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Page 11 text:
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HOCKEY Top Rout-Left to Right-Kathy Friend, Judy Dolger, Virginia Galton, Barbara Friedberg, Ellie Rosenberg, Stephanie Heyman, Ann Meyer, Caroline Legerman, Toni Halpern, Liz Scott, joy Weinman, Dodie DeWan, Emily Kass, Peri Pike, Nina Zasorin, Joan Kramer, Carol Lipson, Coach l.tswin! was the magic cheer that resounded from Pats Kats, undefeated this year, at the start of each game. The Friday practices which made them so proficient at the art of dribble and drive were mostly spent receiving passes from the footballers 6 sharing the field. Wlieti night descended, the ever-lamented need for a phosphorescent ' ball Cor, better still, playerj was evident. Co-captain Jeannie S. was seen to dribble down the field apparently without the ball, while the other captain, Ellie W., cheered her on, shouting, Thats the way, Peril Friendly post-game snacks with their opponents were superceded by a private . '.. Q fin E S 2 Pat Katzenstein. Middle Row-Ann Stein, Eve Katz, Julie Adams, Lucy Oppenheimer, Ruth Neubauer, Hilary Halpern, Bobbie Fisher, Beverly Carter, Elaine Kotlar, Margot Piore, Carolyn Adams, Terry Long, Betty Mermelstein. Bottom Row -Ellie Wimpfheimer, Jean Senegas, Co-Captains. At the moment when over two hundred Fieldston rooters saw the victorious soccer team jubilantly carry Coach Alton Smith off the Woodmere field, the hooters had just won the M. A. A. P. S. championship for the second straight year. Of fourteen games. the 47 Minute Men , as Smitty dubbed them, had produced ten victories, two ties, and two defeats. Besides the captains, Don Borut and Richie Price, this dynamic soccer team featured such versatile athletes as full- backs Lew Goldman and Roger Hertz and linemen Eric the Nord Craven, Rich Levien, and Allan Shedlin, all of whom con- tributed to present Smitty with his third 6 . It r t 5 Y L f 7' P -I it , r i f I ' f 1 l im 9 r 2 xx 1 ' I' taste of Coach Pat K's famous jelly dough- nuts after the season. SOCCER TEAM Top Row-Left to Right-John Friedman, Ken Newborg, Tom Fisher, Mark Kalik, Bob Liss, Pete Her- man, Ray Neubauer, jim Lubetkin, Alton Smith, Coach, Dave Stephenson, Tim Williams, Henry Felt, Arthur Miller, Ronald Ruiz, Harold Freedman, Danny Coren, Mike Friedman, Ass't Manager. Middle Row-Steve Lewis, Mark Walker, Louis Championship since he came to Fieldston. Livingston, Philip Koundakiian, Larry Levine, Lewis Goldman, Richie Price, Don Borut, Co-Captains, Eric Craven, Roger Hertz, Richard Levien, Allan Shedlin, Richard Yudell, Richard Rosenfeld, Manager. Bottom Row-Steve Zorn, jon Ostriker, Peter Meyer, Jon Black, Allan Borut, Bob Berson, Bob Speiser, Dan Bouchara, Bob Kheel, David Rosen, joe Small, Richard Goldstone, Joel Perlman. Y li' ' klL llll.
