country 2, 3, 4, Co-captain and MVP 4, Varsity Winter Track 2, 3, 4, Co-captain and MVP 4, Spring Track 2, 3, 4. Student Councul 2. Red Key Society 3. Milestone 3, 4. Commencement Committee 4. Discipline Committee 4. High Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, 4. Stand Sure Donkey, Fishing Phil h XXI. 27 N 'X 1 M. Phil Graham Phil A. Graham Tina Heffron Caroline Heffron 102 GEOFEERY CARRINGTON GWYNNE MIAMI UNIVERSITY COI-IIOD I want to be an involved citizen of my community, wherever that may beg to be a credit to my professionp to deserve the love and respect of my family. ANITA DOUGLAS HEFFRON Tina AUSTIN COLLEGE Manchester-By-The-Sea...M.I-I.S...the crew...EagleI-lead...Brown's party...Marblehead...The Gape...Men...GDA...Pierce I...Farm- house Zoo,,,Voodie-Champ 133...The main thing is not to panic! We're all so queer...Babs...The Grateful Dead...Spring Fever...New York...I-Iobart...Seven Gentral...Moody girls...Pousette Dart...lt's only part of the pumpkinmthe crazy roommwalking on tree tops...beach partiesmkeep up the 1 to 1 ratio! No!! Wendy's Old Fashioned...Cosmo...Procrastination Strikes...Texas...Graduation ...Glass Reunion...Gommunication. The glory in knowing the heartspun glee, the spunheart glowing beauty of all to beg to be free --Stephen Louis Heffron x,. gi CAROLINE OTIS I-IEFPRON I'Il send for you if you ever want me to but you'll have to find a whole new way of giving... Live in the country. 103 BENIAMIN SCOTT HERSEY Scott UNIVERSITY OP MASSACHUSETTS You can't always get what you want But if you try sometimes You just might find You get what you need. --Mick lagger PETER HEY Pedro Look for yourself and you will find in the long run only hatred, loneliness, despair, rage, ruin, and decay. But look for Christ and you will find him and with him everything else thrown in. --C.S. Lewis ROBERT ALLEN HIGGINS lvl Isl Tad What a pity that the people from the city can't relate to the slower things that the country brings. Time itself is bought and sold, the spreading fear of growing old contains a thousand foolish games that we play. VVhile people planning trips to the stars allow another Boulevard to claim a quiet country land. Its insane. So the subtle face is a loser this time around. Here we are in the years where the showman shifts the gears, lives become careers, children cry in fear, 'Let us get out of here! ' --Niel Young 104 -E. i X UD Scott Hersey Peter Hey Tad Higgins Iulie-Ann I-Iuffnagle Steve Ingrassia IULE - ANN HUFFNAGLE Huff, Bagle, Ioanne GETTYSBURG COLLEGE Mean dude...Peace, Love, and Profound..TP 2...Cherries...Cow tipping..,sunt...Here I am, lim...Unit...beachhouse...Ben Franklin... . water towers...What's the name ofthe island out there...I don't mind you coming here...canoe trips...this is a zoo and you are the animals in it...Bahamas...the Dante...Bagles and cream cheese and Amnesia. If we weren't crazy we'd all go insane. Iimmy Buffett STEVEN IOSEPI-I INGRASSIA PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY Now that I've Expressed my soul I'll step back into my real-life role And hope I've brought you back across the line You may think there's nothing you can do To change what's all too true But all you have to do is use your mind In Fantasy you can be anything you want to be And someday our reality will be as good as Never never land. Carole King, Fantasy 105 it I'm gonna be a happy idiot and struggle for the legal tender. KELLY JUNE JAMES SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE Every day's experience shows us how much more actively education goes on out of the schoolroom than in it. --Anonymous PETER WELCH JENKINS WASHINGTON COLLEGE --Jackson Browne George - Full Moons -Jay Gatz was ,MH WILLIAM CARL JEROME, III UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS A thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as a watchin the night. 106 ANDREW RICHARD IONES Drew PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF ART Varsity Soccer 3, 4. Varsity Tennis 3, 4. Day Library Committee. Outdoor Program 4. E if . W I H GREGORY IAY KAKNES Kak SAINT IVIICHAEL'S COLLEGE G.D.A .... Babs - I'II do it tomorrow...G.H .... Hig's Room...I1:3O Cottage Apartment ffRUH12...EIorida Keys 1977-78! Look at Mother Nature on the run in the Nineteen-seventies. N.Y. I Kelly Karnes Peter Ienkins Bill Jerome Drew jones Greg Kaknes 107 P11 thought it was 1O:3O...B-U-S-T-E-D...I.V. Hockey...It's only Dave... , . 1 f Adam Kastan Daryl Killip Ben Kuo Kit Latham ADAM JEFFREY KASTAN Colden Boy GETTYSBURC COLLEGE 'Q Al Leahey Third Football 2. Intramural Soccer 4. Third Basketball 2. Varsity l'Vrestling 4. Third Lacrosse 2. Come Blow Your Horn 4. Governor Business Manager 4. .1 -1 DARYL PEARSALL KILLIP Igor CORNELL UNIVERSITY Oh, 'tis jostling, dancing, drinking Spins the heavy world around, If young hearts were not so clever, Oh, they would be young foreverp Think no morep 'tis only thinking Lays lads underground. --A.E. Housman 108 XX I it MINC1 - CI-IE KUO Y B954 Ben RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE Let the disappointments pass Let the laughter fill your glass Let your illusions last until they shatter Whatever you might hope to find Among the thoughts that crowd your mind There won't be many that really matter --Iackson Browne I I CHRISTOPHER CARL LATI-IAM Kit SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY The universe is a void in which there is a dreamhold the dream dissappears the hole closes --Arnie Ginsberg Ski Team 1, 2, 3, 4, captain 4. ALAN BRETT LEAHEY Al, Alan, Big Al g GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY I e X Y I-Ionor Roll 1, 2, 3, 4. Varsity Golf 1, 2, 3, 4, co-captain 4. Varsity Soccer 3, 4. Red Key 3. Tour Team Z, 3, 4. Headwaiter, Chairmen 4. Photography Club 2, 3, 4. Ir Milestone 3. Milestone 4. Big Brother 4. Varsity Club 3, 4. Weekendsmsigning out where...Need a car!...America and Pousette Darte. . .Draw the line. ..the Grog. . .reach for the beach. . .etc. I believe that a man will not merely endure: he will previal. I-Ie is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible . voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and W sacrifice and endurance. --William Faulkner 109 .f ' f ':' if .v 's?4 :,:,gf5 f,, sf , '4-:asm 1 M A M .,,. 'a-,QW ' T J J ' Lo IULIA MALLOY TUFTS UNIVERSITY MARY ALEXANDRA MACKAY - SMITH BROWN UNIVERSITY Red Key 3. Senior Honor Society 4. Drama Club I 2 3 4 International Thespian Society 2, Special Merit Award 3 Clee Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Chapel Choir 2, 3. Governor staff 2, 3, Editor in chief 4 l.V. Soccer 3. I.V. Lacrosse manager 2, 3. Day Library Committee 3 Field Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4. Lacrosse 1, 2, 3, 4. Community Service IYWCA Pooll 3, 4. Red Key 3. Cross-Country Skiing 2. Mary Mackay-Smith Am Eff ' L 1- lulia Malloy Anna lvlarkos Tom Mathews 110 Chuck lNlcDoi ANNA - MARIE MARKOS SKIDMORE COLLEGE Once upon a time there was...TI-IE END. Now let's start the story l TOMAS GOODWIN MATI-IEWS TRINITY COLLEGE And in chasin' what I thought were moonbeams I have run into a couple of walls... But in looking back at the faces I've been I would sure be the first one to say When I look at myself today Wouldn'ta done it any other way. --lim Croce I.V. Tennis 1. Veg Soccer 4, Veg Soccer All Stars 4. Varsity Baseball 3, 4. Radio Club 3, 4. Milestone 4. Student Council 4. Varsity Soccer 3. CHARLES WILLIAM MC DOWELL, JR. Chuck, Mac I-IIRAM COLLEGE Varsity Track 3, 4. Varsity Football 4. Outdoor Program 4. Community Sevice CYWCA Pool? 3. I-Ieadwaiter 4. 111 1 - . ... ,- . .. .P ..f in - ,,3 A i ' - ..,.. - I -',g..w' -- ZEDD POINDEXTER MC NERD I Nerd, Four Eyes KALAMAZOO VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE Third Soccer la, lb, 2. Tackling Dummy 3. Used as Goalpost 4b. Varsity St. Bernard Imitation la, 1b,2, Lost 3, Found 4a, Captain 4b. Third Baseball la, lb, Z, Least Valuable 2. Third Track 4a, Held High lump Bar 4b. Permanent Saturday Morning Work Squad la. Trout Club Mascot 4a, 4b. Milestone staff 4a, 4b. Passed Science I 2. Flunked Lunch 3. Passed Lunch to Graduate 4b. Special Prize for Longest stay at GDA 4b. Wounded by Firsbee at Senior Party. NANCY IANE MERRILL UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE You who are on the road must have a code that you can live by, and so become yourself because the past is just a good-but. --Crosby, Stills, Nash 8: Young Pierce 1...over the hill...back roads...S-O-C-K-I-T to me baby... Pousette-Dart...beach parties...go to bed you guys...Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer...Snowedir1...hallway procrastination. CURTIS STEPHEN METZGER ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY The Big G...Ben's Boathouse...Laurie A...Conversations with Leary ...Old Gold Chambers...Watkins Glen Grand Prix...the Bald Faces...Ithaca College and Paige...Fryes Leap, Sebago...Mountain- eering with Mountain Man...Tommy T. for President! You know it takes time But then you know its worth it Keep your dreams It may be dark tonight tomorrow dark to light It's up to you and me It could start tonight. --Little Feat 112 Se , X , X Zedd McNerd Nancy Merrill Curt Metzger Meredith Miller Patty Milligan MEREDITI-I KATHERINE MILLER The answer my friends is blowing in the wind. --Bob Dylan PATRICIA ANN MULLIGAN MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE M The Read goes ever on and on Bells, the toy, Fillet...Leary, the DQWD from the dogr Where it began fI'O people. . .lVl3I'fl l3, hobbits, NOW far ahead the Rgad has ggnel lille l'llll...SOCC6I', Ioli, MOOdy...lIODS And I must fgllowf if 1 gan, Pierce I, bicentennialml-Ioffman, Pursuing it with Weary feet, Fleetwood Mac, b-ball...Landslide... Until it joins some larger way, Hors D'O6uvre. Where many paths and errands meet. And whither then? I cannot say. --Tolkien Nightmares only scare children, you're a prisoner of your imagina- tion... -- Quatro 113 DOUGLAS JAMES MINSTER . SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY Vegetable Soccer 4, Veg Soccer All-Stars 4. Varsity Winter Track 4. Varsity Spring Track 2, 3, 4, tri-captain 4. I.V. Soccer 3. Honor Roll 3, 4. Co-chairman Language Lab Proctors 4. Radio Club. STEPHEN E. MONAGHAN, IR. HARTWICK COLLEGE Spin Favorite verbs: speed, spurt, scamper, scuttle, scud, scurry, whiz, dash, and bolt. Zymurgy's First Law of Evolving System Dynamics: Once you open a can of worms, the only way to recan them is to use a larger can. l know you can't believe it, but you're no fun. . .you're just no fun! --The Tubes .mia---0 SILVIO JOSE MONTEALEGRE .- CORNELL UNIVERSITY Honor Roll Z, High Honor Roll 3. Ir. Milestone 3, Milestone Photography Editor 4. Photography Club 2, 3, 4. N v .. I ' 3Iini.