Chester High School - Annual Yearbook (Chester, PA)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 248
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1967 volume:
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ANNUAL Presented by the Senior Class. Chester High School Chester. Pennsylvania COME ALIVE BE VITAL DURING THESE YOUR BEST YEARS ACHIEVE! CONTENTS INTRODUCTION 4 ADMINISTRATION AND GUIDANCE 16 FACULTY AND CURRICULUM 26 ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES 64 ATHLETICS 92 UNDERCLASSMEN 116 GRADUATES 134 PATRONS 230 Zhe ideal school is the iiieal community, an embryonic democracy. Zhe chilli is not sent to school to acquire knowledge only, but to learn to live. Education is not so much preparation for life as it is real living. J. IV. Parker Jf J did not work, these worlds would perish . . . Khagavad-Qita n P - r (o- )( l-2) • • r,Pr ■ ■ (n-r l) Plow. flow. flow, the current of life is ever onward. Kobodaishi ADMINISTRATION AND GUIDANCE CHESTER CITY SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION CHESTER CITY SCHOOL HOARD-STANDING: Jacob Sapovits. Lyons; Thomas J. Lyons. Secretary; Clarence H. Roberts. President, Solicitor; Anthony Przedzial; Francis G. Pilcggi; Joseph E. Lastowka; John J. Vaul. PHD.. Superintendent of Schools; Edward A Parry. Ad- Donald F. Tonge; Sarah P. HolcrofU Assistant Superintendent, Sccon- dison H. Showalter. Vice-president and William N Warwick, not pre- dary Schools; Russell A. Jackson. Assistant Superintendent, Elementary Schools. SEATED: David G. Roberts; Ellen R. Hook. Secretary to Mr. Till the seats of justiee with good men. not so absolute in goodness as to forget what human frailty is. Sir Zhomas Zaltourd WILLIAM D. GRAYSON ADVISORY ASSISTANT TO THE SUPERINTENDENT 18 JOHN J. VAUL, PHD SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS THOMAS J LYONS SECRETARY TO THE SCHOOL BOARD SARAH P HOLCROFT ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT. SECONDARY SCHOOLS RUSSELL A. JACKSON ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT. ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Zb my mind, the best and most faultless character is his who is as ready to pardon the rest of mank ind, as though he daily transgressed himself and at the same time as cautious to avoid a fault as if he never forgave one. Pliny the founger ADMINISTRATORS OF CHESTER HIGH SCHOOL 20 MISS REGINA G. HYNES Principal GUIDANCE PERSONNEL Human beings and human societies are not structures that are built or machines that are forged. Zhey are plants that grow and must be tended as such. Winston Churchill MR ROBERT ZIMMERMAN Vocational Supervisor MR. JOHN YUDOVICH Sophomore Class Counselor MRS. CHRISTINE SWIERBLEWSKI Senior Class Counselor 22 MRS EVANGELINE JONES Guidance Department Head and Senior Class Counselor MEDICAL . . . CAFETERIA OFFICE PERSONNEL DOLORES PERKINS Secretary to the Principal ANNE BUCKLEY Secretary to the Principal THERESA BODEN Secretary in the Main Office MARGARET ROBINSON Secretary in the Main Office SHIRLEY FRANKLIN Secretary to the Vice-Principals Zhe task of education is a matter of running order through chaos, direction through freedom, unity through multiplicity. Henry Adams 24 r%% ' • s .' iW 3: %' ALICE JEFFERIS Secretary in the Vocational Office NATALIE DAVIS. R.D.H Dental Hygienist JOHN KLOPP. M D. Medical Director of Chester Schools FLORENCE HAGAR. R.N. Chester High School Nurse LEWIS ENGLISH. O.D.. Assistant Medical Director, and JOYCE BROWN, R.N. Chester High School Nurse Assistant Medical Director 25 FACULTY AND CURRICULUM One gives expression to ideas, emotions, beliefs, desires, and purposes by drawing, building, planning, inventing, and dramatizing, as well as by speaking or writing. Jriedrich droebel DEDICATION He who can make pleasant what it is desired that children shall do will have deserved the great secret of education. Claude Jleury Chester High School students claim that their most popular problem solver is none other than Guidance Counselor, Mr. John Udovich. Mr. Udovich-an outstanding high school and college athlete-held records in shot-put, swam in AAU competi- tion and received twenty five football scholarships in- cluding one to Notre Dame. A Chesterite, he was graduated from Pennsylvania Military College with a Bachelor of Science Degree and from Villanova University with a Masters Degree in Guidance. During his nine years at Chester High School, Mr. Udovich taught social studies and served as coach for the High School football team. As the father of seven children. Mr. Udovich has a keen insight into the problems of youth. His office-a busy place—rings with the refrain, “Can you help me, Mr. “UT JOHN P UDOVICH A Chester High PICCO Scholarship winner. Miss Hel- en Beldecos was graduated from Drexel Institute of Technology with a Bachelor of Science Degree and from the University of Pennsylvania with a Master of Science Degree. After nine years as Business Education teacher. Miss Beldecos,—whose Hellinistic intelligence, amiability and loyalty have long been her trademarks in Chester High School—divides her time among advising Cheerleaders, collaborating with Mr. Robert Prosser in writing a text- book entitled Key Punch Practice, measuring caps and gowns, and advising the Business staff for the WELCOME. Living to the fullest her role as teacher. Miss Beldecos has become a familiar figure-playing in Faculty basket- ball games, acting as cheerleader at Faculty basketball games, directing Class Day programs, and sponsoring trips for Publication staff-Hurrah! for this busy teacher who always has time to help, in any capacity, the students of Chester High School. HELEN J BELDECOS A little bit of Ireland with an up-state accent has sprinkled Chester High School for the past ten years . . . Affectionately referred to as the “Gray Fox,” Mr. Raymond A. Wayne has won wide favor among both student body and faculty. After graduation from Millersville State Teachers College, Mr. Wayne worked in industry in the coal mining region of Pennsylvania. Mr. Wayne commutes on weekends to his home in Girardville where his wife is a Business Education teacher. Despite his diminutive size he rules the Men’s facul- ty room—including his own private chair—under the auspicious care of Mr. John Klotz. Besides his mathematical aptitude. Mr. Wayne takes pride in his ability to fix anything. He is an avid sports enthusiast with particular interest in basketball and baseball. A sprightly individual, he has brightened the halls of Chester High School with his Irish wit and good hu- mor. RAYMOND A WAYNE HANNAH F. CASSELL With the wisdom of Solomon triggered by a profound interest in her subject matter. Miss Hannah Cassell through many years of teaching has endeavored to bring students to understand their American heritage. Miss Cassell received both her Bachelor and Master of Arts Degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. She has served as Chairman of the Lecture Committee for the Delaware County Historical Society, has been active in both Middle Atlantic States Historical Association and the Swedish American Historical Society, and in conjunc- tion with the SE District Council for Social Studies, has attended the National Convention in Philadelphia for the National Council for Social Studies. Miss Cassell has sponsored many student trips to Mock Conventions and Model Houses of Representatives, and World Affairs Council. As former Advisor of the High School History Club. Miss Cassell has awakened student realization of the important part Chester played in forging the course of American History. Miss Cassell has been Social Studies Department Head for fifteen years. Under her staunch exterior is a parental dedication and devo- tion which encourages students to proudly take their places in society as the new leaders of America. 29 30 ENGLISH J have ever gained the most profit. and the most pleasure also from the books which have made me think the most. ff. C. and A. IV. Mare -ACULTY ALBERT J BUONO MARIA ATKINS CHARLES L. BRIDY GRACIE COTTRELL GRACE A. ELRICK CHARLES FITZGERALD (Ini.) DOROTHY F. GEFVERT ROBERT G. GILFILLAN EDITH GODICK ROBERT J. KEFALAS KATHERINE E. KESTNER HARRY MUCH MARY C. MULDOON FREDERICK J. S. NICHOLS ANN M. NOLAN CLARA P. RILEY R. BROOK TOMLINSON EDNA J. WIGGINS 31 SOCIAL STUDIES Jt is the true office of history to represent the events themselves together with the counsels and to leave the observations and conclusions thereupon to the liberty and faculty of every man s judgment. Jr ancis Macon FACULTY HANNAH F. CASSELL HELEN P. AMBROGI CHARLES BLOCKSIDGE JANICE V. BOSTICK ALFRED D. BUONO MARY C DACEY MARIE A. HOGAN ALBERT P. KAWAL JACK KLOTZ HERMAN MAILMAN W. HENRY F. PIERSON ANDREA M. POLILLI W. GEORGE REIGNER FRANK E. SELETZ SANDRA E. SKWIRUT WILLIAM T. WIGGINS 33 HANNAH F. CASSELL. Department Head HAROLD V HARTMAN Department Head FACULTY HAROLD V. HARTMAN HERMAN MAILMAN HARRIET O. McKINNEY MILDRED G. MASSINO MARGARET K. MULDOON JANE E. PENMAN 34 35 MATHEMATICS . . . the wise man looks into space. amt does not regard the small as too little, nor the great as too big. for he knows that there is no limit to dimensions. Cao- Zse SCIENCE Equipped with his five senses, man explains the universe around him and rails the adventure Science: Sdwin .Hubble FACULTY ROBERT D. SMITH ERNESTINE D. ALDRIDGE ISABELLE B. CUNNINGHAM ALOYSIUS J. FLYNN RUTH KOTZEN PAULINE LERMAN MARTHA L. LERMAN THOMAS J. MASTICOLA ISAIAH WOOTSON ROGER J. GRIEST ROGER J. GRIEST, Audio-Visual Director ROBERT D. SMITH. Department Head 38 ROBERT W. PROSSER. Department Head COMMERCIAL He studious in your profession, and you will be learned. Me industrious and frugal, and you will be rieh. benjamin franklin FACULTY ROBERT W. PROSSER ALDA M. ADAMS EDITH E. BARTHA HELEN M. BARTHA HELEN J. BELDECOS JOHN E. CARR DELORES DOUGLAS MARGIE N. HALL DAVID W. HUGHES 1 EILEEN KELLEY AMBER S. KNOX ROBERT M. LOMAX JANET A. MILLER 40 LAURA B. PALMER FACULTY C. ROBERT ZIMMERMAN. Supervisor of Vocational Trade and Industrial Education RAYMOND H. BRANDT, Coordinator. Vocational Ed- ucation WILLIAM E. BROWN HARRY J. CHARLTON OLIVER K. CLENDENNING HENRY E. ELENIEWSKI BLAIR A. GANOE WILLIAM H. HALE JOSEPH HRABAK THOMAS J. KUSHMIDER dwight r. McGinnis JAMES J. MERVIN THOMAS H. PHILLIPS PRESTON B. PIERCE. JR. ALBERTA PRINCE SANDY QUATTRO FORREST L. REDDING JOHN L. RIDDELL ROSSMAN D. THOMPSON JAMES D. VERMEYCHUK LUTHER WILLIAMS SAMUEL W. YARNALL GEORGE S. ZACHAI 44 VOCATIONS Jt is easy to become identified with one’s vocational function. When one does, he has no higher value than his services will bring on the market. One needs, first of all. to be a man. Anonymous 45 46 HOME ECONOMICS the bright little needle— the swift flying needle, the needle directed by beauty and art Samuel Woodworth the discovery of a new dish does more for the happiness of a man than the discovery of a star. Rrillat-Savarin ART Zhe thing thou lovest. though the body starve. Who works for glory misses oft the goal: Who works for money coins his very soul Work for the work's sake. then. and it may be Zhat these things shall be milled unto thee. Kenyon Cote MISS DOROTHY RIGGS An Instructor 49 MUSIC Sducation in Music is most sovereign, because, more than anything else, rythm and harmony find their way into the secret places of the world. Plato ANITA L. COLEMAN, Music Instructor CIVIL DEFENSE FACULTY ROBERT B. FORWOOD ROGER J. GRIEST Me is safe from danger who is on guard even when safe. Pubililius Syrus l JTyi f L J.if 1« V HUMANITIES FACULTY ALBERT J. BUONO ANITA L. COLEMAN CLAIRE V. FITZPATRICK ANLOYSIUS J. FLYNN MARIE A. HOGAN LILLIAN S. MOLLOY ROBERT D. SMITH dor we are lovers of the beautiful, simple in our tasks, and we cultivate the mind without loss of manliness. Zhueydides DRIVER EDUCATION Quid quisque vitet, nunquam homini satis Cautum est in horas— who can hope to be safe? who sufficiently cautious? (juard himself as he may. every moment's an ambush. Horace ROBERT J. GRAINGER. Driver Education Instructor SPECIAL EDUCATION Zhe true purpose of education is to cherish and unfold the seed of immortality already sown within us, to develop to their fullest eietent. the capacities of every kind with which the Qod who made us has endowed us. Anna fameson FACULTY: VERA B KEITH. RODGER A HAYDEN. ANNA T. CLARK 55 FACULTY VIRGINIA M. JAKOB DIANA SARNOCINSKI LEONA M. SEALEY MARGIE M. TYLER EARL E. BLAZYNSKI HAROLD O. BOYER JESSE H. BREWSTER ROBERT B. FORWOOD CHARLES HEWLINGS 56 PHYSICAL EDUCATION Zhe health of the people is really the foundation upon which all their happiness and all their powers as a state depend. benjamin Disraeli 57 LIBRARY J go into my library and all history rolls before me. J breathe the morning air of the world while the scent of eden's roses yet lingers in it... J see the pyramids buildingJ hear the shoutings of the armies of Alexander ... J sit as in a theatre—the stage is time, the play is the play of the world. Alexander Smith only people CAN READ LIBRARY BOOKi! STUDENT AIDS DOROTHY APPEL ROSALIND BIRNBAUM GRACE BOWEN MARIE CICHANOWSKY LOUISE CORTESINI ELLEN COLLINS BEVERLY DISNEY JANICE FORD JOHN GEDIEK ROBIN GIBSON THEODORA JORDAN PHYLLIS KRAUS CAIRIE LATIMER JANET LLOYD MARION MOORE FLOYD MURRAY NANCY SHAFFER LINDA SHAFFER CAROL SMITH RITA STEMPIN MICHAEL WETHERILL SHARON YURKASITIS 59 AMONG THE FACULTY Our chief want in life is somebody who shall make us do what we can. Kalph Waldo Emerson Robert Herrick THE FACULTY 63 ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES Education is a natural process of growth through activity. Zhe child is an individual organism, but also an organic member of the social whole. Jt grows by interaction with the physical and by active participation with the social environment. driedrich Jroebel BUSINESS STAFF—SITTING: Edith Flanagan; Jilda Adams: Ann Mane Borgese; Adele Muscella; Bonnie McMaster: Oksanna Wolowee; Lynne Benningfield; Christine Wojick. STAS DING: Amber S. Knox Faculty Adviser; Alice Moore; Jacquelyn Bullock. ANNUAL Ask how to live? Write, write, write anything: the world's a fine believing world, write news' John Jletcher CO-BUSINESS MANAGERS Karen Kcstner and Adele Muscella. ART STAFF Joann Moseley; Mary Ann Johnson; Mary Lou Pace. LAYOUT STAFF Dean Newhouse; Nancy Barlow; Sandy Garrett; Emery Carson: James Caulk. PATRON U1 M WORTH LKSS t $2100 - NO A 2 l00-$ 00-$3 ISJ 400- | 101 TOO- ' 0 . COPY STAFF-Rosemary Gibbs. Copy Editor; Louise Cortesini; Cynthia Parasink; Barbara Conway; Sue Foster. EDWARD MANSKY, Layout Editor WILLIAM BURLAND. Editor-in-Chief CYNTHIA TOLLEN AND JOHN VAUL. writers of the Activities and Achievements.” 67 EDITORIAL BOARD-Rita Stcmpin. Features; Larry Dworkin. Sports Editor; Arthur Fuller. News Editor; Maria V. Atkins. Editorial Advisor; Cynthia Paracink. Features; Anna Staczyk. Features Editor; Helen J. Beldecos, Business Advisor; Paul Wilson. Editor-in-Chief. SPORTS AND FEATURES-Cathy Pearsall; Matilda Fowler; Fran Downey; Larry Dworkin; Janie Calhoun; Linda Nowell; Anna Melnyk. 68 WELCOME NEWS AND FEATURES-Steffie Hyczka: Mane Atkins. Advisor; Stanley K cuiban; Steele; Rita Stempin; Sylvia West; Bonita Tyler; Rosemary Gibbs; Arthur Fuller. Kiki Sik tns Newspapers are the sehoolmasters of the common people. Zhat endless book, the Newspaper is our national glory. Henry IV. Heecher TYPISTS-Patricia Owens; Carol Prorock; Linda White; Helen Beldc- cos. Faculty Advisor; Bonita Tyler; Pauline Uskievich. not pictured. ART STAFF-Howard Crews; Marie Atkins. Faculty Advisor; Robert Hollis; Helen Beldecos, Faculty Advisor. 