Prince George High School - Peerage Yearbook (Prince George, VA)
- Class of 1976
Page 1 of 238
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 238 of the 1976 volume:
“
N, .,'vX' Yxti-XL Mlvbh A iq X gem, xv H SM 4, XX VX ' x Vx x K Q K fr - 5' ,K . ' , T' 'GOAL 5 8' gkxxx L, L,j- 9 fx Q XXXWBQ px, Q3 .7 L+ Qi Li ,,-'XO ' 1 e- X f V1 AL. .X , X , ,gf xx' lu' Q! au, KW bw Qgxbp- , ir. ,up LC , , S+ x ,pq baggy, ,GW GQ? Qvdgy JLLLIX' W0 1 'xp Qpwbcgvvb 5633 56 g fiizgu ws' fp DW' Q9 if 09 -S, NSfC'K 1 Q.LLxOf OyNSFZ4Xy6J'Sh. ,593 , ' 1 QQ? L QM 3-Cl' Q Q0 9, 7 NYC:-X-'R WY! ' m tm iw-J+M'1 ,fig FR nw! ,Qi jg ' V 'Q Q 5 4 TJ '-'Y' ' ' fj ' I ,ful 4 4, el I ' , , x 1 1 Q13 Qfy . Kxfb TTJ' .Ld . -.1 jf- jjj - H' . ,N fy! w '. L , .,, 1 . Q. , -QL, v-... tr F .YT - N- , I-ik -,nn L 5,1 It rw' , . ,KJ JLLW 1 PM NX J' ,H '1N5? bv l - , -H ., , ' - ' - Q V ,JY V? X ', --jg -Lfff-'.,. .qu f Jf'Jf'f. : ' 4' ' V , 1 fi 4 ff ' I 5 ' X - I Y 5, K T. ' ixiffgjq , ' 7' -' nf V N I ,' 7' ' ' , V xx - ,J XX - .A :b -f - - a15...f--'-bug-' fag-, 4'-V .,,M 49, fro r. , R ff - by-'.gp : 'SSN ft fx wc! ,e - -wht :QF . ' D75 f Pr, . .' 4 I 'iff .Z F1114 r ':. V 25, ,.' ., 1'f,,' S . - ' . V . , . , , . ,' . ,A '-,:-g.,- +1 4, - .V 1, 3 b -, -, N' 1 fr L .f-' -lj' Q' an 5,-m .-. !r5i ' at gs ', ' . Af 1 Tffg ,QV 1, A , ,d I SU' , ,J , , . .ff W ' jg- --x. , an LQ, f i A I b. , xn qt-,my l 4. A+ f .- 9 . , , , , 11 1 v. fur: ' A . '.,Q,'Q?,.U. . . M 4 - -fa'-.Q ' l5fWfff?ff ':'f',-I.+'4fff55':fsf'f -. N 1 -A -. 1 , . L -t'-.?E22 'Z4WQ3eeff-?f-v-4 .f Q,-nw.. ' Qdhib- - -'-V Y- V , V -AU: 7-4 Y Yjii---I.: , , 'X fl I ljiffggw Qggwwfig iv A of? A i'1Fjf'59jC9j ' WW! X file! 5 X 5 gf ' rf QD ji if Eff Q Ji k Jivx jw A if xx N2 X Wfflff Q2 W A W Lf7f.w SAW! WM? Q5 W fy E We ' A121 W J My J WW iii 5? gg ww dw E E z E E E Q 3 S 1 E 2 1 E i X ,aim fsisiww me mwimieseas-:maxwwam:t.awv:m:w.'lf an ,:- Haremmammaxmsf-,enQ1:..s:Qsxffaint fi aesifasaew -we The morning bell still sounded off two early at 8:30 AM. 1975 fads and fashions, Levi's, earth shoes, and knee length skirts carried through to '76, Seniors wrote term papers. juniors peddled money to fund Ring Dance and Prom decorations. Sophomores sat on hard wooden bleachers at class assemblies. Teachers gave tests. a 2:30 PM bell s.1sfsr-ffifawpeswssw , W f vw 1.,w,,-a:- V s. a W me 'aesammssfss 1- still let students out to country routing school buses. It seemed that the same old things hadn't changed much in a year. But it was the extras that made the difference, as all those same old things now took on a plus. just a block away, a new 7-eleven store joined snacking forces with competing student stop offs near school grounds. f-1n'Ex1'm' Year FARE FIRST PLAY OF THE GAME action stirs victory fever in behind the backstop fans, Mr. Lesniak and Mr. Spradlin. A new brick building took stand after old shop utilities burnt down after a midnight acetylene tank explosion. Blue painted doors clashed with the green trim left from old lobby entrance way. Class schedules also underwent construction. Homeroom couldn't save students time to finish first period homework after a schedule switch placed G og 9 I e d S HUDDLED AROUND physics homeroom minutes inbetween first and second periods. Mr. Tiller filled assistant principal slot after Mr. Thomas's switch to the junior high. More to choose from, subject choices added three new credits, journalism, concert choir, and reading. An overload of sophomores filled classrooms past the 30 seat mark. Opening y e experiment students look on Extra crowds at home court games turned away after- number-250-ticket buyers. Girls' track gave female sport enthusiasts competition on once male dominated track grounds. Boy cheerleaders added two more spots to the green and gold female lineup. Even though all PG teams didn't have just enough plus to bring first place standings, fan support followed up team performance with larger than ever before crowds. U faazazfzfszrfffviwfs mi.awwwexifwmrazsstieargwgggrgf5g,,g,,55fmg,,,,5,1,w5.3,,5s.,A ,,3,,:gg,, :X - 1aQ21eersawii-FwrsaasnszsfmtmfaffflelAw- ' 1 . '1'WertssU5aM16?z?ifrfr.e,x-1 itseraswe-z11af:5l2s Qia1Gfaiexria Hall work SLIM-'9PllN SHINNYING UP school front flag pole, Frank Hughes loses pull-up grip half way and slip slides back down. Almost new, the three year old courthouse grounds lawned an open-to-all bicentennial celebration. Antique autos and costumes contrasted with '76 fashions and low-mileage versions of newest car models. Time for more changes, Board of Supervisors passed 716 million dollared bill for a new high school. Wasting no time, ground construction started up on new school grounds one week after county decision. Sophomores delighted 6Opening to know that '78 graduates would march into a new auditorium. HALL STOP REFUGEE, Rae lackson stretches plastered leg out in empty corridor to take during class hour make up biology test. 0 -f1f,w112vwaerietsztsmsiwfxrffazxzfmlI-.xsvr ., - -'sf..ff-zgxeuluegmfrravcsezfasfenxfsiffs' Just the Some Nationwide news picked up stores of Kepone poisoning at Hopewell Life Science Products just two miles 13.218 kilometersl from PG. Under health inspection orders, the james River closed its waterways to fishermen. Local fishing industries suffered from spreading Kepone pollution. Prince George missed the TV spotlight, but intracounty happenings involved no major life harming disasters. The nation's spirit turned back toward remnants of a 200 year old heritage, but PG moved ahead. Wrapped in historical sites, PG residents knew all too well nearby battle grounds and civil war plantations. -r if' . . 391 I ,V wa, in ' l Q , .v,.N,..,..anl V 1 :E ' A if Cpening WRAP UP An all oholic han on l'C1's lirsl 7 fill-yr'n slorl- lirnilr-ll salf-s lo canlly, ir rl l rr-ain, anrl holalo go snar ks. Aschool l'UI9 lnur klcill clown on lakl- hoinr- LQVdllf'S. Rr-porl rarrl lolclr-rs rr-quirr-cl parr-ril signalurc-s vac h six vylir-ks. Ex-Blue Devil, Mr. lillrir, surrc-nllr-rl-rl llopr-wlfll loyally lo Royal lorc 1-s. lm-vvly painlf-cl hlul- r-nlranr l- floors fllllllflfl PC slurlf-nts, ldlfllllf1VlH3.QVf'f'lT anclgolrlcolorsc hr-ini-s. llllfigldllflfl sr-lllr-ll in yarsily sporls. lrac k grounds unclc-rw:-nl lllinall- lrac kr-rs. Chl-cfrlclaclr-rs look on inalr- c UUl'lll'llJdl'lS. Irloinf-run slliggr-rs lorr fill inixing ol hasrlhall and sollhall Iir-lrls whr-ri halls Ill-yy olil ol onr- gainr- ancl inlo Ihr- nr-xl. Rain poslponml loolhall gain:-s whilr- inurlcly lil-lrls anrl slir k pigskins r l'ldl1gl'Kl plays, 'Nr-W sr hool ronslruc lionisls sloppz-rl ground digging work yyhr-n pri-c ipilalion lorr l-cl hrrlaks, Stripes, V175 Vligas sporlf-ll hir r-nil-nnial colors wilh rr-ll anrl lmlur- linl-s on whill-Stars, wrfll alinosl, loolhall, girls' haskr-Ihall, dlilllJdSl'l1dllll'dlTlSlf'llSl'lUVl ol lirsl plarr-rlislrifl slanrlings. A iniclnighl r-Xplosion shook nr-ar sc hool houslls anrl lraill-rs whl-n anacetylene tank cll-slroyr-rl lhc- 2 5 yr-ar olcl shop huilrling,Kep0ne poisoning nr-ws sloril-s shook lhl' wholll lri-CQily arf-a whvn air and flVl'llJUllLIllUl1l1dYITN'IlSUUllxlSlCll'VlfllIl'lS. Slrwp ovr-rs pasl 23:23 AM r ounlr-rl on lirsl pl-riocl larcly slips as sc lil-rlulci r hangr-s clirl away wilh lall-alofsf hool hoinl-rooin skippfirsi Ahirc-nlr-nnialgfil lfJgf'll'lC'VOfJf'llf'fl lJfJfJll1S,lT'1L,lSlf,dlTfldlWllflLl!' shows lo c oiinly rl-sicll-nls, Ihr- lhrr-ci flag poll-s in Ironl ol c ULll'l- lWULISl' lawns ll-ll a yrlar long hir 1-nlc-nnial rr-ininclc-r ol l'17o, Nol as c onliisingg as lhl- nliw nil-lric syslc-in, Ihl- prinlc-r shippl-rl in l'g-l-ragp fJdj.jf'S wilh a c ounl all Ihr-ir own. Acljal 1-nl pagr-s horr- liolloin niiinhl-rs Iroin pagm- -17 lo paggc' IHS lo pagl' 5. Slallc-rs LlllSl'lllllll'Kl, lolllclcl, ancl insl-rlc-cl pagr-s inloha rl-giilar l, Z, 5, pallrirn. VVhal soiinrlr-ll likl- a publishing gool' was jilsl a yr-arhook slall plan lo savl- inonl-y on spol color. As anolhl-r alll-r shipinr-nl proirir I, lTlI'llllJC'VS I9!'dlK'Cl'dlNl pri-ssc-clbumper SfiCkErS onlo 1 oyr-r plar l-s lo IJI'l'SfJlldllff' ljgcgraglfs lore lass hiiyvrs. lhc- linal slcip, ccillophanr- wrapping lrom S 84 'N SLIfJi'l'llWdVl4f'l, svalr-rl in N76 gray-s. BREEZY U-TURN, A backblow of newspaper snip ups snows on SCA float crew members, DeDe Wichy and Kim Bishop. A BLACK SCAR on school grounds, the demolished shop building leans on its four wall frame crutch. Good old tradition! We followed routine. As usual, we called in our mugshot professional, Wilson Moore, to cover dances and gridiron ceremonies. But student life wasn't all tradition. We stuck that coined journalism phrase, student life, to every bit of PG living, not just school ground activities but all the little things that made PGHS tick. We took the school gossip and siphoned it out. Leading the list, hunting boasts, after- thoughts of summer freedom, and wide eyed stories of school accidents monopolized student talk. Literally just around the corner, a new 7- Eleven store sprung up in time for 1976 coverage. just a bit of the bicentennial, 76 celebrations took four pages of section space. With no limits, we covered student life topics any way at all. Not a bit alike, varied layouts and copies set a mixed STUDENT LIFE+ collection. b'cemenn'a'feS Va' I I Student Life 9 10 Prom We never thought we'd do it! Planning began months ahead with theme ideas buzzing around. A theme meant our GO-sign -9 got to order decora- book a band, where's the money coming from, who's going to make refresh- ments? . . body pitched in to decorate. No chance to get a head start on tans, we spent early sun time in the gym setting up a For the Good Timesf' scene. Bottles and candles for the tables? Candles we had, but bottles had to come from some- where. Morning announce- ments, afternoon announce- ments, still no one took interest. Finally, tions, got to find bottles, got to . impossible! Every- 'S-Q, g after a M. frantic search we, somehow, confiscated enough and sighed a relief. Still faced with last-minute add ons and touch ups, Friday night dates pitched in spare hours, strong arms, brains, and will power. . .As we edged our way through and found a spot to sit, we gazed around and decided the well used expression, we any 5, were too tired to enjoy it, just didn't hold up. For a Saturday in May at least, all that work made it worth it For the Good Times. Gijng Qeumd QHMMQQ HEAD OF THE CLASS, lunior Marshall, Mark Esposito, ushers in senior smartees, Cindy Crowley and Pat Lewis. FACES PEEK from robe-clad rows as alumni lead off field recessional. EVERYTHING ON STRAIGHT? Sharon Dettor levels cap for final run. READY TO TOOT, Stanley Booker reviews graduation handouts for band intro. .Q E ':?f jg 3.1 12 Graduation 3 it . .. E 3 4- ff' Q 'S gi - NERVOUS GLANCES, hasty smiles add to the last minute excitement as friends file out to line up. TIME OUT to visit the Colonel, Dwayne Tadlock and Charlotte Green catch lune rays at senior covered dish supper. SLIPPING THROUGH, lohnny Temple moves down stage processional of graduation ritual. POSTER OF PRIDE, ceremony brightener covers up platform stage front. it? o me l iiiiegk , ted, is V329 ,A , , I ' f , ww. ' I v 3 fy i 2 2 15. R If . ls ,J 2. IUNEZ. . .Covered dish supper onthe field, . .Bring yearbooks. . .Eat at 6:00 pm. . IUNE3. . .Dancein gym. .. Robert Dixon Dl. . .Dress- casually. . . lUNE4. . .Afternoon Senior Class Superlative assembly, . . Caps and gowns. . .4:OO- 8:00 pm class picnic. . . Pocahontas Park. . . Please bring. . .Potato chips. . . hot dogs. . .Marshmallows. . 256 foradrink. . . Yummm. . .Meet behind bath house. . .Horseback riding. . . Boat paddling. . . IUNES. . .Class night exercises practice. . . 9:0Oam. . .Group picture. . . 7:00 pm be in lobby for line up. . . IUNE6. . .Baccalaureate practice. . . IUNE7. . .Senior Banquet. . . jordan PointCountry Club. . . Be ontime. . .Prime rib of beef. . .Baked potato. . .String beans. . .Salad. . .Hot rolls. . . Cherrytart. . .With whipped cream. . .Amillion calories. . .Lasttime with your cla-ss. . . IUNE8. . .Baccalaureate . . one hour. . .Speaker, Ernie Smith's father ...- JUNE9. . .9:0Oamtonoon. .. Graduation practice. . . Must bethere. . .7:3O big moment. . .Everyone waited for. . .It'stime. . . We made it!!! sa -Q ,NM 3 , 1 ., , I i I 1 N 3? i' WSFTKE L hr, 'I,.ma5.rf' ,-3 1 .. Q . Y K HUGS AND KISSES of congratulations bring shoves from the crowds of friends and relatives in after-ceremony pandemonium RESCUING cap from the night-time winds, Shirley Linton straggles out of somewhat deserted parking lots. CUED IN, Mr. Rockwell listens in on Miss Vick's last minute instructions on stadium pathway. FORMALITIES ASIDE, just-turned grads hand final salute to PGHS. Graduation 13 Gather woocl Cheerleading Fundamentals +15-v' l lli ,ar 1 X Xidll 2 ry 3 1' I Ml If Yearbook Fundamentals , , X Iii Ncvgr t Vie 7336 Fire Building GD QUE? Strike m etch Qslllli. f0O H,' Light Five ambulance Call l.if'e Saving A Q p fra Pe 5 A 5- 3. A: i Zn? 3 g xv- g jam Signal to activate lifeguard 'I4 Summer Camps Three months of summer freedom seemed great until the monotony of daytime game shows and soap operas set in. Local pools opened, but costly club memberships and intermissions often turned classmates away. Variety and , . . pocketbooks shrunk and summer .i freedom lost the value it once had. Fall game schedules forced varsity teams into pre- season practices, drilling underclassmen for high school performance. The Peerage staff needed summer hours to train journalism newcomers in publishing do's and don'ts. Up and about school grounds, cheerleaders worked at early morning practices to perfect sideline cheers. School hours not far away, summer camps offered a last chance to tie up loose ends. ln charge or following orders, PG students gained camp status. Cramming skills and techniques into a weeks time, classmates found workshops just that, a lot of work. Royal camp counselors took charge and wearied summer troopers out. just there for fun, leisure campers found get aways in summer resort areas. Stuck between school terms, summer helped to fit it all in. CAUGHT IN THE WALK across camp grounds, counselor, Daryl Spencer, hurries to help troopers in tent-pitching procedures. NO CAMP FIRES AT TRIPLE R, Mrs. Brissette and Cathy Brissette check in with cafeteria workers and ranch hands at Riverside Retreat Ranch. HEAVE HO! Mark Wettstem helps teammate, Ken Guerin, saw a stubborn log to clear future Youth Conservation Corps camp site at PG fish hatchery 6 , rf yNVOL 'fe '11 6 Q G ef '13 ,I f if lp -A' A woRLD WIDE EMBLEM for teen . -Nz 1 1 involvement, the red, white, and blue f i' symbol publicizes an anti-drug program in Y f local Q ', newspapers. X Z UP IN FRONT Mrs. Collins coaches Ohio X' XV workshop students in trendsetting coverage. 4 'ONS P- M? FOOTSORE AND CHEERED OUT, lanet Burke and Lisa Gorman unwind with a coke from a day of cheerleading practice at Old Dominion NCA cheerleading camp. Knol' tying Q G3 4. fG 'i'V 0 jfmill.. Corpenlry l. l .ll L Hil' heocl ol? neil Basketball Fundamentals A -55 F TZ 4 'Q Keep eyes srroighf Terr Pitching C9 CD EQ as Find Partner Pireh Qient cv Q3 if Crawl in Escape! Summer Camps 15 Oh Thank Heaven. . .Pepsi only minutes away, vv0uldn't have led unsuspect- favorite PG student hangout, after-footbalI- far to go to ing students practice slurpees, sorry - no alcoholic bev- indulge. The into the arms erages, microwave hot after-school Board of Super- of waiting snacks, twenty cent coffee, and the visors didnft faculty guards,' new 7-Eleven store arrived. But even want trouble. but with time, before the Stop it before they became beam Sup- it happens. . . satisfied to portg broke Sorry - no deny their the ground, alcoholic hunger pains Cgnflict beverages. Even until after arose around with no beer school. Buy the block- for sale, anything except away empty crossing Rt. 616 the kitchen plot. .,f' tempted PG'ers sink, comic Minoree from with allowance. book collectors School Homeroom hide-out, glazed brought up intercoms donut breakfast, the question repeated warn- potato chip of beer ings: Students paradise, gales, 92 are reminded coffee-tea-or ofthe Royal it is against milk super student body school policy hero cups wild could to leave school west cups too legally buy grounds under candy bubble beer with a any CifCUm- gum heaven short walk. stances. The but sorry - Eighteen craving for an no alcoholic year olds ice cream cone beverages . . . WHO'S NEXT? Garfield Brooks laughs with Stanley Gorham and Russell Whiting over an after-football-practice joke at 7- Eleven slurpee counter. tl :tru .trt to lisa 'I6 7-Eleven 42331113 I I J 1 i 5. ,!' ! Lg, Q. X MVIQIISQ 7-Eleven 17 if fif iW vi M,-s-.ww .. b 1771 QW 4 , . f ' f, kiw i ' K A Qi? g , f4fc,,,,,gf f Y 1 M Q f 'W ffi: ffhw, 14 fg' M, . .Q HM K 'fftfif 51 1' ' RCU V 1' Aa, Mmm, R xv xxx' H if .,,, 155251 -4' Qi, ww J3L6CNl'W a . U' Y A b nets. provid s r mean ermg mv lRf'T1mberIme Q escapes to ns ., 5 Thompg makers, ,J f -sf K DOODLE Houchms eredu Lita le for free hand. fgigpace. 'N Wg, . gran? PM 1 '9'm.'?w'P'F..WW gif '- ' 'IX3 LX., , ye. Fw ,,. , a fm' 39.3 Xiiml' 7 , -,, my N fy, F lafm ff UP IN FRONT, fourth district gongressman, Robert Daniel, leads Q img off line up of guest A, 4 P .mg S l' gave vw . ' 241 tiki 'Q 'ri i it-gm t e , , . , fit if tglifginagsi W. ,ti L M W N K . h, NM.. m?233gE58LtQEV Z1USTfiEf2'3ere. S7 -1-. ef-. 'i', A r . ir . . f: .'.4 'wa' i '2:WYQpf33. few twff -15 v' P fff ff 4, -na iz! if We , , ' 1 -Fitwnf 'vii . f'fQrff5373f,, f afziew- . Q2 ew WK' fi --f-, nf, ffpfsf-sW'.w ,,Q'- . iwahd. QQ LICiQ'gOt- N faf.--gifts,-Q31 t : -. Mpvw- -- . ivfww Q: -f 'ff' -- ,ga.f.wf W fi'2'f5g16g5 rQ,35lrf6 I f 'H 'ilisiiii' 7'fQDt'fSi0mD6fS4fiUQlhQQd J i A ' 'ere 5 if 'i t' ' I lff ft Qffjg t'i' e r'eti , ffl? rtt, 341 if P'. ?f ' ' f f,,w ,, , ' .A ' Q V3 b fr W f ff ,gif 1Qdd? Q1't z diginnligigtwqwrfo Q22 if r 45,-Q53 get teri gmm if Q4 gra ft frefw ' r , fm. MZ' M4 Om ff f'f t 4 air , 'Z I 3' d ll . . , W , i A . t 15 Tfykfwa . f fb r Q it f r r i me Sr .ff a Gr' ' V ' f , ,r L r . r rerr f . 'W 12-'sf' ,? 'f225Qg,2 .t f ' P rizm 'el ' 'fir f-f6'.,4Wf,f+f'f5r4,iM?1f:f1i1fz1f sis' .- 3.411 Mgr EM Hf?2,,w. ' ' ,J , lH119JfaK'HV W' r 2 965 ' Q ff ei ' If V it-Iv! 'f?iwfQ'5?1ffri- 'AW' if-.rf 'aww-' vf 5 ' , . ,ff m K, k., , rggywt , 2, ?,jrr'y ippif, it tg .L f , e , yay- Q t r r ,gswwf r 4 +-' -ff' -' e ' ' Q A 1 V A ' I 'W A . kr , Loge ur 1 4: :fit .v.i If . H if 'Z - ,if lv 'v t g :mfiimi '74 'A, 3300 ig, sf , Q, -E O.. MQ' I, ,,.'ff ! UNABLE sips READY T receives 18th annual MODERN Mrs. Ellen Rusnak from a paper the Virginia state E ' ' 3 g get Spencer capture twenty foot 16.1 ' roost. STEP TO THE RIGHT! swing of things with dance fun. can ' ap- ' is ...4 :W v. 3E ,A bill' ..uK DULd'i' 'Pl e'f,,... g Warm night, excited girls, competitive floats, and the victory over Dinwiddie - perfect, except for . . .RAlNl Frequentdownpours soaked spectators, parade line up, finalists, and escorts. Extra spurts of spirit added PC.'ness to homecoming. Back up cheerleaders, pep clowns entertained water logged crowd. For third quarter excitement, an extra four legged player galloped across the 100 yards of football territory. Six past queens returned to the soggy PC track in front of all new Royals for the 20th anniversary. Double '78 winners, Carla Hood and Terry Parker, shared the sophomore attendant title. Muff Tutwiler wrapped it up for the junior finalist. A Friday night postponement and rain clouds forced '74 queen, Charlotte Green, back to her North Carolina college. The '65 homecoming queen, Mrs. Edwina Moore Daniels, took the honor to crown Kris Gudmundson the 1975 queen. TWO TALL TOTEM POLE. Snowed under, spirit clowns fling confetti on track grounds. NO PLASTIC PROTECTION. Steve Wilson suspiciously looks for prewarning splash of another downpour. IT IUST HIT! Announcement shock sets grin on escort Gary Tadlock's face as homecoming queen, Kris Gudmundson, flushes after title making call. i'll'ff ra H1ft'.3:fHlvfE11nQ lR '.1a W S SSS GIDDY-UP! Knight, Ronnie Moring, coaxes fidgety horse toward homecoming festivities. TWIN WINNER. Dr. George passes sophomore bouquet to co-attendant Terri Parker. HOOKED ON, Muff Tutwiler edges toward homecoming line up with escort Tony Thomas. 'v BACK YEAR BEAUTIES mark float in DOUBLED FLOWERED Carla Hood ' dl So homore co-attendant rose rlbboned numbered order. cra es p bundle. f .M wr-1.2 I.. , F I L ,S,c,q 24 Musucal V .CAGAG 1..l.e.e.1 D'Q'L'S' ' ' f A ., ig wiv. M C if .Wu KW 5 3, '14 , ga W 5 Q Sxg jf? . Q , J K? 1 vi rf 4 'Q was X91- Huriing 27 Q 'Q BLACK TOPPING, brick laying, and window replacing accompanies surprise shop blow up. The demolished building slowly returned to its old self as workers began repairs. PORPPER UP AGAINST LOBBY WALLS, cripples crowd the hallways for publicity photo as casts and crutches came into season. Terror seized bus shop work- ers and concerned onlookers as they watched the wrecker pull in the Prince George County Public Schools bus Ml. Everyone out, no one could believe the no injury report, especially after look- ing at the damages. Amazement lingered on faces as they gazed at the one-time shop. As local fire officials roped off the damage, the administration set up temporary changes. The sudden explosion left car drivers without regular beside-the-shop parking spaces and moved the smoking area to the front of the school. Vocational students evacuated to the library, lunchroom, orjunior high substitue workshop. KEPONE. . .that's what everybody talked and talked and talked about. lt's in the water, it's in the air, is it in me? The pesticide ingredient publicity put Hopewell in the news and on the national map. Nightly newsmen found a new bit ALL A CLUTTER! Hopewell High's auditorium houses Kepone Congressional Subcommittee one day hearing before returning to big city Washington. MASKS A MUST, chemical testers bundle up for protection to keep out stray Kepone contaminants. of information to headline evening reports. Chemical Capital of the South signs changed to Kepone Capital of the South!! Keep on Truckin'! turned into Kepone Truckin'! Big named Congressmen even came to town for first hand information and set up shop in Hopewell High School auditorium to add to the Kepone deluge. Picking out their own obstacles, suddenly everyone became clumsy. Crutches, arms in slings, and conspicuous limps invaded halls, upstairs and down. Whether they came from cow pasture football or legitimate sources, aches and pains accompanied the accident equip- ment. Five minutes early with crutches to beat the hall rush no longer beat it. Weather forecasts didn't cooperate either. For the first year ever, snow flurry promises turned to rain. With no snow before the groundhog saw his shadow, hopefuls couldn't even pull off a day or two for flooding when semester break rains threatened low lying county roads. ln a year when it all turned upside down, PG'ers found they had to condition themselves for any- thing since the unusual became the usual and visa versa. MIDSEMESTER BREAK FLOODS bring rain up to the hubcaps of workhour rush vehicles on route 36 roadway. All ALONE, bus 421, crumbled from first semester wreck, sits abandoned in bus shop lot waiting for insurance adiusters. 22? gg Sssa Qt sion, Q o I GLIMPSE OF APPROVAL, lohn Randolph checks over just handed plastic package contents. MATCHED UP. Dancing partners Wayne jones and Susan Dubberly mix into junior crowd. PICKET WORK. Paul Linton nails up mini white fence decorations before final set up. PUNCH TALK. Server Eileen McCoy directs thirsty partiers to food and drink refreshers. 30 Ring Dance WHAT A BEAUTY! Frances McCoy releases ring from wrapper for finger wearing show off. Crepe paper, a heart shaped triple decker cake, flowers, candles, and don't forget our new silver ball added just enough of a tinge of excitement to bring junior ecstasy to an overall peak. ' Going from punch, potato chips, and peanuts, the party planners changed their menu to. . .hot spicey meatballs, heart-speckled cheese balls, dainty flowered mints, iced cookies, and a ROYAL pineapple crown. Students enjoyed the refined food addition. Party munching favorites added a touch of class to the once just cookie and punch table. Last minute, I thought you were hanging the streamers, didn't dampen spirits of the long awaited moment -that big step through a giant class ring. Double day sentiment. . sweethearts and Ring Dance goers encountered a two in one sensation when the hearts and flowers night chanced to fall on Valentines Day. Balances paid before hand, for keeps feelings settled in and remained withstanding on through the years as few would ever pass this way again. DOUBLE TAKE. Zetta Mae Heath and Gaye Whiting flash gym floor dancers for snap shot momentos. PERCHED HIGH, Ms. SouthaIl's father wires up crepe streamers from top of ladder seat. Ring Dance 31 'ruaem' ur: WRAP UP rap It all started on October Slst, with the homecoming game, and from there on, it was Changes all the way. For a big start, the annual Friday night homecoming Came on a Saturday night. . . a very wet Saturday night. This Changing routine Continued with a rise from flOc1a phone calls to 200, followed by a damp bonfire, ibut not dampened spirits.l Un December 3rd, school-goers had the surprise of the year. Side lot parkers moved to back, smoking area moved to front, and officials walked around to find out why the shop blew up. Substitute classes formed in the libraries and Cafeterias, as shop students had to bear with it, and the burnt walls and roof waited for repairs, while PC Crowd waited for the okayed new school plans. Soon bored window-lookers had something to watch. With all dirt pushed aside, the new school finally got underway. Loud tape recorders inside, and loud fil'eCl'3Ck9l'S outside broke the in between bell silenCe. With gunshot noise everytime a fireCraCker went off, people Caught their nerves jumping, but they never c aught the culprits. They did Catch the culprits of the gym locker room break-ins though when tired after-game players returned to find everything in Shamblesand wallets gone. Paint touch-ups on doors and new reading equipment Changed the PGHS look, but the Change that affected PC and everywhere most Came with the discovery of Kepone. ln water, and air, people began to wonder how muCh Kepone was inside them. First week of February. . .just walk down the hall after scthool. Lines of auditioners blocked drink and food macfhines. ludges Chose only the best for the second-year Talent Show. Last year it caused such suCCess, they just had to have it again. Hopeful soloists, dancers, and groups crossed fingers and waited. TOE TIPPER, Beverly Brooks takes height over Meadowbrook players. Score does the same, 30-26. GOTCHA! Petersburg catcher, Bill Wegman arm blocks West Lescanec's pathway home. Put out stopped PG victory chances, 2-1. SPORTS ' DIRT SLIDE. First-quarter-dirty Roy Pugh takes sideline gulp from on hand manager, Stanley Booker. ONE HAND SHOW. Lightweight cheerleader, Paula Grimm tops off towering double stunt with Atlas imitator, Matt Wall. Easy?! Sports' coverage couldn't cause any problems. A few pictures of the teams in action and a scoreboard, and we'd have a sports' section. Simple, either we won or we lost, right? Wrong. A score couldn't tell how it felt to fall by one point to rivals, Hopewell Blue Devils, in a tight baseball district race. Then, one week later at a last chance to get to the top, to see Thomas Dale take our previous first place standings out of reach with a 7-3 Knights' victory. An action shot of senior basketball guard, Cindy Williams, didn't say just what that 'll-7 winning season meant after three hard years of losing. Our second place football standings meant one thing - Petersburg did it to us again. The hardest task of all, putting a losing season in black and white, faced us with basketball coverage. Harder yet to write up, four of our losing games we lost be less than six points each. +A material plus to our sports' section, a new girls' track team took up extra double page coverage. Sidelining lettermen added to cheerleader line-ups. PGHS competition came alive with first hand coverage in sports' copy. A dominate full page bleed and an opposite page collage gave SPORTS+ a highlighted mixture of picture coverage. Sports 33 FRONT ROW: Sandra Green, Deluana Smith, Kelly Potter, Brigitte Wyche, Bennie Griffith, Sally Hill, Beverly Crewsg ROW TWO: lulie Samuels, Norma Stoss, Carol Domico, Barbara McTague, Yvonne Favale, Audrey Tuchekp ROW THREE: Debbie Day, Frances McCoy, Pam lones, lane Long, Cathy Richard, Susan Moore: ROW FOUR: Manager Patty jackson, Manager leannie Lees, Susan Green, Kathy Tillison, Manager Tari Briggs, Michelle Villarsg BACK ROW: Coach Ruth Holdren. TRACK--GIRI It wasn't like boys track. We switched girls in and out of events all the time. COACH RUTH HOLDREN FAST FLYING, Kelly Potter steady hands baton off to second legger, Yvonne Favale, in 880 relay. Royal four take first against Thomas Dale relayers but end up short in team totals, 61-37. FINISH LINE STRAIGHT AHEAD. Frances McCoy dashes past crowd and opponents in hurdles competition for second place. Royalettes fell behind in tri-meet with Thomas Dale and Dinwiddie, 61-52-37. .S,TUQ. ,g . ' W 3 - 34 Girls Track BEST FOOT FORWARD. Carol Domico PERCH ED in starting block, Debbie Day plants foot for strong send off of settles in for strong push off at district cumbersome discus. Green loses out to competition. PG tallied 11 points for 5th Dinwiddie trackers, 61 -38. place. F Q k l It's really too bad that jimmie Hargraves waited until his junior year to go out. He did so well, so fast. MS. BETSY PRESTON ROYAL POWER. Lee Moody signifies PG supremacy as he edges partner Tyrone Bullock in 440 sweep against Thomas Dale. PG went on to win 75-61. REACHING BACK FOR SOMETHING EXTRA. Melvin Brown extends for every possible inch in final long jump attempt, but Royals come up short as Manchester outdistances Green, 84-52. FRONT ROW: Scorekeeper Patty Yarosz, Coach Larry Springer, Vernon Thomas, jimmie Hargraves, Frank Williams, David Lyon, Gregory Robinson, Manager Phil Phillips, Scorekeeper Nickee Reynolds, ROW TWO: Manager Don Andy, Ray Butts, Frank Hughes, Howard Moore, Daniel jones, jeff Bolander, Terry Coleman, Mark Lees, Coach Mike Cummings, ROW THREE: Mac Reynolds, Mark Hennington, Tyrone Bullock, jamie Howard, jimmy Coreg ROW FOUR: john McBryant, Melvin Brown, Billy Core, Mike Virostek, james Clanton, BACK ROW: Darrell Harvey, Lee Moody, Alvin Gilchrist, jimmy Hester, David Price. A RECORD I EAR 36 Track BEST FOOT FORWARD. Daniel jones THE LAUNCHING PAD. Mammouth begins kick for leap over tall standing jimmie Hargraves leaves ground as he high jump bar en route to victory over powers shot out to winning distance. PG Dinwiddie, 110-25. mars Colonial Heights unblemished record, 74-62. Sparked by the show of new faces in the crowd of Royal runners, the 1975 edition of Green cindermen finished with a 4-3 record, New found just the right combination in field events to produce a winner With one of the better teams In the district in the slow moving events, Royals broke records right and left, Led by Daniel jones, high jump t6'4W'j and long ju l22'3 j record breaker, trackers improved with every meet. jimmy Hester captured pole vault honors, going head coach, Larry Springer, m his name in the trophy case for a j149'113A j discus throw and stopped just behind the shot put record. W junior high product, Howard Moore, padded the - running events line-up. Moore with senior jamie Howard, repeatedly captured wins in the 100 and 220, giving the Royals a good one-two punch in the dashes. Weekly, the 880 relay team added points to Royal totals. jamie Howard, Daniel jones, Howard Moore, and Lee Moody took the school record and made it tough Royals added increased frustration to a winless Hopewell team, dominating both field and running events in the 81-54 trounce, The Royal win produced enough for a better-than-break-even A season despite key injuries, ankle deep water, at times, on the track, and a group of new faces learning to compete together. overthe bar at 12'6 . Making his debut in his first varsity sport a good one, juniorjimmie Hargraves put f HIGH FLYER, jimmy Hester, coordinates pole action with posh off strength, setting new ' PG record vault of 12'6 . Royals, however, lost the competition-to idlothian, 96-40. ' tl T X for the district's any ham, . 1' K-snngzw 1975 BOYS TRACK OPP-PG Green covers Dinwiddie ground 25-110 Manchester sets back Royals 84- 52 PG jolts unbeaten Heights 62- 74 Monarchs win over outclassed PG 94- 42 PC shades Thomas Dale 61- 75 Trojan powerhouse halts PC 96- 40 Royals walk over Hopewell 51- 84 RECORD 4-3 Kal KING OF THE MOUNTAIN. New PG novelty, sweepers keep Wayne King's perch well groomed as he pushes back the sixth inning Manchester onslaught, 4-3. SHOWDOWN. Wayne King wins homeplate confrontation, stripping Wave's Bill Wegman of mitt and ball to score lone tally. PG lost, 2-1, to Petersburg second time around. TIGHT 38 Baseball They tLescanec and Kingy FIGHT throw beebees and aspirins, and all those things. COACH WAYNE RASH Thomas Dale Baseball BAT COLLECTOR, Tommy Tygrest, gathers up left behind offensive weapons after fourth inning run splurge. PG sent defeated Dinwiddie home, 3-1. f . A V . , - v- ' 4, Q. ., il' I., . -.,t K QSJQYV if ul. iff? vi 'vvQ fiffi-.,Q'.I1f'LQ,33, 1 f -as ' -4 . fin- iiffvy 1-'I r-f:'f5' 2l'iff l'f-.' ' I f, - I , !?5g24:2v- 'A .'.2?1:11-iii.. - - .' - - Tm ' ' I Jill , N- . 2.f.t.Gfi4- -j v ': f' - . 554125.13 ' ' A ..fa.'? f mf,-.t..,ltw5Vu:ag,... .- . TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE. Keystoner Dale Traylor turns successful double play pivot, thwarting a fourth inning General uprising as Royals go on to win, 3-1. GOOD lOB! leff Graham clutches West Lescanec's strong throwing right arm after precedent setting no-hitter over Meadowbrook, 1-0. I fit into the category of average. My goal in the 1975 baseball season didn't involve hitting .300 or winning 10 games pitching but rather receiving that plain, unoriginal, white baseball patch that reads 1975 Central District Champions. You see, I played on the 1974 squad that took Central Region runner-up honors and knew how good it felt to win. Experts rated us, at best, in third place. I laughed. We had a winning attitude, our regulars could carry us, and confidence overflowed throughout the team. We'd show those so called experts. The dedicated bunch faced hard running and conditioning. When regular practices started, once considered routine plays now needed daily drill. Frustration haunted Coach Collins but with patience and practice, the Green rookies smoothed down rough spots. With the confidence of a scrimmage and two wins behind us, the bubble burst. Last place Midlothian knocked off the Royals, 2-O, and, worse yet, left memories to haunt the team through the rest of the season. Gale winds and bone chilling weather produced a rare stage for a comeback 9-5 win over Petersburg. An opponent's single bouncing into a home run, one of our own by Dale Traylor, and West Lescanec's 13 strike out performance cheered up drooping spirits from the Midlothian horror. ROYALS MOVE TO TOP OF STANDINGS - how sweet that head line read and how sweet it felt to beat hated enemy, Hopewell, 6-0, to regain the old perch. The team had everything that day - Lescanec fanned 13 batters, Charlie Powell supplied three hits including a triple, and the entire Royal nine sparkled defensively. A short stay, however, it lasted only one night as Thomas Dale came to town to win, 2-1. The Royals found it a hardlone to take, losing out in the bottom of the seventh inning on a foul line triple and a squeeze bunt. 1975 BASEBALL OPP-PG PG blanks Dinwiddie in opener Royals hold off Manchester rally Midlothian shocks Prince George Cold winds blow for Petersburg Clutch catch stops Colonials Royal bats rally past Meadowbrook PG ruins perfect Hopewell slate Dale produces in seventh inning King pitching stops Generals cold Hopewell recovers with two out Lescanec no hits Meadowbrook Round trippers destroy Manchester Thomas Dale outplays Big Green King gains revenge on Midlothian Two strike Wave homer trips PG Errors strike Colonial defense RECORD 11-5 O- 9 3- 4 2- O 5- 9 3- 6 3- 4 0- 6 2-1 1- 3 4- 3 0-1 2-14 5-1 1- 4 2-1 1- 2 -V , I .gp ..7 ,am Q I 1' ' weft 1 . ., ,,, Sa-view. 1 , 1,v,,...,., .. . .. ,,i.,,, M AAAA., h .M i,L.,,..4, lvgv . y N Y - I . -flirl,-5g-gitgif, l1tf?ii1g!'i?f.f..-il 2-ff'1saw'r4'9'f'5i-f,,ire'.f'W?5' . ' ., ' ,--. ., ' ' iff I .' ' mfs-,? f'Li.fl eff-.7'fi'lff3if'f'ft5.tg5.15254,Nl-.gi-.aft..fffffffi',L,'3Jv'7 f'reg'-Ht-' it 'fre' 'st if ' I -..,.-1 EI.. ffzihlfmfri 'bi' wwe -we .,,g-fp... -rtff,1feNtgp 1?--ftyff .--, 5.5,-vs-p,,,'?: 'VEHW ww Q Fyjgi '..i,3.?9m...f4', af if-ff,w,,,5g5g,sg,:,,,.,L,151.:.L.,,q.,,i'IQjff1fiivff53ft5iz???r 1::9..5t,i3Ji.f 'iffy-:fp,.,fjQ'9'E2 ' A 1 ' ' ' f. gi ,s w 3-gw':,g,j '4 ze: 9 :ff .5.'r5..,::. , ish, 1 tg f- 4. ' 'Ek f Y:,'T'i'If ?r' f'5 fr 0 I M I l'1Tlfl:fT8:k'tti5 7 nft'wT-lf3xi5f'f::.f , ' qs- -fi...7t-rv fa, I' W, ,,:g55-,Qixp frfff.33.??+rf-!i'.f:-fffw-gtfiw. 'i5Q5,,g, l 4 t'-' . ' ', ,Q5 ta. ' 1.'ftf5?4iir'i:if5ii'ff-ftrg6?'i5'3f'. W'.flfI'fJ . I+- . I' o f . I . I ' I , -w , -eve .1 ' -,.i,ft.f....,4.g, V L' I ,..-iifwa i.f- 4 aiffm .U .0 if 22 lf: t2 l43H 'effffrf ff 51-. ' 2 s-.Wfff-'... F.-2739554 . 