-A-mit' 114 ALICE POORE MOSELEY Starsky and Hutch...Social Committee...Queen Concert '77... Boynton...Pield Hockey MVP...Ted Nugent...No, you're not going to hit me Rolf!...Bermuda...Little Sis... Good things in life take a long time ...B-ball...Birthday Parties etc...UNI-I k Room... Noth- ing lasts forever but the Earth and Sky ...I.acrosse...What are ya saying Oggie?...uh, I won't get over it! If you think your life is complete confusion cause you never win the game lust remember that it's a Grand Illusion and deep inside we're all the same. --Styx NANCY L. MURRAY UNIVERSITY OF SUSSEX CEnglandl George Iackson once said: I'll never forget, and if I am guilty of anything I'm guilty of not leaning on them hard enough! To see him obviously framed couldn't help me feel ashamed to live in land where justice is a game. --Bob Dylan Class is when the FBI pays more for your phone bill than you do. Iames Montgomery Doug Minster Steve Monagahn fit .w V, Hu Y i 1 Silvio Montealegre Alice Moseley Nancy Murray 115 Rick Neville Tim Norton Phil Ogden -is 4 My.. .W - I Tom Ostheimer Ion Palais I RICHARD PAUL NEVILLE Rick,Nev UNIVERSITY OI: NEVV HAMPSHIRE couldn't be and only a fool would say that. --Steely Dan cessful? - Came cl0se...WOW' Varsity Winter Track 3, 4, Co-captain 4. Varsity Spring Track 3, 4. I just heard it was you, talkin' bout a world where all is Free, it just Enriching experience?--Never make Honor Roll...Cee W'hiz!...Suc- TIMOTHY OWEN NORTON SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY Thank God for weekendsmthe masked hang dunker...Tony Man- ero Thomas...my little bro Ike Suggs...Tod CMr. Iohnsonl Dagres...Herbie...Delaware...Salavation Army...Tony, Watch out forthe major!...Derek, you're a wild and crazy guy. 116 ...Af THOMAS WINSLOW OSTHEIMER Ost HOBART COLLEGE Varsity Soccer 2, 3, 4, All-League Second Team 4. Varsity Skiing 3. Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3, 4, co-captain 4. Student Tour Guide 3. Social Committee 4. Drama Club 4. PHILIP MADISON OGDEN LAYFAYETTE COLLEGE I ain't asking nobody for nothing. If I can't get it on my own. If you don't like the way I'm living, You just leave this long-haired country boy alone. --Charlie Daniels If you want to get to Heaven You've got to raise a little Hell --Ozark Mountain Daredevils Lynyard Skynyrd, almost...Are you in A New York State of Mind, Wiseguy?...Go for it, Rolfmweekends in Room 3I...on the air...Nancy, Amy, Holly it's been real...I'm out of here. B .Az IONATHAN KENT PALAIS UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE What is life but a Spectrum and what is music but life itself. --Billy Cobham, Ir. 117 SCOTT MC CRECOR POPE Popey PLYMOUTH STATE COLLEGE Social Committee Chairman. Milestone Advertising Manager. Library Proctor. Commencement Committee. Tour Team. Drama Club. Big Brother. Clee Club 2, 3. I.V. Cross-Country 2. IV. Soccer 3, Varsity Soccer 4, Navins Cup 4. Varsity Basketball 3. Varsity Lacorsse 2, 3, 4. When you find yourself at the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on. IAMIE CRELLY PURINTON CORNELL UNIVERSITY Sun's up now and its time to roll Yeah, you know there ain't no better time A Then early in the morning To be out walkin' down that road lust feelin' another day beginnin' While some folks just rushin' by We'll be like some Mr. Independence We'll be takin' our own sweet time. --Ierry Ieff VValker v:::3'.Le T' '55 8. U' kv Q' I Scott Pope lamie Purinton AMX I H J, . N I . 1 '71 V Wil - x . - ,K 3' f - 1 'N 'P-ll fl 1.1 ,,,, .uv ., . . X. Q 4 5 V . Q 1,.t-39.0. if- '1 mv' Z ' ir a ll Andy Robinson lack Rooney Greg Rose 118 IOHN IOSEPH ROONEY TULANE UNIVERSITY Chance favors the prepared mind. ANDREW' WESLEY ROBINSON Andy, Robbie UNIVERSITY OE RHODE ISLAND The future always seems unlikely until the present makes it fact. --Tom Snyder Let not the sands of time get in your lunch. --BCN Philosopher The journey is difficult, immense, at times impossible, yet that will not deter some of us from attempting it. --Loren Eiseley me Louis Pasteur ,..Lg,,.,-N' R.. GREGORY HUGH ROSE Rosey BUGKNELL UNIVERSITY Varsity Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4. Varsity Gross-country 3. Varsity VVrestling 2. Jazz Band 1, 2, 4. Go-owner Rose'n'Bloom Lounge 4. German Club 1, 2, 3. Honor Roll Z, 3. When in doubt, mumble. 119 LESLIE ANNE RUSSELL SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE Your days are short here. This is the last of your springs. And now, in the serenity and quiet of this lovely place, touch the depths of truth. Feel the hem. You will go away with good old friends. Don't forget, when you leave, why you came. --Adlai Stevenson, II NALINTORN SINTHAVANUGHIT Ni 3' VASSAR COLLEGE I.V. Women's Soccer 4. Women's Track 3. Community Service 3. High Honor Roll 3. Cum Laude. IAMES PHILIP SLATER FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL COLLEGE Circle up...band leaders...What stop sign?...Driscoll, give me the keys...Framingham State...how big? How old?...Travlin' Prayer... Dover Beach...The Alpine...Arrow...Backdoor...Rt. 128...Mais out, Monsieur...Trans-Europe Express...Achtung, Peter...Orange juice and aspirin...We can dooo it!...Colorado...The Little Red Ski Shack...I can't do it...outa here. Here's to good friends. 120 Leslie Russell Nid Sinthavanuchit lim Slater .vm vit -79' 'QT If Peter Stenzel Andy Stephenson PETER STUYVESANT PHILIP STENZEL I.V. Soccer 3. l.V. Wrestling 4. Outdoor Program 4. Varsity Track 3 Softball 4. Drama Club 4. ANDREW WOOD STEPHENSON Steph TRINITY COLLEGE Mum's the word...We've had enough rain. . .Amy's...l!Ve want George. . .PMP . .Rumours . .Conference Period. . .Yol . . .I-Ieeyy! I'm going to try for the kingdom if I can. --Lou Reed Don't let the past remind us of what we are not now. --Stephen Stills 121 QW DANA LEE STETSQN UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE k 1' iiQ,. Qz':,yff, ,j ...O.3'70 THD, wow and flutter less than 192, 75 watts per channel MARY STUART STOREY DEPAUW UNIVERSITY gf I Bertha Butt and the Frosh Year...Third teams...Varsity...Hweekends were made ...Parties...ferociously... You can get it if you really want ...Basketball games... l don't love you anymore ...Boynton House...the clown...Don't mind me, I'm just crazy...Hey, I'll be back...Someday... There ain't too much sadder than the tears of a clown when there's no one around. --S.R. and T.lVI. Dana Stetson Mary Storey Ike Suggs Geoff Wlall Bray IN'alsh 122 ISIAH SUGGS, IR. TRINITY COLLEGE Varsity Football 2, 3, 4, co-captain 4, second team All-ISL 3. Varsity Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, tri-captain 4. Varsity Lacrosse 2, 3, 4, All-Northern Division 3, 4. VK GEOFFERY HOWARD WALL Guff, Geoff DARTMOUTH COLLEGE Varsity Soccer 2, 3, 4, MVP 4. Varsity Track 2, 3, 4. Outing Club 3, 4.High Honor Roll 1, Z, 3, 4. Moody Kent Prize: German 1, 2, 3. RPI Medal 3. Iunior Milestone 3. co-managing editor 4. National Merit Finalist 4. Cum Laude Society 4. M: Men, we're in a tough spot. L : Yea, it's gonna take brains to get us out of this. M 1 That's why I said we're in a tough spot. lust what you want to be, you'll be in the end. --The Moody Blues RICHARD BRABROOK WALSH, III Bray SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY Beard 3, 4. Veg Soccer vs. Girl's Soccer 8 to O. Veg Softball. lack Hess, D. Hill -- what a pair! Bangor, Me. OK Dave, on the mats?...Heb...Chuck, Spurt, S.C. Nbpt, ger, what an arm for snowballs! Springball? Canoeing the Parker with Moon, M'aidai, man overboard, I'd rather be boating. Yes there are two paths you can go by, still time to change the road you're on. --Led Zeppelin I get by with alittle help from my friends. The Bridge ...Curt Metz- but in the long run there's 123 PAMELA ANN WEBB Vifeblz, Tawney-joe COLBY - SAWYER COLLEGE Lb Don't ever doubt what your heart says when everything 'Round you says no. It's the pace of the Came that will drive you insane --so relax and let everything flow. --D, Mason Peace, love, Sr profound.,.Lush week...TP-2...Amnesia...BabydoIl X L paiamas...You can do it later...UDS...TT's...I? you...potential...V'- rens...It's over. ' IOHN ARCHIBALD WEBSTER, III VX'ebby You can't please everyone so you just have to please yourself. --Rick Nelson Varsity Hockey 1, Z, 3, 4, captain 3, 4, MVP 3, 4, All-ISL 2, 3, 4. Varsity Golf 1, Z, 3, 4, co-captain 4. a 1 Butchie ...Rye...Hambone...Tic... The Pits ...Pap, you don't hear 3 me...Chuckles...tirst and second period in the library...Dobie L43 Bros.,.Latham '77...third Hole...Waterville...Thanks for everything i Mr. Harrington. .5 .., qv Y IDNOTHAN LUKE WHITE Luke , g 2 EXETER UNIVERSITY CENCLANDI I Varsity Soccer 4. Drama Club 4, Director Come Blow llOllI'HOl'71. xi if 124 l Pam Webb Iohn Webster Luke VVl1ite Rick Willarcl Martha Zawacki RICHARD LANCE VVlLLlAlVlS T W V Rick NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY Varsity Football 3, 4. Second Team All-ISL 4. Varsity Basketball 3, 4. Varsity Track 3, 4. Varsity Club 3, 4. Headwaiter 4. MARTHA SUSAN ZAWACKI BRYN MAWR COLLEGE Varsity Soccer Manager 3. Modern Dance Z, 3, 4. Big Sister 4. Student Tour Guide 4. Governor staff 4. Drama Club 4. Honor Roll 1, High Honor Roll 2, 3. Moody Kent Prize: Latin, 3. Cum Laude 3. 1 l 125 N MEMORIAM Peter Marshal French Robert john Lambert No man is an Iland, intire of it selfe: every man is a peece ofthe Continent, a part of the maine: it a Clod bee washed away by the Sea, Europe is the lesse, as well as if a Prornontorie were, as well as if a Mannor of thy friends or of thine owne wereg any mans death diminshes me, because I am involved in rnankindep And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tollsg It tolls for thee. --lohn Donne 126 DER CLASSMEN 6 , 55,146 :3F -fy i 2,7 .,A,, ,. 'j X 5' ly' Q W 1 ' I4 3 W 'fj N ' Xqmrp f ! Xxxlt I' NK 6 'I 1 f I l I X , ,l',.,f',, I!! X624 X x , .7 17' ll' ' X X ,ff x' I x 1 X 'fl X kr ' X 5' X '62 X 1 ff K '- 'X XX f xx NX I f' , ? f 127 , Xu . 0' ,, . az .,,gA- .r - -,fm L-f,ff?i',-,-.1554.wifi-1'ff-.r.'f44-it ,.S? i 'WZ ff f , . . ., . . . .,---i.. ,e . .4 4...,.:. ,.. I l .f ,X . r 4 ZV4.,51i'l'v I ' ' 24,2 . , 4-wrt 1.24. i , - ',g,.y. .gf yqfe, v55:5Wz4mq,f'.