Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA)

 - Class of 1964

Page 1 of 188

 

Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1964 volume:

V h: ): ' ■ ( nt • . ' •■ y VT m W , J. •V.ri fv Senses $ wao$ ea 8 nr? ? ■ IBH- 3 r«|1 iggpgtai jg ■ •_v-- J ' .3 -3 00 3T .y‘ jffr . nr- SBTii m ■ NANCY GREAVES, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JAMES BARNES, ASSISTANT EDITOR CHURCHILL SMITH, BUSINESS MANAGER Joseph Case High School Swansea, Massachusetts Volume XXI CHIEF 1964 We Were 2 Many Things . . . 3 Then let us laugh as do the brooks that such immortal youth is ours.” ANNA BRANCH 4 Mr. Clifton Hoy Mr. Clifton Hoy, custodian and friend to past grad¬ uates as well as to present students of Case, loves Case High, loves the bustle, the heartiness, the eternal youth of the whole place. Perhaps most of all, he loves the students, the young people, the kids, for their Hi!” or Hello!” or How are you, Mr. Hoy?” even if it’s yelled hurriedly and heard muffled at high tide in the corridor. He loves the kids because they care; and that caring is important to a man who has spent thirty-one years feeling proud of the young generation being educated—thirty-one years while he was taking care of the school building, quietly, loyally. And the kids do love him. They know that under those gray workclothes is a heart that is good and generous, a heart that endures and serves for the joy of living and working and knowing people. For Case High and the students who learn here are his pride, too. Many days the students have dedicated to Mr. Hoy their happiest wish Good Morning!” Now they dedicate to him this 1964 Chief. Dedication 6 Foreword There will always be the memories of yesteryear— our first tottering steps into an uncertain world, the hop¬ scotch days and rough brutality of an uncivilized childhood, the mimicry, the mirth, the raging emotion of adolescence. Four years in high school is little time to do all that we might wish. But of the scenes that passed, some are preserved forever in the pages which follow—the thrill of a game, the puzzle of a test, the high jinks of a leisure moment. These are the echoes of youth. We were very tired, We were very merry . . . 8 Table of Contents Administration . pg. 10 Faculty.pg. 12 Underclassmen . pg. 21 School life.pg. 35 Clubs.pg. 45 Sports.pg. 75 Seniors.pg. 115 Advertisements. pg. I 50 9 Mr. Donald F. McCaffrey In his first assembly address, Mr. Donald F. McCaffrey told us about a young boy, who disappointed in a job for which he had hopefully left high school, had returned for a diploma in 1932, had graduated from Fitchburg State College in 1937, and had since been teacher, principal, and superintendent in many New England towns. This self-intro¬ duction of Mr. McCaffrey to us instilled us with a confidence in the responsibility he would take as superintendent in Swansea. The superintendent of schools is not just the man who sits behind the desk in the Administration Office. He is the man who keeps working on projects like the language lab at Case and the French program at the Brown School until the plans have become a reality. He is the one who, resident and superintendent in many towns before ours, has now become a Swanseatowner pleased with the warmth of new friends and neighbors. Administration 10 m Miss Helen A. Reagan Principal Since 1946 Miss Helen A. Reagan has graced the office of principal with a wisdom and a dignity which endear her to us as a great and good lady. Leader of the first Girl Scout troop in the town, principal at Gardner School, English teacher for many years, director of the dramatic club for a decade, and now principal of Case High, Miss Reagan has dedicated most of her life, spent always in Swansea,” to young children, to students. Her advice has spurred us, her congratulations have cheered us, her smile has warmed our very hearts. And in her heart we hold a special niche of fondness, for we are, unlike her collections of china and Dickens’ works, a part of her life—the collection of young people who will become, by her example, as she joys to see us, responsible adults, citizens, and leaders. Vice Principal Mr. Silva is that excited voice over the loudspeaker that begins, Let me have your attention, Please. There is an away game tomorrow. Now, the easiest way to get to ... He is the fan at all the basketball, football, and baseball games, the guy who plays softball with boys on the field trip, the host each year to a bunch of student Christmas carolers, the vice-principal whom the freshmen call mister and the upperclassmen call uncle. You cannot know him until you have been through four years of school, endured his dark looks, and swelled with his praise. No, you must have been a freshman walking quietly, obediently past that stern gray figure in the corridor, a sophomore elated to wring a tickle of a smile from him, a junior accustomed to joking with him, and finally a senior strolling (arm-in-arm) down the hall with that once-strict disciplinarian. The fondness he holds for us, the new generation of his own alma mater, is as genuine as his hope that we keep Swansea a vigorous, pleasant town in which to live and to learn the values of life.” Mr. Edward Silva II English Enter the English department. Enter four years of discovering thoughts that have worked wonders in the world, gems of wisdom and treasures of truth, immortalized by English masters from Stevenson to Shakespeare to Joyce. Enter the land where in paradox and metaphor Love, Life, and Death are mounted beautiful. Beauty and truth of literature are seeded here, in the minds of the aging children. But it is only later, when Life reaches out from between the book covers to clobber them, that the children will harvest the festering, blossoming seeds and grow up. Until then the words are only words, like words, like words. CHRISTOPHER BORDEN English, Reading Improvement Freshman Class Adviser EDITH ALLEN English BEVERLY HATHAWAY English LINDA HUTCHINGS English AUSTIN O ' TOOLE English, Head English De¬ partment, Y earbook and Cardinal Staff Adviser 12 MARILYN GRIFFITHS LOU AILEEN FIX English, Drama English Homemaking Not for school but for life they learn. Planning menus and preparing meals, mending and sewing, taking care of their own lives by good health habits and the lives of others by their knowledge of home nursing, and developing a personality pleasing to everyone near them—the girls learning these skills in the homemaking classes are the women around whom the happiness of their families will center for many generations. Faculty RITA SULLIVAN English, Librarian NANCY CONLIN Foods AVIS PHILLIPS Homemaking 13 Business ALICE FALLON Typewriting, Office Practice The earliest graduates of Case have gone directly from their school classes in business training into the business world. Today the pro¬ ficiency in office practice which Case students have acquired opens for them gateways to newer and brighter careers as secretaries and stenog¬ raphers in offices, banks, insurance companies, hospitals, businesses, and law establishments. Whatever positions they may hold, they become important spokes in the wheel of the American social sphere. That someday when they win the confidence of their em¬ ployers and co-workers is for them an oc¬ casion to feel a pride in themselves—in a skill well-learned, in a living well-earned. ROBERT BANNISTER Business, Driver Education CARROLL DEAN Director of Guidance ELAINE DE ROCHER, Typewriting RAYMOND STUBBS General Business, Consumer Educa¬ tion ELEANOR EMERY Typewriting, Shorthand, Head Busi¬ ness Department JAMES CONFORTI Civics, Mathematics Social Studies This land, this world, all ours to know, all ours to traverse. I hear America singing,” says Walt Whitman; and far off, in every niche of every country, men sigh proudly, This is my own, my native land.” Through our studies at Case we come to respect and understand the peoples of the world, their history, their economy, their culture. From the old problems over which men fought bitter wars, to the new ones over which men in the United Nations puzzle, we realize that the world at our doorstep is a challenge which must be met with the knowl¬ edge that all nations, all men, constitute the international community which is our world. john McCarthy Social Studies; Football, Baseball, Varsity Coach; Junior Class Ad¬ viser JOSEPH PAPANDREA Social Studies DAVID JOHNSON Social Studies PAUL MONAHAN Social Studies, Senior Class Adviser 15 JOSEPH DI DOMENICO Music JAMES LA FLAME Music Music The sound of music” fills the Case gym twice a year, in two great bursts of song, the winter and spring concerts. But all year long the music students must prac¬ tice the tedious scales and exercises before they can delight us with those superb overtures in melody and chorus. All year long, young people who just like music gather in the music room to sing. HOWARD O ' HARE Physical Education, Basketball Coach, Assistant Football Coach JUDITH JACKSON Physical Education NORMA RIZY Physical Education, Girls’ Sports Coach Physical Education Physical Education class offers an astoundingly varied program for breaking one’s neck. The awe¬ some vaulting horse is feared only slightly less than the spritely trampoline, which is the deadliest of all gym apparatus due to its astounding mobility. As to sports and games, everyone knows that if touch football doesn’t get you, volleyball will. 16 Mathematics JAMES CONROY Mathematics, Head Mathematics Department DONALD TRIPP Industrial Arts EDWARD WRIGHT Automotive, Mechanical Drawing LEO BERNIER Mathematics, Sophomore Class Ad¬ viser Math is the realm of abstracts very real to minds which see beyond daily book exercises to a vast field of exploration. Of all the sciences, math is the language of all the physical unexplainables, math is the explanation; of all the universe that extends from infinite . smallness to infinite greatness, math is the map. Arithmetic, geometry, lots of little algebras, trig¬ onometry and matrix—many long names make many facets to the magical world of pi, pie, and Pythagoras. While encouraging the students who love math to continue studying it, Case’s math department has imbued all the students with a respect for the promise of mathe¬ matics and the capabilities of mathematicians in the world. ALEXANDER JOHNSON General Mathematics JOHN CROKE Mathematics Auto Shop The floor’s been mopped; the place is clean. But there’s one thing the auto shop will always have. That’s the smell of engines—en¬ gines that today make our world run—dirty, greasy engines with worn valves and faulty carburetors, bum transmissions and slipping clutches, blown rods and cracked pistons. But they’re here for a pur¬ pose. They are to be fixed. They are to be pulled apart and put to¬ gether and made useful again. They’re going to run. Someone will be taught, some¬ one must be taught, to do it. That is what automotive shop is all about —learning to mend by mending. You’re on your own, up here boys. No special privileges—you’re on your own.’’ Mr. Wright knows what he says. That’s just what’s in store for them. MAURITA SIEDENTOPF Biology Sciences The science department is a twilight zone between the beclouded logics and non-logics of math and English. Here someone is be¬ ginning. Someone is learning something which will someday bear some knowledge to be added to the bulk of knowledge in now. It is no mistake that the objective of every science student is immortality. Even eternity is not enough time to unravel all the puzzles. But still students make beginnings and try with eager egos to stuff the laughing universe into tiny spheres of knowledge. ' Vv PIERRE LUSSIER Chemistry RONALD REYNOLDS General Science 18 i JOSEPH LA FAZIA Science, Health Foreign Languages CLARA STEWART Art ETTA HANLEY Art Art Room The Art Room is a threshold into another world—a world of sun¬ light and leaves, men and seashores —a world of beauty that has been transformed from a visual concep¬ tion into a painting, a charcoal sketch, a mosaic. In the Art Room, we students, like the great masters, try to cap¬ ture on canvas the ethereal beauty of shimmering pools, the cragginess of mountains. Succeed or fail, we have recognized the beauty in the illusion of delicacy or enormity in nature. PAUL FLANIGAN Latin ESTELLE PELLETIER French JULIA PAPANDREA French, Head of Language Department. Student Council Adviser Perhaps realizing that the meeting of the minds is accomplished first by the meeting of tongues, our students have taken the fullest advantage of the language program at Case. Studying the Latin classics reincar¬ nates for us the splendor of Rome and the great men of all the Roman world of 2000 years ago. Students of French have taken a leap over the language barrier which often exists between Americans dnd not only the masters of literature but also the common people of a foreign land. It is our goal to understand many men who speak in many tongues—different from our own but no longer foreign to us. School Staff HR j ' ■ ' wi •. . ' m ■ L. to R.: V. Orzechowski, D. Smith, O. Ormerod, C. Cords, A. Menard, M. Saylor, G Ormerod, G. Ingham, A. Phillips, A. Chace. LILLIAN CIBA School Nurse CLIFTON HOY Engineer RUTH STICKLER Secretary ALZIRA DE MATTOS Secretary PAULINE VICKERS Secretary GERALDINE SQUIRE Secretary 20 Underclassmen 21 Underclassmen The laughter, the joy, the wonder of Youth . . . Youth that frolics and works, sings and muses . . . Youth that lives.” 