Berkeley High School - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Berkeley, CA)
- Class of 1972
Page 1 of 248
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1972 volume:
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BERKELEY PUBLIC LIBRARY BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA Reference Collection 891363 2 FOR USE IN THE LIBRARY ONLY Central Ref Storage 373 B455o 1971 72 Olla Podrida S 31913010372719 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 REF CAL 373 B455o 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 19 72 1972 1972 1972 the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn th e pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn trie pawn the pa wn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn th e pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pawn the pa wn the Dtsa-icexey nigu scnooi e rkeley high school rkeley high school b keley high school be eley high school her ley high school berk ey high school berke y high school berkel nigh school berkele high school berkeley igh school be rkeley gh school be rkeley h h school be rkeley hi school be rkeley hig school berkeley high chool berkeley high hool berkeley high s ool berkeley high sc ol berkeley high sen 1 berkeley high scho berkeley high schoo berkeley high school berkeley, California berkeley, California berkele., , call fornia berkeley, California berkeley, California berkele y, California berkeley, California berkeley, California berkeley, California berkeley, California berkeley, cali. fornia berkeley, California berkeley, California berkele y, California berkeley, California berkeley, California 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 197 1972 1972 1s72 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972 1972.1972 1972 1 . a pawn. ' ■ . ■ : wB® ' V.” - When the time came to decide on a theme for this x yearbook, I looked around school to see what had changed since last year. I found that each time 1 entered the halls 1 was quickly removed by one of the dean ' s assistants, and dropping a class was next to impossible. A few more subschools nonped out of nowhere . and there v as a serious crack- down on attendance and grading. I saw jjeople cat- egorized and labeled. I felt as if I were in a game and I was the smallest piece on the board, I felt like $ - . A ■■■■■. ■ 8913632 Follow the insructions very carefully. Corrections may not be made after the specified time slot terminates. Mark all entries and descriptions in HEaVY BLACK PENCIL or INK, please print or write legibally. Begin. Your full name, last na ie first, first name second followed by your middle initial and finally the use ' of Jr., o II, III ect. Your address including number, street, apartmaent number if any, city county state including area code, and P.0. Box(if any). Your telephone number, names of parents or gardian, addresses of same, telephone numbers of parents at work, at residence occupation of parents or gardian and present place of employment. Your place of birth, date of birth, sex, hair color, eye color, height, weight, descrptionof any obvious physical characteristics (scars, moles ect,) social security number. Are you a military dependant? yes no Bo your parents recieve financial aid from social security or welfare? yes no List all members of your imidiate family (including half siblings), by name, age and last grade completed. Have any members (including you)of your family had a past history of the following medical conditions? heart disease, fainting, dizzines, hay fever, excessive bleeding, any form of cancer, nose bleeding allergies to the following drugs: penicillin, cortizone, sodium pentathol? Have you recieved innoculations or treatment for the following coditions? yes no polio, smallpox, german measles, malaria, scarlet fever, typhoid. Is there any physical defect you have that may affect your work at school? explain. Do you speak a forign langug Do you speak a forign language at home? if so what language? Are you an American citizen? if not what citizenship do you claim? In case of emergency and we must notify your family or friends, give the names of at least five persons who will accept responsibility for you. STOP. I came to school on that same, ordinary bus that always took me from the real world to my appointment with school and educational time slots, together with the costomary chill of a Berkeley morning and a friend or two I joined the growing crowdson the buisiness on the buisiness district streets and walked towards second period without a single thought as usual. I traced those steps from the bus stop to my desk from a mental blueprint I made as a sophomore . I had long since learned each step by heart. I knew how long the street light took to change, where the rain left shoe soaking puddles and just how long it took to walk % from the bus stop bench to English as usual. At the expected inconviniance of this mo rni ngs red light, after I passed the park and the city hall, after I shifted the weight of my books in my hand and methodically looked at my watch to fill the empty minute, after I indifferantly followed my Berkeley blueprint, I stopped and just stared. I stood through red, green and yellow events just gazing in momentary wonder at that collage of buildings. Time was running out and I was already late. I darted across the street and threw open a cold grey door and disappeared into a aim hall way just as a teacher ' s pencil marked me late in i. ■; another building somewhere How can you stand there dressed in your lies and tell me how you ' d run my life? Don ' t fill me with your moral codes till I ' m just another pawn. I ' ve had enough of your senseless dreams filled with fools that think like you. I’ve heard you say that I ' m a man. Start being one yourself. Say Man, I don ' t want to hear any more crap about rules, bells classes or how to act. This is a little gathering and if you want to party, then you ' re welcome to stay. You won ' t find any IBM cards here, these are people, plain and simple. So dance to the music or be on your way. r , i m . . -H These hands would fight the battles my head would blindly cause when it seemed my life was run for me by chairmen and c omit ties. But life I found was more than what the masses wished for me and I soon stopped my sensless wars and sought then to create . Games and roles, stuck in my mind were questioned long and hard, midnig ht tears and pain all made me seek a differant way of living. So now my time is spent in all the best I have to and hate just seems so I could write you a song filled with laughter and flowers and still not show just how I feel, making those changes we just had to make. There s so little cause to laugh right now, I could write a letter meant for you a hundred times or more, and still not tell you in those words just how. beautiful you seem. Please understand when I look at you and just can’t find the words to say I want you with me, sharing, and caring but now I need to be alone. How strange to feel a deep evergreen breath in lungs of the city. Hyes weary from neon Saturday evenings now rest within a world oi green and sunrise . and for this moment of cool green pleasure, all I can think of is how good it is to just be me INIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIO] INIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIO] INIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIO] INIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIO] SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENI IORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENI IORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENI IORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENIORS SENI Deborah Allen luinimiuimuuiaiuimimniiiimimi iniiiiitniiiiiinnimiimiiiiiiimuHniiiiiiiuni in iiiiHii Anna Allevato David Anzaione 23 Lgura Baker !lI)lllllllttf!nittl!!inillll!iliilUB!lliIlilIltfflil]|M!