Harford Junior College - Owl Yearbook (Bel Air, MD)
- Class of 1964
Page 1 of 64
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 64 of the 1964 volume:
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1 7 the, J Owl Vol V Hlvfowl Inniov Couege 1 115+ w W If a man should wake in a foreign land after a long sleep and see the sun low in the sky, he would have to wait for the sun to change its posi- tion before he could tell if it Were rising or set- ting. So we 'identify each moment by the changes that take place. The moment: the year '63-'64. The changes: a tax cut voted through the House of Representa- tives for the kat time in sixty years, a Negro en- tered a white high school inBirmingham, for the first time in a thousand, a woman in South Dakota gave birth to quintuplets - and Harford Junior Col- lege broke ground for a new campus. These iden- tify our year of great changes. The ground breaking ceremony, September 18, was the beginning. After that, work moved ahead rapidly, and the low modern buildings new housing the classrooms, library and science labs of Har- ford Junior College rose over the meadows of Prospect Hill Farm. To these in a very few years will be added a fine arts building, a student cen- ter, and a gymnasium. So many changes have already taken place that the sun can only be rising over Harford Junior College. A beginning has been made, the future looks bright and we confidently leave our hopes in the hands of the students to come. DR. JOHN W. MUSSELMAN President DR. CLYDE A. GOODRUM, Dean of Instruction MISS HAZEL L. BOWMAN MRS. DOROTHY S. DARE MR. JOSEPH S. TREU Guidance, Psychology Guidance, Mathematics Registrar, Acting Ptesident MR. RICHARD C. O'CONNELL. IR. Art Arts MR. JOHN C. SWEENEY Music GEN. HENRY M. BLACK Business Administration DR. VICTOR C. CLARE Industrial Relations Business Administration MR. BENJAMIN S. SCHILLING Accounting MISS CORA V. WOERNER Secretarial MR. JOSEPH G. BOGDAN MR. MICHAELA. FAMLIGLIETTI Mathematics Mathematics MR. FRANK C. DARE MR. WAYNE H. HOUSUM B, P.R. , Drawing Mathematics Engineering MR. RONALD H. KLAIR Engineering Analysis and Mathematics MR. WILLIAM F. CAPALLO Health, Physical Education MRS. CAROL A. KINGSMORE Physical Education MR. JAMES H. HOPKINS English MR. JOHN M. KINGSMORE Physical Education MISS NANCY E. SMITH French Health and Athletics Language Natural MRS. ENID B. FARRAND SCLences Biology MR. JOSEPH H. FLEISHER MR. MILLAN D. STOLLER Chemistry Electronics DR. CHARLES W. HOFFMAN DR. ARTHUR A. WOODWARD Physics Biology DR. CHANNING R. KAO Geography, Economics Social Sciences MR. PRITAM T. MERANI History, Political Science Library MISS DOROTHY G. DENMAN MISS FRANCES E. BROWN Assistant Librarian MISS EDDRA L. FANIOY Librarian Library Secretary MRS. RUTH GREENE Secretary to Dr'. Musselman MISS MARGARET LIVEZY Guidance Secretary MRS. AIMEE SMITH Secretary to Mr. Treu Undergraduates The first step taken in any task is always the most difficult, for it signifies a break with pre- vious methods and experience. Yet this step must be taken without hesitation if the individual is to grow. Nowhere is this truer than in the pursuit of education at the college level. The college Fresh- man can no longer rely on his lofty position as a high school senior; his knowledge, not his social achievement, is the standard by which he is now measured. If he hopes to gain from attending col- lege, he must accept the fact that others know much more thanhe. As Plato pointed out, aware- ness of ignorance is the beginning of wisdom. Freshman year is a year of rapid and lasting changes for the student. The most important changes are those which occur in the mind. The college Freshman believes he has taken a great step from the position of high school