22 L to R, Back to Front: R. Paiva, W. Gagnon, P. Pineau, R. Jacome, A. Bessette, R. Quinlan, R. Nadeau, J. Conley, M. Holland, J. Soares, M. Ferreira, E. Amaral, R. Baker, W. Mackie, D. Smith, B. Lyne, C. Anderson. Juniors Back Row, L to R: D. Sullivan, P. Paquin, D. Leeman, W. Nicolau. Front Row, L to R: I. Rosen, L. Audet. 23 Juniors Back Row, L to R: D. Moniz, R. Dixon, R. Donaldson, H. Nickerson. Middle Row, L to R: R. Desmarais, J. Heywood, L. Mello, B. Congdon, D. Souza. First Row: N. Bigelow, J. Enlow, S. Holmes. All the Junior cares about is the Prom, the girl in history class he is afraid to talk to, and the thrill of becoming a senior. Juniors find that perseverance and longevity will solve most of their problems, including those of getting their home¬ work done and solving their problems, all of which are immediate, none of which will not recur. Back Row, L to R: R. Baker, C. Anderson, R. Littlefield, I. Rosen, E. Amaral. Fifth Row: B. Makie, R. Jacome, B. Dube, R. Benjamin. Fourth Roto: C. King, J. Soares, J. Tickle, R. Paiva. Third Row: M. Raposa, D. Liebl, J. Boutin, J. Chadwick, A. Paiva. Second Row: V. Souza, D. Salisbury, C. Picard, B. Arnold, R. Dennis. First Row: K. Cabral, J. Kitchen, C. Keighley, M. Kosher, N. Hall. Back Row, I. to R: J. Boutin, J. Crooke, R. Marshel, J. Burrel. Middle Row: C. Weber, P. Nahas, L. Crowley, M. Moniz, K. Barlow. First Row: J. Lebreux, L. Borden, C. Silvia, J. Lebreux, I. Terry. 24 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS R. Rego, President; Bob English, Vice Pres¬ ident; D. Oliveira, Secretary; D. Cawley, Treas¬ urer. Back Row, L to R: J. Kirkman, F. Leonardo, C. Hardy, S. Goodwin. Third Row, L to R: L. Daugherty, E. Turner, M. Cetola, D. Keetly, B. English. Second Row, L to R: T. DiBona, W. Lapointe, C. Leiter. First Row, L to R: J. Ferreira, B. Golz, R. Fischer, E. Malmborg. Back Row, L to R: R. Thibault, F. Leonardo, J. Kirkman. Middle Row, L to R: W. Hyde, A. Casilli, J. Thompson, J. Couturier, J. Powers. First Row, L to R: D. Cawley, L. Audet, C. Forand, M. Reinelt, D. Ferreira. 25 Back Row, L to R: J. Eddy, B. Lasson, D. Moniz, R. Dixon, S. Johnson, J. Cerce, R. Rego, D. Desmarais, D. Baldwin. Middle Row, L to R: V. Lapierre, C. Turcotte, E. Courville, S. Foley, S. Boulanger, S. James, L. Curtis, J. Westgate, P. Dimond, K. Lawlor. First Row, L to R: P. Pettine, H. Therrien, J. Niejadliek, J. Perry, N. Turner, E. Paradise, N. Tattersall. Back Row, L to R: B. Berube, J. Szelag, P. Goss, G. Johnson, B. Baldwin. Front Row L to R: S. St. George, E. Willette, V. Chagnon, D. Oliveira, S. Le Comte, J. Ramsden. Back Row, L to R: D. Kingsford, R. Lambert, C. Appleton, D. Pratt. Middle Row, L to R: G. Durette, R. Haydock, C. Brilliant, C. Ferreira. First Row, L to R: J. Lindberg, J. Palmer, W. Jorden, K. Daugherty. 26 Back Row, L to R: R. Corriveau, P. Pellitier, R. Borden, M. Wolfe. Second Row, L to R: W. Owens, B. Sanford, S. Lapointe, J. Chase, A. Roberts, J. Noble. Front Row, L to R: E. Gaskell, K. Andrade, F. Drake, S. Mailloux. Back Row, L to R: E. Martin, R. Dube, E. Trembly, R. Thibault, M. Remine, D. Mehlmann, E. Bolduc. Third Row, L to R: R. Castonguay, L. Ouellette, E. Lopes, C. King, R. Souza, C. Ferreira, M. Carmello, J. Cole. Second Row, L to R: B. Wilkinson, C. Tracy, M. Ashley, L. Dean, D. Adams, J. Calem, C. Starrett. Front Row, L to R: B. Jowers, B. Lennon, M. Carreiro, B. Warner, B. Oliveira, L. Farris, J. Gardner, V. Henderson. Back Row, L to R: P. Cayhill, D. Keely, P. Cote, M. Trembly, R. Carr, L. Byrnes, P. Lebreux, J. Lynch. Second Row, L to R: A. Costa, C. Goglia, L. Marx, D. Costa, P. Enos. Front Row, L to R: J. Place, K. Borden, V. Greaves, P. Dolan, B. Richman. Back Row, L to R: J. Starrett, R. Medeiros, L. Almeida, D. Boscombe, R. R. Bebeau, P. Stevens. Front Row, L to R: D. Cabral, M. Hood, C. Connors, K. Nolan, K. Ahrens. Sophomores Back Row, L to R: P. McMahon, G. Furtado, M. Travis, T. Lawlor, E. Desruisseaux, R. DePietro. Second Row, L to R: E. Wilbur, A. St. George, G. Smith, N. Larravie. Front Row, L to R: C. Rodriques, A. Paiva, B. Borden. Back Row, L to R: Jeannine Miza—Secretary; Norma Ashley—Treasurer. Front Row, L to R: Donna Cabral— Vice President; Cheryl Connors—President. Sophomores Sophomores are later than freshmen and too early for the uppers. They try with faltering zest to carry on from the beginning made the year before. They are impatient for their chance to be the adults in the school, impatient to dazzle the world with their ideals. Surely the sophomore season is that wonderful time of year when the sky is full of a bril¬ liant burst of sun and every¬ one has found his own Blue¬ bird of Happiness.” Back Row, L to R: A. Correira, R. Parent, R. Marshal, R. Goff, H. McKinley, G. Orton. Front Row, L to R: R. Fernandes, K. -Souza, S. Frietas, S. Soares, R. Letourneau, N. Ashley, M. Gersh. 29 Class of 1966 Back Row, L to R: G. Levesque, J. Tunney. Fourth Row, L to R: R. Silva, D. Frenola, D. Jones. Third Row, L to R: J. Silva, P. Lyne, D. MacMillian. Second Row, L to R: N. Beausolier, M. Rezendies. First Row, L to R: L. Machado, S. Silvia. Back Row, L to R: M. Moniz, S. Flanigan, M. Burke, R. Margado. Fourth Row, L to R: R. Verreira, E. Burrows, W. Austin, D. Littlefield. Third Row, L to R: B. Santos, S. Brooks, J. Rainone, P. Henderson. Second Row, L to R: R. Gonsolves, S. Roberts, S. Harrison, N. Broadbent. First Row, L to R: P. Stone, S. Freeman, J. King. Back Row, L to R: W. Camara, C. Camara, J. Raposa. Third Row, L to R: W. Humphrey, R. Gay, E. Perreault. Second Row, L to R: N. Story, D. Jensen, K. Auruda. Front Row, L to R: N. Mello, B. Saladino, B. Gardzina. 30 Back Row, L to R: D. Pineau, D. Henman, F. Liebl, D. Reed, D. Faria, J. Jean, A. Irons, A. Humphrey. Second Row, L to R: J. Petrosic, S. Borden, S. Trelor, M. Murphy, C. Deston, L. Wojtowicz, J. Bigalow, D. Langfield. Front Row, L to R: B. Santos, G. Liebl, C. Walsh, M. Angelini, L. Wojtowicz, B. Andre, J. Miza, M. Paiva. : 1l IL v 1 m Back Row, L to R: P. Stevens, R. Bibeau, R. Dione, C. Franko, J. Starrett, J. Vickers, D. Normand, J. Paulus, S. Riddensdale, R. Medeiros, L. Almeida. Front Row, L to R: M. Medeiros, S. Barber, J. Iarns, D. Maki, R. Paradeso, K. Tunney, J. Resezendes, K. Braily, L. Audet, L. Bradshaw, S. Cabral. L to R: A. Nicolau, D. Prevost, S. Soares, E. Willette, J. Mello, Top, L to R: D. Parent, G. Omerod, G. Woolam, A. Cieto, D. D. Littlefield. Boulay, M. Boyles. Middle: J. Warner, D. Walkden, C. Guimond, P. Smith, M. Bolduc. Bottom: D. Dionne, B. Ouelette, J. Thibeault, S. Aubin. 31 Freshmen CLASS OFFICERS W. Ashley, Treasurer; D. Morse, Secretary; L. Abbruzzi, Vice President; A. Ferreira, President. We came as idiot children into a world which is too big for perhaps a month. The fearfulness of this world is dropped grins and punctuated prissiness, stark grins, flutters. Voices were shriller, feelings sharper—uncontrolled. Knots of ready boys and lots of girls roped together with glances; nobody cared and the whack¬ ing good times made anybody fair game. Back Row, L to R: G. Desrosiers, J. Branco, J. Souza, L. Abbruzzi, N. Cousineau, B. Price, L. Souza, -R. Trudelle, R. Mitchell, A. Pacheco, L. Wilson, L. Menard, S. Leeman, J. Martin, R. Tappen, P. Martelley, A. Morrisette. Front Row, L to R: S. Ciullio, C. Brodour, B. Enos, J. Carmello, P. McManus, C. Provost, C. Enlow, C. Mosher, P. Foley, K. Curtis, M. McCormick. Back Row, L to R: P. Jones, C. Rowe, D. Rego, M. Sokoll, N. Orben, J. Correira, M. Kelly. Front Row, L to R: J. Borge, C. Medeiros, F. Medeiros, E. Coulombe, M. Almeida, C. Brain. 32 Back Row, L to R: K. Mello, R. Woollam, J. Valley, R. Blackburn, P. Landoch, J. Leonardo, R. Lapointe, A. Wood, A. Souza, R. Martineau. First Row, L to R: D. Chase, J. Tripp, B. Mello, N. Kitchen, F. Foley D. Duphiney D De Paiva. Back Row, L to R: C. Smith, B. Devlin, C. Ulmschneider, B. Remy, B. Tattersall, G. Assad, P. La, Duke, P. Souza, D. Machado. Middle Row, L to R: P. Goyette, N. Sylvain, S. Zerobin, R. Hardy, S. Moniz, M. Casilli, J. Lynch. Front Row, L to R: L. Remy, L. Pineau, S. Alfonso, D. Babin, J. Reynolds, K. Revard, D. St. Laurent. Back Roto, L to R: D. Tickle, B. Leandro, B. Hastings, J. Dolin, D. Ferguson, T. Sullivan, M. LaPage, J. Paullus, M. Troy, J. Boudreau. Front Row, L to R: C. Johnson, G. Mello, G. Laferreire, S. Varanese, P. Camara, P. Santana, N. Costa, S. Ward, B. McKinley, E. Terry, D. Bigelow, J. Dumont. 33 Back Row, L to R: R. Bernier, J. Daugherty, P. Orzechowski, R. Mullen. Middle Row, L to R: C. Wendle, P. Palmisciano, J. Moore, W. Hodgson, R. Noble, T. Stanko. Front Row, L to R: C. Chace, P. McGovern, D. Morse, P. • Squire, E. Romanovitch, B. Wood, J. Graham, M. Daugherty. Back Row, L to R: P. Griffin, M. Hadley, D. Myles, W. Pensak, J. Fornoa, K. LeCompte, N. Norris. First Row, L to R: C. Delaney, D. Barrette, V. Larson, M. Cory, C. Cranshaw. Back Row, L to R: B. Canuel, T. Ferreira, B. Ashley, D. Bibeau. Middle Row, L to R: P. Boldock, S. Castro, P. West, M. Paradise. First Row, L to R: M. Motta, N. Anger, S. Blais, D. Laflamme. Back Row, L to R: J. Walker, P. Joslin, H. Chenard, K. Wicker, P. Ingham, B. Chase. MiddU Row, L to R: M. Tunney, P. Roshey, J. Babcock, S. McNeill, R. Gindon, M. Goff. First Row, L to R: G. Kay, J. Medeiros. 34 Freshmen School Life 35 36 Tumbling, studying, fighting in a basketball game, laughing . . . all segments of the life of students 37 Time Passes, but the Laughter, of Life 38 Sound and Memory of Shall Never Fade. 39 Morning and night — there’s life between Life that can be had but once, looked forward to or looked back on. 42 Spring and summer bring new color and restlessness; they also bring the end of a school year, class day, daisy chain, prom, graduation . . . and for some a beginning 43 44 Clubs 45 Student activities envelop many phases of life and learning. 46 r First Row, L to R: C. Walker, D. Oliveira, B. Sanford, N. Tattersall, L. Dean, J. Westgate, C. Bentley, D. Young, S. Hodgson. Second Row, L to R: P. Cabrita, D. Cawley, Mrs. Siedentopf—adviser, M. Taylor, J. Vickers, N. Greaves, J. Cole. Bios Club Would you like to buy a box of candy?” That’s the question most asked by Bios Club members. For several years the explanation has been We’re planning to fix up the dam.” Since the beginning of the club in 1957, many boxes of candy have been sold and, with the help of the Montaup Electric Company, many improvements on the Swansea Dam have been made. Each fall the members plant a dozen or so more flower bulbs on what are now solid banks; each spring is time once again to haul out the rakes and clear away all the dead leaves and branches which winter has left cluttering the dam area. Even if only a daffodil or two from all the bulbs planted appears in the spring, the beauty of those few flowers is a kind of reward to the Bios Clubbers for their work. 47 First Row L to R: D. Duphiney, D. Duphiney, D. Hood, P. Thibault, B. Britto, S. StGeorge, G. Liebl. Second Row: S. Foley, Mrs. Pa- pandrea—adviser, V. Chagnon, J. Petrosick, E. Wilber, S. Treloar, M. Murphy, C. Deston, B. Congdon. Third Row: R. Noble, A. Cor- reiro, C. Smith, B. Tattersall, J. Boudreau, J. Medeiros, B. Kay, B. Wilde, B. Christopher, T. Stanko, P. Pelletier. Fourth Row: J. Barnes, B. Borden, R. Rego, J. Johnson, S. Flanagan, J. Davis, B. Marsh. Student Council The four classes at Case have for a long time been able to work together through the Student Council to achieve a harmony in the school. Besides continuing the annual re¬ sponsibilities, taking a collection for the Dana G. Plante Scholarship pro¬ gram inaugurated in 1957, and at¬ tending conventions of student coun¬ cils from many other schools in New England, the Council this year init¬ iated a change in the practice of hold¬ ing school assemblies. Thanks to their efforts, now all four dases in their turn have the opportunity to attend assemblies which feature speakers invited or movies hired for the occasion. This change, if only a beginning, was a step toward strengthening the Stu¬ dent Council in the school. 