|[ifflj)lIll!l!liyif9!Illlli(iDHtUI!II!il we can never be bom enough we are human beings; for whom birth is a supremely welcome mystery, the mystery of growing; the mystery that happens only and whenever we are faithful ourselves® e.e. cummings LISA BARSHAY Naomi Beckman Beverly Bennett IllffflliSISillif «f in mil SSf 1 1 illiiiSIf I! i il 1 1 us i f 1 1 Sllf 3 1 i i i 1 1 1 Sif f $ $$ f 1 1 { 1 1 1 s i i J - r « i ? ii i u n j i I Laurolyn Bennett Jacqueline Bradley Janet Buckwalter Clydia Cain Gwendolyn Captain Kathleen Butler Judith Clark Barbata Creamer iniiniiniiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiHiiniiminiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiimiiiimn Janice Cowan IwntfmfJTTiTiinirnrrrTTTniniTTnTmiTiiTTriFiiiiiiiiirinniiTnniinTiTTnnmiTrn Deneane Cruik shank Doris Crowder Doretta Cunnington Olilllll!UlillUlllUilllillllIllfflllBlll!llltll!!!ininilllII!i!IlfflIIIIillllIiliillliill! Anita Curtis iiiiiifiiinmimnmiifimiimiiiiH!! ' Joseph Dashiell iBinnnimiMSHiaiffliinnimBninmmHiiHfflmrmiiuiiiitiiinimiiiisiiiHUi Michael Davis IflUNUillMiilll Marilyn Davis uiiiiiiiiHiimiiitiuiiffiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiuuiimiiimiimiiiuiiiuiuiiuitim Myrna Davis JMIIIDM Robin Davis munuiimjuuiiummmiuimumummiuuiLMiiimmiimiimiiiiimiiiui!! iiiiiiifiiiiflminnjiinniiinniniiifimTimHiiHniiiiifflmiTiiininniHninmi George Davenport anmiinumiiiianmii]iiimiiiiuiiiiii]i]jni niin ii iiiiinmiiiiii]iii iiii): si;Hiiimi[n Margaret Di Stefano Stacy De Natale Raymond Derouchey § IF IT LS A M A J 3 j A AT TO ee | 6TTR A OftOt VrtR | | r ae c v COLZAS IQ I BOR A • , o 6 r.X Eugene Dominique nitiiimnii]iiif!i :i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiil!iiftlllillSllimillll]l!llllllliifiiiiiiiii!!iiii!if Larry Dunmon imiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiitHmiEiittitiifiiiiiiiiiiiiimuiuiiiJiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimifii Patricia Dyas D . Dwyer OSlil Jill ! s smiis Hum umn « n h i hihhii muiuiuimi 1 1 ■ 1 mmi mil Elvis Edgleton Loreeta Earl 39 Winston Edwards 40 Rosalyn Fong 41 42 Ii ! I ' lllllimnil ' I ii IMII1IIII (Hill iliimitranilitliairmmHinnmmi Rodney Gates Rosalinda Garcia ii mimitranfflinmiHiHimniMirnnmmHiminnmmnsfimiinTmnimft Denise Garrison tiiilHMlMMltfiimmiiiiiHmiuimiiinMiiiiMiimimmimmiminiiiiimimimiiiii Charlotte Garnett 43 Renne Gilliam Ronald Gilbert RHONDA HALEY Aquarius Senior President Ujamaa Staff Rally Commitie Homecoming Commitie Snow Ball Commitie Lisa Lewis Virginia Halican Kristin Halback muim Yuri Habu 45 iliiuuinniimnniminnninnnnnnir innnfflmnnDHiiraiiiifflnnni Reba Harris Roy Hanley Margaret Hamilton Hroyoshi Hamamoto R. Harrell Pamela Hand Dorene Hansen iiiinn!!ituuiHii!iiiiiiiiiiinnii!iiiii]i!iiiinuirTniHiiimi]iilimiilIIi!IIII]lIlini iiiminininininiiiiiiinuniniinminniiiiniiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiimiimiiiL Janice Hall [iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiimniiinKiiimiiiiiiiiiiii Grace Haney nint nu i m i miminim iiiiinmininimMn iumuun in nuinni n Eldred Hardin IHlliyililUlUllliJJimtHllJUimmniUiHiimimiiiiMjmamiiii imimmii 1 ii| . ![imi(imiiiiii]i!uimiiin[mniimmFimin(!T!i!iiiiiinT[raimHiiiiiimH i Miss Hastings If1!0iniIlili!II!tI!llllll!!fllillI]iIllltliIlilliIU]|Illll!i!l||!iniIl[}l!llinilllUllil Dwight Hasklin Sondra Harrison Dean Hi rack; Phyllis Hooper Leonzo Herbert Kathy Horton Carla Howard Cheryl Hudson Wei Huey Osby Hunter Pearl Hunter Lanneta Hutcheson Donald Hwang — . Cynthia Ignont — Leslie lino ■ Karen Ikeda— — . Michael Ingram Arlene Inouye — — . Gary Irwin — - - k- jor i ‘n M pit id tflt tfrkX $Vt f: .inOs tj o v ..; ■ V , tp t. flee i v j t r tTCV:- (U.C 1 MiVO fh ro 3 u. ineuX. cf jYza ' -j the rYiCiJir t t oj) j iv ' Cc n, Jnc pxri if u-i ftd.-j tstne h- n£ if CYl Chappell Jackson Charles Jackson Jeff Jackson-——— Naomi Jacobs 5 % Lisa Johnson Luejean Johnson ' M.L. Lohnson Ricky Johnson Yolanda Johnson Barbara James Bob James David Jamison Jenny Jang — Robert Jee Kurt Jenkins — Harley Jessup Gary Johnson J. Johnson — G. Jones Phyllis Jones Sherry Jordan Sylvia Joseph Jeff Jue — ■David Julian - 4 - —Keith Keller jj Darrell Kelly l Dru Kemp— •— Eliot Khuner n Love is Peace, Peace is Happiness, Happiness is Togetherness. Get it to- gether BHS. Yeshi Kidane Jimmy Kihara Seth Kimball- Anita King — 7 rrmffWW you do be done in love. 1 Corinthians 16:11). Nancy King t George Knott Wilson Ko ► Ann Kohn -Luis Kohn Let all that Leona Koo - Frank Kress The sun will shine For us everyday, for I Believe our days will Come and stay. Mor power to you, brothers and sisters “Rachel Koretsky Julius Krevans™ Leonard Kwock Kim Lacy Joanne Lai — Deborah Landry Elizabeth Langford Ira Langford Stephen Larimore • 56 Janice Lee j — Juliette Lee David Lennon — Jacqueline Leonard - Bruce Levine «. S Elliot Lawson Felix Lawson Bruce Lee — — Edward Lee Adelene Lewis Billy Lewis — — Desi Lewis Dolly Lewis Gail Lewis ■ Lisa Lewis Danny Livingston r L Miss Limebrick Carlos Littlefield Barbara Lucas Miss Logan Odest Logan — j Trudy Lomack— — — Fred Louie Wayne Luk ■ Quinn Marshall Chris Markell Dan Markmann Euginia Mason Donna Mason Laurie May David Mayeda David Mayeri Miss McClain Linda McClennan - Priscilla McCoy — Sherree McCrory— Leon McDaniels — Kim McDonald — — Patricia McDowell- Miss S. McKinney Susan McNary — Miss S. McRay — Shiela MacDonald- V ■ Michael Melia Michael Melton — — -— Cornell Merritt Mark Messenger— Rita Mesa Christine Meyer — Paul Miles Gwendolyn Mitchell Member of the pep squad Ambition: Legal Secretary TTTm Jennifer Millentree — “ — LaQuita Miller || J | I I I f““ Oliver Miller — Gwendolyn Mitchell •Kenneth Mitchell HhH -I — li- — Mark Miyasaki ’• HI— “Nancy Mizuhara II I l — ih- • Veronica Monroe ii 11 TV T r-U T T Mark Moody Norman Moore Ruth Moore — Sheryln Moore Mr Morae — Fumio Morishita. ' Lynn Morita ■Vera Moriyama Brent Moriwaki Louise Morris Cecilia Mui ■ .Raja Muna Kathy Mundell William Muranishi .Lissa Muscatine Kevin Myrick — an ihn ? ' $ AftcL Ui qr atajizirf -6 — J XCn ttkxunjl2 ' J2 her L. Fateh We are fighting today to create the new Palestine of tomorrow, a unified and democratic, nonsectarian Palestine in which Christian Moslem and Jew worship ,| work and enjoy equal rights. This is no utopian dream or false promise, for the Palestinians have always lived in peace, Moslems, Christians and Jews in the Holy Land, Raja Muna Ikedo Nobuo — — Luwana Norwood Mimi Oda Sumiko Nakadegawa Mari Nakamura — Bob Names ■ 1 1 Michael Nelson —— •Macy Neshati Michael Nishioka Egosonwa Ofodile Steven Oki Bonita Oliver — Shirley Olson Contentment is not the fulfillment of what yoi want; But the realization of how much you already have . Pamela On Peter O ' Rourke Della Ose Nancy Ota Judy Oshida Harriet Owen Wanda Owens Stephanie Palmer Cathy Parker Gary Parsons Sarah Parsons Nayna Patel — Jannet Patterson— =f Oran Payne Janet Patterson Member of the Pep Squad Ambition: Computer Technition And R.N. Elaine Pearce Erlene Pecot Meg Pederson ■Maryetta Peoples Charlotte Perry Reba Pete Alan Peterson Bradford Phillips Jason Phipps Kim Plainfield E. Poindexter Julie Posey — Beverly Price Darryl Price « Jennifer Price Annette Pridgeon Liltita Pukite Arnold Quan ■ Art Radford ■■■ 1 Chester Ratliff Shari Redel Dorlista Reed - Linda Reed — Eartha Reese ■ Carol Reid — C . Remus Denise Richardson Katie Riggs Obie Rigmaied Barbara Robertson 70 i ai s -ais 71 Jerome Robinson Larry Robinson Sean Robinson Sheldon Robinson Johnny Roman Philip Rosenzweig Andrew Rosen — Nick Rosenlicht- Jerry Ross Virginia Rossi — Judy Rothschild Wendal Rowland Margie Rueger Todd Rowson Charlie Sakamoto — Elizabeth Samuels — David Sanchez ■ ■ Reynard Sanders — Miss Sandhu ■ ■■ — — Linda Sanford -■ ■ — Ken Sano — — Kreyne Sato Paulette Schelstraete Mike Schiess — — Greg Schmidt — — Katey Schmidt — Leslie Schnur — — Philip Schurman - Sam Scott —————— Willie Scott ■ Tim Shake snider®® 5 I rsffiiw i r % i — - Dahl Shannon Carl Shearon DeLys Sheahan Mathias Shearer Kevin Shields Miss Sillers Charles Simpson Gale Small — Alta Smith ' ■■■■■■ Homer Smith — James Smith — Janza Smith «— - Miss J. Smith®- Lloyd Smith — Linda Smith Myrtle Smith 76 Alan Stubblefield Jeff Suda Laura Sugimoto Martin Sumimoto Pamela Sumimoto Ada Suzuki Masao Suzuki Tom Swartz — Johanna Taber Irene Takahash: Ralph Snowden Jim Spaugh Miss Speese Miss Stansberry Susan Starkey Miss Sterling Joyce Srange Mary Srickland n pa 0 CD 13 2L S- o cr tr CD r+ r+ cn h- cr e? CD QJ O CD . H H 1-3 3 T nr H nr o H O 3 0 CO o -s 0 I — ■ • H nr o 3 0 a nr 0 n 0 c n nr o 3 0 in H nr 0 o H nr 0 o ssogsoag. i — . |T 0 JD 0 -s 2 ns 1 — 1 n? i — 0 0 ' C 0 H H h£ g CD 3 -i 0 0 i ! s i ■ ... r I 1 f! 3 0 0 02 PC 0 3 §1 o o S td §1 0 0 £. iQ 3 t- 1 - 0 r+ 0 •o 3 eft!? 3 0 -- O S a 3 0 p ‘•C _ 0 o o Hh 3 0 3 0 3 a 3 a S g | p- 3 3 3- CO 0 O O 3 3- 0 W cr 0 i — ■ 0 so ■ g DO • 0 w 3 • 3 CD 0 vj I— h I CO o H- 1 - 0 3 O 0 PC 0 Cfi CO 0) . Ql PC 3 O 0 0 w 3 3 DO o o p- p 0 — T 1 -s Q) w £ a 0 0 a 0 PC N p o 3 I f S 0 OJ 0 r- - 3 0 3 o in 3 i- - 3 iQ t- 1 - h- 1 - 0 3 3 N 0 i — • JV 0 3 31 M 0 a -+ : 0 3 . 3 p a 0 3 0 H 3 0 O O ' in 3 0 3 i — ■ § 0 i — • 0 3 H O 3 “ 0 3 PC o o rr 0 i — ■ 0 3 PC 0 l — 1 a 0 N a 0 -o -a t -1 pj oj c 3 3 r° a Q- • • Q) oj Oj CD “33 tn ai cn __J 84 CD 3 w a a CD CD cr cr o -s 3 DJ QJ 1 — ' - h— - tu OJ 1“ Marion Wheeler ► Rena Wasserman 9 Linda Wayne o o p- -s p in sa? is- O iQ p in in h- w w O CD K k; CD CD H 0 0 0 ) I 1 II II 9 I 1 II 2000 r • ° pT ti ‘pa w • • (D 1 J- J-- CD t— • t—i ?3 h- 1 o pr DJ ' -s a M m BERKELEY PUBLIC LIBRARY 90 •; k 91 93 95 ORTS SPORTS SPORTS SPORTS SI ORTS SPORTS SPORTS SPORTS SI ORTS SPORTS SPORTS SPORTS SI ORTS SPORTS SPORTS SPORTS SI am The Berkeley High Football team did not finish with a winning record, but it still proved to be a worthwhile season. As Assistant Coach Jim Catlett put it, the players learned to play many different positions. The team faced defeat and still bounced back with plenty of spirit for the next game. The coaching staff’s most valuable player award went to junior, Lee Smith; while the most valuable back award went to ISIeil B-ny, the second leading ground gainer in the Alameda County Athletic League. Vincent Arcencaux was awarded the trophy for the most valuable lineman. Seth Fogel received the most improved player award. Tim Shakesnider and Jerome Robinson were named the seasonal Cap- tain and Co-Captain respectively. At the end of the season, head coach Don Brace- lin resigned to become one of the assistant coaches. Coach Bracelin had been head coach since 1967. Although the team had few returning varsity letterman, it was well balanced with key linemen David Steidel and Vincent Arceneaux, fine backs in Neil Berry and Lee Smith, and defensive players in- cluding junior Willie Rose, Richard Miley and Tim Shakesnider. The team had been rated surprisingly high in a preseason East-Bay poll. After trouncing South San Francisco in the first scrimmage and winning the first game against Stagg of Stockton, it looked like the Yellowjackets had a championship team. Howev- er, they finished the season with a disappointing 2-7 overall record. Linebacker Tim Shakesnider was the only player to make the first team all A.C.A.L. Neil Berry made the second team as a running back. RICKEY PERRY CHARLES JACKSON JEFF JACKSON GREG TAYLOR L EAMON WE A THER O Y WILLIE ROSE DAVID MOORE CORNELIUS BERRY JEROME ROBINSON CESAR FAR FAN ANDREW ROSEN TIME SHAKESNIDER ED BENT GREG MARSHALL CEDRIC DANIELS VINCENT ARECENEA US VINCENT A RECENEA UX DAVID STEIDEL ROBERT GRANT GLENN CROSS MARK GOUAILHARDOU ALVIN JACKSON GARY GORDON JOHN DIXON BOB BAKER SETH FOGEL LEE SMITH RICHARD MILEY DARNELL KENT LEE HERBERT KENNETH MITCHELL MARCUS BRYANT MARC ITOW 107 109 WILLIAM BAKER TERRY BAUTISTA GERALD BENNETT BRUCE BRAXTON MARCUS BRYANT VON RAY CLAY CEDRIC DANIELS EUGENE COMINIQUE EUGENE DOMINIQUE JEFFERY EDS ON OS BY HUNTER ROBERT JOHNSON DAVID KNOTT GEORGE KNOTT RICHARD MOORE WALTER O’NEAL ROBERT SELLS RICHARD MILEY EMILE SHAFFER KENNE TH MITCHEL L CHARLES THOMAS JOHNNY BARNES GARY BATISTE DONALD CLARK MARK CLEGHORN DAVID CUMMINGS RONALD ELLIS SCOTT GEPFORD REMES GLAUDE STANLEY HARVEY PAUL HUNT CHARLES JACKSON JON JACKSON DAVID LENNON CHARLES LIPSCOMB ANGUS PARTEE BYRON RUMFORD RICHARD SMITH MICHAEL HEISSER WINSTON EDWARD no Cross Country CrossCountry CrossCountry Cross Country CrossCountry r rc r ' M I r Cross Country Cross Country CrossCountry Cross Country 115 CROSS COUNTRY DA VI D LENNON ROBERT SELLS DAVID CUMMINGS RONALD BURGHALL RONALD ELLIS CHARLES THOMAS 1 19 iJ,y BASKETBALL DWAYNE BAKER JOHNNY BARNES GARY BATISTE RAYMOND BELL FRANCIS CLAY JIMMIE CR Y JAMES IKOMA ZEROME JEFFERSON RUPPR RUPPERT JONES STAN LETCHER RICHARD MOORE SAM SCOTT ERIC WOODFORD BILL LISCOTT Managers DAN BACH BOBBY SMITH ANDY HERRICK 122 123 125 TENNIS tennis ni M ; -MS TENNIS TENNIS TENNIS Stiffs . . 128 Tennis SCOTT BOROWIAK JEFFJUE PETER LUM TIM NIKCEVICH DAVID ELLIOTT PHILIP BIEBEL ROBERT FLUSS DAVID GALLAGHER WESLEY HESTER CRAIG HAUSER MARK HAUSER GERALD JUE JEFF MAIER ANDRE NANICHE STEVE OKI CHESTER RATLIFF KEN D RICH SIMMONS TOM WEBBER R US TIE COHN TOM BARD 129 JOHN ABEL GHING BAND GHING BAND GHING BAND GHING BAND GHING BAND GHING BAND CHING BAND GHING BAND GHING BAND CHIN( MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND BAND MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING MARCHING GHIN GHIN GHIN GHIN tCHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN ICHIN UCHIN IGHIN ICHIN. ECHINI. IGHIN rlCHIN FiCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHI RCHI RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHIN RCHINL tfftp RCHIN RCHIN 4 ACHING XJ-TXXN JL tCHING BAND xvxx-xxx xxxxn vj x_ r-xiN xvxx-xxxv xxxxn onx ' iu xvx-rxxxv xxxxN vj iDrxxN u xvinx v_ XiiiN MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING orxiN i ivi a.xvv_ xi.