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Francis Millet has served at Milton as an adviser, a
teacher, a coach of Warren Hall football and the
boys' squash team, and the assistant head of the
Admissions Department. More importantly, he has
been our friend. In addition to being compassionate,
he offers us his wisdom and good judgement. As a
token of our appreciation for your outstanding ser-
vice both to Milton and to us, we, the class of 1984,
co-dedicate this yearbook to you, Mr. Millet.
The class of 1984 is proud to co-dedicate this year-
book to Ianet Buell. Both as a teacher and as the girls'
head class adviser, Mrs. Buell radiates warmth and
understanding, she is always ready to listen and to
give support. She has offered us an abundance of
sound advice, be it to an individual or to the whole
class. Mrs. Buell, we thank you for your devotion to
us and to Milton, and especially for your encourag-
ing smile.
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Volume SIX Iune 1984
QQ I
THEY RODE THE BIG BOMBERS
THROUGH THE DEADLY SKIES
OF EUROPE IN 1944
BUT WHEN THEY CAME HOME
TO FACE THE FLAK
IN THE LABS AND CLASSROOMS
OF A PRESTIGIOUS
INDEPENDENT SCHOOL
THAT WAS WHEN
THE
RIGHT
STUFF
A IEROME A PIEH PRODUCTION
STARRING GEORGE C SCOTT as HARRY STUBBS
and IASON ROBARDS IR as A O SMITH
Wlth IULIE ANDREWS BRIGITTE BARDOT
and THE STUDENTS OF MILTON ACADEMY
from THE BLOCKBUSTER WALTER MCCLOSKEY NOVEL
muslc by DON DREGALLA and THE R A F SYMPHONY
chalkdust by SURE RITE
Q : SOME MATERIAL MAY NOT BE
SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN
THEY REALLY NEEDED . . .
T BLE OF
CO TE TS
Dedications ..... ..... 2 0
Class History .... ..... 2 2
Reflections ............... ..... 2 4
Milton: Branching Out? .... ..... 2 6
Candids and Captions .... ..... 2 9
Student Gallery ...... ..... 3 2
The Year in Review .... ..... 4 0
Issues ............. ..... 4 2
Drama .... . . ..... 44
The tail of every coin in the United States is in-
scribed with the motto E Pluribus Unum - Out of
Many One. But, at Milton, I feel the converse is espe-
cially fitting - Out of One Many. Diversity shows itself
here at Milton, not only in the fact that we have many
different people doing different things, such as sports
and the arts, but also in the fact that so many people do
the same things both differently and well. Our section
entitled Student Gallery shows just how proficient our
artists are. Other sections of the book attest to the many
outstanding athletes. Even things as subtle as dress and
manner are done with an individual flair, which I hope
is captured in our candids. Individualism is what sets
Milton apart, and in this yearbook we hope to show
precisely that individualism, that diversity that makes
up a year at Milton Academy.
Thorn Pozen,
Editor
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IA ET
ELL
by Gloria Perkins
Guardian of Goodwin Room
grammar, interpreter of arcane test
scores, friend and advocate of the
Class of 1984, Ianet Warren Buell
arrived at Milton in 1970, when
her husband George was
appointed to teach History and
serve as Master of Robbins House.
The four younger Buells, George,
Ir., Lisa, Becky, and Sam, attended
Milton. A graduate of Bryn Mawr
College, Ian also took special train-
ing in Language Skills and re-
ceived the Certificate of the Lan-
guage Clinic at Massachusetts
General Hospital. She joined the
Milton faculty in 1972, becoming
Department Chairman in 1979.
Upon the retirement of Miss John-
son, the Buells moved into the
house she had formerly occupied
and opened their "mini-dorm,"
with four students in residence.
Living at the Buells has become a
much sought-after privilege -the
occupants' birthdays are cele-
brated with parties, their teachers
and friends are invited to dinners,
and each girl is encouraged to re-
quest a favorite food on the weekly
marketing list.
Ian combines style with sub-
stance and firmness with kind-
ness. Though she would probably
prefer to spend her leisure hours
on her omnivorous reading, she al-
ways manages to find time to bake
20
a treat, knit a sweater, or talk to her
advisees. She has been Class Advi-
sor to the Senior girls since they
were in Class IV and can fairly be
said to know them well! As Lan-
guage Skills Chairman, Ian is tact-
ful, efficient, and above all suppor-
tive of the teachers in her depart-
ment, each of whom speaks admir-
ingly of her. As teacher, she is pa-
tient and positive, and her helpful
hints for taking the S.A.T.'s are
valued. As though all this were not
enough for two women to do, Ian
has also devoted much loving care
to members of her family and has
been taking courses for her Master
of Arts degree, which she expects
to complete soon. In fact, she is the
embodiment of the versatile "mod-
ern woman" as she goes on leave
next year to continue her graduate
work and ponder a possible
change of career.
With characteristic New En-
gland reticence, Ian herself would
never dream of speaking about her
many accomplishments, but the
rest of us at Milton are grateful for
the opportunity to recognize them
and to thank her for using them to
our benefit.
by Thomas Cleveland
Few people associated with Mil-
ton could be said to represent the
very best traditions for which our
school stands. Frank D. Millet is
one of those people. He is an in-
stitution, as Mr. Webster says,
"something that serves to in-
struct." Mr. Mil1et's loyalty and
service to Milton Academy and its
students goes back a long way,
farther than the enrollment in this
school of many of the parents of
this year's graduation class. Would
that any of us could be as in-touch
with so many for so long!
I respect and admire and look up
to him as much today as I did when
I was a student here in the early
1940's. Some things about Frank
Millet will never change, and
probably the most important thing
that has made him such a great
schoolmaster is that he really cares
about other people. To Frank peo-
ple come first, and all of his high
principles follow. He has never
lost his gentlemanly and gracious
ways or his beautiful sense of
humor. lf as much learning is done
from the personal example of the
teacher as from the study of the
subject matter, then those of us
who have been lucky enough to
have known Frank Millet in any of
his many roles at school have
learned a great deal about honesty,
straight-forwardness, and what the
Chinese call "the well-conducted
life."
F RAN
MILLET
The man to whom this Yearbook
is dedicated has made a great dif-
ference to so many who have gone
here. With a handshake, a smile,
and some pleasant remark to set
one at ease, he has been the first
contact of thousands in the Admis-
sions Office. And then he never
seems to forget a face or a name for
relationshiplj as he follows and
shepherds students through the
school. Whether he was coaching
Third Football in his vintage can-
vas football pants, or teaching
someone a lesson in squash, or
running Warren Hall, or helping
someone with his Latin third de-
clension, or living in Robbins
House, F.D.M. has been there -
doing his best to lead some student
to being his best. He writes literally
hundred of thoughtful hand-
written notes a year to students,
graduates, faculty, and families
saying "Thank you," or "Congrat-
ulations," or "Happy Birthdayf'
or "Fm sorry". If we have not been
blessed with one of his more per-
sonal notes, there is no student
who has not been touched by the
gift of his precise calligraphy on a
prize award or a diploma. After
students have left, and before they
send their children back, they are
not forgotten, but Mr. Millet's con-
cern and contact seem to continue.
Probably one of the most heard re-
marks from graduates beyond the
school is t'How is Frank Millet?"
It is good to be associated with
Milton because of people like Mr.
Millet, and it means a great deal to
have him as a teacher, a helper, a
colleague, and above all a friend.
Thank you, friend, for what you
have given and are giving to us and
to our school!
21
CL SS
HISTCRY
by Michelle Dandridge
As one looks around Straus at a
typical Class I meeting, it is hard to
imagine the roots of the Class of
1984: a kindergarten class of sev-
enteen. Now, possibly this thought
doesn't come to mind to the aver-
age senior at 8:00 on a Thursday
morning. However, to one who has
watched and been a part of the
change and growth of this class
over the last thirteen years, the re-
flective thoughts become a con-
tinual occurrence.
In looking back at our earlier
years in the Lower School, the first
feeling that comes to mind is the
sense of closeness that our class
had, and continued to have. This
closeness always helped us to turn
the many "class projects into
something special. Our first big
effort was a performance of The
Princess and the Pea, a stunning
. Ju
l
22
extravaganza, as kindergarten per-
formances go. From there, we were
off to take on the many projects
that lay ahead. Yet, the highlight of
any lower-schooler's career was
the Sixth Grade Play. We went to
work to produce our version of the
musical Oliver. Once again the
class pulled together not only on
the musical, but also in a tribute to
Sir Patterson, our teacher and in-
spiration. With characteristic class
unity and spirit, we made a scrap-
book of class pictures, and rewrote
the words of "To Sir with Lovei' to
fit our feelings for a man we came
to love. The sight of thirty kids
crying and hugging each other as
our performance ended will al-
ways be a vivid memory.
As we moved to the next phase
of our experience, the Upper
School, new students joined and
opportunities opened, yet we
maintained our closeness. With
the first taste of boarders came the
first real challenge of our identi-
ties, which we met head on. Soon
we became visible on sports teams,
r
l
l
in clubs, on the Speech Team, and
on the stage as we went to work on
our production of the Fourth Class
Play.
The class took on the task of per-
forming Bertolt Brecht's The
Caucasian Chalk Circle. It was one
of Milton's largest Class IV produc-
tions, for it involved over eighty-
five people on stage at all times
including intermission, calling on
the limitless energy of our class.
The inventive direction of Rey
Buono, the acting and musical tal-
ents of the performers, and the
adeptness of the technical crew
assured a stunning performance.
The many weeks of hard work cer-
tainly paid off. The play served as a
unifying force experienced by the
whole class. The Class IV play is
truly a highlight for all who par-
ticipated in itg for many, it became
the first step to strong theatrical
careers at Milton.
During the years that followed,
more people came, more talents
were discovered, more friendships
made. As a class, we became a
strong force in the school, be it in
sports, in student organizations, or
in performances. We began to pro-
duce talents of all sorts: Kristin
Perini's running, Sid Whelan and
Miguel Lawson's music, Patrice
Dolan and Sharon DeSouza's sing-
ing, the thirty-five seniors' efforts
on the Speech Team, to name only
a few. As we moved into our final
year, our student leadership be-
came strong as we, as a class,
assumed leadership positions.
Also, members of our class took on
new challenges such as the Spring
Fair and the founding of the Milton
Paper.
I have been lucky to work as co-
Class I councillor, lucky to work
closely with members of a really
special group. I've watched the
names add and the faces change,
Here from the Start . . .
but the spirit of the class has al-
ways remained strong. The history
of this class has been colorful and
eventful. Many happenings I have
been unable to list, but I'm sure
those that have come in contact
with us will not forget them.
It has been a good thirteen years
- congratulations, Class of '84,
and good luck always!
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Thirteen Years!
i
yggflgiggii
The "Velveteen Rabbit"-ish sensa-
tion of feeling an ordinary, some-
times ugly room at Milton turn into
a "home,' never fails to be exciting.
A confined space stops being a
functional, everyday geographical
location of certain activities and
becomes an atmosphere, a feeling,
a tattered photo album of private
moments. The physical character-
istics become so familiarized as to
lose all relevancy, like a grand-
mother's face. It's always a personal
experience, but some "homes" are
so commonly shared they are taken
for granted. Goodwin Room, for in-
stance, lost none on its Goodwin-
ity when its actual location was
changedg it's one of the rare rooms
defined by the reassuring emo-
tions we associate with it, a home.
1
i
l
24
The Straus Library is another. The
Student Center was intended to be
a "home", a Holiday Inn would be
more accurate. Warren Hall's sec-
ond floor, the butt room, and the
third floor of Ware have made it.
Neither the Link, the Computer
Room, nor anything in the Science
Building ever will make it. The
periodical room, cluttered as it is
with tourists, is home to a small
but fanatical cult of Milton's wild-
eyed intellectual elite. Room 3203,
the lunch room, and the dorm
common rooms will always have
it. Wigg Hall never had it, never
will. And don't try to deny it, you
chose your favorite bathroom three
years ago.
A Milton career is like a pizza.
When the Crust of your Identity is
baked and firm, you can pile on the
goodies. The Tomato Sauce of
Honesty. The Gooey Cheese of
Self-respect. The Green Peppers of
Academic Achievement. The Pep-
peronis of Class V Acne Attacks.
The Mushrooms of Perseverance.
The Oregano of Spiritual Courage.
Into the Oven of Maturity. Behold,
the Pizza of Adolescence. Then
again, Milton is like a pizza in that
the more of it you ingest, the more
likely you are to throw up.
Being a liberal at Milton means al-
ways having to say you're sorry.
Things that were Not Worth It: the
IPS lab you slaved over in class V,
the hours you spent on your face
before the first freshman dance,
the boring courses you endured to
appear "well-rounded." Vanity of
Vanities, saith the weary senior.
All is vanity. The excuses you
thought up for your blue slips, the
night you spent awake in bed
sweating before the PSAT's, the re-
cesses you squished through the
crowd to peer into an empty mail-
box. The terrifying authority fig-
ures you struggled to please for
years, the assemblies you sprained
your buns to get to on time. The
swearing you did when your mug-
book photo resembled Bela Lugusi
on steroids. The anger. The
grudges. The putdowns, even the
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clever ones. The times you actual-
ly put on your school socks and
jock for P.E. Hell, the times you
actually showed up for P.E. Need
we go on? Yea verily saith the se-
nior. I'm afraid that all this and
more was simply Not Worth lt. But
Most of it was.
Why did God make seniors? Some-
body has to buy all those orange
and blue scarves at the Bookstore.
I always love looking in a class-
room between classes and seeing
all the diagrams and notes on the
blackboards. It is great to see that
something so simple and under-
standable to one person may be
utterly incomprehensible to the
next.
I long to wear my M jacket where a
hundred other people are not
wearing theirs.
Yes, I did it wrong. So what if I'm a
failure? I am a student at Milton
Academy f!!!j. I am happy. Who
cares ifI get two D + s? Who cares if
I don't get in Yale, Harvard, Prince-
ton, etc., etc.? Who cares if I don't
get in any college at all? That is,
who except me?
There's something religious about
checking books out of Cox. Having
your signature on one of those li-
brary cards in the pocket of each
book in Cox is as close to immortal-
ity as one can get at Milton. Desk
graffiti are washed off, names on
plaques are ignored, senior pages
yellow in forgotten yearbooks. But
for all eternity, my favorite books
in Cox will each bear my proud
signature on the card at the back.
Some sophomore twenty years
from now will notice that I've read
The Great Gatsby and wonder
who the hell I was. That's immor-
tality.
I know it's winter when the sign
with the arrow that tells us to go
around and through the other door
is posted in front of Cox Library.
Milton to me is spending three
hours to put on armor, organize the
troops, just to prepare for the battle
at the Snack Bar.
Who scheduled Parents' Day and
Space Day for the same time? Who
was in charge? It was a case of God-
zilla versus King Kong - no, it was
a case of leather-legged and blue-
jeaned youths meeting their
makers.
One more sobering impression I
have of Milton is the hush coming
over Goodwin Room as Mrs. Winn
reads off a D.C. announcement,
and the quick funsoberingl switch
back as eight lgaspll males run in
wearing togas and dresses.
Iive always been amazed that no
matter how long or how good the
vacation was, two days after we get
back to school it feels like we've
never left.
Contributed By:
Martha Carroll
Thorn Pozen
Robert Sheffield
Iohanna Striar
Michael Weisberg
Rowena Yeung
if
if
MILTON:
BR CHICH
QUT?
by Rowena Yeung
What exactly is cultural diversity? Does
Milton Academy, as a community, have
Cultural diversity? How much of this cultur-
al diversity can an institution of this size
afford to have, yet still maintain its unity?
"Cultural diversity, eh, it's one of the
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things that I mention when I'm giv-
ing a tour of Milton," said an
Orange Key member. As a matter of
fact, both the faculty and the stu-
dents agree that cultural diversity
is one of the most attractive points
of Milton as a school. "Milton has
more cultural diversity than a lot
of schools," stated Mr. Tom Cleve-
land, "maybe with the exceptions
of Andover, Exeter, and Northfield
Mount Hermon. But then they are
much bigger schools."
According to Mr. Michael
Theobald, Milton is still in the pro-
cess of diversifying itself. "We
have a healthy percentage of for-
eign-born and minority students. It
is a top priority right now to hire
more faculty with a different grow-
ing up, but there is very little turn-
over each year. One of the reasons
for the establishment of the Intern
Program is to diversify the facul-
ty." Ellen Argyros, an intern in the
English department, commented,
"We have a different perspective
than most of the faculty, probably
because we are younger, and, up
until last year, we were in the stu-
dents' position ourselves."
Another group which has
noticed as a problem the lack of
minority faculty is the Cultural Di-
versity Committee, a self-formed
group of faculty members. Its
objectives are to examine the prob-
lems that minority or foreign-born
students face, and to make Milton
a more comfortable place for them.
"The attrition rate for black and
Hispanic students is very high
right now," says Mrs. Iane Har-
man. "Besides lowering that rate,
we hope to be able to offer those
who stay a good three or four years
at Milton, not merely a survival ex-
periencef' Last September, there
was an all-day faculty meeting
addressing the issue of that espe-
cial attrition rate, and possible
solutions to better the situation.