48 Junior Classical League Mirable visu,” wonderful to behold, are the toga-clad students of the J.C.L. during Latin Week. These same merry Roman citizens are the faithful interpreters of Cicero’s famous orations all the other weeks of the school year. Casting away their transla¬ tions for a day they take a trip to Boston to tour the Classical galleries of the Museum of Fine Arts. Numen Sine Nomine, their newspaper, gives the students the opportunity to write an article or poem, writing in the ancient language they have studied for three or four years. JUNIOR CLASSICAL LEAGUE Front Row, L to R: Henri Montandon, Dianne Duphiney, Paula Pettine. Second Row, L to R: Marjory Taylor, Barbara Britto, Deborah Olivera, Sue James. Thi rd Row, L to R: Donna Wheeler, Diane Young, Sue Cabral, Lorraine Curtis. Fourth Row, L to R: Mr. Flanigan—adviser, Paul Cabrita, Pete Cuillio, Churchill Smith, John Croke. 49 World Affairs Club Many of the delegates sent to represent Case High at various youth conferences and conventions are chosen from the ranks of the World Affairs Club. Indeed, month¬ ly meetings are filled with, besides the commentaries on national and international situations in the news, tales of club members who have returned from world affairs in miniature—perhaps a Model Congress, a Model United Nations, or an adventure on Youth Conference Day or Student Gov¬ ernment Day. Listening to the reports, all the members may then feel as if they had been delegates to every convention, sharing world affairs with many other students not only from other states but also from other countries. Frst Row, L to R: C. Smith, D. Duphiney, J. Vickers, J. Davis, J. Place. Second Row: D. Olivera, S Mailloux P Medeiros, Nolan L. Dean, L. Curtis, Mr. Papandrea—adviser. Third Row: E. Rodriques, N. Greaves, F. Drake W 50 S uiza S ’ N Stank °’ B ' JameS ’ R Cabnta Fourth Row: J. Arsenault, B. Marsh, J. Barnes, H. Montandon, B. Smith D First Row, L to R: H. Hargraves, B. Britto, L. Faria, C. Wilkinson, D. Hood, N. Bliss, G. Jowers, D. Wheeler, S. Lawton, J. Vickers, P. Medeiros. Second Row: J. Berube, L. Lagerstrom, D. Zemeir, J. Silva, J. West, D. Duphiney, D. Young, C. Klatt, S. Ledger, L. Nolan. Third Rote: N. Greaves, J. Smith, E. Doodson, S. Hodgson, N. Troy, P. Thibault, N. Stanko, C. Bentley, E. Pysz, P. Mc- Lane, M. Miga. Fourth Row: R. James, H. Montandon, Mr. O’Toole—adviser, B. Wilde, J. Place, B. Christopher, R. Gerraughty, R. Deston, C. Smith, B. Marsh, G. Harrington, C. Foley, E. Rodriques, C. Walker, J. Barnes. 52 The Chief The yearbook staff is one of the most decorous groups in the school—until the day of each dead¬ line. Four times during their senior year, there is pure bedlam for those brave souls who just the spring before had so coveted the prospect of being on the yearbook staff. It is one thing to look at the shiny photographs when they have come back from the studio, but quite another thing to take the pictures. The fun of the student photographers is a kind of silent dedica¬ tion to waiting patiently at the football and basket¬ ball games, the bonfires, the pep rallies, the dances, for just the right instant when, with a click of the camera shutter, they will have captured forever a priceless moment—one in a million—in the lives of their classmates. And what of the people who organize these photographs into a theme of school life, of four hard, happy years, yes, a yearbook to be proud of. And the students who write sketches, find out who’s who in each picture, and type out the copy sheets surely they must like the work they are doing to do such a painstaking job. All these people are the ones who stay long after hours on a deadline afternoon to finish up details and send another shipment of pages off to the publisher—all these people make up a good yearbook staff. JAMES BARNES Assistant Editor NANCY GREAVES Editor-in-Chief 53 Front Row: Joe Mello, Mr. O’Toole—adviser, Matt Miga, Ray Gerraughty, Ev Rodriques, Churchill Smith, Henri Montandon, Jim Barnes, George Harrington, Bob Nogeria, John Place. Back Row, L to R: Dianne Duphiney, Judy Vickers, Donna Langfield, Barbara Britto, Helen Hargraves, Carol Walker, Nancy Bliss, Elaine Pysz, Lynne Nolan, Charolette Foley, Nancy Stan-ko, Diane Young, Jean West, Pauline Thibault, Nancy Greaves. Let’s get organized!” rings the familiar cry of our editor-in-chief preparing his troops to begin again the battle with their idealess minds. Thrice each week the staff is exhorted, prodded, cajoled, threatened to THINK of its own assignments—usually to no avail. Journalism is not a class, not a world of imaginative or intensive literary accomplishment, but a group of aspiring young writers brought together by a mutual desire to be on the ’Cardinal’ staff.” In our innocence we saw the Cardinal” surrounded by an aura of mystery and pres¬ tige, but quickly realized that a paper is printed by hard work and perseverance. That is, this became apparent to the small mi¬ nority which had not become self appointed roving reporters, disappearing for entire periods of journalism. Even in the chaotic atmosphere which prevails and the apathy of both staff and school, the paper comes out,” a paper dedicated to preserving free¬ dom of press, to using any article of rea¬ sonable intelligence. As our Adviser enjoys to emphasize, it is an accomplishment to enter knowing noth¬ ing, manage to publish a paper, and leave knowing little more. 55 Front Row, L to R: P. Medeiros, J. Vickers, H. Hargraves, F. Drake, Mrs. Papandrea, adviser. Second Row: N. Stanko, C. Walker, E. Vig- neau, J. Place, B. Marsh, P. McLane. Third Row: N. Greaves, D. Hood, E. Pysz, M. Taylor, S. Boyles, V. Chagnon, N. Bliss, S. LeComte, S.. Hodgson, S. Mailloux, J. Berube, D. Duphiney. French Club Le Cercle Francais continues to be a stronghold for the study of the French language. From singing Dominique” and acting out a play, Le Match de Football,” to the business of the meeting, the seances of the Cercle are conducted entirely en francais. These same students form the newspaper staff of La Classicale,” which is one of the few French high school newspapers in the area. 56 Latin Club The members of the Latin Club, those ever-translating second-year stu¬ dents, are faced with the big question, to continue or not to continue—to study Cicero and Vergil, to hold a cake sale to support their trips to the Mu¬ seum of Fine Arts in Boston, to be¬ come members of the staff of the Numen Sine Nomine,” and to become members of the nationwide Junior Classical League in hopes that the club will raise enough money to send them to the National Convention—or to give up Latin, to end now and forever, their studies with only Caesar’s Gallic Wars to remember. First Row, L to R: J. Mizher, P. Dewey, L. Wojtowicz, C. Chenard, J. Perry, S. Hodgson, E. Gaskel, M. Reinault, D. Oliveira, B. Britto, P. Pettine. Second Row: D. Langfield, K. Braily, L. Audet, J. Berube, N. Bliss, D. Ferreira, M. Murphy, N. Beauseiul, L. Franklin, C. Silva. Third Row: L. Wojtowicz, C. Connors, S. Lawton, L. Lagerstrom, C. Turcotte, J. Noble, V. Greaves, B. Borden, J. Ramsden, L. Marx, S. St.George, C. Goglia, S. Lapointe, M. Hood, E. Willette, N. Greaves. Fourth Row: M. Angelini, C. Deston, W. Owen, P. Dimond, S. Foley, R. Gonsalves, B. Andrade, J. Place, D. Duphiney. Fifth Row: N. Ashley, M. Gersch, B. Congdon, L. Mello, L. Curtis, S. Roberts, J. Pietraszek, C. Bentley, P. Caibrita, R. Castonguay. Sixth Row: R. Winslow, G. Harrington, J. Johnson, D. Wheeler, M. Taylor, E. Pysz, B. Sanford, A. Roberts, S. James, D. Reed, D. Boscombe, R. Goff, Mr. Flanagan, adviser. Seventh Row: M. Wolfe, B. Lasson, S. Goodwin, J. Szelag, R. Rego, C. Smith, R. Borden, G. Orton, H. Nickerson, D. Normand, P Stevens. 57 First Row, L to R: A. Provost, B. Christopher, J. Bradshaw, T. King. Second Row: B. DeNardo, R. Dumas, M. Travers, M. Simcock, J. Mello, S. Purdy, E. Malmborg, H. Montandon, B. Wilde. Third Row: J. Davis, S. Johnson, P. Goss, B. James, J. Eddy, B. English, L. Sum¬ mers, E. Vigneau. Fourth Row: E. Rodriques, J. Santos, R. Gerraughty, J. Ferreira, J. Johnson, S. Goodwin, R. Rego, T. Gaynor, J. Barnes. Boys’ Leaders The Boys’ Leaders Club cannot be called an organization for they conduct no meet¬ ings and they do not perform as a group. The club is actually a body of young men that enjoy leading their classmates in sport¬ ing activities. Mr. O’Hare, Physical Educa¬ tion director, chooses these boys on the basis of physical ability and leadership quali¬ ties. They are a tremendous assistance to Coach O’Hare in making the physical edu¬ cation course beneficial as well as enjoyable to all the boys of the school. 58 A. A. Council First Row, L to R: C. Chenard, D. Wheeler, P. McLane, L. Mello, N. Bliss, E. Doodson. Second Row: J. Davis, J. Santos, M. Travers, J. Barnes. Girls’ Leaders Responsibility and leadership characterize the members of the Girls’ Leaders Club. These girls—sophomores, juniors, and seniors —are sports participants, majorettes, or cheerleaders. It is the job of these girls to lead physical education classes, to organize sports activities, and to set good examples both in and out of school for other Case girls to follow. GIRLS’ LEADERS —First Row, L to R: D. Wheeler, D. Hood, N. Bliss, P. Pettine. Second Row: H. Hargraves, P. Medeiros, R. McLane, C. Chenard, C. Walsh, L. Mello, B. Lennon. Third Row: D. Ferreira, S. Foley, J. Noble, D. Ahrens, L. Wojtowicz, M. Hood, J. Niejadlik. Fourth Row: E. Doodson, N. Greaves, J. Place, N. Ashley, M. Murphy, D. Cawley, V. Lapierre. 59 Camera Club The Case High Camera Club endeavors to teach its members the qualities of good photography, how to use various cameras, and how to develop their own film. Though the club is small, it has the potential to grow and to undertake challenging projects. L to R: Mr. Conroy, adviser; R. Nogueria, R. Thibault, J. Thomp¬ son, C. Hardy, D. Littlefield. L to R: Mr. Reynolds, adviser; R. Bernier, B. Boutin, B. Enos, C. Cranshaw, P. Palmisciano, P. Martelly. Audio-Visual Aides Down the corridor to one of the classrooms he goes, with a projector in one hand and a reel of film in the other. He’s not an expert in electronics; but he knows how to tinker with the knobs and screws to make the projector work and how to fix it when it stops. He isn ' t paid for what he does; he doesn ' t even get to see the movie. But he expects neither. He is just a student happy to offer some of his time during the school day to be an Audio- Visual Aide. 60 Rifle Club Front Row, L to R: Mr. Johnson, R. Dickson, T. DiBona, R. Goltz, Mr. Bernier. Second Row, L to R: C. Appleton, E. Ferreira, W. Lapointe, D. Keetly. 61 Front Row, L to R: B. Jowers, C. Chenard, S. Sullivan; K. McCoomb, S. Leandro, S. Cote, S. Lawton, C. Wilkinson, S. Leger, L. Faria. Second Row, L to R: B. Wilkinson, J. Smith, E. Scanlon, J. Gee, D. Dumont, C. Foley, L. Audet. Third Row, L to R: N. Freitas, K. Cabral, M. Moniz, S. Souza, N. Troy, Anne McCaffrey, E. Petrosso, G. Jowers, J. Rowe. Last Row, L to R: S. Boyles, G. Or- merod, I. Anger, P. Cabrita, D. Castro, G. Spann, K. Klatt. Librarians The Librarians perform a very valuable service to the school. They are responsible for signing out the books which students come to choose during free periods each day. They accept gladly the tasks of putting the returned books back upon their shelves and of cataloguing all new books added to the library collection. Both the daily dealings in the library, borrow¬ ing a book or doing research for a term paper, and ordering a book at the Book Fair, which comes only once a year, are made easier and pleasanter by the willingness of these Librar¬ ians to help the students and the teachers who use the library. 