'ffiix' M, W M - f ft-rgsff' Q X W, yt i rig .-r g ' r ' iEtf , 'y.f:tt.,,j3f'1, to A f rf... ' ' 'f5r:'55'I, il: ,, 'rr' ,W I j 1 W. ' Q, ., ' -2f4ffwf 1' A ' 1' tZ3'.'-,Q5Ng:P.:i,t95 gags '3- tjgW' '!f Yaijgfrd , ,, ,. V . .,f I irrf , fig f f., ., of tif ,, ya . -L gn. . ---' aff! 'f fifi-ts -. -23-w - -' frat fi -M t . ' ,fr 'Irg:-5.5.e trff':j3ytiM,gf-i41.55,-,:i2aaQrjgg,ifX1tfAg?.rt-if t 'fr , t rys-'. , ' in :gifts 1 ,ii 'AZ-.fafttiffQM?-Jawat.'.tf'ft't3TR??f'g2-fi'.f5-4tirffl!v4i tff'132fflTlf An T 'f' t iff ' 'fltgw' ' 'I 'MA-wi, fit? EW W.-fmf1i'fW'f-.1 rim 'ifilf5fJf:,:4,E'f,ffl,Q ?7 f VW ' - , ff -twr:1f.a5'fi.v -:Wef3:tf?f'r f:ka3,.r.+wef1ff5iWit.. if rr .- ff-W-.-Q. .,s..-,aw wi isI'H-fi',zr'-wtwi'wt'f?f.3'1+e.ffz.t.'ai-if-rift' if -feta-f1g5i.,.i,,t2QJ5,7t?sff tit.: eww- .,-avi, . ' . H ,,,.,.iM 5- . Q:--1:1--:,i:..,.JP++t.-A ff- .iff mstef' fr ...fem ft V 4.-. -15? Next time around, Hopewell celebrated with a 4-3 victory over the Royals, scoring the tying and winning runs off reliever Lescanec with two outs in the bottom of the seventh. Tears of victory turned into tears of depression on a long ride home. Time. to bounce back again, and what made it harder, the Royal diamondmen had to do it the next day in a make up game against heavy hitting Meadowbrook. Lescanec drew the pitching assignment and fired a no hit e Monarch battin The seemingly Green hitting homers by Randolph Pettaway, jeff Smelley, and West Lescanec to outscore the Lancers, 14-2. The happy ride home turned into bus pandemonium when hand signals from car-passing fans indicated that had knocked off The Royals were it but Thomas Dale, the district champs, dreams by a score of 975 campaign turned as an up and down and a frustrating S but yet a successful one that we recorded an 'll-5 tally in really a rebuilding year. we started seven but had -la-..4. It would feel great to gain the status of a superstar, but I'm content to play on a winning team. Our 1975 version was not a champion in title but one that was in character - a team that will surely receive eighteen plain, unoriginalfwhite baseball patches that 1976 Central is Robert Allenfs familiar groan FRONT ROW! G80I'g9 Vlkojan, Dale TI'3yl0I', g V? V, A f f f ' signals a slashing opposite field liner as gala:ynf'kgfAlfi?vLlg'fh?rg1iEeZ?VYri!Heff I 8' I I he brfiak? out,0f the baitews box' The WaIton,'Mark Hughes, Gary Tadldck, leff ,.-qw.. . -an-ni e. with 'nnmg hli turned IMO the Only Swfe Smelleyg BACK ROW: Ruben Allen, west f A-eA -nf -P 1 , . ,M YO turn back hard hitting Meadowbrook, Lescanec, Wayne King, Randolph Penaway, ff- - ,zz ,WW Thi? - - ' 1-0. Nor PICTURED: lohnny Davis. .1ll?gq.,,-. ,Q A ig .. .Ja , ,aw-'v'S i .,. .,: .I vv',.,-5-rj g m ' ' H Lcizftiiz 1 .-an 1.4 -...sg -f A,'ls 4 'if P P r .f!1i,M3.vdA,, 'fv.,g,,,wa'. w:-fit. J ,, .,.. Uffffiifyt V521 M' fm .n1'1S:-. A K, C . gi XX . . 1-lfgffhsgaimg f A - 4 ::: aa.. . . , .,.,,ng,45.1:.1., ,A .. J nfy, ,ai iingifj ifffra .fat A ,zgyfggvirf '.5il.4A 1 . -.. ,-.,., 'gif -f if I I I ...w Nix 5 C v- .X, ,- And cheer they did! . . . All the cue from Prince George. The Progress Index STRETCHING THINGS A BIT? General first sacker, james Adkins, nips hard sliding Charlie Powell as Royals control Dinwiddie, 9-0, in season opener. WELCOMED REST. Big Green defense sits back to size up flame throwing Devil righthander, john Koren. Royals handle ace easily in convincing 6-0 defeat. HERE WE GO FOLKS! Coach Wayne Collins screams out obvious officiating blunder to no avail during homestanding 4-3 victory over Midlothian. this from the smallest school in the Central District, . . . Some other area schools should take DAVE PITTMAN, Sports Writer Baseball 41 Thrown over the shoulders, dirty jeans, worn out gloves, and cleats signified one fact- hard work and practice for the Royalettes. An optimistic pre-season prepared Royalettes for a coming onslaught of rival female baggers. Big time Royal baseball often cast a shadow with both fields adjacent to one another. Competition for bleachers, parking, and even fans came close, Watch out for that ball! Suddenly a ball flew wildly as powerful homerun sluggers drove balls into adjacent outfields. Burdened with bruises and sprained ankles, weary Royalettes suffered a loss to Dinwiddie, 18-11. On a steal to second, Elnora johnson trapped her foot underneath the base and sprained her ankle. Short-lived substitute, Kathy Fields, scored the only run as she and the ball collided at home. Hindered by the loss of players, Royalettes surrendered to Dinwiddie, but two days later recovered to take Petersburg, 8-5. In a seesaw battle with Meadowbrook, Monarchs and Royalettes wrestled for the lead, inning by inning. When time ran out, Royalettes had outslugged Monarchs, 12-10, with a 12 hit total. And so the season ended with a 4-5 record - a year when hustle and togetherness made it happen. WAY OUT OF REACH, Delphine Mason sends pitch soaring into Manchester outfield to end seventh inning. Undramatic finish confirms Royal win, 14-10. 4 - 1 K ,. K T 'V 'W:' ' or -Vfffa-PiiifteffwrIwo-:'wm rewwfq.T.','r.' . jg ,, j . A , , ' -Q Y' 'ly' i '35 im, L'5f f. -f ' M : '5'L'l f5 'v'.2Hvs4g,'5mV 'ia49 'wff1?g'L VH -1 H..-15 , -f' . .f V ,. . - , . 2'lfr+-ff QL.-Vt fav 1' 4 ... gym V, ' at --W +-'-Va., 'f ',w4-!ift.T- . ,,,, V .,.n M- Vv- w V rW?'.,4w-gum. 4 , im, -1VV,,,.,,?55,m,.,.1t:f,-,HaugV, 'fr ' V E- fffwf - mf. ,.'f.t.fff-1,-f ya w fm, , V V ' V 4 , -M 2- . j 2,1 ififaf- ', ,:'?3Hf'fV,' ', -V ..,,,Q -r2 7 , ' i '1V i 'Q f? V-fh , qlQV 'W N WV 'ff f',-afPqrf'g' - K' A - - , 4 'fy f1Q-if fy ' , ' . M75 Qmfggymm ,lk 'li b I wi, 1. : i..fsg:'ils:ff:g,gmN'izgfsizgp ,pg ,b 't ,g, 'Im t 1 AT ., , ,,,w, , Q V ' - KW JY, , ,. , .i j , +, A wing:-V! rw LNWUWL, ,. ,Q-M, -1.3. . ,Q V, . 3 4 vm , 1 , , . V, . rg, ., -' V N -j X ta ' -fl-f.,+fwg f. .se VV V. V - --A. ' 'wg rs .V V' 'M ' V ..- . ' , 1 ,. ' If 5 W, ,Vk.H,,.,,,Qug.?y..,4,yAV ,M k 'lkVfVv.,4g, ,.,n..f- M P fav. V V Vw , . . ,V j, if., . V,m+ ,,, v ann' W x , -,, . ' ' 55' 5 , , VL .. VV ..:,1, q A-4 ,,,,f,:fe.5g5,, 1.,,,.,tg,3-.,.,,,',,g3k..,-g.Q,3g4.k,,7 ,'j..g,,:. 7 .gyff3'f,,f3g.,1,,,,i,..g,,V,4'65a,,,,,5,L3,,, in jak, , Atv, QW., . , ' W' ,, 11 1, ly. ' 4. 'Y' V A .fu ef ' ' -Wfwf-mr ' f -- - ' ' W 9621 .Y 5 . ?- .:gA,,-,w taxa , 7,,,.a3,,t.' V40 ,','jgg.,,M,m,,..',.3 ' ' -wg:-+ ., ,w,.f,J 5v-3 , . , V ,- . Vg f ' ,. V j. VV ' 'vie ' ?4Mw. '5:r' .. .9-ig,,,....,':,gg-'V--+ '52, qt 2, 3 --W-wwf., ' A , , - ' -4 , 'r 20333 f x, W, 4, I 1. ' .,, Q' g.zQ.,,g-.?jf2,g3,a5 -g15wm6,,-Tq,fgg5:,Qtj:'?J,:w5W,n ,', . .,:,:a-ygguiqqa, is ., QJFQQQ3 If - , , ,J ,-,,,.,, I ff 4,,,ar- ggfgg:-R Va .w.,,,,,?F V 1 V..-A-3, 4 ?.5jm,2,a mffslpa.-'1 ',gx3-.fy M . M..,' r- MJ:-V, ,3.,,:.5,,, ww,-as-N up . qi ,y'.-1 ' .- 3 ' me fQl9zy f vEjQ' 4 5q:Eft5?s5j,,?lQgvf5fFE?fv,ff?f55?',, . 7..A fj,Kj',4 ,m . '3..V .W V+ . 4 ' fm'-'FV ,,,,,, ' sq gl J Q , A, 7,,t..,53,,,w,:,,,, ,, , ws., , m,,M3bi,,,,.,. ' 45 -,-s.,,:,- ,, , Ha Ku L can :w t - l1f55m 1 ' -iam-w.,:'w ,,.a,,gg4g, f'f-age.-' M-agp w , 'fr 1 ' '-. Vf-V' - J' f. l g ., - it fi L, -:'g,, - IK i g , . ,J 'V4...f,'5,., '. ,,'.- -V ,J--V, gm 5 '-'-f.,g,g, - 'H-V.,,,'rgV .y . 1 s , 4-. ff-3, NM, ,iff ,atm .,,. wsimw-s . . V V , H. A ,V fl ., V, p W V , . . q 1 V f f gf- 15 'fra ,V . lag'-s? 'l'L A , t g- '-- fa ' ' - A ,,.,g,5,4.,,g5 - 4 ' -1:5 's , '?f,,3g:'g, Y. ' Q -. ff, , -,f 'Ji V' f - 'K-.. ,,gj,i,N'-' :K NV., A my L'-fC7,::- M, ,. , ,.,., -gi7D,,,5V L' ,.,i1q,-5 2,44-, , gz4Ws7Vj'5-'aVg,Vr 9Qs'fas ' VV. f 2 r ff? 1 1-:J-W--TIF' ' '. V Vzfw- Wana--1f':f,+ - kai' , ,Vi 11 .- ' m+,-f,f2g,a , :wr gr Jw. I ,. .,-, , , wma- -V - V ,- -Q 1 , ,.. - N ' . 'Q' -' .'4.- .0-1-fV,,4,,.fse.,.,qy 'rv'-1-.af . . - ' K A ' , 7' - , . K '-if' ' ' Q' --- -V -M 4'-45?-ff w '-' ' Q N, , 1 - . V 'ani' in V V ,J ,4i,, - ' I gr- V in '-.1 - r ' - ' , fa, wr - 1799. f .M, . J, -Ly -V -f mu f V .. - , .Lil ,'L.l: ,V .'3f'E f ,Ali , , f'.19'i. . K ix aw' ' -go. 'Vw-vgdzmfi 'Mi' ' 'YD' , V 42 Softball 1975 SOFTBALL OPP-PG Dinwiddie cripples PG chances Royals bruise Petersburg Hopewell sluggers outbat PG Quick action dissolves Monarchs Cold winds delay Midlothian PG bats surmount Manchester Predominate Dale capsizes PG Colonials pump past Royalettes PG topples to Meadowbrook RECORD 4-5 18- 1 5- 8 11- 2 10-12 2-14 10-14 7- O 10- 1 9- 2 NO CHANCE FOR SURVIVAL. Catcher Cindy Williams blocks straightaway path to home plate. Seventh inning play saved game from getting out of control as Matoaca stopped PG, 5-3. - IN SEASDN I I ,t,,.f I '.,. I , ' bV t 4, ,tsp 'QYQI V ,f 'Phf 653. p. ' M - ' vii 3'vf'.y5 G lr Gu 1 'I at I Q, 'LQ' 'V 9 . ', 6 ' 5: V 12 V ten.. Q H R 17' ii ii C gt, 5 ,gg Z K , .r I , A 5 A ,Aim SIGNALS STRAIGHT, Cindy Williams settles eye concentration on mound while umpire calls time for quick glance at count indicator. Manchester opposition fell to Royals, 14-10. TIPTOEING HOME, Karen Wilkinson weaves path through Manchester catcher on lean Vinsh's line drive single. Lady Royals outslugged Lancer counterparts, 14-10. It was really funny to see Cindy Cox's homer go into the guy's field. Usually, it's the other way around. ROY PUGH FRONT ROW: Manager Polly Sorg, Manager Zettamae Heath, Gwen Tatum, lean Seal, lo Turek, Rhonda Sheppard, Cindy Williams, Cindy Cox, Lorrie Poland, Coach Pat Allinp BACK ROW: Kathy Fields, Delphine Mason, Angie Brown, lean Vinsh, Mary Culbertson, Karen Wilkinson, Barbara Figg, Scorekeeper Ann Chudoba, Manager Mary Chudoba. Softball 43 44 GOLF 1975 GOLF OPP-PG PG linkers breeze by TDHS 212-236 Dale and Petersburg PHS 267 Prince George slips Man- MHS 243-246 chester and Hopewell HHS 250 Royals can't match CHHS 236-254 Heights and Trojans MHS 225 Dinwiddie and Meadow- DCHS 216-240 brook hex Royal clubs MHS 217 PG clobbers Wave but PHS 273-228 tumblesto Thomas Dale TDHS 217 Royals outclass Hopewell HHS 253-223 and Manchester MHS 227 PG scores low duel with CHHS 223-213 Heights and Midlothian MHS 217 , . Royals place amid Din- DCHS 218-217 y 1, widdie and Meadowbrook MHS 208 g 1' A N Dale continues streak as TDHS 207-227 , ' , ' PG blasts Petersburg PHS 258 Royals deal defeat to MHS 225-212 X , Lancers and Devils HHS 238 PG decks Midlothian MHS 205-204 and Colonial Heights CHHS 214 Royals lose finale to MHS 220-231 Monarchs and Generals DCHS 224 RECORD 13-11 CONTACT! Greg Young belts ball down fifth hole fairway. Linksmen edged past Midlothian and Colonial Heights, 204-205-214. TEE TIME. Driver head lines up for big swing to send mounted ball on long flight. . -Gun-C ' ' -Adil? 'Nu-151 ya- 41. Mr, Matheny said if we'd win both, he'd buy us dinner. We didn't, but he bought us dinner anyway. GREG YOUNG IT'S IN! Royal golfer Chip Saunders sinks putt during a victory match over Petersburg, 236-267. PUITER POWER. Gary Lichvar shoves ball toward hopeful destination squeezing by Dinwiddie, 217-218. 'aff - U BEAT EH BOTH 'W :S KNEELING: Coach Gale Mathenyp STANDING: David Graham, Bobby Reeves, loe Renaud, Randy Saunders, Chip Saunders, Greg Young: NOT PICTURED: Gary Lichvar, Billy Hayth, Bob Wilkinson. nf' Ag er if 1 , 1 1' -2? t. V545 4 , 'IQ .df N Sophomore control forced high school golf enthusiasts to write off PG as no threat to district contenders. How could last year's 4-20 team improve with a bunch of rookies? The 13-11 finish pushed the linksmen over the .500 mark and showed themselves they could produce some thrills of their own. Somewhat different than other teams, PG golfers sported no uniforms, held home matches away from school, and demanded quiet instead of cheers on the course. But just like any other sport, they had their season highlights. Royal golfers riped Petersburg and Hopewell every time they mel to sharpen up the Central District feud between the big rivals in any sport. To add to the Tri-City antagonism, Hopewell transfer, freshman Randy Saunders, produced under the Royal name and team members returned the favor with their votes for most valuable player. Big Green putters stung second place Midlothian en route to individual honors as they underscored the Trojans in two outings. Excitement even hit the green when the Royals shot a season low of 204, just missing the 1972 school record by six strokes. Close before the seasonfs end, Coach Gale Matheny treated his Green golfers to a celebration feast. Any steak in the house and a round of baked potatoes tasted even better than usual since the coach footed the Denny's bill, They had pulled together, laughed, and lost. The Green golfers did what they had set out to dog they produced thrills and excitement for Royal fans who just liked to see them win, KNEE DEEP, loe Renaud shovels way out of sand trap. Royals advanced to a win over Manchester and Hopewell, 223-227-253. Golf 45 REGISTER, PLEASE. Coach Springer signs up runners for competition in PG-Dale meet. YOU'VE GOT IT! Spotter Doug Marshall, directs leff Bolander and Thomas Dale opponent through last stretch of home course. PG falls to Dale, 34-21. F 'W FACES ,ml , If ,. ...E T' FRONT ROW: David Price, Tom Price, lim Browning, john McBryant7 BACK ROW: Coach larry Springer, leff Bolander, limmy Core, Charles Miller. RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER, limmy Core races to beat Coach Springer's stop watch. BEND YOUR BODY. PG cross countrymen loosen up before Thomas Dale distance competition. These six guys aren't the remains of the team. There aren't any injured or absent. This is the entire team. Coach Larry Springer Strength in numbers didn't help out the third edition of the cross country team. The lack of runners produced a loser in Central District competition, totaling only a 3-8 ledger. Military transfer stole away one '74 co-captain and the loss of another for personal reasons erased pre-season experience and numbers. Early turnouts dwindled, leaving team members with only six of a required seven to field a team for victory. But bright spots shone both for individual glory and team pride. A pleasant surprise to double timer track and cross country coach, Larry Springer, junior David Price broke records meet after meet both home and away. On the 3.15 mile home course, he set the new school record of 18:O0.4 minutes and, then, matched talent at both Hermitage 116:13 minutes on 3 mile coursel and Colonial Heights l15:O0.7 on 2.8 mile coursel to set the visiting course marks. Unmoved by the small turnout, the harriers added on mile after mile for a greater distance total than any other team in PG history. Losing half the team with graduation, future cross country teams would need their own full force membership drives. Why couldn't a school the size of PG draw interest from such a natural country habit like outdoor running? THEY'RE OFF! Royals and Knights step out on long run over the countryside. 1975 CROSS COUNTRY Royals squeak by Hopewell Meadowbrook forfeits to PC. Springers overrun Royals Hermitage runners halt PC Lancers bombard Royals Colonials render Royal hopes Matoaca forfeits to Royals Benedictine crushes PG chances Trojans doubIe+ PG score Dale bands home loss Sussex Central scores low RECORD 3-8 OPP-PG 28-27 wi n 24-33 23-39 17-39 20-35 wi n 18-41 17-39 21 -34 29-37 Cross Country 47 .1 Nzaygfgx Q Q. N , v-'31fZ.Mk V'-wg L ' ,lamb W X I? , ' ff: L C W' ,e y LISTEN UP! Coach Collins clears up next play series' questions before Coach Woodby shuttles in double relief with lohn Randolph 1801 and lohnny Davis t88y. SCREENING OUT ANY INTERFERENCE Roy Pugh Q84j and lohnny Davis 1881 I wonder what it would be like to play under the stars. Mark Hennington DODGING RAINDROPS, Tyrone Bullock f22j puts the move on both Thomas Dale's t83J and weather. Run sets up single offense touchdown in PG victory, 21-6. ' 'MSDN N N ,Ah ,. .,.,. SCHOOLS YELLOW BUS BULGES with Green Machine spirit after 25-7 win over Manchester to post third straight district success. team up for blocked punt scamper by Matt Wall 164i for second defensive score of the night. Dale loses out 21-6. Football 49 FRONT ROW: Warren Myrick, Ray Butts, leff A FACE IN THE CROWD. Mark Hennington shoves through Meadowbrook defenders for first down pick up en route to fourth straight TD before Monarchs could retaliate, 24-12. F E STRAIGHT 50 Football Smelley, Mark Esposito, Roy Pugh, West lescanec, lohnny Davis, Matt Wall, Charles Lee, Tyrone Bullock, Garfield Brooks, Mike Hughes, ROW TWO: Marshall Lewis, George Biberstein, Mark Atwood, lohn Randolph, George Thoma, Mike Harris, Cheyenne Bullock, Stanley Gorham, Greg Robinson, Mark Hennington, Roy Cox, Robert Moore, Tony Gregory, ROW THREE: Sammy Walker, Tim Heimbuch, Luther Wright, Roger Wynn, Norman Epps, Wayne Thweatt, Otis Harvey, Doug lones, Rick Heiser, Russell Whiting, Kerwin Walker, Rick Carrollg ROW FOUR: Manager Stanle Booker, Coach Bill Woodby, Coach Bobby Swineford, Coach Wayne Co ins. MIDFIELD FORMALITIES by game captains, Mark Esposito f72j and Roy Pugh 1841, with Hopewell's Tim lones 1781 and Steve Rasnick f41J set up fair play reminders to arch rivals. MOVIN' ON. Tight end lohnny Davis f88j uses open field maneuvers after latching on to a Lescanec aerial to bypass would be Dale tacklers, Rodney lones 1643 and Ashby Gray 1331, for a big yardage play. Royals won out, 21 -6. When you really think about it, three of the four teams that beat you were in regional playoffs. lohnny Oates Philadelphia Phillies Catcher - PG Alumni 1975 FOOTBALL OPP-PC Royals fumble Springers opener 13-0 One night delay halts Colonials 6-20 First half outdoes Meadowbrook 12-24 Last half fury puts back Lancers 7-25 Outsider Lee Davis blanks PG 27-O Second Saturday claims Dinwiddie 6-20 Repeat performance drops Dale 6-21 Late quarter Trojan TD stands 21 -18 PG out grinds Hopewell 0-8 Wave stuns sidelined starters 32-0 RECORD 6-4 Defense - Defense! And did they ever respond. Fired up for revenge from last year's insult in front of a confident homecoming crowd, the Thomas Dale Knights visited PG, primed for victory. Needing no offensive support, a convincing defense used two Dale mistakes as if 74 Ray Butts rumbled 74 I-o-n-g yards for six points and uncontrollable linebacker Matt Wall stampeded 19 yards to tally six more for personal as well as team satisfaction. Undefeated in district competition with five wins already behind them and three more to go, the Royals would have a first ever football championship. Not expecting much from unacclaimed Midlothian, the Big Green met a crunching Trojan backfield. Going ahead late in the fourth quarter, 18-14, victory seemed at hand as the clock ran down. Then within two minutes, Midlothian, playing the part of the spoilers, broke loose play after play for big Vmdage and the final Scoreboard SIDELINE HUSTLE AND susnf. Royal read 21-18 The three missed extra - ' ' . starters gear up for second half strategy POW? made the dllference and the against Tri-City rival, Hopewell. Defenses flfst d'Sff'CI loss- battle for close 8-0 result. DOUBLE TIMERS, Coaches Swineford and Collins relax Mark Henningt0n's tightened muscles during third quarter bombardment of leg cramps of season opener, Highland Springs. ,sggifi ,if W-5 A TIME OUT FROM BATTLE, Charles Lee 1621 joins Russell Whiting f81j for sideline view of fourth quarter clock down to victory against Colonial Heights, 20-6. 'IOT QUITE ENOUGH The Petersburg postponement could very well set up an end of the season showdown for the district champion. Tri-City Area Sports Writers HANDS FIRST, senior starter, Ra Butts, leads barrage of Royal troops through paper and paint from goalpost huddle. UP FOR GRABS, fullback Mike Hughes turns hurdler as he leaps over waylaid Dinwiddie defender, Gerald Brown 1451, in rainy homecoming celebration, 20-6. FACTS AND FIGURES throw heads 52 Football together for stat keepers, Charlie Powell, Mark Hughes, and Dale Traylor. Chances were slim but still possible if they could beat both Hopewell and Petersburg, but the district didn't matter when it came to Hopewell. With signs everywhere, out to get Lescanec, the Devil defense stiffened at their goal line four times, but following big yard gains from Mike Hughes, not-to-be- denied Mark Hennington finally lunged across the goal line and six points lit up the board. The play turned into the only score of the intense area rivalry as weary and banged up Royals won the defensive battle, 8-O. The Royals met Petersburg in the season finale. More rain had switched an earlier playing date to close out the schedule. Now the district decider, the game meant that the alternating pre-season picks between PG and Petersburg would finally be settled. A classic matchup on paper didn't materialize on the field as the superior Wave crushed the wounded Royals, 32-O. Once again in the bridesmaid role with a 6-2 district mark, Prince George added another second to its long list, tying with Midlothian. Quite a different year made it unique -the rain delays including homecoming, the nagging injuries, the end of the Lescanec era, a victory over Thomas Dale for a second straight year, but, once again as Coach Woodby led off the awards assembly, this team beat Hopewell! ON-THE-SPOT REPORT for referee signals second quarter touchdown by Mike Hughes 1121 on unmolested option give. TD pepped up sagging Royal offense to move past Manchester, 25-7. Football 53 We warned her about kicking once, then, on the next play, she turned right around and did it again. Keith Collins Referee - PG Alumni CRACKING UP, imitation sportscasters Charlie Powell and Terry Coleman funlight a '76 powderpuff round up. CHAIN LINK ARM REST. Senior beauty limmy Core checks behind for rival egg throwing junior cheerleaders. RULE RUNDCWN. lane Long takes in do's and don'ts from relative officiating team of Coach Collins and brother Keith. FLAG H! TOPSY TURVY. Dr. George crowns absentee Tom Walton la ed b Diana 54 Powderpuff Q ,P Y Y , Morris, powderpuff king. DODGING senior tackler, junior Angie Brown makes quick sprint for uninhabited open field. IUMPING THE GUN, senior coach Mark Esposit0's all right-touchdown combo confirms expected referee call. NOT ANOTHER ONE! junior coach Mark llennington winces at senior touchdown 4. When the whistle blows come out fighting, and fighting they did. Women libbers took to the field with their version of the Green Machine. Overlooking expected easy going of flag football kicks, trips, and bites replaced tackle. Senior Huskies overshadowed junior Goats, holding them to one mere touchdown in the last quarter making the final score, as 26-6. Adding fire to Huskie offense, Delphine Mason ran a 99 yard touchdown. Chants and cheers down pat, cheerleaders took sideline position with an added surprise. Week long practice of double stunts toppled in front of powderpuff crowds. All in fun egg throwing led to coughs and runny noses when yolk crowned victims rinsed off in outside cold water only faucets. The work done, energetic players and bundled up spectators filled up field and bleacher benches. Play by play ad libs from press box comedia cheered up the cold night crowd. HS Powderpuff 55 TAKING AIM, Elnora lohnson's side shot secures victory over Meadowbrook, 30- 26. On a hot day in Iuly13 girls stood in the middle of a lighted gym wondering could this be the year we would do it? Could we finally carry victory to the awaiting people in the stands? Sweat and determination helped us along and by August we had put together a team. Starting Beverly Brooks, our 6'1 secret weapon, we would soon find out she could scare anyone away from underneath that basket. The time came, the season had embarked with a 52-40 victory over Hopewell. Now we were ready! Half the season had slipped by us now. We played team after team, winning and losing. Midlothian was next, tied for first place in the district with Petersburg, we knew they would be tough. Both teams had to produce. Midlothian kept the lead by a few points throughout the game. 56 Girls' Basketball STRETCH THOSE ARMS! Six footer Beverly Brooks controls ball in opening win over Hopewell, 52-40. Suddenly PC. fired up, we were ahead by two. Fifty seconds now remained on the clock, we were in foul trouble. Midlothian shot from the foul line, SWOOSHl One point dropped through the hoop. It was our ball. Coming down court the whistle blew, a three second violation had been called. Midlothian regained control. Bringing the ball down with 23 seconds to go, Tammy Holders' bloop shot decided the game. We fell, 42-45, to Midlothian. The season continued, we lost no more. We had won the first night at tournaments, downing Meadowbrook, 60-49. The second night we were up against Petersburg, Central District Champions. Standing at the door of the locker room, looking over the crowds of people, excitement and nervousness came over us. Victory, we thought, was close. Petersburg remained ahead the whole game until the last CLOSE QUARTERS. Fluke shooter, Cindy Cox, puts in lay up to breeze by Wave, 64- 65 quarter, when the Royalettes burst ahead by a field goal. The lead was ours. Tension had mounted in the crowd. Fans bellowed as the ref signaled a questionable call. We dropped to Petersburg, 39-41. Our season had ended. The locker room was quiet with many sad and disappointed faces. We had stood together, leaving our season record, 10-6-the best since Ms. Holdren had come to Prince George. Standing alone now in a dark, deserted gym, I can remember how hard we had practiced and how much we had tried. The quietness and stillness of the rims made me think about what we always had said before every game: UNITED, WE STAND DIVIDED, WE FALL THE MIGHTY ROYALETTES WILL CONQLJER ALL! and, to us, we had. BEND YOUR KNEES, Coach Ruth Holdren models for Beverly Brooks at free line in triumph over Dale, 70-44. NO STRINGS ATTACHED, Lorrie Poland grabs for dangling ball in PG- Meadowbrook thriller, 30-26. GET UP OFF THAT FLOOR, Angie Brown rebounds missed free throw to no avail. Royalettes came up short against Generals, 41-53. 5 -w. .far ll 2 1975 GIRLS! BASKETBALL Rookie Royals shine over Hopewell PG out rebounds Meadowbrook PC drops first to Petersburg Board control blows out Knights Dinwiddie pattern decides game Manchester disheartens Royalettes Midlothian captures toss up game Colonials escape Royalettes PG dominates Hopewell ground PC ends drought at Meadowbrook Wave feels Royal revenge Powerful scoring swamps Dale Royal free throws rail Dinwiddie Double figures outdo Manchester Colonials provide tenth win Midlothian doubles against PC ,tMeadowbrook falls to Royal pride iRoyalette fouls help out Wave RECORD 11-7 'Tournament OPP-PG 40-52 26- 30 52-37 45-68 53-41 51 -44 50-45 62-60 43-60 46-69 45-64 44-70 48-55 42-69 38-48 45-42 49-60 41 -39 WHERE ARE YOU? Cindy Williams searches for ball pathway to Bridgitte Wyche against quick-moving Meadowbrook. Royals squeaked by 30- W I0 E .500 That's PG's secret weapon right there - Beverly Brooks. Roy Cox FRONT ROW: Elma lohnson, Cindy Williams, Elnora lohnson, ROW TWO: lulie Urquhart, Yvonne Favale, Barbara Figg, lisa lohnston, lo Turek, ROW THREEQ Coach Ruth Holdren, Scorekeeper Barbara McTague, Timekeeper lane Long, Bridgitte Wyche, Beverly Brooks, Lorrie Po and, Cindy Cox, Angie Brown, Manager Delphine Mason, Manager Dejuana Ciirls' Basketball 57 How do you explain another losing season? For the Royal version of Central District basketball, the odds outweighed the advantages. When laced together, the absence of a strong middle school program, the lack of an abundance of candidates to try out with a previous loss record and, of course, the all famous crackerbox gym formed a powerful combination. And so. . .pre-season expecta tions fell short as the long range rebuilding program failed to reach the .500 mark. Although Coach Rolf McDaniel did not produce victory after victory, he did instill a positive attitude as all nine squad men played every game with a team concept. Three year starter Ronnie Ford headed the Royal lineup with constant score and rebound totals in high double figures. Revolving backups mixed upper and underclassmen for the starting role with juniors Ted Vanko and Mark Hughes and seniors Marvin johnson, johnny Davis, Gary Tadlock, and Mike Hughes. Excitement rocked the mini gym in the opening game thriller with Colonial Heights. Basket for basket, the Tri-City rivals finished off regulation time play in a 56-56 deadlock. In single overtime, the two teams traded leads until, with a two point, lead Colonial Heights resorted to a frustrating freeze of the ball. Time ran down and the Royals lost out, 62-60. In their second outset, a single basket plus a foul shot separated almost victory from defeat by Dinwiddie, 62- 59, but victory seemed certain as the Royals held a 'I7 point advantage with three minutes to go in the third quarter against visiting Thomas Dale. Court strategy backfired and the Knights left the gym with an 81-74 comeback. Suddenly seven games had slipped by and the Royals held a 'I-6 record with a total of 11 points making the difference. OUT OF REACH. Darrell Harvey 133, grabs for free ball as Royals break down Manchester defense, 64-39. We should be 5-2 instead of 1-6. We lost four of these games by six points or less. Major Paul Hughes fMark's fathery OUT STRETCHED ARMS. Ted Vanko 1301 and johnny Davis 1501 keep out Trojan Tommy Royer's 1233 points. Midlothian topples PG, 80-64. 0 wi U it f ew 1 DRIVING IN FOR TWO. Mark Hughes Q22j escapes Lancer john Preskitt's 1151 grasp. Royals tower over Manchester, 64-39. DEFENSIVE STANCE. Mike Hughes my stoops low to guard against General drive. Dinwiddie stuns Royals, 69-50. A NIP AND TUCK FRENZIED FANS cheer as the Green Machine brings home first win of the season, 81-75, over visiting Manchester. I EVERYBODY STAND CLEAR! Wave opponents back off Gary Tadlock's sure shot at third quarter lay up. Wave takes squeaker, 67-65. Basketball 59 Uneventful play followed both home and away until the Green met up with their first game opponents to start off second season play. In the last two minutes of another close Colonial contest, the Royals produced thrills and chills again when a six point lead dwindled down to four. Holding on, the hard luck Royals avenged the previous overtime heartbreaker, 62-58, as Ronnie Ford led statistics with 24 points. . Midlothian, ala Tim Carr, bombarded backboard nets when they visited the home gym, 79-58. In both encounters unbelievable field goal shooting overwhelmed the Royal counterparts. Up against the odds, the cagers wound up their season with a double showing against district winner, Hopewell, within two weeks of each other. Even with losing scores of 71-56, and 80-64, high spirit flowed through the nine players and spilled over onto loyal fans as the gymnasium atmos- phere showed no signs of expecting defeat on either side. The below .500 mark disappointed teammates, Coach McDaniel, and fans alike as hard work and personal sacrifices just weren't enough to produce victories. In a well balanced district fexcept for Hopewellj, when any team could beat any other on a given night, it made winning consistently difficult. The small margin between victory and defeat for at least a handful of the games could have turned around the 5-13 ledger. Although the coach's rebuilding program fell a little behind schedule win-loss wise, the positive attitude gained respect from fan and foe after each contest. 1975-76 BASKETBALL OPP-PG Colonials capture overtime duel 62-60 Dinwiddie leads narrow escape 62-59 Strategy backfires against Dale 57-51 Midlothian rebounds over Royals 79-58 Tucker offense freezes PG 81-61 PG wins first from Manchester 75-81 Petersburg pulls out squeaker 66-65 Meadowbrook hands visitors loss 85-65 PG avenges first Colonial loss 58-62 Dinwiddie boards control Royals 69-50 Royals find Dale loophole 51-57 1421 Tucker breaks Royal defense 96-75 Trojan sharpshooters outdo PG 80-64 PG hustle surpasses Manchester 39-64 Petersburg pours on points 91-65 Confident Hopewell gets scare 71-56 PG fights off Meadowbrook 62-69 Devil win closes out season play 80-64 RECORD 5-13 X That's happened more than once. We can have a good shooting night, but everything they 1the oppositionj throw up A STEP TO THE RIGHT. Ronnie Ford 142, helps out Darrell Harvey 132j to block out pathway of Trojan Scott Ruger 125j. Midlothian controls board, 80-64. there goes in. Coach Wayne Collins MUSCLE SHOT. Darrell Harvey 132, flicks wrists to send ball high over Midlothian players reach. Midlothian keeps out Royals, 80-64. TEAMWCRK FRONT ROW: Russell Whiting, lohnny Davis, Ronnie Ford, Darrell Harvey, Marvin lohnsonp ROW TWO: Coach Rolf McDaniel, Howard Bannister, Ted Vanko, Mark Hu hes, Gary Tadlockp BACK ROW: Mana er Pail Prince, Manager Phil Phillips, Scorelceeper Stanley Booker, Statistician Mark Hennington. ALL TUCKED IN, pump shooter Marvin johnson 1141 hangs in mid- air shot for a sure two points. Thomas Dale ousted PG, 57-51. Basketball 61 than nw rf i if if bk. 711515 vii f ii Lf I 1, , v i f 'Nu v ' i Y-I if 'tx -Ss.-3,..i...f,g-' g ' 4 is 'i Nothing could stop 'eml Determined spirit minded cheerleaders accelerated through broken arms, bruised ribs, pulled muscles, and stitched up knees, most originating from unsuccessful double stunts. Lift ups for kick offs and foul shot flips stimulated dare-devil acrobatics. Always keeping the line up full, the squad managed an overload as PC spirit boosters Tim King, Gary Tadlock, and Matt Wall began a Royal tradition. Overalls, coming or going, beat Generals, red lips and greased hair - bits of Spirit Week - prompted a homecoming victory. Inheriting nine year old hand-me- downs, spirit rustlers expanded their wardrobe with skirts, monogrammed vests, and sweaters. Adding a lone sophomore, a male trio, and summer camp R-O-W-D-I-E-ness, the new faces bellowed out crowd pleasers beside the one and two year pros. SHOW TIME, Carla Hood and Linda scream out victory-at-hand bumpin' exhibition. BURN EM! PG's newest Royal, Mr. Tiller, wipes out all doubt of Hopewell loyalty. ACTION CLOSE UPS. Bulging crowd support forces cheerleaders to monopolize micro sideline. HANG ON! Kris Gudmundson and Gary Tadlock give a second try for motorcycle ride after first time flop. ADD ' if? ffI' ' Nl THERE AT LAST. Fighting over last small size, new uniformed pepsters flash tri- colored gear. INIURED ENERGY. Mid football season broken wrist semi-sidelines captain lanet Burke from double stunt tries. BODY ENGLISH in silly crowd pleaser, Give me an R, cheerleader clowns bend out nickname call letters. Cheerleaders 63 SPDRTSW P UP The sports season from March, 1975, to February, 'l976, really turned into a YEAR OE ALMOSTS. The girls basketball teamalmost made the tournament finals, football almost tied for the district, and baseball almost beat Thomas Dale and l-lopewell before last inning go ahead runs. YEAR OF EIRSTS. The girls added another dimension to their sports lineup-Girls' Track. Enough interest collected last spring for Ms. Ruth Holdren to spend afternoons learning with the girls about field and running events. . . .AND SECONDS. The defeat by Petersburg marked another second place finish in football for the Royals. At least three times we KPGJ finished in the runner up spot. After the bruising game with Hopewell, more starters limped on the field than ran. Injuries didn't stop there. Cheerleaders had their own casualty totals. Paula Grimm ended up with five knee stitches from a tumble down the hill at the junior brunswick stew outing. l-lead, lanet Burke broke a wrist as the result of a miscalculated double stunt landing, and Carla Hood bruised muscles from the gymnastics to give Tim King a Z down 8 to go for the sideline squad regulars. The guys became cheerleaders and the girls became football players. In the one area of sports where nothing changed, powderpuff football fit into our same old thing category. As usual, the girls meant business, the seniors beat the juniors, and the cheerleaders considered the game action secondary to their annual egg throwing free-for-all. Since flag football supposedly replaced tackle, few resorted to other necessary techniques until Patty Phoenix got thrown out of the game for biting. YEAR OF RECORDS. Looking after individual side of team sports, statistics highlighted l975-76. Track stars broke records in the pole vault, 880 yard relay, high jump, long jump, and discus . . . the Cross Country learn ran more distance than any other team in PG history. . .Cindy Williams and West Lescanec finished their high school careers of four years ot basketball - softballffootball - baseball at the varsity levels . . .Coach Bill VVoodby completed his tenth year 4 oar hing with a total record of 54-41-5. lIllIllS+ - On its feet again, Pep Club boosted treasury counts with a summer weathered car wash and before game pin-on ribbons. Tracking along with the games, club members traveled out to far mil Elia Instead of labelling clubs page by page, once again we covered their activities. Following up on school happenings, we charged clubs for each project we printed. Busy clubs paid the price of more than one spot coverage two years in a row, but the five dollar fee paid off in end of the year recognition. +UnsymmetriaI borders took club coverage just one step further with a topic within a topic style. Food to Initials labels gave each club at least one time coverage. Mentioned more than once in print, clubs falling under multi topics received extra mini-copy coverage with each black lined group of pictures. away games and crowded bleachers with Lllllllg Spllll lllghy the SCA gO1StUdQn,lS home turn outs. Wrapped up in a soap DQPPY- Splut Wgek Solved pepms- ridding task, lanet Burke washes out Sophomore-S ballled with UPpf3fCla55men paula Grimmfs Soap lame,-ed hair. 