69 OFFICERS AND FACULTY ADVISERS CYNTHIA TOLLEN. President PAT BARNARD, Vice President ANITA BURNS, Recording Secretary PAULINE USKIEVICH. Corresponding Secretary ANNE wiLSON. Treasurer ANDREA M POLILLI. Faculty Adviser ROBERT A. HAYDEN. Faculty Advisor STUDENT COUNCIL Zhe only orthodox object of the institution of government is to secure the greatest degree of happiness possible to the general mass of those associated under it. 71 r'hornas jeffcrson COUNCIL MEMBERS TALBERT SPENCE HELENE BRODY DALE ROSENBERG KATHY STEELE MARSHA TAYLOR ELAINE CARTER PHYLLIS JOHNSON JAMES GAMBLE PAULETTE GRAYSON NANCY NOVAK SALLY PEPPER LINDA IRWIN ELAINE HAUSE SUE FOSTER MARY McCABE HOWELL CHETTY 71 OFFICERS—John Vaul, President; William Burland. Treasurer; Randy Kresge. Vice-President; Larry Blazynski. Secretary. EARL E. BLAZYNSKI. Faculty Adviser. MEMBERS-Dean Ncwhouse; Larry Blazynski; William Burland; Batton; Randy Kresge; Mike Zackorchcmny; Henry Groton; Mike George Baron; Lindsley Wright; Glenn Brownhill; Donald Keeth; Bar- Daniels; Anthony Murray, ry Boehmer; Joe Todd; William Costello; Joe Zackorchcmny; James KEY CLUB Zhere is a destiny that makes us brothers,■ fione goes his way alone-. MRS FRANCES P DONAHOO. RECIPIENT OF THE 1967 AN- NUAL SERVICE AWARD, a yearly presentation made by the Chester Kiwanis Club, sponsors of the Chester High School Key Club. Ml MBI RS John Vaul: John Yarn®; Roscoc Green. Romaine Phillip : Jan Summer; Lar- r I)workin; Mike Peterson; Allyn J l that we send into the lives of others Comes baek into our own. Sdwin Markham INTERACT PICCO RED FEATHER Serve and thou shall be served. Jt you love ami serve men. you cannot, by any biding or stratagem. escape the remuneration. Kalph Waldo Emerson INTERACT CLUB MEMBERS-STANDING: Arthur Sapovits; Ed- ward Mansky. Earle Hales: Mr. William Schroat, Faculty Adviser: Thom- as Lundgren; Ronald Porter; David Banks; Robert Hylwiak: Edward Pollard. SITTING: William Clark; David Ott, Vice-President; Arthur Fuller. President: Aiden Brady. Secretary: Robert Bramble. Treasurer. 74 PICCO MEMBERS-John Vaul; Cindy Tollen; Robert Grainger. Faculty Adviser. Joseph Todd; Allyn Hayworth; Sara Lee Pepper; Bill Gatens; Carol Smith; Mama Coleman. RED FEATHER MEMBERS—S7V A7) N(; Richard Evans; James Gamble; Barry Boehmer; Joseph Zakorchcmny; Jan Summers; William Costello; William Burland; John Vaul; Larry Dworkin. SITTING: George Baron; William Tam1; Mr. William Slezak. Faculty Adviser; Michal Zakorchcmny. 75 RED CROSS COUNCIL MONITORS FIRE SQUAD Zhis is our special duty, that if anyone specially needs our help. we should give hint such help to the utmost of our powers. Cicero RED CROSS OFFICERS Rhona Rennett; Linda Petit dc Mange; Edith Church; Ruth Kotzcn. Faculty Adviser; Helene Brody; Pauline Uskevitch: Cynthia Parasink; Mary McClosky. STUDENT MONITORS OF CHESTER HIGH FIRE SQUAD MEMBERS-Howard Wilson; Raymond Diggins; Rodger J. Griest, Faculty Adviser; John Haldez; Albert Arena. 77 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS FUTURE NURSES JUNIOR HISTORIANS Only by working to promote the health and well-being of others can we expect to secure and to protect our own well-beings— before building a house, it is wise to make a careful plan for it. Zhis is also true—in building—even a nation. Arnold and Philippi INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB-S7VIND1NG: Arthur Fuller: Pal Barnard: Deborah Denny: Rosemary Gibbs; Barbara Conway; Mary Lou Jones; Evelyn Crew; Carol Smith. SITTING: Kathy Banks; Sue Forster. 78 MEMBERS OF THE FUTURES NURSES CLUK-STAN DING: Brenda Futrell: Lolly Rogers; Betty Sailor; Mary Beckett; Gwendolyn Mathis; Kathryn Stewart; Beatrice Grier; Deborah Box; Charlotte Chambers; Geneva Mitchell; Evangeline Gray. SITTING: Armenta Wilson; Emma Morris; Mary Womack; Kathleen Thomas; Glendale Legette; Pauline Lerman. Faculty Adviser. MEMBERS OF THE JUNIOR HISTORIANS—Linda Sim- Fitchck; Elaine Carter; Stacey Whitley; Elsie Caroll; Richard Novak; mons; Bernadette Morgan; Charles White; Janice Bostick. Faculty Ad- Alfred Zimmerman, viscr; Josephine Hood; Gillis Cropper. Larry Cohen; SITTING: Kathy 79 Zhe heart to conceive, the understanding to direct, or the hand to execute. ‘Junius ART AND POSTER CLUB ART CLUB-STAN DING: Henry Brown. Vice-President; Edward Teofilak; Dale Rosenberg; Barry Tenney. President; Helene Brody; Roy Downs; Pauline Cannon; James Cobb. SITTING: Elizabeth Draine; Robert Smily; Janice Reed; Vickie Jackson; Loretta McHenry; Judy Webster, Secretary. 80 HONOR SOCIETY HONOR SOCIETY MEMBERS-STANDING: Leon Lanier; Lynne Bcnmngfield; Rita Stempin; Thomas Lundgren; Patricia Naus; Deborah Howett; Karen Kestner; John Vaul; Joan Tillery. SITTING: Harold V. Hartman. Faculty Adviser; Cynthia Parasink; Maijoric Freeman; Barbara Kinlaw. Zo do easily what is difficult for others is the mark of talent. Amiel 81 DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION CLUBS OF AMERICA Jf you haoe great talents, industry will improve them: if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their defieieneies Sir joshua Reynolds DECA MEMBERS—FIRST ROW: Gregory Johnson. Vice-President: Virginia Gomez, Treasurer: Deborah Fleming. Secretary: Gregory Kal- ien. President. SECOND ROW Lorraine Lunness: Debbie Appel. Pa- tricia Blisard: Patricia Cox: Faye Domack; Manine Johnson; Robert M. Lomax. Faculty Advisor. THIRD ROW Gregory Wilson; Reginald Henry; Viraginia Hignutt; Susan Wilson: Betty Chambers; Claudia Purnslcy; Norman Zoumas; John Reed. FOURTH ROW: Barry Cle- ments; David Erbc; Robert Draper; James MacCall; Howard Alexander: Hart Grasty. VICA MEMBERS-SITTING: Mark Lobach. President; Richard Web- ties Chairman; Alfred Lejman. Reporter: Lewis Phillips, Parlia ster. Vice President; David Schaen. Secretary. STANDING: Leon Lan- mentarian. ier. Treasurer: John L. Ridell, Faculty Adviser; James J Mervin. Activi- VOCATIONAL INDUSTRIAL CLUBS OF AMERICA Zeehnical education is the exaltation of manual labour, the bringing of manual labour up to the highest excellence of which it is susceptible. W. S. Gladstone GUEST SPEAKER at the VICA In- THE VICA COUPLE OF THE INAUGU- augural Ball-Dr. and Mrs. Theodore RAL BALL-Valerie Brodie and Bruce Cote of Temple University Brown 83 SCOTTS HI-Q-Maiic A. Hogan. Faculty Adviser; Larry Blazynski; Earl Hales; William Gatens; Cynthia Parasink. Each honest calling, each walk of life, has its own elite, its own aristocracy based on emllence of performance. fames Bryant Conant HI-Q 84 ITS ACADEMIC-Robert Bradley. KYW-TV Moderator; Mane Hogan. Faculty Adviser; Larry Blazyn- ski; Earle Hales; William Gattcns. Jt is good to rub and polish I ' against that of others. Montaigne IT’S ACADEMIC 85 CLAIRE V. FITZPATRICK. Faculty Director DANCE BAND AND CHORUS Jor music (which is earnest of a heaven, Seeing we know emotions strange by it. JVct else to be revealed) is like a voice. A low voice calling -fancy, as a friend. Zo the green woods in the gay summertime. 86 Robert Drowning BAND We are the music-makers. And we are the dreamers of dreams. Wandering by lone sea-breakers. And sitting by desolate streams: World-losers and world-forsakers Of whom the pale moon gleams -. ]fet we are the movers and shakers Of the world forever, it seems. Arthur O’Shaughnessy CLAIRE V. FITZPATRICK Faculty Band Director COLOR GUARD AND MAJORETTES And the flags were all a-flutter. And the bells were all a-chime. Henry flewbolt CHEERLEADERS Kosy-complexion d Health thy steps attends. J nd exercise thy lasting youth defends. ‘John (Jay VARSITY SWAIN. JANICE-Captain HITTNER. LINDA-Co-Captain BEAN. DIANE BURNS. ANITA HOWETT. DEBBIE KASSAB. CORINE McHENRY. DEBBIE PEPPER. SARALEE PETIT DE MANGE, LINDA ROSENBERG, DALE TOLLEN. CINDY WILSON. ANNE JUNIOR VARSITY BECKETT. JOYCE CLAYTON. DEBBIE COLEMAN. MARNA DUDLEY. DIANNA GEORGE. PAULETTE McAFEE KATHY McCABE. MARY MOORE. LINDA PARKER. MELODY PARKER. ROBIN TERRY. JANIS VANIER. CAROL 95 Varsity Team-FRONT ROW Frank Smith; Marshall Blalock; Calvin Laws; Dan Sykes; Curtis Warren. Captain; Tom McClintock; Jim Borcky; Tom Worrilow; Jim Walls. MIDDLE ROW: Fred Cannon. Manager; Paul Lane; Larry Stephenson; Vernon Rothwell; William Thomas; William Morris; David Wise; Earl Perrigcn; Art Layton; Ken Pulley; Gary Bryan'; William Rounds. Manager. TOP ROW: George Shelton; Ron Bantum; David Northern; Parris McGhee; Norman Jordan; Roy Downes; Robert Harris; Vincent Doward; John Sauk; Vernon Cottman. WILLIAM L. SCHROAT, Assistant Coach 96 ALBERT P. KAWAL. Junior Varsity Coach WILLIAM T WIGGINS. Coach FOOTBALL Jh all time of our distress. And in our triumphs too. Zhe game is more than the player of the game. And the ship is more than the crew! Kudyard Kipling RODGER A HAYDEN. Varsity Coach 97 SCHEDULE Sept. 16-Harriton Sept. 24-Penncrest Oct. 1-Haverford Oct. 8— Mcthacton Oct. 15—Marple Newtown Oct. 22-Springfield Oct. 29-Ridley Nov. 5—Upper Darby Nov. 12-Conestoga Nov 24-Saint James CROSS COUNTRY Jor the race is run by one and one. and never by two and two. Kipling TEAM—Sitting: Charles Lawrence; Thomas Hess; Anthony Jones; Francis Downey; Albert Pleasant. Kneeling: Brookcr Hall; Garry Johnson; Genaro Elam; Henry LeGette; Walter Garnet; Douglas Scott. 1966 SEASON Opponent CHS 29-Penncrest CHS 26-Marple Newt. CHS 29—Conestoga CHS 18-Upper Darbv CHS 21—Ridley Twp CHS 31-Springfield CHS 21 Haverford CHS 21-Harriton Standing: Alfred Kirkland. Manager SOCCER Zhis they all with joyful mind Hear through life like a torch in flame. And falling, fling to the host behind— Play up! Play up! and play the game!” Henry fiewbolt Front row: Mark Reed. Manager: Hank Groton: Jesse Brewster. Coach; James Batton; Dave Schaen; Joe Teofilak; Nick Rapagnam: Buzz Vaul: Al Arena. Ron Thomas; Romeo D aurizio; Mel Cobb: Harry Crawford. Back row: James Masticola. Assistant Coach; Earl Hales; Steve Jones; Tony Crews; Henry Howard; Romainc Phillips: Zigmund Sendek: Al Naylor; Bruce Collins; Aiden Brady; Lcn Quarles; Ervin Chambers; Steve Kokos; Rob Okrcnlik. 1966 SEASON Opponent CHS I—Brandywine CHS 0—Harrilon CHS 1—Newark 3 CHS 0—Penncrest CHS I— Haverford CHS 0-Sun Valley 4 CHS 0-Marple Newt. 0 CHS 2-Springfield 6 CHS I—Ridley Twp. CHS 0-Upper Darby I CHS I—Conestoga BASKETBALL Zhe time you won your town the race. We chaired you through the market place,■ Man ami boy stood cheering by. And home we brought you shoulder high. J. S. Jiausman “BYRD” “HARRY SHAM “LOOTY” JUNIOR VARSITY TEAM-Brion Harris; Earl Wil- liams; Richard Novak; Harold “Dutch” Boyer. Junior Varsity Coach; Leonard Stanford; Frank Stcmpkin; Artcmas Harris; Bruce Collins. Manager; Lamont Giv- ens; Eugene Bivens; John Walker; Howard Dennis; James Bentley; Truitt Gillette; George Shelton. 40 VARSITY TEAM-Gustav Margctich; Steven Powell: Theodore Lawson: Donald Leake: Harry McLaughlin: Douglas Scott; Thomas Parker: Winfield Hunt; Edward Swain; Paul Williams: Raymond McLaughlin. Varsity Coach; Kenneth Shamberger. HAROLD O. BOYER, Junior Varsity Coach RAYMOND J. McLAUGHLIN, Varsity Coach 105 EASTERN REGIONAL CHAMPIONS CHESTER Schedule OPPONENT 43 St James 41 82 Springfield 53 80 Ridley 63 66 Marple Newtown 23 59 Abington 42 58 Ridley 52 56 Chichester 50 77 St James 39 77 Upper Darby 62 68 Pen nc rest 50 71 Hamton 27 67 Conestoga 40 59 Ridley 38 25 Springfield 18 69 Havcrford 40 84 Marple Newtown 32 67 Haverford 33 78 Abington 32 52 Upper Darby 46 65 Penncrest 36 61 Harriton 39 % Conestoga 53 77 Chichester 44 53 Coatcsville 48 65 REGIONAL Allentown 51 61 STATE Am bridge 93 107 1966 SEASON Date Opponent April 6th CHS 10— Marple Newt. 3 11th CHS 16—Penncrest 0 14th CHS 1-Upper Darby 0 18th CHS 5-Ridley Twp 1 20th CHS 0—Springfield 7 22th CHS 5—Conestoga 3 May 4th CHS 7—Harriton 1 5th CHS 25—Penncrest 8 10th CHS 5—Marple Newt. 4 11th CHS 15—Haverford 3 12th CHS 12—Conestoga 4 16th CHS 13—Upper Darby 3 18th CHS 0—Ridley Twp 6 20th CHS 2—Springfield 3 23rd CHS 2—Haverford 5 24th CHS 6—Sun Valley 8 26th CHS 3—Sun Valley 2 30th CHS 2—St. James 1 31st CHS 4—Harriton 1 14 WINS—5 LOSSES JESSE H BREWSTER. Coach 108 BASEBALL Ami how the pitcher holds the ball. and how he lets it go. Ami mow the air is shattered by the force of casey's blow. Edward C Zhayer TEAM—Sitting: Gus Margctich; Hank Groton: Dave Morgan: Floyd Too good Bill Marvel; Jim Walls; Wayne Yamell. Kneeling: Willie Morris; Dean Newhousc; Randy Kresgc; Jim Powell; Ted Machin; Jesse Brewster. Coach. TRACK Jf you will form the habit of taking such exercises, you will see what mighty shoulders you develop, what sinews, what vigor. Spietitus Silting: Curt Warren: Jeremy Blackburn; Gary Bryant: Frank Harris; Earl Perrigen; Tom Taylor; Tony Jones; Bill Stravinsky; Fran Downey; Al Pleasant; Ernest Tillery; Roy Downs; Vernon Rothwell. Standing: Paul Lane; Bill Bamshaw; James Bryant: W. George Reigner. Coach; Dave Wise; Steve Ewing; Coach: Kenneth 1966 SEASON CHS 56—Penncrest 79 CHS 56-Haverford 79 CHS 55-Conestoga 79 CHS 42—Upper Darby 107 CHS 73-Ridley Twp. 76 CHS 41-Springfield 104 CHS 41-Harriton 43 STREAMLINE MEET Springfield—42 CHS—29 Haverford—24 Ridley Twp.—21 Marple Newt'n—14 Upper Darby—14 Pulley. Robert Bell; Edward While; Joe Sargent. Arthur Smith; Garry Johnson; Earl London; Vincent Doward. Roger Hayden; Coach 111 HOCKEY co love the game beyond the prize. Henry flewbolt SCHEDULE SEPT. 29-SPRINGFIELD OCT. 6-R1DLEY OCT. 18-UPPER DARBY OCT. 20-HARR1TON OC T. 27-CON ESTOGA NOV. I—MARPLE NEWTOWN NOV. 3-HAVERFORD NOV. 10—PENNC REST VIRGINIA M. JAKOB. Head Coach MARJORIE M. TYLER. Asst. Coach VARSITY TEAM- L4CK ROW: Virginia Jacob. Varsity Coach; Eleanor Grant; Sandy Young; Gloria Alonso; Debbie McKee; Kay Alexander; Peg- gy Brice; Jennifer Avery; Gloria Spradley. FRONT ROW: Wanda Law- rence; Annet Creig; Detra Taylor: Barbara Payne; Jill Council; Iris Springfield. JUNIOR VARSITY TEAM-BACK ROW Mary Pindcr; Thomaci- na Hunter; Rosita Bradley; Julia Spradley. Angclia Hollis; Henrietta Payne; Betty Fleming; Laverne Wright: Lavem Mayo. FRONT ROW: Rhoda Hood: Eleanor Rochester; Ruth Ann Grant; Sheila Short; Wanda Payne; Pat Young; Diane Norwell; Jackie Canada. VARSITY JUNIOR V ARSITY TEAM BACK ROW: Gloria Alon- so. Helene Frankcl: Leona Scalcy. Varsity Coach; Debbie McKee: Jen- nifer Avery. Virginia Jakob. Assistant Coach: Carol Smith: Bernadette Morgan; Edith Church: Cheryl Tolson. FRONT ROW Jean Newman: Ruth Ann Grant; Linda McKenna; Ranee Mack; Eleanor Grant; Linda White: Elaine Hause; Gloria Spradley: Grctchcn Snow. SOFTBALL —not that you won or lost— but how you played the game. $ rant land Kiee SCHEDULE APRIL 18—CHICHESTER APRIL 21-RIDLEY TOWNSHIP APIRL 26-CHICHESTER APRIL 28 MARPLE NEWTOWN MAY 3 RIDLEY TOWNSHIP MAY 5-EDDYSTONE MAY 12—MARPLE NEWTOWN MAY 16—CL AY MONT LEONA M. SEALEY. Head Coach VIRGINIA M JAKOB. Asst. Coach COACHES-Margic Tyler. Junior Varsity: Vir- ginia Jakob. Varsity BASKETBALL Kosy-complexioned Health thy steps attends. And exercise thy lasting youth defends. 