62 Business Bees Who sells the ribboned yellow splashes of chrysanthemums worn on collars and hats by the Cardinal ladies at the Thanksgiving Day game? Why, the Business Bees! Their pur¬ pose in both that sale and the annual cake sale at open house is to provide an award at graduation for the student who has excelled in the business curriculum during his years at Case. Especially ambitious this year, the Bees accepted an invitation to tour the John Hancock Building in Boston and enjoyed watching many of the new machines being employed in business offices today. Front Row, L to R: M. Raposa, S. Soares, S. Leger, S. Souza, N. Freitas, M. Noonan, S. Sullivan, N. Troy. Second Row: D. Dumont, C. Wilk¬ inson, L. Faria, K. Felix, E. Scanlon, S. Parent, C. Faria, C. Brain, E. Chase, J. Gee, C. Foley, K. Griffin, S. Cote, E. Petrosso, M. Moniz, C. Enos. Last Row: K. McCoomb, P. Thibault, K. Klatt, R. Dumas, J. Nunes, I. Anger, R. Gagnon, E. Rodriques, D. Castro, J. Britland, J. Rowe, G. Travasso, D. Zemier, J. Babin, G. Jowers, A. McCaffrey, Mrs. Fallon, adviser. 63 Drama Club I, a stranger, crossed over the threshold into a world I little understood but shall never forget, the world of drama. The people here make believe. They quote prices on eggs that aren’t really there and sit on the stage floor quite convinced that it is a set of stairs leading to a porch which I can’t see. They say words but they are adult words and actions from young forms. What do they do? They take some props, greasepaint, and a script and make a seventeen year old boy think, act, and feel like a man of seventy about ready to die. It is a marvelous world where one can forget himself and pretend—pretend to be anything real or imaginary. Case has such a world in its Drama Club and Workshop where the interested can find anything from the history of make-up to how to hammer nails in a triangular pattern to keep a flat from falling apart. This year the Drama Club has worked on the one act play The Death of the Hired Man” to present at the Southwestern Massachusetts Drama Festival to be held at Dighton-Rehoboth Regional High School. First Row, L to R: P. McGovern, D. Morse, K. Barlow, P. Stone, R. Gonsalves, S. Freeman, J. LeBreux, B. Ciosek, S. Sullivan, L. Mello, P. Bolduc. Second Row, L to R: C. Delaney, K. Donaldson, D. Laflamme, G. Mello, D. DiPiva, S. Roberts, D. Duphiney, L. Franklin, J. Sullivan, F. Medeiros. Third Row, L to R: C. Mosher, K. Nolan, L. Marx, W. Owens, P. Nahas, C. Goglia, D. Young, K. Griffin, K. Klatt. Fourth Row, L to R: Miss Griffiths, adviser; V. Greaves, N. Ashley, E. Enos, C. Connors, J. Heywood, B. Congdon, G. Jowers, L. Curtis. Fifth Row, L to R: L. Brooks, N. Laravie, C. Tracy, M. Ashley, S. Boulanger, C. Provost, A. Roberts, S. James, R. Bernier. Sixth Row, L to R: W. Murphy, W. Ashley, G. Orton, R. Gerraughty, T. Sullivan, D. Moniz, P. Stevens, H. Nickerson, R. Desmarais, R. Donaldson. 64 National Honor Society First Row, L to R: S. Ledger, B. Britto, H. Hargraves, D. Hood, D. Young. Second Row: H. Montandon, J. Vickers, E. Vigneau, N. Greaves, J. Barnes. 65 Story-Telling Club Bringing enjoyment to oth¬ ers through reading is the chief purpose of the Story¬ telling Club. Organized and advised by Miss Sullivan these girls give up free afternoons and Saturday mornings to read to children in the lower grades of Swansea, schools and in neighboring orphans’ homes. First Row, L to R: Barbara Jowers, Barbara Britto, Jean West, Elaine Pysz. Second Row, L to R: K. Klatt, G. Jowers, L. Oulette, J. Gee, M. Taylor, S. Treloar, S. Leandro, S. Sullivan, S. Boyles, E. Scanlon, B. Oulette. 66 Office Assistants An office assistant’s main job is to run errands for Miss Regan, Mr. Silva or any of the teachers who ask her to do so. For example, she may be asked to mimeograph tests or to show a new student to his first class. She delivers telephone messages, menus, a teacher’s mail, and report cards or other notices to the homerooms. She does all the back¬ ground work without which the school would not function so efficiently. First Row, L to R: M. Daurity, K. Barlow, P. Thibault, L. Audet. Second Row: K. Felix, N. Stanko, N. Troy, L. Faria, J. Rowe. Third Row: E. Scanlon, S. Parent, B. Chase, A. Costa, L. Derouseaux. 67 First Row, L to R: N. Turner, S. McNeil, N. Tattersal, N. Goff, K. Lawlor, J. Smith, L. Dean, R. Gonslaves, S. Ciullio. Second Row: J. Place, C. Chase, P. Dimond, S. James, B. Sanford, J. Westgate, M. Ashly, A. Roberts, S. Roberts, L. Brooks, J. Boten, J. Gardner. Third Row: B. Tattersal, P. Palmisiano, B. Baldwin, R. Vierra, R. Bernier, D. Miles, S. Riddensdale, P. Aubit, J. Starrett, R. Hoggat, J. Cole, M. Kelly, M. Miga, K. Mello. Fourth Row: K. LeCompt, R. Rego, S. Flanigan, S. Goodwin, R. Donaldson, H. Nickerson, E. Trembly, R. Gerraught y, T. Lawlor, M. Moniz, E. Vigneau, T. Stanko, J. Valley, R. Desmaris. 68 Cardinal Band They are the music-makers. Music of all school occasions is their business. To people just passing by the door of the music room, their practice is some kind of march.” But to the band members who make the music, now it is a lively time to spur a fighting spirit for tomorrow’s game; now it is a somber piece for All-District Compe¬ tition. From the first football game in the fall to the parade on Memorial Day they are the proudest bunch of band play¬ ers who ever wore maroon and gold. CARDINAL BAND 69 MIXED CHOIR First Row: J. West, P. Pettine, L. Dean, K. Andrade, D. Crossley, B. Jowers, N. Ashley, J. Gardner, B. Congdon, P. Squire. Second Row: D. Souza, L. Abruzzi, S. Flanagan, M. Miga, C. Ferriera, R. Souza, D. Myles, R. Gerraughty, R. Desmarias, G. Orton, R. Vierria. Third Row: C. Connors, B. Santoes, N. Howard, P. Hargraves, J. Ramsden, B. Wood, S. James, A. Roberts, L. Lopes, C. Deston, E. Willette. Fourth Row: B. Ingham, B. Tattersal, T. Lawlor, K. Mello, R. Donaldson, R. Rego, D. Moniz, H. Nickerson, J. Heywood, J. Rainone, C. Walsh, E. Dooson, N. Turner, B. Sanford, C. Jenkins, B. Lennon, C. Enlow, D. Young, E. Wilbur, L. Mello. ALL DISTRICT CHORUS E. Doodson, J. West, L. Mello, D. Hood, B. Cong¬ don, EL Nickerson, R. Desmarais, R. Donaldson, R. Gerraughty, G. Orton, S. Goodwin. OFFICERS Bottom to Top: M. Congdon, D. Young, D. Moniz. 70 You’re six or seven years old and you’re on your way into an exciting world of learning. Someone sits you down and hands you a book. No one asks Would you like to learn to sing?’’ They just mumble on about something called do, re, mi and There, there’s nothing to it. Isn’t that easy! Then, quite proud of yourself, you start to sing. Suddenly, someone shouts Stop! Frightened half to death you sit back prepared for the worst and you get it. There aren’t only do, re, mi’s to remember, but other interesting things like half notes, quarter notes, eighths and sixteenths; then rests—quarter rests, half rests, and others, plus all those complicated timing devices. You can ' t just sing in the same voice all the time. There are dynamics to watch for. It’s really all quite alarming and you don’t know what to make of it all. Then one day you sit back and listen. Why, it’s pretty!” You add your voice and from then on you go through life with a song in your heart. When you enter high school, a little timid, you find first a familiar tune right there waiting in the music room. You’re on your way safely embarked through your high school years singing in the annual winter and spring concerts. You’ll never forget those first frightening days; but then, you’ll never forget a song. GIRLS ' GLEE CLUB First Row, L to R: C. Connors, J. Heywood, C. Cranshaw, D. Hood, D. Adams, V. Chagnone, E. Willette, B. Congdon, L. Mello, E. Wilbur, P. Squire. Second Row: D. Young, J. Sullivan, J. West, P. Stone, B. Jowers, C. Walsh, M. Angelini, P. Charves, R. Parasisio, S. Freeman. Third Row: L. Marx, L. Dean, B. Wood, B. Santos, N. Bliss, P. McLane, J. Ramsden, J. Rainone, C. Deston, H. Therrien. Fourth Row: J. Smith, J. Chase, J. Gardner, K. Andrade, S. James, C. Enlow, E. Doodson, V. Greaves. Fifth Row: B. Lennon, N. Ashley, L. Lopes, D. Liebel, A. Roberts, B. Sanford, C. Walker. LORNA MELLO LINDA MARX Majorettes NORMA ASHLEY DEBBIE OLIVEIRA 72 EVELYN WILBUR Top Row, L to R: M. Hood, C. Walsh. Middle Row, L to R: J. Niejadlik, J. Ramsden, P. Pettine, A. Nicolau. Bottom Row, L to R: S. Borden, V. LaPierre, M. Murphy, P. McLane, N. Bliss, M. Angelini. DIANA HOOD 73 74 DONNA WHEELER, Captain Sports 75 First Row, Sitting, L to R: A. Ferguson, G. Willette, R. Winslow, R. Bouley, J. Holden, M. Burke, J. Powers, M. Boyles, P. Cahill, P. Goss, F. Leonardo, J. Ferreira. Second Row, Kneeling, L to R: L. Summers, D. Melhmann, G. Holmes, J. Kirkman, B. Christopher, M. Travis, B. English, E. Malmborg, M. Travers, J. Santos, S. Johnson, B. DePietro, W. Letourneau. Third Row, Standing, L to R: J. Thompson, S. Pickens, D. Cashman, R. Couriveau, E. Desruisseaux, M. Macedo, L. Almeida, T. Gaynor, B. James, Coach McCarthy, J. Bradshaw, R. Morgado, R. Quinlan, B. Lasson, P. Cote, A. Provost, K. Leighter, J. Tickle, T. King, L. Paulhus. Head Coach john McCarthy Assistant Coach HOWARD O’HARE 76 Footbal Spring was the beginning of those long and grueling hours of drill that go into making a strong team that is worth standing in bitter cold or drizzling rain for—worth all the cheers and hopes of the sidelines. Not rated too high in pre-season polls, the characters” made up in sheer spirit what they lacked in size. They took each game separately, looking forw ard to each as a potential win. The battle cry being given, tri-captains Bruce Christopher, A1 Provost, and Joe Santos led their chargers against the enemy camp, succumbing to the foe but twice. Withstanding many blows, Larry Summers, Pete Goss, Arnie Ferguson, A1 Provost, and Joe Moose” Kirkman composed a staunch front line which opened holes in the enemy line for fullback Bruce Christopher and halfback Jim Bradshaw, and protected the valuable throwing arm of Joe Santos. Pass patterns ground into their heads, ends Gene Willette and all-state Mike Travers, and slotbacks Will Letourneau and Gary Holmes worked the ball down the field, out of reach of the enemy, and over the goal line. There were the darker sides to every game, when the defense became slightly porous; but Letourneau’s Mob” held the fortress that ranged from every side. Bolstering the boys in those bleak moments were Stan Johnson, Bob James, Tom Gaynor, and Russ Carpentier, the all-important extra-energy stimulant needed behind each team. A way of life ended with the final game—sunny and hazy and stormy skies, trumpeters and drummers heralding each game, spirited girls and sideliners crying for victory, muddy fields, dirty faces, bruises, mounds of bodies heaped sky-high, a fleet-footed youth carrying a ball towards a far-off goal—those were the scenes of football, gone, for now, yet to return next year. 77 JOE SANTOS WIL LETOURNEAU AL PROVOST ARNIE FERGUSON ED MALMBORG BRUCE CHRISTOPHER TOM GAYNOR And those who stand to face us are beat to earth again.” BRYANT 79 MICHAEL TRAVERS BOB ENGLISH LARRY SUMMERS ROBERT JAMES PETE GOSS JOE KIRKMAN 1963 Tri-County Champs First Row, L to R: D. Tickle, B. Leandro, M. Sokoll, D. Machado, B. Remy, M. Hadley, Manager D. Griffin. Second Row, L to R: L. Manard, J. Paulus, L. Abruzzi, T. Sullivan, C. Ulmschnieder, W. Hodgson, W. Garrent. Third Row, L to R: T. Ferreira, D. Ferguson, N. Cousineau, B. Devlin, A. Freites, R. Noble. JOE SANTOS BRUCE CHRISTOPHER AL PROVOST 81 For the players on the field, the game must be the only con¬ cern. There is no time for a player to think of anything but how to beat the guy across from him. The basic lesson of foot¬ ball is survival, and it is a les¬ son which must be learned well. Once a player gets sick of taking, then he can give; for coaches know that players are made, not born. This is the sec¬ ond basic lesson of football: to win you must hit the other guy just a little harder than he hits you. 82 But football is not all grim and dust-bound. There is color, and pageantry, and the frantic-for-a- moment fears of the cheerleaders at third and seven. There is the comic gung-ho earnest of the reserve, the third-stringer whose greatest hope and greatest fear is that he’ll be called upon to enter the game. And finally there are the smiles when the game is won and congratulations for a great catch or a fumble-causing tackle. 