±xn v_x BAND MARCHING MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING MARCHING BAND MA RCHIN G BA ND MA RCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING MARC RCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING ■lf.1t HiCH SGH6DI The unity of the band is shown in our attempt to raise money for the marching tour of Southern Californ ia. Most people get down on the band but they don’t understand all the work and rehearsals that go into producing a band. 1ARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING B; IARCHING BAND MARCHING BAND MARCHING B i band [ARCH f 1 « STG B ElL) «P fl-ias: ;ar|V | IARCHfc - - T C B 1 MG ARCH V MGR ; AKLH NG m MARCHING BAND MARCH TN( t ft basebcf i Ilf Hi HI Ml lff-1 iiu MM ■ 3 32 Ste HI Iff Iff Ill fir ■ I Hi Ml III m ?? : : ■ ..St- ' . . TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES AC TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES AC TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES AC TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES AC TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES A ' TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES A ' TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES A ' TIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES ACTIVITIES A ' RAJA MUNA CAROLINE ELLIS MRS. PATTI FISHER .EDITOR ADVERTISING ADVISER STAFF LISA BLACKWELL CAROL BROWN PETRA FROEHLICH ANNETTA GRADY ROBERT HOOPER HARLEY JESSUP RUSSELL KWOCK REGAN MAHONEY LESLIE MENDELL ALEXANDER MEYER JUDY MIZOKAMI RENE PECOT REYNARD SANDERS JEFF SUDA TERI THEODORE JAMES WEAVER . DAILY JACKET Wong Confronts Student Body “Crime Will Not Be Tolerated V. ' o ' vj then blasted the absentee ' ate. t h ' - ' • ' number ol program changes. and the utt o« vulgar , . .rv .i- •: ty-Jflne s - • • . students . . threatened l hrut.-i! JU hr. r A.I- then u rd in the ■ ..... ■ . .... .tumbler Worn: uution.xt tu- ; • ; h. lk ,. vjid jv tntraded To be humor- t ,. u « • v.. tr. r. l you examine vour • h [ts raff in, Asian student Blow-Out Box Retreat Leaves Today V.o u - i«l by sjy nq mat to end the crime situation a . B-tr.f c. High the siutj«nt body should shov. assdis att-.f.A j h— • yit jn jyoea to the student body Do oor ma e ' w.so tty.s, do not tolerate injustice, show n sapprovat o senseless -nisbehjvtor. attend classes and stud it win pay or later. JHS -s a 9°od schoo! Make it a better one. Jacket Photo of the Day ■wratjr trader Stu OMitai rvwv. try .M ti CrWtCn Al students concerned w.th environment) proO-ems shoo ' d colder tv Ecology program ottered by ' -eta studes AN interested students can speak either to their counselor or to Mr. Tyron aoout the course. SSS ' : ? - FALL STAFF EDITOR IN CHIEF. Paul Miles ASSISTANT EDITOR Dan Bach MANAGING EDITOR Neil Berry SPORTS EDITOR Charles Broom ADVERTISING MANAGER Liz Hayashi CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Tony Chapelle, Ed Bent CIRCULATION. Linda Eisenberg PHOTOGRAPHERS Marc Sobers, Bob Hooper, Russell Kwock REPORTERS Jeff Moulton Julius Krevans, Jeff Jackson ADVISER Mrs. Patti Fisher 152 SPRING STAFF EDITOR IN CHIEF. Dan Bach ASSISTANT EDITOR Neil Berry FEATU RE EDITOR Linnie Darden, MANAGING EDITOR Charles Broom ADVERTISING MANAGER Ed Bent SPORTS EDITOR Jeff Moulton NEWS BUREAU CHIEF Paul Miles CIRCULATION. Lynn Morita TYPIST. Nancy Okasaki PHOTOGRAPHERS Bob Hooper Russell Kwock, Teri Theodore III REPORTERS. Donald Graham Derrick Bell, Gazaway Patrick, Annetta Grady, Osby Hunter, Julius Krevans GRAPHIC ARTS PASTE-UP LI NOTYPISTS, ADVISER DISTRICT PRINTER .Margaret Hawthorne .Kenny Mitchell Kevin Shields Greg Leduloff Hal Fowler Hal Lemberger Leon Mayeri Mr. Leon Maybuce Mr. Larry O’Hare 154 Concert Chorale went to San Diego to appear before the American Choral Directors convention on Febru- ary 12th. It was there the group recieved a standing ovation for their performance of the Mozart C minor Mass. Concert Chorale is recognized as one of the most outstanding Chorale groups in Northern Cali- fornia if not the state. The director is Lawrence Barker. mm ...m... What a feeling . . . the first note seems to ring across the world and then is when you really KNOW that this will be an experience to remember and to cherish. There is this cat name Motzart, you don’t quite understand the words he’s using but you under- stand the feelings he is expressing and you KNOW he is expressing them with honesty. One word? One word you ask, for me to describe how I feel. Ah. . . I know the word EMOTION EMOTION. . . What can I say but. . . EMOTION. 155 -LINNIE DARDEN III dance: to the dancer is the challenge of beauty. spectator.. the beauty of challenge. DANCE PRODUCTION. SMOOTH THE HOSTAGE CAST PAT MEG MONSEWER COLETTE BOBO RIO RITA PRINCESS GRACE PETUNIA MR. MULLEADY MISS GILCHRIST LESLIE TERESA I.R.A- OFFICER VOLUNTEER SAILOR O’SHAUNESSY POLLY MOONEY KATEY KEOGH MAGGIE O’CONNER .... NANCY DUGGAN TIZZIE DUNN TESSIE O’SHEA ICYEK BALDOCK SHAGGY CALIAGHAN NOSEY FLYNN David Klein .... Sharon Grodin Robert Sicular Becky Grothkopp .. Deanna Howard Peter Bemis Marc Sabin Tom Fuller Jonathan Gill . Annan Patterson Greg Coon Lisa Braver James Castello Richard Robinson Peter Wallace .Sean K. Robinson Nili Tannenbaum Sharon Elliot Estella Craft Nora Bendich Beth Garner Robin Senour Steve Teeter Valon Cross Tony DeBerry “If you would like to spend an evening with a brawling, kaudy, witty farce, splashing over with singing Irish spirit, see THE HOSTAGE playing at the Florence Schwimley Little Theatre. The Performing Arts Department of Berkeley High School is pesenting this famous play by Brendan Behan. “THE HOSTAGE is a spicy master mix of whores, pimps, soldiers, patriots, and phil- osophers, It is Behan at his most irreverant. Set in a Bordello-lodging house the play com- bines gaiety and pathos, scampering and sing- ing from begining to end. Its the story of a cockney soldier held hostage in reprisal for an I.R.A, man who is to be hanged. What is to become of the host- age provides the suspense, but what all the wild, passionate characters have beco r ' Q is the real substance of the play. 1 5, ' . ... . i «K9lnL ' ®3s 1 : ii • | BS-.