'John (Jay JUNIOR VARSITY-STANDING: Loretta Quarles; Francis Miller; Debbie Liedig; Sandra Wootcrs; Beth Schoenberger: Sandra Murray; La Verne Wright; La Verne Avery; Stephanie Goins. SITTING: Gloria Spradley; Betty Flemming: Margaret W ard; Margie Tyler. Coach; Do- loris Hatcher; Esther Snow; Grctchen Snow. VARSITY-STANDING: Frances Cauthom: Mary Lou Jones; Kay Iris Springfield; Jennifer Avery; Virginia Jakob. Coach; Eleanor Grant; Alexander; Gloria Alonso: Debbie McKee; Carole Anderson; Ruth Rhoda Hood. Ann Grant; Jean Newman: Elaine Hause; Edith Church. SITTING: ftuA y G A A OFFICERS and outstanding members-STANDING: Jill Council; Eleanor Grant; Sheila Short; Jean Newman. SITTING: Gloria Alonso; Debbie McKee; Diane Samocinski. Faculty Adviser; Elaine Hause. MALE AND FEMALE faculty teams participaUng in the “Faculty Frol- ic, a prize winning basketball game sponsored by the G A A. GIRLS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION He that will make good use of any part of his life must allow a large part of it for recreation. ‘John Cocke UNDERCLASSMEN Children are often very positive and dogma tie in moral judgments which are mistaken, for the young have no idea of the variety of ethical views which have been held and disputed. Zhe cure for such ... is instruction, wider and deeper knowledge. . . Johann Herbart SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS rr mMsssa' K • • % %%,v m i ftt BvaV ' fpSA £l « 118 JOSEPHINE HOOD, PRESIDENT DAVID BOYER. VICE-PRESIDENT DIANNE ANDROSKO. SECRETARY SANDRA WOOTERS. TREASURER Jf you compromise and trim your sails to suit others, your heart and mind will be torn and rent. Xhere is but one recipe for success— Perseverence — even if the heavens fall Hans Hoffman AMONG THE SOPHOMORES Xhe real tragedy of life is not in being limit eel to one talent. but in the failure to use that one talent. Sdgar W. Work 123 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS MICHAEL DANIELS. PRESIDENT ROBERT PETERSON. VICE-PRESIDENT Of all virtues for rising to honour, quickness of dispatch is the best: for superiors many times love not to have those they employ too deep or too sufficient, but ready and diligent. Jrancis If aeon r - - AMONG THE JUNIORS Children of yesterday, heirs of tomorrow. What are you weaving? labor and sorrow? Cook to your looms again, duster and faster dly the great shuttles prepared by the Master. Cife’s in the loom! Koom for it. Koom! Mary A. Cathbury Anna S. Hamilton Zhis learned J from the shadow of a tree. Zhat to and fro did sway against a watt Our shadow-selves. our influence may fall Where we ourselves can never be. AMONG THE JUNIORS AMONG THE JUNIORS Zhe Camel's hump is an ugly lump Which well you may see at the zoo: Hut uglier yet is the lump we get from having too little to do. Kudyard Kipling 133 GRADUATES Janie is what you have taken. Character ’$ what you give; When to this truth you waken. Zhen you begin to live. Bayard Zaylor SENIOR ACTIVITIES AND ACHIEVEMENTS DATELINE: 1964. Chester. Pennsylvania ORIENTATION would you believe this castle is going to be our home for the next three years . . and the athletic field ... so far away you'd think it were in Chester. ENGLAND only half a mile away, in reality happy hiking! Pretzels, water ice hey. are you going to Mike’s-get me a Pepsi but don’t let Miss Holcroft see you ... a three day vacation, remember? Well, we finally won a football game and broke the streak . . to bad Abington. you lose . and whose cross countrv team was undefeated in Delaware County? Right here. baby. A new addition to the girls track team Matilda Fowler was awarded the silver medal for the Middle Atlantic States Association’s track hurdles. What do you think of Karen Kestncr and John Vaul representing us at a model House of Representatives held at Temple University? How many “cherubs’ could ever forget Miss Hogan's trips to Bioren Co. Stock Exchange, the Philadelphia Art Museum and the production of “Eurvpides”. staged by Swartnmore College students in tne spring . that play was Greek to us! Maybe more of it sank in than we thought because Albert Arena. Jane Calhoun. George Crew. Linda Hittner. Steven Krause. Cynthia Para- sink. Barrs Tennv. Cynthia Tollcn and John Vaul ranked among the na- tions top ten percent in the NEDT. Speaking of winners. Jane Calhoun placed second in the Delaware County Science Fair with her project on Animal Biology back in Chester, the Physics Club was performing meteorological wizardry by launching rockets'. . watch out Cape Ken- nedy! Space age or no. machines were definitely coming into the picture what other high school in this area could boast the use or actual voting machines in school elections? Results were Brett Foxx. President; Brenda Kcnnard. Vice President; Rosemary Gibbs. Secretary; and Joan Tillery. Treasurer. Inflation set in. but not financially . . . class dues weren’t paid . . . but our egos weren’t hurtin’ . mainly cause our long lost pndc was re- stored with the District I Basketball Crown ... the season ended 24-1 how can we ever forget that heartbreaker against Steelton High- spire revenge is sweet but we’ll get ours! The team brought glorv to Chester, and the least we could do was to honor them with a banquet on April 13. 1965 at PMC’s brand new MacMorcland Center. To add to the amusement Future Nurses threw a “Shindig” that really set this place in motion but gotta take the sad w ith the happy. Student Council honored the anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s death with a special memorial assembly. They say the best wav to cure a malady is self-help . . . Chester’s Opera- tion Bootstrap, our fair city’s self-imposed remedy to relieve a financial defiat was supplemented through the support of the Student Council Red Cross Council was contributing in its own way to communitv improvement as it solicited funds for the Teenage Program-March of Dimes (TAP). It was a traveling vear too . . Pittsburgh was the lucky city to house the District Key Club Convention . . Allegheny Airlines thought they had it rough with only the Chester delegation . . . how ’bout Pittsburgh ... we hear they’re still recovering . . . other cities welcomed Chester students . leadership training was expenenced at Shippcnsburg Col- lege by Earle Hales. Dale Rosenberg, and John Vaul . . . Hannemann Hospital trained Joan Tillery in a Biological Research Program for girt- ed students in science ... in addition, at Chester Hospital. Karen Kestncr volunteered her time as a Candy Striper . already busy with vacation employment and we hardly know our way around . . . ah. summer! DATELINE: 1965. Chester. Pennsylvania One down two to go . . back to the old grind (no pun intended) . . . still marveling over the exhibits at the New York’s Worlds Fair, espe- cially Michaclangclo’s chef d’oeuvre. Pieta . other parts of New York State heard Marsha Brody’s repertoire while she was performing in the Borscht Circuit . . she is on her way up! Action at 9th Fulton Streets watch out for the monitors, mug shots are in color this year . . . up steps arc down, and down steps arc up . if you re confused Mr Robert smith will straighten you out hey. you! Get yaw hand outta dat aquawcum of I’ll bwake yaw awm - - all nght. Mr. Dumey . . J The football victim this year was Harriton when we beat them 6-0 a winning streak, maybe? No such luck in this part of town . . our band really showed its stuff . even gave Sun Valley a run for its money never can tell with live music, though, the Harvest Hop had live entertainment but the only time anybody danced was when they took time out and substituted records . . Motown’s the sound leave Beethoven. Brahms, and Bach to Music Appreciation (?) class speaking of dances, how about the record hops after the basketball games. almost didn’t have a dance after that hilarious bomb scare ai the Chester-Springfield game we know you’re jealous 'cause you didn t go to the Palestra and we did. Springfield, but a bomb-scare? Leave those tactics to Chester fans . they’ve come through plenty of other umes they don’t call 1965-66 The Year of One Thousand and One Fires for nothing ... fire drills had better attendance than most of the classes . . . Key Club and Student Counal pestered everyone again for donations to the United Fund ... met our quota, anyway . . . school organizations also played foster parent to Gerald Feather, an Indian boy who was supported by funds donated from club treasuries . . . the Salvation Army was on the receiving end of Key Club’s services as members con- tributed time and energy collecting canned goods for needy families . . the Salvation Army presented our boys with an award for their dedica- tion and services . Uncle Sam’s overabundance of affection for his American boys took many of them by constriction “Operation Send- 0 T saw Chester High’s band and organization representatives blears eyed but devoted at 6:30 AM to cheer up draftees (as much as humanly possible) ... the boys already serving in Viet Nam had their taste buds treated with culinary delights sent across the sea in conjunction with the Cookies for Viet Nam’ program sponsored by the government Chester High division came under the supervision of student Council this group also treated underprivileged children to a Christmas din- ner and party, and arranged for Santa Claus to detour the North Pole via Chester Hospital, bringing gifts to hospitalized children happi- ness is only a chimney away . . . Vacation usually sends people away but Chester High Basketball fans stayed home to w itness the second straight Kiwanis Victory . John McLean paved the way while winning five awards and being named Most Valuable Player in the Class A Tournament . Sham. Ludy. and Bear also shared the honors we sure showed the other teams who was No. 1 ... oh yeah! District One crown was ours for the asking two years in a row. now could set a precedent . State Finals in Pittsburg, after trouncing Reading 53-43 in Harrisburg for the Pennsyl- vania Eastern Regional title everybody was there, even state-wide T V. ... no autographs, yet, please . . can’t win ’em all someday the big prize we’ll be ours ... it was exciting, though . . now we’re famous, anyway who ever said that winning was enough in itself • thcre're always the fringe benefits . . . airport welcome, parade. NO SCHOOL, and all that jazz . . . and something else . intangible . . yet real . PRIDE Earle Hales. Norman Jordan. Debbit Howett Barbara Kinlaw. Tom Lundgrcn. Romainc Phillips, and Joan Tillery visited the American Vis- cosc Corporation with Mr. Robert Smith during the Christmas vacation as part of a Chemical Study cultural program ... Pat Barnard. Margor- ie Freeman. Jane Calhoun and John Vaul also went on a similar tour to Wyeth Chemical Corp. in Radnor Penna DECA wasn’t standing still either, as they visited Henderson High School on an exchange pro- ?am Miss Simpson accompanied several student mathematiaans to emplc University Tor a science and math workshop Earle Hales. Linda Hittner. Jane Calhoun. Cindy Tollcn and John Vaul participated in a Poetry and Prose Conference of the Greater Delaware Valley held at Bryn Mawr College, thanks to Mrs. Godick’s knowledgeable ideas in lit- erature and the fine arts . . Publications (the Welcome and the Annual Staffs) attended the Columbia Press Conference in New York City . congrats go out to the Welcome for placing a winning entry . . . Rosemary Gibbs represented F.T.A. at the State Convention in Harris- burg Earl Hales. Patricia Naus. Cynthia Parasink and Cynthia Tol- len were selected by the English Department to compete in the National Counal of Teachers in English Contest ... the Key Club District Con- vention was held this year in Phila. . . . Chester, was there, of course . John Vaul was elected to a state office and the club named one of the top twenty most active chapters in the entire state Student Council also went to Phila . . to the Suburban Ass’n of Student Coun- als conferences held during the year . . . Mr. Slezak came through once again with a spectacular student talent show, which featured the Twilights, who were offered a S 100.000 re- cording contract after a talent scout spotted them the show served a double purpose: it provided entertainment and a legal excuse for cutting class, and the funds raised were donated to UNICEF the basketball team made its final appearance at the Mens’ Faculty vs Bovs’ V arsitv game in the spring . . three guesses who won . . Smedley Jr. High School was the scene of the band concert while Sun Center was the hub of the Delaware County Dance Band Competition Lucille Toyal made headlines all across the United States as she devel- oped from an amateur athlete to the number eight rank in the nation for the women’s mile relay races Lucy won the Middle Atlantic States Assn ' i mile run and mile run . . she was also the M AS A. cross country champ for the 2'4 mile run . . . that girl’s quite a catch (smile) And then there was the Junior Prom, the “Sweetheart’s Cruise” ... so much for that! By the way. prom keys are still available from the Guid- ance Office ... the only complaint was over-crowded conditions . . however, this problem was solved by the fact that from now on there will be no more junior proms! Another LAST for the junior class was the ability to select the color stone of its class ring . . . future classes will be spared this indecision thanks to the unified interest of the Class of ’67 . . . Honor Society Induction Ceremonies were held for nominees who were Marjorie Freeman. Debora Howett, Barbara Kinlaw. Karen Kestncr. Thomas Lundgrcn. Patricia Naus. Cynthia Parasink. Rita Stcmpin. Joan Tillery and John Vaul also honored, but this time at class day were Marjorie Freeman: Science and Mathematics Award; Norman Jordan: Chemistry; John Vaul: Franklin and Marshall Alumni Award; and Earle Hales: Harvard Alumni Award. Student Council rounded up the year with a banquet at the Aston Mana Key Club and Student Council renovated the old Chester Court- yard as part of a Clean-up Fix-up Paint-up Week a division of the gov- ernments City BeautificaUon Program . . . finish one start another . Student Council members ended the year tired and worn out from their car wash, even with the help of Key Club . . . with two years behind us . . . what will senior year oring? DATELINE: 1966. Chester. Pennsylvania Orientation, but this time we're not on the receiving end . . Student Council and Key Club are no threat to Lunt and Fontaine, but our “Twas the Night Before School” sufficed . . . it s our turn to play Big Brother to the sophs . . . how time flies! Still recovering from a hectic but educational summer . Marsha Tay- lor. Elaine Carter. Sylvia West. Pauline Cannon. Rosemary Gibbs. Bar- bara Govan. and Richard Evans had an early taste of college life while in a pre-college readiness course ofTcrcd at Cheyney College . Ches- ter High bana members spent three weeks at the University of West Vir- ginia participating in a search for musical talent . . Cindy Tollen and Pat Barnard represented Chester's Student Council at the P.A.S.C.’s summer workshop for leadership training John Vaul. Lieutenant Governor for the Pcnna. District Key Clubs, flew to Chicago for the 23rd Annual Key Club International Convention . . Randy Krcsge and Arthur Fuller were seen in bathing suits (topless yet!) at Downington while attending a leadership training program. Meanwhile back at the dungeon, the latest farce is hall passes (and we don’t mean the ones from the boys) . . . demerits have become as popu- lar and as widespread as draft notices ... try eating a string bean in the hall and see the reaction that develops . if you're wondering what rules there arc to be broken, check your handbook. (SC distnbuted them) to see how many you’ve gotten away with so far The United Fund generously provided Student Council and Key Club members with a tour of institutions financed by this campaign the International Relations Club sent Dcbbit Denny to a conference held at Penn State . various industries and corporations throughout the Great- er Delaware Valley invited senior classes to observe tne opportunities available to high school students after graduation Bell Telephone. American Viscose. Scott Paper. DCNB. would you believe Strawbridgc and Clothier’s? were hosts . . Honor Society officers were also able to skip school to attend a luncheon at Valley Forge. Who said Chester High students were cheap? They'd pay anything, and did. to relieve the strain of academic responsibilities this time it w as the Boyd Theater that turned an educational experience into a ludicrous proposition with the showing of “Fantastic Voyage” pity that the cost of admission didn’t cover the price of a seat . our own audito- rium with an amazing capacity of 430 scats set the stage for a cultural innovation ... the Suburban Opera Company presented four live cap- sule operas to the student body . Humanities classes received a pres- ent from Mrs. Spearc (of Speare Brothers') who donated funds that al- lowed hundreds of students to share the excitement of the Chester Com- munity Concerts . . . elsewhere on the musical front, the band was seen and heard in Atlantic City during the Miss America Beauty Pageant Pa- rade Leonard Owsian s strut could put any majorette to shame . . General Cashmir Pulaski was good for something other than what he is generally (pun intended) known . . . mainly, the parade held in his honor which afforded Chester’s band the opportunity to place sec- ond in the competition . . . hats off to them at the Turkey Day grid classic for showing St. James what a marching band really is . . . Student Council saw Cindy Tollen move up from her post of Recording Secretary in eleventh grade to the Presidency Pat Barnard regener- ated interest in the House of Representatives which she led as Vice Presi- dent . . the Battle of the Budget was tackled by Anne Wilson. Trea- surer: Pauline Uskicvich. Corresponding Sec’y kept the faculty and stu- dents au courant on meetings, announcements, etc., through the daily announcement sheet the pep rally held at the first game of the year was under the supervision of Mudent Council fans in attendance at that game numbered more than all the other games up together ... sec sec what missing a few classes can do for school spirit? The new head of the administration. Miss Regina Hynes, had more enthusiasm than a go- go girl . . -if everyone had had her spirit. CHS