1963 Narry Champs BRUCE WILDE JIM BRADSHAW BRUCE CHRISTOPHER Front, L to R: J. Santos, B. Marsh, J. Bradshaw, D. Fayan, C. St. Pierre, J. Barnes, J. Davis, P. Var- ranese. Back Row: Manager B. Paquette, B. Wilde, B. F. Cabral, J. Ashley, F. Sul¬ livan, B. Christopher, Coach McCarthy, Manager E. Ducy. Baseball Spring rolls around a corner and out of every door pour kids, caps, muzzles, bats, balls—all sorts of odd¬ looking gear. Baseball season has begun! A determined Cardinal nine take to the grass-covered diamond in early April and spend three weeks of rigorous training in calisthenics, hitting, bunting, run¬ ning, and drilling, before tackling other teams in the league. The ’63 season climaxed with a Narry championship and a trip to the Eastern Massachusetts Tech Tourna¬ ment. With three quick victories, Case advanced to the finals, where powerful Matigon took the Cardinals and the Class C title. Second best in Eastern Massachusetts is a worthy title for a team winning 17 out of 22 games. JACK EDDY Cross Country Five miles a day—miles that seemed to stretch on into eternity, miles that made your body cry out with exhaustion, made your already tender feet more calloused, miles that left you with sweat-streaked faces, aching thighs, raw throats, lungs seared by every gasping breath — That was practice. A meet meant competition and that last lunge for the tape down a track that seemed to leer at you; but you ran faster, you strained, you de¬ fied that dusty path—What matter if you lost a match?— Yours was the victory of try¬ ing, of persevering, of never giving up! A 0-10 record may sound discouraging, and so it was, but the boys never quit . . . they loved their sport; they knew they were building the base upon which future har¬ rier teams would grow. Track, basketball, baseball — Case athletes helped win Narry Crowns in many sports — boy’s and girls’ Basketball Case High’s basketball team of 1963-64 was faced with one of the most difficult challenges that any team can face—following up the greatest team in the history of the school. Case fans were far from optimistic when the Cardinals took the floor in early December against Providence Central. With only one tested ballplayer, John Davis, and the remaining four boys with no varsity experience, the team seemed weak indeed. But as the season progressed the team began to gell; and through the experience gained by a heartbreak defeat at the hands of Dighton-Rehoboth, the Case five began to look like a championship contender. The specialties of each individual player became evident in the first weeks of trial for the squad. John Davis led the team in scoring 19 out of the 20 scheduled games, eclipsing the 30-mark five times, including a 45-point output that broke a six-year Case High scoring record. John led all league scorers with 414 league points and 496 points in all 20 games. His average was second by two tenths of a point at 25-9. His efforts, however, would have been fruitless without the rebounding strength offered by Joe Santos. Joe could rebound with the best in the league. Joe and junior Stan Johnson were major reasons for the Cardinals’ impressive 13-7 record. Defensively speaking, Bruce Wilde was one of the finest players in the league. His quickness held many of the league’s high scorers far below their average. Junior Jack Eddy was the squad ball handler. His coolness at the foul line as well as in the backcourt spelled success for the Cards many times during the season. His sharp outside shooting was always a threat to Case opponents. Coach O’Hare had good bench strength in seniors Ev Rodriques, Joe O’Neil, Jim Barnes, and Steve Purdy, juniors Bob English and Jan Szelag, and sophomore Mike Travis. Coach O’Hare was always confident that the remaining members of the squad could be called upon when needed to do a good job. Highlight of the season included a 30-69 come-from-behind victory over Prevost and a 67-65 overtime victory over Dighton-Rehoboth. Basketball, like all sports, builds character, determination, and leadership. Their qualities were surely developed in a fighting basketball squad of 1963-64. JOHN DAVIS - m 1 i t 1 Br L V .A jfl l m V J -ifeFt 1 IS | ., w i «a r i ii Season’s Record Case 55 Providence Central 41 72 Warren 64 72 Dighton-Rehoboth 75 65 Dartmouth 71 80 Prevost 69 66 Westport 35 67 Diman 62 65 Old Rochester 53 62 Apponequet 48 56 Holy Family 63 43 Somerset 50 67 Dighton-Rehoboth 65 51 Dartmouth 73 66 Prevost 57 74 Westport 54 51 Diman 45 53 Old Rochester 52 76 Apponequet 51 50 Holy Family 58 71 Somerset 7.6 JACK EDDY STAN JOHNSON Varsity Front, L to R: J. Szelag, J. O’Neil, J. Santos, J. Eddy, S. Purdy. Back. L to R: Coach O ' Hare, J. Barnes, B. English, E. Rodrigues, S. Johnson, J. Davis, M. Travis, B. Wilde, S. Pickens. 91 r Junior Var$ity Front, L to R: D. Reed, R. Winslow, D. Norman, G. Desries- saux, C. Smith, G. Kay, P. McMahon, L. Abbruzzi. Back, L to R■ C. Ulmshneider, T. Ferreira, D. Boscombe, M. Macedo, A. Pa¬ checo, G. Furtado, L. Ferguson, J. Jean. Donna Wheeler, Chris Provost, and Elaine Doodson Basketball 2:00 P.M.—Gotta hurry down to the locker room. Only 10 minutes to change into those wrinkled maroonies,” ' ' lost and found” socks, and holey, laceless sneakers. 2:11— What took you so long? The rest of the girls have been here for 10 minutes . . . You could have done that at the beginning of school.” Better practice hard today—big game tomorrow. Hope we place at least third in the league. Of course we will if we cut the comedy and start practice—oops, wrong player . . .” Watch those passes! . . . ” My freshmen can play better than you.” Can’t do anything right today—stop giggling—concentrate . . . Rebounds—get off your feet!” . . . Oh, my ulcers! 2:50 Guards—50 foul shots, Forwards —50 . . . Have you finished taking 100? Take 50 more.” 3:20 O.K., girls, I’m going to let you out in time for the late bus today . . . Remember, clean socks and sneakers and watch your passes tomorrow. They’ve got a tall team. Thanks.” ELAINE DOODSON, Capt. 94 Varsity Team from L to R: Donna Wheeler, Diane Ferreira, Janice Noble, Susan Foley, Elaine Doodson, Chris Provost, Patsy McLane, Donna Duphiney, Diana Hood, and Claire Chenard, Manager. DIANA HOOD SUSAN FOLEY JANICE NOBLE 95 GIRLS ' J.V. BASKETBALL TEAM Front Row, L to R: G. Gogiea, C. Walsh, L. Audet, N, Bliss, M. Hood, J. Thibault, L. Wojtowicz. Second Row, L to R: L. Wojtowicz (manager), P. Medeiros, M. Angelini, M. Gersh, D. Cawley, D. Desmond, J. Place. 96 Volleyball There is a hint of spring in the air as March steps in, announcing the beginning of the volleyball season. The first day of tryouts finds quite a number of girls who wish to try their skill at this sport. Soon the team is picked and immediately practices are organized. Every afternoon until the first game the girls practice, trying to perfect a serve, working on the spike, and learning to set up the ball so as to make the spike possible. Volleyball is a sport where quickness and alertness are vital. The team becomes accustomed to hearing the command move” or wake up” from the coach. Finally, the first game arrives. A feeling of excitement pervades the gym as teams from 6 or 7 schools at a time come to¬ gether to challenge each other. Quickly the eye scans the different teams, for a moment watching them practice. Suddenly the game begins and you hope as you stand there awaiting the first serve, that you don’t muff it. Once the real action begins, you can feel the tension mount as the ball goes back and forth over the net. You tell yourself to be quick, and move. As soon as you’ve accomplished a good feat such as saving the ball or gaining some points you really feel part of the game and love it. Then, as suddenly as it started, it is over, and either you’ve won or lost. Victory brings a tremendously happy moment, and defeat a moment of depression, but they are all just moments making up the life you live, all adding to that vast store of high school memories. Front Row, L to R: P. Medeiros, C. Chenard, D. Duphiney, N. Bliss, D. Hood, D. Ferreira. Second Row: J. Sullivan K Ahrens P McLane, E. Doodson, S. Foley, C. Provost. I 13 Field Hockey Fall, and the girls’ field hockey team begins its second season. Dribble, run, drive, into the goal; dribble, run, drive . . . You’re tired, hot, winded, you do it again. Must stay in position and make short passes, keeping the ball close. These same commands mull over and over in your mind; and you do your utmost to comply. And then, the games—which make it all worthwhile. You forget the hours you’ve worked; you want only to get in there, to fight, to win. In a sense, you experience oblivion: you act only by instinct— dodging, running, passing, barely conscious of anything except that overwhelming desire to do your best, to win. But soon it is all over. The field hockey season ends. We lost more games than we won, but we learned to accept defeat; we knew that when one team wins, the other team must lose, and that we could not be victor always. This knowledge brought us a far greater personal victory. First Row, L to R: S. Barber, S. Cabral, F. Foley. Second Row: M. Hood, C. Goglier, P. Enos, C. Provost. Third Row: D. Duphiney, S. Boyles, K. Nolan, C. Walker. First Row, L to R: E. Courville, E. Doodson, J. Place, S. Foley. Second Row: D. Ferreira, D. Duphiney, B. Borden. Third Row: P. Medeiros, C. Chenard, L. Nolan. We’re off! 114 Seniors Working, Playing 117 IRVING ANGER 72 Elmwood Ave. Ambition: Work Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Prom Com¬ mittee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JOSEPH ARSENAULT 12 Worthen St. Ambition: Undecided World Affairs Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. KENNETH ASHTON 2333 G.A.R. Highway Ambition: Engineering Mixed Chorus 4; Rifle Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JULIENNE E. BABIN 126 Jeffrey St. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Class JAMES BARNES 81 Ralph Chapman Rd. Ambition: Architect A.A. Council 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Bios Club 3, Vice-Pres.; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4; French Club 3; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com.; Student Council 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 3; Var. Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; World Af¬ fairs 3, 4; Yearbook, Asst. Ed. 4; Class Pres. 1, 2, 4. ROBERT BEAULIEU 58 Pond Street Ambition: Automotive Engineer Prom Committee 3; Track 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RONALD BEAULIEU 58 Pond Street Ambition: Automotive Engineer Cross-Country 4; Prom Committee 3; Track 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JANE BERUBE 73 Riverview Ave. Ambition: Social Worker Office Assistant 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Latin Club 1, 2, 4; French Club 4. of 1964 NANCY BLISS 1413 Gardner’s Neck Rd. Ambition: Specialized Teacher A.A. Council 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Choir 2, 3, 4; Cheerleader 3, 4; Girl Leaders 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 4; Latin Club 2; Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Volleyball 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Glee Club 4. CAROL BENTLEY 40 Church Street Ambition: Nurse Biology Club 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 2, 4. RICHARD BOSCOMBE 60 Cedar Ave. Ambition: College A.A. l, 2, 3, 4. JAMES BRADSHAW 501 Ocean Grove Ave. Ambition: Undecided Varsity Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Base¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SUZAN BOYLES 2 Maple Ave. Ambition: Executive Secretary Choir 2; J.V. Cheerleader 3; Field Flockey 4; French Club 4; Librarian 4; Mixed Chorus 2; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. CAROL BRAIN 60 Morin Ave. Ambition: Bookkeeper Business Bees 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RONALD BRANCO 17 Fourth Street Ambition: Undecided A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN BRITLAND Dillon Lane Ambition: Barber Business Bees 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 120 BARBARA BRITTO 25 Harcourt Street Ambition: Nurse Cardinal Staff 4; Field Hockey 4; Latin Club 3, 4; Jr. Classical League 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 3, Pres. 4; Yearbook Staff 4; Student Council. PAUL CABRITA 90 Barneyville Rd. Ambition: Undecided Biology Club 3, 4; Junior Classical League 4; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Librarian 4; Prom Com. 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. DAVID CASTRO 20 Oak Street Ambition: Undecided Audio Visual Aid 2, 3; Business Bees 4; Concert Band 1, 2, 3; Librarian 4; Mixed Chorus 3; Pep Band 3; Prom Com. 3; Track 4. ELIZABETH CHASE 415 Milford Road Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Office Assistants 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. CLAIRE CHENARD 53 Ocean View Ave. Ambition: College A.A. Council 3, 4; Field Hockey 3, 4; Girls’ Leaders 4; Latin Club 4; Prom Com. 3; Librarian 4; Student Council 3; Softball 2, 3, 4; Volleyball 2, 3, 4. 