- Q fa. ff, , , ,uf ef' Y 4 C f,, A vw,-1 V ,. ,J , .,-4 rf The lunior Class of 1978 was a very special group of students. They were a concerned and hardworking group. In academics and athletics they excelled while supporting and leading many extracurricular activities. They were not a group to sit back and watch others work. Many members of the class were very instru- mental in assembling the Milestone, while others worked hard in the radio club, social committee, Varsity Club, and other organizations. Among the members of the class are many talented people. Chris Kangis put on a concert in the spring consisting of all original works. Dara Entekhabi displayed his photo- graphic talents on the walls of the Cobb Room and took first place in a school sponsored photographic contest. Many of the Most Valuable Player awards went to members of the junior class, both male and female. Linda Miller recieved the MVP award on the improving womens soccer team, while Sarah Putnam was the Ski MVP and Randy Tye led a surprising basketball team. In the spring, Felicia Lynch was the outstanding player on the lacrosse team while Kathy Coffin broke school records in both the 220 and 440 enroute to the MVP award. Derek Spears was outstanding all year, earning the MVP on a fine football team and being co-MVP on Class B New England Champion Basketball team. The Honor Roll and High Honor Roll were made up of a vast number of this class. Stu Cawley, Abby Woodbury, and Martha Blake led the class academ- ically. These three will receive a strong challenge for academic leadership next year from the likes of Betsy Farley, Linda Miller, and Sarah Putnam. The future is bright for this class: next year should be a good one. This class is one which cares about the school and school community and will continue working to better Governor Dummer for all. 128 Allen, Caroline M. Atkinson, Thomas T. Baker, Deborah W. Baum, Holly I. Bigelow, Talman G, Bixby, Wendy P. Blake, Martha A. Bowditch, Donald H. Campbell, Douglas F. Cavanagh, Bradford S. Cawley, Stuart R. Chishom, Anne W. Coffin, Kathleen M. Cook, lustine E. Cornwall, Cedric S. Cremer, Monique S. Dagres, Troy A. Daher, Mauricio Dudensing, Elizabeth M Entekhabi, Dara Esposito, Ioan S. Evans, Russell E. Farley, Elizabeth A. Field, Caroline B. Fitch, lan M. Forsat, Amir Foucher, loli A. Friend, lonathan M. Garnett, Jeffrey W. Hatfield, Ieffrey S. Heffron, Timothy K. Hochschwender, Amy L Holm, Nancy B. Iones, Elizabeth ludson, Stephen H. Kangis, Christopher P. Law, Lisa M. Leary, Kathleen A. Lindsay, Bruce W. Linn, Andrew S, Lothrop, David S. Lovejoy, Raymond S. Lynch, Felicia l. Manwaring, David P. Martin, Andrew M. Cantitoe Road, Bedford, NY 10506 73 Prescott Street, Reading, MA 01867 40 Cherry Street, Wenham, MA 01984 2 Morningside Drive, Swampscott, MA 01907 R.D. 2, Box 243, No. Stonington, CT 06359 17 Stinson Road, Andover, MA 01810 17 Morgan Street, Wenham, MA 01984 140 Elm Street, Georgetown, MA 01833 303 Summit Avenue, Summit, Nl 07901 Middle Road tByfieldl RFD Rowley, MA 01969 260 Middle Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 50 South Road, Rye Beach, NH 03871 Goodwin Road, Hampton Falls, NH 03844 139 Main Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 402 Bowie Lane, Greenwood, MS 38930 P.O. Box 163, Orleans, MA 02653 Greentree Lane, tByfieldl RFD Rowley, MA 0196i 9 Newcastle Road, Belmont, MA 02178 Bay Pond Rd., Powder Point, Box 266, Duxbury, MA 02.332 P.O. Box 66-1627, Viavaran, Tehran, lran 56 Park Street, Haverhill, MA 01830 33 Chapman Road, Boxford, MA 01921 Fenno Drive, Rowley, MA 01969 14 North Street, Georgetown, MA 01833 9603 Dartridge Drive, Dallas, TX 75238 30 Kamal Esmail, Esfahan, Iran tMaill cfo Prof. Barocci, E52-443b, M.I.T, Cambridge, MA 02139 190 Berkeley Street, Methuen, MA 01844 41 Pleasant Street, Box 112, Wolfebora, NH 03891 5 High Road, Newbury, Ma 01950 7 Cedar Street, Marblehead, MA 01945 9 Pearl Street, Marblehead, MA 01945 35 Birch Road, Andover, MA 01810 421 Main Street, Amesbury, MA 01913 22 Central Street, Byfield, MA 01922 955 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10028 1 Lantern Lane, Exeter, NH 03833 5 Royal Crest Drive, North Andover, MA 01845 367 Woodstock Street, Seabrook Beach, NH 0387 Stonecleave Road, Boxford, MA 01921 1030 Forest Avenue, Zanesville, OH 43701 10 Canterbury Drive, Georgetown, MA 01833 Ash Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 River Street, Byfield, MA 01922 48 White Rock Road, Yarmouth, MA 02675 1776 Santa Fe Circle, Fountain Valley, CA 92708 129 1? 4 L., E E r Miller, Iames C. Miller, 1.inda L. Miller, Scott T. Nourizadeh, Kahashayar O'Keete, Raymond F., lr. Paladino,VVilliam1. Palais, Matthew 1. Perlowski, lohn S., Ir. Perry, Stephen L. Potter, Susan G. Powers, David L., lr. Putnam, Sarah Queen, Stephen H. Reichter, Bradley A. Ronan, lames 1. Roome, Laura 1, Roorbach, Gretchen W. Rosen, Henry M. Rourke, Thomas A. Sapuppo, Lisa M. Saunders, Kimberly Silin, VVendy B. Sinthavanuchit, Soothichai Siier, Harold F. Skewes, Nancy L. Smith, David H. Smith, Eric H. Spears, Derek D. Spoerl, Holly A, Starr, Brian Stephan, Iohanna Steiman, Steven 1.. Tampi-si, Stephen A. Theriault, Richard E. Tye, Randy S, Van Etten, Derek O., lr. Voellter, Richard l., 111 lN'eldori. Mithaetl C, White, lames S,, lr. lN'hitten, Larry D. VN'iiittt-n, Roger D. l.X ic angler, C G. Greger l'i.illian'is, lettrey M. Winer, Mark L. ll'.ltiw'1LllWtl!'y', Ablgdll l. tocwtlworth, Avery K. Kensington Road, Hampton Falls, NH 03844 7 Elm Street, Byfield, MA 01022 82 Rock Meadow Road, VVestwood, MA 02000 20 Sam Street, Davoodieh, Tehran, lran 28 Voriou lpirou Street, Philothei, Athens, Greece 8 Coolidge Road, Andover, MA 01810 Box 208, New Castle, NH 03854 0 Charlotte Drive, Andover, MA 01810 King George Drive, Boxtord, MA 01021 0 Hampton Falls Road, Exeter, NH 03833 Shaker Road, New London, NH 03257 Dx Pasture Hill, Rowley, MA 01000 300 Old Norwalk Road, New Canaan, CT 00840 115 1V1i11pond,No. Andover, MA 01845 10 Qcean Avenue, Marblehead, MA 01045 11.0. Box '15, Mirror Lake, NH 03853 02 Lloyd Avenue, Providence, Rl 02000 444 Atlantic Avenue, Marblehead, MA 01045 3 Deerberry Lane, Andover, MA 01810 7 Regis Road, Andover, MA 01810 1Lunt Street, Byfield, MA 01022 130 Vtlinslow Road, VVaban, MA 02108 0, Soi Senaruam, Phaholyothin Road. Bangkok, Th 180 Main Street, Andover, MA 01810 10 Kingsford Road, Hanover, NH 03755 '7 Redstone Lane, Marblehead, MA 01045 243 Powder Mill Road, Concord, MA 01742 1253 East 223rd Street, Bronx, NY 10400 130 High Street, Exeter, NH 03833 2 lNildwood Road, Dover, MA 02030 03 North Main Street, Topslield, MA 01083 40 Neptune Street, Beverly, MA 01015 30 Indian Rock Road, Nashua, NH 03000 4 Morgan Avenue, Newbury. MA 01050 08 Carlton Street, Brookline, MA 02140 50 Averill Road, Topsfield, MA 01083 37 North Street, Georgetown, MA 01833 74 Atlantic Avenue, North Hampton, NH 03802 Cedar Knoll, Boxtord, MA 01021 Eastern Point Blvd., Gloucester, MA 01030 Eastern Point Blvd., Gloucester, MA 01030 Drmkwater Road, Exeter, NH 03833 Governor Dummer Academy, Byfield, MA 01022 34 Alden Road, Andover, MA 01810 Coleman, Road, Rowley, MA 01000 0 Wallace Court, Charlestown, MA 20120 130 ! ailand 1-9 ig Mx 'mx -iv H JUNIORS frwvdi f rf' 4 H' tl ,,.n,..u L vb' 1 ,,1,,,. ,',,3 f,,.., f.. 1 4, -,fu 114 - .u f ' :wx , H. ,e .:7.- V.- :wf.vf,. f '-'4f.. 'Q- , ' 3'7 ' ' 1 -, - ,. Ag.,.f -fu -',,,,'. ,. ,4 .r yy, ,, , ,. ' A 1. l , . , , '-dug . fi: ,. ,Q-4 AW. -,yfff1:'.L. ' ff. f I f 1 4 - --f . ' 4 . -.uf f gas. , ,, , ff ' -1 f,,-V -:iw .41 5: Jfzj --1 p., E. 1,49 .., yy jf 5, Hy ,' ', 1 5 Y 'V.,,5,.'.'fZ9' xfCmf, ' rc -5 21 , , f ' f' ' ' . Kd- , ...df , ffm Af, if 1 1 ', .ls I 5, L, ef f- ,f fl f- iv' . .. - . S- 4 ,x 191, 1 , 'fm f'j'gL1', ,-:V 5 'jg-l , - . - I ,f I P . ' uvglavmx .Y .-115-5 an t..5,fs',, ,QQ I ,LJ 4haf,,!,',f. .4..,,', 1,', , , , 4. .ff ,fv s. an If 'wr-er ' t -Huw Ahari, Amir-Saeed Atkinson, Charles B. Bailly, R. Ieffrey Bartlett, William M. Baum, Erica I. Bennett, Ieffrey Benson, Ioseph I. Brine, William H., lll Bruce, Ianine L. Bushell, Virginia A. Callahan, Kevin W. Callan, David F. Cavanagh, Peter H. Cornwall, Rupert M. Cushman, Russell G. Devine, Lisa M. Duff, Iulia L. Evans, Elizabeth W. Fain, Iohn W. Gardner, James A. Hall, Arthur P. Harrison, Dean W., Ir. Hildreth, Susan L. Holmbraker, Bernard G. Humphries, Charles T. Iones, Dana H. Iones, Eric F. Iones, Evan C. Kalhori, Neda Kawamura, Taro I. Kurtz, Pamela A. Lacey, Maryann Lawson, Deborah A. Leathem, Douglas V., lr. Lee, Sally O. LeMaitre, Paul A. Lennon, Iohn C. Long, Frederick, H. Mackay-Smith, Helen S. Mahler, Kenneth T. Marvin, Bernard A., lll Mason, Abner A. Mason, Scott C., Ir. McCarthy, Cornelia 133 . . ..- ' ..L 5'. 160 Dartmouth Street, Waban, West Newton, MA 02165 73 Prescott St., Reading, MA 01867 Beechwood Circle, Boxford, MA 01921 276 High Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 2 Morningside Drive, Swampscott, MA 01907 160 Craigie Street, Portland, ME 04102 9 Timothy Drive, Andover, MA 01810 26 Gypsy Trail, Weston, MA 02193 3 Meadowview Road, Topsfield, MA 01983 974 Bay Road, Box 313, Hamilton, MA 01936 1 Carriage Hill Rd., Andover, MA 01810 571 Woburn Street, Wilmington, MA 01887 Middle Rd., R.F.D., Rowley, MA 01969 402 Bowie Lane, Greenwood, MS 38930 Bradlee Road, Marblehead, MA 01945 236 johnson Street, North Andover, MA 01845 Oakmarsh , South Byfield, MA 01922 Chapman Road, Boxford, MA 01921 3867 Olympia, Houston, TX 77019 6 Cabot Road, Andover, MA 01810 133 Dudley Road, Newton Centre, MA 02159 5 Rocky Pasture Road, Gloucester, MA 01930 180 High Road, Newbury, MA 01950 Fairway Drive, Rye Beach, NH 03871 66 Main Street, Dover, MA 02030 Spring 8: Maine Sts., P.O. Box 282, Kennebunkport, ME 04046 R.F.D. ,4,41, Perkins Hill, Exeter, NH 03833 Broad Meadow, RD 53, Box 391, Geneva, NY 14456 4 Longfellow Place, Apt. 3606, Boston, MA 02114 267 Clyde Road, Bangor, ME 04401 Hampton Falls Road, Exeter, NH 03833 Central Street, Byfield, MA 01922 30 Hilltop Drive, Wenham, MA 01984 33 Old Weston Road, Vwlayland, MA 01778 Leather Lane, Beverly Farms, MA 01915 263 High Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 5 Osgood Street, Andover, MA 01810 12 Mansion Drive, Topstield, MA 01983 1 High Street, lpswich, MS 01983 8410 Eustis Farm Lane, Cincinnati, OH 45243 49 Wapping Road, P.O, Box 72, Kingston, MA 02364 4909 Foxhunt Street, Durham, NC 27712 194 Rockland Street, South Dartmouth, MA 02748 185 lpswich Road, Boxtord, MA 01921 McCune, Cieorge C., Ill Minster, Andrew M. Moheban, Steven M. Moore, Gregory R. Morais, Paul A., lr. Morrissey, Jonathan T. Morse, Peter C. Munro, Cynthia C. Neville, Karen J. Cloughlin, Terence I. Page, Andrew L. Pendleton, Rand P. Perkins, Heather S. Post, Katherine L. Putnam, Gretchen Quinn, jennifer A. Robertson, john Rosenthal, lamie D. Rourke, Bryan I. Savranri, Russell C. Schipani, Theodore T., Il 3 Normandy Avenue Cambridge MA 02138 Schwartz, Carl A. 187 High Street Exeter NH 03833 Segil, Iefrey M. 69 Seaview Avenue Marblehead MA 01945 Sperry, Stephen C. 12 Ashbrook Drive Hampton NH 03842 Stafford, Christopher H A P O Box 26 Route 11 A Danville NH 03819 Stephan, Martin I. Sterge, Caroline A. Sutton, Shepard W. Swartz, David B. Sylvia, Scott E. Tallman, C. Bruce Taylor, Nicholas C. Thomas, Antonio T. Tomlinson, Matthew D Tuthill I. Mark Van Etten, E. Ashley Vv'all, Stephen C. Vvashburn, William F. Welch, Ionathan H. Wicander, I. Erik Wise, Frederick W, lAfise, Iohn Woodworth, Henry L. 41 School Street Andover MA 01810 C Wool., Emily Green Tree Lane Rowley MA 01969 S S 1 -, we The class of 1981 was good, both in and out of the classroom. A good number had averages over 3.0, led by high honor roll member Ben Frost. Several were key members of a variety of varsity squads. The women had Sue Perry in soccer, basketball, and lacrosse, along with Clare Putnam and Susan Miller in cross-country and track respectively. The trio of Dana Pratt, Rob Sudduth, and Mark Whitney will be terrorizing opposing hockey coaches for another three seasons. Other freshmen were impressive in areas such as drama, Vinca Ingram and Heather Davis in drama for example. Highlights of the year included Carter's Morning Sports Review, featuring complete batting averages of every player in the American League. It is still undecided whether Mr. Moonves' teaching was a critical factor in this performance. Farmhouse put on impressive displays throughout the winter. They were instrumental in the disputed snowball victory of Cottage over Perkins. And who will forget the football games which followed the blizzard. Finally, Doctor Sax finished a strong second to Brina as class mascot. Most of the class made it through Science I without serious damage, emotional, intellectual, or otherwise, and a few even found physics could be fun. fWhoever thought that all that math could have anything to do with swimmingll The freshmen had a good year, and they promise better things in the coming three. 