'over hall signs. Spirit festivities ended with an after game sock hop. Ted Vanko trots around dance floor with umbrella partner. Cheerleader alternates, Carrie Wittie, Denise Butler, and Eileen McCoy, dress in farmer get-ups. Clubs 65 illllMl'Ellllllll Four move checkmate! Chess clubbers drew up battle plans to capture opponents' pieces. Hidden away in the cafeteria like a group of stowaways, the match makers secretively scrutinize their next move on the boards. As an answer to future hunger pangs, FFA members turned school credits into future farming skills. Sow judging, soil testing, and tractor driving took students off school grounds to on-the-scene neighboring farmlands. Fingers as a sifter, I Alek johnson examines farmland earth for an area Soil Competition. I 66 Competition Imaginative but crude self portraits filled the lobby showcase with bizarre or freaky images of favorite teachers. A few sprigs of hair touch off Miss Vick's primitive self image sketch. Humorously stunned by the elementary illustrations, Susan Harrison stops to inspect worst artist portraits. 5 r 'QQ CD51 School started on August 28, 1975, and so did rivaled competition - big business and all in fun. juniors taunted seniors with class competition success at football pep rallies. Extra curriculars cut, glued, and stuffed the best float at homecoming and teachers poked fun at themselves with Literary Magazine Contest self portraits. PG thinkers moved outside school grounds for competition on the chessboard and with farming skills. All in a bundle, floats, players, finalists, and raindrops came in a green and gold package. Bonneted up, shawled customers, Sharon Holland and Pam Cullipher, ride in a red, white, and blue FBLA float. Eyes agleam, Doug Marshall draws applauding backups to one man Senior Class float. i Sign plastered halls and vicious class competition, sophomores and seniors battled out their rivalries with paper and paint. Reaching high and teetering slightly, Craig Pelter perches on senior shoulder support to add to front hall competition signs. All out sophs pack together on football bleachers to out scream juniors and seniors. Bn xl' 55323 4' ,qos t, P . 5 is I if-5 M . Ji. , ,rriwyj ,sr 'xt . 'Ji blast K-I . Competition 67 68 Free FREE! Generous school board funds cut scholar's subscription prices out completely. Circulation boomed and novice journalists rewarded readers by turning out more frequent editions. Lunch time wind-up includes an apple and a spot glance at Ye Royal Scribe for Doug Marshall. 99 B100 'lO0'Z, discount. A PG first marked by Royal Scribe handouts added to the raft of free activities. Compulsorily attended Band and Choir concerts and the annual foreign language dance completed the list. Student freebees didn't pick up dance attendance but paper circulation boomed. Whether or not free activities would linger, the '76 giveaways made it easy on deflated pockets. war. K 3 Y , ' V' M-A V3K'n.,,,1, 55,1 hw Any kind of music from ragtime to rock fit the repertoire of PG's music buffs' annual concert drew note lovers from the area to an evening worth of melodies. Captive assembly goers cheered on costume twirlers majorette reindeer as Santa rode in. Pam jones, Dianne Vanko, and Tammy Massey help Santa deal out Christmas give-aways. Poured into Foreign tradition melting pot, eclairs, sauerkraut, and tacos fabricated a midget United Nations out of the Foreign Language Dance. Language clubs entertain with native Ft. Lee Officers Club and civilians, young and old alike, hummed, tapped toes, and snapped fingers to Concert Choir tunes. ' One night engagements at Ft. Lee, Prince r f George junior High School, Walnut Mall, and Prince George County Courthouse completed mini-concert circuit. , xx carols, Incognito, Pere Noel, jimmy Core, stops briefly to adjust his facial additions. Free 69 70 Food Fllllll Ah-h-h, another day. . .Eager customers packed the busy little store in the middle of the first floor hall. It sold about every need, but sweet tooths overruled as candy and gum took the majority. Mike Wise rings up a daily total for an Expression customer. FHA had their finger-licking fun at a Friday afternoon ice cream taste. Pam jones dishes out just-thick-enough ice cream to hungry guest and FHA regular Lorine jones. I It's about time! The tangelos made it. Faculty and students wondered if the stocking fillers would make it for Christmas. All worry ended when the delivery truck pulled into the junior high for a quick unloading and then transfer to high school customers. A heavy load, Bob Laws lugs off full case order to empty out truck. Soup's On. PGHS clubs got it roster of delicacies. Profits checked together and had a food festival. out high for the clubs, attendance From foreign meals to tangelos, consumed numbers and treasuries faculty, students, and residents summed up sizably when snacks singled out food tastes from the took over club get togethers. A Fruit cakes, sauerkraut, tacos and eggnog- u-g-g-h-h. What are foods like that doing in a place like this? The tri-language clubs mixed together neighboring country customs for once-a-year holiday splurge. Unfamiliarity among the foods gave students a don't eat approach, but one taste changed minds. Dragging away from the food potpourri, stuffed partier Bill Richmond inflicts mid air blows on dangling Santa Claus pinata. The cheezy rider made its stop. Place: PGHS. When: A Thursday after school. Original French cheeses: Brie, Roquefort, Pyrennes, Camembert, Saint lulien and Port Salut with bread set the annual occasion on tee. Bought from International Safeway, the strange appearance gave French club members second thoughts. Topped off with refreshments, French gourmets sipped a sweet tasting wine. . .Hi C punch. Picky eaters, Adrian Harmata and jimmy Core, nibble at cheezy opportunity. l.1 Food 71 lllIlES 8 llflilllllllllls Settling themselves down to work with an inkling of fun mixed in, Betas planned fund-raising car wash. Indian summer hit the spot with cut-off jeans and sunshine. leannie Lees, barefoot in the heat, directs cars to wash-up location. Money at hand, sign-ups planned for yearly Beta Club convention. Wrapped up to go, dependables say goodbyes before heading to Roanoke convention site. 72 Rules and Regulations Leadership, scholarship, character and service remained the big four for NHS membership. Advisors kept close watch to insure getting just right students. Firm rules kept many outside. At tapping ceremony, Belinda Ellis voices her views on Leadership. State an oil! One, two, three, you're out! No deserts or extra cookies, girls! You just racked-up your third absence. Suspension for a month! Will all Beta Club members turn in their grades to Mrs. Crichton. Maintain a B average, or else! Not doing the or else, students followed the rules. Criping at first, members finally gave in and obeyed regulations. Eventually, regulations turned to habit. Drill team and majorette weight limits, no purses allowed on trips, and sitting in assigned seats, rule after rule, band members followed orders. Maintain a 3.2 average to stick with Betas, and don't you dare get a 4 in citizenship! Come to the meetings, you can't miss more than three! National Honor Society members couldn't use that A in High Government to bring up a CH in Advanced Math. One semester C could keep you out of NHS. Special clubs meant special rules. And the members followed them, or else . . . The three group show ran through second by second precision for perfection. Strict do's and don'ts kept old time majorettes and band members in lineto show fresh drill team girls the ropes. lust auditioned in the fall, the precision banner carriers sevved up green and gold uniform seams and perfected straight line routines in time for end of the season Hopewell performance. Head A 1' if L, .. .t it it starlette, Pam lones, smiles through dreary weather as rainy homecoming backup for queen coronation as Dwayne Seal's motionless stance assures against any chance for disobeying demerits. Sparse and select, French National Honor Society inductees listed high classed requirements to qualify. Nothing but French A's and better than average in other book subjects singled out French eager beavers. All alone, sole French NHS member Doug Crichton, nibbles on French specialty at member French clubbers cheese tasting spree, Rules and Regulations 73 lliHlllME 74 Nighttime New Beta members in, regulars planned cover dish suppers. Members rushed home and threw together concoctions, jumped back in the car, and backtracked just in time. The yearly bonfire blazed, a week late this year. PC burned the Wave in place of rival Blue Devils, since girl basketball playoffs took cheerleader voices off school grounds before regular bonfire rally. Languages blended together for now traditional foreign language party. A Spanish pinata, French Pere Noel, and a German Christmas tree individualized separate customs. Accent conscious linguists sing out strong on translated Christmas tunes. With another new brainstorm project the FHA planned BIG for October. Future homemakers bundled up and collected for UNICEF. Sandy Turner knocks door- to-door for Bennie's Trailer Court donation. 'Qs-1 meant nighttime catch-ups. Late hours caught up with sleepy-eyed students on the day after. Fun stuff and have to stuff mixed together. A free moment never appeared. When driving by, a lighted school with scattered cars formed the usual sight- Nighttime with PGHS. Fingers crossed, scholars prayed for their long-awaited honor- NHS. The moment finally arrived. Members filed into darkened gym, candles in hand, ready to initiate new friends. For a second year straight, the SCA pushed for after game sockhops and special event dances. Arthur Gilder matches with Sharon Tucker while Luree Wall joins up with Marc Anonsen for a Crimson boogie. Slow time music catches Bill Baldwin and Susan Johnston cheek to chin. A lHlllIllliH Z From student body power, SCA substitute politicians lined up '76 objectives: student rights and entertainment. Plans sprung to life as homecoming, dances, and assemblies filled up PC.'s agenda. Barefooted Connie jones grabs partner, Tony Ricci, onto dance floor for quick rhythmed rock number. Non women libbers showed true colors as developing helpmates. Reliving a past era, they fired olden loaves from colonial days. Gooey fingered Christine Wilson operates home baking FHA bicentennial booth with pioneer formula. Flowering school mistresses delyed into the future by going to Walton Elementary School and serving as student guides on Parent's Night Marm hopefuls listen intently to Cindy Vnencak's word of mouth. ULD lb i3 llll llll Among the PG club lineup ranked the iniriaiees: FFA, FHA, DECA, FBLA, SAE, and SCA. Words of explanation revealed full titles as farmers, homemakers, store keepers, business leaders, teachers, and homeroom reps. Morning announcement mini- words made it easy on administrator's tongues as students learned to use favored initials. 76 lnitial Clubs After weeks with hunt and peck system, budding typists flowered into junior secretaries. Shorthand scribes went through multiple steno pads as FBLA members felt the growing pains of infant tycoons. Sparetime members chip in Spirit Week afternoons for red, white, and blue trimmings of float, framework, in time for patriotic entry. FFA newcomers, Mr. Joyner and Mr. Pearson, held migrant meetings when December explosion rocked the agricultural building foundations. Tom Long hands off tangelo workload to Bob Bennett for truck dismount at temporary PGJHS headquarters. Parade chairman, Cindy Vnencak checks off john Markovsky and Butch Pearson's floatftractor parade position. The concept of supply and demand now meant a grade. Buy and sell. Redecorate. A new store and '75 started off with a bang. DE'ers turned PG'ers into satisfied consumers with candy, jewelry, gum, and comic books. Sales pitch specialist, Cathy Collins, charms Penney's customer into budget blower purchase. initial Clubs 77 78 Yearbook llME The all day, all night workout, staff members stayed on at sponsor Mrs. Collins' house from Friday through Saturday to finish up deadline paperwork. Settled down anywhere at all, Peerage staff members sit down to writing, typing, and headlining tasks. Each to his own, David Israel surveys picture for flaws and Gail Var o searches 1 8 for unknown candid name, as Patty Phoenix types up finalized copy, Time taking summer ad selling days paced yearbook workers for a busy routine. Then, the staff of newcomers started book work with three hot August nights at a trial run workshop. Aside from layout and copy tasks, hidden discount coupons and one-a-day clues gave workers a new idea for their sales campaign. Even everyday meetings couldn't close the gap between deadlines and hours of unfinished work, so staffers loaded up rough drafts, finals, and sleeping gear for an all night fguys til 'l2:O0i slumber workout at sponsor Mrs. Collins'. The February deadline didn't end staff meetings. Proof corrections, a covered dish supper, spring birthdays, bolts, and bumper stickers kept workers wrapped up with yearbook until spring hand outs passed 1976 Peerages out of staff hands to waiting student buyers. Partying staff members took time out from deadline troubles with Christmas and covered dish get togethers. 1975 editor, Charlotte Green passes matches to cold blooded Patty jackson at covered dish gag give out. TV jokes entertain Christmas celebrating staff members at a hot chocolate-apple cider party. ,f'N Weekend study away from home, Virginia High School League classes taught upcoming yearbook trends. Mapping out which way to go, Associate Editor Diana Morris and Headlines Editor Tom Walton puzzle over UVA room number with Mrs. Collins. Runabouts, staff photographers, relied on foot and auto travel for transportation to scattered picture taking locations. Follow up tasks, developing and printing take place in cramped school darkroom as Daryl Spencer hangs Contact sheets out to dry. A quicker drying method, David lsrael takes prints from dryer. - 'Wl-u-.4--- X , As deadlines drew near, staff members filled cafeteria annex tive four copies thick final gets typewriter adjustment from Editor-in-Chieflanice Wettstein in first deadline rush. Saturday regulars, Cheryl England and Luree Wall, scribble down ideas for multi WRAP UP full page write ups. i l l Q . 4 . y tables six days a week. Uncoopera- Yearbook 79 Clubs XX rap Llp eu WRAP UP Green and yellow 'Al-AC buttons worn by members of Teen ln- volvement flashed up and down halls, the motto meaning l am lovable and capable. Eager to help, the group aided teen-agers with awkward problems, Busy FHA members also got involved but with teachers instead of kids. lt started with a special first period dinner, went through an ice cream party, and ended with an early morning workday coffeebreak. In a switch from cars to trains, active Beta Club convention goers bumped their way into an entire cab by themselves. Never before tried yearbook discounts went over with a bang. Coupons for 250 to S l .OO off placed in strange places caused excitement and whispers of Where Can they be? But every Royal hoped to find the biggy. Clues everyday gave helpful hints as to the whereabouts of the free Peerage slip. Between sock and shoe of Dr. George, Steve VVilson found it after hearing It's covered with leather, material, or suede. lt's covering changes from day to day. Another plus for students, free newspapers provided fun reading and the what's happening news. The latest thing on the field, newly formed drill team marchers put it together just in time for the last two games. Paper signs hanging off hall walls eventually got torn down by losing lunior and Senior Classes in the SCA sponsored Spirit VVeek poster contest. Clutteron the floor and people on ladders hindered class changes while traffic directing students only managed to make confusion worse. Each Spirit Week day brought different things to do. Leading it off, Farmers Day fit right in for county students with pig- tails, bib Overalls, and sprigs of hay appearing everywhere. Good humored teachers walked into their rooms to find desks turned around and students staring at the bulletin board instead of the blackboard for Tuesday's Backwards Day. The only teacher to get into the act on 50's Day, Mrs. Rusnak showed up in her high school cheerleadingoutfit. Tongue tied from repeating beat Generals over and over again, Arthur Bradley finally got paid off when he uttered it to Secret VVord person Ronnie Moring. Counts of Royals who wore school colors on Green and Gold Day took up minutes of Fnglish class. The Friday aftere noon pep rally set it all up for the Homecoming excitement that night. gmcerfgjlcexcfs-fr mme:-mlm CLARK8 PRITCHARD and CAROLE LANE FASHIONS - eapfwv ,.,. .. .i,., ' ' 1 Vik-Wim.. Jw' .. , f, W Q lf. 1525+- al , ,LW , -43, Q' ll l' we C AU' V-X X. my , .j 4 + e f l ll A mfg dl, fir NHL -aw, A W 1-494 ,L I 1,35 6 . . ' Y ' mf' ' as ., -X 'XXX 1 59,4 ' 2 o 1 Q'-.x gif ,li ,IKQTQ lf ' 15' - Qg 1155 P'-2.2 ' a Elgli wk , Nm 201 209 Broadway East Broadway Hopewell Hopewell l '15 EW, 3 ,ai W,- A ' Wx f - 1 1 , -, K , . 'L 2 :ll ,,a'r' M V ' , im' :JB Q Q L '? . E, A . , Qsugggg Viz i ,4 -l l V 1 X il w F'l it 82 Ads- 301 South . ff.- X, in t g ' i i gf lit i Qdeh, l IT7 FUDDERFUL 6 miles south of Petersburg at intersection of US 301 and Interstate 95 Family Restaurant Cross and Crescent Room Cocktail Lounge Putting Green Game Room Tennis Kiddie Land Shuffle Board Badminton Olympic Pool grmrewiraerwr 301 south PRINCE GEORGE TEXACO Auto Air Conditioning Major and Minor Repairs 24 hour wrecking service lib is fa ii 'C' 41- Q.. vxz. ,gi Us IT RN U F W., A X it I'-Ll Q ree-re Q di , ,M , 3 Ads-301 South 83 uth O 1: OUR 3 144 N. Sycamore Petersburg Drlveln 1603 Boulevard Colonial Heights Vwndow X fftf 4 'La :lf 1.24 1 w 5 84 Ads-3015 th 3002 Boulevard Colonial Heights vwim Walnut Mall 208 Ave. . H 0 M E Sl C K 7 EMR DEN NY'S WESTERN STEAKS 2563 South Crater Road - Petersburg Wi? 3199 South Crater Road Petersburg Vnrgnma 733 0369 It 1. ww ' 3 T ,eele ,- sill ? We CARE About Our Customers HOURS Tues. Wed. Thurs. - 10:00- Monday Friday -10:00-9:00 Saturday - 10:00 to 5:30 Ads east washington giigiii 55352 6 MU N FO RD'S TV 41 North Crater Road SCHVVALM REAL ESTATE E? 'T 1 -E E '1'i'fI,-. , 1 2 0 T : f 5egs:e:sa:e:s:e Q Q f:-:- , ::::Q:S:fT:Z:E: I T 4 '::g:g:g:gg:g:::5: . T : : :E 1' T ff7TfT4 - E -s -.5 '- 2336 E. Washington St. where clients send friends foperated by 4 old retired Sgts. and a housewifej E iW hingto St 2228 E. Wash'ngtor1 WK E'p Eff , 2 Wqfre count Q T PETERSBUR MACHINES sifzstifzlsiawad TOMMY'S 21 31 STEAK HOUSE E. VVaSh M A A Q09 QIJIEQLABLBBT ington Street E4 I' E3 U.: 88 Ads - East Washington St. tg do a companson with our leading competitors. Volkswaggt The car that sent Detroit back to the drawing board. The '75 Rabbit is the winner of Road 81 Track Magazine's '75 Com- parison Road Test. RUM, Though small on the out- side the Rabbit has as much head and room as some mid-size cars. More luggage space, with the rear seat folded down, than a Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham. Plus a hatchback at no extra' charge. All in all it's easy to see why the Rabbit came in first. And not iust by a hare. Luxury without extravagance. In the Dasher, according to Guide to Car Economy, . . . VW has achieved al- DU5h9 most the unheard of- excellent performance, fuel economy and driveability . . . What's truly remarkable is that Dasher is a family car lavailable as a 5-seater family sedan or as a 4-door wagonl with plenty of room and comfort. Throughout the interior, there is evidence of careful, if not lavish attention to finish detail . . . , says Care! Driver. Dasher, in short, gives you both luxury and economy. Why settle for the best of one world when you can have the best of both? The Hot Car from Volkswagen. Volkswagen's Scirocco was re- cently voted one of the ten best cars for a chang- ing world by the editors of Road 8g Track. Its lines were drawn by Giugiaro, the man designed the Maserati. Not only is it hard for the eye to resist, the sleek wedge styling also cuts through wind resistance. We suggest that you try our Hot Car for yourself. You'll find that it does as well on the road as it did in Road 8' Track. Scirocco Compare the new VWs as a group with anyone else's new cars - All of the new VWs excel when it comes to acceleration. The Rabbit does 0 to 50 in 8.2 seconds, Scirocco in 7.5 and Dasher sedan in 8.6. - Pill of the new VWS get from 35 to 38 mpg hwy, from 23 to 24 in the city. - All have dual diagonal brake circuits so that the driver is protected by a back-up system. - They all have negative steering roll radius for better directional stability in the event ofa front-wheel blowout. - All new VWs have rack-and-pinion steering, front-wheel drive, and a unique rear axle design for superior handling. - All have sloping hoods and large glass areas for maximum visibility. Our best engineers started working on the new Volks- wagens over five years ago. A fact which explains the differ- ence between Volkswagen's Cars of the Future and everybody else's. You can drive ours today. ,,,,L,smE,, on ,im 75 EPA Buyers Guide east washington Unfortunately there's.no comporlson. Competitors YOU'LL Fll'ID H I X MIUQIID I IIIM c.1tSI:QQQ,i2E!?,E!5l! Ef'f STURE Herefs I Something For A LOANER UNION FINANCE 5 North Sycamore St. Petersburg 1007 B I d Feel F 400 0 Q, 0 ' ,QFESQQSPSRQQ A Xe' 00 'GO 69f5AQ9 Q9 I Witl7llll QQ Q I X I Q A PENNY SAVED IS A PENNY EARNED L+ INTEQESTJ Vlfgllllil Mutual SAIIINGS AND LOAN ASSOClA'I:ION 4 SERVING VIRGINIA SINCE 1588 . HH! 2 2 2 QJLJLELQ 2 2 SUB 2 2,2 2 ! QMSHQJBQ ' A'1WN AAAMM A'EAAA1A AAAA AN N EA AAAANA : EE 'E ' . I ,.,,, '''22525'Z4'I'''1E3E?fi42555if:::W5f:f5:f5i3f5' A VA Z5IfiIE?EEEEIQ51:'fQ?Iff?ff':EE55f:'TE ' , , 'I -f-gfgfglli Atmmggjgftetheg ,- . A2f2A .' East Bank and Second Streets PETERSBURG INSURANCE 106 West Tabb Street 732-3012 IPB YUI BUUBPBU? on shoes from CE I I I I STANDARDIAMES downtown and the mall ,ian LY! ' :r?f.zR ,f. 1' -, '7 ' X f'.', :.:krT1-... fw? ,,.a-'CQL r 'W- i , E I ' 'ww ,.,. IiEIIIIIllif IHEII s 92 Ads - Downtown Petersburg EXEHELQJWU WE VE ANY HOME fur FIRST FEDERAL Savlngs 84 Loan North Sycamore Street Coloma! Heights Walnut Hull g0 coverage 7 days a week Ad D l Pt b 'I4 I , I w ,,,, S 55 1 ' Th V L I . Aga . . 1 8 Z V n Q Z .I , , A I V I V I t of ky '-3 .7 -nm I W ' 1 , , -.'W.-V . Q V is tiff 'f H ABI., 1 i .BK K i if 543. k f FW effig y, a E 59 ' xi -,Mm QF 'f ww ji Ei ' X 'QA Fw 'I WRX X bf- .fad X w g? iw SX UL y' We 3 Q 'S f J 1 link 3 XX cf B 3 3 2 MM W1 'si 1 5X I hh, '- L I ,C J' Wx' X 5+ L ww' at ff N f 'i f L jf 3 H i 5? 3 5 wr Y X2 f f-.e WOOD STONY CREEK We eau pieee IIUQICIIIIBI' Z 11 gf? N X IPP-1? E ,Ef?E:fETi-,5Q. wld .nmX Sl 1oHN CLEMENTS REAL ESTATE CARSON I , Ad ns , o. 3 NRG , , ,331-4 TRIANGLE EXXON Gas - Groceries - Oil US 460 at New Bohemia 732-9064 - - x f, ,Q X ggi f ,' QZN ' f XIX T - 1 ,V CSV 4, f . g! LU' Q ' Y xx l 5 gf fy U ff U 51 f fa f ZW X 13 W fivi? -P'Gg Uptown Downtown WM or wmcd town ,N B Jw S BANK of SOUTHSIDE VA Prince George Carson Rohoic Stony Creek Dinwiddie County jarratt Petersburg 1 Take it from me . . .after all, Why shouldn't I have a vacation, too? You can just leave me Uusr oFF mes. 46081156 ON RTE. 630, at JQUM Q K millilil ls. l'd have lots of room to run and enough friends to keep me company. l'll miss you, but if I can stay at 83 113351 8 l'll be happy. Take my word for K X P9 ,Amr ,T 'Sw f ' ww ww' ' . .f,gQy,.w Q A' : 'S we an 45253 fy, germs 'K Q WRC: 31,6 'vw v: qfjof ,gzip 2 W Nz wx? tw' IA ,Gif-AY fl. 2553-:f':51:f, ' - J 3 sz? .J AIRPO 102 Ads - Prince George PUT TOGEITHER P9 YOUR HOPEI9! Whispering Winds Furniture Route 616 P9 WP YOU AND YOUR CAR IW SEBERA EXXON 84 CUSTARD CORNER Lgzflefamfa EJCBEPQQKBYBQ BRIER'S CUSTOM BUILT CABINETS J,9hn J Balazik if Rt'5'ixUolfr5!2'f'A3 P S X VN A- X FEES 'S , W K' ' ,ii I-AWAY YGUR TRQU LE QSESYWU yiglfcyged I ow C' imfl8 you f bfgfltlie: Country Aire Mobile Estafes , .- . . , . gi -' 1 , 5.-. .I - H w v' sn, N . Ads - Prince George 105 III II IJ EEICEDIIFJ IIL1 IIITREJIEIJIIICHD 910 SUNNYSIDE AVENUE HOPEWELL, VIRGINIA 458-9259 KX COIN ffl S ND LOAN P5 5100 Oaklavvn Boulevard UMM' 541-1901 QW? Foucs You 1, ' I CAN DEPEND ON fIsIvIf5 Q9 QQ 5039395 I S2 I g Q . go QWQQJQ 9 9 Q annum QQ' T3 Y' 1234 OAKLAWN BLVD., HOPEWELL 3... Y E ,ff-'fr m Ads-O kl Bl d Uikl bl d 51 A1 I e NIKE-'xt xhe Xanes at OaX4XaxNn ENG., Ku HopeweXX. Rome 36, vkghx ouxskde me Fork Lee gate. O MQ, ANN EOXNL Ads -Oaklaw n glvd . -'07 Dc Yllll Have an UVERSIZE checking account I 1 . . . thatTluesn't earn a nennu of interest ? ? ? DonNFKay Hardware HAPMUMUEYRQS Barlngl Wire ltVleKi!KlQlblle8I11nT nK1n3LLUJIhI!e l fAt the Circlej 458-3241 NAIIILJUIKIEWI B 0 L T S VIRG I 0 011 x umm DX SM: I I PA ,lx A fr Is S Q 'EIIINGS seven Oo, . , . k 1 ' - V JCOMPLETE BEAUTY SERVICE ' Iilalib UEE EQITFEIE EIEB 'EFWELJ 15th a IGIIIIG Lpeileee C9 Elias Ho ewell d I S Q 15 Ave. an E m t. 458-1213 Q Nights 458-8466 Oil Company grwgggw':'rf2aez5i41r'3icz'm335:5isg'5i:axgsa:vsq:l':aw5ifn'tw'avfle fwsy-f f ,N 5 llfawlllfTi'3ft'l l'fg'l3'lllll'f,li ll til ll ig l will 0 , ,, . ll J' in li 24, Ti I A ll Jil Eailtrillsesrss ll a 1, ,1 1 .v v.-.. , ful ' - 5 iWlZl l'lf,W w rg, tw 4. . vt,-v,',.W 'fxumsuw'-1- . 'lfil 'N T .' W ' Ji ll' 1- 'vlf s, if? iggtiwi ilsfgifiil-lfllligjliilswsfmigil -,Q 2 ig ' Efl- , + is H f if li 4 'f 'Aft' 1 '- ' it rll fl East Hundred Rd. Chester Cavalier Square Hopewell Uwe emi? 800 I'e Central Bank -fgvfrlgsffafzgfggiggg no service charge on checks ' 51A interest gzgiaisirf banking 9 am-6 pm ' Saturday hours 9-1 ' two drive in windows ' convenient locations , 'asziilllii l 231. -T3 'tx 3.- ll, i'aia 2E.i les if 110 Ads -15th Avenue TON'S Square 9- . XS'xM'u. Smsxklk K 'WM 00a 52522223515125955355:51EE?Fi55252T5??55?35EE?9iiEQiifi551E:Ii-SEQTffV93Qi'3313342QFI.EEff'fi?2':Ei'5:iilE41S-55 E32?5221222???S3hIE129f2S2f5PSii:WfE92SfE'E HZ.-Sifiihibiligii IZ3Wliiiiiiiii5553352325554612559'5?i9??f5f:fiifffihiaffiifeEi:IEGIBSESElit5?k?9fE2ZTfik5?1i?5ifE?ZEEEGiZh15ZIS325ZSifEiE5EiiZ22315tFEiiifEiii?IWEEi5i3E53iSEEviI555R!R?iiSEH5Ei5355'9i??i?i?5B!T Qzmissriwil 116 Ads Wrap Up nd: WRAP UP Peerage track team seemed to have covered more miles than the PG Track Team. One word- ADS - explained that sentence To start off yearbook business, ad sales popped up first on the list. The amount of advertisements that we sold determined the number of pages in the yearbook. So every able- bodied person on the staff went out in cars, on foot, or any other way possible to sell as many ads as we could. The yearly selling market changed, but some companies stayed loyal. Out of91 total ads, 72 reappeared from 1975 Peerage, and we had 19 newcomers. Ms. l-lairstyling even called us! For some strange reason, Coach VVoodby's house always ended up in the yearbook somewhere. ln 1974, a real estate ad featured the Beechwood Manor home, in 1975, it made the cover- with all the kids sitting in the back yard, and in 1976, the Briers Cabinets ad focused on the iust remodeled VVoodby kitchen. Starting last year, artwork penetrated the ad section, but '76 artistic ideas flaired and we had more artwork than ever before. Handset lettering allowed professionaletype slogans, and staffers took special care to make upcatchy sayings. Other new Q-itions showed up in a Steven Kent ad, with a special appearance of baseball celebrity, lohnny Gates. Crater Volkswagen had an extra special advertisement, with the first two-page spread ever in PG yearbook history. A new idea emerged to space together grouped ads according to tri-city location, but individuality still integrated company advertisements. Staff group-work helped with ads, but it was Morris and Walton teamwork that really put them all together. Diana drew Q of the ad layouts, while co-partner Tom touched it off with artwork and handset headlines. Together the ad section came to life. Academics Not just three R's, we had nine academic departments to cover. Instead of listing them all out, we chose topics to cover. The same as before, peculiar classroom scenes dominated the section and special activities took the place of pencil and paper studiers. + I gotta make an 'Af this six weeks to exempt that exam! Often heard student quotes went along with academic copy. The first changes in a long time, three new classes, journalism, reading and concert choir, gave us different classroom coverage. The new classes reinforced a hard-to-make- interesting-ACADEMIC+ section. SCOOPING AND PICKING UP favorite dishes, NHS members, Nicki Waitman, Tracy Wiggins, Michelle Villars, and Nancy Fuller, single out foods in buffet line up. SET UP. lan Glass spooks up art room clutter with black light mountings for Halloween Weird Day. ALL IN ONE. Cardboard constructed showcase sets handmade crafts together in a Christmas display. ive 'f hrisi .TOLI LUB DUB, LUB DUB. Advanced Biology studiers, Mike McDonough and Arthur Bradley, test brought-in-from-home blood pressure gauges. Academics 117 118 Books of an ' METAL BOOKCASE. Spirals and texts stack up neatly in Debbie Hathaway's search. GETTING THINGS STRAIGHT, Bobby King renovates schedule lineup before trip to bookstore. uusum I r FROM HEAD TO HAND, Spanish workbook confusion auses Carl Tatem's P . pencil power. RIPPED READING. Martha Edward scans over well used class underlines before novel checkups. X Q-,,,,lNX FULL DECK. One armed Mr. Thomspon fights hallway mobs with single set of out-of-print Advanced Biology texts for last class. he P I u s per Class Book buying and selling cluttered the across-from-the-office hall as the temporary money handlers crowded together for the bookstore line up. Only as a last resort, students doled out money for unused texts. Short supply of biology and driver education hardbacks filled up morning announcement time searching for possible donors. Messy lockers soon appeared as fallen pages and torn covers from fourth time around editions made their final run. Frequent visits during classtirne by forgetful caretakers resulted from can I go to my locker for a minute- it's right down the hall! Paperback frenzy hit PG full time when it seemed like every class required workbooks. Started two years back, English and history levels subbed multiple paperbacks for traditional hard covers. Now, paper mania gained control in the form of first year workbooks, added English novels, and full-fledged texts. Even though it helped out on skimpy, beginning-of-the-year funds and weak arms before locker keys appeared, extra editions and one-for- each-class workbooks, instead, made it harder to keep straight what Went with which class for which period. HISTORY HEIGHT. Civil War map tops paperback pile, while Reather Bey studies seceding states standing. Books 119 PULLED STRAIGHT. Denise Pugh swishes last coat of shellac across hand-made paper beads. NO ELBOW ROOM, Mary Kirkendall dresses up plain cookie jars with unruly ribbon. More than just alot of Memory Work All right class, cler your desks. All you need is paper and pencil. Typical classes called for typical equipment, but what about a request like, for class today, you need a bunsen burner and two 5 pieces of glass tubing. A little out of the ordinary, specialized materials and tools replaced paraphernalia. Before the real run through, teachers talked through the tool operating tactics. Off to themselves, designers individually worked on creative 120 Equipment assignments. Not confined to their seats, they moved freely around the classroom working on daily chores. Mr. McLaughlin floated to and from confused architects to decipher complicated orthographic constructions. An unplanned explosion of the shop almost finished off semester credits, but a temporary shift to the junior high saved waylaid projects. Cut and sanded handcrafts gave shop students something to show off and know-how for future workings. STIR IT UP. Eric Williamson mixes strangely named chemicals together to form a just right solution. HOLDING TIGHT, Kenny Baxley pencils in final dimensions with corrective equipment nearby. PENNED IN with work, Ronnie Moring figures out a weighty chemistry problem using new metric terms. TRIPLE PRACTICE TEAM, Debbie Baldwin, Ron Anderson, and Greg Robinson, measure off second time through physics' lab puzzler for centimeter total average. Equipment 121 HEAD BENT, pencil moving Kathy Browning gives full force concentration to straight edging graph lines. TAKE OFF! In a forward lunge, basketball pusher, Beatrice Starks, oversteps legal foul line territory during before class free time. 122 Money ALL SMILES, Kathy Tillison places an over HAND OUT. With the promise of the counter order for quilted home ec repayment Teresa Pardoe borrows iust material. enough sheets from Karen Harrison to last through class. Where'cl it All o? ffl., ff. ff -9 K SL lv , V. ' K c ,4 il en TAP, TAP, TAP. Sounds of punched keys ring through PG courthouse as COE pro Cassie jefferson deals out county money. MUDDLING THROUGH left over change, Larry Hardy cashes in 15a for an afterschool stomach saver. Familiar first day sounds of money clinking against just bought locker keys silenced as the day dragged on. Time rolled by and you needed more and more money for school supplies. Suddenly that long wanted Elton lohn tape turned into gym clothes and you caught yourself ordering a small pizza instead of the large one. Maybe your parents gave you a small sum to get started with, but it probably carried you only as far as a pack of typing paper and enough material to sew your first dress in Home Ec. Then it's back to sacrificing one or two football games just so you can have a place to keep that valuable gym suit and to buy more typing erasers. COVER UP. Masks, gloves and aprons offer Disputana workers, james Gilchrist and Philip Cole, shielding from flying sparks of Mr. Bernardo's trial run welding yo . Money 123 An Awful Lot of R cket STICKY FINGERED Debbie Boisseau rubs off glue overload in finished collage clean up. TURNED ON TO Q-94, Mr. MCLaughlin'S music maker blares out today's favorites for mechanical drawing classes. - V n FOLLOW YOUR NOSE. Eric Williamson corners drafting sheets before tackling houseplan blueprint. CLEAR OUT! Sighs of relief signal Kathy Cl0ud's and Kris Shelor's dash for the locker room. Ghouls and goblins danced through the halls in fluorescent paints from head to toe. Then the season to be jolly came about to change the pace. Students asked themselves, ls that popcorn I smell? Colorful Kernels popped away as art classes decorated their Christmas tree. Locker room gossip and horseplay to the rhythmic 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 with additional moans became routine. WNSIIES blOWlf1S, Cl3DS, and ll-WPS themselves in Mechanical Drawing. pushed teams to victory. Winners Whaqkg from the guy next to you boasted while losers ran extra laps. with a T-square occurred quite often Happy homemakers, students tried and that bruise proved it, themselves at married life. Laughter and conversation filled Demonstrations from PG fire the air as common sounds of pencil department added fire safety to sharpeners, crumbling paper, and classroom learning. Women rattling heaters went unheard. To liberated, men tried cooking, relax and create a mood to work was sewing, and diaper changing. the idea of those classes but then As radios played and rulers tapped again where else could you get away to the beat, students found with so much? GIANT STEPPER, Guy Gray, returns to earth after stretching for an awkward volleyball return. ROLLING ROUND. Upcoming chefs, Terry Coleman and Roy Pugh, smooth out cookie dough during a Family Living baking session. Noise 125 INCHES TO CENTIMETERS. Mr. Cummings measures up Marion Hill to metric standards for Aerospace project opener. HEAD TO HEAD with Ducane filmstrip projector, Ronnie Wilson lends an ear to tape deck half of reading center machine. w' R get RC 126 FirstYearCIasses Trial g ,W ,K 4. 'W 4 A ,, 'wav' HAMMERING DUET. Workmen busy themselves with new reading room apparatus. STEADY FINGERS, Barbara Brockwell scratches off headline lettering for nevsisy tit e. 515.55 E kinks 3 I f :if CURIOSITY PURSUERS, Greg Brown VYRAPPING IT ALL UP, Doug Crichton and jimmy Dixon probe for metric gives Ye Royal Scribe a final going over. neck estimates. X .Q .Q , . ,ff S 'E , Something new to sing about. Tryouts, rehearsals, and concerts challenged first-time concert choir members. From a spring selection, tested voices filled in second period schedule slot for one voice harmony. A new boost for the old three R's. Shadow scoops, T-matics, and Ducane film strips brightened up regular stumbling block assignments. Recycled health room went through transformation when contractors erected reading center stations in the midst of the opening week confusion. Encouraged readers profited from one-at-a-time attention when classroom teachers pitched in with reading regular, Mrs. Shields, for double time help. Not expecting to tackle newspaper assignments, extra juniors found themselves in Mrs. Merrix's journalism class. An extra touch to eleventh grade English, newspaper write ups counted one-third of a six weeks grade. A help or hindrance Ye Royal Scribe played a part on some junior grades. 