would have been on the map long ago Seems you can’t keep politicians out of the picture no matter how hard you try . . . Senator Clarence Bell initiated a new branch of corre- spondence to our boys in Viet Nam named “Operation Holiday Star” . assemblies featured the Senator and other local dignitaries express- ing appreciation for student interest ... the band came through again . . . received an award for their altruism . . . the poster contest spon- sored as part of the campaign was the obicct of our talented winning artists: James Hamlcr. James Cobb, and Dale Rosenberg ... has An- drew Wyeth met his match? Our Scott’s High Q Team: Earle Hales. Linda Hittner and Cynthia Par- asink made their TV debut on KYW TV’s It’s Academic watch out GE College Bow l is next . . . viewers of Hv Lit Show and other visual media saw Marsha Brody perform her latest hit “Right Combina- tion” this piece of hot wax was on the nation's top ten Marsha has arrived . another recording which brought fame to our school was Cindy lollen’s first place entry in Delaware County’s “Voice of De- mocracy’ essay oratorical contest . . she never stops talking, does she. Essay contests were numerous this year . . Carol Prorock. Cindy Tol- len. and Rita Stempin ranked first, second, and third prizes in the an- nual “Help the Handicapped contest . Paul Wilson. Editor of the Welcome, was selected as participant in KYW Ncwsradio s “Student Reporter Program’’ . . . maybe our Welcome will place again at the Press Conference with literary excellence as it did last year. The Business and Professional Womens’ Club of Chester and Vicinity honors four girls from schools in Delaware County annually with the “Girl of the Month Award” this year the recipient was Cynthia Toll Chester High had its share of outstanding male students, too. as Rotary Club honored Earle Hales. Tom Lundgrcn. John Vaul. Romainc Phillips. Randy Krcsge. and Arthur Fuller as “Boys of the Month” . . . We had the spirit . . all 69 of us who journeyed to the nation’s capital for the senior class (less) trip the Immaculate Shnne of Conception the Wax Museum (Lyndon's cars arc bigger than we thought) the FBI Building (which some of our classmates preferred to avoid, rea- sons unknown) . . the Continental Hotel where dinner was served (which other classmates preferred to avoid, for reasons known) . me- morials to America’s brave and bold . . Iwo Jima monument and President John F. Kennedy’s gravesitc time for respect The sports scene fell this fall, partially due to the apathetic viewpoint of the spectators (mainly, the ones that weren’t there) the football team couldn't quite muster the momentum that it needed for a success- ful season . . . we’ll leave that task ... to the Class of’68 as for the soccer team, we’ll leave . . . out . . we have to give all the boys credit, however . . the fine sportsmanship they displayed brought more honor to the school than any number of w ins ... then again . something is better than nothing . . fortunately, the cross country team ran up sev- eral victories (smile) . but happiness is . . BASKETBALL the seas were rough, but the mighty Clipper Ship sailed on obstacles overcome were the City Championship when they trimmed (no pun in- tended) St. James . . the third straight Kiwanis Tournament Title Class A (when we really put St. James in its place) the Suburban South Section II Champs-third straight year (natch) District I Champs—third consecutive year (ho-hum) . . Pcnna. Eastern Regional Champs (yawn), and for the first time in six attempts, the big pnze STATE CHAMPIONSHIP . watch out . . Seniority stripped the team of Ken “Sham” Shamberger. Paul “Ludy” Williams. Donald “Horrible” Leake. Tom “Peanut” Parker, and Ted “Nutt” Lawson they will be replaced, but never forgotten . . . thanks, boys, for a won- derful senior year . . . This year the new' look arrived . . Cheerleaders played Betty Crocker and looked like Phyllis Diller after selling tempting tidbits in torrents of rain and hail to raise funds for sorely needed cheering apparel new cheers were also evident much to the delight of the male spectators . cartwheels, splits, and sommcrsaults ... in other words . CHEESE! The faculty came alive in the Mens vs Womens Faculty Basketball Game sponsored by the Girl’s A.A. . . did Miss Barbercain’s cheering tilt the game9 Watch out cheerleaders she may put you out of a job! After twenty years, our gymnasium was finally named the Charles Penn- ington Gym . didn’t think it was possible io have an illegitimate gym . . never under estimate Chester . . . however.«if you’re planning to break a leg. develop a toothache, or suffer homework exhaustion STOP! . . either do it dunng the few periods that the medical center is open or forget it . . . Talk about painting the town red . Key Club gave Chris Columbus and Billy Penn’s statues a good shellacking as part of their city beau- tification program . their Pancake Dav brought in plenty of dough over the past three years for the Chester Kiwanis Club is that why they were named the most financially successful club of the year? This year’s Key Club Model Kiwanis Luncheon provided a delicious meal for officers of student organizations their Parent’s Appreciation Night was not only educational, but a night of pleasure! Unification of the entire student bodv was the result of the formation of the Interclub Council, which was composed of officers of every club in the school Opcrauon Paperback, sponsored by Interact President Art Fuller, shipped literature to American servicemen in Viet Nam the P.T A dinner at the Cloverleaf Inn found the services of Interact boys more than helpful Student Council also sponsored a smorgasbord at the same location in early April, the same time of the year they sponsored a Basketball-All Sports Banquet at the central YMCA. Learning through observation seemed to be the “real right way” to ad- quaint ourselves with other schools . . . Student Council and Key Club both participated in Student Exchange Programs Student Council members also heard President Cindy Tollen deliver an address as a f.ucst speaker of the Phila. Suburban Ass’n Student Councils winter con- erence held this year at Octorara High School . . . Cindy also repre- sented CHS at the annual Brotherhood Week Convention held at the Ben Franklin Hotel, which was sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews members of the Annual and W elcome staffs met with personalities of the literary and publishing worlds when they skipped school to enter their creations in competiuon at the Columbia Press Conference . Key Club President John Vaul acted as Lieuten- ant Governor from Division 22 at the Pcnna. District Convention The Chester Chapter of the Vocational Industrial Clubs of America was formed under the supervision of Mr. Riddell, advisor Our students demonstrated leadership qualities beyond the walls of Chester High, however . . . members of tne Delta Theta Tri Hi Y soror- ity sponsored various community projects . . Club Inspirations enter- tained needy children at the West End Branch YMCA . . the list is endless. The Class of 1967 initiated the Miss Chester High Beauty Pageant Burt Parks has already placed his bid for next year’s contest decora- tion for the Senior Ball at the Falcon House on May 12 was comprised of mint green and white, class colors . . . would you believe Class Day was even more satirical than this resume? P.T.A. provided a Baccalaure- ate Serv ice at Sun Center on Sunday June 4th a time for reflection . . . then . . . . . COMMENCEMENT. Chester High School the good and the bad . the happy and the sad • the fair and the unjust . . the spiritual and the physical . but more than this . . LIFE . Memories arc made of this . . . EARL HALES. PRESIDENT SENIOR OFFICERS rhe glory of a workman, still more of a master workman, that he does his work well, ought to be his most precious possession: like the “honor of a soldier. ’’ dearer to him than life. Zhcmas Carlyle PATRICIA NAUS. SECRETARY THOMAS LUNDGREN. VICE-PRESIDENT DEBORAH HOWETT. TREASURER SE RS the great work of a governor is to fashion the carriage and form the mind, to settle in his pupil good habits and the principal of virtue and wisdom -. to give him little by tittle a view of mankind, and work him into a love of imitation of what is excellent and praiseworthy, and in the prosecution of it. to give him vigor, activity and industry. fohn Cocke CLEON ADDIS JILDA ADAMS DARLENE ALEXANDER HOWARD ALEXANDER LUTHER ALEXANDER CAROLE ANDERSON GARDENER ANDERSON VIVIAN ANDERSON DEBORAH APPEL DOROTHY APPEL ALBERT ARENA ELAINE ABNER LOUIS ARMSTRONG I MADELINE AUGUSTINE JENNIFER AVERY LAMONT BAGLEY GEORGETTE BAILEY RALPH BAILEY TERRY BAILEY BEATRICE BAKER JAMES BAKER PATRICIA BARNARD RHON BARNETT WILLIAM BARRETT Matthew basara MARY BECKETT JACQUELINE BECKWITH DOROTHY BEECHAM JEROME BELL LYNNE BENNINGFIELD ROBERTA BENSON WILLIAM BENSON DIANE BENTLEY JOAN BENTLEY JOANNE BENTLEY RENAYE BERRY 142 SENIORS Meither the rage of his fellow citizens commanding what is base, nor the angry look of threatening tyrant can shake the upright and determined man from his firm purpose. Horace DIANE BISHOP MARVA BISHOP PAULINE BISHOP MAXINE BLAKE MARSHALL BLALOCK JOSEPH BLANKLY PATRICIA BLISSARD YVONNE BOST CHRISTINE BOBBITT BARRY BOEHMER JAMES BORCKY MARY ANN BORGESE CHARLES BOTHWELL JOSEPH BOWERS RONALD BOWMAN LORRAINE BOX DIANE BOYER JOHN BRADLEY DENNIS BROADWAY HELENE BRODY GEORGINE BROWER GRACE BROWN JAMES BROWN MARILYN BROWN 144 SENIORS knowledge may give weight, but accomplishments give lustre, and many more people see than weigh . . . knowledge is a comfortable and necessary retreat and shelter for us in an advanced age. Cord Chesterfield 145 RAY BROWN SANDRA BROWN GLENN BROWNHILL JAMES BRYANT JACQUELINE BULLOCK JANE CALHOUN ROMEL CANADA PAULINE CANNON PAUL CARRAFA DONNA CARROLL EMORY CARSON EDWARD CARTER ELAINE CARTER LEROY CARTER PAULOS CARTER YVONNE CARTER JAMES CAULK LEON CAULK BETTY CHAMBERS JAMES CHAMBERS JANICE CHAMBERS JULIA CHAMBERS RICHARD CHAMBERS JOYCE CHAPLIN 146 SENIORS if a man will begin with certainties, he shall end in doubts but if he will be content to begin with doubts, he shall end in certainties draucis Ram man's capacities have never been measured, nor are tve to judge what he can do by any precedents, so little has been tried. Zkoreau SHIRLEY CHAPMAN DELORES CHAVIS WILLIAM CLARK JOHN CLINEFF JAMES COBB JOANN COBB JUNE COBB JERRY COLES LINDA COLLIER GREGORY COMISIAK HAROLD COOK EUGENE COTTMAN GENEVA COTTMAN THOMAS COTTMAN LARRY COUPE PATRICIA COX CATHERINE CRAWFORD GEORGE CREW ANTONIO CREWS JOEL CROUSE JEAN DACHIU GEORGE DANNER BRENDA DAVIS HEZEKIAH DAVIS 149 150 SENIORS the knowledge of man is as the waters, some (leseending from above, and some springing from beneath, the one informed by the light of nature, the other inspired by divine revelation. d'raucis Bacon RONALD DAVIS ROY DAVIS RENEE DEAN DEBRA DENNEY WILLIAM DEVINE ELMA DI CARLANTONIO RITA DIGGINS SHARON DINKEL MURRAY DOBSON MARSHALL DOWDY SHIRLEY DOWE FRANCIS DOWNEY ROBERT DOWNEY ROBERT DRAPER SANDRA DRENNAN PATRICIA DRIGGINS GLENN DRIVER EDWARD DYKES RONALD ELLIS DAVID ERBE RICHARD EVANS RONALD FALKOWSKI JOHN FAULS EDYTH FLANAGAN 151 DEBORAH FLEMING JAMES FLOYD OTTO FONTAINE ROBERT FOX BRETT FOXX MARJORIE FREEMAN ARTHUR FULLER JAMES GAMBLE RICHARD GANTER LILI GARFINKEL ROSEMARY GIBBS SPENCER GIBBS ROBIN GIBSON CAROL GILBERT DORIS GLUCK PERCY GODSEY JAMES GOEPEL LOIS GOINS VIRGINIA GOMEZ RONALD GOODE ANN GORMAN SHARON GOURDIN BARBARA GOVAN 152 SENIORS Jt is chiefly through books that we enjoy intercourse with superior miniis . . . Jn the best books, great men talk to us. give us their most precious thoughts, and pour their souls into ours. Wm. Sllery Chamtiug JEAN GRADWELL RENEA GRAHAM ELEANOR GRANT HART GRASTY OSCELLA GRAVES ALAN GRAY WILLIE GRAY JAMES GREEN SANDRA GREEN LOUIS HAAS EVELYN HAIRSTON EARL HALES DONALD HALL NANCY HAMER SHEILA HAMLIN JOSEPH HAMRICK LOUISE HAMRICK VANDORA HARDING CHERYL HARDY MARY HARMON VIVIAN HARPER ALETHEA HARRIS JACQUELINE HARRIS CATHERINE HARVEY JAMES HARVEY 154 SENIORS Knowledge and human power are synonymous. since the ignorance of the cause frustrates the effect. . . J wise man will make more opportunities than he finds. Jrancis Paeon REGINALD HENRY CHRISTINE HICKS ERNESTINE HIGHTOWER VIRGINIA HIGNUTT NORMA HILL LINDA HITTNER ROBERT HOLLIS FRANKLIN HOLLOWAY JANET HORSEY JOHN HOWARD DEBORAH HOWETT THOMAS HUGHES BARBARA HUNTER JEAN IDLETT JACQUELINE JACKSON MARGARET JACKSON MICHAEL JACKSON SHARON JANUSZIEWICZ JAMES JENNINGS JUNE JENNINGS LINDA JENNINGS NORA JENNINGS CAROLYN JOHNSON EDNA JOHNSON 156 SE RS enlighten the people generally, and tyranny and oppression of both mind and body will vanish like evil spirits at the dawn of day. Zhomos fcfferscH SENIORS Education is a controlling grace to the young, consolation to the old. wealth to the poor, and ornament to the rich. Diogenes GARRY JOHNSON GREGORY JOHNSON JAMES JOHNSON KENNETH JOHNSON LERMONT JOHNSON MARY ANN JOHNSON MAXINE JOHNSON PHYLLIS JOHNSON DARRYL JONES HEZEK1AH JONES IRENE JONES PATRICIA JONES SHERIDAN JONES STEPHEN JONES TERRANCE JONES THOMAS JONES NORMAN JORDAN STANLEY KACIUBAN MARIE KALUP EMELIA KANIA LINDA KEA BRENDA KENNARD JOSEPH KENNEDY THEODORE KENNEDY 159 the child. the youth, the mu contribute to the resources of the race -, and the resources of the race are the materials with which the education of the race is carried on. Jriedrick Jroebel KAREN KESTNER GREGORY KILLIAN RICHARD KILLIAN RITA KILSON CHARLES KIND SARA KINDER SAMUEL KING BARBARA KINLAW OREOLE KNIGHT STEVEN KRAUS RANDALL KRESGE JESSICA LACEY KATHRYN LAHR HOWARD LANCASTER PATRICIA LANCASTER LEON LANIER ELIZABETH LANK CARRIE LATIMER MAMMIE LATIMER RODNEY LAUBE HELEN LAWRENCE CALVIN LAWS THEODORE LAWSON 161 DONALD LEAKE GLENDALE LEGETTE HENRY LEGETTE JOHN LEWIS WILLIE LINDER LINDA LLOYD MARK LOBACH EARL LONDON RICHARD LUNDBURG THOMAS LUNDGREN LORRAINE LUNNESS VERONICA LUZAK JAMES McCALL sharon McClellan MARY McCLOSKEY PARRIS McGHEE LORRETTA McHENRY JOHN McIVER ROBERT McIVER BELINDA McKENZIE BONNIE McMASTER JOYCE McNEIL 1 RENEA MACK DALE MANCINI 162 SENIORS every man has at times in his mind the ideal of what he should be. but is not.. . man never falls so low that he can see nothing higher than himself Zheodore Parker JOSEPH MANCINI WILLIAM MARVEL GWENDOLYN MATHIS DORINE MAXWELL ROSALIND MAXWELL MARVEL MAY RAYMOND MEEKINS LINDA MIAH JOANNE MILES JAMES MILLER JOHN MILLER LULA MINTER ANTHONY MASTECKA PORTIA MITCHELL HAROLD MOFFETT ALICE MOORE FRANK MOORE WAYNE MORGAN JOANNE MOSLEY OLIVER MOSLEY RUBY MOSLEY BEVERLY MOTEN JOHN MUNN ANTHONY MURRAY IRENE MURRAY 164 SENIORS labour without joy is base. JCabour without sorrow is base Sorrow without labour is base. Hoy without labour is base. jctm Kuskiu JAMES MURRAY JEAN MURRAY ADELE MUSCELLA ARRETTA MUSE NAOMI MUSE PATRICIA NAUS ALBERT NAYLOR CHRISTINE NELSON KATHLEEN NELSON DOROTHY NIMMONS DAVIS NORTHERN LINDA NOWELL LARRY ORONZIO David ott PATRICIA OWENS SHARYCE OWENS LEONARD OWSIANY MARY LOU PACE GEORGIA PANTELOPULAS CYNTHIA PARASINK THEODORE PARKER THOMAS PARKER JEAN PATTERSON JOHN PAULING 166 SENldkS a desire of Knowledge is the natural feeling of mankind, and every human being whose mind is not debauched will be willing to give all that he has to get Knowledge. Samuel fokuscu Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves or we know where we can find information upon it. Samuel fohnson CATHY PEARSALL LOIS PERRY LINDA PETIT DE MANGE RONALD PEYTON LEWIS PHILLIPS ROMAINE PHILLIPS DAVID PIERCE DINETTA PIERCE WILLIAM PIERCE SUZANNE POCHMARA EDWARD POLLARD LA VON POSTELLE NANCY POTEAT FRANCES POTTS STEVEN POTTS DENNIS POWELL DORETHA PRATTIS JOSEPHINE PRATTIS BENJAMIN PRICE JOSEPH PRICE CAROLYN PROROCK JAMES PURDY CLAUDIA PURNSLEY MARY QUEEN 169 When you know a thing, to hold that you know it, and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you do not know it, this is knowledge. . . Cearning without thought is labor lost, thought without learning is perilous. Confucius NICK RAPAGNANI ELIZABETH RATAY NEAL REAGAN JANICE REED MARK REED JAMES RESTANEO JOHN RESTANEO LINWOOD RIDEOUT GARY RILEY MURYL ROBBINS CHARLOTTE ROBINSON JAMES ROMAN HARRY ROOT DALE ROSENBURG JOSEPH ROSS REGINALD ROSS LINDA ROUNDS LUCILLE ROYAL BETTY SAILOR