-jg. - . $s£p 5 ter ■? - JR X MBaaMfe flp I I ' i “See it. You’ll have a good time and see a play by one the most lyric and boisterous writers only Ireland could produce. “You certainly won’t want to miss the very mature, very professional performance of David Klein. Last year he brought consider- able power to the Berkeley stage, this year has acquired confidence and subtilty. “Sharon Grodin who plays “Meg” - his al- most wife - helps hold the play together. When she lets loose with her sharp tongue and becomes an Irish hovden, she makes things sparkle. Greg Coon plays“Leslie”, the hostage. His stage presence and naturalness carry him through some very awkward spots, and he has real support from Lisa Braver as “Teresa”, the ingenue. She is a pleasure to watch her acting is just the right blend of innocence and directness. “A truly difficult task for young people is to appear old on stage. Several did it well, outstanding were Robert Sicular playing an a §i n § hero, and Annan Paterson, a sanctimo- nies social worker who is sex driven and wine bibbing throughout. “Tim Doyle, the director, could not have picked a more timely or more difficult play.” ALFRED PARTRIDGE The Berkeley Gazette This year’s Spring Musical was Fiddler on the Roof which was presented by the Per- forming Arts Department m the Florence Schwimley Little Theatre which had been especially remodeled by Miss MaciJonald and her Stagecraft class in or der to present an intimate production of the show. Seats were removed to creat an orchestra “pit” and the stage was raised, raked, and a 20 foot revolve set in the stage floor. All of the technical creations for the pro- duction were student designed and executed. The costumes were created in the Costume Production class under the supervision of Eliza Chugg, the new and delightfully friend- ly and helpful Costume Assistant. Under the stage and dance direction of Tim Aaron Doyle, a company of 42 students creat- ed the little Russian village of Anatevka in 1905 when the world, Russia, and the family life of the village milkman were undergoing many major departures from “Tradition.” David Klein in his final role here at Berk- eley High School created the character of Tevye, a poor man with five daughters who challenge his ideas and beliefs to their very limits. At the same time as this personal pres- sure is put on Tevye, his social existence undergoes a drastic change as he and the other Jews of his village are forced to leave under the watchful eye of the Constable, played by Sean Kirkwood Robinson, who is torn between friendship and duty as he makes the painful choice that so many men have made throughout history. Many of the fine voices in this production had already received e cellent training in Concert Chorale under the guidance of Mr. Laurence Barker who served as Vocal Di- rector for Fiddler. He was assisted by Mrs. Pendleton and Mr. Pearson. Mr. Elliot co- ordinated the music and led the student orchestra. CAST LIST Tevye, the dairyman David Klein Golde, his wife Lorrie Hunt Tzeitel Sharon Grodin Hodel Kathy Hahn Chava his daughters Lisa Braver Shprintze Cindy Clasper Bielke Paulette Herring Yente, the matchmaker Nora Bendich Motel, the tailor Hector Valdez Perchik, the student Robert Sicular Lazar Wolf, the butcher Mikel Dean Mordcha, the innkeeper John Ferber Rabbi Daniel Peck Mendel, his son Jonathan Gill Avram, the bookseller Tony Deberry Nachum, the beggar Tom Bassett Grandma Tzeitel Rachel Harms Fruma-Sarah Kathy Edwards Constable Sean Kirkwood Robinson Fyedka John Coates Sasha, his friend Devin Hess Shandel, Motel’s mother Robin Broudy Yussel, the hatmaker Sanford Dole The Fiddler Steve Teeter Shloime Jeff Brown Konstatine Valon Cross Sergi David Cunningham Mirala Emily Davidson Sima Heather Fong Stanislav Scott Gepford Rachel Lynne Morrow Hershel Duncan Macfarland Anya Sherree Me Crory Latkiv Donald Miller Fredel Holly Minner Surcha Annan Paterson Berille Lindi Podell Yitzuk Craig Rovere Ruth Robin Senour Moishe Willie Scott Rivka Betty Thomas Bluma Michelle Williamson Beth Garner - Assistant Director 163 Spring BOC members listen to President Chris Lim. It is my personal goal in life to one day become a “leader” of some type. Having had the privilege to have been ASBHS President for Fall 1971, I cannot help but feel that I have taken a large and important step in learning an important lesson that will serve in life whether I become a leader or not. I have learned that in order to effectively deal with human beings, whether they be students, teach- ers, parents, businessmen, black or white, you must come to love them. In my five months as Student Body President I had an opportunity to mature as an individual; I grew close to and came to love many people, who, had I not been President I would never have met. In a truly unique way I grew to feel a deep, and abiding love for all my brothers and sisters here at Berkeley High School. Thank you Linnie L. Darden III ASBHS PRESIDENT FALL 1971 )64 The student goverment and myself have tried to present activities on campus that we thought would be of interest to the student body or different groups on campus. Folk singers, art films, a City Council Women, the principal of BHS have been presented during the lunch hour. A small number of students attended these events. Exchange programs between BHS and other schools have been pretty successful. In order to motivate students to get involved, I shall try to: provide activities that wil l meet the needs of the various groups on campus; provide an atmos- phere at assemblies that will be conducive to per- formers and audience; provide ways of better com- munication of information to the students; try to strengthen relationships between student-faculty through activities; and research student groups to try to identify needs of these groups in regards to activities. Mr. Catlett , FALL BOC MEMBERS Linnie L. Darden .... ASBHS President Nancy Okasaki .... ASBHS Vice-Pres. Valerie Braxton .... ASBHS Secretary Michelle Williamson .... ASBHS Treas. Eugene Yano .... ASBHS Rep-at-Large Neil Berry ASBHS Rep-at-Large Yvonne Guyton .. ASBHS Rep-at-Large Sherilyn Moore .. ASBHS Rep-at-Large SPRING BOC MEMBERS Chris Lim ASBHS President Marchelle Wilson .... ASBHS Vice-Pres. Gwen Henderson .... ASBHS Secretary Juliette Lee ASBHS Treasurer Kreyne Sato ASBHS Rep-at-Large Kim On Lee ASBHS Rep-at-Large Jeff Suda ASBHS Rep-at-Large David Steidel .... ASBHS Rep-at-Large 165 After three years of planning, the Berke- ley High School Career Center opened its doors in October. The center was designed to provide career planning assistance for all Berkeley High School students. In the photos at left: Patricia Lock is uncer- tian about what career to enter after high school. She decides to visit the Career Center. Patricia is greeted by Career Center secre- tary, Mrs. Clarice Prater. Patricia is introduced to Mr. George Wil- son, who talks with her about her interests and goals. She then fills out a form called an Interest Inventory. The Inventory ques- tions her about her likes and dislikes. Based on the results of her Inventory, Patricia will get a list of twenty careers that she is best suited for. She now chooses the five careers that appeals to her most. Miss Margo Horn then gives Patricia in- formation and brochures about each of the five careers she has chosen. The Center will arrange for Patricia to see a representative of each career. Finally Patricia has settled on one career. She goes to her counselor, Mrs. Lee, to find out what high school or college courses to take, in order to prepare her for that. asian studies 168 We came, Asians Packed into yellow buses. We piled up our packs and Bags and prepared ourselves For what was coming 169 For some it was rest. For some it was play. But to all it was a place To escape, to learn, and to Have fun. The retreat brought us togeth- er. Together with brothers and Sisters. .. in