46.5 meters touchdown?!? Metric craze invaded new math books, chemistry blackboards, physics tests, and any place else it could find its way into. Frustrated figure struggling and worn-down pencil erasers made metric haters thankful when feet and inches came back into classroom. HUSHED VOICE SINGER, Daryl Harvey captivates female idolizers. WIDE EYED. Songsters open up for second period choir vocal drill. ' z K 1 First Year Classes 127 All Jumblecl Together WITH CHUBBY CHALK SCRIBBLES, Tammy Henson copies rooftops over her French homework version. ALL THUMBS, Pam Montgomery runs through finger motions for big Hopewell pre-game fanfare. 128 Signs and Symbols BACK TO BASICS. Childhood trait creeps into Ken Phoenix's tricky compass construction for Ms. SouthalI's Geometry class assignment. SOUL SOUND OFF combines his and her voices for quick scale run through. Sian' Open mouth and say a-a-a-al Foreign language authorities scrawled umlauts in German, circumflexes in French, and tildes in Spanish to produce the right word sound, but first or second year amateurs had a much better description. Teachers moaned when scholars replaced official titles for rooftops lcircumflexesl and eyeballs lumlautsj. Three minutes of nothing but scribbles for words. Shorthand saved time and space once minds got all the symbols straight. Write it the way it sounds, 150 brief forms to get down pat, get out your pen and Vs mathematicians waded through sign and symbol interpretations before attacking triangles, trapezoids, and full page equation translations, New texts added contemporary life to usually uninviting problem solving. Geometric shape letter labels now sKp?led out words to replace the old X, , 's. Something extra for '76. Easy credit choir class still drew numbers but the newly programmed concert choir singled out song masters. In a language all its own, songsters singled out notes, dots, flags, and rhythm beats. Moving into big time with the band, concert choir scribble pad, ready for dictation, go. selectees survived auditions for Fort Strange 7 0 monopolized Lee Officer Club, Christmas, and math tests. Unsuspecting spring songfests. WIRED UP for Spanish sounds, Norma Arrington straightens headphones for quick dialog run through. PIECE PICKIN. Tim Reeves and lim Spencer put Germany back together in scarce free time German I class moments. if if . . T ,At Signs and Symbols 129 v if Burnin' the Midnight Oil ALL PROBLEMS ASIDE, a triumphant Taft Kiser closes out last act of Civil War prevention cure. LET HIS FINGERS DO THE WALKING, Gilbert Ruffin picks through library shelves for a narrow-bound Shakesperlre P HY- SCATTERED ACROSS a table, government note cards and books wait for their writer's I'CtUl'l1. GRITTING HER TEETH, Becky Burrow slides papers into place with carbon-smudged fingers. FIVE FINGERS WIDE, eleventh-grade Englisher Susan Dubberly gasps about the What's the one assignment all students dreaded? Term papers. English minded eleventh graders, freed from the trials of Cooper, choked when they discovered five mini-papers took his place. Choosing from a list of American authors, Englishers wondered if they'd gotten off as easy as seniors said. Transforming into history buffs, juniors turned around and pretended to be Presidents, preventing the Civil War. Typing students copied, corrected, and recopied manuscripts. Ten pages plus of typing with foot notes ate up spring days. Seniors, term paper veterans, once more perfected techniques in English and government. Picking a thesis on Shakespeare and stre-e-etching it out to meet page number requirements drove almost grads crazy. After turning English papers in, government papers came next. Keeping up with note cards gave seniors fits, but after weeks of shuffling and rewriting, upperclassmen finished their last major high school hassle. Books read for a paper stayed overdue, causing librarians and other students to panic. Last day final l touches and corrections made tired-eyed vvriters ' slam locker doors, but at I last they could relax. many minis due. SHELLING OUT to a money taking Mrs. Brissette, Pat Nelson hands back tardy government term paper helpers. EARLY BIRD, Carol Foltz picks up extra seconds for second-time-over- manuscript mistakes. Termpapers 131 - WITH NOSES TO THE GRINDSTONE, Mrs. Nichols' first period typing class settles down to finger workout! WET AND WAITING Floyd Brown cues waterlogged band members for two time run through. EXERCISED OUT. Gymnast-clad Kris Shelor survives jumping-jack exhaustion. No such shortcut as straight to the top, PC, students took the long way around - via practice. Band and choir members faced dreaded hours of going over and over the same ole' scales. Not exactly music, foreign language students repeated vowel sounds, A - E - I - O - U. Don't stop, keep typing. Do the drill on page 106. Never a chance to rest, typing students brought speed and accuracy higher each six weeks. Shorthand students took books home to memorize squiggly symbols for a next day's dictation. Team competition and individual glory tempted students in PE. Always out to win, classmates spent extra before classtime practicing shots and skills. Not always a drudgery, practice paid off, but it didn't always make perfect. EARDRUM ECHOES vibrate with second period Concert Choir Christmas exercise. 'fy g My M ., . f ' , x. 'A if M- DECIPHERING after the Dear Sir squiggles, Theresa Mabe and Cassie lefferson figure with shorthand dictations. UP AND OVER GOES Chuck Davis' well needed tie breaking volley for first period PE victors. r M .X l .4 - 1 From the Inside Out LOCK, STOCK, AND BARREL. Game Warden Foster stages one-man-show for all knowing hunters in week long PE bleachers sessions. SOLDlER'S LAWYER, Dale Traylor, calmly runs over war tactics in mind to capsize next colonist victim. TOPPING IT OFF, Regina lames makes ready artificial blaze for amateur fire fighters first rehearsal. POLL PUSHER, Mr. Harry King, leads open handed discussion of money costs for first time election to high government prospective vote casters. FULL STEAM AHEAD, DeDe Wichy and Elma johnson investigate smokey flame killer procedure. . , W I 4m..-, - ' '-16414-aw! AA Not all paper and books filled up tedious, trite class hours. Special speakers, films and real demonstrations seeped in from the outside world through small cracks adding an extra spark to class learning. Snkes frozen in seconds, a six- pack cooled in a minute, blazes snuffed out with a push ofa button. Home Economic girls absorbed fire extinguisher tips from first time class visitors of the Prince George Volunteer Fire Department. Spreading around county talent, PE classes called for first hand gun safety information. Game Warden Garland Foster offered common sense hunting tips to make wary wood roamers a little more aware of the companions hoisted over their shoulders on cold December mornings. Over and over classroom routine turned into worth-the-effort skills when business minded trainees transferred inside practice to the outside world. Secretary bound hopefuls rejoiced over too-often- heard teacher reminders that Mc always follows Mac when you alphabetizeff Whether the outside came in or the inside moved out, scholars delighted that school didn't just exist within four walls. TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS. Mock Boston Massacre judge, Vickie Sanford sizes up colonist lawyer, David lones', cross examination of soldier Randy Taylor. Classroom - Community 135 Academics P 136 Academir s Wrap Up No one fainted at the sight of blood, but students had a lot of hesitation and oohs and aahs, when advanced biologists had to puncture fingers for a required microscopic close-up. Nobody hesitated when junior English takers got to substitute five easy mini-essays instead of the old Cooper-analysis. In fact, no one even missed Cooper at all. Sophomores wished they could have missed the addition of more grammar in English, but instead of getting rid of the boring red book, they just got more piled on. M9fl'iCS piled on, too, at the start of the year in biology and math classes, and nobody ever thought an inch ruler would look so good. Feet and yards came as a total relief. . . One new thing they did see, came as a first to PC. Report card folders - a must for parent signatures - helped ward off the kids who never showed grades to mom and dad. Another first came when PC welcomed reading classes. Machines and teachers helped students who needed individual attention. The art class got attention this year with the repeat of a thing called 5fI'HI1g6 Day - a Halloween surprise of fluorescent paintings, black-lights, and the usual creepy, crawlythings, that art class seemed to make unusual. E Another unusual thing returned - Driver Education in PE classes. Because of last year's unsuccessful try at having it with study halls, people rejoiced to see it back, but switching off every other day made it difficult to remember what to bring where and whether or not to dress out. The return of the Literary Magazine in senior high-English class did not come new, but the appearance of Ye Royal Scribe in junior journalism class came as both new and different. Also, the shop students faced differences, when shop-blow up caused a change of atmosphere from PGI-lS to PGIHS FACULTY' Will QIIUIESUHLMMS' HWUEEIWHEW3 ' ULMFJE3 I like the individual part of my classes. It's more one to one. MRS. DEBORAH SHIELDS Reading Myjunior and senior years in college I delivered newspapers on campus. I had a route ofabout fifty. MRS. ARLENE BARBER General Chemistry, Department Head . . mm' Being a Guidance Counselor M X isn't all 'Hey where am I going to college. ' MR. LES SPRADLIN Guidance Director Ns I . uh ri, Arr NH. Eg. QQ.. vm., Cpu e,.. I QA new Q . Nu 5 Y may hh! NQGATIVE , I0 Afeimo QM '4lw0NS Bgcl H . , k Ei rmnqge .QQQO Sutra! saaume H 03 Saw so Img, H s -11 CWI, NSG Ci., ' B, 3 I Ch' Cy I Qgq' D i 1 QI Faculty 137 STATISTICS if'iElllill.llE' iilillllEE3'l.llit I didn 'I wear braces or glasses. My big problem was that I was skinny - really super skinny, like 98 pounds Clerk Steno II, Clerk Typing ll, COE 138 Faculty - Statistics ff The uniform impressed meg military school impressed me itseli' it was really my only choice. MR. STEPHEN SBORAY Practical and General Chemistry Teaching was my second choice as a career. l wanted to go into government service. MR. IOHN ALLEN Algebra I, Consumer Math, Chess Club soaking wet. MRS. TERRI HEDGEPETH Coordinator, Co-Advisor FBlA lllilFilHlll5l'5U'a5Ui Students can tell whether or not you're prejudiced. MR. IERRY MCLAUGHLIN Mechanical Drawing I and Il iitttit militia-tiwtit ES3ii'liiiliilE'fi3ilDliii l think you can help the vast majority ofpeople in library work. Our key word is service. MRS. EVELYN BRISSETTE Librarian, Audio-Visual Co-ordinator, Student Technicians I had an older sister. So when l was born and people asked my father if they had a boy, he said, 'no, we just had a repeat. ' From that, lgot my nickname Petie. MS. PETIE CORELL Special Education l wanted to get in the army, do my time, andget out. MR. CHIP WASHABAUGH US History Faculty-Statistics 139 STATISTICS lCONT'Dl WIIIIISUEIESWIIIHYI EIHIHlIMIIHlIIU'l.5.XIJ'HXYI I could not find a teaching position when Igot out of college so I worked as a secretary until one came through. MS. SUNATA TILLERY Clerk Typing II, Typing I Young people have rightsg just as adults. MRS. LINDA ISELIN Guidance pa If IW: .ITVA ii'i .I tft'A' glef 140 Faculty - Statistics fc I don't think the normal American Citizen can identify with the government anymore. MR. GALE MATHENY US History, Golf Q Wvorgy' Q3 N' f.'5X.Wl.x The advanta es of militar Iife far 8 V outweigh the disadvantages. MRS. IUNE SCHULTZ Typing I lll3lllllE33'llllHll':lllll'D3ill'llllE ' lllllllllg lt's a challenge dealing with young people. MR. ROGER IONES Government, Department Head When a person becomes 78 other decisions that they have to make like where to go to school and what to pursue as a life career are immediately more important than a ballot in an election. MR. RICHARD PEARSON Natural Resource Management, Agricultural Machinery Service, FFA Usually you're called 2 or 3 times during yourjury duty term and you receive 525 a day. MS. LOUISE THORNTON Government, National Honor Society, Pep Club When l went to court with my brothers it was like something you d see in the movies. MR. EDWARD THOMPSON Biology I and II, Sophomore Class Sponsor Faculty -Statistics 141 HIGH SCHOOL ' N 142 Faculty - High School l3llllEEllll.ElllllEltll ' lll lllli 'gllllllillllllllll I've gotten attached to the school and to the people. MRS. IEAN MELVIN Library Secretary, Bookstore Everything vvas centered around school, that's the way it was. MRS. IUNE HILL My sister lMrs. Taylorj and I hardly ever see each other teaching at the same school, so it doesn't bother us at all. MRS. STUART FLOWERS Clerk Typing, General Business, Co- Advisor FBLA I was very active in high school. I was in National Honor Society, Beta Club, and a varsity cheerleader. MRS. KAY CARWILE English 12, Literary Magazine English II !l.XUS'3UH3lPlElRU53HtMlM 'WIIAUHSHWI WSIMEHK I would go down there every day 4th period when I had studyhallg his secretary would go to lunch, and I would answer the phone and type junk for Dr. George. MRS. BERNADINE ANDERSON Office Secretary When I was in high school you weren't allowed to wear pantsuitsf' MS. BARBARA SOUTHALL Geometry, Consumer Math, junior Class Sponsor :::::5S5E2r555555if2 . z:.:::::::::f:::::gS5::- iiE5E5Sf?5f5555f55553-I . , , eh M, S -S f . .mf , 7 wr ' ' 'fiuvzya QQTWQ y V 7 , , ,-w , ...Novi ,,-glarkdgj , Wayne and I couldn't stand each other in high school. I was voted best couple with another guy. MRS. GRETA COLUNS U.S. History, Yearbook, Varsity Cheerleaders Faculty- High School 143 ly. Y 7, J , I nl, I l K, It v ,, V I 1 IL, ' x I . N-,ill Q' xy, X , ii'V'l lAlS l ima t if I, I my fl UNK l x MARITAL STATUS llllllllllll Slllllllllll. lllllllllllllllltllllglllll ' X ii . srefl' I , fp 2 1' ' . I J I IX 5 I X l Y K , I Ifilpf I . I ,ix I x , 'gl ,X , 1 ,-L, V, Blu I like living without a roommate because I can make my messes when I want and clean them up when l want. MS. BETSY PRESTON Guidance 144 Faculty - Marital Status Our one year old already knows how to throw a ball. MR. ROLF MCDANIEL Math 9, Algebra 11, Head Basketball He was out in the Cow barn with my father and he asked could he marry me. MRS. EVELYN HAWKINS Biology I, Modern Biology I spend time with my children but listening to them makes the big di fference. MR. TOM ASTIN English 10, Teen Involvement YFGEHIAXUHWES' tELtiHllB1RtElil' li.XtElh'iEtttEt Marriage is an institution Created by women so they don't have to support x17srff5afigsN1AK We want to wait awhile to have English 10 11 children so my wife and I can do the ' things we want to do. MR. EDWIN HASTINGS Distributive Education, DECA i i I toss the football around with Mike For many years l've been teaching it 1 fsonj. Really, he's interested in any the second generation, children of 'V E 1 1 1 sport that holds his attention span. children l taught. lcall them my ' fgt MR- BILL WOODBY grandchildren. A f' ' .1 Q Physical and Drivers Education, Head MRS, RUTH SWINEFORD ff Football English 12, Department Head Faculty - Marital Status 'I45 FOOD WIDE ' llllllllllll ' EIHHIIESE ' llllllll' My husband goes hunting, I do too, and we fix the deer meat together. MRS. PATRICIA ALLIN Physical and Driver Education, Health, Varsity Softball V gxm In my refrigerator all I really have is junk! MR. IOHN IOYNER Natural Resource Management, Agricultural Machinery Service, FFA I like to experiment with recipes. MRS. VICTORIA SPANIOL German I, Il, III, German Club I love to eat! I MRS. CONNIE COOPER Guidance Secretary tv. fx ii R 'I46 Faculty -Food lllllllll Lili EGGS ' lllllrllgllilll ' Iillliili On my honeymoon in Mexico City, l ate a lot oflviexican food and it was really hot! MRS. BARBARA KERKHOFF Spanish I, II, Ill, Spanish Club A dinner without wine is like a day without sunshine. MRS. ANNE RUSMISELL French I, II, Ill, IV, Department Head, French Club, French Honor Society l'm a baker. MRS. MARY THOMPSON Home Economics, FHA ei Faculty - Food 147 FAVORITES ii liitiilui - itii..iiiiiiii.iiiiiiii hlllllllll' 148 Faculty - Favorites I still followed the Redskins all the time, and this was all the time they used to lose ALL the time. MS. RUTH HOLDREN Physical and Drivers Education, Health, Girl's Basketball My dog's name is Pookey. For six months wejust Called him 'Dog.'All my pets are named like that - with strange words. MS. CAROLYN PITTMAN Librarian, Library Assistants . . . and l'm a push-over for babies, Every time I see a new one, I want one too. MRS. MARIORIE CRICHTON English 11, Beta Club I like Maude and Rhoda. Anything Norman Lear does, I love. MS. CAROLE VICK English 12, Senior Class mimi ilti - iiltiisu - ittiixviviii - timitt Sometimes I think we spend as much time in the duck blinds, as we do in school. MR. BOBBY SWINEFORD Physical and Drivers Education, Assistant Football Everyone's sad because they want a new school. But I love old schools. I took biology in this room . . . art MRS. MARCIA CHAIRKY Art, Art Club After a chicken, I had two goldfish. One died, and the other one jumped out of the bowl. My mother thought it was a roach and stepped on it. MS. AUDREY TALLEY English 10 X 4l I get a big kick out ofjust going to a restaurant and checking it out. . . MR. WILLIAM BAILEY Band, Band Concert, Marching Band, Drill Team Faculty -Favorites 149 STYLES llllllm Slllllllllli ' Sllllllllillll. llllllllll' l've never been known for being dapper anywa y. MR. MICHAEL CUMMINGS Aerospace, Assistant Track l'm not a real pokey sewer. W MRS. CINDY MERRIX English 11, Newspaper l wear earth shoes because I like to lean backwards. MR. LEON DARBY Advanced Math, Algebra II, Geometry 150 Faculty - Styles MLLJ4 .i fl .1 ' M-11 New 'L- ',,.i 9', , wifi? Zfnijfl' -'5 ' ' I love working with people MRS. DeCARLO SMITH Special Education QUEENS iEiMPJlliE'EVSiE1lNiiiiWi3ii'UHE MRS. ANNE TAYLOR Biology I, SAE I cling to jeans around home quite often. MRS. INELL MOODY Business Law, Bookkeeping I just like things l'm comfortable in. MRS. IANINE BRIGGS Choir I, Concert Choir My husband brought the water bed home so I couldn't take it back. Ficulty - Styles 151 OCCUPATIDNISPARETIME From january to December, I 'd rather hunt than eat. MR. WAYNE COLLINS Drivers Education, Assistant Football, Varsity Baseball, Monogram Club I love to cook, I love to sew, I do all kinds of needle work, and I LIKE to eat! MRS. ELLEN RUSNAK US History, World History 152 Faculty - Occupati0n!Sparetime UEIIIIIIHS ' IEHSWIIIIE ' IIIIEIIHIEIII ' I enjoy reading and traveling. MS. RUTH MARTIN Typing I, II, Steno Block I, Deoartment Head 4-I I hunt deer. . .squirrel. . . birds . . .anythinglcan find to shootat. MR. WALTER WELLS US Government, Athletic Business Manager IIISIWIIII ' WISH ' gllllllilllhllilllg I enjoy helping the students learn to cope with the outside world. MR. ROBERT COATES Special Education Co-ordinator Prince George has a great school system. I enjoy the teaching MR. GEORGE DAVIS English 10, World Geography f 53 personnel and most of the students. R . 5 As long as I can pick up a book and read, I'm happy. MRS. DONNA NICHOLS Typing I, Steno Block I Cooking meat is one of my biggest hobbies. The only thing I won't eat is an opossum. MR. REX MCBARNES Calulus, Physics, Advanced Math, SCA Faculty - OccupationISparelime 153 BEFORE PG Sfilillllll. lllllXlill1J'lli3HDlEHlW WESHWJEWUS l've never taught anywhere else but Prince George. DR. THOMAS GEORGE Principal I just love that football. lmiss coaching. In the ten years l've been here I don 't remember missing a football game. MR. EDWARD ROCKWELL Assistant Principal, Athletic Director l think the Prince George- Hopewell rivalry peaked in 1969 when there was a tie football game. lt's been that way ever since. MR. IOHN P. TILLER Assistant Principal PRINCE GEORGE SCHOOL BOARD Mr. Melvin Lilley, Mr. Willie Vargo, Mr. Park Lemond, Mrs. Elsie Harrison, Mr. Bud Smelley. 154 Administration - School Board t! '11- IPJIE ECIIXIIS EIIIEIWEIIH UEIMISIHIEIIS I miss being close to the students, I'm not in a school with them all the time. DR. IAMES ROOKS Superintendent of Schools There 's a lot of unexpected things I have to deal with, but that's the type of thing I like. MR. THOMAS NICHOLS Director of Transportation Q When we go to Colonial Heights-Prince George games, my wife and kids sit on one side and I sit with Prince George. MR. BURTON ALEXANDER Director of Instruction I think that children live in a world all their own until they get up to about the fourth grade, and then they begin to see out. MRS. VIRGINIA THOMAS Clerk to the School Board Administration - School Board 155 x fltlfl?tllTllWRAP UP Trial run student teachers tried their hand at running classes filled with noisy Royals while Mr. Tiller adjusted to first time PG iob routine, New additions found their place and long time lecturers went bac k to school to earn more degrees. Also taking a c lass, but not academic, Mr. VVashabaugh learned some- thing different in a special bricklaying course. Everyone seemed to have a favorite. Tiring trips back and forth from c lassroom to car caught Mrs, Hawkins Carrying arm- loacls of her beloved plants. After school sparetime for Mr. Cummings meant running until his legs wore out. Small cars made a space saying hit with Miss Vick, Mrs. Holdren, and Mr. Lesniak when it came to early morning parking. The original idea of a '76 Peerage faculty poll brought out other unknown teacher best liked things. Surprisingly, steak came in second to seafood under most loved foods. After a filling seafood dinner the preferred dessert of pie beat out cake, Unbelievable poll results had instructors choosing blue instead of PC green as the main desired color. Other ciuestionaire outcomes indicated that women under 40 made up the maiority of the staff and enjoyed wearing pants rather than dresses butngtjeang, A 'TOOWQ no included fondness of hard roc k, engagement, cadillac owning, and Aries born lac ulty members of the 82556, returned ciuestionaires. Family happenings had everyone on their toes to keep up with the latest news, Top man, Dr. George, got it going when his daughter turned senior at HHS. Increasing size of house- holds, Mrs. Hedgepeth added a new baby to her home while Mr. Matheny gained not only a wife, but her sister Mrs. Rusnak as well. After tracking down Mrs. Crichton for his afternoon ride home, son Doug often had to wait for long teacher conferences to finish up. During class all seemed normal as Doug raised his hand and asked formally, Mrs. Crichton, how did you spell that word? Frenlied rushes of Royals mobbed famed Philadelphia Phillies player and PC grad lohnny Oates during his occasional visits as a substitute-student coach. One year fill in from Taiwan, Mrs. Spaniol taught German I, Il, and Ill classes their daily lessons. IX, DOUG IONES Football Rookie, Sideline Waiting, Team Booster, SUSAN IOHNSTON Clarinet Play Off, Christmas Band Concert. LISA CORMAN Roll Call, Basketball Hello, Knee Slap Beat, SONIA PETTAWAY Ice Cream Maker Apparatus, Blade Licking, Drip, Drip, Drip. TOM LONG and BOB BENNETT Tangelo Hand Off, Unloading Christmas Fruit, FFA Fund Raiser. MATT WALL and IEFF SMELLY Chico and the Man, Literary Magazine Contest, Intercom Crack Up. PATTY PHOENIX Dorito Munchg Powderpuff Party, Cafeteria Crowd, luniorsfSeniors. ROYAL RAID Premiere Pep Rally Skit, Squirt the Devilsg Ronnie Moring in Disguise. MARK ESPOSITO Class President, Bleacher Meeting, Senior Privileges, Turn It Over to Dr, George, 3 Minutes Early. CHEERLEADERS Pep Rally Finaleg 4 Poster Alma Materp Down Through the Years. BRUNSWICK STEW Boiling Hours 8g Stir Every Now and Then, Lee Park, lunior Money Raiser. BECKY IONES Follow Routine, Football Twirlingg Fishnet Stockings, Sequined Midriff. CARLTON MATHEVVS and RANDY TAYLOR Step Up 1, 2, 3, Christmas Carolsg Student Audience, Robed Up. IOHNNY CLEMENTS Homecoming Sock Hop, lam Packedg Levi Attirep Victory Celebration. ONE MAN SHOW. Edie Fletcher reports to homecoming chairman, Cindy Vnencak with no one came confusion. Rearranging student pictures and squeezing in senior stats, we figured with the too familiar problem of fitting in an overload of rnugshots. Picture upon picture, we broke up the rows of faces with frequent candid shots. +A columned pattern lined mugshots up in a never-used-before design. Distinctive students and single events replaced the typical class trip articles in copy and candids. A change for the better, CLASSES+ copy bars and fresh photo ideas intruded on the once monotonous mugshot section. Classes Classes 157 HOLLY DEBORAH ACRE GREGORY ALEXANDER ALLEN MICHAEL ALPHONSO ALLEN FFA 3, 4, Library Assistant 4, 5, Track 3, Basketball Co-Captain 1, 2, 3. RICHARD LINWOOD ALLEN ROBERT LEE ALLEN Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, All Tri-City 4, All District 4. JEFFREY HENRY ANDERSON RONALD LEE ANDERSON Transfer: Carroll High School, Ozark, Alabama, Literary Magazine 5, National Honor Society 47 FBLA 5. DONALD lOSEPH ANDOLINA KEYS, COAT, AND BOOKS tucked in, Spirit Week farmer, Debbie Horsfall, leaves school hours behind. Bobbie socks, pigtails, and crew cuts. No, not a Fifties Day, but, 1964, first grade. Scared and uncertain, from the first we shared many of the same problems. Staggering, we somehow managed to stay herded together until the seventh grade. Divided between Walton and Beazley, our efforts to defeat each other in football somewhat split us spiritwise, yet we never lacked our common bond as neighbors and friends. Shags, jeans, and long hair. No, not a hippie commune, but, August 28, 1975, our first day as seniors. We shared feelings of senior pride, panic at term paper deadline, uncertainty of Biology ll, and confusion of Shakespearean dialogue. Twelve years at Prince George had taught us every nook and cranny. From the first day of the first grade when we walked into the strange room, we saw 25 pair of tear- filled eyes. Never did it occur to us that we would see those same eyes filled once more with tears on graduation night. ,,-- Lf' A SLY REMARK to Dorothy Fields turns classroom heads toward Kenneth Epps in annex DEBRA ANN BALDWIN Copy Editor 23 FHA 5, Reporter 43 Newspaper 23 SCA Representative 2. CHARLIE EARL BALL IOHN STEPHEN BANIK Art Club 43 Chess Club 4,5. KAREN FAYE BANNISTER Band 1, 23 Pep Band 1, 23 Choir1, 23 FBLA 43 Library Assistant 1, 2, 43 German Club 43 Pep Club 1, 2. VON DA MARIE BASS Concert Choir 5. IUDY EILEEN BFITZEL Art 4, 53 Ch0ir'l, 23 FHA 4, 53 GirI's Basketball 13 Powderpuff 4. SHERYLE ANN BENESEK Choir1, 33 Christian Ed. Club 33 Pep Club 33 SCA Representative 1, 2, Alternate 33 Powderpuff 4. PAMELA IEAN BISHOP Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 53 Beta Club 1, 23 Christian Ed. Club 53 Pep Club 53 SCA Representative 3, 5. OTIS BLIZZARD Art 53 FFA 3, 4, 5. JEFFREY WAYNE BOLANDER FBLA 53 SAE 3, 5, Vice-President 43 Pep Club 43 Spanish Club 4, 5, SCA Representative 53 Cross Country 4, 53 Track 3, 4, 53 Voice of Democracy 4, 5. ARTHUR LEE BRADLEY CURTIS RALPH BRIGMAN Spanish Club 4, 53 FBLA 5. GARFIELD LEONARD BROOKS, IR. FBLA 53 FFA 1, 2, 3, 43 Baseball 13 Football 4, 53 Track 23 Powderpuff Coach 5. FLOYD MELVIN BROWN Band 1, 2, 33 Drum Major 4, 53 Council Member 2, 4, 53 Pep Band 2, 3, 4, 53 Class Vice-President 3, President 43 SCA President 5. GREGORY PHILIP BROWN Transfer: Central Hovver High School, Akron, Ohio. MELVIN IUNIUS BROWN FFA 53 Library Assistant 4, 53 Basketball 1, 2, 33 Track 3, 4, 5. THOMAS ANTHONY BROWNING Transfer: Colonial Heights High School3 Colonial Heights, Virginia, Beta Club 53 FBLA 53 German Club 53 Literary Magazine 53 National Honor Society 4, 5. Class of 76 159 TYRONE LEROY BULLOCK Newspaper 4, 5, Football 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain 5, All Tri-City 4, Track 1, 2, 3, 5, Co-Captain 4. DEBORAH IEAN BURKE FBLA 4, 5, Guidance Assistance 2, COE 5. JANET LOUISE BURKE Beta Club 4, 5, Class Treasurer 4, 5, FBLA 4, Guidance Assistant 1, 2, Pep Club 4, 5, SCA Representative 2, Cheerleader 1, 3, Head 2, Assistant-Head, Secretary-Treasurer 4, Head 5, National Honor Society 5. KATHERINE SUE BURROW Band 1, 2, 3, FBLA 5, Vice-President 4, Guidance Assistant 2, SCA Representative 1, 2, 3, COE 5. RAY LEON BUTTS FFA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Baseball 2, Football 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain 5, Track 4, 5. DEBRA ANN BZDEK Majorette 2, Princette 3, 4, Drill Team 5, SCA Representative 3, Alternate 4, Guidance Assistant 4, 5. LORAINE GAYLE CAIN Art Club 2, FBLA 5, FHA President 1, Vice-President 2, Paramedical Club 3, SCA Representative 3. MARILYN LOUISE CARROLL Class President 3, Vice-President 5, Secretary 2, FBLA 5, Beta Club 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, National Honor Society 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, SCA Representative 1, 3, Secretary-Treasurer 2, Girl's Basketball Co-Captain 2, Guidance Assistant 2, Homecoming Attendant 3, Powderpuff 4. PATSY KAY CASSELL Transfer: Northwest High School, Clarksville, Tennessee, Annual Secretary 5, Beta Club 4, 5, Concert Choir 5, Class Secretary 5, FBLA 4, National Honor Society 5. ANN LOUISE CATHRALL Transfer: Petersburg High School, Petersburg, Virginia. ANNA VICKTORIA CIMO FBLA 4, 5, SCA Alternate 3, Office Assistant 1. LEOLA CLAIBORNE FBLA Secretary 3, SAE 3, Povvderpuff 4, 5, Drama 1. 160 Seniors IN THE SPIRIT OF THINGS. Frank Hughes snatches notebook for next class from sticker-spangled bicentennial locker A PUNCH of '76 boosts powerful seniors. EAGLE EMBROIDERED shirt stitches out Venita Weaver's country pride. WAYNE ANTHONY CLARK Art Club 4, FBLA 4, FFA 1, 2, 3, 5, Office Assistant 2. BARRY ARTHUR CLEMENTS Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA Class Treasurer 4. WILLIAM TOLMAN CLEMENTS FFA Vice- President 4, Track 2, 3. IERRY LEE COLE, IR. FFA 5. JUDY PATRICIA COLE Library Assistant 2, 3, 4. ANDRE LEE COLEMAN KATHY MARIE COLEMAN Library Assistant 4. TERRY LEON COLEMAN Art 1, 2, 3, Vice- President 4, Business Manager 5, Pep Club 5, FHA 5, Cross Country 3, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5, Basketball 1, 2, 3, Tennis Team 5, FBLA 4. CATHY ANN COLLINS Band 1, 2, 3, Chess Club 3, Christian Ed. Club 3, 4, 5, DECA 3, 4, 5, Drama 1, 2, FBLA 5, SCA Representative 1, 2, 3, Alternate 4, Spanish Club 1, 2, SAE 3, 4, 5, DECA Student of the Year, junior Board Member, Eastern Area Vice-President, Bicentennial Chairman 4, Library Assistant 4. COLETTE ANN COOK FBLA 4, 5, Christian Ed. Club 3, 4, 5, SAE 3, 4, 5, French Club 3, 4, 5, Pep Club 5, SCA Alternate 3, Representative 4, 5. IAMES DOUGLAS CORE Chess Club 4, 5, Christian Ed. Club 3, FBLA 5, French Club 4, Treasurer 5, Baseball 3, Cross Country 4, 5, Track 4, 5, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5. WE THE SENIORS of Prince George High School, in order to form a more perfect class, establish Upperclassmen Privileges, insure doministic control over sophomores, provide for the Common defiance, promote the general Pep Rally Spirit, and secure the Blessings of Dr. George to ourselves and no one else, do ordain and establish this Bicentennial class of Prince George High School. Right of 76 Class of 76 161 PEGGY LYNN COTE Art Club 1, SAE 3, Spanish Club 3, FBLA 4. IANICE KAY COX Band 'l, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 4, 5, Pep Band 3, 4, 5. CAROL GALDERISE CRAMER Drama 1, SAE Treasurer 3, Spanish Club 3, SCA Alternate 3, 5. MARK ROBERT CRAMER Deca 4, 5. ADA ELIZABETH CRAWFORD Spanish Club 3, 4, Softball 3, FBLA 4, 5, Drill Team 5, SAE 4. ROBERT LIRETTE CRAWFORD C-EOFFREY LYN CROUCH IV Football 2, Baseball Scorekeeperl SUSAN ELAINE CRUEY Beta Club 'l, 2, Drama 3, 5, FBLA 3, 5, FHA 3, SAE 3, 5, Pep Club 5, SCA Representative1,2. EDWIN CRUZ Transfer: Balboa High School, Balboa, Canal Zone. NORMAN EARLE CRUZ, IR. Transfer: St. Louis High School, Honolulu, Hawaii. DAVID CARL DANIELSON Deca 4, 5. ifr' 1 ,,,.,,,,,..,,.,....-aa-M.f..s. ..wmlMNV .twm-w-,ef -wfX- Aw-w -we-1-Iv-ff-wf 'w f KING OF THE CASTLE, Floyd Brown, heads off opening day assembly. Sophs sat in their rightful As you walk through those places again to hear wooden doors, You can be traditional welcome. Missing assured those hard, wood the familiar put downs by bleachers are yours. Looks Mr. Thomas, an assembly of shock and embarrassment welcome from SCA filled eager sophomore faces. President, Floyd Brown, cut Seniors stood and cheered. rookies. They tolerated a New underclassmen had little laugh here and there, never before been put in but then came the blast. . . their places so well. 162 Seniors IOHN ADOLPH DAVIS, IR. Baseball 4, 5, Football 4, 5. DEBORAH DIANNE DEAN FBLA 4, 5, Office Assistant 2. HAROLD MICHAEL DICK German Club 5, Football 4, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5. WILLIAM LLOYD DICKENS FFA1, 2, 3, President 4, 5, State Farmer 4, Chapter 3, Football 1, Co-Captain 2. CATHERINE FLORES DIEGO Library Assistant 5, FBLA 5. PAMELA IRENE EDDINS Transfer: Henrico High School, Henrico County, Virginia. MARTHA LOUISE EDWARDS French Club 3, 4, 5, Literary Magazine Business Manager 5, SCA Representative 5. ROBERT LEE ELDRIDGE BELINDA KAY ELLIS Christian Ed. Club 3, 4, FBLA 4, 5, FHA 1, Secretary 2, National Honor Society 4, 5, Paramedical Club 4. AVIS MAE EPPS FBLA 5, FFA 3, Spanish Club 2, 3, 5, Powderpuff 5, FFA Queen 3, Concert Choir 5, Talent Search 5, KENNETH RAY EPPS Basketball 2, Choir 3, Concert 5, MARK MARIO ESPOSITO Beta Club 3, 4, Treasurer 5, Class President 5, Literary Magazine 5, National Honor Society 4, 5, Newspaper Layout Editor 4, 5, SCA Representative 4, Football 'l, 2, 3, 4, 5, Powderpuff Coach 4, 5, lunior Marshall 4. ANTHONY RAYBURN FIELDS Art 5, Choir 4. CONSILON FIELDS Choir 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FHA I, 2, 3, 4, 5, Library Assistant 4, 5. DOROTHY MAE FIELDS Choir Secretary 3, FHA 2. ILJLIE OPAL FINLEN IV Cheerleader 2, Choir Memberl, 2. CAROL ANN FOLTZ Transfer: Atwater High School, Atwater, California, Band 4, 5, Powderpuff 4, 5, Tennis Club 5. RONNIE ALEXANDER FORD Art 5, FBLA 5, Basketball 1, 3, 4, 5, All Tri-City 3, FFA 3, 4, 5. IULIE ANN FOWLER Transfer: Karlsruhe American High, Karlsruhe, Germany, Band 4, 5 Pep Band 4, 5. MICHELLE MARIE FREEBERG NANCY IANE FULLER Art 2, 3, 4, 5, Secretary- Treasurer1, Beta Club 3, 4, 5, French Club 4, 5, Guidance Assistant 4, National Honor Society 5. ANN AILEEN GEISELHART Classof 76 'I63 VVhat's Expressions? Curiosity plagued new PG'ers about the unfamiliar sign that popped up in the downstairs hall. Known better as the DE Store, Expressions, stocked with eye catching goodies, gave students time to snack up before tackling first period class. Everything from comic books to stocking caps caused buyers to crowd its tiny insides. Managed entirely by seniors, Expressions gave master DE's a chance to play businessman. Interior decorators, bookkeepers, and shelf stockers all found their places in the Expressions business world. With the idea of a learning experience set aside, the upperclass DE's turned behind- the-counter studies into an open marketplace for PG's big spenders. BRET GERNER Transfer: Denbigh School Newport News, Virginia ARTHUR GILDER Transfer: Hopewell High School, Hopewell, Virginia, Basketball 3, 4, 5 MICHAEL EDWARD GILLIAM IEFFERY LYNN GRAHAM Annual 5, SCA Alternate 1, Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, DECA 3, 5 Reporter 4 BRENDA YVETTE GRAVES FHA 3 GLYNIS TERRILL GRAY French Club 5' SCA Representative 5 SHERYL DENISE GREENE Beta Club 4, 5, Choir 1, 2, 3, Class Secretary 4, FBLA 4, President 5, SAE 4, Vice-President 5, National Honor Society 4, Treasurer 5, Pep Club 5, SCA Alternate 1, 2, 3, 4, junior Marshal 4, ANTHONY DEVERE GREGORY Football 5. SHERRI HELEN GRIFFIN French Club 5. KAREN SUE GROSS Annual 3, 5, Business Manager 2, Art Club 1, Beta Club 1, 2, 3, Reporter 5, Concert Choir 5, Christian Ed, Club 3, FBLA 3, SAE 3, 5, French Club 3, Secretary 2, Literary Magazine Art Editor 5, National Honor Society 3, 5, SCA Representative 3, Alternate 1, 2. MINDING THE STORE, shopkeepers, Vicki Kesler and Bobby Allen, keep eyes turned to early hour customers. NEW HALL EYECATCHER, DE's 'Expressions ' sign invites pocket heavy spenders into the freshly decorated cubbyhole. KRISTINE MARIE GUDMLJNDSON Guidance Assistant 5, Pep Club 5, Cheerleader 4, Secretary-Treasurer 5, Homecoming Finalist 4, Queen 5. DONNA CAII, HANKE FBLA 4, 5. DIANE MARIE HANZLIK Art Club 2, Beta Club 2, 3, 4, 5, Choir 1, FBLA 4, 5, National Honor Society 4, 5, French Club 3, 4, Secretary 5. LARRY WAYNE HARDY Concert Choir 5, IIMMIE LEE HARGRAVES Audio-Visual Club 5, Track 4, 5. KEITH CORNELL HARRIS FBLA 4, FFA1, IAMES DAVID HARRISON DEBRA ANN HATHAVVAY FBLA 3, 5, Office Assistant 2, STEVEN PAUL HATTEN CATHY LYNETTE HAWKINS Beta Club I, 2, 3, 4, SAE 5, Guidance Assistant 4, FBLA 4, 5, National Honor Society 5, SHARON LEICIH HAYS Choiri, 2, 3, 4, Concert 5, Library Assistant 5, Spanish Club 5. KURT MARTIN HEBLER FBLA 4, SCA Alternate 3, Office Assistant 2, Cross Country 3, Football 2, Track 3, FFA 4, Secretary 1, 2. MARK DANA HESLER Transfer: Petersburg High School, Petersburg, Virginia, Baseball 5, V ,511 Class of 76 'I65 IAMES WILLIAM HESTER Cross Country 3, Football 1, 2, Track 2, 3, 4, 5. SALLY MARIE HILL Art 4, FBLA 3, 4, 5, Library Assistant 2, Track 4. IEFFREY IAY HOBBS Transfer: Kubasaki High School, Okinawa, Japan. IOHN PARKS HOBBS Transfer: Cherry Hill High School, Cherry Hill, New Iersey. MARK ALLEN HOLDEN FBLA 4, FFA 4. WHATELY MORGAN HOLLAND, IR. DECA 3, 4, Secretary 5. CHARLENE DENISE HOLLOVVAY Beta Club 3, 4, 5, FBLA 4, Spanish Club 3, Library Assistant 1, SCA Representative 1, Secretary 2, Guidance Assistant 5. KATHERINE SUE HOOD Annual 4, Business Manager 5, French Club 4, Library Assistant 4, Pep Club 5, SCA Representative 4, 5, Powderpuff 4. 