135 ENUM ff, . 'Wynn Wm 'V ' .Jinx ,M ,f 1 gf , 7 ' 4 -Ai 1,- if IC' -fiffwl 1 041 i .W .gif Adell, Eric P. Aranosian, Richard E,, Ir. Arguello, Ivan A. Barrett, Douglas K. Booth, David K. Bougas, Charles S. Bradley, Catherine S Brown, David S. Carter, Paul D. Cooke, Daniel L. Coues, Phoebe A. Critics, David W. Dane, Clarissa W. Davis, Heather L. Dexter, Elizabeth F. Forsat, Ali Frost, Benjamin D. Graf, Iennifer W. Greaney, Anthony I. Griffin, R. George Hamilton, Guri L. Hettler, Scott A. Horton, Sherman D. Ingram, Vinca E. Kelley, Pamela I. Kennedy, Sargent L. Krooss, Laurie S. Laventis, Peter G. Lazo, Benay L. MacDonald, Alexandra D. Mahoney, Christopher Markos, Elena M. McCarthy, Evelyn McGhee, Robert W. McLaughlin, Heather I. Menyhart, Michael A. Miller, Susan A. Montealegre, luan C. Morais, Matthew T. Mulherrin, Elizabeth A. Nault, Karen M. Obadia-Foinquinos, Sergio F. O'Dell, E. Thomas, III Parigian, Theodore C. Parkman, lohn C., lr. 15 Acadia, Kimball Road, Amesbury, MA 01913 124 South Street, Concord, NH 03301 Box 1327, Managua, Nicaragua, C.A. 16 Leonard Street, Gloucester, MA 01930 31 South Main Street, Topsfield, MA 01983 24 Pulaskie Street, Peabody, MA 01960 1 Fairway Drive, Rye Beach, NH 03871 119 Fairmount Street, Lowell, MA 01852 21 Oakland Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 Glen Mills, Rowley, MA 01969 Maple Avenue, Manchester, MA 01944 570 Haverhill Street, Rowley MA 01969 Wheeler Road, Lincoln, MA 01773 1 Lafayette Road, Salisbury, MA 01950 335 Grapevine Rd., P.O. Box 353, Beverly Farms, 30 Kamal Esmail, Esfahan, Iran tMaill cfo Prof. Barocci, E52-443b, M.I.T. Cambridge, MA 02139 95 High Street, Ipswich, MA 01938 One Post Road, Greenland, NH 03840 21 Ledgeways, Wellesley, MA 02181 3 Graham Avenue, Newbury, MA 01950 39 Toppans Lane, Newburyport, MA 01950 155 High Road, Newbury, MA o1950 24 Swart Terrace, Nashua, NH 03060 68 Middle Road, Newbury, MA 01950 26 Burnham Road, Wenham, MA 01984 28 Pine Street, Exeter, NH 03833 Emery Lane, Stratham, NH 03885 20 Main Street, Wenham, MA 01984 150 Perkins Row, Topsfield, MA 01983 90 High Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 104 Elm Street, Byfield, MA 01922 Pine Swamp Road, Ipswich, MA 01938 185 Ipswich Road, Boxford, MA 01921 Old Point Road, Newbury, MA 01950 1 Ocean Boulevard, North Hampton, NH 03862 1790 Bay Shore Drive, Cocoa Beach, FL 32931 Exeter Road, Hampton Falls, NH 03844 P.O. Box A-42, Managua, Nicaragua, C. A. 1 South Road, Rye Beach, NH 03871 82 Atlantic Avenue, North Hampton, NH 03862 6 Robert Road, Topsfield, MA 01983 406750.02-Los Chorros, P.O. Box 193, Caracas, Venezuela 107 96 Wildwood Road, Andover, MA 01810 69 Edgewood Street, Lowell, MA 01852 Iewell Road, South Hampton, NH 01913 Perry, Susan R. MA 01915 :ml 3 P-num 'N K 1 'fgx' :xx FRESHMEN Pfeiffer, Cynthia W. Plante, Suzanne M. Pratt, Dana W. Putman, Clare Reilly, Michael M. Russell, Kristen Ryan, David I., A. III Sheffert, Barbara S. Shula, I. David Stark, Thomas P. Stephan, Anne C. Stern, Penelope I. Sudduth, Robert S. Sullivan, Sarah A. Voedisch, Kurt J. Voelker, lordan Whitney, Mark 137 A. King George Drive, Boxford, MA 01921 27 Parker Street, Newbury, MA 01950 10 Hay Street, Newbury, MA 01950 27 East Street, Topsfield, MA 01983 Ox Pasture Hill, Rowley, MA 01969 841 Main Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 20 Drakeside Road, Hampton, NH 03842 P.O. Box 133, Seven Star Road, Grovelancl, MA 01834 24 Mill Road, Hampton, NH 03842 433 Main Street, W. Newbury, MA 01985 10 Sherry Drive, Andover, MA 01810 93 North Main Street, Topsfield, MA 01983 58 Osgood Street, North Andover, MA 01845 27 Pine Street, Exeter, NH 03833 186 Main Street, Boxford, MA 01921 Worcester Island P.O Box 980, Wolfeboro, IMI-I 37 North Street, Georgetown, MA 0183.3 River Bend Circle, Exeter, NH 03842 0.3894 SENIOR Altschuler, Laurel E. Anderson, Scott Barnes, Robert M. Baum, lody R. Beattie, Douglas D. Bendetson, Andrew P. Bloom, Kenneth C. Bougas, lami M. Bowditch, E.F., 11111301 Casey, Ray A. Chetsas, Stephanie Chiara. Gina M. Clark, Bradford D. Cook, Paul I., lr. Dagres, Todd A. Dammann, Rolt H., lr. Diehl, H. Thomas, 111 Driscoll, Thomas H., lr. Drislane,1X'illiam F, Drulxlker, David R Feith, Peter l. Fox, F. Curtiss, ill Fulton, Herzel V. Giampa, larnes M. Goodliart, lames C Graham, M. Philip .VI , Liiahain, Phillip A., lr. Gwynne, Geollrey C. Hellman, Anita D Hettron, Caroline O. Heresy, B, Scott Hey, Peter A. lrliggains, Robert A Hullnagle, lule-Ann lngrassia, Steven l. lanies, Kelly l, lenlxins, Peter W, lemme, William L.,111 lont-s Aiidrew R 170 Heath Street, Chestnut Hill, MA 02107 Governor Dummer Academy, Byfield, MA 01022 114 Beechwood Road, Summit, NI 07001 2 Morningside Drive, Swampscott, MA 01007 16 Glen Meadow Road, Andover, MA 01810 3 Arlington Terrace, Haverhill, MA 01830 237 Dodge Street, Beverly, MA 01915 24 Palaski Street, Peabody, MA 01000 140 Elm Street, Georgetown, MA 01833 210 Hamilton, Street, Dorchester, MA 02122 310 High Street, Newburyport, MA 01050 407 Prospect Street, Methuen, MA 01844 120 U.S. Route ill, Falmouth, ME 04105 54 Pine Street, Manchester, MA 01044 Green Tree 1.ane, R.F.D. Rowley, MA 01000 Box 11414, Vtlenham, MA 01084 8 Andover Street, Georgetown, MA 01833 01 Devens Street, Swampscott, MA 01007 02 Parsonage Lane, Topsfield, MA 01083 3 Bittersweet Trail, Rowayton, CT 00853 55 Black Oak Road, Weston, MA 02103 12.20 Pine Grove Road, Morrisville, PA 10007 0081 Piclctord Place, Apt., 5, Los Angeles, CA 00035 South Main Street, Plaistow, NH 03805 30 jackson Road, Wellesley, MA 02181 2 First Street, Ipswich, MA 01038 Qld Rowley Road, Newbury, MA 01050 5050 Hampton Drive, N. Olmstead, OH 44070 0 Pearl Street, Marblehead, MA 01045 East Hill, Huntington, VT 01050 18 Allen Street, Newburyport, MA 01050 47 South Main Street, Hoolcsett, NH 03100 Glenwood Road, Hampton Falls, NH 03844 Indian Hill, Prides Crossing, MA 01005 4 Baldwin Lane, Lynntield, MA 010-10 05 Kingston Road, Plaistow, NH 03805 17 Fairway Lane, Snug Harbor, Box 182 Duxbury 02332 7 Hanover Drive, Newbury, MA 01050 Flat 2, 38 Unslow Square, London SW. 7, England 138 Kaknes, Gregory I. Kastan, Adam I. Killip, Daryl P. Kuo, Ming--Che fBenl Latham, Christopher C. Leahey, Alan B. Mackay-Smith, Mary A. Malloy, Iulia Markos, Anna-Marie Mathews, Tomas G. McDowell, Charles W., lr. Merrill, Nancy I. Metzger, Curtis S. Miller, Meredith K. Milligan, Patricia A. Minster, Douglas I. Monaghan, Stephen Ir. Montealegre, Silvio I. Moseley, Alice P. Murray, Nancy L. Neville, Richard P. Norton, Timothy O. Ogden, Philip M. Ostheimer, Thomas W. Palais, jonathan K. Pope, ScOtt, MCG. Purinton, Iamie C. Robinson, Andrew W. Rooney, Iohn I. 49 Eaton Avenue, Woburn, MA 01801 47 Lexington Street, Lynn, MA 01902 Mobil Exploration Norway, Inc. Borehaugen 1, P.O. Box 510, 4001 Stavanger, Norway 15 Lathrop Road, Wellesley, MA 02182 201 High Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 751 Andover Street, Lowell, MA 01852 1 High Street, Ipswich, MA 01938 Kensington Road, Hampton Falls, NH 03844 Pine Swamp Road, Ipswich, MA 01938 266 Water Street, Newburyport, MA 01950 30 Spray Avenue, Marblehead, MA 01945 17 Linden Street, Exeter, NH 03833 17 Andrew Road, Topsfield, MA 01983 Kensington Road, Hampton Fall, NH 03844 Box 1043, Dove Street, Wolfeboro, NH 03894 Indian Hill Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 40 Surf Road, Cape Elizabeth, ME 04107 Los Rabies 17, P.O. box 1175, Managua, Nicaragua 22 Spring Street, Ipswich, MA 01938 Great Hill Road, Tamworth, NH 03886 20 Bride Hill Drive, Hampton, NH 03842 65 Telegraph Street, Boston, MA 02127 816 Bay Road, Hamilton, MA 01946 Blueberry Hill, Manchester, MA 01944 Box 208, New Castle, NH 03854 12 Maplewood Terrace, Haverhill, MA 01830 36 Main Street, Byfield, MA 01922 608 Main Street, West Newbury, MA 01985 Montclair Road, West Newbury, MA 01985 Gov. 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PH1PPEN'38, President Wenham, Massachusetts TRUSTEES CARL A. PESCOSOLIDO Ir. '55, Vice-President Exeter, California WILLIAM B. ARDIFF '55, Secretary Danvers, Massachusetts GEORGE E. Mcc.REGoR1r., '51'TreaSurer Boston, Massachusetts FREDERICK G. CRANEIr. Dalton, Massachusetts SHIRLEY STEVENS FRENCH Andover, Massachusetts STANLEY A. HAMEL '45 Seabrook, New Hampshire EDWARD F. KAISER Ir. '61 Vancouver, British Columbia GEORGE D. KIRKHAM '51 Cleveland, Ohio PHEBE STEVENS MINER Andover, Massachusetts IAMES B. MOSELEY Hamilton, Massachusetts RICHARD B. OSGOOD'53 Haverhill, Massachusetts 14 WILLIAM R. PLUMBER'53 Boston, Massachusetts IOHN W. RAGLE, Headmaster Governor Dummer Academy Byfield, Massachusetts PETER R. REMIS'52 Swampscott, Massachusetts FREDERICK M. SMITH II '52 Dallas, Texas WIDGERY THOMAS Ir. '43 Portland, Maine IOSIAH H. WELCH '47 Newburyport, Massachusetts NATHAN N. WITHINGTON '58 Boston, Massachusetts PAUL W. WRIGHT Lexington, Massachusetts DAVID L. POWERS '52, Alumni Fellow New London, New Hampshire IEFFREY L. GORDON '69, Alumni Trustee Newport, Rhode Island MORRIS P. FROST '35, Trustee Emeritus Lake Park, Florida LISPENARD B. Pl-IISTER, Trustee Emeritus Newbury, Massachusetts -iv- ff f ACULTY ,iff-5 .Y- at - Y aff , . , W ,jf f f f :S7 f+'- I 'N' -iz Q Q ij, . ' A' A , 1 lf -1.gx4.Q - . - ff s'j' i n 5, , ' 1' f - ,-- is Q ' .:. ',f QL - 5,71 Lf f . A 4 f ffff -1- Th ' 6 In-famOU5 rec! Pen 141 213i?mf2'4?f3A.fEmiQYf 'ff ff, 3 . Jg 59325 if bib 2 ,I 11 -1 Lid! 'X f W , v5HvwiW iQ f?'.4EW?'i:2i 'f.'i?2wE Vx-rw MGP u In ,Lf Lo'Yi-'fi fy A14 ilfffgki 1610141 A 50: f ff ,rf rf f'J,4 l'flf 04 '1i'- 'riff ., H.-3 fr. X . .-.H . Q. ' ra, .1-.1--,,..s.,-M, N A, . . t gi f s 4, f. fr Q N ig 4: 'K ,' rf: v-.A Q 5.41 3 rg gpg P 7 H-0 2 .ill ,I-i D iii, di- iii , 551 XA I X TL fgffiffx' if - 5 f- ' -, I gilt iff' .IV jing!! f' -1 sf' -s ,wg f? 3- P . ,ff-' .5-'-ff -'LL T, DONALD A CHAMPOUX Business College Business Manager M. LORRAINE HAGER Mount Mary College 1965, B.A.p Loyola University 1967, M.S.W. Associate Dean, Counseling Sociology X Psychology Commons I RICHARD N. LEAVITT Amherst 1964, A.B.p Bowdion 1971, M.A. Director of Studies SCOTT DAVIS LOTHROP Boston University 1957, B.S 1959, lVl.S. Director of Developement 143 MICHAEL A. MOONVES WILLIAM H. SPERRY Gettysburg 1950, A.B.g Duke 1953, M.A. Director of Guidance History Trinity 1966, B.A. Director of Admissions History I DAVID M. WILLIAMS Franklin and Marshall 1950, AB.: University of Pennsylvania 1951, IVl.A. Dean of Students History Eames West 1 JOHN I. WITHERSPOON Harvard 1937, A.B., 1940, LL.B. Administrative Coordinator History ' -,, U 2 X . WARREN M. CLUNIE I Franklin and Marshall 1962, yi A ' I ' B.A.p 1 7 ' University of Pennsylvania DEBRA ALLISON CRAIG Chairman of English Bowdoin 1977, B.A. Department English Mason Cottage Boyton I IOANNA COULD ROYAL WILLIS LEITI-I, III Cambridge University Harvard 1975, A.B.p CEnglandD196O, B.A.p I-Iarvard Divinity School 1964, lVI.A. 1977, lVl.DiV. English, Language Study English 14 Pierce II RICHARD T. MECHEM Harvard 1968, A.B.g University of New Hampshire 1973, lVl.A. English Farmhouse MICHAEL K. MULLIGAN Middlebury 1975, B.A. English, History Perkins II EDWARD I. RYBICKI Salem State College 1971, B.S. English Ingham I FRANCES RUSS NAVINS Connecticut College for Women 1940, A.B. Librarian 146 I J' 'f 35313 'tifikvizul-'ia f ig, .L -' 9. ' z I . ,,, 4- ,. Tm:-. nw , 1 ' - yr -I,,,,y-1: ui, ' . .cl .' .I ' Hvzsfvfix Kava., -,. : - 1, X1 4t':3 'tf ' i 't I i1f35g? 5i i . .. 