One of the suggestions the CDC
proposed was an Orientation Pro-
gram offered to the new minority
and foreign students two weeks be-
fore the school year opens. The
CDC also sees the need to make
more support available to minority
students and even some curricu-
lum changes. Mrs. Harman hopes
that the faculty's good intentions
will become actual action. "I'd like
to see the school confront some
issues like racism, oppressed peo-
ples, stereotyping, some real social
issues."
Students themselves promote
cultural diversity. Members of Le
Club, Spanish Club, and AIMS are
actively exploring foreign cul-
tures. These organizations also
share what they have learned with
the general student body: Le Club
and the Spanish Club sang carols
at the Christmas assembly, AIMS
sponsored a performance com-
memorating Martin Luther King on
the anniversary of his birth. Presi-
dent of AIMS, Lisa Iones, com-
mented, "I am glad AIMS has the
opportunity to help open people's
eyes to the importance of Martin
Luther King, and to some aspects
of the Afro-American culture."
As a school, Milton offers many
programs to further cultural di-
versity. This yearis AFS students
are Christian Stein and Eka Fensch
from Germany and Lisbet Oester-
gaard of Denmark. The Korean War
Memorial Scholar is Hong Duong.
The School Year Abroad program,
according to Becky Holcombe,
who was in Spain last year, is "fan-
tasticf' She also remarked that it is
"sad that people don't appreciate
it: last year only Gordon Burns and
I were in Spain, and Maria Fleming
was the only one in France." The
six-week French and Spanish ex-
changes are more popular. There
are other exchanges to Westmins-
ter in England and Lakeside in
Washington state. Andreas Evri-
viades has been taking students to
Greece and Cyprus over Spring
vacations. There are seniors who
go abroad on their senior projects.
However, although the many op-
tions for exploring foreign cultures
offered at Milton are recognized,
the prevailing student opinion is
that too few people really take
advantage of them. Patricia Yur-
chak commented, "They are there,
but you don't notice them unless
you are very interested." Never-
theless, those who participate in
any of these programs never fail to
learn from whatever culture they
see. "I came back and now I can see
Milton and my life here with a dif-
ferent perspectivef' said Hol-
combe.
Many students are taking advan-
tage of the academic courses
which explore cultural diversity.
The language requirement of com-
pleting level 3 does not seem to be
a hassle to a lot of studentsg indeed,
many go on to take level 4 and 5. In
addition to French, Spanish, and
Latin, German and Italian are
offered if there is enough enroll-
ment, and there has been a propos-
al to add Chinese to the curricu-
lum. There are Milton teachers
qualified to teach minority litera-
ture, Asian history, Afro-
American history, and Latin
American history, and these
courses are again open if there is
enough enrollment. The school
makes a conscious effort to pro-
mote the students' openness towards
the diversity of cultures.
Most students agree that Milton
is very diverse already although
diversity is something there is nev-
er enough of. However, there
obviously are problems to be
solved and attitudes changed be-
fore this community can become
Utopia. Although there are few in-
cidents of blatant racism, chance
remarks, or uses of stereotypes can
madden, if not hurt, a minority stu-
dent. That all blacks are athletic,
that all Orientals are good at math
and science, that all Iews are
materialistic: these generaliza-
tions are obviously untrue, but it is
surprising how our attitudes are
governed by these "basic"
Z7
stereotypes.
That the good little girl and the
bad little girl are the same little girl
is a paradox that accurately de-
scribes Milton's impact on its
minority students. Many have had
very positive experiences 5 they felt
both respected and appreciated for
what they believe and who they
are. Yet what we heard at the Mar-
tin Luther King assembly of inci-
dents of prejudice is appalling. "I
never thought that intolerance and
prejudice would be happening at
this school," said Christian Stein.
Lisa Friedman added, "These inci-
dents are shocking, especially in a
Well-educated community like
Milton Academy."
On the whole, the Milton
Academy Community is becoming
more aware of its asset, cultural
A Spectrum of Views
28
diversity, and consequently more
conscious of its problems and
more eager to improve the situa-
tion. With the combined efforts of
the administration, the faculty and
the students, Milton may become a
better place for both people of dif-
ferent backgrounds and people
whose culture is of the main-
stream.
anclich
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Christ, I'm preppy!
The sound is good but it's a bit cumbersome
No kissy pooh?
What would Freud say?
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It's one of those I-can't-get-the-smile-off-my-face-smiles. Weekend Entertainment Woman
Howard Chaffey
Doug Cabot
Porche 944
A Porche 9449 nobody really
owns one: you just see themg the
image, the idea fexpensive, fast,
sleekj. Who drives them?
William turned off 17th Street
and descended into the bowels of
his office building. The tires
screeched as he pulled into a space
marked with his name. After put-
ting the radar detector in the glove
compartment and taking off his
Varne sunglasses, he got out of his
car, knocking off his Stetson on the
roof as he stood upg but it was O.K.,
because nobody saw him. The
clicking of his cowboy boots ring-
ing in his ears, he walked towards
the elevator while taking out a pipe
from the wide left pocket of his
Brooks Brothers gray flannel suit
jacket. The elevator trip always
seemed unbearably longg filled
with thoughts about the coming
day's agenda, his wife. He was al-
ways alone. "It's along and lonely
trip to the top," he said with a
Andrew Gross
Martha Carroll
chuckle as he got off at the top
floor, still puffing on his pipe.
"Good Morning Mr. Garvin."
"Good Morning Mr. Garvin." He
just nodded, never answering.
For William it was a long way to
the top, but he wouldnit let you
know it for a second. At a cocktail
party that night, wearing three
rings and concealed under his silk
shirt, tie and jacket his gold chain
lno cowboy attire this timej, Wil-
liam found himself talking to a rel-
ative stranger, james Bodin.
"So jim, you said that you were
at Yale, what year?"
"Class of '55."
"Well, I'm class of '57."
"Oh, I didn't realize that you
were a Yale man.,' No denial. The
conversation switched and Wil-
liam's wife, who had been listen-
ing with horror, pulled William
aside and said, "You went to Bos-
ton College, why did you tell that
man you went to Yale?"
"I never said that I went to
Yale." He was always careful not
to, and to be appropriately sophis-
ticated for any social occasion,
even if it was stretching the truth.
His head pounding from his se-
vere hangover, William at 6:00 the
next morning was jogging along
the Potomac River, past the Ken-
nedy Center, past the Watergate,
across the Memorial Bridge and all
the way to the Pentagon and back.
The rain mixing with his sweat on
his soaking shirt. His gold chain
around his neck catching the light
of the street lamps he passed
under. His hair, dyed brown to
keep away any gray, matted
against his headg alone, always
alone. The image, the dreamg poor
boy grows upg "Porche - there is
no substitute."
Thorn Pozen
33
Gordon Burnes
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Bob Colman
A Music Series
I .
Like words, a silence flutters, It is the language of strings
Motionless, a hummingbird, hung Echoing the earth's droughts
from the sky, like faith. sounding of dying naked worms -
Descending of cracking dust -
the sparrow hawk Ending on a tree branch, where silence is the
On Still Wings sound of breathing.
strikes the end of a pawprint trail. Iosh Gray
It holds the mole that the snake, sliding
through wet leaves and green goldenrod stems,
had missed.
Motovespa
Live sleek live loud live fuel-efficient
Live the flashing of red lights ahead through the rain
Live anonymous roads enigmatic companions
Live weave swerve verve nerve engines vigor in vain
The roar of the engines the song of the darkness -
The cool easy darkness that fits like a hood -
Bright green polyurethane hard cushion seats
Taillights flash and beckon you young gorging good
Motovespa - invite you to live
There are no lines we cannot cross
There are no cars we cannot pass
Cars - so pragmatic and straightforward safe
frm The yolk of adulthood cherubically chafe
We're young loud lighthearted the temperature's warm
' ' Run longer pant harder is there no escape -
ggg: l ggg gg Motovespa - invite you to live.
T' T Rob Sheffield
Iohn Bisbee
PIETAS
When white-capped waves, winds, whirlpool full moon rise, Anonymous
Her prow asunder, leafy oars will drag.
Brine in his black hair, Aeneas surprised,
Unconscious, shipwrecked, held by foreign crag.
Salt seaweed, sand dried blood, spared from his grave,
Trojan Aeneas with Carthageis Queen,
Dallied, hidden by the dank, darkened cave,
While barren twigs midst rocks matured bud-green.
Iove, spurred by Fate, sent Mercury in haste,
"Let Dido abdicate passion's love-reign,
Her pyre flames Aeneas' Trojan race."
Must Pietas burn brighter than love's flame?
A life perforce will end, begun so soon,
An embryo withheld, by debt consumed.
Katharine Appleton Downes
A Fine Spring Evening
Two boys lay in the grass on the
edge of the pond in repose. It was
post twilight and very quiet. Occa-
sionally they heard a frog croak or
a robin return to its nest in one of
the nearby pines. Brief spurts of
music wafted over the trees at in-
frequent intervals. Each boy held a
bottle of beer in his hand.
Several empty bottles lay be-
tween them. Tom was resting side-
ways on his left elbow facing the
other boy, Fred. They were bud-
dies. Tom's back was to the pond.
"How long have we been here?"
asked Fred.
"lust twenty minutes."
"The music's already started.
Listen."
Tom listened, then he picked up
an empty bottle and threw it over
his shoulder into the pond. He
turned in time to see circular rip-
ples diverging from the bottle,
which bobbed nose up in the water
and began to drift away. Fred
turned and reached into a brown
bag on the ground beside him.
"How about another beer?"
"Good idea," said Tom. Fred
reached across, handing him a bot-
tle with a silver label on it. The
bottle was cold and wet in Tom's
hand, and he could almost touch
his fingers to his thumb as he
gripped it. He was beginning to
feel older. The beer had a thin head
to it and was yellow, not gold.
"Do you need the opener?"
"No, I've got it," Tom said. The
bottle sighed as he popped the cap
off. Tom handed the metal opener
to Fred, who opened a fresh beer
for himself. A bullfrog began to
croak. The mosquitoes would not
be out for another month.
Tom and Fred sat in mutual si-
lence and enjoyed their beers. Tom
was relaxed, and he felt very solid.
He felt a core of strength and power
gradually radiate from his gut. He
felt it like his last center of gravity.
Now, he was in control. It was very
strange.
With his beer half finished, Tom
looked over Fred's shoulder at the
pine trees. He concentrated on
them and caught the musty scent
they gave off. Underneath each
tree was a bed of brown needles.
Tom noticed that the pine trees
formed a half-ring about where
they lay, creating a natural enclo-
sure.
"We're well hidden," said Tom.
"Oh yeah, no one can find us
here," said Fred. "We're well hid
for certain! That's why I wanted to
come here. I drink here a lot."
Then he added triumphantly,
"Once I even brought a girl here."
Tom had heard this story many
Iohn Bisbee
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Alex Merrill
times before, and it was very bor-
ing. He did not want to hear it
again, so he changed the subject.
"Did you ever do any fishing
here?"
"Fishing? No. You can't, I mean,
it used to be polluted so they all
died."
"What was polluted?"
"The pond."
"Of course."
"All the fish died."
"Of course. Is it still polluted?"
I dontt know. I guess once
something's polluted it stays that
way for a long time."
"Forever, sometimes," said
Tom.
"What?"
"Nothing" Tom finished his
beer and felt very much in control
of himself. "Give me another beer,
will you?" he asked. He opened
the beer Fred gave him. All things
were clearly defined. For instance,
Tom noticed that conversations
were carried out in stages of topic,
and that one stage of their con-
versation had just ended. Life was
carried out in stages too, he
thought. He contemplated these
immense truths while he drank his
beer.
From over the trees they could
hear dance music and a girl
laughing. Tom and Fred weren't
sure these sounds were to them
H
Chris Lemley
first-hand or whether they were
echoes. The music was muffled
and distanced but the laughter cut
through it.
"I wonder if there are any nice
looking girls," said Fred after a few
minutes.
"There always are a few."
"Maybe we should go back be-
fore it gets too late.',
Tom looked at his watch.
"There's plenty of time. Besides,
I'm enjoying myself." He drained
his bottle and threw it into the
pond, then he watched it drift
away. "C'mon, give me a beer," he
said. He was totally confident
now. He could do whatever he
wanted. It would be all right.
"I feel good, Fred," said Tom. "I
feel set for whatever's coming my
way."
"Me too! That's why I want to go
back now."
"I feel irnbibed with persever-
ance."
Fred furrowed his brow and
thought for a moment. Probably,
he was too embarrassed to admit
that he didn't know what "im-
bibed" or "perseverance" meant.
So he looked down at his un-
opened beer bottle and just said, "I
don't know what you mean."
Tom ignored him.
"Do you have the opener, Tom?"
Fred was reading the label on the
bottle.
"Yep, here you go." Tom tossed
the opener to Fred, who didn't
catch it. "You know," Tom said, "I
think I'll try something new. Gim-
me the rum over there."
Fred burped - he sounded like
a frog - then he reached into the
bag and took out a pint of rum. He
looked at the bottle for a moment,
then passed it over.
Tom held the bottle in his right
hand. It had rounded edges and its
neck curved upward delicately.
The glass was thick and smooth to
the touch.
"It looks like a Scope bottle,"
said Fred.
with great skill and poise. The beer
looked much clearer with rum in
it.
"Well, here goes," he said. He
took several large gulps. Then he
put the bottle down on the grass.
He looked up at the sky, noticing
that all the bright stars were out,
before calmly leaning over and
throwing up in the pond.
"Gee, I thought it would have
been more successful," Fred said.
'Tm truly surprised." He took a sip
from the rum bottle, slobbering his
mouth on it.
"Actually, it wasn't that bad,"
Tom said, wiping his mouth. "I
Ruth Davis
Tom ignored him. Then he said,
"I think I'll do something I saw Paul
Newman do in a movie. He wanted
to get drunk quickly." Tom drank
half the beer from its bottle, then
opened the rum bottle. He had to
break the gold paper which was
stripped across the cap. When he
opened the cap, it popped like a
kiss. I
"I see what you mean,,' Fred
said, watching Tom pour rum into
the beer bottle. "Rum and whisky
bear similar traits. It should work.
Try not to spill too much." Fred
was very pleased.
"I didn't spill any," said Tom.
He had transferred rum from its
original bottle to his beer bottle
just drank it too fast." But he had
lost it, the strange something in his
gut. He had lost his solidity and he
no longer felt relaxed. He opened
another beer, even though he
didn't want one.
"I don't think I'll try it," said
Fred.
"No, you wouldn't appreciate
it."
Fred did not understand what
Tom meant, so he let it slide. They
could hear music again. They
thought about the girls. Tom
thought about the girls. Tom could
not finish his beer. So they stood
up, leaving the bag and bottles, and
walked over to the dance.
Neil Mooney
Q .
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Anonymous
Nick Dubrul
THUMB SCREWS
Seething, I lie of reasons and
places.
Others push me onward, to her
But still I move with classic
conscience -
I don,t know if I want her:
Is it affection or desire?
Oh yes, the beauty deceives,
like the tightening of a bolt.
I'm looking for excuses,
directions?
Through the threshold of limbo
Once again I've idealized it:
Like a marble statue
in a fancy garden.
But then
Back to the ever shortening
spaces
Under thresholds.
Anonymous
J
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Io
hn Bisbee
CLAMS
I dropped my hands into the
blue dish of warm clam juice and
snapped shells and made sloshy
bathtub noises, letting my hands
fall into the soft water like eggs
onto cake batter. Someone said it
didn't make sense to pollute the
clam's water, and knocked the
lamp above us as he spoke. I threw
a puzzle of clam's necks and clam
bellies onto the dish instead.
Having finished, I leaned my
moist face into the saunalike tub
full of hot clams and carefully
gathered some into my hands as if
they were warm bullets. Shooting
them to my plate I knocked the tub
so that my face and arms and milk
glass were spanked with the hot
juice. Someone said my milk
would be polluted with the clam's
water and it wouldntt make sense
to drink it. I slurped the salty water
with big fish lips instead.
Ticky Kennedy
IDEAS
Wading in a pool of
dreamlike thoughts
my mind, careless
and carefree churns,
spitting up ideas
like blue droplets
of white water
their flourescentness
blinding me, starting
at me - burning holes
like fire in the air.
One spare, small
drop engulfs me
in a
prism of light
and sets me free
bleary-eyed
into life, the
rays splintering
into a mass of
tiny fragments.
Elizabeth Day
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I eww
Veterans' Day brought the entire Milton community fincluding ,
parentsj to the flagpole for the annual memorial ceremony. l
M llton s weekly newspaper
The -Milton aper
Milton students returned to a new school year highlighted by the rebirth of the Milton Paper.
40
Olpening Seminar Day on issues of war and peace, journalist
T omas Powers traces the history of strategic weapons.
Assistant Headmaster Michael Theobald
will leave Milton this summer to become
headmaster of the Hopkins Grammar- Oral interpreters express resolution at the
Prospect Hill School in New Haven, Ct. annual Martin Luther King Day assembly.
'nf""'-
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Ceramic sculpture by Melissa Glen draws excited attention at opening of the
Nesto Gallery student show in Ianuary.