1 Carting cookies and A Girl Scout for eight years, calendars, once a year Girl Carmen served as one of the Scouts come out from hiding. two girls on a board of The familiar belief didn't directors in Central Virginia. hold true in Prince George. A Diminishing classmate busy senior schedule didn't skeptics, PG scouts showed hamper Carmen Torruella's scouting as not so childish scouting activities. after all. l DAVID WILLIAM HORNE Audio-Visual Club 4, 5, Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 3, 4, 5, Beta Club 5, lazz Band 1, National Honor Society 4, 5. DARLENE FRANCES HORNER Transfer: Mannheim American High School, Mannheim, Germany, Concert Choir 5, Drama 5, FBLA 5, Drill Team 5, Powderpuff5. DEBORAH ANN HORSFALL Annual 2, 5, FBLA 4, Powderpuff 4, 5, Tennis Club 5, Drill Team 5, Newspaper 2. IULIE KAYE HOSTETLER Art 3,4, 5, FBLA 4, 5. SHARON DIANNE HUBER Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Christian Ed. Club 3, 4, FBLA 4, FHA 1, 2, SCA Alternate 1, 2. FRANK ALLEN HUGHES, Ill Annual 5, German Club 3,4, Powderpuff Cheerleader 5, SCA Alternate 5, Newspaper 5, Track 4, 5. MICHAEL DAVID HUGHES Transfer: Zweibrucken American High School, Zweibrucken, Germany, Football 4, 5, Basketball 4, 5. LINDA DELORIS HUNT DECA 3, 5, Secretary 4, Library Assistant 1, 2. DAVID GLENN ISRAEL Annual Photographer 5, Art Club 3, President 4, 5, German Club 3, SCA Representative 5, IV Baseball 3, Golf 5, 166 Seniors I ll --.....,K A LITTLE BIT OF SWEET TALK. Carmen Torruella persuades lohn Wickwire into buying a Girl Scout calendar. CLARENCE GEORGE IACKSON Art Club 5, Band 1, 2, Track 3, 5. REGINA IUEL IAMES FHA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Library Assistant 1, 2, Girl's Basketball 1, Powderpuff 3 SAE 3. ELIZABETH AGNES IANDL Art Club 2, 5, FBLA 4, 5, Powderpuff 5. CASSIE IEAN IEFFERSON Beta Club 2, 3, 4, 5, Choir 1, 2, FBLA 4, 5, FHA 2, National Honor Society 4, 5. ELMA RAE IOHNSON SCA Representative 5, Guidance Assistant 5, GirI's Basketball 2, 3, 4, 5 ELNORA MAE lOHNSON Choir 4, Concert 5, Girl's Basketball 2, 3, Co-Captain 4, Povvderpuff 4, 5, Softball 2, 3, 4, 5. MARVIN ANTOINE IOHNSON Boy's Basketball 4. SUSAN HELENE IOHNSTON Transfer: Orange Park High School, Orange Park, Florida, Band 4, 5, FHA 5, Literary Magazine Poetry Editor 5, Voice of Democracy 4. DEBORAH YVONNE IONES EIGBURT IONES PEARL ELIZABETH IONES RAYMOND IUNIOR IONES VICTORIA JONES ROBIN RENEE IOSEY Transfer: Robert E. Peary High School, Rockville, Maryland, Concert Choir 5, Powderpuff 4, Annual 5. IULIE MAE KAUFMAN DECA 3, 4, Reporter 5, Pep Club 1, FHA 2. ROBERT EDWARD KING, IR. Art 1, 4, Classof 76 167 RODNEY ANTONIO KING Transfer: Hart lr. High, Washington D.C., Choir 3, 4, Concert 5, TIMOTHY MAURICE KING Annual 2, 4, Guidance Assistant 2, Library Assistant 2, Office Assistant 2, Pep Club 2, 3, President 5, SCA Representative 5, Alternate 3, Cheerleader 5, FBLA Treasurer 5, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5. ROBERT TAFT KISER Annual 2, 3, 5, French Club 3, 5, Drama 2, 3, 5, Literary Magazine 5, Newspaper 1, 2, 3, 5. BETTY ANN KROLLMAN FBLA 5, Newspaper 4, FHA 1, 2, Office Assistant 4. DAVID IOHN LABRAKE Transfer: Heidelburg High School, Heidelburg, Germany. CHARLES RICHARD LEE Football 4, 5, IEANNIE ELIZABETH LEES Transfer: Lawton High School, Lawton, Oklahoma, Beta Club 4, 5, FHA 4, 5, Pep Club 5, Spanish Club 5, Track Manager 4, Powderpuff 4. LOYDE WEST LESCANEC Annual 3, 4, 5, Beta Club 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, German Club 3, 4, National Honor Society 3, 5, Treasurer 4, SCA Alternate 1, 2, 3, 4, Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, All Tri- City 2, 3, 4, 5, All District 3, 4, 5, Football 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, All TriaCity 3, 4, All District 4, Basketball Co-Captain 1, Powderpuff Coach 4, 5, Class Treasurer 3, 4, Newspaper 2, IOHN ALBERT LIGHT, IR. Annual 1, DECA 3, 5, FFA 1, 2, 3, Library Assistant 1, 2. IAMES FILI LIUFAU Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Band Council 2, 4, 5, Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Beta Club 3, 4, 5, French Club 5, Football 1, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5. LINDA LOU LOCKER Library Assistant 4, 5. IOSEPH DANIEL LONG Transfer: Zweibruken High School, Zweibruken, Germany. BRIAN CRAIG LYBARGER THERESA ELAINE MABE FBLA 4, 5, Annual Business Manager 2, Newspaper Business Manager 2. IAN HITCHCOCK MACGREGOR Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Drum Major 2, Council Member 2, 4, 5, German Club 3, 4, SCA Alternate 2, 3, 4, 5, Voice of Democracy Second Place 4, Beta Club 3, 4, 5. RONALD LEE MARCO 168 Seniors LYNETTE DALE MARKS FBLA 5, Secretary 4, SCA Alternate 2. DOUGLAS WARREN MARSHALL Newspaper Photographer 5, Spanish Club 5, Cross Country 2, 3, 4, Manager 5, Track 2, 3, 4, 5, Tennis 5. BENIAMIN FRANKLIN MASON Choirl, 3, Concert 5. DELPHINE OTELLA MASON Beta Club l, FBLA 5, Historian 4, SAE 4, FHA l, Guidance Assistant 3, Pep Club 5, Girlfs Basketball Manager 5, Softball 3, 4, 5, Most Valuable 3, Powderpuff 4. LESLIE HUME MASSEY Transfer: Thomas Dale High School, Chester, Virginia, Band 3, 4, Pep Band 3, 4, FFA 4, Spanish Club 3, Softball 3, Girl's Basketball 4, Powderpuff 4. TAMARA MELLE MASSEY Majorette 'l, 2, 3, 4, 5, Christian Ed. Club 3,4, 5, FHA 4, 5, President 3, Paramedical Club 3. CARLTON LEE MATTHEWS Choir 1, 2, 4, Concert 5. CASH KIM McCOY Chess Club 3, FFA 1, 2, 3, 5. ROBERT BRIAN McGHEE Transfer: Lake City Academy, Lake City, Florida, ALICE MARIE MCMLJLLEN Transfer: Goldsboro High School, Goldsboro, North Carolina, Pep Club 5, Spanish Club 5. QUICK SIDE GLANCE. Tim King checks precision hand clap on first- time thank you cheer performance. Coed cheering came to life with football rivalry against Highland Springs as sideline newcomers, Tim King and Gary Tadlock, withstood the test. No one fell flat on double stunts, and chants came out just as clear and stronger than before. Demerit fears kept Tim and Gary from breaking varsity regulations: no drinking, smoking, or holding your girlfriend's hand while in uniform. A step ahead of other district teams, PG and Meadowbrook rallied guy cheerleader support. All around pepster, Tim King, supported Royals through field, court, and diamond action. Returning basketball letterman, Gary Tadlock, took position on the court as other male Royal supporters tried out to fill his shoes. Class of '76 169 BARBARA IEAN MCTAGUE Beta Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 5, German Club 4, 5, National Honor Society 4, 5, Pep Club 3, GirI's Basketball Manager 3, 4, 5, Girlls Track 4, 5, junior Marshall 4. ELIZABETH ANNE MIKULCIK Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 4, 5, Powderpuff 5, Softball 5. KIM MARIE MILLER German Club 4, Paramedical Club 3. ROBERT STERLING MOORE Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 3, Football 2, 4, 5, Tennis Club 5. RONALD CRAIG MORING Annual 5, Art Club 4, 5, SCA Representative 2, Voice of Democracy 4. DIANA IEAN MORRIS Annual 4, Associate and Layout Editor 5, Beta Club 4, 5, SCA Representative 5, Alternate 1, 3, National Honor Society 5. MELVIN MORRISON Baseball 3. LINDA DIANE MOSBEY Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 1, 2, 3, FBLA 4, 5, FHA 4, Pep CIub1, 2, Powderpuff 5. OWEN HOWARD MULLENIX CAROL MARIE MULLINS Transfer: Frankfurt American High School, Frankfurt, Germany, FBLA 5, Beta Club 4, 5, German Club 4, 5, SCA Alternate 5. CHARLENE MYRICK FHA 3, 4, 5, Pep Club 5, Powderpuff 4, 5. PATRICIA ANN NELSON FFA 5, Spanish Club 3. ZABRA ANN NICHOLS FBLA 3, 5, DEBRA KAY OATES FBLA Treasurer 4, Drill Team 5, Softball 3. TERESA ANN PARDOE Band 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Council Member1, 5, Pep Band 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, Christian Ed. Club 5, French Club 3, 4, 5, Tennis Club 5. IAMES WALTER PAYNE, IR, Band 2, 3, 4, 5, Pep Band 2, 3, 4, 5, German Club 5. GLADYS ELIZABETH PECK FBLA 4, 5, Spanish Club 4, Povvderpuff 4, 5. ANTHONY CRAIG PELTER Art Club 1, 2, 5, Drama 3, FFA 1, 2, 3, 5. DAVID LEROY PERRY Band I, 2, 3, FFA 5. LARRY SYLVESTFR PETERSON FFA 'l, 5. THE WIERD, SPOOKY AND SUPERNATURAL Catches PG couple, Mark and Carol Cramer, as they head for Walnut Mall Theater's R rated Race With the DeviI. BOARDED UP intersection of routes 106 and 156 posts billboard candidates for 1975 November elections to catch 18 year old voters. 170 Seniors PATRICE IANAE PHILLIPS Princette-Starlette 4, Assistant Head Starlette 5, French Club 5, SCA Representative 4, 5. TINA DIANE PHILLIPS Transfer: South Dade High School, Homestead, Florida. IAMES MICHAEL PHILYAN Art 4, FFA 3, 4, 5. CHERYL ANN PINER Band 2, 3, Princette 2, 3. Eighteen -the magic age. register for the draft. It enabled you to buy 3.2. . . Eighteen -the age of legally. You could drive into decision for the senior. What the Blue Star, allowed to are you going to do? You enter. could go to college, get ajob, Eighteen - an adult. burn around, do almost You got the privilege of anything you wanted to do. voting, and guys had to Eighteen -guess I liked it. A D, .Ti I' ff' , i.i..-t-i.i-.,T ll ... mn PRINCE GEORGE DlSTRlCT82 4' I ' . NOVEMBER 4th miie: ELECT K BURRD W For wma or surcrtviso DISTRICT JOHN RICHARD PITTMAN Transfer: Duluth Central High School, Duluth, Minnesota. CHARLES RAY POWELL Annual 'I, 3, 4, 5, Sports Editor 2, Beta Club 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, National Honor Society 3, 4, 5, SCA Representative 1, 3, 4, Alternate 2, Baseball 1, 3, 4, 5, Co-Captain 2, Newspaper 1, Sports Editor 2, Football 1, Statistician 3,4, 5. THOMAS ASHBY PRICE Transfer: Palmetto High School, Miami, Florida, Cross-Country 5, Track 5. EMILY DENISE PUGH Art 5, FBLA 4. ROY BUFORD PUGH III Annual Photographer 4, 5, Football 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain 5. ROBERT IOSEPH RADCLIFF FBLA 5, FFA1, 2, 3, German Club 3. CAROLYN ELIZABETH RAINES EVELYN ROSETTA RAINES Choir 4, Concert 5. GILBERT RONALD RAINES FBLA 5, Track 5. ELIZABETH ANN RAMSEY FBLA 4, 5, COE 5. Classof 76 171 172 Seniors BRADLEY SCOTT REEDY Baseball 2, 3, 4, Football 2, 3, 4, Powderpuff Coach 4. ROBERT LEE REEVES Art 4, 5, Beta 4, 5, Chess Club 4, 5, German Club 5, SCA Alternate 4, Newspaper 2, Baseball 2, Football 1, 2, Golf 3, 4, 5, National Honor Society 5. IAMES ALLEN REITH, IR, Chess Club 3, President 4, 5, Newspaper 2, Football 1, 2. DONALD KEITH ROBINSON Art 5, DECA 3, 4, President 5, Reporter 4, SCA Alternate 5, Football Manager1. EVELYN ELIZABETH ROBINSON Beta 'l, 2, 3, 4, 5, Library Assistant 1, 2, Paramedical Club 3, SCA Alternate 1, 2, 3, 4, IV Cheerleader 2, FBLA 1, 2, 3, 4, FHA 1, 2. GREGORY BENARD ROBINSON Transfer: Bond Wilson High School, Charleston, South Carolina, Band 4, 5, Pep Band 4, 5, Football 5, Track 4, 5. LAURETTA DIANE ROSE DECA 5, FHA 3, 4, 5. GILBERT CEDVIE RUFFIN DENNIS WAYNE RYBAR VICKI PEADEN SANFORD Beta Club 1, FBLA 4, 5, Library Assistant 1, 2, Choir 1, 2. WITH THIS RING. Senior skipee, Avis Epps sizes up for her '76 class symbol. 1 1 Cries of hey, what'd ya do that for stung the skipees fresh out of summer school. Graduation in '76 established footing in senior territory but shook the ground around former junior classmates. lnching their way through, confidence soon beamed on their faces as senior activities helped develop new friends and experiences. Rings needed ordering, but fast, to catch up with everyone else. With PSAT's left behind, students rushed towards college boards. Taking history and government at the same time scrambled thoughts for each test. The sophomore-to- senior jump forced the Class of '76 rookies to plunge both feet forward to assert themselves. Critical analyses and term papers both looked new at the same time. Gradually, acceptance eased their ruffled state-of-mind, and they sat down to jam two years of activity into one year of school. IAMES LARRY SAUNDERS, IR, Transfer: Hopewell High School, Hopewell, Virginia, Golf 4, 5. IEFFERY GRANT SCI-IALL FFA 4, 5, RHONDA FAYE SHEPPARD FBLA 4, 5, FHA 2, 4, Library Assistant 1, 2, Office Assistant 2, SCA Representative 1, Powderpuff 4, Softball 2, 3, 4. TIM EDWIN SINGLETARY Chess Club 4, 5. BANDED TOGETHER, Taft Kiser, Sue Gross, and Michelle Villars invade high English 12 class first period. SUSAN ELEANOR SLUKA Concert Choir 5, FBLA 4, 5, FHA 1, IEFFREY DALE SMELLEY Beta Club 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, Literary Magazine 5, Spanish Club 3, 4, Baseball 2, 3, 4, 5, Football 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. BARRY SCOTT SMITH Track 2, 3. CONSTANCE GAY SMITH FBLA 4, 5, DECA 5, FHA 1, 2, Pep Club1. IUERGEN BAERTSCHI SMITH Transfer: Seaside High School, Seaside, California, Chess Club 4, 5, Christian Ed, Club 4, 5, German Club 3, 4, 5. SHERRY ARNETTE SMITH Band 1, 2, 3, SCA Representative 5, Cheerleader 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, Guidance Assistant 1. DONALD HENRY SNYDER Concert Choir 5. REGINA LYNNE SNYDER Concert Choir 5, Art Club 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, FBLA 5, DOUGLAS WAYNE SOWARDS FFA 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Library Assistant 1, 2, Spanish Club 3, SCA Alternate 2, DARYL LEROY SPENCER Transfer: Adrian High School, Adrian, Michigan, Annual Cropping Editor and Photographer 5, French Club 3, 4, Vice-President 5, Powderpuff Cheerleader 4, 5. GARY SIMEON SPIVEY Art Club 1, 2, FFA 3, 4, 5 MARY DIANE STABLES Annual Layout Editor 2, FBLA 4, 5, Newspaper 2, SCA Representative 1, 3, Powderpuff 4, 5. SYLVIA HILDA STARSIA Transfer: Copperas Cove High School, Copperas Cove, Texas, FBLA 4, FFA 4, Library Assistant 5. IAMES GARY TADLOCK Beta Club 3, 4, 5, National Honor Society 4, 5, Baseball 4, Basketball 4, 5, Cheerleader 5, lunior Marshall 4. GREGORY GEAN TAYLOR Transfer: Mannheim American High School, Mannheim Germany. PATRICIA ANN TAYLOR FBLA 4, 5, Class of 76 173 174 Seniors EXCLUSIVE RIGHT OF ARMY LIFE. Kathy Hood hands over ID card for PX entry privilege. ' RANDY LEAMOUNT TAYLOR CAROLYN ANN TEMPLE GEORGE FOX THOMA ll Transfer: Red Wing High School, Red Wing, Michigan, Football 55 Track 55 Povvderpuff Cheerleader 5. DEBRA LEE THOMPSON Beta Club 1, English High School, Lynn, Massachusetts. REBECCA LEE THOMPSON Beta Club 1, Z, 3, 4, 5, Vice-President 45 Christian Education Club 3, SAEQ French Club 35 Homecoming Finalist 4, Princette 2, 3, 45 FHA 3, President 4, Federation Secretary 5. ADDIE YVONNE THWEATT CATHERINE DENISE THWEATT FBLA 4, 5, SAE 3, German Club 4, 5, Library Assistant 2, Library Club 3g Powderpuff 4, 5. LANITA RENEE THWEATT Audio-Visual Club 5, FBLA 4, 5g Beta Club 1, SAE 3, Pep Club 5, Spanish Club Secretary 3g SCA Representative 4, Alternate 331V Cheerleader 2, Powderpuff 4, 5. MICHELLE DIANE THWEATT FBLA 4, 5. NORA NADINE THWEATT Art Club Secretary- Treasurer 2, FHA 5, Treasurer 15 Pep Club 55 FBLA 3. CAROLYN IEAN TOGGER Art Club 2, Concert Choir 5, FBLA 4, 55 Guidance Assistant 5, SCA Alternate 5. DOROTHY ELIZABETH TOMKO FBLA 4, 5, FHA 1, 25 Guidance Assistant 1, SCA Alternate 4 Away-from-home seniors made country schooling a little different at Prince George. History classes never lacked variety as Fort Lee kids brought slides and first hand experiences from all overthe world. Bold from the countless changes of schools, Army dependents waved arms in homeroom to fill out those familiar federally connected cards. Last minute transfers changed sports lineups, club enrollments, and Senior Class ranks. Mr. All-American could save the ball game. The new girl from France with only two foreign language credits could out talk the French Club president who made it to French IV with honors. Transfer brains with A averages took over Senior Class standings. County seniors didn't complain, after all, the Fort Lee inhabitants helped boost the Senior Class count. Besides, who else could get the teacher off the track so easily, pushing that six week test back another day? CARMEN LYDIA TORRLJELLA Beta Club 2, 3, 5, Reporter 5, Choir 1, 2, 3, SAE 5, Secretary 3, 4, German Club 3, Vice-President 4, President 5, Literary Magazine 5, National Honor Society 3, 4, Secretary 5, Pep Club 4, 5. RAY IOSEPH TOUSSAINT Transfer: Liberty High School, Bedford, Virginia. SANDRA KAYE TURNER Hampton High School, Hampton, Virginia, FHA Treasurer 4, President 5, Federation Treasurer 5, Beta Club 4, 5, Literary Magazine 5, National Honor Society 5, GEORGE THOMAS TYGREST Band 1, 2, Pep Club 5, Baseball 5, Manager 4, Football 2, Manager 4, 5, Track 1, 2. ALINE VERNELL TYLER FBLA 4. DOUGLAS ALAN VAVRA German Club 4, 5. DONNA MARIE VEDOMSKE DECA 3, Treasurer 4, FBLA 4, Guidance Assistant 2, KAREN MICHELLE VILLARS Beta Club 3, 5, Drama 3, French Club 3, 5, Literary Magazine Publicity Manager 5, National Honor Society 3, 5, SCA Alternate 3, 5, Track Manager 3, Powderpuff 5. CINDY LENORE VNENCAK Beta Club 3, 4, 5, SCA Representative 4, SAE 4, President 5, French Club 3, 4, 5, National Honor Society 4, 5, Pep Club 4, Recording Secretary 5, Powderpuff 4, 5. DIANNE MARIE VULEY Transfer: Clover Park High School, Tacoma, Washington, I NICKI DIANE WAITMAN Annual 1, 3, Editor in Chief 2, Beta Club 1, 3, 4, 5, President 2, Class Secretary 3, Drama 2, 3, National Honor Society 3, 4, President 5, Newspaper Editor in Chief 2, Pep Club President 5, SCA Vice-President 3, 4, Powderpuff 4, 5, Girl's State 4, Voice of Democracy 4. IACQLJELINE ANN WALKER LINDA MARIE WALKER MATTHEW WESLEY WALL Annual 4, 5, Choir 4, Vice-President 3, Concert 5, Christian Ed. Club 3, 4, 5, Literary Magazine Prose Editor 5, Baseball 3,4 5, Football 3, 4, 5, Regional Choir 4, 5. Class of 76 175 An hour and 45 minutes of study hall seldom found students with the books DECA students utilized extra hours obtaining survival money or extra spending bills I I l i while late nighters resorted to catching up on lost winks Others got an early start on after school activities. With the convenience of outside- the-office hall lockers, free timers didn't interrupt classes, Making it out to cars, students left half day parking lot empty by the 12:25 bell. 176 Seniors MELANIE LORI WALLACK SAE 3, Christian Education 3, French Club 3. THOMAS WALTON Annual 4, Headline Editor 5, Audio-Visual Club 4, 5, Baseball 2, 3, 4, 5. HERBERT REID WARTHAN Band 1, 2, FBLA 5. VENITA GAYLE WEAVER Transfer: Mimcreek High School, Erie, Pennsylvania, Beta Club 4, 5, German Club 4, 5, Literary Magazine Copy Editor 5, Pep Club 5, Voice of Democracy 3rd place 4, Drama 5. ROBERT ALLEN WENSZELL JANICE WETTSTEIN Annual 4, Editor-in-Chief 5, French Club 3, Vice-President 4, President 5, Literary Magazine Editor-in-Chief 5. ROBERT ALAN WHEELER Transfer: Fairview High School, Dayton, Ohio. AN NABELLE MARTHA WICHY Transfer: Medical Lake High School, Medical Lake, Washington, FBLA 4, 5, SCA Representative 5, Powderpuff 4, 5. IOHN BERNARD WICKWIRE Christian Education 3, 4, FBLA 5. TRACY LYNN WIGGINS Band 1, 2, Council Member 5, Pep Band 3, 4, S, Beta Club 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Secretary-Treasurer 2, French Club 3, French Honor Society 3, German Club 4, 5, National Honor Society 3, 5, Vice-President 4, Regional Band 2, 4. KAREN LEE WILKINSON Transfer: Fairfax High School, Fairfax, Virginia, FBLA 4, Office Assistant 3, 4, Powderpuff 4, 5, Softball 3, 4, 5. TALLYING UP A HALF DAY, Dorothy Tomko gathers books from beside-the-office locker before fifth period exit. UNDER THE BIG TOP. Kurt Hebler tinkers with motor insides at nearby Sebera's Service Station. FREE FROM AFTER LUNCH workload, Charles Pettaway and Robert Allen spread out would be nightime assignment on annex tables. CYNTHIA ANNE WILLIAMS Beta Club 3, 4, President 5, Class Vice-President 4, National Honor Society 3, 4, 5, CIirl's Basketball 2, 5, Co- Captain 3, 4, Most Valuable 3, 4, Powderpuff 4, Softball 5, Co-Captain 2, 3, 4, Most Valuable 4. IOYCE LORRAINE WILLIAMS LAURA LYNN WILLIAMS FBLA 4, 5, COE 5, Povvderpuff 5. LESLIE DARNELL WILLIAMS WILLIE EDWARD WILLIAMS FBLA 5, FFA 1, 3. STEVEN SHELTON WILSON Art Club 2, 5, FFA 4. KAREN DALE WRIGHT Art Club 3, 4, 5, Vice- President 1, 2, Band 1, FBLA 4, 5, Library Assistant 1, 2, 3, Library Club 1, Powderpuff 5. VINCENT MAURICE WYCHE ANNA MARIE YAROSZ FBLA 4, 5, SAE 4, German Club 3, 4, Pep Club1, 2, 3, 4, 5, Spanish Club 5, SCA Representative 1, Girl's Basketball 4, IV Cheerleader1, 2, Powderpuff 4, 5, Softball Manager 3. CHERYL ANN ZIKES Art Club 1, 2, Christian Ed. Club 3, DECA 3, 4, 5, Powderpuff 5. FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT WILLIAMS, IR. FFA 3, Football Co-Captain 2, Track 2, 3. Class of '76 177 Allen Aldridge Madeline Allen Robert Allen lohn Anderson Paul Anderson Ginger Angolia Peggy Archer Greg Aude Cecil Aultman Mark Bailey Susan Banik Karen Bannister Kenneth Baxley Sharon Becker Sandra Bender james Benedict Darrell Bennett Robert Bennett Wanda Bennett Ravanna Bey Lori Bischoff Cynthia Bishop Sue Bishop Michael Blowe Pamela Bolick Stanley Booker Pam Bortner Tina Bowles Tari Briggs Barbara Brockwell Angela Brown Apryl Brown Belinda Brown Debbie Brown Ronald Brown Kathy Browning 178 juniors An early end to school days aftera football injury last year forced Chris Crotty to leave Prince George. Cheerleaders kept him up to date in PG news with frequent cards and visits when he was close to home, but few people ever thought of seeing Chris back at school again. Back home again, Chris seemed to face less problems than the rest of us. Always smiling even after tests, he tackled high classes and a full schedule. Classmates, football friends, and cheerleaders competed for the pushing position behind Chris, but only the muscled members of the Green Machine could hoist him up the stairs. A happy face and a well-known wisecrack, Chris joined the PGHS crowd. ,Z Linda Byrne Shirley Capps Mike Carlisle Tony Carpenter Robert Carroll Kenny Chappell Steve Chiminello Mary Chudoba STAND CLEAR! Heal-to-toe p Roy Cox, helps varsity teammates, leff Smelley, and George Thoma hoist Chris Crotty up the steps. ro, 7 james Clanton Aquanetta Clark lanice Clements johnny Clements Michael Coleman Morris Coleman Anita Compton David Compton Roy Cox Albert Crawford Beverly Crews Doug Crichton Sharon Crocker Chris Crotty Diana Crouse Robert Cruz Terri Cunningham Milton Curly Parlee Curren Lesly Davidson Deenie Davis Mike Davis Ralph Davis Ricky Davis Lillian Dennis lames Dixon Walter Dixon Patricia Docx Shirley Drew Susan Dubberly Class of '77 l79 Money! Money! Money! Thoughts ofSS and tr disturbed active juniors Class members. ln a unique financial situation,juniors found themselves starting the year as the most penniless class in school history. Having only S35 to their names, juniors faced enormous financial problems. With eager ideas forthe Prom and Ring Dance, bewildered juniors hunted for scattered sources of income. After taking a peek into theirtreasury, class officers suddenly felt the pinch of the lack of funds and dug into junior pockets for their S1500 goal. juniors STOMACH COMES FIRST! Kurt Hebler calms down hunger rumbles with sweet tooth fund raiser. Charles Dungan Regina Edwards Steve Edwards Tony Eldridge Bill Elliott Sharon Elliott Linda England janet Erickson Alvin Evans Rick Evans Christen Everitt Carol Fain Cathy Fain Yvonne Favale t n f Thomas Ferguson Kathy Fields Kathy Fleshman Edie Fletcher Francine Ford Eddie Fowler Robbin Freeberg Kenny Fry jule Cant Sharon Cay Donald Gibson jan Glass l x l 'N 'hs , of, V ,sl gg '53 -. 'K 1 . V9 . r T' . ,- '+G will . is? ' , 3, W ll K ..' 'zu 1 avr t MINDING THE STORE, Roy Cox hands over loose change to chocolate cake customers. Tammy Godwin Mary Gorby Kathy Gorrnan Lisa Gorman David Graham Susan Green joseph Griffin Karen Griffin Connie Griffith Paula Grimm Duane Gunn Adrian Harmata Darrell Harvey Mike Harris Susan Harrison Wanda Harrison Karl Hayes Linda Headrick Zettamae Heath Rick Heiser Mark Hennington Alvin Hicks Debbie Hill Deborah Hill Sharon Holland Wayne Holt Sandi Horne Herbert Howard Mark Hughes David Hunter jan Hunter Patty jackson George jacob Mary Ann jacob Tammy jefferson Tracy jernigan Karen jiles Stanley jiles Donald johnson Antoinette jones Class of 77 181 Beckie jones Connie jones Lorine jones Mary jones Pam jones Robert jones Robert jones Ronnie jones Vivian jones judy jordan Andreas Kaempf Vicki Kesler Kendall Kestner jeanne King Marie King Mary Kirkendall Warren Knarr Robin Kurnas Sandra Kvasnicka Teressa Lampe Pam Landon Bob Laws Eddie l.edden Marshall Lewis Paul Linton Debbie Logan jane Long Tom Long Valerie McDonald Chi Wing Mark INSTANT REPLAY Robert P Allen and Robert L Allen chuckle with Mrs Anderson over the office s constant double identity mistake Would Robert Allen, Ronnie lones, and Robert jones please come to the office? Homeroom clatter drowned out determining middle initials, and office calls got a package deal with a two for one turn out to ll1t9FCOfTl 3l'lI'lOUl1CEI'T1SfllS. Important second names solved who done-it cases and helped office staffers tell doubles apart A hassle at times, namesakes faced endless explanations to teachers substitutes and unmet PC classmates. lllll llg -sux Bobby Mason Linda Mason Lucinda Massenberg Frances McCoy Maureen McDonough Cary Mchlevv loel Mikuta Lee Moody Terry Oakley Michael O'Connor Tami Ogle lohn Paul Mary Paul james Pease Bobby Perdue Mary Perry Phil Phillips Patty Phoenix Ray Pinckert Patricia Pitt Lorrie Poland Betty Potter Kelly Potter David Price Karen Radcliff lohn Randolph Buddy Raney Peggy Raughley joseph Renaud Becky Rhodes lohn Robbins Freddrica Robinson Ann Rice Bill Richmond Vanessa Riggins Class of 77 183 George Ryans lames Saal Richard Salazar lose Santory Dwayne Seal Billy Sebera Daniel Sebera Holly Sebera Wayne Shannon jennifer Sheets Heidi Stacey Randall Smith Barbara Staples Karl Stoupa Tracy Stover john Studivant Patrick Sullivan Michael Sutton Roy Swanson Glenn Talley Tanya Tatem Gwen Tatum Debbie Taylor Floyd Taylor james Taylor Kenneth Taylor Edward Thacker Stephanie Thomas Tony Thomas Vernon Thomas Catherine Thompson Michael Thweatt Katherine Tillison Dale Traylor Edwin Trent Allen Tucker juniors N Travelling to jacksonville State University, Susan Green, Stanley Booker, and Mr. Astin hit the road for the first teen involvement training workshop. lt gave adolescents from all over a random shot at finding international buddies. Heads put together between August 18 and 22 set up games for use in classrooms. The fall agenda took in the task of getting approval to get things going from Dr. George and Dr. Rooks. Trainees, Yvonne Favale, Mark Hennington, Karen Griffin, Ron Sones, and Patty jackson, sprung from slumber every morning to make 7:30 AM sessions. Shrinking drug problems in home neighborhoods, teen involvement reduced peer group pressures. Trainees wanted youngsters to find natural highs -the PG way. ,4-4 19 .14 . ' 4 af 'K+ D -X .. 5 X frm 5:5340 f Vv SIGN LANGUAGE? Officer Hathway uses body talk to get message across for teen involvers. Sharon Tucker Mary Io Turek Muff Tutwiler Virginia Tyler Dianne Vanko Ted Vanko Tom Vavra Susan Vaughan Barbara Vinsh lean Vinsh Mike Virostek Paul Vlk George Vlkojan Mark Wainwrighl George Walker 'ae Lloyd Walker Manda Walker Sammy Walker Tom Wall Chris Washington Christine Whelan Gaye Whiting Russell Whiting Robert Wiele Bradley Willcockson Mary Williams Eric Williamson Beth Wilson Christine Wilson Dale Wilson Randy Wilson Ronnie Wilson Torn Wilson Mark Windley Inez Wood Greg Young Class of '77 185 FULL SPEED AHEAD, Howard Moore just nudges out Manchester opposition to take first in the 220. lames Adkins Mark Alexander Calvin Allen Pat Allen Gary Anderson Marc Anonsen Ollie Armstrong Norma Arrington LaVetta Bailey ludy Baldwin Howard Bannister lanet Bannister Larry Barnett Lisa Berry Matt Berry Robin Best Elijah Bey George Biberstein Brenda Bishop GET ON THE GOOD FOOT, Carla Hood bubbles into action. 186 Sophomore-s Aching muscles and dreams of green and gold uniforms filled minds of nervous Varsity Cheerleader candidates. But only Carla Hood, and alternates, Eileen McCoy, Denise Butler, and Carrie Wittie, got to don their PG colors. Carla didn't stop there though. Her personality and flare for leadership brought her straight to the top as class president. Rising sophs felt tradition change when the high school welcomed them with first-time voting privileges and new opportunities to run for SCA. Beverly Everson, the only sophomore SCA officer, took a chance and won as corresponding secretary. Chances of winningf' usually increase with experience. As the only non-rookie soph on Mean Big Green, Bryan Phillips used previous freshman practice with Varsity Royals. No bench-sitter, Howard Moore joined Bryan in athletic ranks. Howard's continual foot rhythm dusted the track over and over. His lowerclassman legs ran their way into the record book, adding with Carla, Beverly, and Bryan as four special sophs. TATTLETALE knee dirt and sweaty 65 jersey gives evidence of Bryan Phillips' hard nosed TEN CENTS TOO MUCH, tackle in muddy Meadowbrook Beverly Everson pays extra dime conflict. to call home from hall phone. R If Kim Bishop Larry Blanding David Blystone lulia Bond Steve Boone -:rv .. r Doug Bowen Donnie Bowers joseph Bowers Bonnie Bowman Carlton Bowman Robin Bowman Mike Bradley Kim Bradshaw Mark Brigman Doug Brown Kathy Britt Donna Browning lim Bryant Cheyenne Bullock Kathy Burke Steve Burke Becky Burrow Pat Busch Denise Butler David Byrne Audrey Cain Richard Callis Ronald Calvin Kathy Camden Debbie Capps Classof 78 187 Tarnmre Carpenter Orlando Carter Carolyn Claiborne Renee Clements Rrcky Clements Angle Coleman Daphne Coleman Darlene Coleman Rosemarie Coleman Sandy Conaway Crawley Connelly Lorraine Cosby Faron Courtney Clyde Crawford Robble Crowder Doris Cunningham assugnment on bumpy classroom 188 Sophornores lan Dewell Debbie Dickens Denise Dickens Mike Dickens Norman Docx Arthur Drew Greg Duffek Elke Duncan Pat Duncan Paige Elder Cheryl England Rusty Eppler Norman Epps lulie Erickson Betty Eubank Sharon Evans Beverly Everson lohn Evko Tammy Faulknier janet Fields Barbara Figg leff Finlen Charlotte Finley Dennis Fleshman Red and flushed faces appeared as we, the lowerclassmen, arrived on the first day of school. We found ourselves sitting on the ever faithful, hard, wooden bleachers and in last choice classes, choosing from a selection of junior and senior leftovers. As we faced jokes and gags, sophs showed annoyance but knowing upperclassmen went through it too. We took it all in fun and a part of PG tradition. lllllll Keith Florine Tina Foster Cindy Fred Steve Fudge Robbie Fulcher Debbie Gagliardone Donna Galderise Sammy Garcia 'N Kim Gates Kenneth Geiselhart l Alviln Gilchrist Gloria Gilchrist james Gilchrist Kathy Gilder Kim Glass Class of'78 189 THE REAL MCCOY'S, Frances and Cash head down spirit week 190 Sophomores stairs while younger Eileen passes with a bannister short cut. luanita Goodwyn Rick Cordon Stanley Gorham Curtis Cranderson Valerie Granderson janet Cravitte Guy Gray Sandra Green Sharon Haines Nicky Hamlin Don Hanline Suzanne Hardin Ed Harless Arlene Harris Fred Harris Kent Harris Barry Harrison Corky Harrison Karen Harrison Lyndon Harrison Otis Harvey Patsy Harville Ray Hawkins Kim Hays Larry Hayes Tim Heinbuch Rhonda Hening Kathy Hensley Tami Henson Harvey Hesler A 'bf Paul Holland Carla Hood Rapunzel Hopkins Monica Horn Linda Horsfall Trudy Huffman Nancy Israel Rae jackson janet jacobs Darlene james Lovern james Robin james joy jarvis Henry jandl Alek johnson Anita johnson Richard johnson Yolanda johnson Lisa johnston Alfonzo jones Bertha jones David jones Doug jones Gale jones john jones Kathy jones Leavell jones Wilbert jones Linda joyner Wanda joyner Barbara Kaempf Taliza Kimbrough Stephanie Knight Debbie Krenicky Eddie Krenicky Ted Kruse Heyl Aren't you so and so's little sister? . . . Gee, doesnft he look exactly like his older brother? . . . The pros and cons of sharing high school years with a senior or junior brother or sister brought turmoil. Pulling strings didn't always prove true, and the well meaning upperclassmen usually didn't serve as helpful in algebra as they liked to appear. If you got the same history teacher your sister had, you thought you had it made, but when grades came out, that easy A wasn't so easy and vvasn't an A. You did get to avoid jammed buses, though, riding along in the radio-comfort of your brother's car, but the car ended up just as packed as good old bus 4127. What about the times sister saw you skip, and she knew she had an American duty to tell Mom? Then again, how much book money did you save by getting them passed down to you? Or how about the many friends you made, just because your last name sounded familiar??? Class of 78 191 Michelle LaBeau Dan LaBrake Teresa Lampman Patty Ledden Dee Dee Lee David Lees Becky Lewis Eric Lewis Russell Long loe Lumpkin Robyn MacGregor john Makovsky Susan Mark Bonnie Marquardl Ginger Martin Valerie Mason Wayne Mason Cindy Massey William McBride lohn McBryant Donna McCoggle Eileen McCoy ScollMcDor1aId Betty MCNew larrell Mikuta Charles Miller Nina Miller Page Minach David Minard VV. C. Mobley Howard Moore Sheri Moots Colleen Morin Sarah Morse Vivian Myrick Tony Nieves 192 Sophomores aff. :., . ' X sggzrlv-sv' 2' X 1 -s 'xx 45 'J-3 397 sophs and rising . . .added to the already over-brimming PG domain. Battling through crowds slowly but surely, everyone noticed how narrow halls had gotten since last year. The bleachers seemed to have shrunk also, not to mention the clogged cafeteria. The credit goes to the largest sophomore class everto enter old- faithful. Breaking records left and right, sophs set out to make a name for themselves. Books brought up another problem. Sharing driver's ed hardbacks turned into everyday ritual, and constant begging for used biology texts soon madejuniors and seniors rich. Extra English classes, taught among French bulletin boards, made first-day sophs wonder if they had wandered into the wrong room. But once the schedule confusion cleared, tenth graders felt quite content, they knew at last that they belonged. Vicki Pardoe Ellen Parker Terri Parker Marrietta Patrick Marsha Pettaway Sonya Pettaway Butch Pearson Arthur Peterson llmmie Pettis Fran Pezzulli Bobbie Phillips Bryan Phillips Sheila Phillips Ken Phoenix Michael Poindexter David Pollock Tyrone Powell lames Price Phyllis Price- Phil Prince Debbie Puckett Steve Pullian Diane Rakers Sheila Rand Pat Randolph Wanda Ray Timmy Reeves Carol Renaud Rick Rennebaum Suzan Riley Mark Roberts Greg Rougeau Dennis Ruffin Patty Rushworth William Ryans Laura Saal Class of 78 193 loy Sanford Oliver Saunders Randy Saunders Kris Schroeder Steve Seal Barbara Seay jeff Shaw Charles Sheilds Kristen Shelor Sharon Smith Denise Sowards Dale Spencer lim Spencer Thierry Stakas Pam Stalnaker Iarnes Starke Beatrice Starks Randolph Starks Carol Steiner Angela Stokes Darlene Sullivan Doug Sulouff Stephanie Sutton Brenda Sykes Carl Tatem Elgin Taylor Gilbert Taylor loyce Taylor Teresa Taylor Cheryl Tench Becky Thacker Ricky Thomas Dennis Thompson Clarence Thweatt Diane Tillison Petra Torruella David Traylor Allen Trimble Lynn Trimble Lindville Turner Queen Turner Donald Tyler A. .L ' Fi. 5. fy' , , I x It x C W s iw 'T X B I Question among sophs: Will l graduate a student of a newly painted scene or from one of gray, tinted walls? No one knew The sophomores hoped to attend the new school by the I Q Q I timetheygraduated,butthe site still stood as an empty plot. Some liked the idea of a new school - courses and classroom space. Others felt attached to the old building -the thought of the last graduation there. So sophs,. . .First or last?? 194 Sophomores wr W. , Eugene Tyler Alvin Tyson Tony Tyson julie Urquhart Pete Utely Gail Vargo Larry Vaughan Eddie Vlkojan Keith Walker Thomas Walker Luree Wall George Washington Adare Weaver Mike Wessel Mark Wettstein Cheryl White Steve Whitt Charlotte Williams CL Williams james Williams Karen Williams Richard Williams Tina Williams Gary Williamson Barbara Wilson Buzz Wilson Mike Wise Carrie Wittie Brenda Wood Linda Wray Luther Wright Bridgitte Wyche Roger Wynn janet York Arden Young Avis Young Class of 78 195 1111 1 cl ssesw AP C1'11w111111 l1.111s .11111 1.1111 11.11'l11111 11i11l11gy r11o111s11111s1111l1111 111111111- l'11r1l111l.1l'g11s1111111'S1111l111l11111'11Cfl.1ss.l1l11.111l1111's111111111l11.11111 sl11111111ls squashedl11g11l11111l11 111.11111 11111111 .1s11xl1'.11111o11I111111111 11111111111 gy111.So1111s11n1111111111l.1l1i11g111ni11r1'I1.11rs wl11111 oy11rr1111 11111.11 l111rs llxlbl 1111 l1111.1ll1i11g s11.11111. A 1111.11 11111 10111 11.1y s111 l1111s11-1111 1111.1 lL1I1lUl'f1l11'sS 1111111 1111511154 1311111swi1'11 Slow.15.111111111111l.1g111111111111111111-11l 11111111110 v11ryl111gin11i11g.A1111111111111111l.11g11 1'row11l11rn1111i11l111111ly.1s111.1lI l1.1n11l'11I ol'11111111l11. 1111111 l'.111l.1 Gri111111 loo11 .1 11111111111 11ow11 11111 11111 .11111 1111111111 1111 X1N'l1l1 five stitchesln111-1's11.11111111111111-.1111111ns 1'.111s1111 sl11w 111.1l111rs lo 1'1'y .11111 s111ol111 ll'1Jll'l 11111 11111 111.11111 11y111'yo1111 11ls11's 11y11s w.111111 511111111 l111.111.11 1111s .1111111.1r1111.1sl1'.111sl111's1.111111111.111111111111111111 11111 s11111s. 