couples, in groups And in our own minds. Even though our foods we Discovered new things The kitchen is filled with The chopping of knives, the Sounds of an Asian Language mixed with english. And the scraping of the wok A typical Asian kitchen Others would say.... but we Know that these are our Brothers and sisters teaching Each other the language and Art of our cooking Hot out of the kitchen we Ate our food It was what many had had Many time before, but Never did it reveal so Much to us With this taste in our mouths. And all the culture around us. We were brought very close to Each other We thought deeply about Ourselves We talked about ourselves as Asians And as individuals. We became enlightened to The great Asian race that We were a part of ! Though the retreat had hard Times and problems as well As good things We learned that we were all Human beings sisters Brothers .... man .... woman .... We were all Asians and we Were proud! SOME PEOPLE SEEM TO THINK THAT BLACK STUDIES IS JUST FOR BLACK STUDENTS AND CHICANO STUDIES IS JUST FOR CHICANO STUDENTS AND ASIAN STUDIES IS JUST FOR ASIAN STUD ENTS.. ..THAT WHITE STUDIES IS FOR EVERYONE I BELIEVE THAT THE BLACK EXPER- IENCE IS JUST AS UNIVERSAL AND VALID (IF NOT MORE) THAN THE WHITE EXPERIENCE AND THEREFORE EVERY- ONE SHOULD BE EXPOSED TO IT ON A REGULAR BASIS. BLACK STUDENTS AND THE BLACK COMMUNITY DEMANDED BLACK STUDIES THIS WE MUST NEVER FORGET. SINCE BLACK PEOPLE ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR ITS BIRTH, THEY ARE ALSO RESPONSIBLE FOR KEEPING THEIR BABY (BLACK STUDIES) FED AND CLOTHED. IF IT SHOULD DIE FROM MALNUTRITION OR LACK OF AFFECTION THEN IT IS THE BLACK STUDENTS AND THE BLACK COMMUNITY THAT Wl LL BE AT FAULT NOT THE SYSTEM. Richard Navies o TEACH ME. ..TEACH ME OF MY PAST TEA CH ME OF M Y PAS T SO THA T I CAN TAKE THAT KNOWLEDGE AND DETERMINE M Y FUTURE TEA CII ME... TEA CIT ME OF MY HUMANITY NEVER LET ME FORGET MY, OUR HUMANITY SO THAT I MA Y GRASP IT TIGHTL Y AND GUARD IT WELL WITHIN THE MAILED FIST OF REVOLUTION TEACH ME. ..TEACH ME OF MY POTENTIAL SO THAT I CAN REALIZE POTENTIAL and forge it into a vibrant IRRESISTABLE POWER THAT WILL LIBERATE MY PEOPLE AND VANQUISH ALL OPPRESSORS BLACK TEACHERS TEACHING BLACK STUDIES HELPING TO DEFINE A NEW BLACK ETHOS BASED UPON PRIDE, DIGNITY, AND THE TRADITION OF THE PAST. BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL BOLD BRILLIANT BOUNDLESS BLACK STUDIES TEACHES BLACK STUDENTS TO LIFTTHEIR EYES TO THE STARS AND CHART THE COURSE OF THE UNIVERSE TEACHES WHITE STUDENTS THAT THE UNIVERSE NO LONGER BELONGS SOLEY TO THEM V r SUB-SCHOOLS This was the year that the effect of the sub- schools upon the “Common school” became an impor- tant issue. Berkeley High School, or the Common school was being effected on every level by the School district’s financial crisis. Many parents, teachers, and students in the common school felt that the sub- schols had special monies that could have been used more effectively in the common school. The question became how effectively were the sub-schools educa- ting students, methods used were not important, but the end product should at least be expected to be somwhere near the level of the common school. Were the sub-schools doing their job? Were they wasting the Federal monies given to them, for useless and un- important courses? These were the questions that had yet to be answered as the school year Fall 1971 and Spring 1972 came to a close. Community High The first alternative school is Com- munity High which has been in opera- tion for three years. CHS began with students who could not relate to the traditional academically oriented school. These students wanted more independence, less structure, and an e- qual voice in how the school should be run. Since then CHS is in a constant pro- cess of change. CHS wants to help its students to learn to survive in this so- ciety and succeed as well as become a- ware of their relation to other people, cultures, and institutions. The staff and students feel that they live from crisis to crisis as people resis- tant to the need for change try to change them into a traditional school. However, they have found that students who stay with them for a few semesters learn to meet their personal lives with self-reliance and maturity. 178 n O HM0W CHOc Z_ 1 T 5 CdHHON SlMoi. i rm feopuei ' I MSA under the directorship of Jeff Tudisco, is a “humanities-oriented” ac- ademic school which places great em- phasis on the development and enhance- ment of the skills of reading, writing, and math. Model School A serves ap- proximately 400 students who reflect the student body of the main school (ethnically, academically, and by sex). MSA was designed as a structured subschool which would maintain the traditional academic standards of BHS. The school is operated on an inter-de- pendency relationship with the high school. Students are required to take certain courses in MSA, and may take other courses in the main school. Agora, formerly Community II, is the third alternative school which be- gan in the Fall of 1971. Under the dir- ectorship of Mrs. Ellane Esquer Agora has bscome a multi-cultural school. Its student community is racially balanced among Blacks, Chicanes, Asians and Whites. Such courses as LaRaza folk- lore, History of Black music and wo- men’s lib reflect the ethnic diversity of students who are required to take a multi-cultural history class taught by a teacher from each of the four racial groups. 184 185 186 W i £4% £3 jyj % ?£ ' - . I ' BH CjMEgbS I ■ ' is ' , .. ■ •:’ ' ‘ r ” ' -‘ i ,.; mm m JP- ill I jgjpfrjfc ■ iJSSH 187 An Interview with Mr. Robert Pearson, Director School of the Arts, Berkeley High School by Reynard Sanders The main purpose of the school centers on the student who has an interest m the Arts as well as help them concentrate and experience an artistic background. By em- phasizing basic skiIIs in English and History, the student who needs credits may also enroll. Last but not least, we try to eliminate racism the educational system. With the small enrollment, we can emphasize the close student to teacher relationship. Each stu- dent is treated like an individual, rather than just another sudent. Mr. Pearson the need for a “com- pact-unit” school, would be ideal for the student who is lagging be- hind in other areas in school where he is containerized and programm- ed into the “system.” In such a school, like the School of the Arts, we strive for unity between stu- dent and teacher, and betwen stu- dent and student. LOVE COATS: IT’S OKAY. FOR A SUB-SCHOOL. School of the ai ts chool of the arts 189 On Target 192 On Target School the 8th alternative school, offers students the op- portunity to take the re- quired coures they need and at the same time to explore in some depth possible future careers. Special events in each course; visits to numer- ous companies, business- es, industries and institu- tions; and visits to class- rooms by personnel from these and other outside organizations highlight the activies of this school. Careers in health, science mathematics, and techn- ological fields and par- ticularly emphasized. College Prep College Prep school was started in