41
ISSUES
One of the big changes on cam-
pus this year was the reactivation
of the Community Service Pro-
gram. Under the direction of Mrs.
lane Harman, students are once
again doing volunteer work on
campus, in the town of Milton, and
throughout the Greater Boston
Area. Through the Program, stu-
dents have been able to contribute
to their communities and explore
career possibilities. Mrs. Harman
hopes to see students develop new
skills, independence, and social
consciousness. Bill Dock, Class III,
who has been working at the Low-
er School, remarked, 'fIt's so cool. I
love it." Another student added,
"Community Service has given me
a new perspective, a new image of
myself."
Mrs. Harman intends to incorpo-
rate as much direct service to peo-
ple as possible. "The main thrust
of the program is outreach, of en-
couraging students to leave school
and learn from and about sur-
rounding communities. Recogniz-
ing the realities of urban issues can
be an unparalleled educational ex-
periencef'
Students have been working in a
variety of capacities. Iill Labert,
Class II, has been a junior volun-
teer at the Massachusetts Eye and
Ear Infirmary, and other students
have been involved with other
programs such as Adopt-a-
Grandparent and the MA food-
bank. Now that students have dis-
covered that Community Service
does not take up a lot of their time
-the average commitment is only
two or three hours per week for a
semester -they have begun to ex-
periment with a number of the
available opportunities. The Pro-
gram, which was moribund for
several years, was reactivated
42
when Mr. Theobald asked Mrs.
Harman to change jobs from A.V.
Director to Community Service Di-
rector. Mrs. Harman was "ecstatic
and delighted." At first, Mrs. Har-
man encountered some difficul-
ties. In Ianuary, one volunteer had
commented that there had not
been enough research done on the
options available, therefore, stu-
dents did not know what to expect
when they committed themselves
to a program. Mrs. Harman and
students are researching on as
many programs as possible and are
increasing the number of options
open to students. Next year, volun-
teers can look forward to more op-
tions as well as more information
on each one. Mrs. Harman is also
working to make transportation
more accessible to students so that
they won't be discouraged by prob-
lems with getting to their volun-
teer sites.
Furthermore, there are sites
within walking distance of cam-
pus. Students may work at the
Glover School, Winter Valley Re-
tirement Village, or on campus at
the Lower School. IacQuie Parm-
lee, Class II, who works with first
graders, said, "They're so much
fun. If I could, I would stay all day
with them." Mrs. Harman added,
'fVolunteering is an experience
you can always carry with you as
special, rewarding, and satis-
fying."
STOP! START
I
1
This year many of Milton's stu-
dents and faculty members have
focused on the issue of nuclear
war. In January guest speakers de-
bated presidential policy toward
the threat of nuclear war and in
February the school took a day off
for a Seminar Day on National
Security. Two organizations,
STOP and START, are encourag-
ing both students and teachers to
become more aware of this impor-
tant problem.
S.T.O.P., Student!Teacher Orga-
nization to Prevent Nuclear War, is
a national organization which was
founded two and a half years ago at
the Northfield Mount Hermon
School. In the fall of 1982, Mr. Pe-
ter Keyes and the Public Issues
Board decided to begin a S.T.O.P.
chapter at Milton. Macgill Iames,
'83, then a member of the Public
Issues Board, acted as student
organizer until Ianuary 1983,
when Lyn Swett, '84, assumed the
position. Since the spring of 1983,
S.T.O.P. has held a bake sale, orga-
nized a button and postcard drive,
and set up a S.T.O.P. bulletin
board. This year, each member of
S.T.O.Pfs seven-member board is
preparing a lecture on some aspect
of the nuclear issue at S.T.O.P.'s
weekly meetings. In addition to
supporting a nuclear freeze,
STOP's objectives include allow-
ing students to discuss their views
and to educate themselves and
others about the nuclear issue.
Swett says, "It lets students know
that they have a voice and that
change is possible."
S.T.A.R.T., Students and
Teachers for Arms Race Technolo-
gy, is an organization which was
established at Milton in November
of 1982 by Robert Cunha and Ed-
ward Shugrue. At this time START
supports arms for deterrence as a
solution to the nuclear problem.
Members would support a bilater-
al freeze between the United States
and the Soviet Union if each coun-
try would allow the other to verify
that it is honoring the agreement.
Although the United States would
permit the Soviets to run such veri-
fication checks, the Soviet Union
is reluctant to authorize them. Cur-
rently, START is headed by Shug-
rue, has 52 members, holds
biweekly meetings and is organiz-
ing a vertical file for the library.
X W . . . ..
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CHRONICLE
In the fall of 1983 Channel 5's
Chronicle team, headed by co-host
Ieanne Blake, arrived here in
search of the true Milton
Academy. The program on which
Milton appeared revolved around
special education, showing a small
parochial grade school, an acceler-
ated program at a public school,
and the "cream of the crop" of pri-
vate prep schools.
Although the exposure may
have, according to one student,
been "good for recruiting new stu-
dents" and may have done "a lot to
make Milton the ideal place to go,"
the segment on Milton got mixed
reviews. No student could possi-
bly deny that here "hard work is a
fact of life" and most are "highly
motivated." In an atmosphere of
such high scholastic achievement
and competition it is difficult to sit
back and watch idly. A 12:1 stu-
dent-to-teacher ratio must be an
'teducator's dream." The teachers
have a much better chance to relate
to the student as an individual.
Another good point that the pro-
gram did touch upon was the di-
versity of the student body. As
observed by one foreign exchange
student, Milton does have 'tall
kinds of religious and ethnic
groups."
On the other hand, however, the
majority of Milton students felt
MA'S assets were overshadowed
by the emphasis on what a breeze it
is for us to get into college and how
snobbish we are. According to Ms.
Blake, being a Milton graduate vir-
tually assures acceptance at the
college of your choice. Watching
the show, one perplexed student
wondered, "Why then has my
mother been wasting two years of
her life being terrified that I won't
get into college?" Contrary to what
the Chronicle team may have be-
lieved, many parents send their
children to Milton for other
reasons besides the guaranteed ac-
ceptance to a "top-notch college at
the end of the line" - for exam-
ple, an excellent high school edu-
cation. Although the tone and self-
applied pressures here are all
geared towards college atten-
dance, we are constantly being re-
minded that personal effort, work
and knowledge are more impor-
tant than grades.
The worst part of the show
seemed to be Ms. Blake's pro-
nounced interest in snobs. She
asked one student, Are the rich
kids more snobbish? There is no
relevance to the program's theme
in this query. One student thought
'fthe questions themselves seemed
to imply that Milton was snob-
bish", a similar view was that "ev-
ery question led to the final answer
'Milton is a snobbish high
school."'
With such a limited focus it's
hard to imagine how any of MA,s
numerous assets could have
shown through. Fortunately a few
did and as for those that didn't, we
who work, live, and play here
know all too well what the Chroni-
cle team missed.
43
DRAMA ' :
Tradition, Innovation Hold Milton Stage
The year in drama proved to
be one of both tradition and in-
novation. From Schisgal to
Shakespeare, Milton heralded per-
formances of a broad range and va-
riety.
Leaving Milton to complete her
dissertation, Ms. Carol Banks
planned some exciting produc-
tions for her final year. The fall
play constituted a change from the
normal procedure of having one
full-length play being performed.
Ms. Banks, instead, chose to direct
two one-act plays, The Pushcart
Peddlers by Murray Schisgal and
Hello Out There by William
Saroyan. As a refreshing change,
44
studio was used instead of Wigg
for the performances, lending a
closed-in atmosphere appropriate
to the nature of the plays. In both
plays, a definite mood was created
by the cast and setting, aptly hold-
ing the audience's attention with
style and flair. Cindy Karter and
Ioe Toot in Hello Out There gave
notable performances, as did Dave
Horowitz and Chris Lemley in The
Pushcart Peddlers.
Continuing his tradition of
directing energetic, well-acted
plays and well-attended perfor-
mances, Mr. Zilliax produced yet
another smash success in the fall
playreading, The Matchmaker by
Thornton Wilder. With a large and
talented cast, the day succeeded in
keeping the audience in constant
roars of laughter. Imported from
the Admissions Office, intern
Scott Carneal played a staunch and
foreboding Horace Vandergilder.
Brad Cover was extremely amus-
ing as the nervous clerk Cornelius
Hackle, while Hope Nye played
the vivacious Dolly Levi with flair.
As a whole, the play was full of
energy, unity, and an impeccable
sense of timing so necessary for a
successful comedy. It is truly a
marvel how with only eight to ten
rehearsals prior to performance,
such engaging playreadings can be
produced.
Comedy seemed to be the Min"
thing this year, as Ms. Banks chose
for her winter play Oscar Wilde's
Lady Windermere's Fan. An
elaborate set and stunning cos-
tumes transformed Straus into a
glittering spectacle. The rather
narrow stage which spanned length-
wise across the room was deco-
rated by a huge red fan. No expla-
nation of the symbolism is neces-
sary. The use of areas off-stage was
quite well-handled. A porch was
devised to the left of the stage,
where the timid and forlorn girl,
acted by Melinda Gray, was all too
often sent by her overpowering
mother, portrayed by Tracy
Shupp. The upper balconies were
put to full use: the members of the
cast looked on at the action from
above when not in the scene. The
cast performed admirably, catch-
ing the nuances of Wilde's satire
well. Mark Rodgers and Kathy
Iackson as Lord and Lady Winder-
mere played their roles with great
competence, Chris Cabot gave his
Lord Darlington a refreshing wit as
well as depth. This dimension was
also shown in the performances of
Tracy Shupp and Melinda Gray
who were superbly amusing, yet
had the character depth behind the
jovial exterior.
William Shakespeare is certain-
ly not a new playwright to the Mil-
ton stageg however, the winter
playreading, Macbeth, was a new
experience in the traditional. Pro-
ducing such a widely-read play is
certainly a risk. With nearly every
student and faculty member hav-
ing read Macbeth, the actors and
director had to try to live up to
many pre-conceptions and
imaginations. Not only does the
audience expect a lot from a
Shakespeare performance, but also
the script itself demands a lot from
the actors. To adequately portray
Banquo or Lady Macduff or Mac-
beth is a formidable task in itself.
Despite such potential disadvan-
tages, Macbeth was an innovative
and well-acted production. Mr.
Dregalla's timpani playing pro-
vided the atmosphere for the per-
formance: announcing the pres-
ence of Duncan, foreshadowing
impending doom, or creating a
frenzied backdrop for the witches.
With a cast of experienced actors,
the play was marked by perform-
ances of extraordinary depth of
character. Amy Zilliax, Holly
Cates, and Hope Nye were won-
derfully wicked as the three witch-
es. Clayton Nemrow, Kakie
Andrews, and Brad Cover power-
fully acted the imposing roses of
Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, and Ban-
quo respectively, giving the play
energy, tension, and unity.
The dynamic event of the year,
the Class IV play, was, to no one's
surprise, an imaginative produc-
tion and a great success. This year,
Mr. Buono chose Dark ofthe Moon
by Howard Richardson and Wil-
liam Berney. In a class of so many
talented performers, the play
appropriately had a large cast, in-
cluding the maximum number of
students possible. Music, special
effects, and fine acting were all
present. The set, a huge mountain,
was easily transformed into a
witchis haunt by eerie blue light-
ing and smoke, or a general store
by dropping the front of the moun-
tain down onto the stage. The en-
semble performance was, as usual,
superb. Group scenes were realis-
tic, full of energy and life, and al-
ways had a touch of humor. The
actors were always in character,
interacting with each other at all
times, an obvious result of months
of hard work and fine direction.
The music both on and off stage
gave the play life and atmosphere.
Raffi Hermann on the fiddle and
Holly Duncan on the guitar as well
as the cast's singing various gospel
45
renditions engaged the audience.
The off-stage music was mysteri-
ous and biting, adding to the
magical quality of the play. Angus
Walker and Sarah Di Troia were
excellent as the conjurman and
conjurwoman, both having a dis-
turbing mystical quality. Tom
Lowenstein drew laughs from the
audience as the righteous
preacher, while Anthony Austin
and Carrie Kaufman as the witch
boy and Barbara Allen gave very
moving performances. An innova-
tive production that was a reflec-
tion ofa talented cast, crew, direc-
tor, and musicians, Dark of the
Moon continued Milton's tradi-
tion of dramatic excellence. Look-
ing ahead to next year, when Mr.
Buono takes over as Head of the
Drama Department, one can expect
many more plays of such high
quality and imagination.
46
If you thought a ride in a Toyota had its ups and downs,
period . . .
V Y. . M mx:
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try a Milton exam
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Oh, what a feeling!
The M.A. Faculty
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ADMINISTRATION
Ierome Pieh Ill
Michael Theobald l2J
Priscilla Winn 131
Iohn Mackenzie Q41
Margaret Robbins L51
Thomas Cleveland U31
David Foster WJ
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David Rolbein C11
Cecilia Andrews 121
David Wood 131
Ellie Griffin Q41
lane Harman l5J
Chris Huvos L61
Anne Hill l7J
Christine Savini
'if
Katherine Herzog L11
Ruth Smith IZ1
Charles Burdick l31
Nancy Lee I41
Iames Connolly f51
Deborah Simon l61
David Roak 171
David Smith Q81
Richard Hardy 191
Ellen Argyros C101
ENGLISH
Guy Hu hes - Chairm
Iohn Ziliiax Q21
Dale DeLetis Q31
Alice Perry Q41
Walter McCloskey Q51
Reynold Buono Q61
Ann Kolvig Q71
David Britton Q81
Albert O. Smith Q91
Thomas Doelger Q101
ARTS
Gordon Chase - Chairman 111
1ean McCawley 121
Maggie Stark 131
Iames Hejduk 141
Carol Banks 151
Brian Cheney 161
Paul Menneg 171
Kiki Rice 181
Donald Dregalla 191
Darlene Anastas 1101
Anne Neely 1111
56
f
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SCIENCE
Mitchell Bronk - Chairman Ill
Edmund Cabot L21
Ted Dewan f3J
Jane Dawson l4J
lack Starrner Q51
Harry Stubbs f6J
Donald Wales WJ
Anthony Domizio Q81
Susan Nourse Q91
Ellen Trout 1101
MATHEMATICS
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Ioan MacDonald - Chairman
IU
Kay Coldiron 121
Tom Bisbee 131
Andreas Evriviades f4j
Philip Perry f5J
Peggy Fitzpatrick IGI
Erica Banderob f7J
Barbra Isherwood f8J
58
Susan Burdick U1
Derek Stolyln L21
Albert Sau L31
Iohn Banderob K41
Ro?er Connor 151
Iac yn Bonenfant Q61
Edward Siegfried 171
Robert Sinicrope C81
59
FOREIGN LANGUAGES
l
David Eastburn -
Chairman 111
Aubrey Smith l21
George F ernald 131
Marisol Maura I41
Leo Maza 151
Francine Bustin f61
Ellen Lewis I71
Nina Seidenman 181
Iacciueline Lopez IQ1
Wi liarn Moore U01
Patricia Gossen U11
Iames Hawkes U21
60
HISTORY
21, ,.TV,: 3
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Alan Proctor -
Chairman I11
Mark Hilgendorf IZ1
Carolyn Wade 131
Iohn Warren Q41
Barclay Feather 151
Robert Gilpin L61
Richard Griffin I71
Ethan Bisbee L81
Sally Dey L91
Nancy Starmer U01
Peter Keyes i111
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ADMISSIONS
COLLEGE C'
62
DUNSELINC
Ioy Hoffman 111
Frank Millet 121
Iohn Charles Smith 131
Perry Russell 141
David Harman 151
Clark Duncan 161
Diane Proctor 171
Scott Carneal 181
Ianet Buell Ill
Gloria Perkins 121
Mickey Steimle 131
Sheila O'Marah MJ
Theodore Wells f5J
Sarah Wehle H51
Iohnston Torney Q71
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ATHLETICS
Neil Keller U1
Dana Cole 121
Nathan Taylor I31
Lawrence Fitzpatrick I41
Marijke Alsbach f51
Fran Flaherty Q61
Tom Flaherty Q61
Charlene Grant 171
Amy Campbell 181
64
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DURM STAFF
The Gilpins Q11
The Doelgers IZJ
The Burdicks 131
The Cheneys C41
The Dowers L51
The Lakes 161
The Foleys WJ
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I
THE MILTON PAPER
SEQ
Row 1 - Papfn. Row 2 - Davis,
Lualdi, Martti a, Salwen, Appell,
Klose, Cannister, Mooney. Row 3
- Cadigan, Iackson, Heuston, Hol-
combe, Hirose.
58
MILTON MEASURE
Row 1 - Carroll, Lisio, Mr. Smith,
Dandridge, Denneen, Lamont. Row 2
- Karp, Feldman, Halloran, Quinn,
Emery. Row 3 - Salloway, Sholley,
Drohan, Sherwood, Takoudes, Mar-
cus, Byard, Parker.
irrl . iirr T.
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Row 1 - Codes, Parmlee, Burton,
Mahanor, Dueger. Row 2 - Iackson,
Vega, Quinn, Iones, Mr. Wood. Mis-
sing - Yeung.
SNACK BAR
low 1 - Theobald, Flatley
Andrews. Row 2 - Gates, Swett
Iones, Carroll, Martin. Row 3 -
Foley, Walcott, Duncan, Bisbee
Ohlson, Churchhill, Vega, Byard
West, Eldridge, Cole, Brickus
Mahanor.
SKI AND MOUNTAINEERING
1 ORANGE AND BLUE KEY
4, . .