'lw111l'111 y11.11' l1igl1 s1 l111ol11rs 111.11111 11l.111s 1111' .1 s111'i11g 11111 111 O1'l.1111111, Flo1'i11.1. VVill1 111111 17118 11.11'111111, w.1ili11g Iisls l1l111111111w1ll1I1oy.1ls w11111111111111lo1'.1s11.1r11 s11.11 on 1l111l111s. 5111111.11 l11111111's .11111 .1w.11'11s W1'l1l 111.1s11l111'11111I11w11l'l,Cl's l111s1 l7I'dllWS. As soon .1s 111.11 l111rs 1111 111111 1'1111r11s11nl.11i1'11s l-111' C11v111'1111r's Slililiibl, Doug CI'l1'l111JlW .11111 S11s.1n C1111111 sl.11l1111 li1li11g 11111.11111l11'.1111111lor111s,l1111l1y111sl-l.1I1111g 811111111 S11s.111 113111181011 w1111 11111 711 l111lly Cfro1'1111r.1w.1r11111 111111111 F1 . . X 7 , V . 1'1.1ll.1111111.1ll,l1.11'1111l1.111111s1111s111111l 1111111181 11.111111 11111' 11.1y .11 1'11l111'sl111rg lX1L1I'S111Q S1 11001 .11111 1111111 1 111111' 11.11111 111 1'11g11l.11' 1 worl1111g1'l.1ss11s1 M.111.1g11r111'.1Il s11rls,l11111lT1y 1yg1'11sl 1.111 1'X'C'I'Vf 111111g 1111111 looll1.1l1 111 l1.1s11l1.1II 111.1111s. 1711ri11gl'C11S'sli1's1y11.11'ol lil11, 111111 ol' 11111 s1111111111s lW.l11 .1 l.1sl11.11111111l11i11g.1'or11.11l1 y11.11' .111111 111.11 .11 111.1s1 111111 1111111.11 1.1rri111l 11111 11111 l'.1111ily 11111' 1111111 '76 gr.111, 11111 King, 111111111 11111 long 111.1111 1-11111111111 w11ll 11111s111'y1111 11111' 111 logg111' 11.111 s1111w1111 1111 in 111.11 11111 rolls since1960.1J11l1l111Ti111,ll11- l11gg11r 11.111111 1 .111111 1111111 C.1r11ly11's111111111111.1l11 11111, l7l'1l1l1l'lAS .11111 sisl111s. 11111 lW.l1T11'S.llxl' will 11111111 111'11o111g l11ro11g11 11111 11.1lls 1111111 11181 except fOr 1980111111111 C.1r11ly11's sis111r o111y 111.11 1111s l1'11sl1111.111 s1.1111s. As 1110111111 1111' 11111 C1111.1l l.111111s 11111111 11.111 11.1111 1 .111111 1 los111', l'1'111111ls g11l 111g111l111l'11X'11l'11111w1111l1111111111l1Ll1111.1l'.1l1 ll111y l111111gl1l 1111g11l win. ElW1flQ'51J1 .111 sl1l'1sl11JL11.1lW1 llT15l'.lliL1l1111'11 1i1111s, 111is1111111 s11111s, .11111 111is11111g1111 111111 L117 1111111 Cl.1ss11sXX111111l11 N ?0lDlDS-5 ENB ENDS Our same old method of seven section organization ended with a plus. We put the little topics that didn't different look at the everyday. Alumnus johnny Oates' near miss at a nationwide bubble blowing championship proved fit on any other page together in a fun-to-do eighth section of our own. From slang words to a history book story of PC's background, mini articles set roots in the section of bits and pieces. We covered a handful of special students on fractions of double page spreads. Sons and daughters of local restaurant owners earned write ups on after school work hours with parents. Special spotlights on Tammy Massey, jimmy Pease, and Daryl Spencer gave us a too good of a news story to pass up. Volunteer fire fighters and junior emergency crew members gave us the inside story to county life saving. We covered the all helpful cafeteria and maintenance workers on their own two pages. Nearby trailer court residents and inside-the-county long distance students finished off our mixtures of scattered articles. Fragments and scraps of ideas that couldn't fill up double pages shared the + ODD 'N' ENDS space. CUT OFF GET UP. Make believe ring bearer, jimmy Hester, balances Coke tab wedding bands in family living marriage ceremony. E WIASJS CAFETERIA LOUNGER, Connie Smith props up double fad earth shoes and T ieaned legs. TRAVELIN' BUDDY. Carry all satchel A transports Randolph Pettaway's hand fl size necessities. ll iw- Levi lovers joined ranks to make blue jean corporations richer. Striving for equality, women's rights grew more common as students appeared in guys' denims, and guys with satchels raised the question, girl or guy? As males went to salons and females to barber shops, hair stylists went unisex. Afros, shags, and feathered bangs suited one for two. Business boomed and stores sold out of jeans, earth shoes, and shirts of silk to gauze. The confusion of converting length and width sizes brought about poster charts to ease number difficulties. The puka shells fad showed up in rings, bracelets, and choker necklaces. As the color went from green to blue to black, mood ring owners changed from unsettled to happy to upset. Leather ID bands flashed around as name give aways. While you wander through the halls with your fellow look alikes, ask yourself, equaIity? +Odds n Ends 197 Lucky fourth period free timers formed small crowds in front of any available TV sets. Long waited through commercials finally ended just in time to see Fonzie cruise across the screen. For one all-too-short half hour, PG TV peepers relaxed to enjoy Happy Days in the 'I950's. Leaving the 50's in Fonzie's hands, popular Welcome Back Kotter shows set the stage for fads, 70's style. Famed Arnold Horshack's oh, oh, oh, imitations sounded out through classrooms while best friends turned and exclaimed UP YOUR NOSE WITH A RUBBER HOSE! Mr. Kotter's sweathogs didn't worry Good Times liver lipped star 1.1. as he mouthed off in all-out cut down battle with sister Thelma. Echoes of Dyn-o-mite! filled the lunchroom and classes which became dotted with hats, 1.1. style. Wednesday night hit, Starsky and Hutch, captured the 10:00 spotlight. Soon after Christmas vacation, sweaters like those of the crime stopping team wrapped up PG bodies. Not just screen enter- tainment, TV shows set off fashion firsts and script lines intermingled with everyday slang. TABLE NEIGHBOR IOKES take Starsky and Hutch wrap around wearer Alvin Millelfs thoughts off serious notebook concentration. SHOW TIME. Rerun watchers laugh over Happy Days comedy instead of last minute test review during Miss Vick's fourth period study hall. TUNEID IIN 198 TV shows JACKET' STITCH IN TIME. For an added touch, Apryl Brown embroiders nickname title on brother Greg's cover up. HOMEMADE DECOR. Multi signature jacket keeps Virginia Tyler warm during early morning card game. IACIK Slogans, love messages, zodiac signs - what's good clothing coming to? Imaginations went wild. Designs took their origin from needle and thread, stencils, or even clorox. Hand drawn designs got the final touch with a fat needle and multi-color threads. Washing the jacket with clorox gave a faded look. Grabbilng a rag as a writing utensil, the amateur designers bleached out letters to relay messages on their backs. Signed by fellow students or friends, the jacket became a field of graffiti. Fads went out of style after a period of time, but signature jackets hadn't served their time. SLANG sHoT. Turkey insult flies from Curtis Brigman's lips towards classmate's sly remark. Hey man! What's happening? Words echoed through the halls as students met each other. What ever happened to a plain hello? As the lingo changed over the years, the guy who tripped you was no longer a nerd, but now a turkey. And how about the friend who didn't lend you a dime for lunch, what a chump! Solid, you hit the beach when you should have been in English. Al-I-right. You knew you aced that exam in chemistry and smoked history so you could exempt. As the bell rang at 2:30 you had to check-out the parking lot. Later. 'WMM A TUIQIFSEE'-J NN Q 'Y K PGVFD I m PGP-IS 'D A A ' ' CIFZEVV O BLJQFQOVVSVILLE FD SDNVF 'DISIDLJ ANTAVFD MFFIZEE FCM ALL VQLUNTEERS or Crew and Fire Departments HEAVE HO! lohn Makovsky and David Hunter run through fire department check list. A school time alarm left a certain group of guys fidgety in their desk, caused by a natural urge to dash out in a seconds notice. Red lights, loud sirens, and suspenders only represented one side of the not always so exciting task. Early morning alarm brought PG volunteers out of beds into icy winter winds or away from a Sunday afternoon football game. Big blazes united the fighters, whether from Prince George, Disputanta, Burrows- ville, or Carson, forgetting all rivalries until after last spark died out. Then, it's back to the cross county department competition. Starting from a shack in the boonies and a '65 truck twith a half dead batteryj, the Emergency Crew wanted more. Adding a junior crew almost four years ago, new trucks, building, and location, the crew meant business. Along with regulation shift, junior crew appeared at every home football game in full gear. Pushed down again, newly formed senior crew members handed over front lawn duties to the junior lifesavers. A once a week cut kept the establishment smiling. Age requirements prevented the undergrad volunteers from installing red lights on their own car grills and driving to the scene in rescue vehicles. Aware of standard procedure, junior crew had one step up on other applicants for full-fledged membership. Acceptance into a senior slot meant new classes of familiar material but at a higher level. If or when voted in, the eighteen year olds now had the chance at big time experience. CREW NEWS works up English Class curiosity as speech maker Mark Holden relates gory emergency crew facts. EGCDT IA Cruzin' down the white lined path of freedom Sergeant York talked to a car called jack Rabbit. Everything rolled along smoothly 'til a big bear moved up from behind and sped past. Knowing that a gear jam- ming hare was flying five miles ahead, a quick call on artific- ial ears warned him in time. This is Sergeant York calling jack Rabbit. You got a copy on me? 1 0-4, Sarge, what's up? We got a smoky headin' up on your tail, lack. You better put the hammer down 'cuz he's closin' in fast. Roger, Sarge. From first impression sounds, puzzled listeners would think the foreign jabber came from child's play or a different language instead of just disguises used in the code world of CB's. First CB's only criss-crossed the nation's interstates with long haul truckers. But for a fast growing number of high-schoolers, the trucker's new culture came in the form of citizen band radios -the 4-Wheelers direct route to the legendary life of mystique truckers. Aliases lack Rabbit, Wizard, Crow, Cow Puncher, Sly Fox, and Sergeant York - not selected by random, secret nicknames sym- bolized its owners mind, manner, and routine. 10-4. CCCDPSJ GN ME ??9 DICTIONARY Policemen - Smokiesg Bears Toll Booth -Chicken Coop Location -'IO-20 Alright- Roger, 10-4 No - Negitory Yes- Positive Last Person in Convoy - Back Door Step on the Gas - Put the Pedal to the Metal, Put the Hammer down What's your CB Code Name?- What's your Handle? LIFTING CB radio from under the seat hideout, Steve Hatten slides receiver in dashboard position. 202 Mr. Tiller 1 t, ,f --gc ,V 1 le, 5-H V-- l Y lx ' i' l Y-csv! lflii lift W1 1 Y i 1 Vliiif iii? Ll' MSE CALLING ITADAY, Ml'.Tiller ! llml,ll,li lflalfl 5 sF?' Lltfli stops for last minute check before heading home. GREEN I just want all of you to know that when l left Hopewell I left behind all my Blue Devil loyalty. l'm a true Royal now. You hear that, coaches? Out to free himself from any former ties, Mr. Tiller declared his independence from Hopewell at faculty meeting opener. On the first district game day with Colonial Heights, Mr. Tiller showed his colors. All decked out in unsuspecting red, white, and blue and even a colonial on his tie, teasing Royals sent him back into his office to hide for the rest of the day. Never again did the loyal Royal dare appear on Friday with outa flashy green and gold combination. Deciding to end the blue and gold ribbing once and for all, the new main office administrator asked cheerleaders for the Hopewell pep rally spotlight. Cheered on with screams and yells, the former Blue Devil lit the match to burn up PG's version of the rival mascot. In a frantic search following Hopewell's home football field loss, those still with doubts in their minds convinced themselves when excitement and a small little grin sneaked across Mr. Tiller's face after the Royal's most important season win. 2 fr N ffy 'll' fun. 'll 1 ' V .4 In QQ -'S ..., l lla?- An imaginary railroad separated PG from its nearest high school neighbors. Hopewell just happened to fall on the wrong side of the track. Not always sensible logic a bred in rivalry drove Royals against the blue and gold. Hopewell-Prince George sport matches called for a clash when not only teams battled but spectators exchanged not-so-complimentary yells. Hopewell fans entered the PG gym to face a night of Go Back to Bailey's Creek chants. Even more effective a Send the Devil's Back to HopewELL 50 foot sign aggravated Devil fans as PG fans loved the Hopewell taunting. Green support never slackened. A defeat from Hopewell only meant more rivalry next time around. A Hopewell dummy burned at SIGN STICK UP. Sherry Smith tapes anti-Devil sign to lobby wall before rival basketball match. ,- ,- HOORAY HOLLERS! Cramped fans cheer on PG tie up basket in heated bleacher competition between Royal and Devil stands. FEASTING MOUTH STUFFERS, cheerleaders mock Blue Devils and devour snacks before pep rally Royal Raid attack. W the stake each football season. Too proud to admit their own equal level of rivalry, blue and gold supporters didn't give Royals the satisfaction of knowing PG threats deserved bonfire rituals. Devils swallowed their pride when sarcastic anti-Royal football signs failed to stir a Hopewell victory. The best season game any sport had to offer repeated itself in coaches' award speeches when a 1-100 record would bring applause if that1 was a Blue Devil defeat. :Acta T0 Axiiteiivs ' Hopewell Rivalry 203 GAZE FROM THE GAZEBO shows backside view of stately Appomatox Manor. BIRD'S EYE VIEW. Lonely but peaceful old mill sits over Lee Mill Pond back edge. Nine out of ten PC students probably never knew where our school name came from. Nine of them never even wondered and probably didn't care. But since it was a year to be patriotic, the yearbook staff decided to dig the Royal Alias skeleton out of the closet. Who WAS Prince George? According to Mrs. Rusmisell and the history books, Prince George of Denmark, a companion of Queen Anne of England, formed a target for the county without a name. Now you're interested, right? Apple-polisher politicians turned us into a namesake. Success! The couple wed. just a bit of trivia for your bogged down bicentennial brain. STOP AND TAKE NOTE. Little regarded signpost marks off PG county history info. 204 PG Name!Community IIN A NUTSIHIELL In 1702, Charles City County gave birth to Prince George. The boundaries stretched from the james River to the North Carolina border and from the Surry County line west to the Appalachian Mountains. PG's 169,901 acres of land supported 1,327 taxpayers. PG Firsts 1607 - Local Berkeley Plantation or the Pilgrims' Plymouth Rock? Sources contradicted each other over where the first Thanksgiving really started. 1657- America's first Protestant Church landmarks PG at Merchants' Hope Church on county route 641. With a questionable founding date, the carved year lies on one of the church's rafters. Background Assembles Prince George owns a colorful biography. Burned war aftermath, including county records, limits the tale. Delvers ran into trouble distinguishing names like Epps or Eppes and Hardiman or Hardyman. With often more than one spelling, the history, nevertheless, assembled piece by piece. TRIPLE ALLIANCE. Cooperative informers guide history buff visitors through City Point credentials. With almost no city life in the early 1700's, only plantations dotted the countryside. They sustained themselves as units, trading with one another. Using what now serves as Route 10 as a horseback path, the four legged animals provided most of the transportation. Civil War Involvement During the final three weeks of Abraham Lincoln's life, City Point in nearby Hopewell substituted as a temporary US capital. ln the siege of Petersburg, Southern soldier, Wade Hampton, stole 2,500 heads of Union cattle and drove them through the PG part of Blackwater Swamp to help out starving Confederate soldiers. Windmill Point at Flowerdew Hundred witnessed the 72 hour crossing of the james River by Grant's Union troops via a homemade pontoon bridge. Prince George Prospers As a milling center, the Charles City protege teemed with more trade than its benefactor. Ward's Creek stop off on the route to Burrows- ville showed why. On the PG side of the james River, tributaries ran faster to support more mills to develop twice as fast as its mother country. Border Changes Soon Dinwiddie, Prince Edward, Petersburg, and others flew the Prince George coop, until today's present boundaries existed. Never permanent though, bickering state constitution rule that a city can annex parts of a county but counties can't do the same leads to constant border contractions from land snatchers, Hopewell and Petersburg. information in this article came from The Prince George - Hopewell Story, Francis Earle Lutz, the William Byrd Press, Inc., Richmond, Va., 1957. Community 205 ,reiicczirs A DOUBLE HANDED, Chi Wing Mark gives a stir to simmering vegetables for loy Young's evening menu specialties. TWO AS A TEAM. Wintergarden's Karen Radcliff mounts ready-to-go salad on serving tray after brother Bobby adds final trimmings. PLATE Come and get it! ln-the- back workers spread the word at school about parent owned eating houses. loy Young and Wintergarden restaurants flavored farm country with an international tou-ch while King's Barbeque made stomachs happy with that close to home feeling. On Sweethearts Day, Karen Radcliff waited on pre-Ring Dance diners at the Wintergar- den Restaurant, serving Bobby and Greg's kitchen specialties of Spaghetti Wintergarden and LaSagne. Bobby King whiled away any- other-student study time doing anything but waiting on tables at the pork barbeque haven. Would loy Young customers get hungry in an hour? No way. Chi Wing Mark helped fill up culture seeking clientele after a quick explanation of the menu's oriental labels. Don't-cook-tonight ideas drew gourmets to their prospective favorites. Pots washed and scoured, lights went out, finishing up another work day - make that work night. BITS AND PIECES. Hot off the coals pork barbeque gets quick hand chop up from behind King's Barbeque counter worker, Bobby King. l 1 5 at .gr 'N K VV..4s..'q. -1-4' ii '1 206 Restaurants K. . Trailer trials and tribulations marked life in a mobile home as a phenomenon to remember. A trailer containing one bathroom, four people, and a cat made the morning rush hour to the bathroom hazardous to one's health. During the violent month of March, trailers M. 1-push of a button ran up PG bills. Hi and bye to a county neighbor meant cash rather than conversation. Limiting lengths, fast talkers relayed messages to not-so- far away friends. Multiple choice prefixes hindered forgetful dialers, causing wrong numbered calls. A phone lock cured Sherry Smith's family of increasing monthly bills. Living far out in Disputanta meant paying for all outside area calls, depriving phone socializing. Disputanta, Carson, and Spring Grove made up Prince George while the unusual telephone system separated communication by wires. Upsetting clubs and other organizations, long distance numbers caused phone brigaders to spread information on coming events. The only way to beat the system - say it at school or pay to say it later. 733:7732:il:c24.i6:A'5lx 5-Mails! Q Q ICSTISTISSJQT 20a SPENT, Sally Close travels across the phoneline border to avoid long distance Disputanta charges. TRJJMILER TJALIH sitting on the edge of open fields received powerful blasts from the Old North Wind, jolting them around upon their foundations. Nighttime downpours turned flat lots into a mere shallow lake. In dimming evening lights, unsuspecting drivers vaulted over unforeseen speed bumps. if YI b 'J '5u'xaolVMS- .W its .- More than once, trailer owners awoke to the howling of cat spats in the cavity under their homes at 2:00 AM. With neighbors close by, a sense of security developed, curing worrisome, sleepless nights. Small lots made summer lawn care shorter and easier. Plenty of paved streets supplied smooth bike riding and roller skating for the neighborhood gang. Well lighted streets made it possible for everyone to stay out late at night, enjoying the summer evening breezes. Trailers may have cramped living styles, but the number of friends close at hand provided the right combination of players for a good game of basketball or cow pasture football. NO NET BALLGAME, AV Hicks stretches over neighborhood teammates for two points at Bennie's recreation field. Phones!Trailers 207 208 Tammy Massey ,- Not just all glory, Tammy Massey soon found out that her big name title of State FHA Secretary meant extra hours, extra write ups, and an oral presentation in front oflune convention goers. With an early start last March, Tammy sent off application forms to snatch one of the two run off spots for secretary. After a summer's worth of planning, the state officer put Project Youth have a place, too into action. With one of the busiest clubs as a back up, Tammy and FHA'ers baked bicentennial bread, collected pennies for UNICEF, baby sat for visiting parents on open house night, and built Betsy Ross for the homecoming parade. As a last minute brainstorm, Tammy and Kim Miller came to school on semester break free time to treat teachers with coffee break goodies they stirred up themselves Determined not to use an ordinary slide show of the PG FHA on the go, the three year member used creativity and talent to turn out life size cut outs with center holes cut away With just a touch of entertainment in the presenta tion out popped a confident face with a quick project by project run down from a coffee pot a rabbit and even a pumpkin ASSEMBLY LINE SERVERS Tammy Massey and Kim Miller ladle out Ms Tillery s orange juice request during teacher workday ALL TIHIE WAS T0 STJEIT When dare devil Daryl Spencer joined the yearbook ranks staff editors spent the year keeping him out oftrouble Out to get a different angle Daryl climbed sneaked squirmed and leaned anywhere and everywhere he could find ln the football opener with Highland Springs a quick dart onto the field during a time out because of Mark Hennington s leg cramp sent cries from the officials of you can t be out here' after they spotted the camera flash During the county th bicentennial celebration police called him down off the towering police station antenna when he decided the 76 Peerage needed a 20 foot high aerial view of the festivities Even Hopewell High School showed evidence of the Peerage cameraman s antics After borrowing a yearbook sales poster or making his own for their halls and setting up shop on stage when e Congressional subcommittee visited their auditorium for Kepone investigation the Tri City neighbors wondered if he didn t belong to them - - 1 ' ' - . , . . , . I 1 1 I I I I I I I ' , . 1 . , . ll I II ' ' ' ' ' 'I 1 . . . , 1 I ILIIVED ICMSTIIN I LIIVIIN 5 A wide range of backgrounds drew classmates from multiple dwellings: military quarters, houses, apartments, trailers, and even a boat! New faced jimmy Pease registered for PGHS with a jordan Point Yacht Club address. With permanent residents for two yeaars, the 42 foot boat had everything a house did, complete with two showers, just a little more compactly. Regular house furniture fit in with no tie downs except for a safety latch on the refrigerator. Only extra rough weather demanded a close watch on free standing lamps. The on-the-water lodging had extra added attractions. Ifjimmy felt like a swim, he jumped off the swim platform at the back of the boat. For a change of bedroom win- dow - opps, stateroom - scenery, he could start up and move it himself. Best of all, the PC junior never had any grass to mow. I ts Bu? Z Q by 5 ik I V, ,. HI., , wk' t ' -- ..,,Q, V we Wi fi . s A Q M, . :asf g ,- .f,. 'Ak' W U' , ' ,Aa El - ON HIS FLOATING PATIO, jimmy Pease relaxes with his dog to take advantage of the windy lawn IHIE CAMERA UG Whether Daryl hung out of Mr. Darby's second floor window to snap a shot of the repairmen on the shop roof or shocked Mrs. Flowers and Ms. Martin when he climbed on the stairway landing window to focus in on smoking area clean up, the otherwise impish 5' senior seemed to come alive when he got behind the camera lens. TURNING IN CIRCLES, merry-go- round rider Daryl Spencer oversits saddle as he huddles under umbrella topped carousel. jimmy Pease! Danfl Spencer 209 210 Signatures tlfo' E it 5.7 Character spotlight - the occasional personality spurts which decorated semester notebooks, the miniature art that trimmed test edges, eased tension, and filled leftover blocks of blue lined whiteness, the SIIGINJ ll,1r1ffr2ES B IDCDCCDDLES First grade ABC's got lost along the school years. Originality in y's and e's 1 lead-smeared desk graffiti- bf0U8l1l Cllafadef I0 GSSHYS, where did the connection and Crossed eyes from K come in? All stood out as leaCll9l?- Name'YVfll'n8, SIVGS QL r individuality, unique pencil SD'-'fCl3l attention, appeal? Q' personality, a tiny scribble f0D On the ll5l 0f.P9V50n?lllY A for attention, and an Denmanshlp- llleglble, B unnoticed piece of all of us. I Defllapsf l3Ul the letter ' Who would have thought doodles dlffefefmes all became Pall C 1231, could have had so much ef what made YOU, YOU, and importance??? PGH5, US- s Smile YU 0 'T E lk ' rr!! P PM PG has a bubble blowing champ? Silly brainstrom of witty baseball commentator, joe Garagiola, turned into an American League vs. National League duel for the biggest bubble. PG's claim to fame, johnny Oates, got into the act when the sports' celebrity beat out Philadelphia Philly teammates with a 17Vz blow. After 1ohnny's 21 eastern division win, National League team representatives huffed and puffed for the size winning diameter but the Phillies' catcher's 18 incher took the prize. Next stop: the World Series, Bazooka style. In pre-game mini show, Minnesota Twins Kurt Bevacqua, American League champ, outblew johnny 18 to 'ISW' with the five pack mouthful. Still a winner though, double donations went out to Tri-City charities, and the 1976 Baseball Royals had all the sugarless gum their mouths could hold. WWNAS F . . .firecrackers in the bathrooms. . . .between class 5-minute tape deck breaks. . . .the shop blow up. . . .long skirts and high heels. . . .7-Eleven right across the street. . . .prices going up S5 and at . . .mood rings. . . .blue doors instead of green? . . .a flood of crutches and slings. . . .new school approval at last. . . .long legged females on the track. . . .extra supply of soph- omores. . . .vacation in Florida for seniors. . . .numb sophomores from bleachers. . . .broadway coming to PG in FootIight Scandals. . . .walking and talking backwards for a day. . . .juniors trying to donate spirit signs to seniors so they could beat the soph- omores, but didn't. . . . up your nose with a rubber hose! . . .Home Ec fire extin- guisher lessons. . . .necklaces for girls AND guys. . . .newspapers that didn't cost. . . .converting Mr. Tiller into a Royal. . . . rain, rain, and ONLY rain. . .s . left-right echoes of the drill team. . . .majorettes pulling PG's getting-too-old-to-walk Santa in on a wagon. . . .ahhh's and ooh's when Darrell Harvey sang. . . .looking once and looking twice - I can't believe it- boy cheerleaders. . . .Vegas, Civics, and Pintos instead of the biggie models. . . .milk and lunch prices staying the same, for once. johnny Oates!A Year of 2'l'l AHEAR JRGUNID TIHIE CLQCIKQ lg BUSY BAKERS, Mrs. Spencer and Mrs. Balazik, form assembly line work style for cookie dessert while Ms. Horne grabs for another cook pot. TEAMWORK. Mr. lones and Mrs. Fields perform the you sweep and I'lI hold ritual in smoking area. On any school night about 12:00 PM, lights flickered and went out at PGHS. Chains rattled and keys turned to check doors, then double check and lock tight. As a new school policy, Mr. Bermond Tu rner's night crew now stayed around until midnight. Late night floor waxing, nightly classroom clean-up, closing crossihall gates filled up evening time until the witching hour arrived to leave. The non-night stayers, Mr. john janosko and crew piled in at an early 7:00 AM hour. Mr. lanosko rushed from place to place when his name echoed over the PA system, Will Mr. lanosko please report to the office. With a new boss-lady, Mrs. Frances Houchins, and a former boss-lady-turned worker, Mrs. Catherine Bendall, the cafe- teria staff continued to pour out food for student lunches. Switching off their own meal schedules, the workers sat down to before 11:00 AM lunches in time to get ready for the thousand kid stampede at the start of fourth period. OFFICE STANDER, PG handyman waits for instruction after PA system paging. BELOW DECK, Mr. lanosko funnels chemical into boiler water tank. 212 Cafetena!Maintenance 5, 5 - - 34... A . . ' 58 2 UW., T 5 -- rr 4 In J xv . x.,, 5, ..., has-Arofmnvaan ASSISTANT SIGN HANGER, Mr. Turner lends a hand to junior heart painters for Ring Dance decor. BALANCING THE BOOKS, new boss, Mrs. Houchins adds and divides monthly food bill totals. CUPS IN A ROW. Mrs. Lucas lines up paper containers for assembly line cookie stuffing. Wa lm. iw gi H5 gill' 5 gan Q Magi A .. ,. Q, NX W4 x. - HIGHER GROUND. Tape in hand, Mr. lanosko measures off window inches for new pane replacement in girls' locker room. FORWARD, LEAN. Reaching out, Mr. lanosko braces himself as he stretches across to replace rooftop spotlight. Cafeteriallvtaintenance 213 'indicates name in copy A Acknowledgements: 221 Acre, Holly: 91,158 Adkins, james: 186 Adolph's: 85 Ads: 82-115 Airport Grocery: 102 Aj's: 85 Aldridge, Allen: 178 Busch, Alexander, Mark: 186 Allen, Calvin: 186 Allen, Gregory: 101, 158 Allen, Mr, john: 138 Allen, Madeline: 178 Allen, Michael: 158 Allen, Pat: 186 Allen, Robert L: 182,183 Allen, Robert L.: 41,158,177 Allen, Robert P.: 165,178,182,183 Allin, Mrs. Pat: 43,146 Altman, Cecil: 178 Anderson, Mrs. Bernadine: 143 Anderson, Gary: 186 Anderson, jeffrey: 158 Anderson, john: 178 Anderson, Paul: 178 Andolina, Donald: 158 Andy's Corner Grocery: 99 Andy, Don: 36 Angolia, Ginger: 178 Anonsen, Eric: 24,25 Anonsen, Marc: 75,186 Appomatox Manor: 204,205 Archer, Peggy: 178 Armstrong, Ollie: 186 Arrington, Norma: 129,186 Art: 125' David Israel - President, Connie Griffith -Vice President, Chris Whelan - Secretary-Treasurer, Terry Coleman - Business Manager, judy Beitzel, Wanda Bennett, Debbie Boisseau, Ronald Brown, john Evko, Kathy Fields, Robbin Freeberg, Nancy Fuller, jan Glass, Sandra Green, Clarence jackson, Marie King, Ronnie Moring, Craig Pelter, Keith Robinson, Steve Wilson, Dale Wright. Astin, Mr. Tom: 144, 62' Atwood, Mark: 50 Aude, Greg: 178 B Bailey, Lavetta: 186 Bailey, Mark: 178 Bailey, Mr. William: 149 Balazik, Mrs. Margaret: 212 Baldwin, Bill: 75 Baldwin, Debra: 121,159 Baldwin, judy: 186 Ball, Charlie: 159 Band: 19, 68, 72 , 738, 129',133 Starlettes: Pam jones - Head Majorette - Council, Patty Phillips - Co-Head Maiorette, Tammy Massey, Diane Vanko. Princettes: Cindy Bishop, lan Dewell, Tammy Henson, Beckie lones, Connie jones, Terry Oakley, Becky Rhodes, Susan Vaughan, Members: Floyd Brown - Drum Major-Captain - Council, jimmy Liufau- Council, lan MacGregor - Miscues st all - - f I n I s h A CONGLOMERATION of well wishers crowd jordan Point pier to send out cheers to favorite entrees. 214 Index Council, Teresa Pardoe - Council, Tracey Wiggins - Council, Ginger Angolia, LaVetta Bailey, Lisa Banks, joe Beaudet, Pam Bishop, joe Bowers, Karen Burrow, Ricky Clements, Rosemarie Coleman, Buford Collins, Leonard Cook, janice Cox, Doug Crichton, Linda Crowley, Terri Cunningham, Patricia Docx, Greg Duffek, Herman Duncan, Cristen Everitt, Carol Foltz, julie Fowler, Mary Galderise, Sammy Garcia, joe Griffin, Susan Harrison, Danny Herald, Timmy Herald, David Horne, Linda Horne, Sharon Huber, Dickie johnson, Susan johnston, Bob jones, jay jones, Debbie Krenicky, Robyn MacGregor, joel Mikuta, Debbie Mikulcik, Liz Mikulcik, Pam Montgomery, Robert Moore, Vickie Pardoe, jim Payne, Tyrone Powell, Greg Robinson, Dwayne Seal, Ron Sones, Darrell Swindell Dave Togger, Paul Vlk. Banik, Susan: 178 Bank of Southside Va.: 97 Bannister, Howard: 61, 186 Bannister, janet: 186 Bannister, Karen: 178 Bannister, Karen F.: 159 Barnett, Larry: 186 Baseball: 38, 39, 40, 41 Basketball: 58-61 Basketball, Girls: 56, 57 Bass, Vonda: 159 Battlefield Park Exxon: 85 Baxley, Kenneth: 121,178 Becker, Sharon: 178 Beitzel,judy:159 Benedict, james: 178 Beneficial Finance: 115 Benesek, Sheryle: 159 Benesek's Mobile Home Service: 96,97 Bennett, Darrell: 111,178 Bennett, Robert: 77,157,178 Bennett, Wanda: 178 Bennie's Mobile Home Park: 96, 97 Bernardo, Mr. john: 123 Berry, Lisa: 186 Berry, Matt: 186 Best, Robin: 186 Beta Club: 71 , 74 Cindy Williams - President, Doug Crichton - Vice-President, Barbara McTague - Secretary, Mark Esposito - Treasurer, Sue Gross - Reporter, Stanley Booker, janet Burke, Marilyn Carroll, Patsy Cassell, Steve Chiminello, janice Clements, Nrzaxx 1 Susan Dubberly, Anthony Eldridge, Linda England, Nancy Fuller, Mary Gorby, Lisa Gorman, David Graham, Susan Green, Sheryl Greene, jeff Grubb, Diane Hanzlik, Adrian Harmata, Susan Harrison, Wanda Harrison, Charlene Holloway, David Horne, Patty lackson, Cassie jefferson, Susan johnston, Sandra Kvasnicka, jeannie Lees, West Lescanec, james Liufau, Debra Logan, jane Long, lan MacGregor, Diana Morris, Carol Mullins, Andy Paul, Lorrie Poland, Charlie Powell, Bobby Reeves, Evelyn Robinson, jeff Smelley, Gary Tadlock, Becky Thomspon, Carmen Torreulla, Sandy Turner, Michelle Villars, Cindy Vnencak, Nicki Waitman, Venita Weaver, Tracey Wiggins, Eric Williamson, Beth Wilson. Bey, Elijah: 186 Bey, Ravanna: 178 Biberstein, George: 186 Bicentennial: 9,10 Bicycle Repair Shop: 115 Bischoff, Lori: 178 Bishop, Brenda: 186 Bishop, Cynthia: 178 Bishop, Kim: 9,187 Bishop, Pamela: 159 Bishop, Sue: 178 Blanding, Larry: 187 Blizzard, Otis: 159 Blowe, Michael: 178 Blystone, David: 187 Boisseau, Debbie: 124 Bolander, jeffrey: 36, 46,159 Bolick, Pamela: 178 Bond, julia: 187 Bonfire: 74 Booker, Stanley: 12, 33, 50,61,178, 184', 185 Books: 118,119 Boone, Steve: 187 Bortner, Pam: 178 Bowen, Doug: 187 Bowers, Donnie: 187 BOwers,joseph:187 Bowles, Tina: 178 Bowman, Bonnie: 187 Bowman, Carlton: 187 Bowman, Robin: 187 Bradley, Authur: 117,158 Bradley, Mike:187 Bradshaw, Kim: 187 Brier's Cabinets: 104 Briggs, Mrs. janine:9,151 Briggs, Tari: 34,178 Brigman, Curtis: 159,199 Brigman, Mark: 187 Brissette, Mrs. Evelyn: 14,131,139 Brissette, Kathy: 14 Britt, Kathy: 187 Brockwell, Barbara: 125,178 Brooks , Beverly: 33, 56, 57, 85 Brooks, Garfield: 16, 50,159 Brown, Angela: 43, 54, 57, 78, 178 Brown, Apryl: 178,199 Brown, Belinda: 178 Brown, Debbie: 178 Brown, Doug: 187 Brown, Floyd: 132,159,162 ' Brown, Gerald: 52 Brown, Gregory: 127,159 Brown, Melvin: 36,159 Brown, Ronald: 178 Browning, Donna: 187 Browning, jim: 46 Browning, Kathy: 122,178 Browning, Thomas: 159 Bryant, jim: 187 Builders Supply Co.: 115 Bullock, Cheyenne: 50,187 Bullock, Tyrone: 36, 471, 49, 50 160 Burke, Burke, Deborah: 160 janet: 15, 63, 65,160 Burke, Kathy: 187 Burke, Steve: 187 Burrow, Becky: 130,187 Burrow, Katherine: 67,160 Burrow Pulpwood: 99 Burrows, Karen: 24 Pat: 187 Business:123 ,129 ',131t ,133 ' 135' Butler, Mr. David: 103 Butler, Denise: 65,186 ,187 Butterworth Furniture: 111 Butts, Ray: 36, 50, 51 , 52,160 Byrne, David: 187 Byrne, Linda: 179 Bzdek, Debra:160 C C.B. Radios: 201 Cafeteria: 212, 213 Cain, Audrey: 187 Gain, Loraine: 160 Callis, Richard: 187 Calvin, Ronald: 187 Camden, Kathy: 187 Capps, Debbie: 187 Capps, Shirley: 179 Carlisle, Mike: 179 CarlisIe's American: 87 Carole lane Fashions: 81 Carpenter, Tammie: 188 Carpenter, Tony: 179 Carroll, Marilyn: 160 Carroll, Robert: 50,179 Carson Texaco: 94 Carter, Orlando: 188 Garwile, Mrs. Kay: 142 Cary, Mike: 188 Cassell, Patsy: 160 r OPENED WIDE. Raft racers steer clear of james River-'s jaws with memories of last summefs movie terror. jaws, tide changes, cargo ships, and the re- creation ofthe Battle of the lronclads made for an eventful WRVQ Great james River Raft Race. ,Entrees included anything from inner tubes tied together and rafts built on the spur of the moment to a 50 foot manmade jaws. With a good send off, the contestants started out from jordan Point at 10:00 AM. At mid river, however, a miscalculation of the tide changes sent the rafts heading towards Hopewell instead of destination point, Berkeley Plantation. Paddling forwards, and moving backwards, the contenders faced more confusion. WRVQ manager, john Hill, had asked a shipping agency not to send boats through the area until the end of the race, but communication lines got crossed as rafters dodged a Dutch cargo vessel in the middle of the action. Hungry and tired riders reached Berkeley Plantation hours later with food and drink waiting for rehabilitation Too exhausted to care who won, the weary travelers went home with aching arms and tired bodies. Cathrall, Ann: 160 Cavalier Central Bank: 110 Chairky, Mrs. Marcia: 149 Chapel, Frank: 188 Chappell, Kenny: 179 Charliefs Lakement Texaco: 81 Cheerleaders: 62, 157, 203 janet Burke - Captain, Lisa Gorman - Assistant Head, Kris Gudmudnson -Secretary- Treasurer, Linda England, Paula Grimm, Carla Hood, jan Hunter, Tim King, Linda Mason, Sherry Smith, Gary Tadlock, Muff Tutwiler, Matt Wall, Denise Butler-Alternate, Eileen McCoy - Alternate, Carrie Wittie - Alternate. Chess Club: 66 Chess Club: james Reith - President, Mark Chiminello - Vice-President, Charles Dungan - Secretary, Tim