121 BRUCE CHRISTOPHER 83 Maple Ave. Ambition: College Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Varsity Football 1, 2, 3, 4, Capt. 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 2, 4, Treas. 4; Yearbook Staff 4. PETER CIULLIO 53 Norwood Street Ambition: Accountant A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 2; Track 2, 4. BARBARA CIOSEK 246 Gardner’s Neck Road Ambition: Airline Stewardess Drama Club 4; Prom Com. 3; Field Hockey 4. KENNETH CLARK 508 Maple St. Ambition: Service A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RONALD CLARK 508 Maple Street Ambition: Army A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SUSAN COTE 319 Stevens Rd. Ambition: Undecided Business Bees 4; Librarian 4, Pres. 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 122 BRIAN COUSINEAU 136 Pearse Road Ambition: College A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 3; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 1, 3; Base¬ ball 1, 2; Football 1. Seniors JOHN DAVIS 77 Eisenhower Rd. Ambition: College A.A. Council 4; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4 Prom Com. 3; Student Council 3, 4 World Affairs Club 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 4 Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 4 Football 1; Var. Basketball 2, 3, 4. ROBERT DENARDO 45 Madison Road Ambition: College A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Foot¬ ball 1, 2, 3. LOUISE DESRUISSEAUX 79 Bayside Ave. Ambition: Journalist Latin Club 2; Office Assistant 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4. RONALD DESTON 46 Lawrence St. Ambition: Engineer Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 12 ? ELAINE DOODSON 116 Touisset Avenue Ambition: Physical Education Teacher All-District Chorus 3, 4; A.A. Council 4; Girls’ Leaders 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 2, 3; Mixed Ensemble 3; Prom Com. 3; Yearbook 4; Field Hockey 4; Basket¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4; Softball 1, 2, 3, 4; Vol¬ leyball 2, 3, 4; Girls’ Glee Club 4. RICHARD DUMAS 110 Cliffe Avenue Ambition: Chef A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys’ Leaders 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Rifle Club 2, 3; Class Vice-Pres. 3; Football 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain 4. DIANE DUMONT 80 Rangely Street Ambition: Secretary A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Business Bees 4; Li¬ brarian 4; Prom Com. 3; Yearbook Staff 4. DIANNE DUPHINEY 16 Rolfe Avenue Ambition: Teacher Cardinal Staff 4; French Club 4; Jr. Classical League 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 4; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Office Asst. 3; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 4, Sec.; World Affairs Club 4, Treas.; Yearbook 4; Field Hockey 3, 4. Class CHERYL ENOS 612 Warren Avenue Ambition: I.B.M. School Business Bees 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. CLAIRE FARIA 476 Wilbur Avenue Ambition: Undecided Business Bees 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. LOUISE FARIA 119 Shore Avenue Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 4; Prom Committee 3; Year¬ book Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. KAREN FELIX 44 Eisenhower Road Ambition: Beautician Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. ARNZEN FERGUSON 208 Old Warren Road Ambition: College Prom Committee 3; Track 1; Cross Country 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. of 1964 CHARLOTTE FOLEY 2 Third Street Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Li¬ brarian 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Field Hockey 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 125 LESLIE FRANKLIN 10 Riverside Avenue Ambition: Teacher Camera Club 4; Drama Club 4; Latin Club 4; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RICHARD JOHN GAGNON 33 Rangely Street Ambition: Florist Business Bees 4; Prom Committee 3; NANCY FREITAS 241 Yinnicum Avenue Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4, Vice-Pres. 4; Librarian 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. WAYNE GAGNON 71 Ocean View Avenue Ambition: Service A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS GAYNOR Stevens Home for Boys Ambition: College Boys’ Leaders 4; Football 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JUDITH GEE 136 Wyola Road Ambition: Bookkeeper Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Story Tell¬ ing Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. KATHLEEN GRIFFIN 126 Norwood Street Ambition: Business School Business Bees 4; Drama Club 4; Latin Club 2; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 3; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RAYMOND GERRAUGHTY 90 Bark Street Ambition: A Good Musician All-District Chorus 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1; Boys’ Leaders 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Con¬ cert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Band 2, 3, 4; Drama Club 3, 4, Pres. 4; Football 1; Mixed Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Mixed Ensemble 1, 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Rifle Club 1, 2, Pres. 1; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. NANCY GREAVES 379 Market Street Ambition: College Bios Club 4, Treas. 4; Cardinal Staff 4; French Club 2, 3, 4, Pres. 3; Girls’ Leaders 3, 4; J.V. Basketball 2, 3; Latin Club 3, 4; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; World Affairs 3, 4; Yearbook Editor 4; Debating Club 4; Editor La Classicale’’ 2, 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. HELEN HARGRAVES 53 Metacomet Avenue Ambition: Elementary School Teacher Cardinal Staff Asst. Ed. 4; J.V. Cheer¬ leader 3; French Club 4; Girls’ Leaders 4; Latin Club 2; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 1, 2; Yearbook Staff 4; Class Vice-Pres. 4. GEORGE HARRINGTON 43 Cypress Drive Ambition: Sanitation Engineer Cardinal Staff 4; Junior Classical League 3, 4, Treasurer 4; Latin Club 2; Prom Committee 3; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook Staff 4. 127 GARY HOLMES 68 Allard Blvd. Ambition: College Biology 2; Boys’ Leaders 1, 2, 3; Cross Country 1; Football 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Boys’ Varsity Club 2, 3, Treas.; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SANDRA HODGSON 41 Britland Street Ambition: Nurse Bios Club 3, 4, Sec. 4; French Club 2; Office Asst. 2, 3; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3) 4. Seniors DIANA HOOD 1407 Gardner’s Neck Rd. Ambition: Occupational Therapist All-District Chorus 3, 4; Choir -2, 3, 4; Cheerleader J.V. 3, Var. 4; J.V. Basket¬ ball 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 2; Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 4; Yearbook Asst. Ed. 4; Girls’ Leaders 2, 3, 4, Pres. 4; French Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. GILBERT HOWARTH 183 Ocean Grove Ave. Ambition: Air Force Football 1; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. NICHOLAS HRYCAJ 19 Hetherington Dr. Ambition: Industrial Arts Teacher Audio Visual Aids 3; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 128 ROBERT JAMES 35 Seaview Ave. Ambition: College Boys’ Leaders 4; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Jr. Classical League 3; Latin Club 2, 3; Prom Com. 3; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook Staff 4. RAYMOND KARDOSZ 14 Sawyer Ave. Ambi tion: Air Force A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. GERALDINE JOWERS 42 Clancy St. Ambition: Business College Business Bees 4; Choir 2, 3, 4; Drama Club 3, 4; Librarian 4; Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Co-Chairman Prom 3; Story Tell¬ ing Club 4; Yearbook 4; Library Typist 4. ROBERT KAY 84 Oakland Ave. Ambition: Electrical Engineer Cross-Country 4; French Club 3; Prom Committee 1, 3; Student Council 2, 3, Vice-Pres. 4. THOMAS KING 43 Riverview Ave. Ambition: College Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Cross-Country 2; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Rifle Club 1; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. KRISTINE KLATT 128 Maple Ave. Ambition: Office Worker Business Bees 4; Drama Club 4; Librar¬ ian 4; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 4; Yearbook Staff 4. 129 BARBARA KOCHAN 19 Wyola Rd. Ambition: X-Ray Technician Prom Committee 3; French Club-3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. LINDA LAGERSTROM 556 Old Fall River Rd. Ambition: Nurse Yearbook Staff 4; Latin Club 2; J.V. Basketball 2; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SANDRA LEANDRO 114 Bark Street Ambition: X-Ray Technician Choir 2, 3; Drama Club 4; J.V. Cheer¬ leader 2, 3; Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Girls’ Glee Club 4; Story Telling Club 4; Librarian 4; Student Council 2, 3; Prom Com. 3; Field Hockey 4. BRUCE LACHANCE 41 Prospect St. Ambition: Undecided Boys’ Leaders 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Rifle Club; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SUSAN LAWTON 790 Wilbur Ave. Ambition: Executive Secretary Banner Bearer 3; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SUSAN LEGER 134 Bluff Ave. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; National Honor Society 3, 4; Yearbook Staff 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 130 WILFORD LETOURNEAU 497 Milford Rd. Ambition: Undecided Football 1, 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. EARL MARLMBORG 84 Metacomet Ave. Ambition: College Baseball 1; Track 2, 3, 4; J.V. Basket¬ ball 2, 3; Boys’ Leaders 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT MARSH 57 Prairie Ave. Ambition: College Student Council 1, 4; French Club 4 Latin Club 2; World Affairs Club 4 Yearbook Staff 4; Prom Committee 3 Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4. anne McCaffrey 77 Harbor Rd. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4 ; Office Assistant 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. KATHY McCOOMB Ambition: Airline Stewardess Business Bees 4; Librarian 4, Treasurer 4; Office Assistant 3; Pep Squad 3; Girls’ Glee Club 2; Prom Committee 3- 131 PATRICIA McLANE 96 Cedar Cove Rd. Ambition: College Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 4; Cheerleader 3, 4; A.A. Council 4; French Club 4; Girls’ Leaders 2, 3, 4; Latin 2; Yearbook Staff 4; Prom. Com. 3; J.V. Basketball 2; Var. Basketball 3, 4. PATRICIA MEDEIROS 89 Norwood St. Ambition: English Major Banner Bearer 4; Field Hockey 3, 4; French Club 4; Girls’ Leaders 4; J.V. Basketball 3; Latin Club 2; Prom Com. 3; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES MELLO 11 Sidney Ave. Atnbition: College Boys’ Leaders 4; Cross-Country 4; Track 2, 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. MATTHEW MIGA 290 Wilbur Ave. Ambition: Sportscaster Cardinal Staff 4; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Con¬ cert Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 2, 4; Dance Band 2, 3, 4; Pep Band 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 1, 2. Class MARLENE MONIZ 65 Allen Boulevard Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Girls’ Glee Club 1, 4; Librarian 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. HENRI MONTANDON 613 Stevens Rd. Ambition: Coffee House Proprietor, Bhikku A.A. Council 4; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Car¬ dinal Staff Editor 4; Football 1, 2, 3; Jr. Classical League 3, 4; Natl. Honor Society 3, 4; Prom Com. Co- Chairman 3; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook 4. JOAN NIEJADLIK 76 Houlton St. Ambition: College Latin Club 2; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. LYNNE NOLAN 40 Sycamore St. Ambition: Teacher Cardinal Staff 4; Field Hockey 3, 4, Captain 3; French Club 3; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 4; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook 4. ROBERT NOGUEIRA 18 Bayside Ave. Ambition: Undecided Audio Visual Aide 4; Debating Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. of 1964 MAUREEN NOONAN 20 Oakland St. Ambition: Cosmetologist Business Bees, Treas. 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2; Librarian 4; Pep Squad 3; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 133 JO SEPH NUNES 336 Bark St. Ambition: Work Business Bees 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Seniors JOSEPH O’NEIL 94 Ralph Chapman Rd. Ambition: Business School Baseball 1, 2; J.V. Basketball 1, 2; Prom Committee 3; Track 3, 4; Varsity Basketball 3, 4. 