1f'4-' ' 35122 X Ll Q' is ' '- 1 new ....,.2..aw-1 iu f wf f f IQ? :mf-. :, ,W3 J. f-.Aer Q, -. A, .--2.5.x :uit .ff .Jw , ' ,I s 4 -. :.- .4 ' sz- rnew, -lf'-he st-,L :fm 5-I Q -1, fm-f is .1 if iw M- ,f I Wm- :ig ' -I ' . v'.,'1,!-i -5, ,:'.f.12':x -,gf 93.5 za af' .' i f X, 'Q' Q , .W F-qs 71342-S --53,31 'Qi' i,Fff-Q:f'lQ...Q? Asif -ffti. R521 hge iq '-Ili' f . 1 fam sift'--9-M- ing ef 'Q ' gtw '7:f'-' im-s' taw-'file ' asm , . 1 mi. 1, , fi 't rdf , , W. . , JU - - fx- - ,V -f-,- -. ,W-I ., . A . . wff. A I, -ef-an ' 51' - ' ' iv ' - :ff . . . ia?ei'efi sm M5?,iMsM?sAias,,,?S2 355, iii THOMAS I. FOSTER Northeastern University 1963, AB.: University of Massachusetts 1965, M.A.T., N.S.F. Institute-Universtiy of Massachusetts Summer 1968 Universite Besancon Summer 1974 Chairman of Mathematics Department Morgan Tower CI-IALMERS CONGDEN Brown University 1975, B.S. University of Maryland 1977, M.A. Mathematics Commons II GEORGE H. EVANS, III Princton 1949, A.B. Mathematics Cottage A. JEFFREY GOSSELIN University of Massachusetts 1968, B.A.p Salem State College 1973, M.Ed. Mathematics Phillips II 147 fe fa' F-a 99+ -l,,,. ,ff wzfrf 741141 lifvgazu 11 -' f if 525 ' ,Z 4535141 ?5,f2Q,i sri ffm 'twig ,755 'bi A 1 .g vjq V, -KL . . . ,. ,V V, gtg! gn .1 fig A H 1 ,g :yi if, yay ,, 'ff Stuff . ,. ,rf ,ia f DOUGLAS LEE MILLER Amherst 1950, A.B. Chairman of Science Department Physics, Electricity, Sciencel Speech ROBERT E. ANDERSON Kenyon 1957, A.B. Director of Athletics Biology, Sciencel Eames VVest DAVID GLENN EYRBERG University of Maine 1970, B.S. Biology, Sciencel Moody ROBERT LISS Dickinson College 1976, B.S. Chemistry Ingham II 148 FRANCES E. MULLEN RICHARD RADOCCIA Brown University B.A., 1974 Wesleyan University Habitat Institute for B.A., 1977 the Environment Chemistry, Photography Brandeis University, 1976 Phillips III Biology ROGER IVIANNING SMITH Trinity 1972, B.A. Mathematics, Physics, Science I Electricity Ingham I 149 A 1 's .ll s lbgaq? w- V- J. :g ,f ' 'f , by I 5 H ',,,,.W5w:,,: 31,3 pg,735gg5!:,,5crfx,,5'1:,'. H, , '. ,V ,V . i 1 f,e35y,Q-'Zi 1j,:,,51,Q. .,,- 'Q f2 .,,f5Qf','gfy:e' , 7.11,-'ff-1',' 7 V. . ' ,. - f I J W,-,.,.Jg ,Q .Q ,.-, ,ty ,, .,... .U ,1,1,,.,,, 5, -Lf, l .V - I- , 1 -:,'v.4.'f1-11-'f if. '1 . '. '.s,w.'.1 V. -' , - . . A ' ' , 4-P 55-, .:1'4i,f gag- 1: -753,1 Q, fi,-.'f.',1::A . ,Q -5: 2 . sf. V f , ' . ,. - '12 we fi 1 rf.,-, I1 fr I H 11 af ' 1' ', ' . I? 4 'fig-, 1 W 'mar 'Ja .xi mi- wil?-4' -in ,hp - , '- Q s 1 ' 1--.W-:N ,,.f, 4 . .-,,A,,,.r:f-, .1-,Lv , , ,. 1 - t 1 V , I, 1 ivy., J .-,lggf ,v':- Ja, if ,.-,.4,,l- ,lr :,,.J.,. f, ,4. , I , t I .' . , ,, . . fn ' ' ' ' -1 -.-1 .J .,.- . - .V 1 -, .' 'A -. - ' 9' ' -' -. , , s, ., 4,..f uw. . ,-M., , fa- 4 - ., ,f 5' -' 5,5 if In .17f2Y,g,:: 155,44 - .f,..,, kr , f.,.f --. 1, . W.iQfM'5?k5f! 3 PIERRE N. BARATELLI University of Colorado 1956, B.A., 1959, lVl.A. Chairman of French, Com University of Dijon University of Texas Modern Language Department monsl LAUREL E. ABUSAMRA Hollins 1969, B.A. Middlebury 1970, M.A. French Boynton House DAVID S. ABUSAMRA Holy Cross 1969, B.A. Middlebury 1970, M.A. French, Spanish Boynton House RGBERT SCOTT CLAGETT Brown 1973, B.A. University of Kiel 1972 German, History 150 KATHERINE KRA Oberlin 1971, B.A. Tufts French, Spanish Commons III LL ALEXANDER WELD WHITE Trinity 1967, B.A. New York University 1972, M.A. Spanish ...A Y. z ,, .-... .-f- vga-. .xi jv,53fmii1Aw:4ivG'Wfi 55.5-iw? ' ,ftafri-R AY sw if if flif, ' 52?2,i?2fffWT wigff4?'Eff'3?E?fiff'f'J af? we-If 2f'Xgf2?3Q, 1j4,,'1',-'fig jbw' fffifn. 5g'7Q!1k-,g- ,vw ' .4 ,152 'x?.,..-'R wg-5.15, v-gag' ii. ',43,1-sim wx gif, , 1 ,-11. -GEL-,g.., ,'.:g:.na:i ',.' y 'i' -,I .fl 'sr' '95 1' ':. .V . 'Yiwf 1 - ', :-. v. 1 :, - L .L ., yas? . '- ab, . I ,V R ,f , , . X 45,11 :v L,-2 5g',,,V ,yt W 1 -fxfx,-,ig,.'g4,:g5,,jgzt . 71115. rag-933.2 ff - z 3,- E4 f3,11if'i::'?.b '72 Qg'5g:qg,'1,1:4f.-,js--i A,-r,-,, .. if A - , MERRILL G. BECKETT Bowdoin 1977, B.A. Latin, English Farmhouse III CATHERINE GRIER Sweet Briar College 1972, B.A. Latin 151 0'-at 'KIM07' 'WM-f ,xr V f 'A ' 1 I f 1 -,si CHRISTOPHER E. HARLOW Iuniata College 1963, A.B. Rutgers 1966, M.A. Chairman, History Department mf, A 4 1, '. 218: 92-5 ., ,yy x: r-,.- ' ,,. ,V ' . - . . .. ' . THOMAS M. TINDALL Dartmouth 1967, A.B. Union Theological Seminary 1971, M. Div Religion, History lngham l ALEXANDER UFEMA Michigan State University 1975, lVl.S. Pennsylvania State University 1972, BS. Chaplain, Religion Pierce Il 152 '11 J? 5 ., -' . ,N af f t . ? W.-al' 'QvSw .A i KITTIE S. MERCER Studio Art, Art History Music MARY M. BLAIR Lawrence 1966, B. Mus. RICHARD BoULANoER i New England Conservatory of Music 1978, B.A. Electronic Music, jazz Band 153 'fi - 51-.- ':f'9 4 ' '-'!f-.1 f . 954 -'f .f-fa-f1f,wszff2f4f:f t f-1 Alf, 1. rg ' 3a f,.f:,,e.1 ,.i,fi ,,.. 'V I. A ' H if .U'a5 :g. wwf, ' - 7-' A- 4 15. ' ' I ' ffl 5 N' 017 H3114 'frf' a ' 1 ', ' . f, f wx. , -i, ne' fa 1 f . U ,1 1 J 1 '1 a ' af' ' f Q J ' . . ' 1 rf, 5-, ,Q ff ,,,1 ,, 63 1 111' ' . YY' rv ' A 1 . , 1 - Y, 1 f 1 Jr ,, Q, 2' -ti V, I-A, 1' L, Y , ... , , Illia,-vii , 1, .. w... ,V , - , i , . , ', ELIZABETH B. CLARK CHARLES S. HARRINGTON University of Denver Bowdoin 1972, B.A. .1?72' B'Af Mathematics Girl s Athletics . ' . Physical Education DEBORAH MARSOI-AIS Physical Education . . Pierce lll Perkmsl Bridewater State, B.S. K . L -2 -. 1 n f, 2 ,..,. i sz t g 154 talk DOROTHY OGDEN Allegheny Associate Director of Admissions BARRY A BURLINGHAM Furness College University of Lancaster, Lancaster, England Assoicate Director of Developement PATRICIA C. WALL R.N. Head Nurse MARIORIE S. COLPITTS R.N. Resident Nurse 155 ...MA WI H SPECIAL THA J,f4f,f!4 if 4 I 3 1 f nf 1 0 f ,W f jv 1' 19711 fi! f nameiwr-ng 4'ffff! ' hx l 2 X if if 'lr Wi Of! .4 A A4 'UP 156 CL UBS AND OR GAINAZA TI ONS XX X Q xi X xx X FQXXX xx X Xlxxxxilxss XXX L- - x X 'QNQ XX xx x-X 1. XX X X X - X X X ,xx x X X x X . Xxx X X.. - L A X A 157 N , N M X u gs RED KEY DISCIPLINE COMMITTEE nun I . - . A ,-. 158 MILESTONE SOCIAL COMMITTEE ,mn 160 S.. RADIO CL B , I 'Wir' wtf? 4 iiaarfff H1 if Q ..... -., JAZZ BAND GLEE CLUB SITY CLUB '53,-' SENIGR PARTY COMMITTEE RABBIT CLUB 166 -if 'Q GOVERNOR l DRAMA CLUB 167 I f ,Q .3A:gf,, ,Egfr , . ,Y 1,. A MQW 4' .gf x 1',g1,Qg3Q 'ff,:1f x' 4 A-'CJ 1 1 x . 1 xulfx Q.- V ' 'f.,' ,1C,. , vw.-fx , .M ,wear sv 1' 'Q .1295 is . 2L: . f 7' ii' ' ,Hx LA ,r,.vrf, I ' Q is 'X sv :-1:53 . 7 -,U ., .,f K X 1 -My ,x x-' , L . ill af, ,- bww I .,m' 11,4 A., I 'E,,-fur 1 w7 ., !,g6f:,, , Jyiiw QQMK' , S K 1 H . . , ' , , , , , , 1 X 4 ny 40,7 f , ma l faq 1 -gm Y 11 Wf f f fg if 1 drzmjfk .1 'W f 1 4 1 9 1 ff, ff, yy y f ffh f 0 1 ' W ,f 1 Wm V F , WML A , uf iffy? 'Q V U ,C ,Zn f ff I 4 f, ff: V , ' 1 , f .way lr . f ,r M, ' Wltmfu. , -, if 'ff 'G' I A- ,-nl W, , , ., , M tial., fr ' W VV QQ , ..-.fw1,,M , , ., Cf , , ff, ff ' . fx ff '1 4' , ww 'N' an ,f 4. f fa f f --Q HMI, 14-1, 4 ' , . M, ff 1 -.. 7,4 4, ,. 2 ff, o 'Wig Aim: ,E tf '- , ,rung ' lv Q? , V , 'L .K Vffclif. K f , . ' f fr, , W. .vm 1 J f Aw . ., Y 4 ,.., ,-an . . 12, ' '. ff. 35? f 15 ' u , ' '1 ' 1 0 . Q 1 Ku W, , 5 X 'V W J. N. sf.. V , K , ' 5 Q , . L. , ' ,V , X 4 x X X X , A ' 5 sg x LA 43 . gl K . ar , . :SQ . .K Y . f 3 k 1? 9 ,fra -. . '95 ' , if S W-xx xxx , . ' :TX EQNQX A xi? Q ix' X X -X ix g Xl Jw x . SK K SV1. gag. fwk 1 N u , N vm 6,1 , 'M f , ,,,ii 14 '11 ' law' 'if Q I Q ,xx ' . ' -gg, 5, ,,V 4 1 fa' ' 446 fa PIP. iid? .WL 3' 1 f gn, -. eq, 552 T. ,wg ft fe 32? , Q 2252 323595 fm- ,.1g.:g,f '- 4 . 3 ' yin M 1.1-sg? , Q my FR V M ,rf 1 , Q3 , P nf 'z , f , , v -4. Q ,- , . , v- . , 4, I .5 ., , ig if ' ,2 , , . Q, . . 4, rf, 42 - ' 1 ' . 4+ 'Y' 4 1 'G' 'fn ' .w N' ., iz, , ,. 6' Q g may 5, . 93 'f-.-M .y ,,e,,j U m ' -I 4 1: . N A gfw 9 ,gy t gf f X . ev Q fda ,A A mf 2 144,441 Q, za 1 , Ax- , ' -, QQ 7 - , ' YA ' Q - - 7f f ?f Wm' 'M H, ,fA23fv.ifs 'kb ,Q ig 'MH' Q -I 5' f THE MORSE FLAG The Morse Flag was first awarded 64 years ago at the 150th Commencement of this school on Iune 9, 1913, and it has been awarded each year since that time to the senior whose record in all respects has met with the highest approval of the faculty. According to the trust established by the late Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse, a long-time friend and trustee of the Academy, a new flag is provided each year in order that the old flag which has flown over the school during the past year may be given to a member of the graduating class. An inquiring mind, a sharply-honed intellect, a deceptive stamina both physically and mentally, a high and uncompromising standard of decency - such qualities as these distinguish the winner this year of the Morse Flag award. Few are the facets of Academy life in which he has not played a leading role: athletics, he has lettered nine times and been twice a captain, leadership, he has served on the Student Council, trust, he has sat on that most taxing of all student-faculty bodies, the Discipline Committee. Member of the Red Key Society, the Milestone Board, this year's senior committee to plan Commencement, honored fo'r his junior year both by designation as the Francis Scholarship holder and by election to the Cum Laude Society, he is recognized by the faculty as possessor of perhaps the most challenging and tenacious mind in the school. Indeed, just as he has an occasion seen fit to reason on thorny issues with the Headmaster, it is without question that - should circumstances warrent, he will never shrink from discourse with the august leader of that renowned institution to which he proceesd in the fall: Harvard University. MALCGLM PHILIP GRAHAM of Ipswich THE ACADEMY PRIZE There are two prizes which are awarded by vote of the entire faculty: one is the Morse Flag awarded earlier this evening, the other, the Academy Prize. Upon retirement of Headmaster Ted Eames in 1959 the underclassmen of the Academy endowed the already existing Academy Prize so that henceforth at each commencement it could be given in honor of Edward W. and Eleanor K. Eames so that the qualities they so deeply prized might be prized in turn by future and succeeding classes. Those visiting the Phillips Building will find inscribed