the spring of 1972. Smaller class- es, closer student-teacher relation- ships, and more than one teacher to a classroom are the major structural differences between Col- lege Prep and BHS. These differ- ences are hoped will benefit under achieving students and better pro- vide a relevant education with an emphasis on higher education. Only tenth graders were eligible to enter, and it was thought that a student should have his complete high school education in College Prep. These students will then in four years be able to decide the true benfits of the intensive read- ing, math and history programs of College Prep. 194 NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDE NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDE NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDE NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDE NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDER ' NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDER ' NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDER ' NDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDERCLASS UNDER ' YO LAND A ABRAHAM JEFF ADAMS BECKY ANDERSON DONALD ANDERSON JANIS BALLARD TOM BARD TERRY BAUTISTA SANDRA BEACHAM G LO R IA BELL CHERLANNE BENAVIDEZ jO. SARAH BERGES AIDA BOGAS JOSEPH BOLDEN RAY BOLES MARILYN BROACH ROBIN BROUDY ALVIN BROWN CAROL BROWN CH R 1ST I N E BROWN LISA BRUER SANDRA CHO YCE SCOTT CLAUDEANOS CONAN COCALLAS MARTY COLE DAN COLVIG JUDY CARPENTER SHERRIE CARR NOVELLA CARRAWAY DONNA CHAN MARC CHISAKI SUSIE CRAIG DAVID CUMMINGS DAVID CUNNINGHAM BABARA DAVIES DOUG DECKER 199 TEOLA DEUBERRY DIEGO DISTEFANO TERRY EDINGTON MARK EDWARDS MARLON EDMOND mtm CAROLINE ELLIS MIGUEL FERNANDEZ WANDA FIELDS JANET FINE ROBERT FLUSS DONNA FOLEY KELLY FRANCIS PETRA FROEHLICH PAUL FUKAMAE ROBERT FUNG 200 ANNELLE GARCIA YVETTE GARDINER LYNN GARRETT DELORES GEE SCOTT GEPFORD LAURIE GERACI ANN GLIBERT LARRY GLEN DAN GLICK DEBBIE GORIA REBECCA GREEN KRIS GUSTAFSON PETER HAAS ELEANOR HALEY ALLISON HALL ROBERT HAMILTON SCOTT HAMMERQUIST AMELIA HAN DAIDRA HARREL GARY HART 201 JOHN HARVEY MARGARET HAWTHORN BURNETT HAY MIKE HAYNES ED HEMPHILL LYNN HENDERSON BRUCE HEPPLER JEAN HERBERT WESLEY HESTER PETER HO VICKY HOFMAN PAUL HOLLINGSWORTH JACKIE HOLMES BOB HOOPER KATE HOPKINS 202 BRENDA HUDSON PATSY IMAZUMI ROBERT ITO BEVERLY JACKSON CHARLES JACKSON ZEROME JEFFERSON DENISE JONES GAIL KAMADA JEFF KASTOR MARTHA KENNEDY SHARON KIDD DAVID KING HOWARD KING LAURIE DROEKER DIANE KULP BARBARA LEE GLORIA LEE NANCY LEE SUZY LEE MIKE LEWY 203 REGINA LOVE SUE MA REGAN MAHONEY CLAUDIA MANN ROBY MARKEY PAT MATLOCK PAM MCGEE CHRISTOPHER MELCHERT LESLIE MENDELL TANIR MILANOV WILLIAM MILLER JUDY MIZOKAMI DENN IS MO R IWAKI BARBARA MORTIMER DAVID NAKAYAMA STEVE OKANO GREG OLIVER CHRIS OROURKE LEIGH OWYANG 204 MIKE PARHAM GWEN PARKER GARY PARSONS ANNAN PATTERSON CRISPIN PIERCE JON PO RT IS VICTOR POWELL MICHAEL POWE R THEODOSIA REESE LAURIE RINTOUL MIKE ROBINSON CLINT RUBIN DEBORAH RUFF LIZ SCHM IDT KAREN SCHUTTGE LOVIE SCOTT CALVIN SIMMONS JUNE SIMMONS DIANE SIMS BABARA SLAUGHTER 205 CALVIN SMITH LEE SMITH MARTHA SMITH SARA STECK BRENDA STRANGE DARREL SUMMERS PETER SUSSKINE JILTALKOSKY JEFF TAMAYO BRUCE TANAKA CAROL TANNEBAUM MARY TETLOW BETTY THOMAS MARK TOYOFUKA DEBBIE TURNER 206 CAROL UNO JANE VAHLSTROM KAREN VAN HORN JULIE VELSON JOEY VISSER 207 CHARLETTE WEATHEROY TINA WEIGAND GREG WERRONEN MARILYN WEST MARILYN WILCHER MICHELLE WILLIAMSON KAREN WINKLER IRENE WONG SUSAN WOOD DARLENE YATABE ROBERT YATES RALPH YOUNG SALLIE YOUNG 4 208 JOHN ALLER KAREN AMBEAU DAVID ANDERSON MARIA ARTLE TOM ARTLE DEE DEE ARMSTRONG ANNIE AUSTIN JULIE AUSTIN ANN AZEVEDO BOB BAKER WILLIAM BAKER DEBRA BAILEY LINDA BARNETT VAL BATEY MARY BAUTISTA YOLANDA BEAN JOANNE BELOW KAREN BERT ANDREA BLACKWELL BRAD BODIE 209 MARY BRANNEN MARK BROWN WAYNE BROWN NANCY BURNETTE LETICIA CABRERA MARSHA CAMBRIC SHEILA CARR LESLIE CARRELL BRAD CASTILLO LAVERNE CHARLES SUE CLARKE PHYLISS COLE ALLISON COOK AMY CORNSWEET RACHEL CURRY 210 MIKE FORD KRISTIN FRIEDMAN DORIS FUKAWA PAT GARRET MARGO GEGG DAREN DAVIS VERNALL DAVIS GWEN DOUGLAS KANETHA EAGLETON DEREK EDWARDS SUZANNE ELWOOD MIKE EPPS ETHAN FELDMAN LARRY FLUSS LYMAN FONG 211 LAURA GLINES LORRAINE GOCK HEIDI GOLDBERG GEORGINA GOLDEN LEORA GRIFFIN SUSAN HALLORAN MARGARET HAMBLY CLEMENTINE HAYES BARNEY HAYNES BETSY HESTER SUSAN HEXTER JANET HILL BOB HIPKISS DIANA HOWARD WILLIAM HUNG 212 CHARLES HYDE MARC ITOW PENNY JACKSON LARRY JAUREGUI DARLENE JENKINS CLIFFORD JEW LINDA JONES VIVIAN JORDAN MARTY KENNEDY ARLENE KEY MARK KIEL JOSH KNOBLOCK LYNN KLOK MARTHA KOTTLIER MIKE KOZLOWSKI NANCY LARMOUR PETE LEDWARD DUDLEY LOGAN ROLAND MAPLES ROB MCDONOUGH A... , ( 213 KAREN MCGEE SEAN MCGUIRE JOY MCKINNEY DAVID MELCHERT TOMMY MISHIMA SHARON MONTGOMERY STEVE MURANISH1 ANDY NAKASO KIM1 NARAMATSU ATHENA NORCIA EDWARD ODA BRUCE OKANO CHERLY OLIVER RONALD OTIS RONALD PARHAM RANDY PATTERSON BEVERLY PETERSON DEBORAH POKANZER SALLY POSEY GREG PRESCOTT 214 DEBBIE RATCLIFF VICKY RENTEIN MELINDA SAMUELS LYDIASANCHEZ JOHN SANDERS RIESSA SANDERS KENNY SANO RACHELLESCHILD JANE SCHMIDT MARGO SHERR LEON SHURN ROBERT SICULAR MARGO SIMMONS CHARLES SIMPSON MARK SMALL SHARON SMITH CLAUDIA STRANGE CYNTHIA THOMAS YOLANDA THOMAS SANDRA THOMPSON KINGSLEY TOY RUBY TURNER BERTHA VASQUEZ SHEILA VERNAN KIM WALLACE DONALD WASHINGTON LORETTA WASHINTON STEPHEN WATCHER SARAH WATTS ROBERT WEAVER 216 DAN WEINER MICHELE WHEATLEY KATHY WHITTLE TYR WILBANKS LORAINE WILDER CELESTE WILLIAMS GINA WILLIAMS JEANNETTE WILLIAMS LINDA WILLIAMS JACKIE WILLIS LES WONG JUANDA WRIGHT CAROL YOKOYAMA 217 ACULTyi 972 FACUL Louella Anderson VERTISMENTS ADVERTISMENTS ADVERTISMEN ' VERTISMENTS ADVERTISMENTS ADVERTISMEN ' •VERTISMENTS ADVERTISMENTS ADVERTISMEN ' •VERTISMENTS ADVERTISMENTS ADVERTISMEN CONGRATULATIONS To the GRADUATING CLASS From The Berkeley Clearing House Crocker National Bank 2295 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel: 835 5000 Central Bank, N. A. 2187 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel. 841 8200 Bank of America N. T. S. A. 2101 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel: 273 5743. Security Pacific National Bank 2000 Center Street Berkeley. Tel: 848 5360 United California Bank 2175 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel: 351 7090 Association Bank of California, N. A. 2333 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel: 843 6353 Wells Fargo Bank, N. A. 2144 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. Tel: 464 2100 222 ON THE FOLLOWING PAGES ARE SENIOR “BESTS” WHO WERE VOTED FOR BY MEMBERS OF THE SENIOR CLASS WHO WISHED TO DO SO’. SENIOR KAREN MAPLES SHOWS OFF MACH I AT GOLDEN BEAR FORD WHERE SHE WORKS PART TIME. GOLDEN • . ce ' Is . ' ? OTORS 1995 University Avenue BERKELEY. CA 94704 845-5270 Qitiendwst h)hu g Qtoite Marsha Gans and Merriam Marshal sto| by Foleys for a root beer after school. Foley Drug Company 2312 Telegraph Ave. Berkeley 848-1545 Congratulations to the class of 1972 845-747 B NEW a USED VOLKSWAGEN a PORSCHE JIoule Sales Representative Oliver Imported Cars 2525 SHATTUCK AVE. BERKELEY. CALI E. 94704 We have enjoyed hosting a number of Berkeley High School students at our weekly luncheons- Berkeley Rotary Club CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1972! OFFICE 527-7980 1700 SOLANO AVENUE • BE R KE LE Y, CALI F O R N I A 94707 9 mU L 224 Denise Brown Glenn Cross BEST FIGURE Physique BUY OR LEASE 2400 SHATTUCK AVE. BERKELEY , CALIFORNIA PHONE 845-2530 Northbrae Community Church A non-denominational church with a liberal perspective. 