ARTHUR SAPOVITS JOSEPH SARGENT JAMES SATCHELL CHAUNCY SAUNDERS CAREY SAVAGE 171 VINCENT SAVAGE DAVID SCHAEN ANNETTE SCHMIEGELOW LEONARD SCHULER MYRNA SCHWARTZ EULA SCOTT WILLIAM SCOTT ELIZABETH SCRIVEN BARBARA SEARLES DONNA SEL3Y ZYGMUNT SENDER VINCENT SETH JOSEPH SHAHADI DORIS SHEPARD CLARENCE SHERMAN LEONARD SHERMAN JOHN SHOCKLEY JUDITH SHUMAN JOHN SIMPSON RICHARD SIMPSON JOHN SKLADANOWSKI PAUL SLOAN FRANK SMITH LULA SMITH 172 SENIORS Jar must thy researches go. wouliis 't thou learn the world to know. Zhou must tempt the dark abyss, wouhis't thou prove that. Hang is, Naught but firmness gains the prize. . . Zhat virtue only makes our bliss below. and all our knowledge is ourselves to know. Alexander Pope 173 THERESA SMITH ARMETTA SOLOMON CARL SPANGLER TALBERT SPENCE DAVID SPRINGFIELD JUDY STAFFORD RONALD STALLINGS ANNA STANCZYK JACQUELINE STAPLES CLIFTON STARKEY KATHLEEN STEELE RITA STEMPIN LARRY STEPHENSON VERA STEVENSON KATHRYN STEWART LEROY STILLIS BERNADINE STINSON LEROY STODDARD RITA STRANGE ROBERT SULECKI JANICE SWAIN CORDELIA SWIGGETT DANIEL SYKES INEZ TASKER 174 SE RS All our progress is an unfolding like the vegetable bud. ] ou have first an instinct, then an opinion, then a knowledge. Smerson SENIORS Educated men arc as much superior to uneducated men as the living are to the dead. Aristotle MARSHA TAYLOR THOMAS TAYLOR BARRY TENNEY JOSEPH TEOFILAK KATHLEEN THOMAS RONALD THOMAS WALTER THOMAS ARNETTA THOMPSON GLORIA TILLERY JOAN TILLERY KATHLEEN TINLEY CYNTHIA TOLLEN RITA TRENCHIK HENRY TUCKER IDA TUCKER WILLIAM TURNER BONITA TYLER PAULINE USKIEVICH JOHN VAUL JAMES WALLS THOMAS WARREN MARJORIE WASHAM PATRICIA WASHAM FRANCIS WATSON 177 178 SENIORS Js the strength of the body lies ehie fly in being able to endure hardships, so also does that of the mind. . . a man is capable to deny himself his over desires, cross his inclinations, and purely follow what reason directs as best though appetite lean the other way. fohn Cocke RONALD WESLEY DONNA WESOLOWSKI JAMES WEST SYLVIA WEST LINDA WHITE PATRICIA WHITE RICHARD WILFORD JACK WILKIE DOROTHY WILLIAMS JOYCE WILLIAMS PAUL WILLIAMS STANLEY WILLIAMS STEPHEN WILLIAMS ANNE WILSON DONALD WILSON DOROTHY WILSON HOWARD WILSON PAUL WILSON SUSAN WILSON ROBERT WIMMER JOSEPH WINTERS CHRISTINE WOJCIK OKSANNA WOLOWEC FAYE WOMACK 179 MARY WOMACK NANNIE WOMACK THOMAS WORRILOW JAMES WYATT WAYNE YARNALL CARL YOUNG CAROL YOUNG LINDA YOUNG SANDRA YOUNG SHARON YURKASITIS NORMAN ZOUMAS 180 SHIRLEY MINOR SENIORS Dost thou love life? Zhou do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of Kemember. that time is money. Jn investment in Knowledge pays the best interest. Htujtmm Jrauklm SENIOR DIRECTORY ELAINE ABNER 315 Yarnall Street • Distributive Edu- cation. Activities: Chorus 2; FTA 2, 3. JILDA ADAMS • 2211 Green Street, Feltonville • Commercial. CLEON ADDIS -2715 Forwood Street • Vocational. HOWARD ALEXANDER • 1217 Norris Drive • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. LILLIAN ALEXANDER • 410 West Second Street • Commercial. Activities: FNA 2, 3: GAA 2, 3. LUTHER ALEXANDER • 1217 Norris Drive • Practical Arts. CAROLE ANDERSON • 113 Franklin Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Girls' Hockey Manager 1, 2, 3: Girls' Softball L 2, 3: Girls' Basketball 1, 2. 3: GAA 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep. 1. GARDNER ANDERSON • 920 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts. VIVIAN ANDERSON • 714 West Third Street • Commercial. DEBORAH APPEL • 127 East 22nd Street • Distributive Education. Activities: Chorus 1: DECA 3. DOROTHY APPEL • 127 East 22nd Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3. ALBERT ARENA • 917 Glen Terrace • Academic. Activities: Boys’ Baseball 1, 3; Boys’ Soccer 2, 3; Interact Club 1, 2, 3; Visual Aids 3; Literary Society 3: Student Council 2: WELCOME staff 3; Fire Squad 3; Red Feather Campaign 2. LOUIS ARMSTRONG • 221 Woodrow Street • Voca- tional. VALERIE ARTWELL • 403 Evans Place • Commercial. Activities: H.R. Rep. 3. MADELINE AUGUSTINE • 1419 Culhane Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: GAA 2, 3; DECA 3. JENNIFER AVERY • 25 West Third Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Girls' Hockey 1, 2, 3; Girls’ Basketball 1, 2, 3: Girls' Softball 1. 2, 3; Girls' Track 1; GAA Rep. 1, 3; H.R. Rep. 1. LAMONT BAGLEY • 525 West Second Street • Practical Arts. GEORGETTE BAILEY • 503 Baker Place • Practical Arts. Activities: Track 1. RALPH BAILEY • 1302 Morton Avenue • Vocational. TERRY BAILEY • 922 Madison Street • Commercial. Activities: Art Club-Pres. 1: WELCOME Staff 3; H.F. Rep. 3. BEATRICE BAKER • 920 Norris Drive • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 3. JAMES BAKER • 241 West Ninth Street • Vocational. GEORGE BANKS • 1402 Alexander Place • College Preparatory. PATRICIA BARNARD • 130 Worrell Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Student Council 2, 3, Junior Senator 2, Vice- Pres. 3; Red Cross 3; ANNUAL Staff 3; IRC 3; United Fund Campaign 3; Monitor 2. RHON BARNETT • 537 Norris Street • Commercial. Activities: Boys’ Basketball Manager 1; Band 1, 2, 3. 182 WILLIAM BARRETT • 417 Evans Place • Practical Arts. Activities: H.R. Rep. 3. MATTHEW BASARA • 1036 Sycamore Street • college Preparatory. MARY BECKETT • 410 Grounsell Court • Commercial. Activities: FNA 1, 2, 3, Cor. Sec. 3. JACQUELINE BECKWITH • 2007 Harris Street • Practi- cal Arts. Activities: Monitor 3; GAA 1, 2: ANNUAL Staff 3; Student Council 1; H R. Rep. I. DOROTHY BEECHAM • 2207 West Second Street • Practical Arts. JEROME BELL • 722 Jeffrey Street • Commercial. MARILYN BELL • 616 Potter Street • Special Education. LYNNE BENNINGFIELD • 2705 Curran Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3; ANNUAL Staff 2, 3; National Honor Society 2, 3; Monitor 2. ROBERTA BENSON • 2014 Harris Street • Commercial. DIANE BENTLEY • 336 West Ninth Street • Distributive Education. Activities: Track 1: DECA 3; WELCOME Staff 3; Cho- rus I; GAA 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep. L 3. JOAN BENTLEY • 834 West Third Street • Practical Arts. Activities: Girls’ Basketball 2; FNA 2, 3. JOANNE BENTLEY • 834 West Third Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 3. REN AYE BERRY • 1223 Edward Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 3. DIANE BISHOP -1128 Thomas Street • Commercial. Activities: Art Club 1; GAA I, 2, 3; ANNUAL Staff 2, 3. MARVA BISHOP • 1003 Kerlin Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, GAA Rep. 2: Dramatic Society 2; ETA 3; H.R. Rep. 2. PAULINE BISHOP • 120 Lockley Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1,3: Chorus 1. WILLIAM BISHOP • 832 East 14th Street • Distributive Education. MAXINE BLAKE • 618 Central Avenue • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1,3; FTA 3; FNA 3. MARSHALL BLALOCK -611 Dupont Street • Commer- cial. Activities. Football 1. NORMAN BLALOCK «611 Cupont Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Basketball 1, 3: Soccer 1. PATRICIA BLISSARD -2157 Lee Lane • Distribute Edu- cation. Activities: DECA 3. CHRISTINA BOBBITT • 619 Norris Street • Commercial JOHN BOBROWSKI • 2703 Boyle Street • Vocational. BARRY BOEHMER • 2212 Baldwin Run Drive • College Preparatory. Activities: Key Club 1, 2, 3: Visual Aids 3; WELCOME Staff 3; Literary Society 3; Fire Squad 3. JAMES BORCKY • 1411 Highland Avenue • Commer- cial. Activities: Football 1, 3: Soccer 2; Baseball 1, 2, 3; In- teract Club 2, 3. ANN MARIE BORGESE • 2010 Edgmont Avenue • Com- mercial. Activities: ANNUAL Staff. YVONNE BOST • 928 Edward Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; ANNUAL Staff 3; H.R. Rep. 3. CHARLES BOTHWELL • 2904 West 11th Street • Voca- tional. JOSEPH BOWERS • 733 Engle Street • Vocational. RONALD BOWMAN -1113 Terrill Street • Commercial. LORRAINE BOX • 1019 Yarnall Street • Commercial. Activities: Interact Club 3; GAA I. 2, 3. DIANA BOYER • 816 West Third Street • Commercial. Activities: Band 1. 2. 3; GAA 1, 2. 3. JOHN BRADLEY • 321 Flower Street • Practical Arts. EUGENIA BRAME • 130 Jeffrey Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA BARBARA BROADWAY • 1428 Morris Place • Practical Arts. Activities: Art Club 1, 2, 3. DENNIS BROADWAY • 1428 Morris Place • Practical Arts. TIMOTHY BROCK • 1224 Pulaski Drive • College Preparatory. HELENE BRODY • 1524 Washington Avenue • College Preparatory. Activities: Band 2. 3: Red Cross 1, 2, 3; Student Council 2. 3: United Fund 3; Red Cross Treas. 3; Color Guard Capt. 3. MARSHA BRODY • 207 East 22nd Street • CoUege Preparatory. Activities: Red Cross 2. 3; Monitor 2, 3; GAA 2, 3. GEORGENE BROWER • 1600 Edgmont Avenue • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3. GRACE BROWN 415 Engle Street • Commercial. JAMES BROWN • 702 West Second Street • Vocational. MARILYN BROWN • 408 Avars Place • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 2. SANDRA BROWN • 218 Townsend Street • Practical Arts. WILLIAM BROWN • 304 Patterson Street • Practical Arts. GLENN BROWNHILL • 84 Eyre Drive • Vocational. Activities: Key Club 3; H R. Rep. 1, 2. 3; Red Cross 3. JAMES BRYANT • 1401 West 7th Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Football 1; Track 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep. 2; Lin- quist Society 2, 3. JACQUELINE BULLOCK • 919 West 7th Street • Commercial. Activities: Chorus 1.2; Dramatic Society 2; FTA 1, 2. 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; Student Council 1, 2. 3; ANNUAL Staff 3; WELCOME Staff 3. DAVID BUTLER • 1224 West Third Street • Practical Arts. JANIE CALHOUN • 115 East Parkway Avenue • Aca- demic Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Orchestra 2; Dance Band 2; Science Club 1, 2, Secretary 1. 2: WELCOME 1, 2. 3, Girls' Sports Editor 3: ANNUAL 2; GAA 1, 2. 3; Red Cross 3: Monitor 1, 2, 3; IT'S ACADEMIC 3, Alternate; Softball Manager 1. PAULINE CANNON • 2603 Swarts Street • Academic Activities: WELCOME Staff 3; FTA 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; Monitor 1. 2, 3; Visual Aids 3: H.R. Rep. 3. PAUL CARRAFA -612 West 13th Street • College Preparatory DONNA CARROLL • 330 Sunnyside Avenue • Commer- cial EMORY CARSON • 1920 West Tenth Street • Vocation- al Activities: Mixed Chorus 1; WELCOME 1; ANNUAL 3; H.R. Treas. 1. EDWARD CARTER -1215 Nooker Street • Vocational Activities: Industrial Society 1, 2, 3. ELAINE CARTER • 323 Lloyd Street • College Preparatory Activities: FTA 1, 2. 3; Junior Historians 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep. 1; GAA 1, 2. 3; Student Council Judge 3: Red Cross 3; Inter. Relations 3; Y-Teens 3: FTA Vice Pres. 3; United Fund Campaign. LEROY CARTER • 520 West Fifth Street • Vocational Activities: Football 1; Track 1. PAULOS CARTER • 420 East 11th Street • Commercial Activities: Track 1; GAA 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep 3; Office Aide 2, 3; FTA 1, 2, 3. YVONNE CARTER • 357 Lamokin Street • Commercial Activities: Junior Historians I, 2. 3; ANNUAL Staff 2. 3; WELCOME 2, 3; Chorus 1, 2, 3; GAA 1, 2. 3; Y-Teens 3; Monitor 2: H.R Rep. 2; Red Cross 1; FTA 1, 2, 3, Treas. 1, 2, 3. 184 JAMES CAULK • 920 West Third Street • Vocational Activities: WELCOME Staff 3; ANNUAL 3; Junior His- torians 3. BETTY CHAMBERS • 226 Jeffrey Street • Commercial Activities: Future Nurses Club 2; DECA 3. JAMES CHAMBERS • 1235 St. Barbara Place • Voca- tional Activities: Track 1; Chorus 1, 2, 3. JANICE CHAMBERS • 323 Gartside Street • Practical Arts JULIA CHAMBERS • 1235 St. Barbara Place • Practical Arts Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; FTA 3: Chorus 1, 2, 3. RICHARD CHAMBERS • 1012 Townsend Street • Voca- tional JOYCE CHAPLIN • 1201 Johnson Street • Commercial Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3: Library Aid 2; Office Aid 3. DELORES CHAVIS -1116 Norris Drive • Commercial Activities: GAA; Chorus. STEPHEN CHILDERS • 4120 South Bent Lane • Voca- tional WILLIAM CLARK • 939 East 20th Street • College Preparatory Activities: Interact Club 2, 3; Literary Club 3. BARRY CLEMENTS • 3004 West 11th Street • Commer- cial JOHN CLINEFF • 2706 Boyle Street • Vocational JAMES COBB • 506 Edward Street • Practical Arts Activities: Cross-Country-10 1; Art Club 1, 2. 3. JOANN COBB • 2106 West 12th Street • Commercial Activities: ANNUAL Staff 3; GAA 1. JUNE COBB • 501 Edward Street • Commercial Activities: Art Club. LINDA COLLIER -818 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts Activities: GAA 1, 2; Monitor 3; H.R. Rep. 1; H.R. Vice- Pres. 2. HAROLD COLLINS -2313 West Third Street • Practical Arts GREGORY COMISIAK • 2327 West Fourth Street • Vo- cational HAROLD COOK • 342 Taylor Terrace • Practical Arts ALVAN COOPER • 737 West Mary Street • Practical Arts RONALD COSTEN • 1023 West Third Street • Vocation- al EUGENE COTTMAN • 1910 West 12th Street • Vocation- al GENEVA COTTMAN • 1910 West 12th Street • Commercial Activities: H.R. Rep. 1; Monitor 2, 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; FTA 3; ANNUAL 3; WELCOME 3; Chorus 1, 2, 3; H.R. Treas. 3. VERNON COTTMAN • 1709 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts Activities: Football L 2, 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Chorus 1, 2, 3, Football Co-Captain 1, 2, 3. WILSON COTTMAN • 1709 West Seventh Street • Voca- tional Activities: Band 12. LARRY COUPE • 253 West 21st Street • Vocational Activities: Band 1. 2. 3; H.R. Rep. 1. TERRY COWAN • 30 South Eyre Drive • Vocational PATRICIA COX • 2727 ChiChester Road • Commercial Activities: DECA 3. KATHERINE CRAWFORD • 717 West Seventh Street • Commercial Activities: FNA 1, 2; Chorus 1. GEORGE CREW • 2241 Providence Avenue • College Preparatory Activities: HI-Q I; Interact Club 2, 3. 185 JERRY COLES • 421 West Third Street • Vocational ANTONIO CREWS -418 West Second Street • College Preparatory Activities: Soccer 1. 3. JOEL CROUSE • 2623 West Seventh Street • Vocational JEAN DACHIU • 623 Madison Street • Practical Arts. GEORGE DANNER • 1406 Locketer • Practical Arts. Activities: Baseball 1. BRENDA DAVIS • 1001 West Eighth Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1. 2. 3: FTA 1. 2, 3; Junior Historian 3; WELCOME 3; Dramatic Society 2. HEZEKIAH DAVIS • 210 Woodrow Street • Vocational. RONALD DAVIS • 815 Pusey Street • Vocational. ROY DAVIS • 123 East Fifth Street • Vocational. Activities: Baseball 3; Basketball Manager 1, 2, 3. DEBRA DENNEY • 2712 Forwood Street • College Preparatory. Activities: FTA 1, 2; Red Cross 3; International Rela- tions 3; GAA 1, 2. 3: Library Aid 2; ANNUAL 3. WILLIAM DEVINE • 404 Grounsell Street • Practical Arts. ELMA DICARLANTONIO • 1000 Culhane Street • Commercial. RITA DIGGINS • 909 Upland Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3. SHARON DINKEL • 134 East 22nd Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1. 2, 3; H R. Rep. I. JEROME DIX • 1431 Purnsley Terrace • Vocational. MURRAY DOBSON • 1334 Peterson Street • Vocational. MARSHALL DOWDY • 343 Ulrich Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Literary Society 3; Basketball Manager 2, 3. SHIRLEY DOWE • 2510 West Seventh Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA I, 2, 3; Chorus 3. ROBERT DOWNEY • 2742 Lehman Street • Vocational. FRANCIS DOWNEY • 2742 Lehman Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Track 2, 3; Cross-Country 3; WELCOME 3; ANNUAL 3; Literary Society 3. ROBERT DRAPER • 2412 Lindsay Street • Commercial. Activities: DECA 3. SANDRA DRENNEN • 367 Rural Avenue • Commer- cial. PATRICIA DRIGGINS • 214 Concord Avenue • Commercial. GLENN DRIVER 619 East Union Street • Vocational. STEVE DURHAM • 1124 Upland Street • Academic. Activities: Interact Club 1. 2, 3; Literary Society 3. EDWARD DYKES • 812 West Eighth Street • Vocation- al. MARGARET EATON • 216 Crosby Street • Home Economics. RONALD ELLIS • 44 West 11th Street • Practical Arts. DAVID ERBE 1124 Parker Street • Commercial Activities: DECA 3. RICHARD EVANS • 2327 West llth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Key Club 1, 2. 3; Band 1, 2; Chorus 1, 2, 3; Red Feather Campaign 3; Junior Judge 2. JOHN FAULS • 3015 West Sixth Street • Vocational. EDYTHE FLANAGAN • 324 West 22nd Street • Commercial. Activities: Student Council Rep. 3. DEBORAH FLEMING • 841 West Fifth Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: Track 1, 2; Softball 2, Manager 2; GAA 1, 2, 3; DECA 3: DECA Secretary 3; H.R. Rep. 1. JAMES FLOYD 617 West 22nd Street • Academic. Activities: Basketball 1. OTTO FONTAINE • 714 Jeffrey Street • Vocational. Activities: Basketball 3. MATILDA FOWLER • 927 Pennell Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Hockey 1. 