251'-1
1yi,,9,,Mv Nw f,
lv, l
V' '
.., A
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ff
1
2
'N M E
Row 1 - Gross, McKay, Noble. Row 2 - Tsang, Singer, Row 1 - Singer, Labert, Coleman, Walcott. Row 2 - Carroll, McKay
Spencer. ' Heuston, Parel. Row 3 - Wyett
GIRLS' OCTET
Row 1 - Glen, Parel, Gates. Row 2 - Pines,
Scott.
70
SPEECH TEAM
Nf-
Row 1 - Godes, Shapiro, Norton, Gates, Zilliax lco-captainl, Karp fco-captainj, Yurchak, Downes, Bronk, Ebisemiju, Coleman. Row Z -
Pines, Corey, White, Cross, Salloway, Rosencranz, Dolan. Row 3 - Rosenbloom, Condit, Franklin, Dandridge, Hoit, Carroll, Panarese,
Colt, DeVegvar, Howland, Cover, Andrews, O'Shea, Kaufman. Row 4 M Curran, Gutowski, Levine, Monks, Cervieri, Nemrow.
FRENCH CLUB
Row 1- Scott, Levine, Hoit, Sha iro, Day, Norton, White, Hutchins, Crawshaw, Corey, Tokheim, Striar, Weber, Markis, Parmlee,
Franklin. Row Z - Wolrnan, Millet, Mathews, Takoudes, Schore, Churchill, Ball, MacLaurin, Pines, Fleming, Colt, Flaherty, Kim,
DeVegvar, Fluhr, Kohn, Cervieri, Saletta, Walcott, Stein, Stella. Row 3 - Sklar, Roberts, Lisio, Nicholson. Row 4 - Rodgers, Cassin,
Kaypaghian, Choi, Shupp, Gallagher, Zelazo, Chaffey.
PUBLIC ISSUES
Row 1 - Levine, Shapiro. Row 2
SPANISH CLUB
Burns, Atkinson, Sherwood,
Pease, Dusseault, Codes.
Row 1 - Swett, Demos, Keller.
Row 2 - Denneen, jones,
Friedman. Row 3 - Hoshour,
Toot.
BOYS' OCTET
Row 1 - Mahanor, Gregg,
Cabot, Cirksey, Vega,
Holcombe. Row 2 -
Schmeiser, Moran, Neblett,
Churchill, Eldridge, Mitra,
Tokheim, Marshall, Kagan,
Horowitz, Labert, Victor.
Row 3 - Goldstein,
Feldman, Rosencranz, Truax,
Meaney, Chase, Waters,
Howland, Rice, Fallon,
Monks, Sheffield, Curran,
Mooney.
Iii:
DANCE CLUB
xiii'
Strekalovsky, Colt, Pick, George, Pines,
Crawshaw.
AIMS
, ,S I I
re :wi
Row 1 - Klose. Row 2 - jones, Simmonds. Row
3 - Mr. Hilgendorf, Santiago, Canister, Carter,
Davis, Parmlee.
MACUS MABUS
Row 1 - Ulman, Downes, Call, Hoshour. Row
2 - Stimson, Striar, Paiter, Sheffield. Row 3 -
H. Chaffey, W. Chaffey, Monks.
Row 1 - Cervieri, Lapey,
Colt, Choi,
Rosencranz. Row 2 -
Rodgers, Dubrul.
DEBATE
Row 1 - Churchill, Stirnson, Eldridge,
Toot. Row 2 -- Striar, Mathews, Truax,
Cabot.
CURTAIN CALL
ARTS BOARD
Grossman,
74
1- -ws -
Row 1 - Champoux, Sheffield,
Parker, Kennedy. Row 2 - Mr.
Gilpin, Kaufman, Shugrue, Demos
Row 3 - Masella, Cook, Wyett,
Spencer, Toot, Cheever. Row 4 -
Cooke, Schwarz, Chan, Cavender.
'
fu-.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
ASSOCIATION
Row 1 - Atkinson, Wilde. Row 2 - Garrity, Col-
cord, Choi, Toot. Row 3 - Davis, Flaherty, Marr,
Chylack. Row 4 - Kagan, Abelmann, Fitzgibbons,
Mr. Wood, Horan.
WRITERS' FORUM
Row 1 - I. Gray, Heuston, Kennedy, Appell. Row 2 - M. Gray, Jackson, Klose, Feldman, Shapiro, Zelazo.
MATH TEAM
Row 1 - Klose, Yeung, Kim, Yurchak.Row 2 - Morse, Mrs. Fitzpatrick, Morrissey, Godes, Timberlake, Anthony. Row 3 - Park
Fay, Weisberg, Carter, Hsung, Halloran, Quinn, Fitzgibbons, Champoux.
ORCHESTRA
Row 1 - Hermann, Morningstar, Karp, O'Donnell. Row 2 - Siegfried, K. Bennett, Millet, Pozen, Hansen, Smith, Maclean, Mackey,
Hirose. Row 3 - Shapiro, Zonis, Markis, Klose, L. Bennett, Robertson, Weisberg, Yamamoto, Pathiakis, Ohr. Row 4 - Sigourney, Mobley,
McElroy, Iensen, Goodman, Barbieri, D'Arbeluff, Baker, Feinstein, Brown, Bookbinder. Row 5 - Pringle, Goodman, Machold, Wash
Missing - Feldman, Anderson, Hewley, Bell, Carter, Mr. D. Dregalla lout looking for othersl
CREDIT CHORUS
76
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
1
WSI'
- N.,
-M E
Row 1 - Cooke, Micheletto, Glen, Mooney, Schmeiser, Carroll. Row 2 - Russ,
Paul, Chase, Mahanor, Foley, Dandridge.
BOARDING COUNCIL
Denneen, Mr. Gilpin, Nye, Cheever, Burton. Row 3
Row 1 - Vega, Poskanzer, Nye, Wright. Row 2 - Sweeney, Carroll. Row 3 - Whelan, Driver.
78
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Chris Morrow, fullback Ioey Swir-
balus, and All-League split-end
Pat Flaherty. Best of luck to next
year's captains Tim Mackey and
Tim Kilroy.
The Boy's Varsity Soccer team
had an up-and-dowirseason
which ended with a respectable 5-
6-2 record. During the first part of
the fall there were close losses to
teams that we should have been
able to beat, but these were bal-
anced out by victories over the
one time League-leading B.B.N.
squad and the previously unde-
feated Thayer team. A frustrating
loss to Nobles at the end of the
season did nothing to mar the
strong play of goalie Doug Marttila
nor the rest of our strong defense
core. Iohn Lewis and captain Geoff
Theobald were elected to the All-
League team with John Bisbee re-
ceiving honorable mention. Good
luck to next year's captains Ioe
Chase and Chris Smith.
The Girls' Soccer team had a
tremendous season. For the sec-
ond consecutive year I.V. was un-
defeated. The Varsity, with help
from coach Ms. Grant, placed sec-
ond inthe I.S.L. and in the annual
soccer tournament. In addition, all
82
players had a Wonderful time.
Hopes are high for next yearis
team, who, under the leadership of
captains Alison Churchill and Ali-
son Demos, will be tough to beat.
Dana, Governor Dummer, B.B.N.,
and especially Nobles - WATCH
OUT!
Boys' Cross Country enjoyed
one of its finest seasons in recent
memoryg We raced to a 7-1 dual
meet record. After the first two
weeks we ran off six consecutive
victories, and then went into the
League Championship race with
high hopes. Unfortunately muddy
and rainy conditions slowed down
runners, which took us out of con-
tention and dropped us to a third
place out of sixteen teams. Indi-
vidually, the team was led by cap-
,gacalmwfqw
tain Mark Lawrence, Ed Sugrue
and Mark Rodgers early in the sea-
son, with soccer-convert Colm
Sweeney, Yawu Miller and Bill
Brown as important factors as the
season progressed. Sweeney and
Lawrence finished among the
medalists in the League meet. Cap-
tains Ed Sugrue and Tom Hoshour
will lead a young but experienced
team next year and it will no doubt
challenge the best in the League
once again.
Girls' Cross Country had a char-
acteristically successful season:
we won the I.S.L. title for the
fourth consecutive year. Winning
every race she competed in, co-
captain Kristin Perini continued
her superb efforts in running. Next
year's co-captains Sarah Smith
and Christina Mathews both had
excellent seasons, but unfortu-
nately Christina, along with co-
captain Kakie Andrews and re-
turning runner Susan Evans, suf-
fered injuries. Soccer-convert
Kathy Iackson and veteran Mary
Beth Martin added the depth cru-
cial to a winning team. Next year's
outlook is positive for yet another
1st place.
83
FOOTBALL
Row '1 - Zervas, N. Mooney, Swirbalus, Pyne, Bradley, Wayne, Churchill fcaptainl, McCarthy fcaptainj, Gould, Koltun, Cabot,
Morrow, Horan, Scott. Row 2 - Thompson, Fitzgerald, Hobbs, Flaherty, Cadagan, Stammen, Ayers, Miller, Cross, Torrico, Phillips,
Kilroy, Merrigan, Marsala. Row 3 - Ohr, Mackey, Perini, Mullen, Ohlson, McElroy, Vincequerro, Robledo, Burns, DeMatteo, Cassin,
Cooper, Chayett. Row 4 - Dearborn, Goff, I. Mooney, Marshall, Wilde, Pierce, Donohue, Griffin, Travis, Butzel, Saletta, Lee,
Sigourney. Row 5 - Rhodes, Aoki, Hirose, Mr. Flaherty, Mr. Cleveland, Mr. Perkins, Cooke, Mr. Garrity, Bordonaro, Paul
FIELD HOCKEY
Row 1 - Wright, Walcott, Brewster, Swett fcaptainl, Chylack, Friedman, Doherty. Row Z - Remington, A. Duncan, Flaherty, H.
Duncan, Pines, Takoudes. Row 3 W S. White, I. White, Cervieri, Albright, Kylander, Frederickson, Tessmer, Chilton. Row 4 - Ms.
Campbell, Weinkopf, Corey, Hutchins, Colt, Bermingham, Ms. Alsbach
N
x
F
I
BOYS' CROSS COUNTRY
Row 1 - Gardner, Rosenthal, Hoshour, Lawrence fcaptainj, Sugrue, Stikeleather, Rodgers. Row 2 - Shapiro, Halloran, Young, Brown,
Kay, Hsung, Merrill. Row 3 - Champoux, Curran, Lowenstein, Haley, Sweeney, Mr. Wood, Yamamoto, Miller, Pease, Bisbee
GIRLS' CROSS COUNTRY
Row 1 - Evans, Mathews, Perini Ico-captainj, Andrews loo-captainj, S.P. Smith, jackson. Row 2 - S.S.M. Smith, Kim, Callahan,
Rush, Schmeiser, Meaney, Chase. Row 3 - Mr. Clifford, McClellan, Hoey, Markis. Martin, Klose, Mr. Wood
86
WI TER
This winter has proved exciting
to all our teams and brought stellar
victories to some. The captains as
usual displayed wonderful leader-
ship andthe members spirit. Girls'
Basketball is champion at the
A.I.S.C.A. tournament, Boys,
Squash won the Iackson tourna-
ment and the Interscholastics,
Wrestling won the Graves Kelsey
tournament, and Alpine Skiing
came first in the annual Cannon
Mt. Invitational. This is also the
season in which the new squash
courts are in use and in which Mil-
ton can boast of the birth of a new
Swim Team.
The Girls' Basketball team
coached by Amy Campbell and led
by captain jennifer Brewster
ended successfully with a winning
7-5 season. What they lacked in
height the team made up for with
the quickness of players such as
Brewster and Maureen Flaherty,
the shooting of Iudi Ohlson and
freshman Sarah Schwenzfeier, and
with Mary Beth Martin and Eileen
Weinkopf on the boards. For the
fourth consecutive year Milton
participated in the A.I.S.C.A. bas-
ketball tournament, defeating
opponents Winsor and Bancroft.
We made our way to the finals
against Cushing Academy, upset
them by a score of 69-31 and
finished the season with a great
triumph. IV had an especially suc-
cessful season with a record of 10-
2. From the team: K'Many thanks to
manager Nicole Ryan who traveled
with us and a special thank you to
Ms. Campbell. You will be greatly
missed next yearf,
This year's Varsity Boys' Basket-
ball went through a very tough sea-
son, meeting some very talented
and competitive teams. The squad
was almost entirely made up of
l
-i4..,2,4,
underclassmeng the only seniors
were co-captains Alan Cooke and
Eddie Foley. It was in many ways a
"rebuilding season." Milton's
overall 4-14 record was in no way
indicative of the play and the atti-
tude of this hustling team. The
Mustangs were an excellent pass-
ing team who were also extremely
skilled in full-court defensive
pressure. Undoubtedly, one of the
team's greatest strengths this sea-
son was the outstanding coaching
job done by Brian Cooke. His ex-
pertise and knowledge of the game
was instrumental in the players'
development. We are very grateful
to Brian for his never-ending en-
thusiasm that always sparked the
team. With ten returning lettermen
next year, experience will be
plentiful and success almost in
sight. Best of luck to next year-'s
captain Iohn Hazelton as he leads
the Mustangs into action.
The Milton downhill Ski Team
has had a very consistent season.
We finished off three league races
in a comfortable second place, and
finished first in the annual Cannon
Mt. Invitational. Among the top
ten skiers were co-captains Eric
Churchill and Gretchen Cole, Mike
Wolfson, Doug Morse and Colm
Sweeney. Next year looks very
promising, with the return of six
letterman. With the addition of
modern rapidgate slalom poles to
practise through, and the expert
coaching of David Britton, Tom
Doelger and Paul Menneg, next
year's team will do well. Best of
luck to them!
Despite the lack of snow this
winter, the cross-country Ski
Team also had a great season. Al-
though four out of the seven races
were cancelled, in the others we
did quite well. Captain Ed Shugrue
and racer Will Gregg led the charge
by consistently finishing in the top
ten. Other speedsters such as Bill
Dougherty, Doug Grindle, Ron
Champoux, Seth Kaufman, Doug
Jones and Dan Tangherlini helped
bring the team to an exciting year-
end standing of third place out of
the ten schools in the I.S.L. Coach
William Moore comments, t'What
a determined bunch . . . their spir-
its were always highf' With the
mascot Larry Melman and the
cheers of a sidelined fdue to inju-
ryj Susan Evans, this team, accord-
ing to Shugrue, "could do no
wrong."
The Ice-Hockey team also had
quite a successful season. After a
shaky start, Milton came in with a
strong surge, winning the last three
games, the third being an overtime
victory against arch-rival Noble
and Greenough School. In the ex-
tremely competitive Keller Divi-
sion, Milton finished with a re-
spectable 7-7 record. Go-captains
Iohn Micheletto and Neil Mooney
maintained team spirit and unity
and provided a beneficial experi-
ence for all associated with the
program. The graduating seniors
shall continue on with a great suc-
cess while leaving a strong tradi-
tion to next year's team, and espe-
cially to the captains-elect Mike
Moran and Tim Mackey.
This year's Volleyball team had
its toughest season in a long while.
Since five Varsity players gradu-
ated last year, we had to recruit
some less experienced players.
However, we managed to form a IV
team that went undefeated, and a
Varsity team that defeated Gover-
nor Dummer for the first time in
three years in their undefeated sea-
son. Varsity ended their season
with a 7-3 record. Captain Kath-
leen Flatley remarked, "Although
we sometimes entered a game with
the wrong attitude, we always
came out on top, aware of our mis-
takes as well as our successes. I
think that what led us through the
season is that we always remained
headstrong and confident in our
capabilities." Next year, under the
leadership of captain Gaity
Meaney, the Volleyball team will
be successful.
Under the guidance of coaches
Richard Griffin and Thomas
Flaherty, the Wrestling team had a
stellar season, winning all their fif-
teen dual meets. We capped the
season by winning the Graves
Kelsey tournament, crowning Pat
Flaherty and co-Captain Iohn Kol-
tun as individual champions.
Flaherty, in addition, won the
tournament's most valuable wres-
tler award. Des Curran, co-Captain,
won the most fallsfleast time
award. Indeed, the only award the
team failed to receive was the most
improved team award. Good luck
to next year's team.
This has been an electrifying
season for the Girls' Squash team.
With many new players, we
proved that depth is not always
achieved through experience. The
team worked together generating
enthusiasm and determination. A
brilliant victory over St. Paulis, 6-
1, for the first time in girls' squash
history, marked the start of the
Milton squash Chamber Swingers'
Crescendo to the top. The best of
P
luck to next year's team and a bless-
ing for the new courts.
The Boys' Squash team also rolled
up a list of honors unmatched
in Milton squash history. In addi-
tion to being undefeated for the
second consecutive season fthe
win streak presently stands at 271
and in addition to winning the
89
Iackson tournament at Brooks for
the third consecutive year as well
as the Interscholastics, the team
has managed to improve its unoffi-
cial national ranking from third
place C831 to second. The teamis
main strength was its depth: we
lost only four individual matches
throughout the season - and of
course the members' enthusiasm
and support for each other. With
only two seniors, Schwarz and
Theobald, leaving, and with the re-
turning trio of Clayton fcaptain-
electl, Smith and Handy eager to
continue the strong tradition
established in the last two years,
next year's team should be quite a
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success.
Last but certainly not the least,
the newly established Swim team.