941 THE ALAMEDA BERKELEY Leslie Cotton Odest Logan CLASS CUT - UPS CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1972! BERKELEY CLEANING CENTER CLEANERS — LAUNDERERS SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS THormvall 3-1675 HARRY “Yosh” TAKAHASHI 110 University Ave. . JAMES “Mich” TAKAHASHI Berkeley, California 1896 Solano Ave PCj Berkeley Phone 527-4400 WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO NOW? Californi Pearl Hunter and Derrick Bell CLASS FLIRTS Run up for a snack, afferschool or af lunch Blue Gold MARKET Kittredge Shattuck 226 D mgs Jdattke § 15 04 SHATTUCK A VENUE BERKELEY, CALIF. Phone 848-2 02 0 HALLMARK CARDS PAPERBACK BOOKS SHE R A TON NA TURAL VITAMINS MISS CLAIROL COSMETICS DOROTHY GRAY COSMETICS PRESCRIPTIONS The brand of strength GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS WORLD’S LARGEST FAMILY OF INSURED ASSOCIATIONS Great Western Savings and Loan Association • Great Western Savings and Loan Association of Central California Great Western Savings and Loan Association of North Hollywood • Great Western Savings and Loan Association ol Southern California Great Western Savings and Loan Association of San Diego • Great Western Savings and Loan Association of Santa Barbara Congratulations to the class of 1972 Blanche Hawkins and Dewaine Baker PRETTIEST EYES j l HI PERFORMANCE , , CORKY BOOZE 1513 San Pablo A Berkeley, Calif. 94702 415 527-2165 AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR Corvettes Cameros Vegas V I 1 1 1 1 I 1 I I 1 1 I 1 1 i B I 1 1 1 i r BEST WISHES SENIORS. MANY THANKS FOR YOUR BUSINESS. Mike Ferguson OF CALIFORNIA Creators of fine class rings, awards, announcements, yearbooks, and dibfomas 1 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SENIOR CLASS! [ ' New | Claremont I Market i 2905 COLLEGE A VENUE BERKELEY SINCE 1887 Mason-Mcduffie Co. ...WE Hope Someday YOU Will NEW MAIN FINANCIAL CENTER 2850 Telegraph Ave. Berkeley COMPLETE REAL ESTATE SERVICE Sales Loans Escrow Insurance Management WHEN YOU ARE READY TO BUY A HOME Call our Residential Sales Dept. Phillis Wherry BEST THE SKI HUT specialists in backpacking and mountaineering equipment 1615 university ave., berkeley 228 SkatzenbagSE usic acoustic altec-lansing ampeg fender gibson gretch guild hammond J. B. L. marshall martin shure sunn yamaha 2953 Telegraph Berkeley 843-1 354 John Lang John Miller 229 ,M ai Toraya RESTAURANT 11:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. (CLOSED MONDAY) FRIDAY SATURDAY - 11:30 TO 10 P.M. 1914 FILLMORE ST. • SAN FRANCISCO 94115 • TEL. 931-9455 1734 POST ST. • SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF. 94115 • TEL. 931-5200 1695 SOLANO AVE. • BERKELEY, CALIF. 94707 • TEL. 524-7000 Fidelity Motors Inc. 2600 SHATTUCK AVE. BERKELEY Sales and Service Oldsmobile American Motors Honda and Jeep Annette Abrams Kenny Mitchell NICEST SMILE Young Men ' s Christian Association JOHN H. CARHART ASSOCIATE GENERAL DIRECTOR RESIDENCE 19 Carmel El Cerrito. CA 94530 Ph. 524-9722 Y.M.C.A. 2001 Allston Way Berkeley, CA 94704 Ph. 848-6800 TIE 1 GUT STEP Soohdear 2024 Shattuck Ave 548-5954 NATURALIZERS CONNIES ULTIMA BARETRAPS Imports from Spain and Italy Lisa Blackwell Gary Batiste PERFECT MATES BOTTS ICE CREAM 2977 COLLEGE AVENUE - BERKELEY 5, CALIFORNIA 848-3528 848-3528 Hours I I a.m. to 10 p.m. Including Sundays and Holidays LEADERS JOIN THE ROTC WHY? Because they are men who have a rare capacity to give so that others, in all walks of life, can continue to take their rights for granted. WHO ARE THEY? Of the over 5,000 young men who were awarded four-year scholarships from 1965 to 1970 92% were in the upper 20% of their class. 53% were presidents of their student bodies or were class officers. 18% were editors of school publications. 61% were varsity letter winners. Let us make you a better leader For more information please contact The Professor of Military Science (415) 642-3374 149 Harmon Gym University of California, Berkeley Army ROTC The More You Look At It... The Better It Looks. Ira Langford Tim Shakesnider MOST ACTIVE MANUFACTURING JEWELERS MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY SILVERWARE BY: owie ?eed Barton a int Gorham Wallace Heirloom Kirk International WATCHES BY: Omega Tissot Accutron Patek Philippe Caravelle CHINA BY: Royal Doulton PEARLS -GOLD -PRECIOUS STONE AND JADE JEWELRY WE DESIGN MANUFACTURE JEWELRY IN OUR OWN SHOP JEWERY APPRAISALS FOR ESTATE OR INSURANCE 843-6410 2200 SHATTUCK AVE. BERKELEY CONVERSE ALL STARS $ 8.95 Irregular $ 9.95 Regular TOM VQISEN Tennis Sports d a 7 r T? r r A T T7 T T C I A Cl ? TM Rhonda Harris Anthony Van Hook CUTEST COUPLE California Book Co. NEW TEXTBOOKS USED TEXTBOOKS ENGINEERING SUPPLIES STATIONERY ARTISTS’ SUPPLIES GIFTS 4 ? i ♦ ♦ t Berkeley, California (Telegraph at Bancroft) Jackie Bradley Darrell Kelley PRETTIEST HAIR (hot YOU houkl? flsk your Bonk of America employment office today. World Headquarters Building, 13th Floor 11 South Van Ness, Bank of America Center, San Francisco San Francisco (Market and Van Ness) (California and Kearny) An Equal Opportunity Employer M F m BANK of AM ERICA Annetta Grady Johnny Barnes MOST POPULAR □ I □ I L-J I □ I □ I □ I □ I □ 1 1 1 1 LJ I □ 1 ALVIN DUSKIN H easy care clothes y uli attston way (at oxford) tnon -fri tt b sat io-o □nnunonun MARY JOE S SPORTING GOODS If If ' s For Sports We Have It ! adidas - RIDDELL - SPOTBILT - WHITE STAG Phone 525-1597 524-6542 913 SAN PABLO AVE., ALBANY of Solano Sissy Earl Lee Herbert MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED FIDELITY SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 26 LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT NORTHERN CALIFORNIA BERKELEY OFFICE 2323 SHATTUCK AVENUE 843-0600 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ’72! j SINCE 1907 I The Name That Stands For Complete Satisfaction 2369 Telegraph Ave. Berkeley, California Telephone THornwall 8-4736 Ski Touring - Kayaking Back Packing 4th and Addison Streets Berkeley You’re Always WELCOME at the Late Nite Snacks • • Daily Specials Breakfast Lunch 1800 University Ave. Berkeley OPEN 6 A.M. to MIDNIGHT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OPEN 24 HOURS Renee Pecot Danny Green BEST NATURALS 2570 BANCROFT WAY, BANCROFT CENTER, BERKELEY HUSTEAD’S 24 HOUR TOWING and ROAD SERVICE BODY SHOP 843-2402 TWO LOCATIONS 2037 Durant Avenue, Berkeley 110- 10th Street, Oakland National Automobile Club 24 Hour Towing k)Ou LAbie ■ 1.6 Hfw | DEMETRIOS P. AGRETELIS BERKELEY HIGH PTA HENRY M. ELS ON DR. EDWARD GALLAGHER MR. and MRS. R.D. GILMORE EDWARD R. GROGAN DA VID HI RAN O DR. ROBERT LARZELERE DR. and MRS. EDWARD MARKELL DA VID NA JIM A DR. F. HAYWOOD NORTON W. R. ORTMAN DR. WILLIAM E. RHEA
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