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Page 10 text:
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FOOTBALL Top Row-Left to Right-Allen Ross, Peter Meltzer, Managers, Ray Darby, Peter Rutkoff, Tom Strauss, Farrow Allen, Coach George Martens, Jay Almour, Danny Rottenberg, Doug Lowy, Bill Glauber, Bob Rosen, Dave Rob- bins, Paul Weinstein, David Kann, Managers Peter Rothman and Kay Radin. Middle Row-Ass't Coach Chet Gusick, Bob Like the proverbial snowball which, as it rolls, grows in both size and velocity, the Eagles, captained by Pat Mungin and Mother Goose Weber, built from a seem- ingly poor season a more impressive one of 7 four wins and two defeats. Experience, rather than touchdowns, were acquired at games with Locust Valley and E. M. A. If these losses were bitter pills, they were vitamin-supplying ones, for from then on, the Kingmen fsparked by the image of the Little Kings grandmotherj were uncon- uerable. The a ex of the season was Cl reached with a momentous score of 33-0 against Barnard. Then, in grand style les QI Abrams, John Davis, Sam Howell, Kenny Witty, Tony Devine, Captains Bill Weber and Mel Mungin, Bob Levy, Peter Israel- son, Kord Lagemann, Bill Cohen, Bob Corash, Fred Sapirstein. Bottom Row-Michael Sukin, Tom Sand, Roger Hayes, Peter Rosen, Mike Bobkotf, Matt Silverman, Eli Zabar, David Gar- field, Stu Galanor, Roy Neuberger. The Volleyballers won their first game and proceeded to give other adversaries a run for their money. Perpetuating tradition, co-chairman of the G. A. O. Sybil F. and Rona H. headed the varsity. Debby and X Ellen served to opponents, with mastery and relish, a taste of their own medicine. spiked by Renee and Fredda, while joan and Judy cooked up trouble at the net. Bub- bling with zest, Carol, Michele, and Lynn kept the ball on fire. The captains capped the season by seasoning the game with effer- vescent encouragement. Meanwhile, the j.V., led by swift Susies Kane and Pines. outwitted, outleaped, and overcame oppo- f-sf? We . me We 4 'T x . K .w ' ' 5 petits princes finished the season by de- feating Wfoodmere. VOLLEYBALL Top Row-Left to Right-Dana Koch, Lynn Goodwin, Carol Horwitz, Fredda Weiss, Renee Raphael, Debby Shulman, Ann Kirschberg, Judy Bloch. Middle Row- Sheila Lascoff, Kathy Rothschild, Alice Shapera, Michelle Perl- nentsg Charnay and Marks mastered man- agerial matters, and Alice B. coached. man, Carole Cohen, Judy Schupf, Betty Soltz. Bottom Row- Sue Kane, Ellen Weber, Rona Hirsch and Sybil Frankenthal, Co-captains, Sue Pines, Joan Epstein.
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Page 12 text:
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SOCIAL COMMITTEE If Fieldston's students have ever needed encouragement to pur- sue their social arts, this committee has supplied the occasions for all to charm and be charmed. For dancers with vigor and endurance who didn't care to lindy, the Folk Dance was inaugurated. And for those anxious to forget midyears, there was a Winter Carnival. The chef d'oeuvre of these versatile planners was the elaborate Com- mencement Dance, held, if not in Madison Square Garden, at least in spacious Fieldston School. Hope Finney and Gail Karsh led the committee. -' 3, 5: I '92-M 'gif 0 fag nl 97? 5 I ' the ga tif? W . K -st Zlxliiqf x if .psi r 'TLFSV ' n 'Lui COMMUNITY SERVICE COMMITTEE May youth by service nobler grow. Here the Fieldston students grew, if only callouses, from stapling pledge cards. Led by Millie Rapp and Steve Shapiro, the mem- bers of the Community Service Committee gave aid, both directly and financially, to agencies in the New York area and more lately to the entire country. Some planned ways to help the Indians of the West, while the Saturday morning Riverside teams ride herd on the West Side Indians here at home. CURRENT EVENTS CLUB Besides displaying cryptic notes on bul letin boards, the Current Events Club under took the vital task of deciding how certair countries should proceed with foreign af fairs. The fact that many world transaction: went contrary to the club's rulings only in fused a spark of suspense and vigorous de bate into meetings. Meanwhile, to enlighter those who read the news no further that the headlines, this club and its chairmen Ira Hammerman and Kord Lagemann, pro vided films and speakers for the entire school
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