kid to college man, that he has become mature and worldly-wise by virtue of his entrance into col- lege; but the final proof of just how mature he is will be how successfully he completes the two years of intensive study which he faces in col- lege. Cherie Amato Richard Andrews Leroy Antetomaso Arthur Asher William Bankert Leo Bantner Carroll Barnes Carolyn Barrow Wilbur Barrow David Barton Linda Battle Ronnie Bedsaul John Bender Reno Black David Bolgiano Lois Bostwick Paul Bourg Gary Boutchyard Gilbert Bowers Torn Brakeall C. Breidenbaugh Richard Brook Donny Bromley Frank Brown Beverly Buck John Buettner June Bull Charles Bullock Barbara Burke Gary Burkins Archer Calder William Caldwell William Campbell Charles Caudill Beverly Cecil William Coats Edward Coffey Charles Cole Charles Cook William Corbin Dorothy Cox Dell Crouch David Danner Madge Divers Emmett Donnelly Carroll Dorsey John Dougherty Hannah Drasher Elmer Jarusek Kenneth Jenkins James Johnson Kenneth Johnson Arthur Jones Harry Jones Michael Jones Florence Jubb Myra June Walter Jung William Jung Mary Ann Kahoe Matthew Kato Diana Keithley Fred Kern James Kline Jeffrey Koller Ann Kondos Michael Koshuta Bonnie Kragl Henriette Lawrence Charles Lawson Elbert Lilly Allen Lloyd Robert Dubois Phyllis Eckert Elizabeth Edwards Jane Edwards Larry Fields Donald Gent Joseph Giunta Jeff Glover Ray Gochnaver James Goodson Frank Grafton A1 Graybeal Myra Gregory Robert Hanson Cheryl Harris Camelle Harrison Bruce Hildebrand Walter Hill Thomas Hlavaty John Holter Clarence Hopkins John Hostetter David Huff James Huff John Lloyd Howard Logan Frank Lohmann Robert Long Carol Louch Thomas Mabe Ruth MacCauley Mike Malone Ray Marchman Damon McDaniel John McDonell Donald McDougal Joan McGrady Robert McKinney Lloyd McNutt Jack Messman John Michael Richard Miller Gerald Mion Lawrence Moffett Nancy Moffitt Harry Moody Nathan Moore Norman Moore Donald Morrison Norman Moulsdale Mary Jo Nealon Mary Nicodemus James Nieberlein Kenneth Noble William Norris Wallace Oberender John Page Ken Patterson Elaine Perry Howard Pershing Joanne Peterson Bill Pfingston Bobbie Powers Beverly Preston George Proctor Martha Reeve Richard Reeves Jim Reynolds Hugh Richardson Judy Rinehart Susan Stuetz James Sumpter Cliff Tellis John Tobin Eleanor Tomaso Eve Underdown James Vancherie Kenneth Vansant Dora Waddell Carol Wagaman Michael Walter Carol Waltman Avery Ward Marlin Watson Lillian Watters Willis Whitlock Fernglen Wiherle Russell WTIbar Linda Wilfong Carol Wolfe Ron Wolfe Brian Zongker John Zook Ray Rios-velez Emma Robinson Richard Robinson Jane Rogers William Rogers Tom Ryan Dolores Schruefer Mary Schueller James Schultz Gerald Scott James Scott Dick Sexton Linda Shortt Allan Shreve Everette Smith Gloria Smith Richard Smith William Smith William Smithson Sherman Snapp Edward Snodgrass Bernard Sprissler Kenneth Stout The Student Council . . . . . . encourages academic achievement. promotes fuller understanding between faculty and student body . . . . . . developes physical fitness. . . . through the various organiza- tions it supports. l4 MARGARET DARE , President MISS BOWMAN, Advisor STUDENT COUNCIL MEMBERS: FIRST ROW: Miss Bowman, D. Crawford, M. Dare, N. Welch. SECOND ROW: 1. Hanna, N. Little, P. Morrissey, M. Kahoe, A. Denbow, P. Ford. THIRD ROW: W. Hill, C. Sasser, B. Wiley, C. Louch. STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS: D. Crawford, Vice-Presi- dent; M. Dare, President; N. Welch, Treasurer. Organizations Organization is the very basis of human life, for life is a constant striving for formulation of abstract ideas into organized, articulate expres- sion. By far the rarest form of such organization, and the most fulfilling, is creative organization. Creative