Singletary - Treasurer, Steve Chiminello, jummy Core, Bob Eldridge, David Graham, Bobby Reeves. Chezik, Lori: 188 Chiminello, Steve: 24, 25,179 Choir: 127,129 ',133' Cor-cert Choir: 69, 117', 127 , 129 Carolyn King - President, Darrell Harvey-Vice-President, Daphne Coleman - Secretary- Treasurer, Clint Alfond, Susan Banik, Vonda Bass, Kim Bishop, Vivian Blanding, Angie Brown, Melvin Brown, Patsy Cassell, Veniece Coleman, Beverly Crews, Lesly Davidson, james Dixon, Avis Epps, Kenneth Epps, janet Fields, Kathy Fields, jule Gant, Debra Gilliam, juanita Goodwyn, Curtis Granderson, Sue Gross, Duane Gunn, Larry Hardy, Fred Harris, Sylvia Harris, Gerald Harville, Patsy Harville, Sharon Hayes, Marion Hill, Sally Hill, Darlene Horner, Billie jean Ison, Elnora johnson, Robin josey, Taliza Kimbrough, Tony King, Laura Kirshman, Stephanie Knight, Valerie Mason, Carlton Matthews, William Mayes, Mary Mayes, Sonya Pettaway, Sheila Phillips, Evelyn Raines, Wanda Ray, Gregg Reese, Penny Sills, Susan Sluka, Tanya Tatem, Randy Taylor, Clara Thomas, Catherine Thompson, Carolyn Togger, Queen Turner, Linwood Tucker, Lloyd Walker, Matthew Wall, Adare Weaver, Vincent Wyche. Chudoba, Ann: 43 Chudoba, Mary: 43,179 City Savings Bank and Trust Company: 84 Cimo, Vicki: 160 Claiborne, Billy: 188 Claiborne, Carolyn: 188 Clairborne, Leola: 160 Clanton, james: 36,179 Clark, Aquanetta:179 Clark and Pritchard: 81 Clark, Wayne: 161 Classes: 157-195 Classroom - Community: 134,135 Clements, Barry: 161 Clements, janice: 179 Clements, johnny: 157,179 Clements, Renee: 188 Clements, Ricky: 188 Clements, William: 161 Close, Sally: 207 Closing: 222-224 Cloud, Kathy: 124,188 Coates, Mr. Robert:,153 Cole, judy: 161 Cole, Larry: 188 Cole, Philip: 123 Cole, Sheila: 188 Coleman, Angie: 188 Coleman, Daphne: 188 Coleman, Darlene: 188 Coleman, Kathy: 161 Coleman, Michael: 179 Coleman, Morris: 179 Coleman, Rosemarie: 188 Coleman, Terry: 36, 54,125, 161, 217 Collins, Cathy: 77,161 Collins, Mrs. Greta: 15, 63, 79,143 Collins, Keith: 54 Collins, Coach Wayne: 41, 49, 52, 54, 61 ', 152 Community: 204-250 Competition: 66-67 Compton, Anita: 179 Compton, David Conaway, Sandy: 188 Connelly, Crawley: 188 Cook, Colette: 161 Cooper, Mrs. Connie: 146 Core, Billy: 36,188 Cole, james: 36, 46, 54, 69, 71,161 Corell, Ms. Petie: 139 Cosby, Lorraine: 188 Cote, Peggy: 87 Cottle, Tim: 188 Country Aire Mobile Estates: 105 Courtney, Faron: 188 Cox, Cindy: 43, 56, 57,188 Cox,janice:162 Cox, Roy: 50, 57 , 113,179, 181 Coxe, Peggy: 1 62 Cramer, Carol: 162,170 Cramer, Mark: 162,170 Crater Volkswagen: 88-89 Crawford, Ada: 162 Crawford, Albert: 179 Crawford, Amy: 188 Crawford, Clyde: 188 Crawford, Robert: 162 Crews, Beverly: 24, 34, 35,179 Crichton, Doug: 73,115,127,179 Crichton, Mrs. Marjorie: 148 Crist, Cheryl: 188 Crocker, Sharon: 179 Cross Country: 46-47 Crotty, Chris: 1 78 ',179 Crouch, Geoffery:162 Crouse, Diane: 179 Crouse, Ira: 188, 207 Crowder, Robbie: 188 Crowley, Cindy: 12 Cruey, Susan: 162 Cruz, Edwin: 162 Cruz, Norman: 162 Cruz, Robert: 179 Culbertson, Mary: 43 Cullipher, Pam: 67,188 Cummings, Coach Michael: 36,126, 150 Cunningham, Doris: 188 Cunningham, Terri: 179 Curly, Milton: 179 Currin, Parlee: 179 D Dalten's leweIer's: 110 Daniel, Bob: 10, 20 Daniel, june: 188 Daniels, Mrs. Edwina Moore: 24 Danielson, David:162 Darby, Mr. Leon lBuddyj: 150 Dave's lock Shop:103 Davidson, Lesly:179 Davis, Chuck: 133,188 Davis, Deenie:179 Davis, Mr. George: 153 Davis, john: 41, 49, 50, 59, 61,163 Davis, Mike: 179 Davis, Ralph: 179 Davis, Ricky: 179 Day, Debbie: 34 Dean, Deborah: 163 DECA: 70 , 77 Chris Patillie - President, Keith Robinson - Vice-President, Billy Hollfnd - Secretary, Becky Rhodes - Treasurer, julie Kaufman - Reporter, Cheryl Zikes - Reponer, Bobby Allen - Chaplain, Vicki Kesler- Parliamentarian, Cathy Collins - State Officer - Eastern Area Vice-President, Mark Alexander, janet Bannister, Sandra Bender, Darrell Bennett, Mathew Perry, Michael Blowe, judy Bonner, Dean Burton, Pat Busch, Debbie Capps, Ronald Coleman, Mark Cramer, Amy Crawford, Doris Cunningham, june Daniel, David Danielson, Deenie Davis, Denise Dickens, Greg Duffek, jeff Finlin, Kim Gates, jeff Graham, jule Gant, Rhonda Henning, Keith Holmstrand, Rapunzel Hopkins, Monica Horn, Linda Hunt, Donna jacob, Tammy jefferson, Victor johns, Yolanda johnson, Michelle Labeau, Carla Massey, Betty McNew, Terry Parker,jimmy Pease, Bobby Perdue, john Pittman, Pat Randolph, Buddy Raney, Lauretta Rose, Laura Saal, Billy Sebera, Holly Sebera, Connie Smith, Randolph Starks, Gwen Tatum, Becky Thacker, Stephanie Thomas, Rodney Thompson, Mary jo Turek, Karen Williams, Mike Wise, Carrie Wittie, Linda Wray, Bridgette Wyche, Norman Epps. Dennis, Lillian: 179 Denny's Western Steaks: 15', 84 Dettor, Sharon: 12 Dewell, jan: 189 Dick, Harold: 163 Dickens, Debbie: 189 Dickens, Denise: 189 Dickens, Mike: 189 Dickens, William: 163 Diego, Catherine: 163 Dixon, james: 127,179 Dixon, Walter: 179 Docx, Norman: 189 Docx, Patricia: 1 79 Domico, Carol: 34 Donald McKay Hardware: 108 Drew, Authur: 189 Drew, Shirley: 179 Drill Team: 72', 73 Drill Team: April Brown, Betty Brown, Debbie Bzdek, Lu Lu Carroll, Lorraine Crosby, Doris Cunningham, Valerie Granderson, Tammy Godwin, Sharon Haines, Sandy Horn, Debbie Horsfall, Dee Dee Lee, Delphine Mason, Francis McCoy, Sinthea Myrick, Debbie Oates, Patty Phoenix, Betty Potter, Peggy Raugley, Driver Education: 119' Dubberly, Susan: 131,179 Duffek, Greg: 189 Duncan, Elke: 189 Duncan, Charles: 180 E Eddins, Pamela: 163 Edwards, Martha: 109,118,163 Edwards, Regina: 180 Edwards, Steve: 180 Elder, Paige: 189 Eldridge, Robert: 163 Eldridge, Tony: 180 Ellingwood, Cheryl: 11 Elliott, Bill: 180 Elliott, Sharon: 180 Ellis, Belinda: 72,163 England, Cheryl: 79,189 England, Linda: 63,180, 222 English: 131' Eppler, Rusty: 189 Epps, Avis: 163,172 Epps, Kenneth: 159,163 Epps, Norman: 50,189 Equipment: 120,121 Erickson, janet: 180 Erickson, julie: 189 Esposito, Mark: 12, 50, 55,101 ,157, 163 Eubank, Betty: 189 Index 215 A never before tennis team formulated when two transfers, Ray Toussaint and Ron Sones, set plans in motion. Needing a sponsor, Mr. Astin and Mr. Spradlin doubled up practice duties after an organizational meeting carved out 20+ racketeers. Without adequate facilities on county grounds, the netters battled balls back and forth on close by Fort Lee courts. With first year practice behind them, the originators hoped to throw off their intramural title. Changing over from club status to teami status the court hustlers could take on scattered area opposition. I FLYING THROUGH THE AIR. Ray Toussaint's powerful backswing calls for long legged cross over stretch. 216 Index Evans, Alvin: 180 Evans, Rick: 180 Evans, Sharon: 180 Everitt, Christian: 180 Everson, Beverly: 164,186 ',187,189 Evko, john: 188,189 F Faculty - High School: 142-143 Faculty - Occupation!Sparetime: 1 52, 153 Faculty - Statistics: 138-141 Faculty Styles: 150-151 Fad - jackets: 199 Fain, Carol: 180 Fain, Cathy: 180 Faulknier, Tammy: 189 Favale, Yvonne: 34, 57,180,184 ' Ferguson, Thomas: 180 Fields, Anthony: 163 Fields, Consilon:163 Fields, Dorothy: 159,163 Fields, janet: 189 Fields, Kathy: 42 , 43,180 Fields, Mrs. Lucy: 212 Figg, Barbara: 43, 57,189 Finlen,jeff:189 Finlen, julie: 163 First 8: Merchants: 93 First Colonial Savings and Loan: 106 First Federal Savings and Loan: 92- 93 First Year Classes: 126-127 Finley, Charlotte: 189 Fleshman, Dennis: 189 Fleshman, Kathy: 180 Fletcher, Edie: 11,78,157,180 Florine, Keith: 189 Flowers, Mrs. Stuart: 142 Foltz, Carol: 131, 163 Food: 70-71 Football: 48-53 Foreign Languages: 119 ,127 ,133' Ford, Francine: 180 Ford, Ronnie: 583,60-61,163 Foster, Mr. Garland: 134 Foster, Tina: 189 Fowler, Eddie: 180 Fowler, julie: 163 Fred, Cindy: 189 Free: 68-69 Freeberg, Michelle: 163 Freeberg, Robin: 180 French Club: 71, 74' janice Wettstein - President, Daryl Spencer-Vice-President, Diane Hanzlik - Secretary, jimmy Core -Treasurer, Doug Crichton - Reporter, Marc Anonsen, Pam Bortner, Renee Clements, Sandra Conaway, Colette Cook, Pam Cullipher, Susan Dubberly, Martha Edwards, Nancy Fuller, Glynis Gray, Sherri Griffin, Don Hanline, Adrian Harmata, Patty jackson, jeanne King, Marie King, Taft Kiser, jimmy Liufau, Debra Logan, jane Long, Teresa Pardoe, Patti Phillips, Lorrie Poland, Kristen Shelor, Dale Spencer, Tracy Stover, Becky Thompson, Allen Trimble, julie Urquhart, Michelle Villars, Cindy Vnencak, Melanie Wallack, Eric Williamson, Barbara Wilson, Beth Wilson. French Honor Society: 73 Doug Crichton Fry, Kenny: 180 Fudge, Steve: 189 Fulcher, Robbie: 189 Fuller, Nancy: 117,163 Future Business Leaders of America: 67', 77' Sheryl Greene - President, Terry Oakley - Vice-President, Tina Bowles - Secretary, Tim Ki ng - Treasurer, Paul Holland - Reporter, Aquanetta Clark - Historian, Mary Perry - Parliamentarian. Future Farmers of America: 66 , 70 ,.77 Future Homemakers of America: 70 , 74 , 77 Sandy Turner - President, Pam Bortner -Vice President, Karen Bannister - Secretary, Debbie Baldwin - Treasurer, Wanda Harrison - Reporter, Chris Wilson - Historian. Federation Officers: Pam Bortner-Vice President, Becky Thompson - Reporter, Sandy Turner- Treasurer, judy Bitzel. Members: judy Beitzel, janice Clements, Anita Compton, Lorraine Cosby, Diana Crouse, Gwen Davis, Conslion Fields, Patsy Harville, Rupunzel Hopkins, Nancy Israel, Regina james, Susan johnston, Lori ne jones, Pam jones, Pam Landon, jeannie Lees, Tammy Massey - State Secretary, Danna McCoggle, Charlene Myrick, Vivian Myrick, Rebecca Parham, Mary Paul, Lauretta Rose, Pam Stalnaker, Nadine Thweatt, Cheryl White, janet York. G Gagliardone, Debbie: 189 Galderise, Donna: 189 Gant,jule:180 Garcia, Sammy: 189 GarfinkeI's: 111 Gary's Men's: 113 Gates, Kim: 189 Gay, Sharon: 180 Geiselhart, Ann: 163 Geiselhart, Kenneth: 189 George, Susan: 220 George, Dr. Thomas: 7, 23, 54,157 Georgie Girl: 7 German Club: 71 Carmen Torruella - President, Venita Weaver - Vice-President, Allen Trimble - Secretary, Susan Green - Treasurer, juergen Smith - Historian-Reporter, Ginger Aniolia, Lisa Berry, Betty Brown, Mi e Davis, Hal Dick, Cheryl England, Charlotte Finley, Sandra Green, Victor johns, David Lees, Valerie McDonald, Barbara McTague, Colleen Morin, Carol Mullins, Marrietta Patrick, Kenny Phoenix, Patty Phoenix, Phil Prince, Karen Radcliff, Bobby Reeves, Timmy Reeves, Bill Richmond, jim Spencer, Sharon Tucker, Doug Vavra, Adare Weaver, Steve Whitt, Tracy Wiggins. Associate Members: Donna Browning, Thomas Browning, Chris Crotty, Lisa Gorman, Lisa johnston, Michelle Labeau, Charles Miller, Phil Phillips, Cathy Thweatt, Diane Vanko, Ted Vanko, Gerner, Brett: 164 Gibson, Donald: 180 Gilchrist, Alvin: 16,189 Gilchrist, Gloria: 189 Gilchrist, james: 123, 189 Gilder, Arthur: 75,164 Gilder, Kathy: 189 Gilliam, Mike: 164 Glass, jan: 93, 117, 180 Glass. Kim: 189 Globe Department Store: 90 Godwin, ammy: 181 Golf: 14-15 Goodwyn,juanita:190 Gorby, Mary: 181 Gordon, Rick:.190 Gorham, Stanley: 16, 50,190 Gorman, Kathy: 181 Gorman, Lisa: 15,157,181 Gould Funeral Home: 113 Graduation: 12-13 Graham, David: 14 Graham, jeff: 38 , 40-41, 92,164 Graham, Leigh: 25 Granderson, Curtis: 190 Granderson, Valerie: 113 Graves, Brenda: 164 Gravitte, janet: 190 Gray, Ashby: 50 Gray, Glynis:164 Gray, Guy: 125,190 Green, Charlotte: 12, 24 Green, Sandra: 190 Green, Susan: 34,103,181, 185 Greene, Sheryl: 34, 164 Gregory, Anthony: 50,164 Griffin, joseph: 181 Griffin, Karen: 181,184 Griffin, Sherri: 164 Griffith, Bennie: 34 Griffith, Connie: 181 Grimm, Cheryl: 38', 82 Grimm, Paula: 33, 63, 65,168,181 Gross, Sue: 78,164,173 Gudmundson, Karen: 81 Gudmundson, Kris: 24 , 63, 85, 165 Guerin, Ken: 14 Gunn, Diane: 181 H Haines, Sharon:.190 HalIigan's Co., Inc.: 95 Hamlin, Nicky: 190 Hand Writing: 210 Hanke, Donna: 165 Hanline, Don: 190 Hanzlik, Diane: 165 Hardin, Suzanne: 190 Harlow Hardy: 93 Hardy, Larry: 123,165 Hargraves, Larry: 36 , 37, 165 Harless, Ed: 190 Harmata, Adrian: 181 Harris, Arlene: 190 Harris, Fred: 190 Harris, Keith: 165 Harris, Kent: 190 Harris, Mike: 50,181 Harrison, Barry: 190 Harrison, Corkey: 190 Harrison, james: 165 Harrison, Karen: 122, 190 Harrison, Lyndon: 190 Harrison, Susan: 66,181 Harrison, Wanda: 181 Harvey, Darrell: 36, 58, 61, 127,181 Harvey, Otis: 50,190 Harville, Patsy: 190 Hastings, Mr. Edward: 145 Hathaway, Debbie: 118,165 Hatten, Steve: 165, 201 Hauling, john Balazik: 104 Hawkins, Cathy: 165 Hawkins, Mrs. Evelyn: 144 Hawkins, Ray:190 Hayes, Karl: 181 Hayes, Larry: 190 Hayes, Sharon: 165 Hays, Kim: 190 Headrick, Linda: 181 Heath, Zetta Mae: 43,181 Hebler,Kurt:104,165,177,180 Hedgepeth, Mrs. Terry: 138 Heinbuch, Tim: 50,190 Heiser, Rick: 50,181 Heith, Billy: 14' Henning, Rhonda: 190 Hennington, Mark: 36, 49 , 50, 52, 53 , 55, 61, 101,181,184 Hensley, Kathy: 190 Henson, Tammy: 128, 190 Hesler, Harvey: 190 Hester, james: 36, 37,166 Hicks, Alvin: 181,207 Hill, Debbie: 181 Hill, Deborah: 181 Hill, Mrs. june: 142, 222 Hill, Marion: 126 Hin, Sally: 34 Hill, Sally: 166 Hobbs, jeffery: 166 Hobbs, john: 166 Holden, Mark: 166, ZCD Holders, Tammy: 56 Holdren, Ms. Ruth: 34, 565 57,148 Holland, Billy: 104 Holland, Paul: 191 Holland, Sharon: 181 Holland, Whately: 166 Holloway, Charlene: 166 Holt, Wayne: 181 Home Economics: 123 ',125',135 Hood, Carla: 23, 24 , 62,191 Hood, Kathy: 78, 90,166 Hopewell Finance Corporation: 111 Hopewell Glass Co.: 112 Hopewell Marine Service: 114 Hopewell Oil Co.: 110 Hopewell Radio 8: TV: 106 Hopewell Rivalry: 203 Hopkins, Rapunzel: 191 Horn, Monica: 191 Horne, David: 166 Horne, Ms. Madge: 212 Horne, Sandi: 181 Horner, Darlene: 166 Horse: 223 Horsfall, Debbie: 5,158,166 Horsfall, Linda: 191 Hostetler, julie: 166 Houchins, Mrs. Frances: 19, 213 House of Burgeses Beauty Salon: M, 85 Howard, Herbert: 181 Howard, jamie: 36, 37 H 81 S Equipment Co.: 84 Huber, Sharon: 166 Huffman, Trudy: 191 Hughes, Frank: 6, 36,160,166 Hughes, Mark: 39 , 41, 52, 59, 61, 181 Hughes, Michael: 50, 52, 53 ', 166 Hughes, Maj. Paul: 59 Hunt, Linda: 166 Hunter, David: 181, 200 Hunter, jan: 11,63-, 181 Hunting: 9' Imcperial Printing: 112 In ex: 214-220 Initial Clubs: 76, 77 lselin, Mrs. Linda: 140 Israel, David: 78, 79,115,166 Israel, Nancy: 191 I jackson, Clarence: 167 jackson, Patty: 25, 34, 78, 181, 1841, 185, 223 jackson, Rae: 6,191 jacob, George: 181 jacob, Mary Ann: 181 Iacobs,janet:191 james, Darlene: 191 james, Lavern: 191 james, Regina: 134,167 james, Robin: 191 jandl, Beth: 169 Ianos, Henry: 191 janosko, Mr. john: 212, 213 jarvis,joy:191 jefferson, Cassie: 123, 133, 167 jefferson, Tammy: 181 jenkins Food Center: 83 jernigan, Tracy: 181 jiles, Karen: 181 jiles, Stanley: 181 john Clements Real Estate: 95 john Lea Kennels: 98 johnson, Alek: 66,191 johnson, Anita:191 mmf' johnson, Yolanda: 191 johnston, Lisa: 57,191 johnston, Susan: 75,157,167 jones, Alfonzo: 191 jones, Antoinette: 181 jones, Beckie: 157,182 jones, Bertha: 191 jones, Connie: 76,182 jones, Daniel: 36, 37 jones, David: 135,191 jones, Deborah: 167 jones, Doug: 50,157,191 jones, Mr. Edward: 212 jones, Eigbert: 167 jones, Gale: 191 jones, john: 191 jones, Kathy: 191 jones, Leavell: 191 jones, Lori ne: 70,182 jones, Mary: 182 jones, Pam: 34, 68, 70, 73,182 jones, Pearl: 167 jones, Raymond: 167 jones, Robert L.: 182,183 jones, Robert W.: 182,183+ jones, Mr. Roger: 141 jones, Ronnie: 182, 183' jones, Tim: 50 jones, Victoria: 167 jones, Vivian: 182 jones, Wilbert: 191 jordan, judy: 182 josey, Robin: 25,167 journalism: 117 ', 127' joyner, Mr. john: 771, 146 joyner, Linda: 191 joyner Paint 8: Frame: 91 joyner, Wanda: 191 juniors: 157, 178-185 junior Emergency Crew: 200 K Kaempf, Andreas: 182 Kaempf, Barbara: 191 Kaufman, julie: 167 Kerkhoff, Mrs. Barbara: 147 Kesler, Vicki: 165,182 Kestner, Kendall: 182, 207 Kimbrough, Taliza:191 King, Bobby: 167, 206 King, Mr. Harry: 135 King, leanne: 182 King, Marie: 182 King, Rodney: 168 King, Tim: 168,169 ' King, Wayne: 38 , 40, 41 Kirkendall, Mary: 120, 182 Kiser, Taft: 25, 130,168,173 Knarr, Warren: 182 Knight, Stephanie: 191 Krenicky, Debbie: 191 Krenicky, Eddie: 191 Krollman, Betty Ann: 168 Kruse, Ted: 191 Kurnas, Robin: 182 Kvasnicka, Sandra: 111,182 L LaBeau, Michelle: 192 LaBrake, Dan: 192 LaBrake, David: 168 Lampe, Teresa: 182 Lampman, Teresa: 192 Landon, Pam: 182 lauterbach's: 90 Laws, Bob: 70,182 Ledden, Eddie: 111,182 Ledden, Patty: 192 Lee, Charles: 50, 52,100,168 Lee, Dee Dee: 192 Lee Mill Pond: 205 Lees, David: 192 Lees, jeannie: 34, 72,168 Lees, Mark: 36 Leona's Hair Fashions: 109 Lescanec, West: 33, 38, 40, 41, 48, 5o,53+,168 Lesniak, Mr. Tom: 4,145 Lewis, Becky: 192 Lewis, Eric: 192 Lewis, Marshall: 50,182 Lewis, Pat: 12, 38 Library Club: jimmy Adkins, Michael Allen, Karen Bannister, Darrell Bennett, Sue Bishop, Melvin Brown, Patricia Crockell, Cathy Diego, Conslion Fields, Debra Gilliam, Annette Grammer, Wanda Harrison, Gerald Harville, Sharon Haines, Deborah P. Hill, john Hobbs, Patty jackson, Laura Kirshman, Linda Locker, Terri Parker, Mary Perry, Patty Phoenix, Patricia Pitt Patty Rushworth, Sylvia Starsja, Carl Tatem, Christine Williams. Lichvar, Gary: 14 Light, john: 168 Linton, Paul: 182 Linton, Shirley: 13 Literary Magazine: 66' janice Wettstein - Editor, Barbara McTa ue Copy Editor, Cindy Vnencai - Copy Editor, Venita Weaver - Copy Editor, Mark Esposito - Business Manager, Matt Wall - Prose Editor, Susan johnston Q- Poetry, Sue Gross - Art Editor, Michelle Villars - Publicity Editor, Ronald Anderson, jeff Bolander, Tom Browning, Martha Edwards, jeff Grubb, Taft Kiser, George Lyon, jeff Smelley, Becky Thompson, f SERIOUS BUSINESS for Terry Coleman brings backup laughter from teammate Ron Sones when practice serve goes haywire. Almost team rank Index 217 Moneymakers cashed in on a once in a lifetime event -the bicentennial. Liberty bell embossed napkins to red, white, and blue wrapped Nutty Buddies flooded the 200 year old market. Getting on the band wagon, anyone who could capitalize did. Advertisements declared independence on prices. Clothes came in all designs: blue and red backgrounds with white stars and visa versa or with an added touch of stripes to top them off. Not just nickel and dime bargains, big business jumped in when Vegas came out with a red and blue pin stripe all their own. Sports programs added special halftime spectaculars and shoulder patches for the Pro Bowl All Star squads. The World Series wouIdn't have the right touch if they didn't play the 1976 version in Philadelphia. So, in the midst of the bicentennial bonanza, if you lived in a red, white, and blue house or drove a car with the patriotic racer stripes, you fit right in. 218 Index 1 1 .fa i 1 ms 'il wifi' :ual 150 LUNCH BONUS. Walter Chiasson, more food-minded than bicentennial minded, unwraps paper for nutty buddy inside. Illled, BIue,8J White Sale Carmen Torruella, Ray Toussaint, Sandy Turner, Frank Wallace, Bob Wheeler. Liufau,limmy:168 Locker, Linda: 168 Logan, Debbie: 182 Long, jane: 34, 54, 57, 83, 91, 182 Long, joseph: 168 Long, Russell: 192 Long, Tom: 77,157,182 Love's Wayside Furniture: 83 Lumpkin, joe: 192 Lybarger, Brian: 168 Lyon, David: 36 M Mabe, Theresa: 133,168 MacGregor, lan: 168 MacGregor, Robyn: 192 Maintenance: 212-213 Majorettes: 68, 73 Makovsky, john: 77, 192, 2fXJ Marco, Ronald: 168 Mark, Chi Wing: 182, 206 Mark, Susan: 192 Mark's:111 Marks, Lynette: T69 Marquardt, Bonnie: 192 Marshall, Doug: 46, 67, 68,169 Martin, Ginger: 192 Martin, Ms. Ruth: 152 Mason, Benjamin: 169 Mason, Bobby: 183 Mason Construction Co.: 102 Mason, Delphine: 42, 43, 55', 57, 169 Mason, Linda: 92,102,183 Mason, Tommy: 102 Mason, Valerie: 192 Mason, Wayne: 192 Massenburg, Lucinda: 183 Massey, Cindy: 192 Massey, Leslie: 169 Massey, Tammy: 19, 68,169, 208 Master Chevy: 91 Mathematics: 129' Matheny, Mr. Gale: 14,15,140 Matthews, Carlton: 157,169 Mayes and Rose: 94 McBarnes, Mr. Rex: 153 McBride, William: 192 McBryant, john: 36, 46,192 McCoggle, Donna: 192 McCoy, Cash: 169,190 McCoy, Eileen: 65, 186 ', 190, 192 McCoy, Frances: 34,183,190 ' McDaniel, Mr. Rolf: 585 6042 61, 144 McDonald, Scott: 192 McDonald, Valerie: 182 McDonough, Maureen: 183 McDonough, Mike: 117 McGhee, Brian: 169 McLaughlin, Mr. jerry: 124 ,138 Mclean Tom's Sales: 1111 McMullen, Alice: 169 McNew, Betty: 192 McNew, Gary: 183 McTague, Barbara: 34, 57,170 Mechanical Drawing: 120 ,125'i' Melvin, Mrs. jean: 142 Merchant's Hope Church: 204 Merrix, Mrs. Cindy: 150 Miculcik, Elizabeth: 170 Mikuta,jarrell:192 Mikuta, joel: 183 Miller, Alvin: 198 Miller, Charles: 46, 192 Miller, Kim: 170 Miller, Nina: 192 Minach, Page: 192 Minard, David: 192 Mobley, W. C.: 192 Money: 122-123 Montgomery, Pam: 128 Moody, Mrs. Inell: 151 Moody, Lee: 36, 371, 183 Moore, Howard: 36, 37 ,186 i,192 Moore, Robert: 34, 50, 170 Moots, Sheri: 192 Morin, Colleen: 192 Moring, Ronnie: 23,84,121,157,170 Morris, Diana: 54, 79,170 Morrison, Melvin: 170 Morse, Sarah: 192 Mosbey, Diane: 170 Ms. Hair Styling: 81 Mullenix, Owen: 170 Mullins, Carol: 170 Munford's TV: 86 Musical: 24, 25 Myrick, Charlene: 170 Myrick, Vivian: 192 Myrick, Warren: 50 N National Honor Society: 72 , 75 Nicki Waitman - President, Susan Green - Vice-President, Carmen Torruella - Secretary, Sheryl Greene - Treasurer, janet Burke, Barbara Brockwell, Tom Browning, Marilyn Carroll, Patsy Cassell, Doug Crichton, Tony Eldridge, Belinda Ellis, Linda England, Mark Esposito, Nancy Fuller, Mary Gorby, Lisa Gorman, Glynis Gray, Sue Gross, jeff Grubb, Adrian Harmata, Diane Hanzlik, Wanda Harrison, Cathy Hawkins, Mark Hennington, Charlene Holloway, David Horne, Mark Hughes, Patty jackson, Cassie jefferson, Susan johnston, Sandra Kvasnicka, West Lescanec, Barbara McTague, Diana Morris, Carol Mullins, Lorrie Poland, Charlie Powell, Bobby Reeves, Gary Tadlock, Vernon Thomas, Becky Thompson, Sandy Turner, Michelle Villars, Cindy Vnencak, Tracey Wiggins, Cindy Williams. Nelson, Patricia: 131,170 Newspaper: 68' Doug Crichton - Editor, Mark Esposito - Sports Editor, Terry Oakley - Photography, Ron Brown - Photography, Doug. Marshall- Photography, Marie King - Art Editor, Greg Aude, Sue Bishop, Barbara Brockwell, Tyrone Bullock, Aquanetta Clark, janice Clements, Rusty Cole, Albert Crawford, Beverly Crews, jeff Crouch, jeff Dodge, Richard Dudley, Tony Eldridge, Cathy Fain, Kathy Fields, Edie Fletcher, Sharon Gay, Don Gibson, David Graham, Debbie Hill, Sandra Horne, Frank Hughes, Beckie jones, Pam Landon, Sue Laughlin, Bobby Mason, Maurice Studivant, Wayne Shannon, Tanya Tatem, Ted Vanko, Eric Williamson, Mark Windley, Donna Zuskin. Nichols, Mrs. Donna: 132 , 153 Nichols, Zabra: 170 Nicholson, Mr. john: 25 Nieves, Tony: 192 Nighttime: 74-75 Noise: 124-125 O Oaklawn Bowl: 107 Oakley, Terry: 81, 183 Oates, Debra: 170 Oates, Mr. johnny: 50 , 82, 210 Oates, Lori: 82 O'Conner, Michael: 183 Odds-N-Ends: 197-213 Ogle, Tami: 183 Office Supply: 114 OK Tire: 109 Opening: 1-7 P Pardoe, Teresa: 122,170 Pardoe, Vicki: 193 Parker, Ellen: 193 Parker, Terri: 23, 245193 Patrick, Marietta: 193 Paul, john: 183 Payne, james jr.: 170 Pease, james: 183, 209 Pearce, Mrs. Hazel: 25 Pearce, Mr. Russell: 107 Pearson, Butch: 77,193 Pearson, Mr. Richard: 771,141 Peck, Gladys: 170 Pelter,Craig: 67,170 Pep Club: 654' Nicki Waitman - Co-President, Tim King - Co-President, janet Bannister, janet Burke, Denise Butler, Debbie Capps, Mary Ch udoba, Colette Cook, Linda England, Edie Fletcher, Mary Gorby, Lisa Gorman, Valerie Granderson, Paula Grimm, Kathy Hensley, Tracy jernigan, leanne King, Marie King, Michelle LaBeau, leannie Lees, jane Long, Sandra Kvasnicka, Delphine Mason, Valerie McDonald, Charlene Myrick, Sinthea Myrick Vivan Myrick, Sherry Smith, Cathy Thweatt, Lanita Thweatt, Nadine Thweatt, Carmen Torruella, Petra Torruella, Michelle Villars. Perdue, Bobby: 183 Perry, David: 170 Perry, Mary: 183 Pet Dairy Products: 101 Petersburg Business Machines: 87 Petersburg Coca-Cola Co.: 101' Petersburg Insurance: 91 Peterson, Arthur: 191 Peterson, Larry: 170 Pettaway, Charles: 177 Pettaway, Marsha: 193 Pettaway, Randolph: 41,197 Pettaway, Sonya: 157,193 Petters,jim:193 Pezzulli, Fran: 193 Phillips, Bobbie: 193 Phillips, Brian: 1861, 187, 193 Phillips, Phil: 36, 61, 183 Phillips, Patty: 171 Phillips, Sheila: 193 Phillips, Tina: 171 Philyaw,lames:171 Phoenix, Ken: 128,193 65, 75-763' Phoenix, Patty: 78,113,157,183 Phone Numbers: 207 Physics: 4 Pinckert, Ray: 183 Piner, Cheryl: 171 Pioneer Federal Savings 81 Loan: 108 Pitt, Patricia: 183 Pittman, Ms. Carolyn: 148 Pittman, john: 171 Poindexter, Mike: 193 Poland, Lorrie: 43,57,183 Pollock, David: 193 Potter, Betty: 183 Potter, Kelly: 34,183 Powell, Charlie: 38, 41 , S2, 54, 81, 92, 191 Powell, Tyrone: 193 Practice: 132,133 Preskitt, john: 59 Preston, Ms. Betsy: 144 Price, David: 36, 46, 47 , 183 Price, james: 46,193 Price, Phyllis: 193 Price, Tom: 171 Prince, Phil: 61,193 Prince George, Name: 204 Prince George Theatre: 24, 25 Nicki Waitman - Assistant to the Director, Denise Butler- Wardrobe Mistress, Lloyd Walke -Lighting Design, Kurt Hebler - Set Construction, Eric Anonsen, Norma Arrington, Stanely Booker, Kathy Burke, Karen Burrow, Steve Chiminello, Beverly Crews, Leigh D. Graham, Darrell Harvey, Patty jackson, George jacob, Robin josey, Taft Kiser, Warren Knarr, Phil Phillips l' Andrea Simpson, Cheryl Templef Ted Vanko, Gay Weaver. Ruger, Scott: 61 Rules and Regulations: 72-73 Rushworth, Patty: 193 Rusmisell, Mrs. Anne: 147, 204, 222 Rusnak, Mrs. Ellen: 129,152 Ryans, George: 184 Ryans, William: 193 Rybar, Dennis: 172 S S 81 N Supermarket: 107 Saal, james: 107,184 Saal, Laura: 193 Salazar, Richard: 184 Samuels, julie: 34 Sanford, joy: 194 Sanford, Vicki: 135,172 Santory,jose:184 Saunders, Larry: 14,173 Saunders, Oliver: 194 Saunders, Randy: 14, 153, 194 Sboray, Mr. Stephen: 138 Schall, jeff: 173 Schroeder, Kris: 194 Schultz, Mrs. june: 140 Schwalm Real Estate: 86 Science 119-1 2O'f, 127 Seal, Dwayne: 73,184 Seal, jean: 43 Seal, Steve: 194 Seay, Barbara: 194 Sebera, Billy: 184 Sebera, Daniel: 184 Sebera, Holly: 184 Sehera's Exxon 8: Custard Corner: 104 Senior: 158-177 7-Eleven: 16-17 Shannon, Wayne: 184 Shaw, jeff: 194 Sheets, jennifer: 184 Shelor, Kristen: 124, 132,194 Sheppard, Rhonda: 43,173 Prince George Texaco: 83 Progress Index: 93 Prom: 10, 11 Puckett, Debbie: 193 Pugh, Denise: 121,171 Pugh, Roy: 4, 33, 49, 50, 125, 171, 78 Pullian, Steve: 193 R Radcliff, Greg: 206 Radcliff, Karen: 183,206 Radcliff, Robert: 173, 206 Radio Shack: 107 Raines Raines Raines Rakers , Carolyn: 171 , Evelyn: 171 ,Gilbert:171 , Dianne: 193 Ralley, Susan: 193 Rally Ramsey, Elizabeth: 171 Rand, Shelia: 193 Randolph, john: 49-50, 183 Randolph, Pat: 192-193 Raney, Buddy: 183 Rasnick, Steve: 50 Rasnick Upholstry: 114 Raughley, Peggy: 183 Ray, Wanda: 193 Reading: 117 ,127 Reedy, Brad: 41,172 Reeves, Bobby: 14,172 Reeves, Timmy: 129, 193 Reith, jimmy: 172 Renaud, Carol: 193 Renaud, joseph: 14-15,183 Rennebaum, Rick: 193 Restaurants: 206 Reynolds, Mac: 36 Reynolds, Nickee: 36 Rhodes, Becky: 183 Ricci, Tony: 76 Rice, Ann: 183 1 Richard, Cathy: 34 Richmond, Bill: 183 Riggins, Vanessa: 183 Ring Dance: 30-31 Robbins, john: 183 Roberts, Mark: 193 Robinson, Freddrica: 183 Robinson, Greg: 36, 50,121,172 Robinson, Keith: 11,172 Rockwell, Mr. Edward: 13 Rose, Lauretta:172 Rose Oil Company: 94 Rougeau, Greg: 193 Royer, Tommy: 59 Ruffin, Dennis: 193 Ruffin, Gilbert: 130,172 Shields, Charles: 194 Shirley Plantation: 103 Shop 9: 120' Signs and Symbols: 127-128 Singletary, Tim: 173 Slang: 199 Sluka, Susan: 173 Smelle Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, y, jeff: 41, so, 157, 173, 197 Barry Scott: 173 Rev. Cecil: 13 Connie: 173,197 Mrs. DeCarlo: 150 Dejuana: 57 Smith, juergen: 34,173 Smith, Randall: 184 Smith,Sharon:194 Smith, Sherry: 63,173, 203 Snyder, Donald: 173 Snyder Re ina 173 , 8 1 Social Studies: 119 ,131 ',135' Softball: 42-43 Sones, Ron: 93, 18411, 185 Sophomores: 186-195 Sorg, Polly: 43 Southall, Ms, Barbara: 1285143 Southern States: 92 Sowards, Douglas: 173 Sowards, Denise: 194 Spaniol, Mrs. Victoria: 146 Spanish Club: 71, 74 Norma Arrington - President, Barbara Figg - Vice-President, jo Turek - Secretary, Paul Holland -Treasurer, Lavetta Bailey, jeff Bolander, Tina Bowles, Curtis Brigman, Belinda Brown, Ron Brown, Marilyn Carroll, Tony Eldridge, Avis Epps, janet Gravitte, Wanda Harrison, Otis Hanley, Sharon Hays, Carina jiles, jeannie Lees, Bonnie Marquardt, Maureen McDonough, Alice McMullen, Fran Pezzulli, Carol Renaud, Susan Riley, Carl Tatem, Vernon Thomas, Susan Vaughan, Luree Wall, Mark Wendley, Anna Yarosz. Spencer, Dale: 86,195 Spencer, Daryl: 14, 79, 129, 173, 209 BICENTENNIALIZED. Special year diploma gets red, white, and blue stick on from class treasurer, janet Burke. Spencer, jim: 125,194 Spivey, Gary: 173 Spradlin, Mr. Les: 4 Springer, Coach Larry: 36, 3742 46-47 Stables, Diane: 173 Stacey, Heidi: 184 Stakas,Thiery:194 Stalnaker, Pam: 194 Standard james: 92 Staples, Barbara: 184 Starke, james: 194 Starks, Beatrice: 122 Starks, Randolph: 194 Starsja, Sylvia: 173 Steiner, Carol: 194 Steven Kent Restaurant: 82 Stokes, Angela: 194 Stoss, Norma: 34 Stoupa,Karl:184 Stover, Tracey: 184 Straccioni, Mr. Dino: 109 Strosnider Chevrolet: 106 Student Action for Education: 76' Cindy Vnencak - President, Mary Chudoba - Vice-President, Sheryl Greene -- Secretary, Debbie Brown - Treasurer, jeff Bolander, Pam Bolick, Barbara Brockwell, Rosemarie Coleman, Colette Cook, Pam Cullipher, Patricia Docx, Beverly Everson, Kathy Fleshman, Susan Green, Sue Gross, Karen Harrison, Susan Harrison, Kathy Hawkins, Zettamae Heath, Karen jiles, Connie jones, Wanda joyner, Terry Oakley, Mary Perry, Patricia Pitt, Diane Rakers, Carol Renaud, Holly Sebera, Becky Thompson, Carmen Torruella, Gail Vargo, Melanie Wallack, Gaye Whiting, Eric Williamson. Student Cooperative Association: 9, Floyd Brown - President, Mark Hennington -Vice-President, Cindy Vnencak - Recording Secretary, Beverly Everson - Corresponding Secretary- A Treasurer, Seniors: Mark Esposito - President, Marilyn Carroll- Vice-President, Patsy Cassell- Secretary, janet Burke- Treasurer, Pam Bishop, Colette Cook, Martha Edwards, Kathy Hood, David Israel, Diana Morris, Patti Phillips, Sherry Smith, George Thoma, DeDe Wichy. juniors: Stanley Booker- President, Belinda Brown -Vice- President, Mary Gorby - Secretary, Lisa Gorman - Treasurer, Ginger Angolia, Steve Chiminello,,Regina Edwards, David Graham, Zettamae Heath, Pam jones, Bobby Perdue, Ronnie Sones, Diane Vanko, Gaye Whiting. Sophomores: Carla Hood - President, Becky Burrow -Vice-President, Barbara Figg - Secretary, Kim Bradshaw - Treasurer, Kim Bishop, Cheryl Crist, Elke Duncan, Valerie Granderson, Nancy Israel, Cindy Massey, Sinthea Myrick, Tyrone Powell, Denise Sowers, Allen Trimble, Bridgette Wyche. Studivant, john: 184 Sub-committee Hearing, Kepone: 6-7 Sullivan, Darlene: 194 Sullivan, Patrick: 184 Suloff, Doug: 194 Summer Camps: 91214-15 Sutton, Michael: 184 Sutton, Stephanie: 194 Swanson, Ray: 184 Swineford, Mr. Bobby: 4841, 50, 52, 149 Swineford, Mrs. Ruth: 145 Sykes, Brenda: 194 Index 219 T Tadlock, Dwayne: 12 Tadlock, Gary: 24, 59, 61, 63,168, 1691, 173 Talley, Ms. Audrey: 149 Talley, Glenn: 184 Tennis,Girls Tatem,Carol: 118,194 Tatem, Tanya: 184 Tatum, Gwen: 43,184 Taylor, Mrs. Anne: 151 Taylor, Debbie: 184 Taylor, Elgin: 194 Taylor, Floyd: 184 Taylor, Gregory: 173 Taylor, Gilbert: 194 Taylor, james: 184 Taylor, loyce: 194 Taylor, Kenneth: 184 Taylor, Patricia: 173 Taylor, Randolph: 135,157,174 Taylor, Teresa: 194 Taylofs: 92 Ted Curry Motors: 86 Temple, Carolyn: 174 Temple, Cheryl: 24 Temple, lohnny: 12 Tench, Cheryl: 194 Carolyn Claiborne, Lori Chezek, Cindy Cox, Gwen Davis, Regina Edwards, Carol Foltz, Debbie Hill, Eileen McCoy, Nina Miller, Sherrie Moots, Colleen Morin, Sinthea Myrick, Ellen Parker, Sonya Pettaway, Lori Polland, Pat Randolph, Holly Sebera, lulie Urquhart. Termpapers: 130-131 Thacker, Becky: 194 Thacker, Edward: 184 Thoma, George: 50, 81, 101,174 Thomas, Mr. Charles: 162' Thomas, Ricky: 194 Thomas, Stephanie: 184 Thomas, Tony: 11,23,184 Thomas, Vernon: 36, 184 Thompson, Becky: 23,101 Thompson, Catherine: 184 Thompson, Debra: 174 Thompson, Dennis: 194 Thompson, Mr. Edward: 119, 141 Thompson, Mrs, M. l.: 147 Thornton, Ms. Louise: 141 Thweatt, Addie: 174 Thweatt, Catherine: 174 Thweatt, Clarence: 194 Thweatt, Lanita:174 Thweatt, Michael: 184 Thweatt, Michelle: 174 Thweatt, Nora: 174 Thweatt, Wayne: 50 Tiller, Mr. I. P.: 63, 202 Tillery, Ms. Sunata: 140 Tillison, Diane: 194 Tillison, Katherine: 34,122,184 Togger, Carolyn: 174 Tomko, Dorothy: 176 Tommy's Steak House: 87 To s Turv Year: 8 9 D Y Y - Torruella, Carmen: 166',167,175 Torruella, Petra: 194 Toussaint, Ray: 175, 216 Track: 36-37 Track, Girls: 34-35 Trailers: 207 Traylor, Dale: 38', 40-41, 52,134, 184 Traylor, David: 194 Triangle Exxon: 96 Trimble, Allen: 194 Trimble, Lynn: 194 Trent, Edwin: 184 Tuchek, Audrey: 34 Tucker, Allen: 184 Tucker, Sharon: 75, 185 Turek, Mary lo: 43, 57, 185 Turner, Mr, Bermond: 213 Turner, Lindville:194 Turner, Sandra Turner, Queen: 194 : 74,175 Tutwiler, Muff: 23, 24', 63, iss TV Shows: 198 MATCHING DOT TO LETTER. Dr. George's daughter, Susan, visits PG testing ground for preliminary SAT'S. 220 Index Tygrest, Tommy: 38,175 Tyler, Aline:175 Tyler, Donald: 194 Tyler, Eugene: 195 Tyler, Virginia: 185,199 Tyson, Alvin: 195 Tyson, Tony: 195 Tyus, Kevin: 41 U Union Finance: 90 Unisex: 197 Urquhart, lulie: 57,195 Utly, Pete: 195,198 V Vanko, Dianne: 68,185 Vanko, Ted: 25, 59, 61,65, 185 Vargo, Gail: 78-79,192,195 Vaughan, Larry: 195 Vaughan, Susan: 185 Vavra, Doug: 175 Vavra, Tom: 185 Vedomske, Donna: 175 Vergara's Royal Cleaners: 101 Vick, Ms. Carole: 13, 66, 148 Wllage Barn: 85 ViIlars,Michelle: 117,173,175 Vinsh, Barbara: 185 Vinsh, lean: 43,185 Virginia Meat Market: 109 Virginia Mutual: 91 Virostek, Mike: 36,185 Vlk, Paul: 185 Vlkojan, Eddie: 195 Vlkojan, George: 4-0-41 , 185 Vnencak, Cindy: 76-77,175, 175 Volunteer Fire Department: 200 Vuley, Diane: 175 W Wainwright, Mark: 185 Waitman, Nicki: 117,175 Walker, George: 185 Walker, Keith: 195 Walker, Kerwin: 50 Walker, Linda: 175 Walker, Lloyd: 185 Walker, Manda: 185 Walker, Sammy: 50, 185 Walker, Thomas: 195 Wall, Luree: 75,195 Wall, Matt: 33, 40, 41, 49,157, 175 Wall, Tom:185 Wallack, Melanie: 176 W I T Wells, Mr. Walter: 152 Wenszell, Robert: 176 Wessel, Mike: 195 Wettstein, Mark: 14,195 Wettstein, lanice: 79,176 Wheeler, Robert: 176 Whelan, Christine: 185 Whispering Winds Furniture: 103 White, Cheryl: 195 Whiting, Gaye: 185 Whiting, Russell: 16, 50, 52,61, 185 Whitt, Steve: 195 Wichy, DeDe:9,135,176 Wickwire, lohn: 167,176 Wiele, Robert: 185 Wiggins, Tracy: 117,176 Wilkinson, Karen: 43, 176 Willcockson, Bradley: 185 Williams Williams Williams Williams Williams Williams Williams ,Charlotte:195 , C. L.: 177 , Cindy: 43, 56-57,177 , Franklin: 36,177 ,lames:195 ,loyce:177 ,Karen:195 Williams, Williams, Williams, Laura: 177 Mary: 185 Richard: 195 Williams Texaco: 99 Williams, Tina: 195 Williams, Willie: 177 Williamson, Eric: 120,124,185 Williamson, Gary: 195 Wilkinson, Bob: 14 Wilson, Barbara: 195 Wilson, Beth: 185 Wilson, Buzz: 195 Wilson,Christine: 76,185 Wilson, Dale: 185 Wilson, Randy: 185 Wilson, Ronnie: 126,185 Wilson, Steven: 24,177 Wilson, Tom: 185 Windley, Mark: 185 Wise, Mike: 70,195 Wittie, Carrie: 65, 1865 195 Wood, Brenda: 195 Wood, Inez: 185 Woodby, Mr. Bill: 49-50, 535 145 Woody's Chevrolet: 95 Wrap Up Academics: 136 Ads: 116 Classes: 196 Clubs: 180 Faculty: 156 Opening: 8 Sports: 64 Students: 32 Wray, Linda: 195 Wright, Dale: 93, 177 Wright, Luther: 50,195 Wyatfs Florist: 113 Wyche, Bridigette: 34, 57,195 Wyche, Vincent: 177 Wynn, Roger: 50,195 Y Yarosz, Anna: 177 Yarosz, Patty: 36 Year of. . .121-l Yearbook: 78-79 lanice Wettstein - Editor-in- Chief, Diana Morris - Associate- Editor, Kathy Hood - Business Manager, Patty jackson - Concessions Manager, Tom Walton - Headline Editor, Daryl Spencer- Photography Editor, David Israel - Photographer, Roy Pugh - Photographer, Mark Wettstein - Photographer, Angie Brown - Sports Editor, Charlie Powell -Assistant Sports Editor, West Lescanec - Sports Staff, Edie Fletcher - Index Editor, Charlie Dungan, Cheryl England, jeff Graham, Sue Gross, Debbie Horsfall, Frank Hughes, Robin losey, Matt Wall, Patty Ledden, Linda Mason, Ronnie Moring, Patty Phoenix, Tanya Tatem, Sharon Tucker, Gail Vargo, Luree Wall. York, lanet: 195 Young, Arden: 195 Yong, Avis: 195 Young, Greg: 14 Z Zikes, Cheryl: 177 atom, om:38,40,41,79,176c ' I ' ' wafihangarfvfii Ofltlnenta COITlpetItIDl'l Warthan Reid 176 Washabaugh, Mr. Chip: 139 Washington, Chris: 185 Washington, George: 195 Weaver, Adare: 195 Weaver,Venita: 161,176 Wegman, Bill: 33 Pay to take a test? Me, make a speech? Are you cra-, awards?! Extra credit?! Students lined up to try their luck at answering, translating, and speech giving. Eyebrows raised as males filed in to take the Betty Crocker Test, ignoring sex implications. Excitement-stiffened hairs stood on end, heads spun, eyes watered, palms sweated, and knees shook. Please begin. . . stop. Next speaker, please . . . thank you! Bicentennial themes laced the Voice of Democracy Contest, and Betty Crocker Test, and '76 winners stepped up for applause, bows, and awards. The following is a leftover collection of some good photography that just didn't make it elsewhere in the book because of lack of space andfor importance. We have intentionally not captioned these pictures so you could figure out what was going on and why. Thanks go out to... Dave Pittman at The Progress Index for sports photos even though he said we only called when we wanted something, Mrs. Swineford and Mrs. Rusmisell for buying all of Daryl Spencer's excuses to get out of class. johnny Temple for all the free photos he took for us. Danny DeFalco, even though he only stopped in on his way to the school down the road. Coach Collins for his 4:30AM wake up duck call when staffers spent the night at GAC's house. Cheerleaders for Iivening up the cubbyhole office competition. 