on the paneling outside my office door, in the entry-way of the Cobb Room, the names of all Morse Flag winners, reaching back to 1913, and the winners of this Academy Prize from 1931. Uncompromising determination, unflagging drive, uncompromising standards of excellence - these charac- teristics signify the recipient of the Academy prize this year. In football one thrills to watch the elusive runner, the battering lineman, in hockey, the deft stick handling, the bursts of blinding speed, in track, the grace, the body control, the rhythm. Though he may fall short of giftedness in each sport in which he has participated, this young man has accomplished a dogged mastery of all: The same dogged mastery has brought recognition for his contributions as a leader in his sophomore year, a key award on this same occasion a year ago as a junior, last fall election to the Cum Laude Society and a Letter of Commendation from the National Merit Scholarship Foundation, and Editorship of the yearbook for his class. A pre-eminent scholar amongst his peers an aspiring aerospace engineer as he moves next year into that demanding curriculm at Georgia Tech, 1978's recipent forthe Academy Prize is Byfield's own SCOTT ANDERSON g Aa .Jim 'Eid HH I I 5 .4-v- 170 PETER MARSHALL FRENCH 'U MEMORIAL TROPHY This year, for the first time, a valuable award has been added to the pantheon. It recognizes, in the field of athletics, an individual who, whatever his class at the Academy or gifts as an athlete, for his or her contributions deserves our special respect. It gives me pleasure to read for the first time the citation and to initiate this award. The French Memorial Trophy has been given by his sister in loving memory of Peter Marshall French. It is inscribed each year with the name of a student at any level whose perseverance, sportsmanship and generous spirit on the playing field, regardless of distinction as an athlete, represent the highest standards of participation, and it will remain throughout the year on display in the Peter Marshall French Student Center. The first name to be inscribed on this beautiful trophy is that of a freshmen who, performing on the youngest teams in school in football, basketball and baseball has for his unselfishness and his enthusiasm earned the admiration and appreciation of his coaches and his teammates. PAUL DAVID CARTER of Newburyport 2, GOODWIN ATHLETIC PRIZE The Goodwin Athletic Prize, established by Mr. Fred H. Goodwin of the Class of 1916, a trustee of the Academy from 1916 to 1949, is given to the senior who, by his athletic achievement and sportsmanship, has brought the great honor to his school during the past year. There are innumerable good athletes: crowd-pleas- ers, gifted egotists, taciturn but talented loners, the generous, the modest, the apparently indestructible. Yet he who is not merely good at the game, but consistently, unvaryingly goodg intelligentg a team playerp and a gentleman - such is a rare and admirable figure. This year's winner of the Goodwin Athletic Prize is just such a one: nine times a letter-man, three times a captain, three times named to All-Independent School League Honors, in two different sports, he has been a unifying and stabilizing influence in every season - demonstra- ting quick, sure hands in football, ball-stealing, feeding and scoring on the Governors' strongest basketball teams in decadesp streaking out front up straight-away and around corners on the track, he will bring to that peerless college overlooking tfrom Meldrim Thomp- som's granite turfl the broad-flowing Connecticut - and that verdant state felicitously signalized in his middle name - a rare rich quality, not only as a athlete, but as a young man. I-IERZEL VERMONT FULTON of Los Angeles THE GAFFNEY PRIZE The Cummings Prize was established by the family and friends of the late Fred T. Cummings of Troy, New Hampshire. It is awarded annually to a student who has shown perseverance, hard work, and good spirit in contributing to the welfare of the school. Service and scholarship distinguish this year's winner of the Cummings Prize. These two qualities. pervade all she has devoted to: through the Red Cross Bloodmobile, the YVVCA in Newburyport, and the Salvation Army she has reached outside the Academy into the larger communityp here at home she has been Red Key, a Big Sister, Co-Chairman of the Day Library Committee, Co-Managing Editor of The Milestone and a member of the Cum Laude Society, Finally, she is the first student in memory ever invited to sit on the Committee of Admissions to Governor Dumrner Academy. ICDY REGINA BAUM of Swampscott The Gaffney Prize, established in memory of Robert A. Gaffney of the Class of 1940 is awarded to that senior who, in the opinion of the faculty, has been most considerate of the rights, opinions, and sensibilities of others. Known by all, liked and respected by all, considerate of one and all, he has served younger students through his proctorship in Mason Cottage, the school through his Chairmanship of the Red Key Society. Letter winner in three varsity sports, he has accepted disappointing injury and adversity side by side with success as part of his lot. The definition of the Gaffney Prize fits him aptly: ...considerate of rights, opinions, and sensibilities of others. ANDREW WOOD STEPHENSON of Swampscott THE CUMMINGS PRIZE 172 THE BARRISKILL PRIZE The Iames M. Barriskill Prize, established in 1960 by the students in memory of Mr. Barriskill of the faculty, is awarded annualy to that member of the senior class who has made an outstanding contribution in the field of music at the Academy. You have seen her before this evening, and I have saved some of the thunder for this second moment recognition. She has been not only premier character actress at the Academy, but for four years an active member of the Glee Club, for four years a student body voice and piano - while other areas attaining member- ship in the Cum Laude Society and the position Editor-in-Chief of the student newspaper, The Gover- nor, at its best: MARY ALEXANDRA MACKAY - SMITH of Ipswich THESPIAN AWARD The Best Thespian Award was first made in 1971 when our Drama Club became a member of the International Thespian Society. It is awarded for meritorious work in the field of dramatics, for inspiring participation, providing leadership, and developing the- atrical knowledge and abilities. True leadership is a rare quality, showing differently perhaps in different people, but almost always reflecting poise, perceptiveness, persistance, and responsibility. When creativity also plays a part in it, then it is truly rare. A member of the International Thespian Society since her sophomore year, winner of their Special Merit Award as a junior, she whom we honor tonight has won applause many times on the Governor Dummer stage, both in leading and supporting roles - and when not featured in the cast has worked unselfishly behind the scenes: MARY ALEXANDRA MACKAY- SMITH of Ipswich THE WILKIE SERVICE AWARD The Wilkie Service Award in honor of Valleau and Marjorie Wilkie is awarded to a senior whose contri- butions to the community outside the school have best demonstrated the deep concern, the unfailing sympathy and aid, for which Val and Marge are affectionately remembered. Happy is that community which can count among its members even a few who can meet each day gladly, with an unassuming generosity and concern for those around them, whose presence is a kind of compass homing on quiet strength. lf you have stood by him on the sidelines, you have felt the unswerving loyalty of his support for his team, if you have watched him on the field, you have seen not a starring, but a steadfast effort. By his own testimony, early in his career at Governor Dummer, self-control did not come easily to him. Though aboarding student, in his junior and senior years, he has through the Academy's Community Service Program given countless hours to organizing and directing recreation activities for children at the Salvation Army Gymnasium in Newburyport The 1978 winner of the Wilkie Service Award is PETER HEY of Hookset, New Hampshire 173 100 SPECIAL PRIZES An alumnus of the Class of 1911 at the Academy, father of an alumnus, friend and neighbor of Edward W. Eames for years during the latter's retirement, until their deaths in 1975 within days of one another - and for many years a generous benefactor of the Academy - Milton L. Dodge of Newburyport in his bequest provided for the continuance each commencement - time at Governor Dummer of Special Prizes to be awarded to members of the Senior class whose perseverance, courage, initiative, sense of respon- sibility, loyalty, andfor concern for others have contributed to the strength of the Academy. With gratude to Mr. Dodge and his family, we award six Special Prizes tonight. Each of us knows perhaps a few who have succeeded on natural talent alone, they are much to be admired. Closer to the circumstances of most of us, however, are those who -if they are to lead - must do so by virtue of determination and extra effort, when they succeed, they are greatly to be respected. In his two years at Governor Dummer, the recipient of tonight's first Special Prize has won the admiration of us all: as a striver in the classroom, as a concerned contributor on campus: as a dormitory proctorp happy-go-lucky, but committed, a letter-winner in each of his six seasons at GDAp in lacrosse, attackman with the quickest and most unerring wristshot north Cand perhaps south, tool of the Mason-Dixon line - a certain-school-in-a-southern-su- burb-of-Boston's loss, but Governor Dummer Acad- emy's gain: PETER WELCH JENKINS of Duxbury 4 1-QL-...A mis, The poet Homer of ancient Athens and VValt Whitman of America both are famous for Catalog- uing in their poetry. I have not their talent, so for this next prize-winner, I stand in need: - during his four years at the Academy, three as an elected member of the Student Councilp - student tour guide, - member of the jazz band, the staff of The Governor, the Varsity Club, the Commencment Committee, the Senior Honor Society, - in his junior year, a student representative to meet with the Board of Trusteesp - as a senior, a dormitory proctorg - seven times a letter winner fin three sportsl, he has performed conscientiously and with patience two of the most difficult student roles in the school: as Chairman of the Student Council and as student representative to the joint Faculty!Student Discipline Committee PAUL IOHN COOK, IR. of Manchester Massachusetts The next winner of a Special Prize Boasts a record every bit as broad and as impressive as was his who has just preceded her - but as I have already demonstrated my ineptitude with cataloguing, I will not venture it again. She is a student leader, an actress, an athlete, elected an ' 'Outstanding junior, a member of the Senior Honor Society, and a member of the Cum Laude Society at the end of her junior year. Off Campus, as on, she has intelligently championed controversial, but key causes in the public interest. Most recently, in a carefully