2; Basketball 1. 2. 3; Softball 1; Track 1. 2; GAA 1, 2, 3; Linguist Society 1, 2, 3; Publica- tions 3; FTA 2, 3; Chorus 1. 2; H R. Treasurer 1. 2: H R Rep. 3. BRETT FOXX • 1313 Reed Place • College Preparatory. Activities: Key Club L 2: Band 1. 2. 3; Dance Band 1. 2, 3: Chorus 1, 2, 3; Class President 1, 2. MARJORIE FREEMAN • 2616 Kane Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Library Aide 2: Band 1. 2. 3: GAA 1. 3: Ju- nior Red Cross 3; IRC 3: FT A 2: Honor Society 3: Moni- tor 2: ANNUAL staff 3; Visual Aids 3; Library Aide, Treasurer 2; Honor Society, Vice President 3. ARTHUR FULLER • 811 Glen Terrace • College Preparatory. Activities: Interact Club 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 2, President 3; IRC 3; Student Council 1; Literary Society 3; WELCOME staff 2, 3. News Editor 3. JAMES GAMBLE • 1205 Nooker Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Key Club 2. 3; Student Council 3. RICHARD GANTER • 816 Edgmont Avenue • Commer- cial. LILI GARFINKEL • 205 Sunnyside Avenue • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; Monitors 1, 2; Red Cross 3; FTA 2. 3; WELCOME 3; ANNUAL 2. EUGENE GARRETT -1811 West Front Street • Voca- tional. EULES GARRETT -1811 West Front Street • Vocation- al. Activities: H.R. Rep. ROSEMARY GIBBS • 1314 Reed Place • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3 . Dramatics 1: IRC 1, 3; Red Cross Council 2, 3; FTA 1, 2, 3; ANNUAL Staff 3; WELCOME Staff 3; Senior Class Rep. 3; Student Coun- cil Rep. 1; Class Sec. I, 2; IRC 3, Pres. 3: FTA Treas. 2. SPENCER JOSEPH GIBBS • 1125 Upland Street • Commercial. Activities: Track 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Dance Band 2, 3. ROBIN GIBSON • 1027 Hyatt Street • Practical Arts. CAROL GILBERT • 138 Reaney Street • Commercial. DORIS GLUCK • 612 Dupont Street • Commercial. Activities: Band I, 2. 3: WELCOME Staff 3: Red Cross 3. PERCY GODSEY -1213 West Seventh Street • College Preparatory. JAMES GOEPEL • 319 East Eighth Street • Vocational. LOIS GOINS • 617 Jeffrey Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1. 3; FTA 3; WELCOME Staff 3: GAA Rep. 3. VIRGINIA GOMEZ • 1506 Edgemont Avenue • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: GAA 1. 2; DECA 3. LEON GOODE • 103 Concord Avenue • Practical Arts. RONALD GOODE • 103 Concord Avenue • Vocational. ANN GORMAN • 2305 Upland Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 2. 3; Art Club 2; DECA 3. SHARON GOURDIN • 335 Rural Avenue • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 3. BARBARA GOV AN • 211 West Fifth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2; FTA 3. JEAN GRADWELL • 224 Clayton Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2; H.R. Rep. 1. RENEA GRAHAM • 609 Jeffrey Street • Commercial. Activities: Chorus 3: FTA 3. ELEANOR GRANT • 3030 West Ninth Street • Commercial. Activities: Girls- Hockey 1, 2. 3; Girls- Basketball 1, 2. 3; Girls’ Softball 1, 2, 3; GAA 1, 2, 3, Rep. 2. 187 HART GRASTY • 43 West Eighth Street • Distributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. ALAN GRAY • 1824 West Sixth Street • Vocational. WILLIE GRAY • 1824 West Sixth Street • Practical Arts. OSCELLA GRAVES • 407 Concord Avenue • Home Economics. JAMES GREEN • 318 West Second Street • Commercial. SANDRA GREEN • 1009 Padget Place • Practical Arts. Activities: FNA 2, 3. LOUIS HAAS 912 Madison Street • Vocational. EVELYN HAIRSTON • 553 Norris Street • Home Economics. Activities. GAA I; WELCOME Staff. EARLE HALES • 1027 Butler Street • College Preparato- ry- Activities: Soccer 1, 2, 3; Track 2: Interact Club 2, 3; Band I, 2. 3: ITS ACADEMIC 3: HI-Q 3; Dance Band 3: Senior Class President. SHEILA HAMLIN • 1129 Norris Drive • Commercial. NANCY HAMER • 313 West 22nd Street • Commercial. JOSEPH HAMRICK • 12 West 24th Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 1, 2. LOUISE HAMRICK • 12 West 24th Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Red Cross 3; GAA 3. AN DORA HARDING • 349 Ulrich Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 2; H R. Rep. 2. CHERYL HARDY • 2117 Tolston Street • Distributive Education. Activities: GAA I, 2, Rep. 2; DECA 3; WELCOME Staff. MARY HARMON • 507 Tilghman Street • Practical Arts. VIVIAN HARPER • 617 West Sixth Street • Commercial. Activities: Dramatic Society 1; FTA I; Chorus 2, 3. ALETHEA HARRIS • 627 West Second Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; FNA 1, 2. JACQUELINE HARRIS • 317 Ayars Place • Commer- cial. CATHERINE HARVEY • 222 Kerlin Street • Practical Arts. JAMES HARVEY • 222 Kerlin Street • Commercial. REGINALD HENRY • 317 Yarnall Street • Commercial. Activities: Band 1; H R. Rep. 3. CHRISTINE HICKS • 1003 Tilghman Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Chorus 2; ANNUAL Staff. VIRGINIA HIGNUTT • 308 West 15th Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: Band 2, 3; DECA 3. NORMA HILL • 1109 West Norris Drive • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1. LINDA HITTNER • 740 East 25th Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Girls’ Softball 1: GAA 2. 3; Monitors 2, 3; HI- Q 3; ANNUAL Staff 2, 3; WELCOME Staff 3: Dramat- ic Society 2; Red Cross 3; Cheerleading 1, 2, 3, Co-Cap- tain 3. FRANKLIN HOLLOWAY • 1106 Nicholas Street • Prac- tical Arts. Activities: Track 2. JANET HORSEY 311 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts. HENRY HOWARD • 717 Pennell Street • CoUege Preparatory. Activities: Soccer I, 2, 3; Baseball 3. JOHN HOWARD • 1116 West Eighth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Soccer 1, 2; Basketball Manager 1, 2, 3. DEBORAH HOWETT • 1101 Thomas Street • CoUege Preparatory. Activities: Cheerleading 1, 2, 3; Monitors 2; Senior Class Treasurer. BARBAR HUNTER • 1211 West Second Street • Commercial. LEWIS HYNSON • 2012 Harris Street • Vocational. Activities: Track 1, 2, 3. JEAN IDLETT • 420 Ayars Place • Commercial. EDDIE JACKSON 912 Butler Street • Vocational. JACQUELINE JACKSON • 36 West Eighth Street • Commercial Activities: GAA 1,3: FTA 3: Monitor 1. MARGARET JACKSON • 308 Cartside Court • Practical Arts. MICHAEL JACKSON • 933 Central Avenue • College Preparatory Activities: Band 1, 2, 3. SHARON JANUSZIEWICZ -2112 Lee Lane • Commer- cial Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Red Cross 3; Welcome Staff 3. JUNE JENNINGS • 630 Flower Street • Commercial Activities: GAA 3; FTA 3; Y-teens 3, Pres. 3. LINDA JENNINGS • 705 West Seventh Street • Commercial Activities: Girls’ Hockey 2; Girls' Track 2; GAA 1, 2, 3; FTA 3. NORA LEE JENNINGS • 1103 West Eighth Street • Commercial. CAROLYN JOHNSON • 201 Reaney Street • Home Economics Activities: H.R. Rep. 1; H.R. Vice-Pres. 2. EDNA JOHNSON • 1418 West 11th Street • Practical Arts Activities: Girls’ Basketball 1; Mix Chorus 1. GARRY JOHNSON • 607 West Sixth Street • Commer- cial Activities: Cross-Country 3; Track 2, 3; Chorus 3. GREGORY JOHNSON • 327 Kerlin Street • Commer- cial Activities: H.R. Rep. 1. 2, 3. JAMES JOHNSON • 230 Jeffrey Street • Practical Arts Activities: Basketball 1, 2. JAMES JOHNSON • 336 Lamokin Street • Commercial. KENNETH JOHNSON • 327 Kerlin Street • Commer- cial. LERMONT JOHNSON • 510 Baker Place • Vocational. MARY ANNE JOHNSON • 1212 West Mary Street • Commercial Activities: Annual Staff 3. MAXINE JOHNSON • 2205 West Third Street • Commercial Activities: GAA 1; FTA 1, 2, 3; DECA 3; Chorus 2. PATRICK JOHNSON • 1073 North Ayre Drive • Voca- tional Activities: Lithographers of United States PHYLLIS JOHNSON • 822 West Eighth Street • College Preparatory Activities: Girls' Track 1; FTA 3; Student Council, Sr. Judge. RONALD JOHNSON • 533 Eighth Street • Commercial. ANTHONY JONES • 303 Evans Place • Practical Arts Activities: Track 1, 2, 3; Cross-Country 1, 3; Band 1. DARRYL JONES 1211 Morris Street • Commercial Activities: Football 1, 3; Dramatic Society 2; Student Council Rep. HEZEKIAH JONES • 205 Woodrow Street • Practical Arts. IRENE JONES • 1716 Nichols Terrace • Distributive Ed- ucation Activities: GAA 1: Monitor: H.R. Rep., Vice-Pres. PATRICIA JONES • 824 West Eighth Street • Home Economics Activities. FNA 1, 2. 3, Sec. 3. SHERIDAN JONES • 536 East Tenth Street • Commer- cial. STEPHEN JONES • 2720 Lehman Street • College Preparatory Activities: Science Club 1. 2: Soccer. 189 TERRANCE JONES 1111 Norris Drive • Practical Arts. THOMAS JONES • 1141 Norris Drive • Practical Arts Activities: Art Club 1. 3. NORMAN JORDAN • 38 West Eighth Street • College Preparatory Activities: Football 2, 3. STANLEY KACIUBAN • 3021 Carter Avenue • Aca- demic. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; WELCOME staff 1. 2, 3. MARIE KALUP 4213 Bent Lane • Commercial. Activities: Business staff 2. EMILIA KANIA • 424 Hayes Street • Commercial. LARRY KATZMIRE • 524 East 22nd Street • Vocation- al. Activities: Band 1. JAN KEATES • 1008 Central Avenue • Practical Arts. JOHN KELLY • 1025 West Seventh Street • Vocational. BRENDA KENNARD • 1723 Nichols Terrace • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1; Drama Club I; FTA 1, 2. 3; Histori- ans 3; Class Vice President I. JOSEPH KENNEDY • 2618 Swans Street • Vocational. THEODORE KENNEDY • 915 West Seventh Street • Vocational. KAREN KESTNER • 45 West Tenth Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Hockey 1, 2; GAA 1, 2, 3; FTA 1; Dramatic Society 2; Honor Society 2, 3; ANNUAL staff 2, 3; Business Manager 3; WELCOME 1; Student Council Rep. 1; Monitor 2; Softball Manager 1. EDWARD KEY • 252 West Second Street • Practical Arts. GREGORY KILLEN • 1113 Hancock Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: Art Cub 1; DECA 3; President 3. RICHARD KILLIAN • 328 West 21st Street • Vocation- al. RITA KILSON • 1812 West Ninth Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3. CHARLES KIND • 921 Parker Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 1. SARA KINDER 1124 Kerlin Street • Academic. Activities: Chorus 1, 2, 3; GAA 3. SAM KING • 834 West Sixth Street • Commercial. Activities: Literary Society 3; H R. Rep. 1, 2. BARBARA KINLAW • 1418 West Sixth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Majorettes 3; GAA 1. 2, 3; Student Council 2; Junior Judge 2; PICCO 2: Honor So- ciety Secretary 3. OREOLE KNIGHT • 219 West Seventh Street • Commercial. ALFRED KIRKLAND • 1006 West Seventh Street • Commercial. Activities: Track 2, 3. Manager 3; FTA 1. STEVEN KRAUS • 215 West 24th Street • Academic. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Dance Band 1, 2, 3. RANDALL KRESGE • 21 North Eyre Drive • Vocation- al. Activities: Baseball 1, 2, 3; Band 1, 2, 3; Red Cross 3: Key Club 1, 2, 3. Treasurer 2, Vice President 3. JESSICA LACEY 117 Kerlin Street • Practical Arts. KATHRYN LAHR • 2618 Sandelands Street • College Preparatory. Activities: IRC 1; GAA 1; Literary Society 2; FTA 3; Visual Aides 3, Student Council Rep. I. HOWARD LANCASTER • 1329 Engle Street • Vocation- al. PATRICIA LANCASTER • 222 Pusey Street • Commer- cial. LEON LANIER • 1009 West Fifth Street • Vocational. Activities: Honor Society 2, 3: ANNUAL staff 2; H R. Rep. L 2, 3. ELIZABETH LANK • 417 East Seventh Street • Commercial. Activities: DECA 3. CARRIE LATIMER • 700 Upland Street • Commercial. Activities: Girls Soltball I. 2; GAA 3; Chorus 2. 3. Library Aide 3. MAMIE LATIMER • 700 Upland Street • Home Econo- mics. RODNEY LAUBE • 1307 Hancock Street • Vocational HELEN LAWRENCE • 108 Franklin Street • Practical Arts. Activities: ENA 1. 2. 3. CALVIN LAWS • 1010 West Second Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Football 1, 2. 3; Track 1. THEODORE LAWSON • 1221 West Tenth Street • Commercial. Activities: Basketball 1, 2, 3. DONALD LEAKE • 1415 West Seventh Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Basketball 1, 2, 3. GLENDALE LEGETTE • 300 Ayars Place • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 1, 2. 3: FNA 1, 2. 3. HENRY LEGETTE • 300 Ayars Place • Vocational. Activities: Track 3; Indoors Track 3; Cross-Country 3. JOHN LEWIS ■ 323 Kerlin Street • Commercial. WILLIE LINDER • 1206 West Ninth Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Basketball Manager 2, 3. LINDA LLOYD • 820 East 14th Street • Distributive Ed- ucation. THOMAS LUNDGREN • 1124 Madison Street • Aca- demic. Activities: Football 2; Baseball 1; Interact Club 2, 3; Class Vice-Pres. 3. MARK LOBACH • 2713 Forwood Street • College Preparatory. RICHARD LUNDBERG • 2719 Forwood Street • Voca- tional. 191 LORRAINE LUNNESS • 320 Townsend Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. VERONICA LUZAK • 2503 West Sixth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2. 3; Monitor 2, WELCOME Staff. JAMES MACCALL • 2004 Edgmont Avenue • Commer- cial Activities: DECA 3. RENEE MACK • 2304 West Third Street • Commercial. Activities: Hockey 1. 2: Softball 1, 2. RONALD MAISEL • 604 West Ninth Street • Practical Arts. JOSEPH MANCINI • 2721 Chichester Road • Vocation- al. Activities: Baseball 1, 2. 3. WILLIAM MARVEL • 145 Worrell Street • Vocational. Activities: Baseball 1, 2. 3. DORINE MAXWELL • 1921 West Mary Street • Practi- cal Arts. SHARON McCLELLAN • II4 West 21st Street • Commercial. Activities: Art Club 1; GAA 1, 2, 3. MARY McCLOSKEY • 1405 Honan Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Red Cross Council 2, 3: Monitor 2. 3: H.R. Rep. 1. 2. 3. PARRIS McGHEE • 814 West Third Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 3; Baseball 3: Band 1. 2. 3. LORETTA McHENRY • 1421 Honan Street ■ College Preparatory. Activities: Visual Aids 3: FTA 3: GAA 3. JOHN McIVER • 536 Penn Street • BELINDA McKENZIE • 618 West Second Street ■ Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2. JOHN McLEAN • 103 Kerlin Street • Academic. Activities: Basketball 1. 2. BONNIE McMASTER • 32 West 11th Street • Commer- cial. Activities: ANNUAL 3: GAA 3; Monitor 1. JOYCE McNEIL • 1001 Hunt Terrace • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3; WELCOME 3. GWENDOLYN MATHIS • 931 Pennel Street Commercial. Activities: GAA I, 2, 3; FNA 2. 3. ROSALIND MAXWELL • 1313 Engle Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; Chorus 1, 2, 3. LINDA MI AH • 919 Flower Street • Commercial. ELAINE MICHALOWICH • 1029 Ward Street • Commercial. SANDRA MICHULKA • 228 Clayton Street • Practical Arts. JOANNE MILES • 1010 Thomas Street • Distributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. JOHN MILLER • 423 Concord Avenue • Vocational. SHIRLEY MINOR 1413 Norris Drive • Commercial. LULA MINTER 518 West Fifth Street • Practical Arts. Activities: FNA 1. ANTHONY MISTECKA • 112 Wilson Street • Vocation- al. PORTIA MITCHELL • 503 Kerlin Street • Commercial. Activities: Chorus 1, 2, 3; H R. Rep. 2. ALICE MOORE • 216 West 15th Street • Commercial. Activities: ANNUAL 3. FRANK MOORE -418 West Fifth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Chorus 1; Tennis 3. WAYNE MORGAN • 1326 Engle Street • Commercial. Activities: Band 2. OLIVER MOSLEY -515 West Sixth Street • Vocational. RUBY MOSLEY • 515 West Sixth Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3. BEVERLY MOTEN • 934 Stoval Place • Practical Arts. JOHN MUMFORD • 402 Fulton Place • Practical Arts. JOHN MUNN • 317 Lloyd Street • Vocational. ANTHONY MURRAY • 912 West Ninth Street • Practi- cal Arts. Activities: Football 1; WELCOME 1; H.R. Rep. 1, 2; Key Club 2, 3. IRENE MURRAY • 1524 Townsend Street • Distributive Education. Activities: Chorus 1, 2; GAA L 2; H.R. Treasurer 1, 2; DECA 3. JAMES MURRAY 613 East 19th Street • Vocational. JEAN MURRAY • 712 West 11th Street • Distributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. KEITH MURRAY • 806 Elsinore Place • Commercial. ADELE MUSCELLA • 814 East 14th Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; Monitor 1; ANNUAL 2, 3, Business Manager 3. ARRETTA MUSE • 710 JefTrey Street • Distributive Ed- ucation. Activities: DECA 3, ANNUAL 3. PATRICIA NAUS • 1511 Honan Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Gymnastics 1; Band 1, 2, 3; GAA I, 2, 3; Dra- matics Society 2: Red Cross Council 3; Class Secretary 3. RICHARD NAVIN • 1200 Highland Avenue • Commer- cial. ALBERT NAYLOR • 1434 Wright Terrace • College Preparatory. Activities: Soccer 1, 2, 3; Band L 2, 3: Chorus 2, 3; Liter- ary Society 3. JOANNE MOSLEY 1114 Edwards Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; WELCOME 2; ANNUAL 3. 