7-Eleven for all the pictures we used it for. Dan - ski for oversleeping on picture day, then breaking the second camera, then losing the Thomas Dale basketball candids when we won. Mrs. Rusmisell for checking to see if we were still here before turning out the lights. All the parents that fought the coffee, hot chocolate, and Cokes with too much foam in the concession stands. All the students, faculty, and administration that made it a plus of a year. Club sponsors, Mrs. Crichton and Mrs. Thompson, who always let us know what was going on where so we could have a photographer there. All the teachers who took the time to fill out our questionaire so we could do something different and succeed. The Board of Supervisors for approving the new school so we will have a theme for our 25th anniversary even though they missed the 20th. Tom Walton for all the dates he gave up on Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons while Diana worked on yearbook. Mark Hennington for agreeing to adopt the quote on page 49 since Mark Esposito wouldn't. Coach Collins for only asking five times this year is yearbook over yet? Dr. George for keeping the free yearbook coupon tucked away in his right shoe 'til Steve Wilson guessed. David Israel for doing the three bicentennial spreads he hated. Roy Pugh and Daryl Spencer for going to Maymont Park to get a picture of the deer that wasn't there. Ronnie Moring for going to Richmond to get the picture that was. Daryl Spencer for decorating the yearbook office with alligators hanging by their tails. Mr. lanosko for hammering up the Times Square street sign without asking questions and our light and our note board. Mrs. Pugh for ordering all our hot dogs at one time when they were cheap. Mrs. Gross for letting Sue bring Kevin in to see us every so often. Ms. Martin for being so nice in letting us use the Typewriters in 'IO7 and 109. Mr. Thompson for helping us sell yearbooks even though he only sold one -to himself, Ms. Vick who helped Diana Morris think of a word and then let her out to work on her copy when she did. Wilson Moore, whoever he is. Acknowledgements 221 swin s for out of reach tri awzzxzftwwwvwzaf-www:ss:crabmite:wmzwawm:zaczmemmz:.f1a,sas?.f2P:rf:m?xiseuews::r+ww-w-i::,fL:'-'.':'.':mel',QW1.,...V :L7,.55'bz'a1G'N2'f Win 'JR M1-N die' ii .G PEP RAI.I. I CAPER COVERED UP from fake fear of Royal ferociousness, Linda England acts out Trojan fright in occupations pep rally skit for Midlothian football match. Stay fresh cellophane wrappers helped tie the theme up. Once ripped off, the cellophane wrap-ups uncovered an almost typical seven section yearbook. Not quite that basic, an eighth +Odds and Ends section took Peerage format out of the ordinary. + Odds and Ends followed up the not so normal seven section regulars, Student Life + , Sports + , Clubs+, Ads+. Academics+, Faculty+, and Classes+. NOT TALL ENOUGH Mrs Rusmisell g - language club party piflata. L mt www-W I-Iondmode Peeroge Culprit and Crew fsp d SOOT SMOTHERED shop destroyer, 'e acetylene tank W1 stands in inspection line-up next to non-blow up comrades. PLAYING UP Footlight Scandals on coming attraction show for W E U premiere, Patty lackson puts Q PGHS early lobby crowd. U ... in ::.1,14.j'2'A l .,- 1 .f ' Q E Not just the same old thing, each section had its own plus, special border, headline type, or copy style to set pages apart. No different from the rest of the section, dividers introduced division styles. An after title plus formed the only link between divider pages. A spot of color, dividers faced opposite pages of reversed type on red. Section closings wrapped up over all coverage with extra spot color and no picture back ups. Bolts in and stickers down, yearbook staffers arranged Peerage pages together one by one. The put-together Peerage bolted sections into a bumper sticker marked cover. Individualized class stickers personalized '76 Peerages for the 700+ fall payment buyers. Closing 223 3 I Xl t 1' 224 Closing STAGE CREW. Back to front spectators, Valerie McDonald and Mike McDonough, cheer on basket- ball team from elevated on stage view. A final five dollars after the four dollars down - A final rip in the cellophane wrapper- A final friend's signature - A final run through the pages - and the race is over. From starting August line-ups side by side, you didn't risk glancing back and falling behind. So now we've slowed it down for you to linger on - A final instant replay of wrapped up 1976. FRAMED UP. Prince George County gains nationwide certification of bicentennial merit after courthouse festival. Right' Down to the Finish Line Glossary ACTION SHOT - picture of a team or members of a team in game play ASSOCIATE EDITOR - works with Editor-in-chief in all major decisions and is in charge of overall design CANDIDS - pictures of people vvho don't know they are getting their picture taken COPY-CAPTIONS - used in Clubs+ section to describe individual club activities and the specific action in pictures DESIGN -the style in which the parts of the page are arranged DIVIDER-the page like every other page of its section that tells you you're out of one section and into another DOUBLE PAGE SPREAD - side by side pages that cover a topic together FULL PAGE BLEED--a picture that runs off all four edges of the page HAND-SET LETTERING -the unordinary headlines done in unordinary types by the Headlines Editor INTERVIEW- our style of reporting used in FacuIty+ section LAYOUTS -the arranging of pictures, copy, captions, and headlines on a page PAGE TOP POLL- all the info from the questionaire the teachers answered compiled on the top of their pages PICS - abbreviation for pictures SENIOR STATS -club and activity information beside senior pictures SEVEN SECTION ORGANIZATION -a traditional method of yearbook division used this year to emphasize our theme, but we added an eighth section SPOT COLOR -an extra, single color in 30, 50, 70, or 'l0O'Xs added to regular black and white pages. 1 flgr c v- V -. 'YQ L4 Q .A -fn 1 ,1. x 1 vat ' my .V P! fr' f 'Z 1 1- 35 I vr Vi., if l 1 Mn L Q- gr, N x A L r rv v -. I R ggi ffwig uf YI' s 'Q -R 1. 4 v 1, Y 41. 'fzrf ,vqfv 1 1 , 1.15- .5 ff , ix vin x 'ig-. -if a BWP Q ru Jag, dffr M- W -1... W 3 1 1. 2 l. 'Q .- 2 1,-xi 'r ei' rw' af 334+ Iran' 4? .sv ffi, H31 ,xiif QT? 3 C01 1 if if W1 Wg V r A I K .1 'va A 'Mtv' 1' 43 W 'ilu A 4 1 'w 4 L if i 4 .1 , ., , ' :V ,-ff 5 avg: , i- wg, V ,,L r V ff 1f f 3 'P' ' 'v'- 2: Y' ,e :fV.+:,5f,Vff-1. V1 1, -- f- ' , V V 1 .3-- H :x,1,f,uV- ., . :asv 2:---' , ,. 1 hiuarmdxa' ' f ,'u1i,-f,m-mg M. , ,1eViia.,,4 4:5 - .5 fmfsf V Vs:-Q '!,:.gw. V1 ,,,, 'tr fi V . I flffjg-it 'ilx-J , V, -2:-1'.1!2, 1-iv wif ' 9'?54, X.'51i Q 2:1 gif, fm. ffrgib-is l -2-,m:Pffi'5Vf --'f17FG i?f'fg -W -lr-if-L -x I ,QV 'g-JM: glfffq- 1 Af 3 mg- , -.y A V ff- +V ,1.- . 2 IV wav-ff ., VV ,V br:-V :a-s: jf ff: Emi? '-+':w-'f++ '-1-- A-af.i54V:' : 1V fkffffw' . Az? ,fm 1 , fKaff'f . . .. affgr ., '-af +:'a?py'35ff.l in 'V131e 1fVf3 1?V'5faL ' fEVj iff'??1L54f' 'ali 1,9 -.1 :Sixty .VfT'.19 12 N ,nu , 'Vfffl 1 V V 1 ,V--Q. 54, 1 afar. , wwflau if wffvg,33,x1m -1,1 1:4-f PQ'v53'.'f. ,A gfsiwflfw.JGLQVJ-1-Q-1' 5y EidfP,j15-'H IJ-. 4511: M15-z-w1F'1'fL'i,s2i 5'-1, 1' X SVT-HMV - .r-. ww gf 4 V . -' . 21:61, 521-5 -u3, ,y1V1:1 ff -'V 5152, ' fi UU . V ffif, 'Vt UH: 'fi W'5g ' f fb!Q'fgi ,QV 'Lfgfv E Qf'g 'f' f 5ki3' X 'M' g . VT5f5:'4iQ92fQ55?-' ' V V F, 3 iff. .'!3 QF?--Vwg 1fi2:'if A'.1-f2'.'2i ff ' 2' 'iizfw L 'V 'ZLL ff, - 'wfffrkfiiwslf-'f l V' -' ,rt -1' '.fE:4 V if 1-,1V:,,gI Ul1f..lz,1gQ.Q5i, M1AV'gsvffb2.a.ag3Vs'2L', T93 '3:3',V+'?!if9.iSf'J?gaIj V'Ll 'gagig 5, 11- .L- .If i'l?!V 1IVV 'f.W2v5 ,,V X ' - AFA K . ,- .V ., ff '. 759 Qri-1 -1'fr'5f'-'1.,:g:fgV:V:4?f1L'Eq :V' 1152-4ffVF5,1r:f,:?:E., gi,zfi'1' 2VE3'VVS5if2L, KW. bfVl'f'P-1'as2i2'Qi?,,if'f7 f1rf fIf:1rV7WVJfA 'ffiffav IV' ' J , F 'V - -.gn --FH 1., 93 ffl 25.4.54-,'i Ugg- at :j,,:f!ge..1fgg Agg' jill- , g?:,H,ivfizgiiQI ff'?,,,yf3f5',,,ZWVZQISH 41 -QV. ?li34 :g4Qk- 'T V1-in - -V 1 5,911 V v V, V ,' .. - f. J .w . '-. ,'-, 4'4 1- 'H' 2 -' if ' ' -1 'M M L -' xi 'V' i' f' ' vZ'F,l V VV' . '- '51 T' VT-v' ' w-'- -, . '. ' ': if V wg, wh115:41Drigz?-r.,Qf1L.1fg ' gsm? fs 'fV4rg5'giVVtsiL, gif ,: V nig f- ,V V , - w g my '- -. , nz- lu- Lil: gefg,.,- ,L ,-1:3-,y v .- -EI, :VV Hg.. .5 vg , V, 3 -,Jn ,1fgm ,ZL1i,a5,nuT M5 gf H , lr -1,-.QQ V. 9,3 ig, . gf:-ff 'Z P. f ,, C -h Y 24:4 5 .:, i K-J ' if 5f:.. V,,,3,iVU'.1 if '- 11' vp' lffw ,1--14 3 -I :Sr ,f- 31. 'gg Swv? J.J',,:VA sq ,cj 4---1.51, ,V'f'f , JMU 4? VV?-QF -fi' 2 A U ,f - f V :, ,- V' :-1.1 'f ' ', f,Vf V1 'ISIS V ' ' 3-291.6 1 'ma ,, :','4:'L 1 L1 a L?-,,:. L V 'F . ,'f ,L,-a-518153 V ',fA.-.uf Mi-57 . I '-ff'.'J fa? ' , '- , , . , ' V . an .fzrw-rq V, 13: Efiii eff'Fg.1. 1.3 V ' 11 19-i '- ' ra - 1 V 'V ii fi :ei-MV ,, 1 -1 V , '. fi. my VV X M W--f w V- f' . ' , -i - V . . - me . H vw.: ,QQ QEEQ Ea gli 5,53 E ' Nff,1?,2 f?i1g'sF4pf f1S,ga Rfgrqb -ff Ji.f'21 1b15V? + :V ' 1 - ' W V - - 'Hz 1'3 :f,eAg,g1 Vg Qf 11.5 ' - ' Qvlfli' -'Jj,,f!.,1w1' QP 51,1 QV 3 4 L i lzaqzg, ,W':g5,1. W fi-,Y 5 -,y ..-'3:3V-gk. gy'-wg -5' 3,1--' A V, . A .. K . . ,, ', :,-fu -t 7'-+5 ff' . ff f'-JL'1,1.:.Vf'-Y 1 '-e?9'751VTf ,W-Ars' ,..f' ,V5-- JY' ELAi5'Z'3f fg'1i V315-wi' 2 wfim,-'v 7'4i 1'5-'J7 JF 5g2?, 'V , ' WW- , A ff '.-4 ' f if .. 1? V- is 555 3539519 Q ' ' ' 1 f 'V Vi V ' A , : Q . ffl, .i-452:13 -,-.L A ggligfg, ,Ui 135+ Rafi!! ,f 'if1 ' GQ?-33V-5gQ-:' - 1 L! 1 , ' ' 1 V 1' ,dv V31 , I gg 371--fr 1 'f,,Vu, 'Wf,Alb1'Vl,.1,,',r i i',,.-,ini-'f+,1.Vf g.:f1,,. 5'gV,'E,, , qgrw iff 1 H51 ', Vsqgxi. ,F ff- ,Ni '54,-,A -vin'-A f . ' ' , , 'f -5 , V V Q .gV rig: f' 1+ 'Q ' 1. 4' 'V 5 f , -, my qu.-, .1 f'.:5,V-' pl :P .fHQfszfu:V,L.- farm-if mm., ,,VV.'f,,f1 K :mx V 'V 2 A '- V '. . V ' f a, P-J. iii? Wzzis- .5Q 'f'?'x'7!1'f:'1i'h ri ff' . .5155-L3,V.. rxgfglffl ' if Z5 Ii!! 'Q 531' ' fl 5 iffVf.'.V'i1'v3'f?75f5Q3f?5Q.n,g 'A 1',2V:?,'m-Q A-Qi ..7Lf,feFg,-lE'.!'jf5LV ', LV' -A, K ' V . V ' 'V . jg, vw .Vepsfi-slr-a JJ ff. 1,1-mf: 21 ,VWziw35afgV, f 51gz .Q?.ffT.:.frVV,f,..- :?kf3A:1',Q5v fK,?1yT?Vf7,LM F-,1.1,1Vf -. 1' 'V ' , -: 11 .Qbbgf iV5ff:QV.., 4'V4 ' K :-f 3'3 '3?f. l'Z'4.'?5?f!V51 ,lk .juz-5ji,:,ag'2j'H V 'V-f tyf'1V:,Lg 1'.?-:NV-51j5':''1fFfA'-Ggf' y' lily 1 V wj iI-32-,15 T,liiV 514?lf:fA VW' gQ5V ? 5jfg1f?i'1f'f-:A JEL. 2 y 1 7 I '5'2PA'i -' i rim' .N V -Exif V1 fxf-BV' Q V- Wifi?- 2'54.' . -1' , 'iw If -:Aa , , V1 ' Wm,-1 1,3 p gm. lg. , .Mya 2-,. 1 M- 73.4, V. V V , 'pw- V',-- 1-1.VVV vis., ,,,,-V12-A if xx ,,g?.Q . fra vez+'i.' f-H. Af- M. V11 , , ,,,,W I M 1- V , f- VLVVQV f zn: i5.-P 1-'ai M 1 :ri -ew, 5V12f'-W. . ,fi ' iff'-:afiV L fin ,V 'i FVXWFV'1W'35f la.4'Vgl1gVQ'i VfwV1sf,V ,w',R1,,f- 'x75i,4:f.1 4- ui'-f ' VV ' . V 4:1 2F154-P1, glgg:1.rV9ff..3f4 Efaarf-.' 44? ifffsmg aff '4'fa,1 fZ.-.V 5af2gW,fqg:sVzJ , n f iff. V iff 5 .1 r V ij V: VV ,. y-A 21- g-,fwg V,.3f'1,5 V1 - .. ' ' ' ' V , , A MAES-:.1Vf.?,,3gQ4Q, ' 1-3 5-if '.?go5f,g:1:J:,-V'V?e:g?Qii11,V. ,gx:,V VV4f,f1f1,g.g-D f 5, .- V' .. .. Q1- . 4 i:1!i.,V.Vgl, - 1, xy -,Q 1 L, A47Q,,iQjg.l:2x,.gaH i :Et ' ,,1 .E LQ EV' zfit3i aa VVV Q1 if 3,32,g55jgQg':.f:f3i.y V gg ti ,s h 1Q'3AF,,'55 V g T U V b V 5:25 :Vg mm 1+ .V '-'arm ijyfifilggfigi aa--wiifV5.V V1-W mfi ': ,qw 3 , f1wp..wV' A- A V512 .A ':'V,,3fw,,VV -, 12,41 M fa x fh.-:IV-Q-:1 wg '3, 154 .I .al 'Q lfim' I. I q,:,41,VQf?:,f,f',-W, V-:,gif q-15, -. 3i,j,j',yfV-5Q'51:.?yVH Q iv - 1 Q- 'LH j V -' A 1. V. 5 ' , ,M .' 3325- '+. Vqxi-fV1-,V:Av. ffm- .... ' . '55.f7-h-'Vm:Vf,'VVf,z QUEEN Zn +Pf2g.gVav:5'-i- ,:w1v1VzVV. iff f-3'fs:f1,V-falzi'-Kira -V22' ' '?xTi5'5' . ' ZH- 'Vlfi1 '- ,, V . VAEYAUQ ,, 5,-., ,.g,1yf VVf.,- yr' rg- :,.--M154 ,M Vi! gg -. 4, l ,557 l?Q5Wyfagy.4:,Eh? up Q,F..,. Y. Mg, .V 3 U.g.,ff'.,,-5 :gg H511 VM L :fm V' V1 4 .5 - gf'-fl 1 QV,i,1'HV Vriffe-g1T,'1f,,i:. - 'ng 2?--V 2 , -Q V- ei Qi:-r,jfg-,QQLSQWZ,'?g.f'-V'.f', '-f,:2g4:.2.1!-Y-41,-.1,:' Lid 1gfV 1V ' 1' 4V A A if , 'K' J ' X, ' . . ' 1 V-,L xQfin+ jfizawf , 3,2 . - gk fe , 31-hm rf 11-:wh ,:2..gf: ify,VV:tw'w,ifT'g':i ,-,i, Q- Wifi, ml. fw+':'1.'V' Qshifw' V , .J , A , V- A V 14 ' L 'V ...pd-ff, W, VV V 'VW'-V :V 1- 1 J x A-,Q :wg 4, 1 gg- if! ' 41-'wifi-'5,7f'QyfV P dw VV X A rig: 1 f . .- V V. af- 5? ::'i ' , ' f A,Q,g,1'3.V7V 411 Lge:-45 gk? ,ggi-V' 1. -V V r . fi? 5 qw-!, L:' '3,'? .-:Qi f-9,21 3 :V , 13,2515 jf uni, ,Q si llifdg' '2'r,,V: -i,,fVSi,11V-f5jf,.g,+5f FQ-Q I fzmlfg Q ff? Vlff Qif9 f.',f'll3 .1',.S.-.' Z' J , ' ' . ,V -V , 3.,5..h,3,Q,V5-5A2i1fQ.fV,1:N3.,3xr9g -, tif' gg vgjigvfbf , ,,, gq V1M,f1Qi37p :jg QLWVV A ., . A V . Jjfxaki 3' 11?-,l ,Vl iw ' - N59 Fifi: lg J :sf 91J-W' 'Viva--1-V Y-fi f V101-'V 'f' ' .4fl.T3 g T , , - ,. fi V 13, .ds ' 1 aj 1.15333-.'V 1- V ,'7 5 Y - 5'-2 f-,-,1 Q ?'-:'4'1AiV V 4' r - ' 11, My L mf T' .-g31'1 '.'J?' 2' .I' Q 1,-V.,VQ: 1w,gg'l.-'F-.-.fi '-L 31. 1 ph! g'f 1fij.,':f , , '. , P, 4 V 'j ' A' 5 V - .131 ,ap f--V fe.-V V-IV . 5741, 4 .V VV i,1,f 1 v:'I11141.:' -2 ,v-.51Vi42.fV.1--uv -VV:-www-V.:,:2VV :.VV31,4f',1g-2, 41 . M 4, V . W X :,a1f:'V'fik15f ' f '-Nw' V5-' 'w3 -w+Q'-i'f'f?.:T5 'Wirif 555' W A ei 'w'-ffafffff5t5'if:4'r+V:, 51: -'--F515- ffl:-Y-1-V 11 71 V15 4 -V n - J A V V ' L Vwitffilf 3+ df. V .2 V3Rf'f.'29iW ,f7li xi 1 UVM?-' .. -E fiiaQWs.Vg2:1f'u'f::iw Z M' in if-v5?Q5':iL2f'?.f .. 1 . ,, K. , 4' .5 A 2wjw V - , zagaf V Q +V2f2fggVf1v?V' V'f.qi1fVf' V3 Vgifssg V +V 1 , -' e f JV ff I7-1f V:rXZ-'ik-lf'. , J 1 - 1-fi..x.V5a ' 5,12 ,' iq P Vfzf ,m,,4.-'a- 1152Vc'PiV-VV? .im aj'.'1 1V,-- q., 3 fazwg s 'V .v,,.:':1g,w :H . ' 5, Vx , -mu: , ' --jen -- ,Q :V-Vp L . V 1,-,y -,A .Q V V 'N--fy cv V VP ni- V ip: ,'v1Y'V, 4g'ju,:,.'-1 ,-yi.-,-n1f?f,r'A- ,lv ,. ,WR .MV ,ing V X ,f y ff-,V-,M--V-1V4,f V V, - , A 1 . 1 V. .Eur 5. f N. m 1.-ii 'if V4 , fl Q ,,R'95ei2:q,V fzvsfzi. 1 -1a',fV1.w :V M af Q VVV V fn- ., e-' :,1+xf-,fg4V,+-,-ww: ,'agw:fVm .215 M3 -mf 'V ,ll QM gif Y I 1 2a2 'IwfV ffY'3J':1iif:12ff!: -M 514 H1a?qN???1s' '- 'efV- 'M 'f ' -V V ' wap: f , 'iff' V' VV N 'Ann 'iff' :VP - 1--'i5'f 1 f,-521 w . 1 V , 1 L2 failcf'-fff2w g-,Q--rf, wig 1.3: I R M: V 2' :-'H' , V V I ' 1 .1 x4'glL 'i?,QV4gffi:',? wsu! 5552.1 ,f,.J5 fl2?lif. .v1Effii5f?5?vBff3'1?fff-QVfrjfii' '-V:f5fffVQ9'i'? QTTTY 'V 637' 2- ' 5' 51 , '- Q 1 5: .fpQ2,ZfeA 'H' T-' .Kirpal ,,4V',sg'. , gg . ' V gg: : :V'.i'1 ,Ska925.1AZeV 2?eL-,,n'-Q4121.'5m .f1l'i'?a:,,AffV if ' r- mrs' -. . ' -i ,-.::1jfV V., , -i fb V-V' ' . -X , Wqfi U-1, -A ,h . .5 .i , H ,lf 9 JH A 44, ,M Eg, .1 V435 ..,,.5: ,3gky,,4, .,Vp,2,,3 -,- 31,3 -fl ,,,?,fffy,,g ,gg-A 12,953 V, gxrw, . V , , li f Q ' 'M '- 11:5 f iV:21iV'114,: p ,K ,gg,g'.-V'Ii,q,.giQ4d 5,91P 71: ZgllgeQ1-:f':2: 1,5 .ffii-Ve, ef.gQS14i1 r -.f ' V V ,, 11 e'l.-13 V I ' '-,1?1'4f-.Qi-'L 'V2-'ini Q V-yt. fffipf' K' ' lit-Y 13:6 xl w' la Wfazwir f'?V ' LFEx-KLA',g:.'f.:E'If7 1E5' QW 1z-4: F'Zag4.V 'f1,2 - Ef 1i g-.VFW 'I' .'-- E :J1V f V i ' V- , 'nf if---1 'i'fQi3:f?, 2:i'11i L i1i4:, ffM 'li '1 ' 461-11? 4- ' f'al:ef:Velfihfvfifsid'V1Tc.s'V,.gLe!:?'g?1ia5:v1 1'5i:t2Qfqf,'f,':. -' I . ,iq , .15 fi' 'cgi-:1'3g, gf , it :Mi if ina - 1 V W in V ' ' QV , fx MJ ..4.f ..V-if 1 f fr 712: ' - -f S. , '- TJ. ,,7'1!E-. 5 33:2 4 44,5 2'1ffJm,11,1,fTS1b- 41:.,V17 Qblfw., A A V V152 I 'M 'I fa-fr22fff'f ': ix--' ' H VV -3 '.-11 - 51-. 'lflww 53 2V 4f:,i I 1'5'm.-H-fm? P151 1, fi im I iffirliv..mg-wf:41Wn,fVA 'ilfizdfd'f'L1+'-wi?-all-!7'if' '- 3115? 'fra LV' i3-QV? ., U21 . 1 ' 3 . Q-,g-,iV,fc1,f 1Q,?.V.,v,..- . . Ai,-., L.. .LV-V, ,UA .,1z,,,V.w wn9'f .1:, 3 ,,-,-V,-13 Lad A 4 fg,f,v,V. am' ' 1 .1' .V M, .,- -.VfL,1-, wg ,,.., L H , uf Vfl! 'Yf':1ff-315 'A . 'f,3,Vi5 f :fi 22215315 if 132' V V. .XL Li 1f3ff'Af5 'F?',1-13'5', 45' F -.Qi , -' V 7 , f Vt! A Q- 1 4 4 wie.. 'EF' ? W- wil? 'Vl A ':1L,fl :V'f ffkiwbiif iffif?1?'wT'w?ffIJ+x.. ' ,-V 4'Q'vYVs'f 3-Q2-Fw 1 ' , 'f.i A' . Z fi-e I 1,'f4zif2Vmff ff I' ' V we HH w V :A i Sv lfff V'i-.'a,ffwym2 ' .1mwVV1zrg'v1w1f, . V' ' e. ww sf 1 ig M. V im, V,.V 1315 V. ,1 . - 5 f?'Q,jL2: 5 :Eg '-LgznV,.l., .4,ye Ligifgi wa, ,F UQ A.555,'3Qg2:gf-3:34343 :,, 31:1 ffl ' T- A .pr 3 V' 'rug wh ., f ' ' 43:5-.51 if wswy V: f if V- wx ., , 'vi'- V1,f.fi5 V I V -' V J 2 ,'3Vi'i ,PTFE , Q,i19'?a'Q gg 'Qfvf Q'Eji1f,2Qii5Q5:g ,-z 4 air-g.':.3fV,,. ,i..1V.g'Q:EV,.,,,f, 5,4 .. 5 ,, :ff-i3'.'41'.:3igjZ . '.' , 'V:5f:,i, , ,, 1, .Q via- 9 4V 5, ' ' effing mfyrqf-,L 'ef:,js,1e-V:f,'gV',V,,1g ,V . f 1 f - ' 1 5,55 jf1,fg,Ll4..g,a-3,1-Q H-:s11,351 !r1fi4'V-VEEEEV-'gV.g1.'N1 3, gffggfg SQE VM4 VifV.EVf..f,24,lf1,'V A 1 rr' :sly- C' V 1'-'E 1V4Tf 7'1'V1Z'5V7'f'f - 31 fa-,:ff3i?. ' V' Q5 Q+rf.f-Wi1-2'i,,f- aliQ-':fil'Vi? 'i 3V2L4 ' 4 ' 43 f'-L '1 37f5I5t? Y '. ff V ' . ' A aw 3- 1.-:,W3f.E,f'1A ,,'. ' k ?,1,4r'g'Z -7, 51-1 Q.21,,VA-, ri IL ,gj Kai f TEE 314 16f'S2Eif'F'5.'?y2',Q7f':7fv1L- ji fr?-1-ympiJ,A,'- L .,-2! N I, M QQ .mi 'Q1,',Z.. 'l mf A V. ., 4 ' , V Vgrg, V E .1 Us ,4fVf.,sf:5-.wa Vip! VRJU2- Vw ws- -' V mg f.q.fr5f,'W :f'i1-'Mfg ' ! ,f!aaf, 5 '55'-i V x V f W f fi Y ,.52iif. Vijliilf f qg lLb1ZVef5a.?f' f V . 5 . ' .g:V1hL?7 'jfygllf P! xg eg, if-55 515:52 Vi ' ,!WQFi1+5y5.'f. -?i24,?i'J:-V 2.13 . iw 14- ' .ff:'i9,g, N541 'V 1: ' Q e Vu:--1 V- -,, ,, Q.,Jv,. , MV :V 1 ,: ' .f- 24,5-f,,'. V Inf' u- ,K 74 1 4, , -4 :PVI gd, 'V' 'I-fx. : K V . M -,pgs ,fAg,,-q-gfaiV g,g'f 5311 '- vsp? Q55 :ing-'. np ,QQ s:,if:2'gsa .g 4Qg?,2 ff-gf?-a -Vi,-51 Vx ,eiwgggfgg - . iff, QQ?- 1-k,f'.g5:,'i'?1,iuQQ'ijwV -z 1 Q y ' VV 7 1. Va' 'Q-.--2, V4 ,. -4, , gn' ,VV -L ' ' ,fu - V ii V :V- -.f- V, .- ? , :gf--,'. ,1V'fj 1 -V A V fy f.:,.,,, K 'E'-13, ' V: ...V -4 3 5 inf '- f , '1i'g:V,gs:3?,gw5ij1zy-15' 32153 1?'3ii:ESL'A?t1QzeL,Vg V?,V?'?V ffiag fgslizfs .sung , -2 'A fp! , if ' L2L,5:WwTT'3i , W EF: firjff ,fiir-'V!V,.ff1!.gi'g J ' ,giilgiw,LlV:.2 :uQ.Zi'gE5. 5 '- W W,-, ' ff 559 1, '4,,gfVf': Q1 35:31, 5: iv. . TV V ,gg gf? ivfifagimk 5.361 -, A Hi' 'f x ' ' Vffvij ,:1 aw j Q -zygzfhg,-3-. ,-Q 151-: Q' jf 5 gm'-f ,. ' ' L Q ,gm ,f.ggrV,2f5ff, LU: :cg V-ffgl-'Q-'pq' H: 9 2 3.1 V ' ,Q 1 gf ., Q NL viii f,:4l1V-xg:-1g,, biiigzgg ' .f fesf Li EH if fq?I?Z?iSi,p1:?55i,.11'f3'f XE'-.,'W 1gig :lgif, P1 .Eg-!'g54,?gYf V , 1 , -HE .f ., ,, f., Q- V. . V,-, ,.'.1 ,V 1-Vw-1' 2, z., -. fm- , J ,MV-xv .. u' Ya, 3, 1, 5 ' V , V, gi ,Q w .,Vi.Vf wr- A' A -V ' , 3 - ' - 1 Jizz' :ig 5 fi A2451 an Vf EH? ,. ,-ggh-gif ,qu-, ,E , V V- A V' gui .Wa Wifi V-Vggf wil QQ- any M W gig Q V fwfmsr.-ffQVffVVfV:ifVf: :V VL V1 : PM , 'Q 354 fx 2. -A ' T: ' ' ' , - ,Z A N N V fr Vw. We 3V01f'y,g2f':a?:'?-V5f'k,E'E5l','f'?l,CF 5fLif VV. .samffaafwf,Vm f.-,m.7e ff iflffiwiiw f i2aV. f::fv'f+. 1-fff ll-V, , 4- Q: fm- 1':iEg.5'v.w , FS, Kuff' ,rf-,Ll .4-, ggi, :-LV -gf, Pg fn., 1,-Jafiqx v-gz'L1f.'5afUfgf-A--f V J-gy. - I.. .17-V.2 v.'1' Vu f- 1' y my-..i1' E,,:a-3g?p ,ff ,v. , '. V1 I '--' 1 ' . ff, -iiauiff-f1,f-' -V 'N 54- K1-1 Qi' fun QQ' i VM' -' V 4:1M::'f!H-1v?FW!?- ' ?3TiY'5.:fffV'Mf by-'Vzifshf-11 F all iq 'AQ fy-V' fi'.-5.-'lf-5'-wk . 3? I .. ,gut j' 'gf VF1' Q rw - ,V ,,.Qg,..4gV 151: 145 ,' 124 Min- 'wk 1 v H1 . Qi, -135: +,N5V,g:!j-fgiifg V,.Q-Va:-gg, i-'QQ .Q- f' ,iff ,. Em, 'fwqw Fry. 4,1 1 .-fi 1, ?'i,14 - '31 ll E W gw. , f .'6- ysWx1i54V 715531 A 41, ' i I i 1 -V -'r L 1' V f,,zf.z.'V'f wif? ,gi 1.-:Vw V wi:--Aw I 'ff 2z'j V.,,An fm, px , Lv, ,3,yg1VV. yji Y V . , ' ,g j,f'i1 .-'Zig-5,112 f+U..Q,!gV V u 'JJ ffifkfii Vg 5137 PH. -'I ,Q-if '.XVfgA.5L:1T,55-L, L: I 'xii- 'Ff, 'fF Afa':,,,4 , ,SSa?ffhE5i f5, P1?Qw p I A ' . V- . erm' .,-' -V 2-.:1. . -V H:-.'1. V . V ' MV: AV Q, .2 JI. ' ,z f w - -,'f:I.'-' 'li ,LV,.V '- ,' '-rw-12' r: 1:'.' - '. V. . -.., V 1 H-m ., V 'X ' gi. Q 1' Marg- .felis-A V,,1pg.,s.m3qg4,,Vg5':,,qgihi1-Eg 351112.51 fig w: .a2Tj1.,ii'afxe 'i w4,dg,5fQ:,5Q2 , fgggfiz., , V: , .. 11 :, ' ' V -fe-xv' if 1 'iw .1 if 5 V w. V 21595. f-ru iw-V' V ' '. ,V , 11 wi-34-1 hi-f-1E?vV',' I ' 2 emi' Qsf-Vw 11215-V -,am.,,+,t ff.-V'-,LV'au1.-5,,1L.:f,:f'ws-ww ' wi T '1'n '5J'i5L'7, he V ' iauwifw V, 1 f 2 T- -V . 1 ' ' V .N , -V w :V .. .- 2 ,V V' Q1 , 1421. V1VVV:.1'ff-Jf-:H an ,+L-f,V1Vfif1.':--aw:V.--. ,s , . 1? :AQ -iaiiii' :. -..Af.f'..,j5'-fm ?Kf'11'J-'gi WESQEZVJQ AZN ,Qf1fExEQ2Q31f5imdvQ.-I,V f1lV,'15.-4J,.-25157, 3 'We1,a.fzkf11 '.I:'.f 'i3 f.,- V :Vi V, , iifgf fi 'Q4 V 11421 fffflw 1 - Sv J Q- ' K, 4 79:-Q1 SAV iff! HW., ig Faffw' ' . :Q5,?fEi4'f' ?'5as2'ffwffH1f.:1f',f.H:J '-vlxhfl'-:ffKSWrgm'gN 4. P'if11:rsg1sj3iJ-S155 15 ' .- I Pg:-21 , VV 'fl ' 1-if V1 Y ' ' if VI - XI: 'TV- 1 7:'V2' 1 ' . 5 ' , ,L.:Uf?1Vi2 w f? '- L 4 E 'S :fa wif 1- .V ' 'A ' ,iff 'ww' 1,8351 V 1 rim. 1VYEiXi2133,?E fall? E Q ikibfiaki-, Vw?-X A22 1 1 4f2FV2'jf'W f,i1'E1f?l1?-e'V-41VV f, V '-'l: 't Z9 5l'- V. - .,' 1- Sf : ', , ,. ',1wH'LV,:VV::'.V. -. ' N: K - , A' ,V 81, 'ga' ' :,.,,-1,w',f1.g1 V V3 . -:g4,,.'f-1-r:,.-f 'ff---'tggf L- V Y -11 1 f?'f 1.-'iii' 41:5-,'f:' - '9453:'4Ll'?VJgf'-g,.y,,q1gVL,i,'Vw.: 1 . 15,5 'w'V,.:,, .5V':,'affE35VgwQg .Z'!,'ge,,: fff L' VVf,'V, ?E':l:.31.e.'f?l ,' - 'i-'GCN1i,Vf'5g1f-1'-if-'i,gag ,T - aw. .1 4- ,,, 1' 9' 'M V1 V- ' ffi w - wl'-arf-W' H A MVA'-1-5 ?Tp'i',,'!'E 1 -1.-:V':-z 'Vs' HH .:1 , , + ' 2 . 1 2' 'JV ' L- fi 3354 -V ' f V friyn.--. -,-GvVV,'1-'M 'VI .VIN-1' 'rs' -'ra' '1 '- riff? fsgti 5 , ':J2z ' .1 ,V-Vw'::lL'2:f - if a W, fu ,lin -f - '- Um 'Zi Vi: -me'5fH?9'IQ5?1?'.,f L?-VA ?aEi?1JLl:3, 2'ffi.51l':1.f. .zV 353 mf?-U F3 'Er .' f?fvH1 M? 4- .V b7 f3?iiV -- - FV f V V i V- ,af L7-:jf Vw, V VVryq4-Vw ffg ,ff iV59:,4:q,e' ,L +-m!f'?'I3?f7gv3lV:f', fi rm-9511! ,ffgg::V1-ww,---,.,2+, -i . f - J 1 hx' 'l 4 lgiziih JN -w.'2'.?lig-.'l', - V' -V- ,'t! .1 wV,ffVg1',5Ff 'Q .vygg ,El Q5i?qg1+ !3j',,7g'.fNY1g'mw1,,pu:!fV 2 .- V- ,- 'I' - , VH ,JV -V :?j':-,593 .,y V -jew may 353,373-vigx Ei? .5 gg 35.155 5,1 -,3',,4,ifjAQ?L,3f?. '.:g,Xg,gg ag ,1.A:-- 73,2131 'fflVe l4:,Vh '-Vw Hf..'-MAg4?,:g,f3'i:wV1y!q4 ,J . F - V L , .. ,.,i--. ,.-Sa --'aifin V',fff1+S fiff5,,-aV,.3f5v:'f.f'K Jijlw-fgl:,V 5,V1gsg'rVfVVf.f:-41.3-qfs,,VE , w w gaf'1?fV5-, gm-'-3,1,.,.-.gl-'T-3, ,- V- - ,H- H-. . ' 2. I ,f - . Vw -Ql1:11'f 'xml 'HW' 'V we , 1.51 M 'fm- 3 , '2 1 ' A -Q 1 -153: -V I ' ' ,JA . ' V- -,.yV:-CE! 2, w, ., , , . L ,, -,-- 1. ,V Q.: 1 ' Iip1Up.d,z -- V11V.V'w!. flg,,V.fffV,V,-1413,-,gsgug ,.i ,..,1,,f f,,,,qVl,. -Q, . - JM1. H M g,-sL,,,4A- . ,V 1 , ,v.g.,g-iq., 3 fg: ,. wif- ,, ,pp 1,5 uf 'QV -3.5 '01 .av-SV' 5513 'fwfgff - ff, rdf :P wv,,V-fWe,,.I3b'5i'1m -.1-, ,mg fa V. - gn, , -,V-3 ,,.-VVV.,,,,-1.1-25151 . ,. VJ, V N 7 V, VA -, VV, 1 ., VV' .Hg , ,V ,1 Vi ., 1 V ff fi 'HN' .- -wx.-Q, ,Vip-A -Q, :.,1-,- , A.Vf+4:w,,- V -V . V 3 . gi: U5-5,531 f- Q, AV 'l E 5 gi?.,i3.Q gui'-,nnggi Y, ,. Z A 11 , EQgYJ51E+a:i1yV: , 5,94 ,bzfii 35' zjhV1':L,lIF v,g,3'.j5tQgI,,' L ' V, V551 5-if ' K T 1- Q ,, .-V-,ilvgfj E V . 7 zxigfgiif, w,,F:,l.- :VR L1 NIKE,-511 pfg1+2ge3QQgEW- , gli? ,, ,,J'f-'TLA-igE'?ri1:. ,gi,-wffzwf VV wig, 5:3 xi'-V5.7 -. .,, QW: .fV1:f'+ 9 my 37,31 5:51 V..i,,,.5- ,. -- 4, wi gg- -fi., J' nl V A iw., 41331. 5-fig-V gy BV 711 535VfQi,7V V :wg mg A:,,1..w'gj'1? . V f- :Ev M my-,,1i-1-55' ' 4 V- .qzjf 1 , 1 B 5: f 4 V W - sg.: i-fe 11311145 f - .. .'?i'L f . - F '. .lQ'1Vf?'?+' W 15135 55f3?j?Qf1? ' ' kf1f,Vs?H- K fVH3g3s2i f'. . V 1:f172?fi'3v K?f3?' T 71 497127: 2' if ' 'E w V-1' YA11f,'g1Z ?+ gif? V. 'J'fj:rL'-Q - 5 V:3h1f : , aim, 2-,F,5.H'l'f 1, 215149 by L,TB4 n 5121351 ,, 'fY4',g,5.3g4 4f:,-,IV-,11 ..-W7-'g15',,,.f'1 JiV 'vc - 3 .su , f- L' ' ' , ' 1 ,ja , V, '1- J, ,qt '. --Fi-:gi fl-'g ' . A' ,:.:rvs:, .,w .1 'sa'-: . -vw-Q a5.,lQj.,wi- Kwai J' .,K,,5?i 4-V., iw. -275315 gb: Jfk. J -f l1V-':3,J- T, wg- -1 J VV: 1 E31-1 . V' 7?.2.N1'.57' 1 V :K 'z:fw '3fMr.V SHN ' f??Vr'ff+4?2J'fw?Jfm11 ' ZE'1ES'jf?-T 'i'ff9pfY w V -3+-, a?-HIVV-::q ' V'.1zff:'.' .f -1 rf-V V94 2 V, QM' 3? J?e:VW1 . eqwwg ,J wif: fe. m f fl- -aw -' ' 1ff'5p,.,.iV 'f.f.:1:..:'f r 3' is KA 3.1: jf. ,Ula V' gjQQQ7U' Q54Q g ' ' ALF Q61-,'i:f,.:1 ghjiprly' 55453 1 , 1 -Qlffw-1 -:fi n LQ? ' F43-L''5.f 1C'?L'?.f2,-,,r'? 97 -- ,'22ATvpgsQg-V- :-I rf.-,Q 1 1:,:- . . ,, 175 ., A 1 Q -. ' 2V Q Vs, L.: AL- 5.3 1 '.: V,, .AT -ez gr, ggi, if xq1, 1g., -VF' iw- - Lug 5 T q,4,.V5 -sf :' '7. I ft' f +'iw::'f.L'19'i?1g-'xi :2 5 M-ff In V ' -'z . -rw 301a A'5v: fwflrifirn- ,VV -1 f f w 'rf w I, 1' V' 1 ' . , Q V xji-',ivf'1 ','1V7'.- fd .121 4 ,N . :VV 4 K V-,'h1...-v EA-. V.2V,Q,--M.-y, ,JVI U: V' ,.ffV'. -ff' 14 , . ,V f . EQQLQIQP-1 mx -'r' .. Su : - v w-nf fi ,. Nfxbg E 'V if V. r, 1. :-H. wb 2' ' 'ff--A - ffj :---3, ,Q .t A 'y1. A-Q7 tif' Vf2gKIz'mf:V-n!i'.:f J Je ' ,,,usH: 1' 'E 'fi T iff? 1, A-,? VQ 3. J- , '14, -IP I ir -gQ.4f11 ':' N' 4 5. g -':1,x,, ' , .Q-. 5 1'-, M454 M -wgjA 1,.5 ' 1 wr. Lomb L WL Gm SO MMMOW1 PWCQW, 50 wovxollrhulj 50 Wim! 'Dr Wok SQL 50 NCQ 50 uid, so QD,15 dfUGxH, OS Ypj QSMQAMMWIQML OQZTTUGIWHOL 50 50 I WMD! HQN what me Y alia can I 5 W wx Hqoua JAm?Y9QM XBLQSQGQQQB WMA Qdmwxl 33554 33205 - ' ' M L5 was UWXSQL 3 ezwQw,vQe-gm ,QW 'lab Q aj QM is 4? 31 M5 Sw Eg Q 2, 2 Q1 555 N S 163 X G Quxig I gdb 22 Q ,ffiiif if fi V 'I Sfmiky M ' iff 7:36 wwf .1 Aw-f . u 'Vlf PfiQgg4 2 E:ugQ,,d,y C7 0 ffffffifm CZ,-f7 F5lZZ.....5.'..., MQ, Q 54- W . H162 pf Zmjqfmbmlyfd' fmfmmzgm . cnxwwfwfwig W WWM Mfffwzawymg 02,7 QZ40 i ., I ' ,I 71, Q gf-ii 5 cfm! Wa' 'ff 52 figffmdfffdff-a,fcJ1f4aQ.A Hwfzwf If O M 56 MM' M54 ww 06Q'Z g my r M f9wQ,24y4 HL4Aw,9jL??? I QD ' -,if N 4 U LU'he 54:-4 4024 if A 'J mf , , CJ ff 0452.47 Q , f5j4,f4,.,,7 -.-4Si1..j, ,V ' ggi' n , 1 51 ZWZ,,jjfgJf'?54 25 meme my .9?9 d7'Zf7 an WQQ7 fu aw? ...L 'I 01 A4Zf1!'r7fl0m,q If' I -- 3 90-Q'-ff fi-1f?42,a , lf, aj - MM ma'7 f'!0Q?'f', C7 Q Z Aj L7 1 , 4 1 L.? il g ...A Qi f L pwilfmf, . f fffev-P1 . I V A G' A Y Www ,, J ,,,. f . ,I-.. If -5. .4 -,I - 1, ,J ' ,ivpjfg 27,72 E C fifs-ffm. 5. fj , - 1 f . ' 3 1' IX If-Of1'3 aff 177-4 L4' 51fm'r4,wo4- wiicaicwa -A LAT' ' , I - H mf' - I S 1 1 CXL-42401 .zo ,qmzqwg f5j,a..4ff GJQQM-!f,...',5we 504m gif Cbggcj 60609 . , p ' 641 .L+-fum 9:0 me . H I, fy! ii? if , 4, nj 71 K f - --.J7 ' 1' 'Ag -f !f7A4j'jf by-. 'f,-iff' ff,wLd64.0 Z-J0'fTE4 'jf-jf! Zak v-'52FP0'? . ,, , X f J' M ...J x 5 ' , w rl? 'mgvfg 51'.35fi.6 1.519 .0121-'f'fe5r'1! .'7'l0 fL4f:'TV,f, fri! ,a Z :tj 1:3-Q61-Legacy A . ,757 ,Q ff f 1 ,, 3 '-- My !flf' fu ,F ' , Vggiji, fllazf C7 ff- fam ,fzqm zfi 45p,.-1556 'fn G ,QMQ ,,,4Q,gwwy, .xl 0 'D I -,Q J' l i M,-b . 2 V I I I ff -Cd-N7 ffa.,.!..:gm,L,v ,m,4:fgA' gfwfrw ,g?41,-.W 335: fgyfijtiy Hjfj, Z,, l.,,,57cQCc1e,y, . W I M ! ,wp , . V1 . if-'J HGQQQL, ' - A, 1 pdl Y. . . I,-A - in HAI, -N J, . ...f. '69'1-0'i-0.f.f15f-we qf'j:'fi42f::..f2,, fzfwff' , Q,f'4Q2-,ga-,,,?55f' Zlwhp! wm,7'74i-cf 3 ' 4 f' f ' -Zinn f' ' 42' ', ' rl , ,J f q!jZ.-41 www i 1 3 nf ,4 - , I M, r , ,Q-gb. !7j'Q'Fl ,a'fi49j2,2f!:3jp ,417 ,.57'fI g1,k,? t b? ,w6 ! E l 0 p s 5 7' 1 1 , Q f .ff T '4'ef'2 'Sv fur? ,fu --Q5-aff:-55? 5335110 ,flag flaga, +. A:,v2,.Q52J Mn Z! C: 9 0C'7'Lf:,.-fi' 'V I l .1 -f . 6' 'I ' L7 , ,.: .- - AW1 N4Q'4:1MfLig,y ',f2fe'gf23 c,.,.ld7',f,g,nf?d5 ,,,fg1w..g1,.,y-51'-,gL.f5 life, Lybgybz t ,. fi , Ly.. ffjg hq Lf' -in 11, ,ff J . nn ' ,I ' f .iv Jr! , 1 A. f,1,.F??ff!-aff, Q. 'fix 4,ff.c14Lm?,f AfCk1F,? '4-i:7a4..ag4A::fi ,fL,yL2 Q ?'7Z'fl'Y,4q2 I 1 If ' G 1 I , . , . ' r V f'-. , , - , g ' 5 f .. - 4 'QLJI ' ff A139 C' -f flZQfzT.i 4?j7 PQ! film' r215 15:.144:'1i?pfa7J: M -f'5? f?i7f 4'WQ LQ -01.140943-:.W,, ..!l51r'.1irz,gq.+gf,,Zjf j ,0 . ,' ' , Af ', . .. 0. aifbfywjanx gg fg3Qffff-423' -JfgffI'mz,f1aeLfz.i 14543 f7f6 fQfaff7 4i :2'9 9M'b'W Life' 57 .1 59 ie M217 if . Aff .V Qf - Y Q:.,f :cm . J J . . ' 1 ,, ,Sw - dmfcw 15114 qg.3af,,, 1,621-2fy,?'5,' E7 PRINCE GEORGE ALMA MATER Prince George, we love but thee, Faithful and true we'll be, Friendly to all in need Of a good deed. To Prince George we do bow, Of Prince George we are proud. We love our colors bright, Green, gold, and white. 'Now and forever, Dim though our paths may be, Always remembering Our pledge to thee: Never to be so proud, Smile through our hopes and fears. Prince George, we're true to you Down through the years. f-L,-Q.,--,Q.,...,v..,-..,..,.-,..,..0-.,..,..,..,-.1-.,-..,-Q-a..,-.,f..,-.,- jwenl,-Ahh .xauucal Cornmencemenf crerciaea Cfm of I9 78 I, PRINCE Groks: I-IIGI-I scl-loot DR. THOMAS GEORGE, Principal J J , , 5? . ,. . FF-l K-r 3 Q Ya D A H xg-vs: Y A N N, : Jngxr, ' 'G' h -Z ,Q- BJA- ' 4 FA? 2-. l Q , .KXqi,.- up TLf,I5,,. 4' 'x GRADUATION Friday, June 9, 1978 mo If.M. Athletic Field Un ease of rainy High School Gymnasium Q-inf-agua-.1-.Q -..- -.'....- -..- Q.,-5 -:.,..,..- -..- e.'...- -e.- e.'..- ev- -ena- iagff., I , 'NIO H1989 Megoog .muug 1x:uogeN.g ' 'uo3Bug1.lV IOJIJQ nuuoN 50 AJOUISUX ug 119143 912 sn-:Mom poomamg IIOHH Amyq 9,415 Malpuv paxil Bugumq 5193111311 Aqqoxuyl .KSIMOIQ uesng Epllyq M4013 UUK I egapqsd qapmzag .wuxo qdasnf STVHSHVW HOINFII' usqnbxn auuv aglnf :Edna sapqg smuoql gdmaux 9xoI9uueH umqxeg uosxalxg uuiq All:-mag 1- uosqopg Ipaq aqnf Amuuog eoaaqag azxpmeg rngpumoq and aguuog SHJWITCIVEIS HONOH, 'mv aunt '4-'V-WIQZQ vs1'1xHAv'1 Guliv!-la 'WMM 991 VFW-TH 'PWAM 91629 QP-WD '5R1!M snag Apuayg 'uosnm UUV 91511-WH 105I!AAe I-Wadi 'DIVX 'S'UB!II!AA vmmaq 'uos1gaoau5,yA 991 epuaxg 'supmyy HUUAB1 UPUUWH '5U!1!llAK avg F101 'WO-DSIUM ouaugoquv 99Ao.L 'xfqlum suaxmv pug oinm QUUV SHUI '4wll b-'Ile ang mqaxu 'Had-IHJ. nooaqog :wang 'xan.ll!.L npaqesgg I-uad 1l9 -'-ml. mqa 9y.mu'-I uomnj, KBS UUVIGK 'UOSEIILL' nuv llwlIB2!l3 'f0SU1UlLLe ang uaoeqou RIIUUWLI- mxv usual, '-l0Ii9.L uoiaqeu oomf I3 Bel IWFPWO P02313 UWWIJCIS 'UNWS lggqg mqopnamg 'sxamuumg mxv may fusmiis 1911.401 lP1l!'I 'ASIUEIS .ms Blaming 'Jax-1eull31S analog vpmng 'iazxgdg A -f L 1 T asglnq 111194951 'slixumogg' UWVI 'm'm'lS 'DW-'S' uuv pfxaqg 'uosdmgg GUWIH U315!-DI '-'0I0'IS, avmgq tuqea 'uxaqsg H S!- X LHP90- PS WQLMD 'URL 'WSWS V -WHY MI 'P-'UFWS ouuv umsq 'lung ugagqlg 'ln.l0Axq5flH 'IW'-IWEIEI UPEI -'HHH WW BIIEUF!-'J '-:HPSR 11:32 Amuml 'J ug 'I 9W!G 'S-'NFB eauag smflqg 'SUI-hi 03901 'ENN 'EWG 'Il mwvi vsqvu 'lwuva sponyq Bqsmyq 'AIEMINBJ H3105-'V 'Wil-1-WN 3P!-'Wd uang Aqmxuq 191118,-I lm-4 I Pl- !A '90'P-Wd mxA'1 I-rlmnl 'QIIBSKIN 1111.41 vvmoq 'K-UQQMSN 959150 U'!A!A '9P!-'AN waqva wnuss 'mmm v!SS!-'lla W!'lW4O 'btwffw guuuemgaq uuv apo'-5 'uoqmw QIUTPEW 1139500 'U!-WW: mxv 9595 'qaengw mf 'W!N '-WILWN nur! uuuoq 'xappgpq UID! '-'03I!GI f0O9Wn4- uukl uxqaq 'Lmalgow mtv IBN 'sadew amy 151131163 Mass-BW agmw H1183 'AQSSUW 9593 ay.xafaA 'uosupq ang agmxog fqpxunbmwg uusng UQIIA WM WEN, Aux nuaqog 'xo39x3:gsN,, .L BIIUBUI '1-Iulplao'-I uuA1 soaaqag 'sgmaq aaw ussnjl 'unnudnuufl nmifl quoqaq 'A:p5n9xX , 'WX 'F-WPUBH 'IFEX 9551190 1519110 54114131 axnlauuul-I umqmg qdmaux, 4, ,anaqagyq upuoloi 'sauoj,, :ww uqpag 'sauof mxv ugpuv 'uosuqoj uuv Amumj, 'uosxayaf Kof mxag 'symzf .u-In moi 'mmf qousf 'sqomsj sgmyq uuunq 'quauf aug-lngsog Euosnpaf ' lmA'1 li-Til 'uosxpuf asguaq Apmj. 'uaux-Hug 9-450 BPUVI 'IIVJSWH '- apausaf upsg 'pooH,,g 5- l1'X ww 'Kali'-'BH alisg ljyuoqg 'iiuguag 'I5'!9 l I-BQWEX 'SABH 'l33q9z!l'El 591921 mos!!-'UHQ4 nam ana .nz 'B 1 X I G '-HP 'FH uuxq uaamu-:X 'zgaxoiau-3, 391 WWII LQUPW-'S 10390 YSFI 'AW-'D 55951303 ay.xa1sA 'uosxapmug asgofg srpuug Exauxunug 911110.11 uguunf 'mimpong 91-WW emma 'Wi-BPW9 uu.4fI qnxoqaq 'ouupmgfivg UN '!'lW5OK P3-'J fi!-'UN 'URL 191905 21429 'HQ-WH Walsh! WIKI NWI 'SPIQM lpaqnzgg smlnvj, 'xaguunrmg S'1HID xauuau QUABM ppsuog Apsaq pu:-JW qmg nameg 9uAuM A.un I uuA'1 slug 'Jxvmg nuA1 Apanag 'uos19A'5l,,4. uuv uoxsqg 'suxmg ang KW-IH 'lluvqng 'HGH WWI 'U059!3!-'EI mxA'1 pilaqg fpuulxug, Aux uzpusg 'sppamg 33525 agssaf 'xspm 991 auapv 'spnmxpg pxu3uu1 93113 'unsung ima!! I-419110 'Ibis'-'!5U'll0CIo-5 351001 991490 'S'193F'!CI osguaq emqseg 'suaxgagq 981 119111 'sxaw.ag,.L !-'-'QW 'Dmd 'KPUSCH uuv aunf 'laguna uuv ugaumd 'xaqdmngrg anauuv ssgq 'xapmmg UWVI I5-19'-ID WS!-YD 9Sfn0'1 AUIV 'pxogmexg nuj Up.nuAg 'xog auguuoq uosglv 'mzmog -'uooaqsu luxpuug '.4nMuuo3,,g, omlxuq Byxpfg 'uumalog . 9515130 agmuxasog 'uuuxayog uagum9A auaqogw 'uuuxalog aaguuf ulaiuv 'numalog 95'-'!5-'EA 'l!allS 'Siva WW QEKBS '-95010 any u9:-:gg 'ugzuqg 3!-WN I-WI '5l!19'lD uu.i'1 agqqaq 'sddng uuv Aaxpnv 'ugeg ammgq spugq 'aumg -aualag asguaq fxapng dmoqymzg eooaqag 'Axmxngd umlarul uxxqwx 'angxng agmw umloq 'Hngumo.lg,.Q. osgnoq lug, 'sqooxg asgnoq uAIo.:ad 'sxloozg -, 'l5!2 I 'MHIIVX '3-I!-'H V. qiwi I5-'NIO 'Sims Qmmx 11012115 'SGHPPH nav Alxaqnqx 'meqSpu.lg,.1. 'PUQWHEI WFIUH 'WWMUEI Msg aguuog 'uuu1Moq,,g azwwm vnu! 'PWS ang upuaxq 'doqsgg B53-K-BILL :mmf 'xagsguueg 9U'15'I 'I1!P I 'UIMPIUH 359.1 BMA WI '59I!9Hn1l 571 PIUKA '53-UV 'l19q9Z!!?l HEI HIWWPBV 'WV VFP!-Qui 'WHY WV 'WPG 'USIIV -.1 j 'mgug3.l5A 19303 '9nuAM 'lf d -'9'Il I T151-'AA P9lP!lN WWTEAA 'BEM uoglg .Quan 'UOSEM 331 5-'93 'UUSWUFIEAA 'af 'xaalum saumj 'summmy III '90'I H01-'BO 'SU-lV!II!AA 001 U9-NUS 'REWM fl-WW 'UFIJSDQAA UWC! l9 l9!W 'IQSSQM '-'I 'UUJK-WD SUmoqL 'Klum -mf 'smuoug-L pxomw '.!9:u2Ay LIIPJI NWI '-DYIIEAA :pew uhmq 'ncsuyA png Luuq 'uer13neA PPWCI -'Nad 591311 ssmuoqjd sgo 'JQIAL arising 'HIAL '-'I lUl!lEI 9II!APU! l '-BU-m.L :aummq qusxq '.m3sgo1-L A111 'uosvf :pew 'Jang' '-'I lwusw 09'-TQWIO 'uvw-mu PBX l9Bll0!W '-ISZIPMS new Aalplug 'sueqdaqg lxffgllgvva 'H-was Duma NJ. 'mms uupxog 3186 'laauads 931 19lld0l5PllO 'xapiug -'9A!lO 5'N0'U!.L Blu-'S PKWUCI 144101 '9599Hol- NUS P5490 '3U!PPaH-L U05dW!S d!lI!'IcI WVU!-'di au1.m9luA saumf 'saga annul magnum 'uamog Sams ssuwlu. 'JEGOL4 poomryl 11191111931 'xyuaoqd UNLV il-'BN 'ani'-'!II!WcI msn nv mquv 'uosxapag lnsd saumf 'sxagad l9U'l3!N '3'1!'lf-'Bd Keg Auusq 'uos1sN ssmoqj, 'asaow 'JI 'upqaw p.luMoH 'MOON Auf HSIIBI 'sqmuw PPWCI I9 lU!W 'GIEUDSN UWUH NWS 'P!'W0G3l4Z USIIV WVHIFAA ,HPEXHWNI sapuqg uqnj ',qsAo:1uyq -.1 jf 'lanumg qdasof 'upidmnq aoxuow puoumnu 'MM01 ogg uoaq 'sgmaq laV'I0!N PPWG 'Savil- P-WNPH ,IW-Ki 9l0!'-I3-'X UOWKL Ullof 515115921 laguuq 'zanmf pmmpg aauamlg 'xauxof awning uaqlgm 'sauof 901 uqof 'sauoj 9uAcAA mlinoq 'sauoj u0u.wA uopukl 'unsung auAuM Aung 'uosgusg WU! U- !l'l!AA 'SP-WH S9-m3 AWS '5'-'S 991 sgung 'uosxapu-:ug uamls PIBUDH 'xqsgoog NPD! 'WPBIS UQMJS WUI '95P'1..'h4 :Mum ppuog '.lamx9H,4, , , 'ff 'WWI 'OGIAEI .If 194519 uuuuotq 'sddg mpg Iupuog 'fialmg FIG!-'Wd Wqog 'unsung sang 5305319 519800 ilu!!-lj IIIEION 'xooq :mug laeqoyw 'suaxpgq M3-'PUV -'alldqil-HID 'KPWU 3122 'f.S p'?m ZSWG . u Jonpzig uongqigaumog 'WW 'UWHHAA 'awo A-m I d!II!'IrI 'QI'-'D uoqmg nasmg 24013, L 991 Axlagg 'sgualualg 0m9'IdIV 'au-'DQWIO '-'I 'U!Pf'm .:I moglnf 'nadnqg 'ldamf IWHQIW '4-W0 133011 'Hn-wg 11311021 PMBQ '9mAg, wlsva Hams 'alma A:-:neg 'N u.m5u3M uogaazgq puvg fp9:w9s ugmuax asuald aouagpnv NDVI Josuodg sselg .IOQUSS ,IDEA 910193 'H .1o:lo91yq eoueppng I101S9.Id I.I.'l9q9Z!lH Iedlvusla avvmssv PIOJHHIN 'o IISHH Iedlwl-Id 93.1099 smuoql 'JG 91.61 30 S5913 7 . naqgngl qusluaarpgpmogn-'lvnolssaong SVWUIJIG .10 N0l.I.V.LN3SEIlId lm vw! w'10!PHv? asuvw vw'1V A . . ml . gig-4 ,Eg 13:2 aagaglxggigxojzggf aumamiagffq :Eggs 313603 s9lA1g seuxoql .I Au0.r.'JIc1a'1vA noueg anna sopgg 2100?-IDN qaw uuslxqof, XUUWNVH q sof sxamoq xxlaglgm qxauuax 'smqag HI 'pl0.lsH .Quan 'lpugf pxoggg ppzuoq 'sxamog uouisq 91:95 'pxas,,4, lasqaguuug uyqog! 'saulsf 9uAsAA salsnoq 'uamog PZZu'3.55PSI'uL'gE1?E.u ',i S'33f1QH23ii3Y,'L 322.222 19pui:asxu':al15pca'::g'g::l1Kl?migm ' ' In 'AUDI Hliwnajslbggu 'whv Ima 'imfwfwion Ptauuaa 331093 'usaivaqfg uosxppg mpeg aglnf mxoJ.v.Lr1'1vS M0-'P'-'V ll-WW 151-WKIUH :I-'BW Pm'-PSU samlal-I PWMPEI MQLHWN 'IU-'OH 3'fb!U'!m0ClI SIZWQUH mlqqoll Infd 'QWHOH la I3!W WWUI 'WEPQUWI , II SUWFIPDI SW!!! WHS 594- I-I WIWH l A GUMAA U-W1 'llwmtl Aqunog 931093 aouud 'L mH1.15Z,'F'!13.,.,'1W2Z2S 23.'.Hff 'u'i'I,'L4s,,'Q'f'l2Q'j ggH If sggzlgmmg -2223553 gl00'PS 50 luavlwvimdns - ' ' ' d ,um - A - . .' ...... f.Z,f',IX,f i?..H'2Z'I'3ZZ,' naigffi WEEKS 1 C'aIQEfQHlf,'E.mf ?2'f?,'5f3,'I 5210021 EI SQWUI JCI SSHHGUV sxoa ,e,1,,u!,J 931099 SBLUDILL 'JCI ' 4 'A ' 8EDIVEIdS .EIO .NOIJDIICIOHLNI SELVDCIVHO 8L6l puug Iooqog q2i5H 931093 aoupd liapl 1 7 Q,uztNNvg UEFISNVJS uvlg EIHJQ, -V Qpaquos !I!'UlI.I9l lssnald aouagpnvl .V . Q Q. 'DWISNH WWI 'WHHD 'W s a'-L wig' 4 Q99ue1smnoIgQ pun dutodj uluuopssaooxd pun 91eJueg,, momma zmuomnwg voomng limgazoag -'IVNOISSHDOWI RHQAM 3nw'IvAv'1 HJJIDGDIH - ' 4 uopgsazg-aogA . aooj-I znaznvnf vwvg 'A 4 uapgsaq 'W'd 02:1 S833H:lO h ale! 16.aum.41APP!u 8161 0 9979 vavpaax uoyvninug Q.. .4---N , I rig. 4 2 QE 5 fl xti .. ' -4 . fig 'QA - 7 WN' 'flu 'T as PX ' -vs 5431 'JZ USS- ' . V ,1.V I - I,..,5V, cu, 1 Qi.. ' J 5 ', ,T ' .',. . ' 1 Q' AJ 514' NN. 9 NN, 1 fag' . ii' -- ,'l -QM' gp sux . .J -' Q, .Jw iN 'gy 1 RU ' 'lj-4 Vx,-9 I 974' .- L . , U . . gtk! , A 411 F. -K 1 - ,I . N 4 ex ' - L y J A Qui fb ,X R - f 'FC -Q4 ,yn ,QV 'ix Q. ' A ' gf, fi . ' , C qb -ixy i? R f I my ' P .l QX . N -Q Y, Y --Q CN - . v ' ,LX , Zi, X ' Xgxxq A F fl l f 2 r - N X . 09? QU A NX 4 XA , , ' 1,5 N- V H N A i 4f 5 If ' x l K . 2. X- t M ' X ' R' A, 4- JQX jo ' - A Vflk, 1 N Jw 4 lla iii ' A 3 A E ex X ,hp-'2 , J, 10, 4 X N ' ual 4 '11 YN fn, 'Q ' fx , f EJ uw K-wbfdfg . ov X N N Qi Kigilljr :J ,Lv . Q 4 lk 'ik i. ,+'Z?A fum' 6 . w .5-, ,-at Q S uv q A L' I, 33.11 1+ 1335, QV,7 iv V . XS, -- , bg ' 4.2,4,-fd.-sv-'ixxi' X4, 314' .- mQ.g9L- T . - ' fi , f , . 31 if V, Q '54 '51 YW y , A. -P Q23- . ' ' if-ii '..4'+v-av' .- - f , ' 1 ' -A F 'J - f . - -. -'- . -- '--arm 'I J - f' -'r 4 - f ' , ' f , . , .,. -wa. 1: .. I , 1
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.