4 SANDRA PARENT 420 Ocean Grove Ave. Ambition: Undecided Business Bees 4; Office Assistant 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. FRED PERRON 105 Milford Rd. Ambition: Mechanic Rifle Club 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. EILEEN PETROSSO 214 Wilbur Ave. Ambition: Cosmetologist Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Pep Squad 3; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 134 STEPHEN PICKENS 107 Elm St. Ambition: Undecided A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, Manager 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys ' Leaders 3, 4; Football, Manager 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball, Manager 4. JOHN PLACE 379 Seaview Ave. Ambition: College A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4; French Club 4; Latin Club 2; Track 1, 3, 4; World Affairs Club 3, 4, Pres. 4; Yearbook Staff 4; Debating Club 4, Vice-Pres. STEPHEN PURDY 82 Milne Ave. Ambition: College Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Boys’ Leaders 4; Cross-Country 4; Latin Club 2; Prom Committee 3. PAUL PINEAU 118 Elmwood Ave. Ambition: Marines A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. ALAN PROVOST 71 Norwood St. Ambition: Undecided Baseball 2; Football 2, 3, 4, Tri-Captain 4; Prom Committee 3; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4. ELAINE PYSZ 464 Maple Ave. Ambition: English Major Bios Club 3; Cardinal Staff 4; French Club 4; Junior Classical League 3, 4, Sec. 3; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 4, Secretary; Year¬ book Staff 4; Debating Club 4. 135 RICHARD QUINLAN 2 Bentley St. Ambition: Undecided A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4; Football 1, 2, 3, 4. MAUREEN RAPOZA 186 Bark St. Ambition: Office Work Business Bees 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. EVERETT RODRIQUES 15 Beach St. Ambition: Hotel Manager Boys’ Leaders 4; J.V. Basketball 1, 2; Cardinal Staff 4; Football 2; Prom Com¬ mittee 3; Rifle Club 2; Student Council 3; Basketball 3, 4; C lass Pres. 3. FRANCIS ROGERS 108 Metacomet Ave. Ambition: Undecided Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. Class JUDY ROWE 99 Pond St. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. RICHARD RYAN 307 Maple Ave. Ambition: Undecided Baseball 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Rifle Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JOSEPH SANTOS 2315 G.A.R. Highway Ambition: Physical Education Teacher Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-Captain 4; J.V. Basketball 1; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Foot¬ ball 1, 2, 3, 4, Tri-Captain 4; Prom Committee 3; Varsity Basketball 4. ELAINE SCANLON 65 Nimitz Rd. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Office As¬ sistant 4; Prom Committee 3; Story Tell¬ ing Club 4. JUDITH ANN SILVA 302 Hortonville Rd. Ambition: Nurse Librarian 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Jr. Red Cross League 3; A.A. l, 2, 3, 4. of 1964 GERARD SILVIA 19 Chase St. Ambition: Clerical Typist Baseball 1, 2; J.V. Basketball I, 2; Boys’ Leaders 3; Football 1; Varsity Basketball 3, 4. MICHAEL SIMCOCK 909 Bark St. Ambition: Bookkeeper and Accountant Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Track 2, 4; Cafeteria Duty 3, 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JUDITH SMITH 15 Prairie Ave. Ambition: Nurse Choir 2, 3, 4; Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 2; Librarian 4; Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; Girls’ Glee Club 4. ANSON CHURCHILL SMITH 63 Hortonville Rd. Ambition: Teacher Cardinal ‘Staff 4; Football 1, 3; Jr. Classical League 3, 4; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook Staff 4; Public Speaking 4; Debating Club 4, Pres. ROBERT SMITH 23 Juniper Ave. Ambition: Civil Engineer Prom Committee 3; World Affairs Club 4; Debating Club 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SANDRA SOARES 261 Maple Ave. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. SHARON SOUZA 4 Eastern Ave. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4, Secretary; Librarian 4; Prom Committee 3; Girls’ Glee Club 2. GLENN SPANN 116 Louis St. Ambition; Air Force Cross-Country, Student Manager 4; Li¬ brarian 4; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. NANCY STANKO 364 Bark St. Ambition: Teacher Banner Bearer 3; Cardinal Staff 4; Flag Twirler 4; French Club 4; Latin Club 2, 3; Office Asst. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; World Affairs Club 4; Yearbook 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2. JOANNE SULLIVAN 177 Bark St. Ambition: Math Teacher Choir 4; Drama Club 4; Class Secretary 1; Girls’ Glee Club 4; A.A. 1, 4. SUSAN SULLIVAN 2 Maple St. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Drama Club 4; Librar¬ ian 4; Prom Committee 3; Story Telling Club 4. MARJORY TAYLOR 262 Maple Ave. Ambition: Museum Curator Bios Club 3, 4, Pres. 4; French Club 4; Jr. Classical League 3, 4; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Story Tell¬ ing Club 4; World Affairs Club 4; De¬ bating Club 4. 139 PAULINE THIBAULT 546 Bark St. Ambition: Executive Secretary Banner Bearer 2; Business Bees 4; Car¬ dinal Staff 4; Flag Twirler 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Student Council 4; Year¬ book Staff 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. GERALDINE TRAVASSOS 105 Orlando St. Ambition: Secretarial Work Business Bees 4; Librarian 3; Prom Committee 3; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. MICHAEL TRAVERS 434 Cedar Ave. Ambition: Air Force A.A. Council 4; Baseball 2; Boys’ Lead¬ ers 3, 4; Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 3, 4; Varsity Basketball 3. NATALIE TROY 53 Sherburne St. Ambition: Secretarial College Business Bees 4; Latin Club 2; Librarian 4; Office Assistant 2, 4; Prom Com¬ mittee 3; Yearbook Staff 4. Class PATRICK VARANESE 14 Second St. Ambition: Armed Forces Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Latin Club 2; Prom Committee 3; Rifle Club 2; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. JUDITH VICKERS 11 Riverview Ave. Ambition: Doctor Bios Club 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Latin Club 2; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; World Affairs Club 4, Sec.; Yearbook Staff 4; Class Sec. 3, 4; French Club 4, Pres. EDWARD VIGNEAU 1063 Wood St. Ambition: Mathematician Boys’ Leaders 4; Choir 2, 3; Concert Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Cross-Country 4; French Club 4, Secretary; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4. CAROL WALKER 68 Seaview Ave. Atnbition: Oceanographer Bios Club 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Choir 2, 3, ' 4; Field Hockey 4;- French Club 4; Latin Club 2; Mixed Chorus 2, 3; Prom Com. 3; Yearbook 4; Class Treas. 1. of 1964 DIANNE WARD 104 Puffer Ave. Ambition: Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Prom Com. 3; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. HELEN JEAN WEST 84 Shore Ave. Ambition: Nurse All-District Chorus 4; Banner Bearer 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Choir 3, 4; Latin Club 2; Mixed Chorus 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Story Telling Club 3, 4, Sec. 3, Vice- Pres. 4; Yearbook 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2, 4. DONNA WHEELER 135 Dellawanda Rd. Ambition: Obstetrician A.A. Council 4; J.V. Cheerleader 2; Var¬ sity Cheerleader 3, 4, Head 4; Girls’ Leaders 2, 3, 4, Recording Sec. 4; Jr. Classical League 3; Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 1; Year¬ book 4; Class Treas. 2, 3, 4. Seniors BRUCE WILDE 85 Wilbur Ave. Ambition: College Baseball 1, 3, 4; J.V. Basketball 1, 2; Boys’ Leaders 3, 4; Latin Club 2; Cross- Country 4; Student Council 1, 2, 3, 4, President 4; Varsity Basketball 4. CAROLE WILKINSON 63 Calef Ave. Ambition: Medical Secretary Business Bees 4; Librarian 4; Prom Committee 3; Story Telling Club 3; Yearbook 4; Girls’ Glee Club 2. DIANE YOUNG 450 Old Providence Rd. Ambition: College Bios Club 3, 4; Cardinal Staff 4; Drama Club 4; Jr. Classical League 3, 4, Treas. 3; Latin Club 3; Mixed Chorus 2, 3, 4, Sec. 4; Natl. Honor Soc. 3, 4; Prom Com. 3; Student Council 1; Yearbook 4; Girls’ Glee Club, Sec. 4; Class Sec. 2. DONNA ZEMIER 9 Baker Rd. Ambition: Medical Secretary Business Bees 4; Latin Club 4; Prom Committee 3; Yearbook Staff 4; A.A. 1, 2, 3, 4. 142 Class Officers Donna Wheeler, Treasurer, Judy Vickers, Secretary, James Barnes, President, Helen Hargraves, Vice-President. 143 The day has closed; Tomorrow draws nigh BEST DRESSED: Eileen Petrossa, Bob DeNardo Who’s Who Among the Seniors WITTIEST: Richard Dumas MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED: Henri Montandon, Nancy Greaves WITTIEST: Christine Klatt 145 BEST DRESSED: Eileen Petrosso and Bob DeNardo BEST ALL AROUND Diana Hood and James Barnes Who ' s Who BEST LOOKING: Maureen Noonan and Alan Provost 146 MOST TALENTED: Jean West and Ray Gerraughty MOST MISCHIEVOUS: Bruce Lachance MOST MISCHIEVOUS: Carol Walker MOST SINCERE: Barbara Britto and Brian Cousineau 147 MOST ATHLETIC: Elaine Doodson FRIENDLIEST: Diane Young Who’s Who FRIENDLIEST: Mathew Miga MOST LADYLIKE AND GENTLEMANLY Judith Vickers and Arnzen Furgeson 148 D.A.R. Award Each year the D.A.R. Award is presented to the outstanding senior girl who possesses the qualities of leadership, service, and pa¬ triotism. This year the Daughters of the American Revolution are proud to present this award to Diana Hood. MOST ATHLETIC: Joe Santos Harvard Book Award Each year the Harvard Club of Fall River presents an anthology containing the writings of Harvard graduates. This Harvard Award is given to the outstanding junior boy who has demonstrated the qualities of leadership and scholarship in his school and community. This year’s recip¬ ient is Jerry Johnson. DAUGHTER OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Diana Hood HARVARD BOOK AWARD Gerald Johnson 149 Winter gggMgfgg l!f - 8 f ir- Ov sTX «MU «L w y 150 Spring Advertisements PATRONS AND PATRONESSES MR. AND MRS. JOHN WILDE MR. AND MRS. JAMES HOLMES MR. AND MRS. JAMES GRIFFIN MISS HELEN A. REAGAN MR. AND MRS. AUSTIN J. O ' TOOLE JR. MR. AND MRS. ALBERT CHENARD MR. AND MRS. JOHN W. DOODSON MR. ROBERT E. TSHIRCH MR. AND MRS. MATTHEW F. MIGA MR. AND MRS. DAVID BRITTO MR. AND MRS. GEORGE BLISS MR. AND MRS. ANDREW L. WHEELOCK MR. AND MRS. KENNETH G. CHASE MR. AND MRS. RAYMOND DUMONT MR. AND MRS. JAMES BARNES JR. MR. AND MRS. GORDON HARGRAVES McLANE MR. AND MRS. CHURCHILL SMITH SR. MR. AND MRS. DONALD McCAFFREY MR. AND MRS. EDWARD J. SILVA MR. AND MRS. EUGENE MONTANDON MR. AND MRS. ERNEST WHEELER Advertisements BRIDGE PACKAGE STORE 535 Wilbur Ave. Swansea, Massachusetts RUDY ' S VARIETY 395 Wilbur Ave. Swansea Massachusetts PATIO GARAGE 520 Wilbur Ave. Swansea Massachusetts CUDDLES COMPLIMENTS OF THE CLASS OF 1967 Ronald Deston Lou Desruisseaux Dianne Duphiney 153 REMEMBER? Paul Pineau Beaulieu Twins Robert Nogueira Mike Travers Ray Kardosz 154 Compliments of REISES ' DAIRY, INC Hornbine Road REHOBOTH, MASS. Compliments of SWANSEA CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Locust Street SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of MAYNARD ' S Compliments of FRATES ICE CREAM JEWELRY G.A.R. Highway SOMERSET, MASS. 1094 County Street SOMERSET MASSACHUSETTS School and Class Rings Available Courtesy of LEARY PRESS School Rings $ 8.75 Class Rings $19.95 236 Second St. FALL RIVER, MASS. FIRST STEPS Joe O ' Neil Claire Faria Pat Medeiros Ed Vigneau CUDDLES Marlene Moniz Susan Boyles Barbara Britto Compliments of SILVA ' S SOMERSET DRUG 1072 County St., Somerset, Mass. OS 3-1205 OS 8-8624 Compliments of Compliments of HAYES ' COLONY SHOP A County St. SOMERSET, MASS. FRIEND Compliments of Life Retirement Accident and Health Group Fire and Casualty Homeowners Automobile Marine JOHN E. SCANLON INSURANCE AGENCY 549 G.A.R. Highway — Swansea, Mass. JOHN E. SCANLON Tel. OS 4-4052 156 Nancy Freitas Lime BABIES Compliments of Compliments of THE SPECTATOR PRESS 780 County Street SWANSEA BRIDGEMAN LUMBER CO. MASSACHUSETTS 927 County St. Tel. OS 4-4656 SOMERSET, MASS. Compliments of SOUZA ' S PHOTO SERVICE KEY ' S OIL HEAT CO. 502 South Main Street FALL RIVER 34 Borden St. FALL RIVER, MASS. MASSACHUSETTS Tel. OS 5-7801 Ronald Branco John Place Barbara Ciosek Anne McCaffrey Bruce LaChance 157 FRANK ' S OCEAN GROVE BARBER SHOP PHARMACY Ocean Grove Ave. 265 Ocean Grove Ave. SWANSEA SWANSEA MASSACHUSETTS MASSACHUSETTS GOO GOO