The following is from Captain Ion
Rice: "The Swim team has come a
long way since we first started in
Ianuary. A number of the swim-
mers were first-timers, but every-
one pulled together and by the end
of the season we seemed to have
the makings of a real team. I feel
that almost everyone on the team
has made some improvement in
both endurance and time. The first
season is always the most difficult,
and, in view of this year, it seems
that next yearis team will be really
impressive. We had no meets this
90
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year, but that is to be expected.
Hopefully the potential developed
this year will materialize in 1985?
And here is a message to Ion
from the team: L'The members of
Milton's first lofficialj Swim team
would like to express our gratitude
to Ion Rice for his hard work and
dedication leven when we weren't
so dedicatedl, for without him we
would never have made it into the
water this year. Thanks Ion!!
DOWNHILL SKIING
Row 1 - Barry, Kylander, Merrill, Gardner, Gray, Wolfson. Row 2 f Mr. Doelger, Sweeney, Schore, E. Churchill fcptj, Cole fcptj, C.
Churchill, Forbes, Mr. Britton.
CROSS COUNTRY SKIING
IISAOWIXII - Mathews, Schrneiser, Dougherty, Tangherlini, Kaufman, Cook. Row 2 4 Chaffey. Gregg, Fay, Shugrue fcpt.1,Iones, Grindle
r. oore.
BOYS' SQUASH
Row 1 - Smith, Clayton, Theobald Icptj, Schwarz, Handy. Row 2 - Mr. Millet, Abelmann, Lipman, Poskanzer, Lowenstein, Mr.
Bisbee. Mr. Perry.
GIRLS, SQUASH
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Row 1 - Mr. Keyes. Row 2 - Chilton, Victor, Wright, Chylack, Dolan, Cervieri. Row 3 - Frederickson, Scott. Eldridge lcptj, Downes
Panarese, Zervas, Walker, Berry.
BOYS' BASKETBALL
if
Row 1 - Cadigan, Burns, Cooke loo-Cpt.J, Foley loo-cpt.j,Hazeltor1, Miller. Row 2 - Parel, Takoudes, Butzel, Slavet, Russ, Brown,
Hendrikson, Mr, Cooke.
GIRLS' BASKETBALL
1 37
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Row 1 - Churchill, Weinkopf, Brewster fcpt.J, Flaherty, M, Dandridge, Ohlson. Row 2 - Ms. Heggie, L. Dandridge, Burton, Martin
Remington, Mobley, Castillo, Rugo, Vega. Row 3 - West, Schwenzfeier, Byard, Simmonds, Dirks, Millet, Bodman, Miss Campbell
WRESTLING
Row 1 - Sigourney. Thompson, Flaherty. Koltun lco-cptl. Curran fco-cpt.J, Robledo, Dearborn, Cross. Row 2 - Davis. Mr. Flaherty, K
Griffin. Donahue, Noble, Godfrey. Marttila, M. Griffin. Gross. Tribe. Mr. Griffin, Lipman.
VOLLEYBALL
Row 1 - Meaney, Parel, Mahanor, Flatley fcpt.J, Timberlake, Kleinman, Taylor. Row 2 - Huang, K. Davis, Karter, O'Shea, Ostergaard
R. Davis, Ruiz, Miss Alsbach.
HUCKEY
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Row 1 - Glen, Bradley, Hobbs, Ardaina, Swirbalus, Mooney lco-cpt.l, Micheletto foo-cpt.J, Raftery, Slotnick, Garrity, Appleton. Row
2 - Mr, Garrity, Rossi, C. Mackey, S ea, Fitzgerald, Moran, O'Neill, Chase, T. Mackey, Green, Iordan, Quinn, Mr. Duncan, Duncan.
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MILTUN 6
NUBLES 5 QUTJ
SPRI G
It is no doubt difficult to predict
the spring sports seasons when
they have just started, but the ex-
perience of the returning letter-
men, the inspiration and the en-
thusiasm of the coaches and the
captains, and the spirit of the
athletes will ensure fine seasons
and wonderful times for the
players.
It is already apparent that the
Girls' Lacrosse team is going to
have an exciting season. A group of
sixteen prospective players
travelled to Orlando, Florida for a
lacrosse camp during spring vaca-
tion, and there were fifty-odd
others who showed up at the try-
outs. It was very difficult making
cuts, but as a result the Varsity
team is very strong - being com-
posed of returning players Susan
Evans, Sally Wright, Ien Brewster,
Mo Flaherty, Chelsea Remington,
l
captain Betsy Walcott, plus play-
ers from last year's IV, as well as
some amazing newcomers. The IV
this year also looks particularly
strong. We're looking forward to a
fantastic season!
The Boys' Lacrosse team looks
equally promising. This team is
composed of the return of nineteen
lettermen and a few strong new-
comers. Co-captains Eric Chur-
chill and Iohn Bisbee will be head-
ing up a strong core of senior de-
fensemen, while on the other end
of the field Ioe Chase, Seth Handy,
and Tom Clayton lead an explo-
sive attack unit. The opening game
of the season was a victory over the
, 1-,
strong Andover team, which
shows the potential of our Mus-
tangs. Let's hope successwill con-
tinue far into the season!
Last year, the Girls' Track team
finished an exciting undefeated
season by placing third out of the
twelve schools in the Inter-
scholastic Championships held at
Milton. This year's co-captains
Susan Mahanor and Lisa Iones
look forward to an even better sea-
son this spring with the return of
many track veterans and the in-
coming of several promising
athletes. With this combination
and some new additions to the
coaching staff, this team is confi-
dent of another undefeated season,
and moreover, of being the League
champs with a first-place finish in
this year's Interscholastics.
The Boys' Track team looks
strong also. Coaches Taylor, Evri-
viades, Clifford, Keller and Wood
are working with the team to make
a more complete and rigorous
training program. Co-captain Sid
97
Whelan is leading a strong middle
distance group with runners such
as Ed Shugrue, Hong Duong and
Chris Allen. Co-captain Ioe Swir-
balus is leading some strong
throwers such as Chris Carter and
sprinters as I.R. Torrico and Lee
Rhodes. The jumpers and the vaul-
ters are also training hard to im-
prove their performances. Dis-
tance runners Yawu Miller and
Mark Lawrence should be giving
strong performances, and so
should hurdlers Stetson Chung
and Ike Onyeagoro. This team
should have a truly impressive
season.
The Golf team is looking at its
strongest season yet, with a very
experienced team. Coach Phil Per-
ry feels that the team's greatest
asset is its six returning lettermen:
captain Don Raftery, Geoff
Theobald, Skip MacDonald, Paul
Higgins, Iosh Karp, and Bill
Brown. The newcomer is Ian
Lapey. The competition in the
strong, since all seven of its mem-
bers are returning varsity letter-
men: Iim Schwarz, Arkie Engle,
Steve Cervieri, Frank Lowenstein,
Pat Perry, Tod Underhill and
Ricky Theobald. Arkie, Pat and
Ricky are all ranked in New Eng-
land, and Arkie, returning for the
fourth year on the team, will take
some time this spring to pursue na-
tional tournaments. The possible
setbacks of the season are Pat Per-
League is growing stronger every
year, so the Milton Golf team has to
pull together and practice even
harder than last year. With this
team's potential, this season's
promise of a first or second place
finish in the League does not seem
unlikely.
This Spring may prove to be an
exceptional one for the Boys' Ten-
nis team. Led by coach Peter Keyes
and captain Iirn Schwarz, the team
has outstanding players at the top,
followed by very competitive
depth. The team is bound to be
ry's basketball injury and the
strength of the rival Belmont Hill's
team. Besides defeating Belmont
Hill, the team wishes to dominate
the League with an undefeated
record. This team certainly has the
potential to do so.
At the start of the season, the
Softball team looks promising. The
success of the team will come from
a combination of the experience of
the returning players and the en-
thusiasm ofthe new. Five returned
from last year's squad and they
will be the core of this year's team.
Captain Celeste Vega, Iudi Ohlson,
Laurie Victor, Lynda Ruiz and Eli-
za Byard will lead a virtually new
group of girls, but it is already
apparent from the quality of the
players that this season will be a
stunning one for Milton Softball.
The Baseball and the Girls' Ten-
nis captains were not available for
comment, but Milton boasts of fine
teams, and these two should not be
exceptions.
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GIRLS' TRACK
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Row 1 - Mahanor loo-cpt.1, Iones fco-Cpt.l. Row 2 - Perini, Zervas, Friedman, Birk, DeSouza, Ryan. Row 3 - Callahan,
Schrneiser, Tessmer, Norton, Decker, Kim, Condit, Smith, Markis, Hoey, Saxe, Shugrue. Row 4 - Andrews, Brewer, L. Baker,
Bernard, Shapiro, Rush, M. Baker, Burton, Castillo, Mobley, Bell. Row 5 - Mr. Wood, Rhodes, Takoudes, Pieh, Rhodes, Millet,
Simmonds.
BOYS, TRACK
K ., W, ,..,,
Row 1 H Champoux, Boynton, Gordon, Gardner, Duong, Chan, Weekes, Sugrue, Haley, Mr. Taylor. Row 2 - Mr. Eviriades, 101
Chung, Lawrence, Slavet, Hazelton, Rossi, Rhodes, Miller, Allen, Carter, Wyborg, Torrico, Ayers, Mr. Wood, Hannon, len,
Dougherty, Hicks, Sahar, Whelan fco-cpt.J, LaBonti.
GIRLS' TENNIS
Row 1 - Flatley, Scott, M. Carroll lcpt.J, Doulos, Chylack. Row 2 - Mr. Carneal, Bodman, Cutler, D'Arbeloff, MacLean, Kohn
McG1a1ne, Miss Alsbach. Row 3 - Ewing, Gardner, Zonis, Taylor, Bower.
BUYS' TENNIS
,,,, '
Mr. Keyes, Lowenstein, Theobald, Schwarz lcpt.J, Cervieri, Perry, Underhill
4
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FORBES
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Row 1 - Urstadt, Chan, Utsch, Kafin, Chase, Young, Perkins, Torres. Row 2 - Marcus, Chaffey, Micheletto, Cabot, Driver, Rodgers, DuBrul, Karp
Row 3 - Hexner, Ku kendall, Pringle, George, Meyer, Gitlitz, Burns, Goff, Nichols, Lai, Mrs. Foley, Kevin, Meg, Michael, Brian, Schwarz, Allen
Row 4 A Mr. Fernaldl Green, Sage, len, Mr. Taylor, Goldstein, Morgan, Drohan, Kylander, Perry. Row 5 f E. Foley, Mr. Foster, Mr. Wood, Holt
Sklar, Chase, Handy, Phillips, Wilborg, Kagan, Sahar, Tsang, Pease, Cassin, I. Foley
108
552255555
bag-tag . . . banana boat . . . chew room . . . Dweeb . . . Cubby . . . Phil . . . Ax Andrewl . . . Spot . . . Dom . . .
Bosh . . . Bill, put some clothes on . . . don't spit on my carpet . . . golf is not just a game, it's a way of life . . . an
epileptic penguin doing a rain dance . . . Big Mick and the Alpha Cheers . . . the thicker the folder the thicker the
applicant . . . vintage Clark . . . the Canuck . . . eh . . . ying-yang . . . Wingnut . . . where did you buy your head?
. . . Billy lack and Davey Crockett . . . Why wasn't I invited . . . he was so European . . . Ponderosa . . . Hoss . . .
RHS . . . Eeflerious . . . pass the apple . . . but Carlotta, I had a salad with lunch . . . Ello, Leech . . , I'll see you
after twelve and I don't mean midnight - Footnote Slotter . . . Vertical . . . watch the tap . . . Ican't talk to a man
with corn on his tie . . . my, isn't Skip looking pretty this morning . . . FrannieX . . . Iwas drinking-tea . . . Phi
Slamma Najamma . . . Dagwood Bumstead . . . 210 verbal, what did you do, put down your address? . . . Isaw a
new anteater today . . . Iwant to see you four after chapel , . . Footnote BMOC . . . Baloney Head . . . Slotter vs.
Duran, the thrill in Daka . . . the large chill . . . nice talking to you, Gerald, speak English . . . Brads, why? . . .
lim, Sarah called . . . Iosh's S600 scholarship to Macalester . . . Crying to Dancing Don . . . Ithink we'll take that
risk . . . college day to Andover . . . They're going back door on us . . . Spills . . . Thank you Rosa . . . Amy, we
can see you . . . Boom, Boom . . . and the door isn't closed by Thanksgiving . . , When it's ninety degrees in my
house, I say momma turn up the heat . , . Don't looka gift Phil in the eye . . . where's Sef . . . Bob Smiff . . . Any
fool can learn from his own mistakes, but it takes a real wise man to learn from the mistakes of others -yuh-huh.
v
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Row 1 - Nye, Huang, Castillo, Remington, Pelletreau, Wright, Greer, Glen, Manaktala, Ruiz, Victor, Lipman, Karter, Chilton. Row 2 - Parel,
Byard, Mathews, Fitzgibbons, Carroll, Iewell, McGuire, Ranney, MacLaren, Davis, Eldridge, Ewing, Howland, West, Fleming, Bell, Fitzgerald,
Namgyal, jones
110
Iackson Five . . . Space Day . . . Making Breakfast on Snowday . . . MTV! . , . WIDG . . . The coke machine is
broken . . . Nurds . . . cackling in the halls . . . "cherish is the word" . . . THRILLER . . . Make it burn . . . the
toys are not for you! . . . dorm tours please you guys . . . they HUNG the doll? . . . Blob . . . OH POOH . . .
buttroom mothers . . . chapel . . . broken pew . . , Zebraskin . . . OTRT? . . . B.K. - ambiguous, especially in
the morning . . . Ice cream treatment . . . Nine o'clock swinging . . . cloves . . . "But Iennifer?!" . . . Sal, I'm
going to cut my legs now . . . Christopher, what does a pig say? . . . To live like a pig, to sleep like a pig, to eat
like a pig - the way to live! , . . Champagne, chocolate mousse and cookies . . . yes, l'll do an ice-cream run,
as long as you don't ask me again until Ianuary . . . Who took off the refrigerator door, this is a serious offense
. . . The camel club rules . , . K'She's already gone to bed - yet again" . . . Terrapin Station . . . "Tara, we
HAVE to get to assembly on time today or we'll be suspended" . . . Ranking with Pidge . . . that's debatable . . .
I beg to differ . . . and now for something completely different . . . Laurie hates it more . . . Howling at the
moon . . . C'mon, why don't they howl back? . . . Boys are so unreliable . . . Our house is a very, very, very
fine house . . .
111
l
WULCUTT
Row 1 - Cheney, Blanchard, Walsh, Wiemeyer, Bilodeau, Fitzgibbons, Cross, Theron, Gordon. Row 2 - Smith, Mr. Flaherty, M. Flahert ,Mrs
Flaherty, Rossi, Bo nton, Morrissey, Horowitz, Mrs. Dregalla, Mr. Dregalla Row 3 f Tribe, Allen, Sweeney, Torrico, Wolfson, Morse, Mr. Cheney
Mrs. Cheney, HSHLISOH, Chaloff, Mrs. Nourse Row 4 f Campbell, Mr. Keyes, Tan herlini, Choi, Iones, Mr. Nourse, Cavender. Row 5 - Nichols
Myer, Iohnson, Lipman, Levine, Pathiakis, Sherwood.Row 6 - Cover, Hobbs, Gogfrey, Robledo, Garfield, Kagan, Merrill, Slotnick, P. Flaherty
Fay Row 6 - Aoki, Kierstead, Singer.
C'mon with the noogs . . . There are 151 ways to throw a party . . . black
lung . . . Haroooooon . . . brown bag the brown book . . . ex-Gucci . . .
PYT . . . Moss lives - take down . . . It was a complete waste of timeg
that's why I did it . . . I thought about her so much, I couldn't deal with
her-thanx, Otis . . . tribute to Lorenzo, Russell, 81 Andy . . . space-shot . . . passive Pete . . . smokescreen . , . grogs
. . . Score! . . . Gesundheit, Tinto . . . clueless . . . the hippo and the walrus . . . Zeke and the cookie monster . . .
shovelling CQ 12, building the fence C-D 2, painting it CQ 4 .. . When do you sleep? . . . Delaware Destroyer . . .
dependable Ivan . . . small firecrackers, big bust . . . Slotter, you can be cool for awhile . . . continuous bingos . . .
Bisted: That's all right, that's O.K., you'll be working for us some day . . . herple . . . total raving madman . . . massive
Yabboes . . . the Ritz . . . on the 'bound . . . Obviousityis the best policy . . , you only know what we want you to know
. . . getarealjob . . . Ocean Reef . . . constant conferences . . . completely clueless . . . fudge Pacman . . . puddler . . .
Lov Den , . . good lovin' . . . Gumby's got a woodie . . . Oh!Oh!Oh! . . . the word "partym didn't even enter his mind
. . . the smile is worth a million words . . . thriller . . . Thanks to all our friends and those who wish they were . . .
Cynical seniors . . . Iamie . . . Arf . . . T.I. . . . Horrendous , . . Schweeners . . . Smach . . . Chumly . . . Slaughta . . .
Wolfie . . . I'Vino . . . Gods . . . Hobbsie . . . Ereeeeeek . . . Luv ya, Mo 81 Di 81 Ruth . . . Special thanks to Kim D . . . a
final thank you to the Flahertys . . . Your girlfriend is only as good as your friends think she is . . . Forever yours . . .