192 CHRISTINE NELSON • 1405 Concord Road • Commer- cial KATHLEEN NELSON • 1405 Concord Road • Commer- cial. Activities: Chorus 2. DOROTHY NIMMONS • 424 East Third Street • Practical Arts. LINDA NOWELL • 1120 West Seventh Street • Commercial. Activities: WELCOME staff 3; H R. Rep. 3. DAVID OTT • 112 West 24th Street • College Preparato- ry- Activities: Basketball 1; Interact Club 2, 3. PATRICIA OWENS • 1413 Honan Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2. 3; WELCOME staff 1. SHARYCE OWENS • 220 West Second Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2. LEONARD OWSIANY • 2901 West Seventh Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Band 1, 2. 3; WELCOME staff 3. MARY LOU PACE ■ 724 Potter Street • Commercial. GEORGIA PANTELOPULOS -111 East 24th Street • Commercial. CYNTHIA PARASINK • 439 East 12th Street • College Preparatory. Activities: WELCOME Staff 1, 2, 3: ANNUAL Staff 3; Red Cross Council 2, 3: GAA 1. 2. 3; Honor Society 2, 3, President 3; HI-Q 3: Softball Manager 1. THEODORE PARKER • 404 Ayars Place • Commercial. THOMAS PARKER -711 Jeffrey Street • Commercial. Activities: Basketball 1, 2, 3. JEAN PATTERSON • 119 West 24th Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 3. JOHN PAULING • 1420 Richardson Terrace • Vocation- al. CATHY PEARSALL • 2513 West Third Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 2, 3; Chorus 3: WELCOME Staff 3. H R. Rep. 1, 2. LINDA PETIT DE MANGE • 912 East 18th Street • Commercial. Activities: Cheerleading 1. 2, 3; FTA 1; WELCOME Staff 1, 2; Photography 3: Red Cross Council 2. 3, President 3: Visual Aids 2, 3; Linguist Society 1; Gerry Feather Campaign 2, 3. LEWIS PHILLIPS • 2117 Edgmont Avenue • Vocational. ROMAINE PHILLIPS • 1140 West Norris Drive • College Preparatory. Activities: Soccer 1. 3: Track 3; Dey Club 3; Band 1. 2. 3: Chorus 1, 3. DAVID PIERCE • 727 West Fifth Street • Vocational. DIN ETTA PIERCE • 505 Pearl Place Commercial. Activities: GAA 3. WILLIAM PIERCE • 727 West Fifth Street • Commer- cial. Activities: H.R. Rep. 3. SUSAN POCHMARA • 2621 West Seventh Street Commercial. EDWARD POLLARD • 223 Woodrow Street • Practical Arts. RONALD PORTER • 1402 Locke Terrace • College Preparatory. Activities: Track 3: Interact Club 3. STEPHEN PORTER • 2608 West Sixth Street • Vocation- al. Activities: Football 1. LAVON POSTELLE • 509 Pearl Place • Practical Arts. Activities: Track 2: Band 1, 2. NANCY POTEAT • 738 West Second Street • Practical Arts. Activities: FNA. FRANCES POTTS • 329 Montgomery Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: DECA 3; FTA: Junior Historians. STEVEN POTTS • 1029 Concord Avenue • Practical Arts. DENNIS POWELL • 80 Central Avenue • Practical Arts. Activities: Football 3. 193 DOREATHA PRATTIS • 1720 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts. JOSEPHINE PRATTIS • 1720 West Seventh Street • Practical Arts. BENJAMIN PRICE • 818 McDowell Avenue • Vocation- al. JOSEPH PRICE • 1102 Nichlos Street • Vocational. CAROLYN PROROCK • 1228 Pine Lane • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2. 3; FTA I, 2. 3: WELCOME Staff 3. JAMES PURDY • 1436 Perkins Street • Vocational. CLAUDIA PURNSLEY • 721' 4 West Second Street • Commercial. Activities: DECA 3; FNA 1, 2, 3; Library Club 1: FNA President 3. CLINTON QUARLES • 825 West Eighth Street • Practi- cal Arts. MARY QUEEN • 1622 West Second Street • Practical Arts. NICHOLAS RAPAGNANI • 912 Keystone Road • College Preparatory. Activities: Soccer 1, 2, 3. ELIZABETH RATAY • 1228 Ganster Place • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. NEAL REAGAN • 70 West Tenth Street • Practical Arts. Activities: Art Club 2. JANICE REED • 914 West Ninth Street • Academic. JOHN REED • 325 East 20th Street • Commercial. Activities: Soccer 1; DECA 3. MARK REED Mil East 13th Street • Academic. Activities: Soccer 2, Manager 3; Audio Visual Aids. JAMES RESTANEO • 1331 Kerlin Street • Vocational. LINWOOD RIDEOUT • 1112 Parker Street • Vocational. Activities: Soccer 1; Track 1. GAR RILEY • 918 Butler Street • Commercial. ROBIN RILEY • 810 Pennell Street • Practical Arts. MURYL ROBBINS • 826 West Second Street • Practical Arts. Activities: FNA 2. 3: Art Club 2, 3. CHARLOTTE ROBINSON • 912 West Fifth Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3. RICHARD ROCCIO • 2416 Felton Avenue • Commer- cial. JAMES ROMAN • 101 Lamokin Street • Practical Arts. DALE ROSENBERG • 233 East 23rd Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1. 2. 3: Cheeneading 1, 2. 3; Monitor 2; Junior Red Cross 1; Student Council Senator 2. 3; AN- NUAL Staff 3; Red Feather Campaign 3. JOSEPH ROSS • 1516 Lytle Terrace • Vocational. REGINOLD ROSS • 923 West Ninth Street • Vocational. Activities: Band 1. LINDA ROUNDS • 1139 Remington Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Band 2. 3; Majorette 3; GAA I. 2. 3; Red Cross 3. LUCILLE ROYAL • 719 Pennell Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Girls’ Hockey 1; Girls’ Track 1, 2. 3; Chorus 1. 2, 3, GAA 2, 3, IRC 2; Red Cross Council 3; Dramatic Society 2. BETTY JEAN SAILOR • 1425 Wright Terrace • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3; FNA 1, 2, 3. Treasurer 3. ARTHUR SAPOVITS • 519 East 22nd Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Band 1, 2. 3; Literary Society 3; IRC 1. JOSEPH SARGENT • 932 West Ninth Street • Vocation- al. Activities: Track 1, 2, 3. JAMES SATCHELL • 537 Tilghman Street • Vocational. Activities: Track 2. 194 CHAUNCEY SAUNDERS • 923 West Seventh Street • Vocational. CAREY SAVAGE • 736 Jeffrey Street • College Prepara- tory. Activities: Track 3; Key Club 1, 2; Band 1, 2, 3. VINCENT SAVAGE • 321 Tilghman Street • Vocational. DAVID SCHAEN • 3014 Union Street • Vocational. Activities: Soccer 2, 3. ANNETTE SCHMIEGELOW • 603 West Second Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 2. LEONARD SCHULER • 30 West 11th Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Baseball 1; Visual Aids 2, 3; Band 3; Red Cross 3. MYRNA SCHWARTZ • 124 West 21st Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA L 2, 3; WELCOME staff 1, 2, 3; Liter- ary Society 3; Red Cross Council 3. DAVID SCOTT • 727 Upland Street • Academic. Activities: WELCOME staff 3; Literary Society 3: FTA 3. EULA SCOTT • 106 Penn Street • Practical Arts. Activities: GAA 2, 3; FTA 3. WILLIAM SCOTT • 2409 West Third Street • Vocation- al. ELIZABETH SCRIVEN • 324 Kerlin Street • Practical Arts. Activities: FTA 3; GAA 3. BARBARA SEARLES • 1523 Rothwell Terrace • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2. 3; ANNUAL staff 3; WELC OME staff 3: Monitor 3. DONNA SELBY 1515 West Seventh Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 1. 2, 3. Rep. 2; H.R. Rep. 3. ZYGMUNT SENDER • 2906 West Sixth Street • Voca- tional. Activities: Soccer 3: Industrial Society 1, 2, 3. 195 VINCENT SETH • 942 West Eighth Street • Practical arts. KENNETH SHAMBERGER • 1220 West Ninth Street • Commercial. Activities: Basketball 1. 2. 3. JOSEPH SHAHADI • 2617 West Third Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Football 1, 2. DORIS SHEPARD • 1610 Upland Street • Commercial. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3: Red Cross. LEONARD SHERMAN • 606 east 19th Street • Commercial. JOHN SHOCKLEY • 308 East 20th Street • Distributive Education. Activities: DECA 3. JUDITH SHUMAN • 2502 Ridley Avenue • Commercial. Activities: Library Aide 2. 3: FNA 1. 2. JOHN SIMPSON • 216 Yarnall Street • College Prepara- tory. Activities: Band I. 2. 3: Chorus 1. 2. 3: Orchestral 2. 3: Dance Band I. 2. 3. RICHARD SIMPSON • 1214 Keystone Road • Vocation- al. Activities: Baseball 1. JOHN SKLADANOWSKI 1114 Vauclain Street • Voca- tional. Activities: Soccer 2: Industrial Society 2. 3. PAUL SLOAN • 1434 Perkin Street • Commercial. FRANK SMITH • 313 Broomall Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 1. 2. 3. LULA SMITH • 1100 Porter Street • College Preparatory. Activities: FTA Advisor 1, 2. 3; Chorus 1, 2; GAA 1. 2. 3; Monitor 2; Teachers' Aide 2, 3. THERESA SMITH • 329 West Ninth Street • Practical Arts. Activities: FNA 2, 3; WELCOME 2. ARMETTA SOLOMON • 2312 West 13th Street Commercial. Activities: GAA 2, 3. CARL SPANGLER • 3419 Township Line Road College Preparatory. Activities: Baseball 1; Key Club 1,2: P1CCO 3. TALBERT SPENCE • 2107 West Third Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Basketball 1; Band 1, 2, 3: Chorus 2, 3; Student Council 3. DAVID SPRINGFIELD • 423 West Second Street Commercial. EDWARD STAFFORD • 2535 Lindsay Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Basketball 1: JUDITH STAFFORD • 2535 Lindsay Street • Commer- cial. ANNA STANCZYK • 2839 West Sixth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; Red Cross 2, 3: FTA 2, 3; Dra- matics Club 1, 2: WELCOME 1, 2, 3; Hockey Manager 1. JACQUELINE STAPLES • 1025 West Eighth Street Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; H.R. Secretary 3. SILAS STAPLES • 221 Tilghman Street • Practical Arts. CLIFTON STARKEY • 517 Penn Street • Vocational. KENNETH STARLING 2711 Nolan Street • Vocation- al. KATHY STEELE • 1017 Concord Avenue • College Preparatory. Activities: FTA 1. 2; Student Council 2, 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; WELCOME 3; Red Feather 3. RITA STEM PIN • 1002 Hyatt Street • College Preparato- ry- Activities: GAA 3; WELCOME 2, 3; ANNUAL 3; Red Cross Council 3; Library Aide 2, 3; National Honor Soci- ety 2, 3; Treasurer 3. LARRY STEPHENSON 516 Penn Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 1, 2, 3: Track 2, 3; Band 1; H.R. Rep. 1, 2. VERA STEVENSON • 2121 West Second Street Commercial. KATHRYN STEWART • 324 Engle Street • Commercial. Activities: FNA 1, 2. LEROY STILLIS • 929 Stoual Place • Vocational. Activities: Dance Band I; Football Manager. BERNADINE STINSON • 1021 West Eighth Street Commercial. Activities: FNA I; GAA 3; H.R. Rep. 2. LEROY STODDARD • 921 West Seventh Street • Practi- cal Arts. Activities: FTA 3: WELCOME 3. RITA STRANGE • 5 Yarnall Street • Home Economics. ROBERT SULECKI -2313 West Fourth Street • Voca- tional. JANICE SWAIN • 1221 West Ninth Street • Distributive Education. Activities: Cheerleader 1, 2, 3, Captain 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; Drama Club 2; H.R. Rep. 1, President 1. CORDELIA SWIGGETT • 808 West Sixth Street • Distri- butive Education. Activities: DECA 3: Chorus 2: ANNUAL 3. DANIEL SYKES • 925 Elsinore Place • Commercial. Activities: Football 1, 2, 3. PAUL SZELAK • 2606 West Sixth Street • Commercial. INEZ TASKER • 701 Central Avenue • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2; Chorus 2, 3: ANNUAL staff 3; Monitors 3. MARSHA TAYLOR • 921 Lamokin Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Student Council, Judge 3; FTA, Jr. President 2, President 3; Junior Historians 2, 3; Teachers Aid 1. 2, 3; GAA 1, 2. 3: WELCOME 1, 2, 3: ANNUAL staff 3; United Fund Campaign 3. 196 WARREN TAYLOR • 26 East Seventh Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Football 1. 2; Boys’ Track 1, 2. WINIFRED TAYLOR • 2107 Tolston Street • Commer- cial. BARRY TENNEY • 340 West 22nd Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Art Club 1, 2, 3; ANNUAL staff 3. JOSEPH TEOFILAK • 3037 West Second Street • Voca- tional. Activities: Soccer 2, 3. KATHLEEN THOMAS • 923 Stoual Place • Commercial. Activities: Chorus 2; GAA Rep. 3; FNA 3. ARNETTA THOMPSON • 619 Feffrey Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA Rep. 1; H.R. Rep. 2, 3. GLORIA TILLERY • 308 Ayars Place • Practical Arts. JOAN TILLERY • 1108 Parker Street • College Prepara- tory. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3: National Honor Society 2, 3; WELCOME staff 3: Class Treasurer 1, 2. CYNTHIA TOLLEN • 628 East 19th Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Jr. Red Cross 1; Student Council Recording Sec. 2, Pres. 3; Cheerleader L 2, 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; AN- NUAL staff 2, 3; WELCOME staff 3; Monitors 2; IRC 3; PICCO Student Committee 1, 2, 3: Red Feather Cam- paign 2, 3. RITA TRENCHIK • 2411 West Third Street • Commer- cial. Activities: GAA 3. IDA TUCKER • 106 Edwards Street • Practical Arts. WILLIAM TURNER, JR. • 1030 Sycamore Street College Preparatory. Activities: Band 1, 2, 3; Dance Band 1, 2. 3. BONITA TYLER 1311 West Third Street • Commer- cial. Activities: WELCOME staff 3; GAA 1, 2. 3; ANNUAL staff 3; Monitors 3. PAULINE USKIEVICH • 2617 West Sixth Street • Commercial. Activities: Student Council Corresponding Sec. 3; Red Cross 2, 3, Sec. 3; GAA L 2. 3. H R. Rep. 2; WELCOME staff 3; Senior Council 3; Red Feather Campaign 3. JOHN VAUL JR. • 72 West Tenth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Soccer 3; Key Club 1, 2, 3. Pres. 3, Lieut. Gov., Division 22, Penna. District: WELCOME staff 1, 2, 3; ANNUAL staff 1, 2, 3; Monitors 1, 2; Dance Band 2; Science Club 1. 2; National Honor Society 2, 3: Interact Club 3: PICCO Student Committee 1, 2, 3: Red Feather Campaign 2, 3; Holiday Star 3. DELORES WALLS • 512 East 11th Street • Practical Arts. JAMES WALLS • 324 East 14th Street • Vocational. Activities: Football 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 3. THOMAS WARREN -315 Ayars Place • Vocational. MARJORIE WASHAM • 402 Yarnall Street • Commer- cial. PATRICIA WASHAM • 402 Yarnall Street • Practical Arts. RONALD WESLEY -717 Engle Street • Practical Arts. DONNA WESOLOWSKI • 2930 West Sixth Street Commercial. Activities: Monitors 1, 2, 3. GAA 1, 2, 3. JAMES WEST • 308 Avars Place • Vocational. SYLVIA WEST • 2011 West Tenth Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Girls’ Hockey Manager 1; FTA 1, 2, 3, Sec. 3; ANNUAL staff 3; WELCOME Staff 3. WILLARD WETHERILL • 2624 Boyle Street • Vocation- al. DONALD WETZEL • 82 South Eyre Drive • Vocational. Activities: Cross-Country 1; Track 3; Baseball 3. LINDA WHITE • 826 West Mary Street • Commercial. Activities: Girls’ Softball 1, 2, 3; GAA 1, 2, 3; Hockey Manager 3. 197 PATRICIA WHITE • 927 West Ninth Street • Practical Arts. RICHARD WILFORD • 1610 Providence Avenue • College Preparatory. Activities: Band 1, 2; H.R. Rep. 1. 2. JACK WILKIE • 627 Crosby Street • Vocational. DOROTHY WILLIAMS • 1012 Potter Street • College Preparatory. Activities: FT A 2, 3. JOYCE WILLIAMS 1311 Morris Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1. 2, 3: Monitors 3: Chorus 3. MARIE WILLIAMS • 2123 West Fourth Street • Commercial. PAUL WILLIAMS • 109 Franklin Street • Commercial. Activities: Basketball 1. 2, 3; ANNUAL Staff 3. SHIRLEY WILLIAMS • 734 Jeffrey Street • Commercial. Activities: DECA 3. STANLEY WILLIAMS • 512 West Fifth Street • Commercial. Activities: FTA 2, 3; WELCOME Staff 3; H R. Rep. L 2, 3. STEPHEN WILLIAMS • 1504 Reading Drive • Commer- cial. Activities: Band 1: Key Club 1. ANNE WILSON • 138 East 22nd Street • Commercial. Activities: Cheerleading I, 2, 3: Student Council 2, 3, Treas. 3; Red Cross 1, 2: GAA 3; Red Feather 3. DONALD WILSON 310 Ayars Place • Vocational. Activities: Industrial Society 1. 2, 3. DOROTHY WILSON 2110 West 6th Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Girls’ Basketball 3; Girls' Softball 3; Chorus 3. GREGORY WILSON • 1415 West Sixth Street • Dis- tributive Education. Activities: Track 2: DECA 3. HOWARD WILSON • 524 East Ninth Street • Commer- cial. Activities: Football 2. 3. PAUL WILSON • 708 Jeffrey Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Cross-Country 2; WELCOME Staff 1, 2, 3, Sports Editor 2, Editor in Chief 3. SUSAN WILSON • 524 East Tenth Street • Distributive Education. Activities: Girls' Track 1, 2: DECA 3: WELCOME Staff I. ROBERT WIMMER 1118 Thomas Street • Vocational. Activities: Soccer 1: Band 1. 2; Industrial Society 1, 2’ H R. Rep. 2. JOSEPH WINTERS • 785 East 24th Street • College Preparatory. CHRISTINE WOJCIK • 2504 West Sixth Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 2. 