researched and skillfully orchestrated program before the entire school, dealing with the energy issue, she provided an irrefutable case for the value fo Senior Spring Term projects when conscientiously planned and pursued: JAMIE CRELLY PURINTON of Byfield V' Particularly to be prized in an Academy like this are those who can maintain the even tenor of their ways, earnest, loyal to their friends and to their school, standing up both against pressure to be discouraged or temptation to lord it over others. Such a one is the next recipient of a Special Prize. Dogged worker in the classroom, one of the strongest of the dormitory proctors, he has been a captain, at least three times he has recieved All-Independent School League Honors, he has been designated Commended Student in the National Achievement Scholarship Program for Negro Students: ISIAH SUGGS, IR. of Lynn x 1 i i Then there are those who wherever they participate create the feeling that they are in it not to get, but to give, who are welcome wherever they put in an appearance because they are fun to be with and because they can be counted upon to contribute - to wit, in this case, manager and assistant coach of the third girls' basketball in her junior year, tour guide extradorinary, assistant in the Office of Admissions, Assistant Director last fall for the Drama Club's production of Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap , Co-Chairman of the Red Key Society, member of the Commencement Co- mmittee, general gal-of-all-work: greeter, cheerleader and cheerer-upper for the school- LESLIE ANNE RUSSELL of Hampton, New Hampshire The final winner of a Special Prize in 1978 has amassed an impressive record throughout the school, one hard to imagine surpassing. For four years he has stood academically at or near the top of his class, and each year at graduation-time he has captured academic honors, he is a six-time letter winner, between track and soccer, and this past fall was honored as second goalie on the Independent School All-Star soccer team, in addition to being chosen Most Valuable Player for the Governors. Managing Editor of The Milestone, Presi- dent of the German Club, member of the joint Studentfliaculty Athletic Free Term Commitee, he is one of two Governor Dummer Seniors this year to survive the competition for National Merit Scholarship and emerge - out of 1,000,000 potential candidates as one of the 13,500 finalists from whom about 25011 will be awarded National Merit scholarships. This summer, as the result of his performance on a nationwide competitive examination Geoff will spend four weeks as the guest of the German Federal Government, in West Germany. Next September he will join some outstand- ing recent graduates of the Academy at Dartmouth College. GEOFFERY HOWLAND WALL of Newbury ' ., 1 .,. 1,1915 ' , . ,:.- - Q, A. E, WHf,',3f,w-- 1' ' -wf+'+1 ni! . ,.. , .- ,. 1 I, ' .- ' Q1g..'..:1-. '.4n.,. 1 ..gf 1- -4 . 175 UNDERCLASS AWARDS Each year a number of awards are presented to underclassmen - awards well and truly earned. Since these students' day in the sun is yet a year away, however, I shall as they appear this evening treat you to- but a tantalizing glimpse of their virtues. HARVARD PRIZE BOOK The Harvard Prize Book, has been endowed by Mr. Roger B. Coulter, Class of 1913, first winner of the Morse Flag and a former Trustee of the Academy, so that it may be awarded each year in the future. The book is awarded to that member of the junior class deemed most worthy through his high scholarship and character. Only recently has the Prize Book Committee, made up of Harvard University alumni, which sponsors recognition for outstanding juniors in more than 1500 schools throughout the nation, agreed to honor deserving young women equally with young men. And just in time, for this year she who is deemed most worthy in her class of the Harvard Prize Book award is: ABIGAIL MANN WOODBURY of South Byfield 1 A, 176 THE HALE SCHOLARSHIP The Hale Scholarship was established by Dr. and Mrs. Clayton H. Hale in memory of their son, Dean Channing Hale of the Class of 1961. It is awarded to that student who, through perseverance, has shown the most improvement in the various aspects of school life and has become an esteemed contributor to the well being of the Governor Dummer community. We have watched him in class, where he is both earnest and ableg we have seen the respect in which he is held by his friends and schoolmates: we have responded to his superb talent and leadership in three sports. The deserving winner of the Hale Scholarship this year is DEREK DEALE SPEARS of Bronx, New York is x THE INGHAM SCHOLARSHIP The Ingham Fund Scholarship was established through the generosity of the family of the late Dr. Charles S. Ingham, former Headmaster of Governor Dummer Academy, in honor of his father, the late Samuel Kellogg Ingham of Saybrook, Connecticut, to help an industrious and able student through the school. An unassuming but admirable acheiver academically, artistcally, and a worker in all ways, the recipient ofthe Ingham Scholarship this year is IUSTINE EUSTACIA COOK of West Newbury THE FRANCIS SCHOLARSHIP The Francis Scholarship was established by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Francis in Iune 1941 in memory of their son, Richard Hawes Francis, ofthe Class of1936. It was awarded each year to a student of high character who has made substantial intellectual progress and who has demonstrated a spirit of cooperation and helpfullness in the life of the school. Vibrancy, energy, leadership, scholarship, and a supply of enthusiasm which spills over to enliven all who know her - all these characterize this year's winner of the Francis Scholarship: KIMBERLY SAUNDERS of Byfield THE WHITTEMORE AWARD The Whittemore Award is awarded to a member of the sophmore class who through attitude and persever- ance has made the best contribution to the Academy. Now, to present this award is Scott Anderson - the winner his sophomore year - representing the Senior Dormitory Proctors. This years' winner is the type of individual who impresses you as soon as you meet him. I-Ie is the type of individual who will do something which needs to be done, without being asked. Through his positive . attitude and spirit in the classroom, on the athletic field, f' -1 and in the dormitory he is a leader in his own quiet way. DANA HAMILTON IONES of Kennebunkport, Maine SPECIAL AWARDS 177 1 '. ill . FRIDAY JUNE 2 P V. I 1978 4 f , ,.ff ,Q -HI mme if , f 2 f' ,fi p - 9 f EQ - Q . 2 2' f - if . If 2 . 4 1? , 1 ,Y if 'S , 1 S 52, it , yy gg I W RDS BAUSCH AND LOMB MEDAL The Baush and Lomb Medal goes to that senior who, in the estimation of the faculty, has been most outstanding in the study of science. SCOTT ANDERSON of Byfield COLMAN SCHOLARSHIP The Edmund Coffin Colman Scholarship is awarded to a undergraduate with efficiency in the study of R.P.I. MEDAL The Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Medal is awar- ded to a member of the junior class who has been languages. The holder of this scholarship for this year outstanding in the study of mathematics and science will be ABIGAII. MANN WOODBURY of South Byfield AMBROSE AWARDS There have been Ambroses connected with the Academy for at the very least a century. I suspect that the Ambrose Prize Speaking Awards date back to the 189O's, when Fred Marden Ambrose was a Trustee. Last night three seniors demonstrated the happy outcome of the conjoining of thought with eleoquence. They are this year's winners in the competition: Third: THOMAS I-IENDRICS DRISCOI. of Ipswich Second: MARY ALEXANDRA MACAY - SMITH of Ipswich First: IODY REGINA BAUM of Swampscott during the year. STUART RANKIN CAWLEY of West Newbury 180 THE THORNDIKE HILTON CUP The Thorndike Hilton Cup was established by the Class of 1919 in memory of their classmate, Thorndike Hilton. It is awarded each year to the ranking scholar in the Senior Class. With this cup goes a silver medal. For the past four years I have watched, fascinated, while the same four students, three boys and one girl have challenged each other for academic supremacy in this class graduating today. From the very first they have vied closely. Furthermore, throughout their careers here they have been outstanding not only within their class, but among the very top scholars in the Academy. This year - during which three more johnny-come-latelys have mounted determined attacks upon their preeminence - they, all four, still remain, like Affirmed and Alydar, no more than a neck apart. The prized Thorndike Hilton Cup must go to one of them. Thus we have a living example of what I emphasized last night: That the honor an award brings with it stands upon the quality of the competition in which it was won. The Cup this year goes to one who though he has in the past been tied in the year-end class standing, has never dropped out of first place. SCOTT ANDERSON of Byfield HON ORARY CERTIFICATE While for the next minute or so I confront for a last time whether or not we are really going to let these seniors here assembled depart this verdant scene, let me temporize by fulfilling the pleasant duty of awarding a special Honorary Certificate. For this past year we have enjoyed here at the Academy the presence and participation of the latest in a delightful succession of English-Speaking Union scholars. Luke White of the Old Rectory, Widford, Nr. Ware, Herts., came to us last September from Eton College averring-and I quote from his ESU application that The only thing I can contribute to the Americans is myself, I suppose, as an ambassador from England. Quite a substantial contri- bution, I think we here would agree. Luke, a free spirit, has sported in soccer, being already adept at French, has conquered while here the first year of Spanish, flirted with photography, and otherwise dealt solidly with his academic schedule. More prominently, however, as actor, director and producer he has loomed large on the Governor Dumrner stage, his characterizations ranging from an Italianate sophisticate of somewhat shady credentials to a philosophical and flamboyant Beagle hound. Thank you for a lively year, Luke, and best wishes in your progress through Exeter University. IONOTHAN LUKE WHITE MOODY KENT PRIZES Tne Moody Kent Prizes are given annually to those students throughout the school, graduating senior or und rclassman, who have achieved outstanding records in various academic departments. No more than one may be awarded to the same student. The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in English is awarded to Scott Anderson of Byfield The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in History is awarded to Malcolm Philip Graham of Ipswich The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Mathematics is awarded to Daryl Pearsall Killip of Norway The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Science is awarded to William Francis Drislane, II of Topsfield The Moody Kent Prize forthe highest standing in Religion is awarded to Ahnerflgilious Mason of Durham, North Carolina The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Music is awarded to Iamie Crelly Purinton of Byfield The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in French is awarded to Iody Regina Baum of Swampscott The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Spanish is awarded to Martha Susan Zawacki of Ipswich The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in German is awarded to Geoffrey Howland Wall of Newbury The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Latin is awarded to Sarah Putnam of Rowley The Moody Kent Prize for the highest standing in Art is awarded to Robert Middleton Barnes ofSummit, New Iersey 182 T f 5.5-2zmw?ff41fiff:fm'fai1mwff?izf:2z?35.E1QZt2',ii, 1- 1. f A- ,, F'1fWi'H'ff2 -Wifi-55'35if'i3' Eff?WffLfq5?:'2fs1 i f gi .4a:i,gwfB,,-,z f.:-f:y'f1a ' 3 .2 ' , 1 ., U MTM! or nf :fix f f tn. M . . . 