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Row 1 - Yeung, Schmeiser, Labert, Parel, Iackson, Heuston Row 2 - Vega, Hutchison, Fluhr, Tokheim, Canister Row 3 - Kylander, Dueger,
Iensen. Bermingham, Dirks, Swett Row 4 - Duncan, Parker, Smith, Rousseau, Taylor Row 5 - Santiago, Anderson, Chasa, Nangle, Simmonds
Klose, Millet, Colcord, Carter, Chylack
114
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Nurd . . . You Perv . , . He should be shot . . . CANITAKE YOUR COAT . . . Concentrate . . . Gotta get up, Gotta get up
. . . Is she or isn't she? . . . Would you or wouldn't you? , . . Hello Flo . . . Hello my child , . . So there we are . . . Oink,
Oink . . . Say Hathaway, LOUDER! . . . Chi Chi . . . Booboo . . . Smarter than the average bear . . . Laundry Room . . .
Knit, pearl, Knit, pearl . . . Life is but a Peanut . . . Tommy's having . . . S.T.A.L.L. . . . A 4th class boy thinks we are
immature!!! . . . Tommy's having a seizure . . . Lasagna Belly . . . Herbie the Harvard Man . . . When you get to the
country country, burn ash, not wood . . . Oliver Herbie Iackson-R.I.P .... He's useless . . . The Mormons . . . Do you
want to go to college? . . . Susie's intern . . . Put her in the study hall . . . Lufituaeb . . . Suffer! . . . Physical activitiy is
against my religion . . . lthink l'm in love . . , The MOST perfect relationship . . . Stumpy . . . Oh! . . . Where's the
champagne, G.T .,., What amess! , , . Celeste's been abad girl, again . . . Hell, No, I won't go!! . . . Climb atree, a
twig . . . Ihear the secrets that you keep . , . Smelly goes home . . . L.Cfs DILEMMA . . . lMy ,it'll be gone before
the yearis outj . . . She's out of the way . . . We're just too cool . . . foul . . . What can we do? We occupy all three . . .
SZIX . . . ltls like woooooooosh! . . . S!B's rut . . . 3 dinners . . . Said l'm a nightowl, honey, sleep all sleep all sleep
all day long . . . 142 swears . . . Ican't deal . . . I'm sucha loozer! . . . Puke-colored eyes . . . Bubbly!!!MY! . . . We Real
Cool . . . Iwant to put up my men . . . You know this song??? . . . I.R., my, he's persistent . . . 4 in a bed . . . Pizza-face
. . . The Popcorn Theory . . . WE're not invited . . . the Star Chamber . . . Helpful Hints . . . Room eviction . . . Friday
flick . . . You appear-but in reality . . . Nic fit? . . . Girls just want to have fun . . . the shower . . . Has he shown it to
you yet, Hil? . . . You guys are gross . . . Devilish . . . If looks could kill . . . HUG . . . and after 10 o'clock . . . the late
night committee . . , Shhh . . . Here she comes . . . chipmunk face . . . When it rains, it pours . . . So, when are you
bringing back the Champagne . . . Tell me about it . . . a creamy fromage . . . "You decide which of your homework
you absolutely have to do for tomorrow and then you do half of it" . . . He's pretty tasty . . . slurp, slurp , , . you hit a
policeman? . . . the bald eagle . . . beaker . . . cute German sausage , . . Moooooo . . . Girls, being a superpower is no
longer enough. We must become a superduper power , . .
HALLOWELL
,
Row 1 - McGuire, Eldridge, Lee, Gottschalk, Goolsbee, O'Flanagan, Azeke, Mathews, Machold, Neville Row 2 - Tennille, Lewis, Chaffey
Bisbee, Vinciguerra, Freeman, MacArthur, Mullen, Gray, Yamamoto, Sigourney Row 3 W Pratt, Clayton, Kaypaghian, Berger, Sherwood, Crow
Schniewind, Cross, Lucero, MacLaurin, Cooper, Mr. Saul Row 4 - Dedijer, Truax, Morrow, Whelan, Abelman, Walsh, Churchill, Brice, Horan.
116
an
fi?-
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N- 4.
4
latah tomatah . . . caroling . . . so you're writing a novel . . . Doctor . . . 4000 million Chinese . . . mow's tackle
. . . purple moons . . . Rigorous . . . Santa can't go that high . . . my childhoodis coming through the mirror . . .
fudge Pac-man . . . Dan, Dan, get up Dan! . . . see me, Mr. F . . . N.L. . . . Danned . . . Bam-Bam . . . Pebbles . . .
cracker jacks . . . sheep-dog . . . squeal . . . wedgie . . . roach killers . . . munchin' the buds . . . I can't close my
eyes . . . somebody trew me a gueber . . . you can't question Bugs Bunny in mid-air . . . Yoko . . . Cromo . . .
Mook Squid ... Quilliam DHOE Mow Chachmo ... Sicky ... Trux ... CW ... Clay'in ,..
Ever find the exams? . . . Helmut . . . My aunt is Lynda Carter. . . . tickets to the movies . . . Romo's frog . . .
C.B. . . . quiff . . . Ioe, come out and play . . . Minky . . . Blackjack . . . I'm into leather . . . woof-woof . . .
Long-silver . . . The But - plugs . . , Mow's answering service . . . Mrs. Austin . . . Sicky's cushion . . . head
control . . . Rudolph . . . I love de reggae but me no smoke herb, man . . . 24 hr. day , . . sc. . . . Cut-ups . . .
D.H., blowin' the Bee . . . Boofed . . . strong-box . . . Boots . . . 151 . . . and Iim, uuh . . . I took the whole
flagpole . . . laps, Ike . . . Writer's tree . . . the fire-exti extinguisher . . . Eggy . . . I canit feel my legs . . . Iudas
and the cops . . . Aquaphobia . . . skiing . . . Zone . . . Doctor Destructo . . . Slotnick in the coves . . . Boobalina
. . . Bloody molies . . . Bacon . . . 2 by 4 . . . Romo cuts Thursday . . . A corridor . . . The triple, double
disappearing act . . . Scabs . . . Romoli . . . My buddy Paul . . . I'm sticking to the sheets . . . midnight flag . . .
now is it fair ... Bad news ... Duff ... 3:15, 4:20, what, again? - PHIL!! ... Big Red ... Parson's room ... "I
could hear everythingn . . . Debbie . . . Wakini bake . . . No calls . . . Rob's wedgie . . . Dadio . . . It's a
conspiracy! . . . Spilled milk . . . Chach in flight . . . Exposure . . . We're coming to take you away, hee hee ha
ha ho ho . . . Watch out for the truck! . . . So he thinks he'll get away with it, but will he? . . . piggery . . ,
pretty brave group . . . RING THE IUDAS BELL!
. I
Nfl
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ROBBI S
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Row 1 - Allen, Felder, Bingham Row 2 - Zuckerman, Dock, English, Park, Anthony, Prud'hom1ne, Dearborn Row 3 - Pozen, Slavet, Gardner,
Atkinson, Ardagna, Iordan, Chan, Pole Row 4 - Charnpoux, Porter, Mr. Carneal, Stein, Poskanzer, Mr. Doelger, Renkert, Lawson, Dohan,
Lawrence, Ziegler, P. Brown, Toot Row 5 - Mr. Warren, Schore, Ulman, D. Brown, Tsang, O'Neill, Neble, Spencer, Churchill, Forney, Hazelton,
McKay, Chung, Davis, Ho-tung, Mr. Dewan
118
2 al
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l , I .P ... C.B. 3X ... Captain Nemo ... Russ ... Holy
i SI ' One Duffy Tadpole Guyrus
,ff ' Geek-Nick Command . . . Andy's A. Canes . . . Riff
D
and Raft . . . Satellite Member - G.T. . . . "Ace"
.. . 359 -the Chew Window . . . Hearts . . . Bank
. . . Magic Swammie . . . 10 o'clock dip . . . Yeller
. . . Chew Brethren . . . Timmy Z's rocket . . . Eh,
blow it off . . . Decks . . . Mr. Harsh . . . Score . . .
You might as well be - . . , Roommate Warfare
. . . bye bye Clash . . . I started to think about my
dad - . . . Leftus kneeus popus outus . . . You
Mon, the Garfieldis on your bed . . . the Witch . . .
Closet Dead Head . . . Beasts . . . Cradle Robbers
. . . Belt . . . the Assassin . . . Carneal - Bowie?
. . . Spanky . . . The Docks . . . that bed is blocking
an egress ... 7:54 - 1.75 ... Dead bird on the
tennis court . . . Fake Curtis runs - Tennis Court
Oath . . . E.T. . , . Purple Haze . . . Mark goes down
under . .. Shut up - Shut up . . . Rob's
technicolor yawn . . . the Whopper beat the Big
Mac , . . Revised Edition , , . Were Outta Heyah!
119
FAULK ER
Row 1 - Ryan, Burton, Hausner, L. Davis, McCathern, K. Davis, L. Carroll Row 2 - Appell, Marr, Fallon, Fensch, Mr. Burdick, R. Davis, Mrs
Burdick, P. Carroll, Lisio.
120
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Charity, it's 7 o'clock . . . "Ain't nobody,' . . . When's the heat coming on? . . . C.B. - straighten out your bed . . .
Wendy, will you say grace tonight? . . . ugh . . . Shut that window, Ruthie! . . . Who's "untouchable" is this? . . .
basement desk destroyers . . . cheerleading the races . . . I'm a great haircutter-just trust me! . . . Celtics lose again?
. . . ctmon Itm desperate!! . . . E.A. - phone Nicole . . . Carla, do you want some hash? -how about some hash? . . .
The Mid-West is the place to be . . . I'm not a slob, Fm just unorganized . . . Choices! . . . Snow day, right? . . . What
was that? . . . Again please? . . . Charity, it's 7:15 - go away . . . this room smells . . . Sondra, your nightgown is
burning . . . the Magic Fluters . . . Carla, how's your knee?-What knee?! . . . Eating Room . . . A.M.-"Butllike him
so much" . . . C.B. - marriage counsellor . . . it's not the mood, it's the people . . . DON'T DRINK- fthe water! . . .
We need a new closet- don't look in there! . . . 2nd floor gourmets . . . "Amy or Carla, did you guys break the toilet
seat?,' . . . little dust creatures be gone . . . Tsang-it's acrushed singer . . . Carla, what's that huge rubber thing doing
on your bed? . . . sexy, sensual umbrella cases . . . Jeremiah was abullfrog . . . Charity, it's 7:45 . . . Butz! . . . Revenge
of the Chew god . would youjust chill out? . . . Ralph . . . gullibility at its best . , . "Engarde!" . . . golfers and soccer
players . . . Reesets peanut butter cups . . . MORON!! . . . dealing with centipedes . . . "Don't forget to open the flue,
Ellen!" . Amy, stop snoring . . . WHAT smells like sour milk in here? . . . Smoked oysters . . . Embryos and eyes . . .
"I'm going to ask you to leave" . . . Keep that door knob away . . . Carla, hide those rolling papers . . . Steve was right
. . . or was he? . . . What's the green gunk? . . . ERF . . . The lay Gargantuan Treaty, what? . . . Ihave a problem, dear
. . . fire alarm-take six . . . adoptaLugan . . . everybodyts mom . . . the BUS, Denise, the BUS! . . . lcan't believe the
G.D.B. left! . . . if you can't say it you can't do it . . . 1 a.m. talks , . . The close-bounders club - care to join us? . . .
Charlie T. -the dreamer . . . usos los manos, caramba! . . . Ellen, is the flue open or did you burn some bacon again?
. . . rendezvous on the deck . . . 10:30 -- Charity, youtre going to be late for assembly, again! . . .
121
DAY COMMITTEE
-'-'
Hoey, Moran, Timility Row 2 - Foley, Mahanor, Butzel Row 3
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Whatever floats your boat , . . Let's blow this clarr
bake . . . Partners in crime . . . If itts not your mothe
then it must be Sheraton of Boston . . . Oscar 8: Feli
. . . Octopus . . . Walrus . . . Vampire . . . Fozz
Bear, I love you . . . the animals go in two by two . .
Come hither wench, I shall take thee now . . . Ru
sian for water . . . Psycho . . . Hey I.C.! . . . Purrri
... Cool ... Waterbuffalo, high noon ..
Owwwww! . .. Mo-a-thon 1,2,3 .. . 4?. . . Dubiou
Slayter Loose Lips? Godspell Forever ..
That man is God . . . We are the rebels! . . . Coach . .
They're lost in the streets of Boston . . . Rainboi
Sisters . . . Hurt Me! . . . I'm too old for this! . . .
wanna o home! . . . Chop-chop . . . Fogged decks.
steamed windows . . . Gum on a shoe . . . Put a cor
init! ...Twit!!! ...Getarealjob! ...Let's do lunci
. . . How low can you go?! . . . Pond Scum gl Scur
Bucket ... Fly, be free! ... Headgames ..
KINKY!!!! . . . Tunefactory . .. fM.E.D.J2 . .. P.G
MoeDoe . . . M.D. - Mental Deficient
We've -
shared our cups and toasted our times in rot gut
Whiskey and fine french wines
Old friend -
we've been a mile or two together
Charlie Daniels
Bermuda
Bound!
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Sahurtaday . . . cabin talks . . .
architecture . . . 3A.M. in Flor-
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night hidden tennis ball
folding a sweater . . . "Erf, why
don't you t- ... ZZZV' ... V-
Hoop "Where the hell is
IOWA?" the Lithuanian
Syndrome "We must play
WIFF EECH UHVAHV' . . .
If fwel have seen farther than others, it is because lwej have stood on the shoulders of giants.
14 years! . . . Greeny . . . "You're
playing what, SQUASH?!" . ..
F.F.F. ... 1.1. at the wheel ... col-
lege plans "Guys, there's no
more hope!" . . . INcredible! . . . "I
don't snore, YOU do!" com-
puter class . . .
Isaac Newton
Caribou . . . Parsh . . . teeing off the
19th hole! Iunior Year
Theo's women my awesome
build . . . Curly Lemon . . . lithping
. . . LAX . . . A-mazing! . . . vun-
deebartan bum . . . A V2 inch! . . .
"All right, I lied!', .. .
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casual rebels against respectability . . .
the movie look . . . two weeks ago? . . . I
don't buy it . . . I used to be disgusted
. . . a far away likeness to a vaguely
remembered image . . . you've slammed
the door of love in my face . . . I think
this school is full of people wanting
inconceivable things fcase in pointl . . .
confidants concord . . . what we do is
secret . . . open to persuasion . . . Ioan,
don't you hate people who donit like
J.T., UB4U, Us? think how
convenient it would be if we were your
dentist . . . "It's just the pestiferous
absurdity of the whole thing" . . .
tutelary saints, bordering genius,
breeching decency . . . gee, my life is a
funny thing . . . fcuboidal wisdomj . . .
my intended lshe inspired uneasinessl
. . . innocently experienced . . . "That
Wasn't me that was my crooked brother,
Ivan" . . . looking for Mrs. Wright . . .
another carton . . . at the bottom of the
pool . . . a potpourri of phantasmagoria
. . . school for scandal . . . a
multi-faceted gem of ambiguity . . . party
commandos . . . good times . . .
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Iamie Nichols Gretchen Cole Arthur Myer Iennifer Dueger
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The Perky football season RECKY draa-ma
Heini 8: tasti-puffs . . . Hey, who's that guy? , . . it's
hot . . . unreal . . . the beamer . . . condo action . . .
whatts the deal here? . . . peace, man . . . so hard, so
fast 8: so cool . . . have a shower . . . reel-ly . . . I'm in
control here . . . caj . . . have like a . . . ballsy . . . rad
. . . the mole . . . the Silver Cloud Express . . . PIS-
POW . . . have it when the rents are not around . . .
Paul who? . . . we're there . . . rappin' with Drew . . .
that rnan in the white van . . . you know about me and
Steve . . . sickdog . . . Wally gonna be a football star
. . .I'rn howlin' . . . Bang a right . . . Zerv, pull over-
the HOOD! . . . shoobydoobydoo! . . . Rappin' with
Dr. C. ... Stay Low T.P., R.L., and L.C ...
I I' :xr H egzl
Living well is the best revenge.
What hath night to do with
sleep?
Le Club Marie-Louise
Noo ie Fund-Raising .. .
George Herbert
"Ahh, excuse me ..." Big Mac
... Octet+ 2 ... "Non-de-
nominationaln . . . Amex . . .
Laissez-Faire
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Clayton M. Nemrow Filene's Iames M. Karp
m sorry, officer, but there's no room for Pack up the gear, I hear the garbage truck coming. The Milton Academy track team set a
ou. new worldis record today . . .
tey dude, what it is . . . strawberry daiquiri . . . that's probably the funniest thing I've ever heard in my entire life . . . the
1r o zone . . . time to make the donuts . . . Sinli . . . Kung Fu . . . old man, do not make me laugh HA . . . what are you,
ammered . . . you wanna ahty . . . B.K.!McD's . . . could you spit a little more chicken please-thanks . . . 10:death
ue to laughter . . . what's that thing over your eye, wimp . . . did you bring the book . . . beware of trains . . . hee-hee-hee
. . tap, tap, tap, tap . . . nice day, huh . . . how's the patient doing . . . don't blow it . . . Fun uns . . . hyeah, I sure will
. . he lo, is this the Nickelodeon donut emporium . . . assion juice . . . O.K. let's start at the bottom of page - 2-plpthp
. . chocolate and pansies . . . what's that purple stuff in the rocks . . . is this your super sports grip . . .