Compliments of SWANSEA TEACHER ' S ASSOCIATION SWANSEA, MASS. Kathleen McCoomb Sandra Leandro Donna Zemier David Castro 159 Mike Travers Sue Sullivan FRAZE ' S SPORTING GOODS 9 North Main St. FALL RIVER, MASS. JOSEPH BORGE SONS BAKER TRACTOR Grand Army Highway 190 Grand Army Highway SWANSEA MASSACHUSETTS SWANSEA MASSACHUSETTS ESQUIRE PACKAGE STORE 1220 Wilbur Ave. SWANSEA MASSACHUSETTS AL ' S AUTO 2nd MARINE 312 Wilbur Ave. SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS 160 FIRST STEPS Sandra Parent Wayne Gagnon Patricia McLane Glenn Spann SOMERSET FIVE AND TEN Compliments of ROTHWELL FOUNDRY Milford Road SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of DAYLEY OIL COMPANY County Street SOMERSET, MASS. 161 Compliments of POIRIER BUICK Pleasant Street New England ' s Fastest Growing Buick Dealer FALL RIVER, MASS. TEL. 674-5733 Kenneth Ashton DIAPERS Flowers telephoned anywhere Compliments of REYNOLDS FLORIST 1240 Grand Army Highway SWANSEA, MASS. WEDDINGS FUNERALS HOSPITALS BABIES Tel. OS 2-6287 or OS 8-0719 162 Eileen Petrosso Brain Cousineau Judy Gee Richard Dumas Sandra Hodgson REMEMBER? Alan Provost Donna Wheeler Steve Purdy JfiLr’Aci®? ' Judy Vickers Gerry Jowers Compliments of NADEAU ' S HARDWARE STORE 232 Ocean Grove Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of LAGERSTROM ' S POULTRY FARM 556 Old Fall River Rd. SWANSEA, MASS. FRontier 9-9791 Compliments of Compliments of SUPERIOR CLEANSERS 8 LAUNDERERS ROLAND J. REMY 435 Pleasant St. CONTRACTOR FALL RIVER, MASS. Pick up and delivery in Swansea. SWANSEA, MASS. We Give T.V. Stamps 163 SWANSEA AUTO SALES BOOTIES LIVE MODERN FOR LESS WITH . . . Fall River 155 No. Main St. Telephone OS 5-781 I 164 Linda Lagerstrom Joan Niejadfik Diane Young Bob Marsh TOTS Left to right: Dee Cawley, Treas., Robert English, Vice-Pres., Debbie Oliveira, Sec., Russell Rego, Pres. COMPLIMENTS OF THE CUSS OF 1965 Joe Arsenault Carol Bentley Nancy Bliss Richard Boscombe Betty Chase 165 f Claire Chenard Peter Cuillio James Barnes Back I. to r.: Cheryl Connors, pres., Norma Ashley, vice-pres. Front I. to r.: Donna Cabral, sec., Jeannine Mizher, treas. COMPLIMENTS OF THE CLASS OF 1966 BABY BUNTING Compliments of PELLETIER INSURANCE COMPANY Second Street FALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of MUNRO HARDWARE County Street SOMERSET, MASS. Compliments of LOCKHART INSURANCE AGENCY 1 186 County Street SOMERSET, MASS. Tel. 678-5102 Compliments of Cor. Macomber Ave. and Wilbur Ave. Swansea, Mass. EDWARDS Your local Ford Dealer MOTORS INC. Gerl Travassos Carol Brain Diane Ward Susan Lawton Robert Smith 167 — Compliments of — SWANSEA PLUMBING AND HEATING 16 Louis Street SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS Arnzen Ferguson Rhonda Levine Bruce Christopher Ray Gerraughty BABY RATTLES Compliments of The Furniture Wonderland of the East PLYMOUTH AVE. at RODMAN ST., FALL RIVER Cheryl Enos pH Leslie Franklin Elaine Doodson Wil Letourneau Nancy Greaves 169 OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SATURDAYS UNTIL 6 P.M. TODDLERS Helen Hargraves Carol Walker Robert Kay Francis Rogers - V Everett Rodrigues 170 Compliments of ROGER ' S SPA SOMERSET, MASS. Fountain Service, Patent Medicines, Baby Dept., Magazines, Candy, Tobaccoes, Films Developed. Compliments of PURDY ' S NURSING HOME Gardner ' s Neck Rd. SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of GLADY ' S CLOTHING OCEAN GROVE Clothes for all your needs. Compliments of LEE ' S RIVER ESSO G.A.R. Highway SWANSEA, MASS. Your (humble) Dealer Compliments of Compliments of ADAM ' S BOOK STORE THE HOB NOB FALL RIVER, MASS. G.A.R. Highway SWANSEA, MASS. THAT ' S ME? Compliments of SOKOLL ' S MARKET 136 Wilbur Avenue SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of AL ' S DINER Wilbur Avenue SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of IRV AND AL ' S SUPER SERVICE Grand Army Highway SWANSEA, MASS. R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY Compliments of CONTINENT BAKERY 205 Ocean Grove Avenue SWANSEA, MASSACHUSETTS OS 2-8521 Nancy Stanke Lynne Nolan Matt Miga Elaine Scanlon Maureen Noonan 171 MIDDLE AGES? - ...._ Carole Wilkinson Michael Simcock Joe Santos Jerry Silvia Compliments of MR. AND MRS. FRANK GALLERY Compliments of LITTLE BILL ' S SEAFOOD Corner of Gardner ' s Neck Rd. and Rt. 6. Clams, Quahogs, Little Necks. OCEAN GROVE, MASS. Compliments of LOVETTS VARIETY 84 Hortonville Rd. DADA Compliments of Compliments of SOUTH SWANSEA REYNOLDS PHARMACY 531 Wilbur Ave. SWANSEA, MASS. Cor. Macomber Avenue and Wilbur Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of OCEAN GROVE BARBER SHOP Marjory Taylor Judy Rowe Barbara Kochan TOOTS Karen Felix Diana Hood Gil Howarth Kristine Klatt Compliments of MAE ' S BEAUTY SALON 226 Ocean Grove Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Tel. OS 4-5681 Compliments of HARRY ' S SEAFOOD RESTAURANT 20 Mount Hope Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of Compliments of LAPOINTE ' S DAVE ' S CLEANERS STORE 1255 Gardners Neck Rd. 202 Pinehurst Ave. SWANSEA, MASS. SWANSEA, MASS. Frequent your neighborhood store. DAVE COONS — Prop. Compliments of SWANSEA OIL COMPANY Wilbur Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. LEO P. CYR — Prop. TODDLERS BOB ' S BARBER SHOP 533 Wilbur Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of MONIZ ' S VARIETY STORE 105 Buff inton Street TEL OS 3-6381 • • . v c, ,. ' MOHIZ VAR Err MTENI medicine MAILLOUX ' S RED+WHITE MARKET 334 Ocean Grove Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Compliments of THE SEA BREEZE CAFE 378 Ocean Grove Avenue SWANSEA, MASS. Joanne Sullivan Natalie Troy Souza Richard Ryan 175 beginning 17 a day a night . , ry • . ■ : : .. 4 Tif ■■ ■ ■ ■ • • •• V ' a £ . ••••■ v : apaaffrfi ■ . ..... . • ;V... m w 13SB Re ( 5 ‘ 2 s .V, . — 1964 CHIEF NANCY GREAVES. Editor JAMES BARNES. Asst. Editor JOSEPH CASE HIGH SCHOOL SWANSEA. MASSACHUSETTS VOLUME XXI Three Photographers We moved about within the realms of one little world, separate from all others we will ever know. GIRLS ' SOFTBALL TEAM: Back, L to R: S. Foley, D. Duphiney, D. Hood, C. Chenard, N. Bliss, P. Medeiros. Middle: P. McLane. D. Ferreira. E. Doodson, L. Audet. Bottom: C. Chase, C. Provost, D. Desmond. There was the adventure of learning—about people, about living—the work and the games. MOST POPULAR: Ev Rodrigues and Donna Wheeler STEVE PICKENS ED VIGNEAU and ED BOLDUC ,_ Ifbl 7 I „„ • j s . ' it BOB MARSH Sports There is a simple yet intoxicating joy in the movement and freedom of sports. MIKE TRAVERS BOB DENARDO WIL LETOURNEAU, H. McKINLEY It is a tvorld you can know only by entering—the vaulter is a bird freed from the bounds of earth, the racer a passing wind. EARL MARLMBORG Track JERRY JOHNSON GARY HOLMES Back, L to R: F. Leibel, A. Humphreys, P. Cote, C. Lieter, R. Morgardo, J. Powers, B. Berube, B. Remy, E. Bolduc, B. Bibeau, • t t ' ' ens E. Malmborg, P. McMahon, T. Lawlor, H. McKinley, R. Goff, R. Matton, J. Lafa«ia. Bottom: A. Carrerio, B. Murphy, R. Cantelmo, W. Letourneau, J. Soares, G. Holmes, A. Provost, J. Johnson, J. Mello, B. English, R. Dumas, M. Travers, T, Gaynor. E. Malmborg, E. Vigneau, B. Beaulieu, N. Hrycaj. TOM GAYNOR NICK HRYCAJ RICH DUMAS Back. L to R: Coach McCarthy, B. Christopher, P. Varanese, M. Travis, J. Santos, J. Barnes. Second: Mana¬ ger S. Pickens, J. Bradshaw, J f Kirkman, B. Marsh, G. Willette, J. Davis. Bottom: S. Purdy, S. Winslow, B. DeNardo, J. Eddy, B. Wilde, D. Norman. PAT VARANESE 1964 Narry Champs It was a glorious day when they took the crown . . . for a year had ended—in victory. Baseball was a game not unlike life—you slid in the dirt, you raced home, you hoped and fought for victory. BRUCE WILDE JOHN DAVIS BRUCE CHRISTOPHER JIM BRADSHAW Camelot was a child’s dream come true. Class Day was the be¬ ginning of an end—an end that meant not belonging. Behind us we have hut m e m or i e s . We dream of a future, we face an unfamiliar world . we sing a new song of life, and we let the sun shine upon smil¬ ing and hopeful hearts. This Page Compliments of LORING STUDIOS. CLASS OF 1964 Jluridcitj Evening, une 11, 1964 £i$lit O ' Joel in the BOYD GYMNASIUM PROGRAM Pomp and Circu mstance .Arr. Ployhar Entrance of Graduates (audience seated) BAND INVOCATION .Rev. Allen W. Joslin Rector, Christ Church, Swansea Lord’s Prayer . Malotte Graduates ADDRESS OF WELCOME .James Barnes President, Class of 1964 ADDRESS .Dr. Joseph L. Driscoll Southeastern Massachusetts Technological Institute Halls of Ivy . Knight Graduates SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS— Mrs. Harold Riendeau, Chairman PRESENTATION OF AWARDS Donald F. McCaffrey, Superintendent of Schools ALMA MATER 01d Melody Graduates RECESSIONAL - “Men of Harlech” .Welsh Air Arr. McLin Exit of Graduates (audience seated) I GRADUATES Irving B. Anger Joseph Gene Arsenault Nancy Mae Freitas Richard John Gagnon Kenneth William Ashton, Jr. Wayne Rene Gagnon Julienne Estelle Babin James Barnes Robert P. Beaulieu Ronald Peter Beaulieu Carol Anne Bentley Jane M. Berube Nancy H. Bliss Richard L. Boscombe Suzan K. Boyles James A. Bradshaw Carol A. Brain Ronald Branco John Henry Britland Barbara Anne Britto Paul Manuel Cabrita David P. Castro Elizabeth Ann Chase Claire Louise Chenard Bruce A. Christopher Barbara Ann Ciosek Peter Joseph Ciullo Kenneth Clark Ronald A. Clark Susan Evelyn Cote Brian Paul Cousineau John S. Davis Robert George DeNardo Louise Rena Desruisseaux Ronald Herbert Deston Elaine Werneth Doodson Richard Alan Dumas Diane Marie Dumont Dianne Norma Duphiney Dennis L. Early Cheryl Ann Enos Claire Ruth Faria Louise Carol Faria Karen A. Felix Arnzen Ferguson, Jr. Kenneth Fischer Charlotte Madelyn Foley Leslie Gail Franklin Thomas James Gaynor Judith Marilyn Gee Raymond M. Gerraughty Nancy Louise Greaves Kathleen A. Griffin Helen Marie Hargraves George James Harrington Sandra E. Hodgson Gary Walker Holmes Diana Crossley Hood Gilbert R. Howarth Edward Nicholas Hrycaj Robert Goff James Geraldine Ann Jowers Raymond R. Kardosz Robert E. Kay Thomas J. King, Jr. Kristine Klatt Barbara Pauline Kochan Bruce David Lachance Linda A. Lagerstrom Susan Jean Lawton Sandra Anne Leandro Susan J. Leger Wilfred R. Letourneau Earl Victor Malmborg Robert Alan Marsh Anne Margaret McCaffrey Kathleen McCoomb Patricia J. McLane Patricia Ann Medeiros James Paul Mello Matthew Francis Miga Marlene Susan Moniz Henri Eugene Montandon Joan Niejadlik Robert Charles Nogueira Lynne Patricia Nolan Maureen Theresa Noonan Joseph R. Nunes Joseph Francis O ' Neil, Jr. Sandra Jean Parent Frederick Perron Eileen Rita Petrosso Stephen Jackson Pickens Paul Laurent Pineau John Warren Place III Alan D. Provost Stephen R. Purdy Elaine Catherine Pysz Richard G. Quinlan Maureen Ann Rapoza Everett Keith Rodrigues Francis John Rogers Judith Ann Rowe Richard James Ryan Joseph Dennis Santos Elaine Marie Scanlon Judith Ann Silva Gerard Silvia Michael G. Simcock Anson Churchill Smith Judith Ann Smith Robert Sherwood Smith Sandra Louise Soares Sharon Ruth Souza Glenn Phenix Spann Nancy Anne Stanko Joanne F. Sullivan Marjory Ruth Taylor Pauline C. Thibault Geraldine Marg. Travassos Michael Mark Travers Natalie Ann Troy Patrick Thomas Varanese Judith Anne Vickers Edward J. Vigneau Carol Jean Walker Dianne Lee Ward Helen Jean West Donna Kathleen Wheeler Bruce Gordon Wilde Carole Elizabeth Wilkinson Diane Lyn Young Donna Marie Zemeir ! § § § § $ § § § § § § § l CLASS OFFICERS President . James Barnes Vice-President.Helen M. Hargraves Secretary . Judith A. Vickers Treasurer . Donna K. Wheeler Class Colors Class Flower Maroon and Gold American Beauty Rose Class Advisor Director of Music Paul F. Monahan H. James LaFlame ALMA MATER Our strong bond can ne’er be broken Form’d in dear Case High. Far surpassing wealth unspoken Seal’d by friendship’s tie. Chorus: Alma Mater - Alma Mater, Deep graven on each heart, Ode Victorious, we go singing As from these halls we depart. Mem’ry’s leaflets close shall twine Around our hearts for aye, And waft us back o’er life’s broad track To pleasures of past day. High School life at best is passing Gliding swiftly by; Then let us pledge in word and deed Our love for dear Case High.


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Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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1962

Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Case High School - Chief Yearbook (Swansea, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
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.