organization presents a wide hori- zon. It encompasses the most mundane and the most aesthetic. It provides an opportunity for all to express their varied talents in the most con- structive way possible. In the school, especially, creative organizations such as yearbook, newspa- per and drama provide a training ground for the student with artistic abilities. Service organiza- tions, such as People-to-People, give the student an opportunity to learn and understand the world in which he lives. It is the building of individual character, not the book or play produced, which is the true measure of an organization. 1m 13111311111110? 1.13.9311: 111112113111. duped. into L1 . . each of us 111111133153 12111 :11 life, 311d . 111I 331113160131ch . , 1;;f 1.11111 1:;1111, 111:1 , - mes, 1.11111 1111113111 .: 131' 311.1111: 90.33.11, . L 1 11$ nan 331214131111'13'3'10 L DAVE CRAWF 0RD inf. Editor mp;dm$c,1hacMssg are , ailijmalthy means 1a 15 and renewing strengt daily r130 8 Of Riga. 1m3. 3pent in social act 21' 11121.. 1.1311,, every 13911th .6 gain for 183.911 03:11:15; 1:11.121 1101'11'3011551111 111-81165 300d life is a balan$e n? '3 113': 9'1ch , ; ,,,,, u ML L, LLeLft to LrigthzL MLr. Hopkins, adviser, ALnn . ,Denbow, Dave Crawford, Pat Morrisy, Nancy Little, Hannah Drasher, Nancy Parks. r1nrs chanwea and 11333 g-'i:1j 3 bring 0131311 0111111ng3 1.12; 1.11111 N we know and :0 0111's: 1311x3123, 51.13 131:1 1111383113 we are 31101111111: 1411:. 11:52, am 111311.011 the way 1.1;; mg wmrhhwhlle human being 3.1; , L w 4713:; liarwtweie ,' School Eiar Mn-Sfafe 3r a bleedaoff page. We hoekground 'of 'fhewpicjures 'musi be exmneted Mk: orpcoplt V4 from We edges of +119 mommiag board to avcnd 1 X535 09 THE Moumme scum m. g: emu rtpmducu exact HARFORD JuNIoR COLLH VOLUME 6, ISSUE , 1 Rcumscr NAMED 1 n w. Mr' M 4' MnLeod and i, an art RON WOLFE eWashinge C., was Editor architect m the Harford J unior College build. the 204-acre site on Prospect Hill The Board of Trustees chose Mr. I for the important task at its meet. adnesday, September 5. McLeod is a widelyeknown archi- 9 has done the pianning for the m Montgomery Junior College, a $1,000,000 institution in Hagerstowm iful and highly utilitarian $584,000 .eld house in Montgomery County. n was selected to do the architec. ylanning of the $4,500,000 Haile University, in Addis Ababa, Ethio- the past ten years, the McLeod 4. Do not park adjacent to the yellow nnes. ng'sh Annnrl- 5 ma M... nan... Hnbate- n16: vanr to via. x gmLeft to right: Ron Wolfe, Mary Ann :kets i, . L Mr Kahoe, Jim Taylor, Jim Hanna, Wade the? . last 5 . ollar - ETun;.w1;llP20Ck' g.gwffwliqlelggtr... ,, :nse. Mundt teach. y classes is HJ.C. library ValuedgFacility received his Harfard Junior College has a valuable , M m L'LeB. facility'which is not often usedrby the' and. Althoggh students .. its library. Students should the seizvxce, realize its usefulness and value .. and 1.3: experience should utilize it much more often. At the close of last year, in June, has complete our library had 4206 books in its collection. pavement. MI'. During the summer 175 new books were star's Degree processed. Now there are ahnost 4400 books. to us from Some of the new reference books are; law he taught A Treasury of fhe Familiar, edited by that he taught Ralph L. Woods; Westminster Misforical Atlas to the Bible; and Funk and Wag- xg fienarfmpnf nalls New Standard Didionary of m Eng Harford Players Jeff Koller Mr. Dare, Jim Taylor, Mr. Sweeney Jim Taylor Josh Lovelace Carol Miller 20 The Harford Players under the direction of Mr. Sweeney presented an intimate musical comedy, The Fantastiks. The cast included actors from the community as well as members of the faculty and student body of the college. The musical was presented in the Wakefield Elementary School on November 8th and 9th to sellout crowds. Papa Dare Director prompting c ast Moonlight and romance 2l People-to-People LINDA SHORTT President MR. P. T. MERANI Advisor SEATED. 