161
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Thorn Pozen D0n't dream it, be it.
Rocky Horror Picture Shovs
Asher M. Lipman
The Dead -What's the sawdust for? . . . Party on the Porch . . . Mr. Prof . . . Cat Woman . . . Harvard '83 . . . The
Police . . . the police . . . "Let's hit the docks" . . . Ming Tree and the Garden . . . Heffenreffer and Beacon Hill . . .
it doesn't mix with that . . . Egg foo young . . . I.I.'s House? . . . Iwas up here, but now I'm down here . . . Car at
Chris, . . , OLD LYME . . . back in prison . . . Groes and ggers - 1 foot left . . . Where's Danville?? . . . Dad and
Frank Purdue . . . Boat 5 . . . Ieff's phone bill . . . Gloucester accident . . . Harsh and Parsh . . . CD and Rays . . .
Thanks Buddy . , . sarcasm?!! . . . good thing your name isn't Pinnochio . . . Look there! peridols and SGT. BN . . .
Paris '82 . . , BMW . . . Bus trips . . . good. !. . . Tommy D and Mr. C . . . The hamburger Pot . . . green and blue
Coats . . . Forgetting Birthdays . . . The Green Accordian . . . Mr. N and Flat's cookies . . . Alien poem . . . Thelma
the maid , . . Gerry says "Happy Birthday" . . . You're so uncool - I'm NEver going to party with you again . . .
Asher, Thorn - need nametags? . . . Good same paants . . . Geekman in English: nice ties . . . Prom '83 and airport
NYC and G.T Good same words - ESP Chinatown Express Fitta Face, Bisonhead inverse
proportion . . . Get a life - buy a beach ball
!
9
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Elise Feldman
Though I am always in
haste, I am never in a
hurry.
Iohn Wesley
Melinda Gra '
Steep thysellin a bowl of
Summertime.
Virgil
Helen Bronk
So little done - so much
to do.
Cecil Iohn Rhodes
Elise Feldman Melinda Gray Helen Bronk
Be exalted, O Lord, in your strengthg
we will sing and praise your might.
167
REJGICEE REJO1CE! RBTOICYY REJIOCEY REJOILEY
REJGICH! REJOXCE! RkJOICEY RBJIOCFY EQJOIQE'
EEJOICE! REJOICEE RFJOYCE!
iJOICE! REJOICE! REJOICE?
EDICEE REJOICE! REJOICEf
DICE! REJOICE! REJGICEY
iCE! REJOICE! REJUILH'
IE! REJOICE! REJUZCLf
S! REJGICE! REJGICE?
5 REJGICEY REJOICEY
REJOICE! REJGICE!
ZEJOICH! REJOICEE
ZJOICE! REJOICE! R
IOICE! REJDICE! RE
SIUE! REJGICE!
ECE! ICE!
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REJOICEE
REJOICE! REJOICE
' REJGILFY RLJOILI
ull
The race is not to the swift or the
battle to the strong . . . but time
and chance happen to them all.
Ecclesiastes 9:11
. . , there is nothing better for
men than to be happy and do
good while they live. That every
man may eat and drink, and find
satisfaction in all his toil - this is
the gift of God.
Ecclesiastes 3:12-13
Whatever your hand finds to do,
do it with all your might . . .
Ecclesiastes 9:10
.
Ywgtfre. Soctpemcler 5.3
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And in time
, and in time we will all be stars.
FAME
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There is a correspondence between the human
soul and everything that exists in the world.
l:.mei
Do me a big big favor?
Eat a live toad first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you all the
rest of the day.
DON'T PANIC!
,Douglas Adams
Everything's gonna be all right
' Iesus Christ Superstar
And the money kept rolling out in all directions.
Evita
Michael Gary Weisberg
Douglas Fox Morse
Just another one of life's useless experiences.
Harrison Ford
Every method has its problems.
Iulia Child
If you think about it you get in trouble.
math class
Nobody is more petty than a group of teachers.
English class
If you want trivia, which is what this course basically
is . . .
history class
Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent.
Isaac Asimov
171
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Keli's House . , . Geek Election '84 . . . Townie Alarm , . . Friday night at the fights, , . Mr. 2x4 . . . Dr. Shotgun - M
Funnel . . . Dags . . . Sleep King II . . . Assembly, 14 times . . . Safety! . . . Hall Hockeyfwhatasave? . . . Menno, there's
cop coming . . . anti-terrorist driving . . . Nice doggie?! . . . Dags, it's Michelle again . . . Mclob, please . . . If the team bt
goes off a c iff, then maybe IV . . , The Roast . . . this is the last one, I swear . . . The South will rise again . . . Dam
Yanks! . . . Damn Hics! . . . Look on the bright side, only 159 days left . . .
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Cyrus B. Noble
Steven T. Poskanzer
Riff gl Ralf
Once in a while you get shown the light
ln the strangest of laces
lf you look at it riglbt
Robert Hunter
As wind in dry grass
Jr rat's feet over broken glass
T.S. Eliot
www -. we , . . , ,V f H Qin. . emi -nm 41 11 '
Guy Renkert Rob McKay Mark Forney Cohn Sweeney
Heh, Heh . . . Madness does not preclude Achievement.
Inspector Clouseau
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andrea hans
they say skies
are never Chartreuse
they say trees
are never rustling cellophane
leaves and sun
is never music you can touch
they say men
are never gentle clowns,
but swallows flying
upside down
have seen the sky turn green.
j . pintauro
xandria birk
kathy jackson
It loved to happen.
Marcus Aurelius
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Nothing left to do but smile, smile, smile . . .
Grateful Dead
88
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Iennifer Iewell To share our sadness with the one we love is perhaps as great a Amy Eldrid
happiness as We can know, unless it be to share our laughter.
Iames Kavanaugh
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This is going to be hot, Iohn, I know it. I'll just wait here awhile.
Desmond Curran
So theytre a little late.
Iohn Hughes
.
I think it's today. They've got to be here somewhere.
"Beam us up, Scotty, this place
sucks!,'
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fav' 'W
Palm Beach . . . naturalky . . . 3rd hole .. . What's the par anyway? . . . Kim and who? dubious! . , , Cookie . . . V hoop . . . Saturday . .. The
Moose is Loose . .. hea monitor . .. "monster" ,. . TW . . . Punkie . ,. Thanks Mr. Millet ,. .
platinum boy . . . Sugar Ray . . . how many tokens does a Tarcel take? . . . Nique
. . . flume . . . room service . . . It doesn't work!! . . . What's a moose? . . . bread
battles Salt or Fresh water? . . . Rich and Nick . . . It's acid! are you insane yet?!!
. . . Like wow man totally awesome . . . Nick, do you have a fourth cousin once
removed? . , . The wheel of Fortune . . . wanna wrestle? . . . gag me with a halberd
. . . what does L.I. stand for? HAREM . . . does her name begin with aI?? . . . carrot
juice . . . Was there any film?!! , . . what garbage can? Australia . . . six shadows,
Doug?? . . . A.L.E.F .... a dollar! . . . Little Boy . . . We're there . . . What does that
bullet shell remind you of Elise??!!! . . . I want a back rub!!!
J,
f
X y
What are the veritable names of these
gregarious seniors whose pseudonyms
are MO and SMIFF?
MILTON FOLD-IN These
two
benevolent gents of magnanimous
acclaim have toured the nation,
ap earing on the screen, stage, playing
fielyds and advertisements of various
bourgeois products. To find out who
they are, fold in the page.
it gt
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194
MIGUEL, shut up!Who? Rush? Yes and The Police!HARSHfturn down, IIM
improv sucks!Iim's into itfyou dropped a blom on me!
A negro scholar! The Lake, The Cape fBourgeois-Z!Iimi!treND
Iam? where's the gig? Pierre Hotelg Hello NY!151, ralph
LAWSON, you're going to the prosfgym shortsfscore me some!fa0 SCHWARZ
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GRASS
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For lon you live and high you fly
For smiles you'll give and tears you'll cry
And all you touch and all you see
Is all your life will ever be
Pink Floyd
197
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THE ROOTS OF EDUCATION
ARE BITTER, BUT THE FRUIT IS
SWEET.
I ARISTOTLE
I
CHARLES ABELMANN ERIC CHURCHILL
198 IT'S ALL WORTH IT IN THE END
3111.
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KEED om:
"I'd have to say it would be
you . . . Mr. Sobel."
It is easy to find fault if one has that disposition. There
was once a man who, not being able to find any fault
with his coal, complained that there were too many
prehistoric toads in it.
Mark Twain
Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die
even the undertaker will be sorry.
Mark Twain
trail
Xa
You're only a dog, old fellowg a dog, and you've had
your day.
Be sure you are right, then go ahead.
Iulian S. Cutler
David Crockett
201
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Patrice Dolan
Dear Mom, Kathleen, and Gigi
I think there really is a rain-
bow . . .
Thanx
I love you all
Susan Evans
Thanx to Mom, Alex, David, Mark,
len, Ned, len V.E., Mark L., and to
anyone else I've forgotten . . . spe-
cial thanx to Andrew and Dave , . .
on the road again
Kristin Perini
Thank you, you guys, for all the
good times-P.D., K.F., K.D., S.E.,
K.A., G.W., S.B., . . . and especial-
ly, thank you Mom and Dad - I
love you more than you can know.
Kim Doulos
Mom and dad, thanx for so much. I
love you always. Also special
thanx to Stephen for the past two
years, and for being a friend.
X,
Gwen Walker
Across the hills the Wuggly Ump is
hurling on, kervash, kerblump
Edward Gorey
Kakie Andrews
Oh, man, look at those cavemen go.
Their in the freakiest show.
David Bowie
Hi honey! . . . this really sucks. I have to wear a turtleneck - it's so embarrassing . . . dat's very sad . . . dat's
baaad news . . . Hi Marty . . . I'1n having an identity crisis . . . things are really bad at home - there's no
toothpaste or deodorant . . . I,II1 an alligator . . .
GET THIS . . . totally hip
. . . excuse me, do you
have any menus? . I
think you two had better
come in and face the mu-
sic . . . CJ. . . . you think
you are so funny . . . you
talk too much . . . I love
that man Drew and
Kie . . . Patrice you are so
tacky . . . -where are you
going' - hooommmeee
. . . Nantucket . . . E.C.R.
. . . 4 stuck in a snow-
bank . . . you never have
any food in your house
. . . one night in Scituate
snowed in at Ki1n's
. . . L.A.C .... Strawberry Daiquiris at Iim1ny's II think Larry forgot the rumj . . . harsh . . . I'm really sick of this
. . . the prancer . . . I'd wallow in self pity, too . . . BYE HONEY
Wigan E, i HMI.
Susan E. Mahanor
Kathleen D. Flatley
ERNH-FAIL! . . , Gee Boys . . . "Olie, Olie, O1ieComeFree', . . . M3 . . . BR-Sb-BR . . . Cyrus Noble: Robbins House! . . . Flat's Sweater . . . V-Ball,
B-Ball .,. "Burning Down The House" . . . F.D. + Baby . .. 99933 ... "Chiz, Whata Lifeu ,.. Humarock , . . C.C.B ..., Paahty . . . C+V:CC ...
DELICIOUSXBEAUTIFUL! . . . Thirteen years?! . . . F-L-A, F-L-A, F-L-A, F-L-A-T-S, FLATS . . . Wair Thair! . . . ThanksI.C.W. . . . The VAN . . .
"No, No, No La Lanza" .. . Don Quixote . . . Eddie, C.I. .. . "Ground Control To Major Torn . . . "It has to be done" . .. Cawfee . . . Gazawh . . . I
see said the blind man" . . . Thanks, Kendra, it's good having you in OUR class . . . Thanks Family . . . THANKS ANDY . . . i?4sf!Gr . . . Thanks
Bakes, Michelle, 8zMark, Youlre EXCELLENT . . . Erick Alan . . . SIDV . , . Gingie and Murnpsie . . . ROCKY . . . Ineed aTab! . . . Hang in there
W.W., E.B., and M.B.M. . . . "Back in the truck!" . . . Ron Strykert . , . Natasha fMay she rest in peacej .. . MICHAEL , . . La Mejor Chicazjoli . . ,
"Flats, Do you know where we are?" . . . YAAAH! . . .
Iudi Ohlson
Clint R. Eastwood
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Larry I. Bird
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Don't it always seem to go
you don't know what you've got
'til it's gone
Ioni Mitchell
Know that the goal is distant, and is
utpward, and is worthy of all your life's
e fort to attain to.
Thoreau
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Rob Sheffield
He not busy being born is busy
dying.
Bob Dylan
Flynn Monks
I think l'd better think it out
again.
"Reviewing the
Situation",
Lionel Barts'
"Oliver!,'
Doug Grindle
When the going gets weird,
the weird turn pro.
Raoul Dul
Perry Papp
He who is truly wise is y
conscious of his ignorance. i
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You RANG?! . . . Abad . . . c.c . . . Don't drive on Rob's lawn . . . The Nobles Feuds . . . But officer, I was on
my side of the Road!? . . . Thanks, T.K. . . . Fort Lauderdale . . . The Strip . . . The Stripper . . . Iurnp it, Bill
. . . Denny's . . . Tequila: Drug or Drink? . . . Swirbs Grad Party '82 . . . Sean and Nikki . . . Green Death . . .
ID? Oh, mines in the car . . . No, you calm down! . . . Pat, not her! . . . Lake Placid . . . Swirbs . . . DeBradley
. . . Lurch or leach? . . . F.I.T.T. . . . M.A.D . . . Roofers fool have more fun! . . . Stage Fright . . . Le . . .
Thanks to the Flahertys . . . Milton 34, B.H. 14 . . . Here's to you Fluff, good luck next year! . . . "That's
enough for me" . . . The Eagle . . . The End.
213
Barak Rosenbloom Ierrold Codes Michael Halloran Francis Quinn
Could I revive within me
Her symphony and song,
To such a deep delight 'twould win me,
That with music loud and long,
I would build that dome in the air,
That sunn dome! those caves of ice!
And all wlio heard should see them there,
And all should cry, Beware! Beware!
His flashing eyes, his floating hair!
Weave a circle round him thrice,
And close your eyes with holy dread,
For he on honey-dew hath fed,
And drunk the milk of Paradise.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Fran . . . Ihate dot-dots . . . cats . . . toucha-toucha . . . G natural . . . Ribet . . . Mike's Pahty '83 . . . Bag your face! . . . Keep to the ri ht . . .
Slam! . . . Doubting Thomas . . . a valiant attempt . . . Nice . , . An algorithm is a kind of way you sort of do things . . . Mr. Loges . . .
Where's Michael? . . . Computer Dance '82 . . . olive 'uice . . . tennis ,. . Ms. Sun's redefinitions . . . hilarious nymph with a speech
impediment , . . They?wThe committee? . . . Nikon, oflcourse . . . FOD . . , Fwankie Wawabee . . . our brilliant advisor . . . Whoosh! . . . It
could be cemetary spelled wron . . . Tom and the screwdriver . . . Back to you, Ioan . . . Which direction is the form? . . . TALFW . . .
Crosswords . . . See you later-Iiiope , . . Smurfs much? . . . What's the sixth? . . . Me fac vomere! . . . FOF . . . Bob , you forgot your ICL!
. . . in the closet fBut, I am here!! . . . cheese curls . . . circles . . . Wa-wa-waves . . . Aren't you beingabit forward? . . . Alternate! . . . L.L.
gplesnt rip! . . . medical glove . . . High Anxiety . . . Nurse Diesel fMooJ . . . What hands? . . . Fruit Center . . . Frank's cooler . . . CILUS
ase Error . . . '
215
Rosebud
Woke up this morning
Can't believe what I saw
A hundred billion bottles
Washed up on a shore . . .
The Police
'Message in a Bottle,
Thanks mom, dad, lim, and Rosemarie
The stingers . . . Scituate . . . The Police, Sulli-
van Stadiuln, 8f10!83 . . . Roxanne, put on the
red li ht . . . Fender stratocaster . . . My "tow-
nie" tiiends
Wogga I.
Bryan Wuthrich
And if rny thought-dreams could be seen
They'd probably put my head in a guillotine
But it's alright, Ma. it's life, and life only
Paul Higgins
Bob Dylan
216
fl
1506
me IWW
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if
If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Then quit. There's no use being a
damn fool about it. V
W.C. Fields
After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is
music.
Aldous Huxley
Q ,Av
Lonely by day
Emlpty and cold
On y to say
Lo and behold
Deep in the night
Down in my dreams
Glorious sight
This soul has seen
There's a well on the hill
You just can't kill for Iesus
There's a well on the hill
Let it be
Iames Taylor
217
It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Iohn Dean
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CHRISTIAN STEIN CHRISTOPHER WALSH
E
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Life is our Dictionary.
Emerson
221
There is no end to what we can do together . , .
McCartney
2
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Relocation Resources Norwell
BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS '84
STREKALOVSKY at HOIT, INC. ARCHITECTS
51 North Street
Hingham, Mass.