6 M ,y . 4 . f , V, , , 1 .. if ff.. 0: ' .fffl iz.. 1-22 lv' , 0 Vw ! sf- 'f 6' ff ff if P' W'x': f-if ' -I -i A 1 gl 1- , 7, - ' ' ,Q Q A 5 rf: 'xfvilfftfil 5f,'i:LJ,,,14'. 4ll'fff:, . ,',1'J'4.T. df -ifaaf ,ralfffiililifrafly ff '- 'M ,rl AA, K -VH5 . if 'I nit , .5 ', 1 ,Q 4:7-q:..,.u Lv 2'.',,' '.- J him fQn5fm2g . 9-42.2714 .-, '-'Pad' -gf .-' .. J '-1 ' vb- Faculty Officers 184 p R ir' Vw 'aw 4- get 'Q Scott Anderson Iody Baum Bill Drislane M. Philip Graham Daryl Killip Alan Leahey Mary Mackay-Smith Silvio Montealegre Phil Ogden Iamie Purinton lack Rooney Nid Sinthavanuchit Dana Stetson Geoff VVall Martha Zawacki l 4 ! CNE LAST LGOK 185 Wi ww A 'Rb-if 'wmv-mv I: 187 wiv 188 Z Q Qwllllf 4 9 W 4 Q f Q 0 ff 6 Z if Q I WJWJI11 ,fulfill 9 g Mm all f 7 Z IIJMW WW! QQ, 1' Z 5 MW 4 ? Q x X 9 2 ' 4'WW0l1W 4 W Z WWWWMWMW I I W 5 ll f 9 Z , Z 0f I 4 ig Q0 4 4 I 6 Q ff Q Q A D VER TISEMEN T x Q S ll 189 'There 's Complete Locol News!Regionol News!Notionol News!World News!High , , School ond College Sports!Professionol Sports!Sports Results Cl1orts!Deor Abby! In 1 Lifestyle!Your Heolth!Comics!Jeone Dixon Horoscope!Rev. Billy Grohom!Crossword f U Puzzle!Weother!Art Buchwold! or Williom Sofire!Births ond Deoths!Colendor of Events!Jomes Reston!Sylvio Porter!TV Listing! Bob Greene!Wnllnom F Buckley .lr !Edutornols!Letters to the Editor!Bridge!Seek 8. Find!Througl'1 the Yeors! Jock Anderson!Clossafned Wont Ads!Full Color News Photos!Nikkl Scott!RetolI Advertisung!Consumer Information! Cortoons!Engogements!Weddings!Gordening!Politicol News L nee Eagle-'l'rlhune CB FP fy D Y,- For home delivery call the Circulation Department C6173 685 i000 Q I . il if ,f f B C CS ar, W 0 8 I - 190 Gblh Glnmm: FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS GEORGETOWN SHOPPING CENTER 3Hln1m:rn Q ' Q., '63, -6 f , FREE Q. . ,. V, If Q 1 6 I 1 ELIVERY ' ' EL: E'A ' A , 'F' , , ,-,, ' V F --I A ,-K V. : fl- 1, ,I W-bi-L.: ..A4. 3,4 , senvlce 352 zooo FQR A GGOC1 Luck SHORE THING Try Com liments of CAP'n JACICS p WATERFRONT INN Mike's Subs 253 Humphrey St. Swampscott, MA 01907 16175 595-4734 or 593 1411 Right onthewat -C t fT Salty d SHP h P 465-9392 191 H E EKU? SNTEAN K llllll l Sixth-Three State Street Newburyport, Mass. 01950 TEL: l617l 462-3136 Crossroads Plaza Salisbury, Mass. 01950 TEL. l617l 462-8771 Twenty-Seven High Road Newbury, Mass. 01950 TEL. C6179 462-2645 . 'Q S am' ra 0 Q I Q AD ,lffflg-J. ll: I I' 110, V lll Wfffff 5 I D K! A 47 Nlerfi -vi Street 1-f 4-52,- NcvlbwyP0r't, 8750 Good Luck Class of A78 McCormick True Value Hardware 28 West Main St. Georgetown, MA Town 81 Country Hair Styling Port Canvas 29 Market Square Newburyport, MA Bergson's Ice Cream 8: Fine Foods 33-35 Market Square Newburyport, MA '...... I. Institution For Savings 93 State St. Newburyport, Ma. and West Office: Storey Ave., Newburyport, Ma. Old Newbury Crafters At Inn St. 6 Inn St. Newburyport, MA The Book Rack 52 State St. Newburyport, MA i Davis Electric Co. 40 Merrimack St. Newburyport, MA Port Stationers, Inc. 44 Merrimack St. Newburyport, MA L 193 - I Cfravelnng? 'H 4 A uygxx HAYDWS PHARMACY Q0 the v A M ,I ,I ful Lawrenf:eE.Drowne, Reg. Ph. i S N M f6ute C P D1 W M 0Hou5enf rfwel I '?4gPl98S3.T1 St., Newburyport. Mass. - 46?-2727, 465-7721 T I ph 462-4941 462-4468 A SO. . Haml tonlagdnigibx - f603j 71.4-4738,-N . L 1 A' l I .,-.ffff ' . 48 I .A 4.1 f M CHAN TS EIGIATIONAL l BANK l or: NEWBURYPORT 194 I. .. CHASE Sz LUN ll HN C 0 47 STATE STREET NEWBURYPORT MASSACHUSETTS 01950 PHONE: 462-4434 Seaport Studios, Inc. 27 State St. Newburyport, MA Lunt 8: Kelly's American Home Center Route 1, Traffic Circle Newburyport, MA I.unt's B.P. Station Traffic Circle Newburyport, MA A Full Service Station Le Rustique 42 ln St. Newburyport, MA -Leather Goods-Iewelry School Supplies-Novelties First 8t Ocean National Bank 51 State Street Newburyport, Mass. Palumbo Ornamental Iron and Copper Work Hanover St. Newbury, MA Sportsman's Lodge Plum Island Road Newburyport, MA Fine Foods-Liquor-Dancing Hyman's Shoe Port Plaza Newburyport, MA Fowle's News 17 State St. Newburyport, MA K-Mart Newburyport Gives Satisfaction Always -I A Northeast Communication Company nd 8: Pagin stems mn5.:: --:--- - 2 A-A-Q--Q---1-sun 1 1 2 Edward Baum Co. N y 156 Broad St. Lynn, MA 01901 L 198 Insero Motors Traffic Circle Newburyport, MA Lyman B. Pope, Sr. Long Live Pooh-bah Martha 8: Tom Cesarz -1 Volpone Motors Co 58 Merrimac S Newburyport, MA 01950 ' 5 5 - f ' ' ,- :X ,sf 4 Arthur S. Page Insurance Agency, Inc. 57 State St. N buryport, MA 01950 1 Labadini Restaurant 'Nl b ypor't,MA Buchika's Ski Haverhill, MA Shop The Andover Andover, MA Shoppe 200 Hazel's Yarn Shop 42 Inn St. Newburyport, MA Newburyport Flower Shop 4 Threadneedle Alley Newburyport, MA Art And Camera 37 Pleasant St. Newburyport, MA Chetsas And Sons 57 Pleasant St. Newburyport, MA .,,, . U, T , , x . .'- ', T, , T-N, ,, , .x, :Q W V1 Q .V M . 'x, ,. x'w .xA,- ' -.'T..Nvn, , ' X , -,.. T . K., , , ' T' ',,'.. . .' K' '- . X' - . .. , A- , - 4 '. .N-4,5 1 , 'V 4 , , .Uv-,C.. + , , X - w.. .N , . -,,,.-'1.'-. TA, 2 ,, . I, A, .' ,'- HX-fi T ' .. X TOWLE MANUFACTURING C0 260 MERRIMAC STREET NEWBURYPORT MASS 01950 , -T .- , T X U ' - . ' , 1 ,X . ' . . , ' ' , . 1 ' ' V' ' ' . , , 3 - I ' - ,- 'A , ' ,I .4 I f':f1.:: ,,, I f f , V- ' , - I ,' ml, - fl' 'fmnul' .,A,,',, ,' - , , , , , , ' 'I f lj ', , ,. , ' ,',f, .4-Q,-, ,- ,L-Q, ' , , , 19, ,-T' ' ,,' V,--, .,, .1 ,, ,,'.. .fn 1 , , , , , , ., - -4 ' I , ., 'J 34,1 . 4 , .,,,.,,, 1., , . , .. ,, , .,' ., , f,,- ,, ,. , , , A - , , , '. , I Y -f', ,, .1. , f,- .' ,,,-1: 31,1 1 , , ' Y , , ,, ' m ,. . ' , , 1' ' , ., ' QM, ,',,f, .,- . T ' , I ' T , ,'. ,,,f- , if-,Q ,'f2,', . , - V, f ' , ', ' ..' ' . ',' , ' 'nf ,-'iff 'i 'f-ff'-- J , . , ' f' ' ', . ' r, -,, 1- 1' '. ' ,,-', 1 ' f 'T - ,,' 'N . nf- 1-.,.' rf ' .gn-'-, ' , ' , V , , ,, . I 4, ,V I, AJ, ',',,,,,y5.,,U-.L,,., ig.-,'.f,.,f, .II , , V I , -4 .. - ,4 .V ,rf ,, , nf, , ,f ,Vg ,,3,f- 1 , . ,,f ,4 ,1f.,, ' n:.,,, -,f 4 1 ,V , ' ' .., 4, w v ,' ,J ', ff, iff' ,l ,fl yu.-7,4 1 I 'N MCYCLES gcwtll Georgetown il 1 Savings Seven North St. Georgtown, MA A Community Bank with Community Interest 1 Gimy Blvd. at Mill Sf TEL. 352-8600 Route 97 Haverhill, MA . -as Ipswich Bottle Shop 164 High Sr. Ipswich, MA Best Wishes 202 4 5' t 3 if 1 l l Essex Bituminous Concrete Corp ' Russel St. Peabody, MA Mfg. of Specification Bituminous Concrete and Crushed Stone ll. . .. ......... .. i .. Putnam Associates Inn St. Newburyport, MA 01950 l Brookside Floral l Rowley, MA l E Best Wishes to Class of '78 h Thomas H. Driscoll, Sr. V I I The Mears Shop South Hamilton MA ' l L 203 Shop Rowley MA Sunny Lane Cleaners, nc 1 Hour Cleanlng on the Premlses C-ll. VAN CEYTE Owner Manager ONE STOP SERVICE Dry Cleanlng Shlrts Leather and Suede Cleaning Topsfleld Shopplng Center Phone 887 8431 Hours 7 8 Sat 7 6 Davld S Waters Insurance Agency nc The Whlmsey House 37 Mam St Topsfleld MA Lnspenard B Pluster Fashlons By My Harrdresser ' . ,I . G D A Vegetable All Stars P-ping-pong, MTB, the fair, it's a cruiser! Elroy, Cat, lax ball, purple rhinoceros, 7 flights of Stearns, can you call my mother? Don't turn on the light, Oops! It's in my head, Ellie honey the bathroom, Paws, Phone calls, paranoia, hey congratulations, you finally made it, Anthro class, this is the present, is it a boy, a guy, or a man? etc., etc., I can't fit it all in, catch ya ..... . . .Vf ig, 1- '.y.,',.3? ' ' .M ...Q -' - 'Z ? o -sh aff? L s .v 4' . p ng! r I sf? . 1. Tl' . , . f A as Q ' it I r t 'Mm . 277 '--. E, , he at a 4. 1- . my 1. an ft, X, . 1 ,mssshq , J., , s 4, - Q., 'M' U ,KL-. 'Q t cv r 5 11 Q an i E Q . 4 ' f ll.: J ,T 'J yd ' ,Q Q rw ., sg, irq, ' '. if, ' - ill .XR 1- ' ' rf 'ffl 4' 'L . . A if .. C 06 PRESTIGE POR TRAITS INC and UNIVERSAL PUBLICA TIONSQ INC Through the combined efforts of the Professional Staffs of both Prestige Portraits and Universal Publications, we hope we have achieved our purpose in helping you to record one of the most important years of your life-your graduaton year Congratulatzons to the Class of 1978 17 Elm Street Stoneham Massachusetts 02180 61 7 4 38 J I tv 7 l . ' 1' 'I af Q Q n , . - ' 1 . 1.4 , ' H , ,' 4 ' ' ,, 4 ' , . , f ' 1. -3. 2' ' 'ii fji .'-1..'51 20 A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR I never thought I would live to see this day, but the book is finished. Only two weeks overdue, but what the heck, it probably would have been finished a lot sooner if I had spent as much time in the Milestone room as I did in the weight room. The book is far from perfect. We did the best we could. Any mistakes are mine. We did the best we could. I would like to extend my personal apologies to the cast of Charlie Brown, the Trustees, and the golf team for the lack of pictures. The golf pictures were destroyed in the darkroom, and the play and trustee pictures never got taken for a variety of poor excuses. There are a few people who should be mentioned for their assistance. Mr. Wayne Peabody and Mr. Roy Hult merit special thanks for their invaluable photographic help. Geoff Wall was irreplaceable, essentially my right hand. Iody Baum added her feminine touch to this male organization. Stu Cawley did all the art work as well as just about everything else, we reward him with this job next year, poor boy. M. Phil Graham was about the only typist besides myself. Martha Blake and Katherine Post did a great job copying over nearly half the pages in preparation for shipment. Finally, 1 would like to thank Steve Wall for his involuntary loan of a radio for the office. I hope you enjoyed the book. I would be interested to hear your reactions. If you're ever in Atlanta, yall give me a call now, ya hear! I What, me worry? And now, the only appro- priate way to conclude a yearbook dedicated to a wrestling coach lSorry Hebl. 1 THE END Y ' ,tn Y u 5: in u I . . . - o 1 .' V 'll 5 m.. AA, ..- , ..,, r 1- . . ' Y .. 'yu X' 1 . rw' ii 1 4? giwfnyv' s.,r,-wtf. . Y Q I w 5 4 -. I D' 'f7if'.-A ' ol 4 M A Q lv, O 5 s 1 2: 4 , X , 'JI IH' Q1 1,,. .privy - r v, ., 'lp ZA? I Af 'flvlxzi 1 iii - 1-il ,1 j ,A ., vsp. vs, Y 1, .f . U, 2 f ' -' iQ .53 . 'N ZX . ef , '-2, Q. 37' -5- ., x x N 'a .ff
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