1. to 1'.: Mr. Merani, Joan McGrady, Jeff Koller, Linda Shortt. Mrs. Schueller. STANDING. 1. to r.: Dave Crawford, Joyce McNutt. Gloria Smith. James Goodson. Janet Robinson, Richard Reeves, Richard Litzinger. The People-to-People Organization has a very active chapter in Harford Junior College. Now in its second year this is the only sponsored chapter in a Maryland Junior College. Last summer, with the financial support of com- munity businesses, the clhb sent Joyce Jordan and Sondra Williams on a ten-week trip to Europe as representatives of the University Student Program. It is hoped that the project can be repeated again in '64. In Memory of John Fitzgerald Kennedy 191 7-1963 On November 22, 1963, the President of the United States was killed by an assassin's bullet in Dallas, Texas. Let us remember that on that day the young of the nation lost a hero, the country a dynamic leader and the world its best friend of peace. I ask you to give to the service of our country the critical fac- ulties which society has helped develop in you. I ask you to de- cide, as Goethe put it, whether you will be an anvil or a ham- mer, whether you will give the United States, in which you were reared and educated, the broadest possible benefits of that edu- cation. It is not enough to lend your talents to deploring present solutions. Most educated men and women on occasion prefer to discuss what is wrong rather than to suggest alternative courses of action. But would you have counted him a friend of ancient Greece, as George William Curtis asked a body of educators a century ago, who quietly discussed the theory of patriotism on that hot summer day through whose hopeless and immortal hours Leonidas and the 300 stood at Thermopylae? J. F. Kennedy, October 12, 1961 Even as Mr. Charles Reed broke ground with this golden shovel, the earth mover could be heard roaring in the background changing forever the face of Prospect Hill Farm. The old and the new will be combined. The beautiful stone farmhouse with its redwood floors will be renovated and just across from it will rise the brick walls of the new library. The dream is fast be- coming a dynamic reality. 24 There is much to be done . . . A well is drilled and water flows 57 35::;; .;6 COS! v 7.3.;.1ar.w Av. e. 24 V a; Q 1 A and miles of pipe are laid . . . chm. 5? Walls are carefully shaped by strong hands and grow towards completion. 25 Activities From the moment e enter life as helpless infants until the momnt we depart, we are all grouped into general ulasses. Yet each of us manages to follow his ot distinct pattern of life, and to find his own w.rk and satisfactions: We deal with the world on 0' own terms, not those of our contemporaries. Anc each of us finds his own outlets for the tensions his chos en path produces. For most, this release :3 found in social activity. Such activity form: an essential unit of life. None of us can live wit out some distraction from our daily, well-regulatad pattern of living. The school basketball gam-, the group picnic, the chess game in the lou ge are all healthy means of releasing tensions an- renewingstrengthsapped by the rigors of daily 1i -. ?HEHVW ; Time spent in scial activities is never ' - wasted; every contact 5 a definite gain for each of us, for it widens oJr horizons and makes us aware that a good life is a balanced mixture of work and leisure. With .ur realization of this fact, we are Well on our wa to becoming worthwhile human beings . 