TO BILL APPLETON
BEST OF LUCK
IN THE FUTURE TO YOU AND YOUR
CLASSMATES
FROM YOUR FATHER
WILLIAM S. APPLETON, M.D.
BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE
1951
GONGRATULATIONS, ANTOINE
We're proud of you
Love,
Mom
Audrey Charles Sz Gwen Carol Shirley8z Darryl
Carmen Iames Iasen Peggie
Lorenzo Lonnie 8zLawrence Mabel Damien
Belle Kesha Paula
THERE'S NO STOPPING YOU NOW!
Dear Patrice,
To sweet A Sz her classmates,
our love Sz Congratulations It's fun to help you "toot your horn,'
Au H ' 'cause we're so proud of you! All our love
ans Kathleen, Gigi and Mom
BEST WISHES
all the lipmans nathaniel asher rebecca
benjamin jacob sarah rachel deborah all the
lipmans nathaniel asher rebecca benjamin
jacob sarah rachel deborah all the lipmans
nathaniel asher rebecca benjamin jacob sarah
rachel deborah all the lipmans nathaniel
asher rebecca benjamin jacob sarah rachel
Congratulations
to
Sunny Sunflower,
Clem, Pizmo,
and the Great Class of
deborah all the lipmans 1
Best Wishes
THANKS TO IB, MLB, TB, MB, FB, TCC, to
DBD, DD, DAE, AE, GF, WG4-BG, IFH, KH,
ABK, IMacD, IMMCC, BM+NS, IMM, SO'M, the Class of
AP, PR, BMS, DS, AOS, RBS, IS+NS, ATT, 1
MIT, SAW, TWW, PMW, DW, and IZ -
FOR ALL YOU'VE DONE.
ARS'84 Dr. and Mrs. Philip
Doherty
To Dear Kristin
We are so proud
Love You
Mom and Dad
Congratulations
To
Michelle
- 13 years -
We are proud of you
Your loving Family
Congratulations
We love ya!
Michelle,
Of poems, prayers, and promises
And things that we believe in
How sweet it is to love someone
How right it is to care
How long it's been since yesterday
And what about tomorrow
And all the memories we've shared
Without you I never would have made it. You are very
special and I will take you with me always.
I love you,
Maureen
CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE CLASS OF 1984
AND
MANY THANKS TO THE
FACULTY AT MILTON
THE IORDAN S
You've come a long way, Matt!
Congratulations to you
and the Class of '84
227
CONGRATULATIONS from the Lithuanian Folk Dance Group of
Boston!
Compliments of a Friend
S.T.U.P.
Awesome
Bodacious
Coaches Shoes
Congratulations,
Mom 8: Stanford QB
Welcome to the
Best of Boston
After 60 5 5
Years...
f 0
f AQ:
' 3321,
There Is 5,
7
Still 01113
J.0ne ,
lmmys
Harborsule.
Jimmy 's Harborside Restaurant
4 Non em Avenue. oston oI6l7J423-
2 2 h B l000
Open Lunch and Dinner- Monday thru Saturday- ll:30 AM to
L d R V I P lu A M or Credit Cards A
'Maas'
FISH SHANTY '
245 Northem Avenue, Boston 542-5600
9:30 PM
cc d
Best Wishes to
the Class of '84
from the
M. DeMatte0 Construction Co
0
Four Years at Milton
and He's Still
Blowing Bubbles.
Congratulations
Class of
1984
HOW TO GO '84
Congratulations, E.C.W.
Love, DAD
To those who've shared, cared, loved
and helped me survive
Moe, Vega, EMO, ICL, Pam,
DWB, ERF, IEB, MED, Sue,
Iude and Rush
Neither you nor your friendship
will ever be forgotten
Chelle
HUBBA HUBBA
,8-4!!
The
Hampshire
Press Inc.
. . . for all your
printing needs
CREATIVE PRINTERS FOR
OVER 75 YEARS
Maureen -
Thank you doesn't seem to say
enough to someone who has
always been there, always
understood and rarely questioned
You've let me be me
l love you!
Michelle
Never say goodbye - the best of times
have only just begun
Best Wishes to
the Class of 1984
from a
Milton Parent
Congratulations
Milton Academy -
Class of '84
A Iob Well Done.
Hey Hollis - You
made it! lThrough
Milton that isj. After
12 years I will never
doubt you. Promise
too far behind. What
ld I have done
You will do
foolish
without you? You see .
5333-fdvfgg 3501325 things, but do them with
walked down my driveway . . . Love always, O
tYour anchor to windward - Alwaysj
Milton has given you the C0He1'Hfu1Ht10HS
tools, good from
luck in making best use
of them.
Richard 81 Dins Nemrow
The Striar family
RELAX . . .
SOVEREIGN IS JUST AHEAD.
RAINADA
I N
161 Bridge St.
East Windsor. CT 06099
203-623-9411
RA""'tr'?6 ?r?.l"ADA
401 Wunchester St, 1228 WBSIGVVH AVG
Keene, NH 03431 Albany, NY 12203
603-357-3038 518o439oQ931
TH THE
LOED WAKEFIELD
595 N nn A ,,
wakeflela, 051201880
617-245-6100 1u,,,,.,..
LORD BEDFORD
340 Great Rd
Bedford. MA 01739
617-275-6700
CONGRATULATIONS NEIL
AND THE CLASS OF '84
WOW
ENGINEERING DESIGN CONCEPTS, INC.
I6 DERBY ST
W A
To fhe Closs of 7984:
So long, iI's been
good To know you!
ARTHUR XVIONKS ASSOCIATES
35O Ronclolph Avenue, IVIiITon, IVIA O2I86 oT7!oQ8-OQO3
PUBLIC RELATIONS PROMOTION ADVERTISING
QA Tone's Throw from The Aooclemy. Pleose don'T Throw sf Q
To 133001 ICQCLV I OF
'WGA
' ' i i I4.C.E:'.
VI
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C CL S'PCC,tO.,llOVE.
+3 Mumbai
5 QI Fl
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EZESULT
Congratulations
to the Class of '84
from all of us at
433 West San Francisco Santa Fe, NM 87501
To each one of that group of young men and
women who for some brief, bright years left be-
tween the back door and Doug's lair a trail of
mud, snow, grass cuttings, jackets, hats, gloves,
books, records, tapes, sleeping bags, grins shy,
shifty, sweet, sheepish, confessions, opacities,
yearnings, zaniness, laughter gentle, goofy, im-
moderate, self-absorption, quick kindnesses,
and the grand atmospheric disturbance of
growth: I'll miss you.
Take care of yourselves and each other, keep
your steps steady and light, find a vision, fall in
love over and over with life. And come back
often to maintain that trail.
With affection,
,lfwdafwfafvf
236
BECKK
Wishing you every success for the future:
Daddy, Jane, Dave, Abby,
Paddington, Squirt, Tjfany and Tabbatha
and
everyone from inside the barn too numerous to mention.
lim i' if 1,
,Q it i 7 7. S sgstftftizkvt- ,t
tk Lyra ' Q. whit' 6UlA':,l'5gg,',' ,I
.WM l y 175-5-if
. , ., M, .Q .4W?"qS4' ' -"'-'rf W ' ' 'wwmf'v'QNft"xvjf'v'?f'71-111' '
XQ I'-"T ,WQQ -' VIH' P . lx ff' Q . sein' at-5 A!zl,f4FA
M 'ms it M.:f51i-ww ' at 'N "waive we ffeifii
V4 A 1fi1Tit:"'f-'QQ ' Bi f 7 3 'i't5Qi'vf"'6'Q
1 :'.- '.'::, iiiizl ' 'iIhL"L,.:-.-'-,-- ' - 'f'-A 'P w if
F 7 E -N, f'g'f1V"' uf., . - -felt 5-I Ay! -
' "3 . Eff . lifn ab 'T Q' if Qi. , ' f 23.
. D- ' k F- .ql-.H 5- '
4
, .
STANNOX FARM
SHERHONN. INIA 461 73 4553-71576
"Hi Honeys" . . .
Thanks for everything.
I couldn't have done it without you.
Thank you A.W.
"Something important is always said in
a phone call that lasts more than three minutes."
7-4-f I L Y
S. E.
Alexandra '71 Mark '74 Susan '84
David '72 Iennifer '77
"Dare to have five!"
1957-1984
Congratulations Th k
Mrs. Dwight D. Evans
E 1 4 if ' L ge gg
Milton
Academ .
Ill
237
Mr. Millet:
Thank you for six wonderful years.
Todd
238
BEST
WISHES
Congratulations to
Mark Lawrence
PWS and
Management .
Cmp Best Wishes For
' The Future
Construction Managers
Builders
Boston, Massachusetts
' T I CS , , S , G, ,
COHEIYYIUIHTIOHS DFW? CESWESIIE 51El5B13?5,T?MS
to the Mow, and RAY
Class of 1 Good luck, we love you
- don't forget us
from an admiring
parent. MDB, and CBT
Love, UR, PAY, DMK, Msn, LAI,
We Thank The
Milton Football Tearn
For That Unforgettable Thriller
Against St. Paul's.
N.
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CONGRATULATIONS
NICHOLAS
AND THE CLASS OF I924
FROM:
LAND SHARK GEu41nnans C085
BRAIN HOLE Punrus vom-1
GRE1 oozli ekffnl sur-:E
I nrrf ufcr DEYOURER GAS sinus
SllArlBunc Hounn THE BLOB
CEREBRAI. 'PARAS :TE Rot GRUB
unsfz nope yum mclrr nuamonl
Louunsum lTEllNlFE'K,
Brewer SC Lord
Personal Sc Business Insurance since 1859
New .England finds security
in our experience.
40 Broad Street
Boston, MA 02109
Tel. 16171426-0830
Bra h Offices:
Acton, Cambridge, Pram' h W mouth
lmouth QLawre d Q
Bedford QGail Aviation J
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
Fraser Lem1ey's
SE TRY kigigfziigy
3780 MYSTIC VALLEY PKWY., MEDFORD
The closest Lincoln-Mercury Dealer to downtown Boston
TELEPHONE
391-5700
BAKERY GOODS SUPPLIED
TO THE SNACK BAR
BY THE C.H. BENT CO.
AND ARTHUR C. PIEROTTI PAPA BEAR TOURS
INC.
2258 Dorchester Ave.
Dorchester, MA. 02124
'All the best!"
Complimmts Qf H mz11r1'r's Irv Crmm.
131 EI1'olStn'c't, Milton, MA 02187.
296-1313
HBest Wishes To The Class of
98439
Merttila 81 Kiley, Inc.
ALLBAR REALTY
1 1 60 WASHINGTQN
STREET
DORCHESTER, MA.
02124
q5xQ'.g??
2 9 8 ' 2 4 2 0 xeCix:xSxc?1Aass. 0
ax?-53,0 Pye.,
0205 'bbw X 'D if
A Q Insurance
GOOD LUCK TO
THE CLASS OF 1984!
HIGTIIEINS
C O Nl PA N I E S
...V-f"',
To Everybody At Milton
Thank You
For Loving Rowena
These Four Years.
Without You It Would Not
Have been Possible.
Katherine and
Chak-Cheung Yeung
THANK YUU
Daddy, Mom and Stephenie.
I Love You So Much.
Rowena
246
1IOHN 4:19
1:1
NIV 1 2,3,4,5 6,7,8,9
19,37 34,24,21,37
19,5,34
2,37 23,7
26 30 13 32 11 20 19 5,5,22
Here's to Milton, you're true blue.
iOI5N'HISCOCIQ Gretohen's off to college,
Congratulations,
Denise! 1
Best Wishes To
The Class of 1984!
thanks to you.
A country bumpkin she is no more
but now a "pseudo" with smarts
galore.
Congratulations Class of '84.
Some proud parents
. M141
IB
PROFIYI' YOUR WEALTI I
Planning a Vacation
in Spain?
We suggest you spend
part of it
looking into
low-tax investment
in a Sun-Coast
vacation or retirement
condominium or home
Condos from 515,000
Houses from 530,000
Call: 16171842-2818
fy
uson saucy Jealfora
19 Maple Ave. , Shrewsbury MA 01545
All Our Love and Best Wishes
Iudy and Sally
247
WE'RE PROUD OF YOU
PAM CARROLL
MOM Sz DAD
FEBRUARY 25, 1984
MILTON 6 NOBLES 5 lO.T.j
"YEAH CHARLIE, 'IT WAS AWESOME'!"
Sandy, Ioe and Iulie
BARNEY 81 CAREY CO.
Undef One Clkmof
LUMBER Sz BUILDING
PHOTOSTATS ' PHOTOCOPIES ' PSFSTING
SECRETARIAIMSEIIEYLEES6gi:IiElEPg':jilglE ANSWERKNG
' 2 GRANITE AVE., MILTON, MASS. 02186
. pl-HCS
P.o. Box 118
TYPE 6 DRA KEEVIN GELLER
Twenty-Two River Street ' Braintree, Massachusetts 02184 PRESIDENT 71
6171843-5700
ASH! game 7
Thanks, buddy - '
wouldn,t have made Ie Faime'
it without you. "
Rebecca
maj.
I'll miss ya.
'et
MW Ke..
1 R.nf -.n- Q
America's favorite America's best selling
Sgft diet soft
Coke is it! 1. Just for the taste of it.
BEST OF LUCK AND SUCCESS
TO THE CLASS GF '84,
from
Your Local Bottler Of Coca-Cola
Best Wishes To The Class Of '84. Congratulations
May Each Of You Prosper In Time.
The Staff Of The Peking House. C1355 1984
250
MILTON FLOWER SHOPS
524 Adams St.
Telephone 696-3450
One of New England's Finest Florists
CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE GREAT MILTON CLASS OF
1984
5'-4.
f ASN.
ESPECIALLY "X.B."
Love and Best Wishes - The Kahns
MA K8cBOLIO'S
ICE CREAM FOR THE CONNOISSEURW
362 Granite Ave
muon, MA. O21S6
698-0550
Thank You Milton For 18 Wonderful Years.
The Carrity Family
Andrew: Don't Ever Forget:
the dream room - 89 Marlborough St. -
March 19 - THE DATE OF MY BIRTHDAY!
KM - "I think you both better come in and face
the music" - see you in five years? . . . and
at the risk of being incredibly tacky . . . I
Love you. Did you say you need a maid?
ps. by the way everyone,
I never wore bells.
To P.D., S.E., K.F.,
Love you Honeys
Luf,
me
Compliments of
Lawson and Wa ne
Thanks Chucka . . . M.C. see you in six years
Sponsors
Dr. 81 Mrs. W.H. Abelmann
The Ayers Family
Central Cleaners
Dr. gl Mrs. Leo T. Chylack, Ir.
Mary Jane Curran
Walter 81 Caroline Dueger
Iohn P. Feldman
Dr. 81 Mrs. Robert G. Feldman
Mr. gl Mrs. Edward S. Fitzgibbons
Freeman House Bed and Breakfast
Mr. 81 Mrs. Terence I. Gallagher
The Gates Family
Mr. 81 Mrs. Alan Godes
Mr. 81 Mrs. Loren Godfrey
Dr. gl Mrs. Arthur Goodman
Dr. 81 Mrs. Dustin Heuston
Drs. Elizabeth 81 Robert Lawrence
Li'l Peach
Mr. 81 Mrs. Paul L. Lualdi
Dr. 81 Mrs. Charles Mahanor, Ir.
Emily B. McKay
Mr. 81 Mrs. Peter Merrigan
Sandy 81 Dick Morse
David 81 Ioan Poskanzer
Elizabeth Pozen
Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis W. Quinn
The Quilted Acorn
Captain 81 Mrs. I. Michael Rodgers
Mr. 81 Mrs. Morton K. Rosenbloom
Mr. 81 Mrs. Alexander Saunders, Ir.
Iane, Amy, Lucy, and Iucare
Mr. 81 Mrs. Shupp
Dr. 81 Mrs. A.B. Stimson
Dr. 81 Mrs. Ioseph Swirbalus
Soledad Vega
Pearl 81 Ioel Wolfson
Martha 81 Tom Wright
Maryanne Wuthrich
Dr. 81 Mrs. Nicholas T. Zervas
2
"""+..,
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NY
YE RBOUK STAFF
D Vi 32
W , 'N
R 'fi -4:
Row 1 - Mr. Smith, Yeung, Iensen, Hoey, Wright, Dedijer, Godes Row 2 - Mr. Dewan, Hans, Spencer, Labert, Davies, Brown, Pozen, Weisberg,
Ruiz, West Row 3 - Cirksey, Tsang, Singer, Andrews, Carter, Iohnson, Rosenbloom
254
I
Www --I'- , lf, if . K
Photo staff is a 10 letter word but should be a four letter word
. . . What the hell is a pica anyway? . . . I spat again! . . . He
reeks . . . These layouts must be done on sheets marked in
PICAS . . . We have to type over 100 pages by when?!! . . .
Please delete our blackouts . . . Compleat . . . Well, it's not my
fault! . . . I Gantt use this typewriter! . . . Theo, can you stop
blowing in my arn1pit?! .. . Pica is a four letter word .. .
Kakie, can you sharpen my pencil? . . . But he's a nice guy . . .
Has anybody seen the white-out? . . . Sorry, I ate the Twinkies
. . . The key does not work!! . . . The whopper is watching you
. . . Pass the erazzor . . . Kakie, you need knee-pads . . . When
will Thorn learn to spell?
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