3; WELCOME Staff 2, 3: ANNUAL Staff 3; Monitors 2. OKSANNA WOLOWEC • 241 East Fifth Street • Commercial. Activities. FTA 1, 2; GAA 3; ANNUAL Staff 3; Guidance Helper 3. FAYE WOMACK • 1330 West 2nd Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3; DECA 3; FT A 1, 2. MARY WOMACK • 1330 West Second Street • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 3; FTA 3; WELCOME Staff 3. NANNIE WOMACK -1612 West Third Street • Practical Arts. THOMAS WORRILOW • 933 Potter Street • College Preparatory. Activities: Football 1, 2, 3: Baseball 1. JAMES W YATr • 1231 West Second Street • Vocational. SAMUEL YARNALL • 1110 Butler Street • College Preparatory. Activities. Basketball 1; Baseball 1, 2, 3; H.R. Rep. I, 2, 3; Red Cross 2. CARL YOUNG • 810 Eighth Street • Vocational. CAROL YOUNG • 426 Highland Avenue • Commercial. Activities: GAA 3. 198 LINDA YOUNG • 1207 Keystone Road • Commercial. Activities: GAA 1, 2, 3. SANDRA YOUNG • 2523 West Second Street • Commercial. Activities: Girls’ Hockey 1. 2, 3; Girls’ Basketball 3; Girls’ Softball 2, 3; Band 1; GAA 1, 2, 3; ANNUAL Staff 3. SHARON YURKASITIS • 1121 Baldwin Street Commercial. Activities: Library Aide 3; GAA 3. NORMAN ZOUMAS • 218 East 22nd Street • Dis tributive Education Activities: DECA 3. 199 Il£ tz iissr 7, ffif1ITIIH J r AMONG THE SENIORS JOo man's knowledge here can go beyond his experience. {John Cocke 201 AMONG THE SENIORS J’ve played a little, and J’ve worked a lot. J ve looed and J’ve hated, as who would not? J’ve had some fun and J’ve had some sorrow. J’ve had to steal and J’ve had to borrow. J’ve sinned a little, but all in all. J’ve hardly tasted life at all Milt Bronston 202 iM 9 205 AMONG THE SENIORS We are in the world like men playing at tables; the ehanee is not in our power. but to play it is, and when it is fallen. we must manage it as we ean. {Jeremy Zaylor 207 AMONG THE SENIORS Zhere was a man. though sonic did count him mad. Zhe more he cast away, the more he had. Paul Punyan 208 AMONG THE SENIORS Every life is a profession of faith. And exercises an inevitable and silent propaganda. Amiel AMONG THE SENIORS Our past is clean forgot. Our present is and is not. Our future's a sealed seedplot. Jnd what betwixt them are we? 7). Q. Kossetti 215 AMONG THE SENIORS tife's a pudding full of plums. Care’s a canker that benumbs. Wherefore waste our elocution On impossible solution? Cife’s a pleasant institution. Cet us take it as it comes! W. S. (filbert 216 217 FACULTY FROLIC Haste thee Hymph. and bring with thee ]est. and youthful Jollity. Quips and Cranks, and wanton Wiles. Hods, and Keeks, and wreathed Smiles. John Milton JUNIOR PROM OF 1966 friendship should be surrounded with ceremonies and respects, and not crushed into corners, friendship requires more time than poor, busy men can usually command. Katph IValtlo Emerson AUTOGRAPHS AND PICTURES Oh! tke good times when we were so unhappy. Dumas 223 224 Cong, bug be my heart with such memories fill'd! Cike the vase in which roses have once been distill'd. ] ou may break, you may shatter the vase if you will. Rut the scent of the roses will long round it still. Thomas Moore - - RECEIVERS OF THE P.I.C.C.0.1966 scholarship Awards-Seated Dor- othy Yacek; Cemille Pntchctt. Pamela Tiller. Angela Davis. Bernadette Johnson. Carolyn Smith. Olivia Carter, Judith Klock. Joyce Spradlcy. Standing Nicholas DiDomcnico. Donald Burke. Mark Mitchell. John Margetich. Shirley Morrison. Mr. Vermeychuk. Patricia McGee. W Mar- tin McCabe. Lovell Harris. Edward Isaacson. 229 230 PATRONS J still believe that people are really good at heart. Jane Jrattk BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL PATRONS Vesuvio’s Restaurant 3200 West Ninth Street Chester, Penna. Aldan Rug Mills, Inc. Lenni Mills Pennsylvania Morris Jewelers, Inc. 620 Edgmont Avenue Chester, Penna. Edgmont Beef Co. 514 Edgmont Avenue A. J. Schmidt Company Sheet Metal Steel Fabricators 418 West Front Street Chester. Penna. Harry's Chester Shoe Fair Fine Shoes Cancellations and Samples Seibu—Kan Karate School Walter Daily the 3rd, Instructor Weinbergs Apparel and Accessories Edgmont Avenue Chester, Penna. A Friend Squire's Sandwich Shop 1115 Morton Avenue J. C. Ayers Company Sheet Metal Works Roofing Chester, Penna. Wellington’s Auto Service 54-56 West Ninth Street M. J. Freed. Inc. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding Chester, Penna. Yellow Bowl Restaurant and Catering Service Morianni’s Sandwiches. Beer. Pizza Fourth and Morton Avenue A Friend Hardware Supply Company Edgmont Fourth Street Chester, Penna. Chuck’s Esso Eighth and Morton Avenue Edgmont Oil Co. 1104 Morton Avenue V. J. Pace Sons, Inc., Realtors 133 West Fifth Street Chester. Penna. Oppenheim’s Food Market 11-13 West Third Street Chester, Penna. Meats—Groceries People’s Printing Shop Morton Avenue Joseph A. Totino. M.D. Chester, Penna. George F. Brower Funeral Home 1600 Edgmont Avenue Chester, Penna. FACULTY PATRONS Miss Alda Adams Mr. Mrs. J. Ambrogi Mr. Mrs. Charles Aldridge Miss G. Barbacone Helen M. Bartha Miss Helen J. Beldecos Mr. Earl Blazynski Mr. H. Boyer Mr. Jesse Brewster Mr. Charles L. Bridy Mr. W. E. Brown Mr. Mrs. Wm. N. Brown Mr. Mrs. J. Edward Buckley Mr. A. Buono Mr. Mrs. A. J. Buono Cynthia Buono C H S. Printing Classes Mr. Harry J. Charlton Compliments of Fifth Period Office Practice Compliments of Fourth Period Office Practice Mr. Mrs. George Cottrell Mrs. Grace A. Elrick Miss Claire V. Fitzpatrick Mrs. Shirley Franklin Dorothy Gefvert Dr. Mrs. Jos. B. Godick Mr. R. Grainger Mr. Mrs. Roger Griest Mr. Mrs. Wm. G. Hagar Mr. Mrs. Wm. H. Hale Miss Marie Hogan Mr. Mrs. David Hughes Miss Virginia Jakob Evangeline K. Jones Vera Shawn Keith Mrs. Eileen M. Kelley Mr. Mrs. John A. Kestner Mr. and Mrs. Norman Knox Miss Ruth Kotzen Miss Pauline Lerman Mr. Mrs. Robert H. Lomax Mr. Thomas Masticola Mr. Mrs. Alfred H. McKinney Mr. Mrs. William Molloy Mr. Frederick Nichols Mrs. A. Nolan Miss Jane L. Penman Mr. Mrs. John E. Perkins Mr. Mrs. A. M. Polilli Miss Jesse Powell Mr. John Riddell Miss Clara P. Riley Miss Diana Sarnocinski Mr. Mrs. Wm. L. Schroat Miss Leona Sealey Miss Sandra Skwirut K. Stankiewicz Christine Swierblewski Miss Madge Terwilliger Brook Tomlinson Mr. Mrs. John Udovich Jim Vermeychuk Mr. Mrs. Myron Willert 233 REGULAR PATRONS Robert Amer Mr. Mrs. Guy Cook Aunt Blanche Mr. Mrs. Richard Calderoni Larry B. Anderson Peter Coccagna Mr. Richard Austin Vivian Clifton Mrs. Annie Austin Doreen Clifton Mr. Mrs. William B. Armour Compliments of a Friend A Friend Mr. Mrs. Crawford Bill Mary Armstrong Mr. Mrs. James Collins Mr. Mss. John Burrell Mr. Mrs. Joseph Carand Vaughan Beswick Mr. Mrs. Lonzo Clement Norman H. Bennett Mr. Mrs. Harrison Carroll Wayne Brownhill Joseph Caranci Mr. Mrs. E. Brownhill Mr. Ciliberto Theodons Aurelia Bogucki Charles W. Custis William L. Bryant Mr. Mrs. Alphonso Collier Samuel N. Broughton Mr. Mrs. Horace A. Collier Mr. Mrs. Harry Borgese Mr. Mrs. Randy Clascoc Linda Kathy Borgese Madeline A. Carroll Mr. Mrs. Joseph Bowman Mr Mrs. William Cassell Julia Bndgeford Albert Mary Council John Beaudet Brady. C. C., Renee. Tony, Kim. Greg and Kevin Coundi Billy Sharon Mr. Mrs. Ben Despcr Mr. Roosevelt Beaver Mrs. Abbey Ann Dawson Mr. Mrs. Henry Brown Mr. Mrs. Herman B. Dawson Mrs. Ola Bunside Danny Edie Mr. Mrs. Daniel Brown Mr. Mrs. Thomas Donaldson Omega J. Brooks Joe Donnely Mr. Mrs. L. Brown, Jr. Ignatius DiCola Mrs. Berke William Helen Davis Mr. Mrs. Charles Burley Arlic Davis Charles Burley Charlie R. Davis Ethel C. Butler Mr. Mrs. Purnell Daniels Mr. Mrs. William Brevard, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Stephen E. Ewing, Jr. Mrs. Minnie Bentley Mr. Daniel Ellis Gladys Berry Mrs. Martha A. Engberg Helen Bartha Mrs. Elliot Miss Hattie Bailey Miss Beth Edwards Miss Sara Bailey Mr. Mrs. William Eaves Adolphi H. Blair. M.D. Mr. Mrs. Thomas Flanagan Bonnie Mr. Mrs. Dennis J. Flanagan Mr. Mrs. William Chaplin 234 Frank Jimmy Mr. A Mrs. Edward Pcyrc Ferry Just a Friend Mr. A Mrs. Joseph Fisher Mrs. Mary Keyser Mr. A Mrs. Arthur Garrison Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kestner Mr. A Mrs. James E. Greene Miss Karen Kestner Mrs. Alice B. Greene Mr. and Mrs. James Knight Mrs. Rose Givens Mr and Mrs. Steve Korab Mr. A Mrs. Cameron Grant Mr. and Mrs. Elais Kish Rebecca Gray Dr. and Mrs. Robert Keohane Miss Jeanette Gibbs Mr. and Mrs. Cephas Lavne Alan A Mildred Grier Mylesia Latimer Mrs. May Gamble Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Lehr Mrs. Alice Govan Mr. and Mrs. Stanley S. Lech Mr A Mrs. Ernest Howard Mr. Herbert Lancaster Mr. A Mrs. Arthur Hudson Mrs. Edith Lancaster Mr. A Mrs. Robert Hannum Roy Lawler. Jr. Mrs. Ethel Hay man Little Lewie J. Wayne Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lunness William Hood Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lombardi Mr. A Mrs. George Howie Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lamey Mrs. Martha Hall Mrs. Ua Mac Luff Mr. A Mrs. Daniel Harris Miss Gail McMaster Mr. Henry Harris Mr. Francis McMaster Joanne. Robert. Pamela Harvey Miss Bonnie McMaster Julia May Harris Mrs. Mary McMaster Mrs. Myrtle A Robert Harris James McCloskcy Mrs. Elizabeth Harris Harry A. McClellan Mr. A Mrs. Jimmy Harper Edna McClellan Mr. A Mrs. William Hilton Gwen “1950” McCloskey Mr. A Mrs. Douglas Hales Mrs. Margaret R. MacDowell Buddy Houser Mr. and Mrs. David McGrier Mr. John H. Jones Mr. Wesley McLaughlin Mrs. Annie Jones Miss Muriel McIntyre Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey James Mary Moses Miss Joyce N. Jennings Mr. A Mrs. Raymond E. Moore Elaine Jones Mr. A Mrs. Raymond L. Moore Edwin R. Jones Gary Moore Mrs. Nan Jones Mr. A Mrs. R. L. Moore. Sr. Willie Johnson Mr. A Mrs. Charles Montefuso Mrs. Magnolia Jennings Mr. A Mrs. Elbert Mathis A Family Jim and Bea Mr. A Mrs. Costa N. Miller Alfreda G. Jordon Mr. A Mrs. Mayo Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Johnson Nance Morre Joe “Zack” - Key Club” Laveme Miller 235 Mikes Hoagie Shop Michael Mckosh Moya, Jrs. Mr. Mrs. L. Nowell Mr. Mrs. Nygard Mr. Mrs. Newlin, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Marion Nicholson Nick and Sue Arthur Norris William Pridgen Clarence Penrose John Parylak William J. Pajer Mr. and Mrs. Tillie Pearson Harry Peppel Mrs. H. D. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Peters W. Alrich Price William Patterson Mr. and Mrs. A. Przedzial David Padgen Mrs. Margaret Polli Mr. and Mrs. Peter Rush Walter Reinmiller Joseph M. Rose William Robinson Lamont F. Rawlings Mrs. Cecelia Rodgers Mrs. Ella M. Reynolds Mr. Philip Roane Nola B. Robinson Florence Roberts Rachel Robins Mr. and Mrs. Essix Rushing Mrs. Rose Riley Mary Rhan David A. Rothwell Mr. Mattie Summerhill Mr. William Smith Mr. R. W. Salchmo Joseph Samuels Mr. Sc Mrs. James W. Saven Constance Sniechoski Mr. Sc Mrs. William Simson Mr. Mrs. Paris Scrivens Elmore Spear Carrie L. Springfield Mr. Mrs. Cornell Montrella Springfield Lennard Sherman Diane Sharlcnc Mrs. Catherine Swigget Mrs. Padia Stevenson Mr. Mrs. George Swain Mr. Mrs. Calvin Showell Joyce Sexton Mr. Sc Mrs. Robert Starky Mr. Mrs. Thomas Swigget Mr. Sc Mrs. Curtis Stewart Mr. Mrs. George Shuman Mr. Sc Mrs. Sutcliffe Marie Sc Vince Shandi J. Spear Mr. and Mrs. Robert Truell The McClellan Clan Mrs. Luebinda Towns RuthVTinley Lennie and Bca Grier Trego Mr. and Mrs. John Udovkch Catherine Vasil Mr. and Mrs. Henry Vasil Mr. and Mrs. George Wanner Mrs. Doris C. Washington Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Williams Mr. and Mrs. Leotha Wise Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Waller Mr. Bing Williams William Wasche Florence G. Wilson Diane Sc Sammie Lee Weathers Mrs. Beatrice Young 236 STUDENT BOOSTERS Marlene and Buddy Linda and Chuck Squizz and Jim Dolores and Sonny Ricky and Eula Alfred Kirkland Doreen and Sammy Rick and Marie Doris and Joe Mrs. Eileen Kelley John lannucci Andy Walt Barry Boyle Tony- Frank DeVita Jim Wallace Charlie Hank Robert Beck Chuck Doris Moore Ronnie Mackert Scrappy Leroy tarter. Sr. Richard Navin Keith and JciTy F. M. Hopish Peter Adamonis Katherine Mastronardo Gerry Mike and Rae Johnny and Virginia Ronnie and Dolly Ray and Elma Linda and Martin John and Gale Joe and Bunny Mane and Seed Albert and Karen Jimmy and Anne Marie Harriet Legg Marv Moccia Sandra Urian Evelyn and Harry, Jr. Mary and Ed Judy and A1 Joey and Nina Romeo and Mary Tommy and Linda Marie Pete the Lover Cassie and Frank Matilda and Theron Doris and Percy Alice and Cornell Sandy and Pete Tony and Tonic Herman Dawson. Jr. Tommy and Marty Nancy and Rocco Dobie and Bobby Ida Briscoe Dallas Fitzsimmons Audrey G. Millncr Lamont Rawlings Carol and Richard Mary A. Conroy G. Merlis Elberta Mary Lou and Jimmy Sue and Dave Ernie and Joyce Sherec Linda and Michael Pam Mancini Millie Mancini Terry and Diane Phyllis and Jon A Friend Great Lover Wayne and Dallas Dwight “Wilt” Turner Kenneth C. Jennings Jacqueline H. L. Bullock Gary Johnson Miss Bette Johnson Edith Church Nancy- and Jack Kathy and Joe Pat and Glenn Michael Helen Jan Peter Sandra John Lavem John Mary Catherine Ida Donna Anne Elizabeth Dee George Ben John Mary Pat and Gus Spencer Temale Chorus Linda and Art Elena and Jerry Dale and Mike The Polilli’s Pauline and Allen Chuck and Judy The Rosenberg’s Homeroom 302 Wayne and Joyce Terry and Tom Terry- and Hank Bill and Sherry Anne and Dee Steve and Debbie Chuck and Beatrice Lenny and Bea Homeroom 302 Sonny Ruth Randolph and Emma Adeline Jay Verdell and Bernadine Jane and Arnold Elizabeth Dianne George and Brenda Karen Myra and Dallas Pauline Bishop James Ashley Renee Mack Robert and Diane Ann and Charles Gary and Girls Charles and Josephine Charles and Grace Ruth and Inez Eugene and Lynne Denny and Rea Carl and Joyce Kenny and Allison Miss Brewster Mr. Brewster Richard and Geneva Ben and Cheryl Ralph and Rosalind JoAnn and Price MacBloom Daddy-o and Clarissa Clinton loves Shelia George loves Diana Bittle loves Sylvia George Kay Agnes Georganna Jean and Bing Sue and Donnie Mary and Victor Lilia Francine Walker Sue and Richie 237 LOCAL AREA WINNER of the 1967 “Voice of Democracy Essay Contest, sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign War Cynthia Tollen. first prize. OPERATION HOLIDAY STAR Sponsors-Captain Charles Olsen; Senator Clarence Bell; Dr. John Vaul: and Harry Goldstein. LOCAL AREA WINNERS of the 1967 Veterans of Foreign Wars Ability Counts Essay Contest, sponsored by the President of the United States-Carolyn Prorock, first prize; Cynthia Tollen. second prize; Rita Stempin. third prize. 238 SPECIAL NOTICE Zrue education makes for inequality-. the inequality of individuality, the inequality of success, the glorious inequality of talent of genius. . . Superiority, not standardization, is the measure of the progress of the world. felix Shelling WINNERS OF THE ‘OPERATION HOLIDAY STAR” POSTER CONTEST SPONSORED BY SENATOR CLARENCE BELL-Paul Harris, first prize; Dorothy Riggs, Art Teacher; James Hamlcr. second prize; William Harris, third prize; Linda Moore, honorable mention; Mrs. Amber Knox, who has been called the J. P. Morgan of Chester High School, has been Business Adviser of the ANNUAL for the past five years. With the same “iron rule” reserved for her classroom teaching. Mrs. Knox has succeeded in financially changing the status of the Year- book and has trained her business staffs to be competent and efficient business personnel. Although Mrs. Knox will be sadly missed, she has left a lasting example to “accomplish the difficult”. Heartfelt thanks and good wishes go to this teacher with the Midas touch. James Cobb, honorable mention; Floyd Toogood. honorable mention; Lillian S. Molloy, Art Teacher; not pictured-Dale Rosenberg, honora- ble mention. 239 IN MEMORIAM DR. JOHN B KLOPP 1902-1967 Within the memory of most Chesterites is a doctor who did much to im- prove the health of its citizens. Dr. John B. Klopp. As medical director of Chester School District for 35 years he instituted and supervised the pre- ventive Tuberculosis and Polio programs at the High School, not only immunized but also distributed pins and diplomas for the Practical Nurses, and as an avid football fan took special care of the players by personally examining them before the game and overseeing their safety at the games. Dr. Klopp, administrator of all medical personnel of Chester and curator of its youth, will long be remembered for his efforts to establish a healthy community. High sacrifice, and labour without pause Sven to the death-.—else wherefore should the eye Of men converse with immorality. 240 Wordsworth v •( « J . 3’ ?
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.