26 l a Do L. to L: A. Shreve, H. McGuirk, G. McBride, M. Malone, R. McDonald, J. Tobin, T. Ryan, C. Mergler, not pictured: D. Morrison. NNEWm-Cbpvm L. to r.: R. McDonald, W. F. Capello, T. Ryan. The coach shows how. Charlie waiting for his 4 6' '7 players. 28 Ryan pops for two. The '63-'64 basketball season proved to be disappointing in the won - 10st column with H. J. C. winning only 1 out of 17 games. But, the team always played a hard game right through the final quarter. Inexperience and inability to put the ball through the hoop more often than the opponents was the story of the season. McBride really gets off his feet. Morrison shows how it's done. McBride rebounds. 29 Clap your hands, Stamp your feet, Get in the rhythm Of the victory beat. We've got to F-I-G-H-T. We've got to F-I-G-H-T. We've got to F-I-G-H-T. We've got to fight boys, Fight, fight, fight. Cheerleaders B. DuBois S. Spencer M. Dare P. Frangawlakis L. Gunther S. Clarke B. Edwards S. Stuz Bob Wiley, President, Ron Jones. Tournament Director, Niles Welch, Vice-President. R. Jones, B. Wiley, N. Welch, B. Yri, K. Vansant, R. Wolfe, L. Antetomaso, B. Long, R. Reeves, Mr. Housum. The HJC Chess Mates is one of the most Between Rounds active student organizations. The club, on December 14 and 15, sponsored the Harford County Open Chess Tournament. This year the Chess Mates joined the Maryland Chess Association and played matches against twelve chess clubs in the Baltimore area. Ski ttles Lightning Tournament Without dohbt the greatest changes lie ahead for a; graduate - he may con- tinue his working career; perhaps he will marry. Nevertheless, the founda- tions for change have been laid earlier and none more important than those at Harford Junior. Most important the? graduate achieves a, broader perspective of the world. He realizes that the ; conflict at the Berlin Wall, at Saigon, ' and aththe Mongolian borden directly influence his life. He graddates intork a larger world than his father, and his. z college years have in part prepared' , him to cope with the great changes taking place there. h x , i w 1 964 ROBERT S. BISHOP HANNAH E. DRASHER Student Council 1; Year- book 2. ANNA M. DENBOW Yearbook Editor 1, Asst. Editor 2; Newspaper l; Glee Club 1; Drama So- ciety 1,2; People-to- People 1,2; Student Coun- cil President 1. 34 DAVID H. CRAWFORD Student Council 1, Vice- President 2; Drama Society 1; Yearbook Editor 2; People-to-People 2. MARGARET A. DARE Glee Club 1; Student Coun- cil President 2; Cheer- leader 2. PA TRICIA A. FORD Student Council 2. LINDA L. GUNTHER Drama Society 1; Student Council 1; Cheerleader 1, Captain 2; People-to- People 1,2. WILLIAM F. FORD Not Pictured: George A. Drama Society 1,2; Delta Harkins, Michael C. Psi Omega. Weaver, Norma M. Knight. NANCY R, LITTLE Handbook Co-Editor 1; Yearbook 2; Student Coun- cil 2. DIANE D. HORKY Student Council 1, Secre- tary 2; Drama Society 1. RONALD E. JONES Newspaper 1; Chess-Mates 1 , 2. JOYCE E, McNUTT Freshman Class Secretary 1; Drama Society 1; People-to-People 2. JAMES F. MARTINEK GLENDON R. MORGAN Chess-Mates 2; People-to- People 2; Drama So- ciety 2. PATRICIA A. MORRISSEY Chess-Mates 1,2; Drama Society 1; People-to- People 2; Student Council 2; Sophomore Class Vice- President 2; Yearbook 2. RICHARD C. SEXTON Manager Basketball 1. MICHAEL C. RITONDO 36 ANNE K, SMITH Newspaper 1,2; Yearbook 1; Student Council Vice- President 1; People-to- People 1; Drama Society 1; Handbook 1. DOROTHY B. WATTERS English Honors Program 2. AUDREY A . STEELMAN ROBERT L. WILEY Chess-Mates 1, President 2; Sophomore Class Pres- ident 2. LINDA I. WILFONG Newspaper 1. NILES T. WELCH Student Council Treasurer 2; Radio Society 1; Chess- Mates Secretary-Treasur- er 2. 37 John O. Burke Roland N. Cullum Class of 1963 Elizabeth Ann Edwards T. Joyce Jordan Not Pictured: Lois Blackburn, Donald K. Carey, S. Dell Fox. III, John W. Molnar, Joyce Marie Williams. Russell 5. Keen John P. O'Neill Donna Mae Ritchie Cathy R. Price Charles F. Ramsay Sondra J. Williams 38 L ax 35;:3 ii CAROL JEAN WA GA MAN Miss Harford Junior Callege 1964 Shakespeare maintained that a man in his lifetime passed through, V; , seven stages of growth, seven roles which he had to act out on the stage of his life. Each part represented a tremendous change for this individual, a loss of old beliefs, a reinforcement of half- conceived ideas. Often, this change was hard to accomplish; it left scars which would never heal. But it had to be carried; through, for without it the individual would never have i L grown. The man in his times of change is like the pond when a stone is cast in. Once the stone has en- tered the water, the pond is never the same. The stone creates a series of concentric cir- cles radiating from the center. As the cir- cles move outward from the original source, they increase in size. How like these cir- cles is the development of men. No change is entire unto itself; each is fol- lowed by further change. Without these changes, man would never grow. Without growth, man could not exist. Directory of Undergraduates Akers, J. Clark, J. Gordon, W. Alexander, C. Clark, S. Goirley, R. Alter, W. Cluck, J. Grace, L. Amato, R. Coale, M. Graham, M. Ambrose, T. Cook, E. Grant, D. Ambrosi, D. Cook, G. Grant, D. Ammirato, M. Cooper, M. Graffon, N. Anders, B. Corbin, W. Graybeal, B. Anderson, M. Cornwell, G. Greenfield, D. Angeletti, R. Craig, W. Grogan, E. Anspach, R. Creed, M. Gross, R. Appel, D. Cregger, D. Guaty, W. Appel, J. Cullum, E. Guhr, D. Ardolino, J. Culp, C. Gunther, L. Ashby, C. Cywinski, L. Harkin, G. Ayres, P. Davenport, J. Hall, D. Babies, W. Day. R. Hambrick, H. Bagley. H. Deamico, M. Hanna, 1, Bailey, R. DeBerry, J. Hartsoe, R. Bazemore, D. Dever. K. Harris, M. Beavers, R. Deweese, C. Haughay. D. Benincasa, I. Diamonte, O. Hayes, B. Berry, R. Dickson, K. Headley, C. Bines, G. Dinka, W. Hendrickson, H. Birks, W. Dixson, D. Henry, E. Bishop, R. Dodler, G. Henry, R. Bishop, W. Daugherty, D. Hess, B. Blevins, P. Duffy, V. Hilton, K. Bloom, B. Edwagds, R. Hince, D. Bodt, J. Ensani, H. Hlauaty, T. Boggs, F. Eller, T. V Hollard, I. Bohrer, C. Ensor. M. Holbrook, T. Bohrer, J. Epard, K. Hooker, E. Bonakdarpour, B. Fanjoy, H. Hopkins, J. Bonige, T. Fejfar, M. Harmer, Z. Booth, R. Flowers, W. Howes, J. Bowen, J. Flinn, M. Hrubesh, R. Bowers, V. Forbes, R. : Hudson, W. Brown, B. Formato, J. Isom, I. Buffington, A. Forsythe, D. Jacobs, R. Burcham, P. Foster, C. Jadali, M. Carmone, T. Frangowlakis, P. James, B. Carter, G. Fusco, A. James, L. Chambers, C. Gallacher, S. Johansen, W. Charland, L. Gamble, 1. Johnson, K. Cherioweth, C. Gayley, J. Johnson, W. Choate, C. Gent, D. . Keen, M. Citro, M. Gibbs, D. Keese, R. Clark, C. Gibby, C. ' Kessler, P. Clark, G. Gilbert, D. Kestner, R. 42 King, C. Klein, J. Knapp, L. Koszara, A. Kyle, R. Larner, S. Lee, 0. Leighton, A. Leishman, M. Leonard, V. Lewis, A. Lewis, P. Liddell, R. Little, S. Litzinger, R. Long, B. Longo, V. Lundmark, J. Lutz, J. McBaide, W. McFadden, E. McGrady, L. McGuirk, H. McLaughlin, J. Mabe, T. Mahan, M. Martin, J. Martin, C. Martin, L. Mason, H. Matasonsky, B. Mather, C. Mathews, T. Maxey, G. Meredith, J. Mergler, C. Metaxa, A. Mezan, R. Miller, D. Miller, F. Milliner, H. Mitchell, F. Moffett, E. Moffett, P. Moler, L. Monks, J. Montgomery, K. Montgomery , S. Mozafari, D. Murray, R. Mullen, C. Nation, J. Neeper, D. Nelson, 8. Nichols, D. Noble, R. Norman, H. Orlosky, J. Ortt, L. Parks, N. Patterson, C. Pearle, M. Peeler, G. Perlman, M. Petrali, S. Petrogallo, A. Pevera, S. Pfai, R. Pfeiffer, P. Pickard, D. Pinto, L. Polk, H. Pollard, J. Potter, C. Powers, P. Price, 8. Prim, T. Putman, R. Reamer, J. Reidy. J. Reeves, E. Reightler, L. Riemenschneider, G. Rivera, A. Roeder, D. Rohr, L. Ryan. J. Saneman, W. Sapanaro, J. Sasser, C. Schaefer, R. Senior, R. Senn, R. Shimek, N. Shom, L. Shue, G. Simmons, C. Sims, T. Sivtek, J. Slack, S. Smith, A. Smith, B. Smith, D. Smith, W. Snodgrass, H. Snyder, D. 43 Sowa, J. Spencer, S. Spicer, S. Spies, C. Stephen, D. Stevens, D. Stewart, L. Stewart, I. Stollzfus, R. Sullivan, P. Sullivan, C. Swarm, J. Tashgy, P. Taylor, C. Taylor, J. Tedrow, M. Thompson, R. Thompson, T. Tombaugh, D. Tuma, J. Upperco, D. Upperco, L. Van Dyke, C. Van Duyne, J. Valentour, V. Vass, L. Wagman, D. Wagner, M. Walker, D. Walker, M. Walsh, C. Watson. E. Watson, E. Weaver, E. Weaver, V. Weaver, V. Weddle, J. Weir, G. Wells, C. Wheaitian, S. White, T. Williams, C. Wilson, S. Wolfe, R. Wolford, R. Woods, D. Wrede, D. You, R. Young, D. Yri, W. Zancanata, C. Compliments of . . . C. H. RIGLER FURNITURE CO. 313 St. John St. Havre de Grace, Md. Phone: WE 9-2933 Compliments of . . . THE DOLLY-MAE APPAREL SHOP 201 North Washington St. Havre de Grace, Md. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Harford County Aberdeen Office 207 West Bel Air Ave. , Aberdeen, Md. Bel Air Office 12 Office Street, Bel Air, Md. Edgewood Office Edgewood and Hanson Road, Edgewood, Md. Compliments of BOYD 8: FULFORWS PHARMACY Bel Air . Md. Compliments of HECHTS HARDWARE STORE Havre de Grace, Md. KURTZ $ KAHOE FUEL OILS 133 N. Bond St. Bel Air , Md . Phone: TE 8- 6910 Congratulations, Class of 1964 From Harford County's Largest Employer in Private Industry . . . Providing Unequalled Opportunities for Job Advancement in a Variety of Careers . . . SHOE COMPANY, INC. Belcamp , Maryland We Make Bata. Shoes - People Make Them Popular PRESTON2S STATIONERY STORE Hallmark Greeting Cards Office and School Supplies Bel Air, Md. Phone: TE 8-5858 Compliments of COURTLAND HARDWARE Bel Air, Md . AUTOMATIC SALES INCORPORATED Serving the Public . . . Automatic Candy - Beverage - Cigarettes Sold Thru Vending Machines Aberdeen, Md. Phone: 272-0800-00 THE MOTOR SALES COMPANY OF BEL AIR, INC. Chevrolet - Oldsmobile Cadillac Sales and Service Bond St. and Pa. Ave. Bel Air, Md. Phone: TE 8-4500 UP 9-2200 FIRST HARFORD FEDERAL SAVINGS 8: LOAN ASSOC. Bel Air Ave. and Rogers St. Aberdeen, Md. Phone: CR 2-0 700 GRIER OIL COMPANY North Phila. Blvd. Aberdeen, Md. Phone: CR 2-2060 TE 8-6560 LEE BUICK, INC. Perryman, Md . Phone: 272-3800 Compliments of . . . FIDELITY EXTERMINATING COMPANY, INC. Specializing in Termite Control Harford County 120 W. Thomas St. Bel Air, Md. Cecil County 225 North St. 398-23 60 Compliments of THE COMMERCIAL 8: SAVINGS BANK Bel Air Edgewood FOLEWS PHARMACY Prompt Service St. John and Green Sts. Havre de Grace, Md. Phone: WE 9-2992 McGRADY CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. Apartment Rentals and House Sales Office: 420 S. Phila Blvd. Aberdeen, Maryland Compliments of SEW 2N2 SAVE SHOP Bel Air BOB TURLEY2S BOWL Re staurant Bowling Is for the Whole Family Free Instruction for the Family 10 AM to 5 PM Dial TE 8-43 60 TO THE STAFF from THE STAFF by THE STAFF Our staff it was small, Our budget so meager Our advisor quite tall With staff very eager WM. We met every Friday Throughout the year, With gallons of work And a teaspoon of cheer . We worked until March, From back in September, Our creative fires Became but an ember. With layouts and pictures, Snow delays and all, We finished our book, Boy! What a ball! This isn't great poetry Or great anything, what's more; But it shows how we feel About OWL '64. TAYLOR PUBLIYSljlkNAG FQMPANY
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