College High School - La Campanilla Yearbook (Upper Montclair, NJ)
- Class of 1960
Page 1 of 112
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1960 volume:
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,Y r ■k ■■A 3 ! 60 l La Campanilla , COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL UPPER MONTCLAIR, N. J. 1960 Although we may not pass this way again, any thought of 1960 will always call to mind memories of: Leaves underfoot on crisp September morn- ings . . . overwhelming beginning-of-the-year ambition replacing memories of a lazy, long-ago August ... the dim realization that this is our last year here, as the intangible senior class spirit draws us closer than ever to each other and to our school . . . irregular clicks marking the passage of class time . . . lunch and laughter in our grey, familiar upper hall . . . diversion of attention from English to snow . . . wet feet and rosy cheeks at 12:30 . . . bright crepe paper streamers reflected against the whiteness beyond the windows . . . long bars of morning sun on the gym floor . . . New York lights and dark trees outside the lounge . . . windows streaked with spring rain . . . cool, mint-green mornings and balmy afternoons . . . the last few weeks, when each familiar experience takes on a ne.w significance as we share it for the last time ... the amphitheatre ... a greater awareness of something ending, than of a begin- ning, at commencement. WW . • ■' ifii? ' - f fn I960: the culmination of our six years at College High School. We could never capture all we will want to remember of these years, or all we hope to be remembered for. Here in our year- book we bid a fond farewell to College High, as we take a last but oft-repeated look at I960: our year, our class, our school. dS ' laietSasaa i P S n T .k s ■k ' .- -; ' « ' .  r? -l f MkS DEDICATION We, the Class of 1960, have come to realize the great amount of individual guidance and personal help we have received in our years at College High School. As we look back over our years at C.H.S., we are forced to admit that we were not always worthy of the help we received, nor were we fully appreciative of it. We are thankful to many persons for their interest and guidance; but we wish to take this special opportunity to express our heart-felt gratitude to Miss Gallagher, the Assistant to the Director, who has advised and aided our class to an extent which far exceeds what is required of her. Miss Gallagher is an administrator; but, more than this, she has been to us an advisor, a teacher, a critic, an encourager; indeed, a true friend. As a small expression of our gratitude for her patience, her guidance, her criticism, and her untiring interest in us, we, the Class of 1960, dedicate our yearbook to Miss Gallagher. MISS GALLAGHER MISS JOAN E. GALLAGHER ' Thou wert my guide, philosopher, and fr end. — Alexander Pope DR. KEITH W. ATKINSON Direcfor MISS JOAN E. GALLAGHER Assistant to the Director MRS. ELIZABETH H. PETTEGROVE Secretary ADMINIS MRS. DOROTHY WALTER Librarian DR. HAROLD C. BOHN Senior Class Adviser MR. WILLIAM P. DIOGUARDI Director of Atliletics TRATION 1960 Dr. Harold C. Bohn English Dr. Maurice P. Moffott PAD Mr. George Placek Physics, Chemistry Dr. George Zebi( Latin Mr. Paul C. Clifford Mathematics 1959 1958 1957 Dr. Edwin S. Fulcomer English 1956 i r, Bertrand Boucher Social Studies 1955 Miss Irene Pennington English Mr. Stephe Kowalski Biology Dr. Bruce Meserve Mathematics Dr. Carolyn Bock Latin ■7 C ■C  r BM H M ' U ' J SWli H fm wi Mr. Walter E. Socio; Stud Kops Mr. Horace J. Sheppord Miss Louise Fonken Physical Education Mr. Williom Ballare Speech ' «K, Mr . William McNiece Shop c. ' 1 y ■? 1 N 1 1 i! 1 t«yj 1 Mr. John Schumaker Mofhemof cs Dr. Rufus Reed Science Dr. Kotherine Hall Home fconomJcs Mrs. Phyllis J. Lawrence Physical Education Dr. Eloisa Riven Spanish Miss Shirley Martin GAA Mr. Charles Martens Art Mrs. Susan Reynolds Home Economics Mr. Ramon Steinen Mathematics Mr. Hilton Goodman Spanish WJ ' r: Miss Dorothy Morse Mr. William Mr Foster Wygont Dr. Alden Coder Mr. Philip Cohen Chorus Dioguardi Physical Education Art Driver Education Modern History ' A feacher affects eternity, he can never tell when his influence stops —Henry Brooks Adams Mr. Louis Zerbe Sfrinq Ensemble Mrs. Keith W. Atkinson Typing Miss Mildred Osgood Art OUR TEACHERS i fm tiiii ' The secret y findov f whence the world Looks small and very dear -Gilbert Keith Chesterton ■' -■■' jy ji. ' ?jJ ' , SENIORS Quote — Dominus vobiscum. Likes Chris Parillo Pet Peeve cheap clothes Noted For his expensive shirts Usually Seen .... v earing his $10.98 shirt Song A You ' re Adorable ROBERT HARPER ATKINSON 222 Inwood Avenue Upper Montclair Amiable, easy-going ... wit and imagination well- mixed . . . gentle humor . . . from College High ' s first family . . . composed, courteous . . . the boy with the extravagant wardrobe . . . Chris Parillo exclusives . . . Inventory Control Manager emeritus . . . assiduously developed vocabulary . . . takes his studies more seriously than he takes himself. No mon is happy who does nof fhink himself so. — Publilius Syrus 12 Bob BARBARA ANN BANNISTER 36 Burlington Avenue Paterson Bright as a button . . . small girl with a big mind . . . never idle . . . busy B. B. . . . unspoiled sv eetness . . . a ready and willing friend ... her frequent amused chuckle . . . class youngster . . .the littlest scientist . . . peaches and cream complexion . . . careful, concerned . . . clear of eye and voice. Good healfh and good sense are two of life ' s greatest b essings. — Publilius Syrus B. 6. Quote Sure, I don ' t mind. Likes Debussy Pet Peeve Mozart Noted For naivete Usually Seen looking up Song Hey, Little Girl JAMES ANDREW BEHRMAN 690- 14th Avenue Paterson The class jester . . . diabolic wit ... his Little Johnny jokes ... his supernatural powers . . . act with due regard for Jimmy and his lightning bolt . . . that fear-inspiring laugh . . . demon grin . . . surprisingly serious about his studies . . . best-dressed by for . . . continental clothes, continental manner . . . fraternity man . . . lumberjack . . . kind and considerate in off-guard moments. Born with the gift of laughter and a sense that the world is mod. — Raphael Sabatini Jimmy Quote Na-sa-ma-ty-an-a-tow-a-sy Likes Chinese Waiters Pet Peeve -- Jinny Noted For sadistic humor Usually Seen shooting somebody Song — — He Quote - Yeehaaughh Likes anything edible Pet Peeve hypocrites Noted For undeniable genius Usually Seen helping Song Count Every Siar ROY BARTH BERNT 25 Marquette Road Upper Montclair Dark and handsome . . . fantastic mental capacity . . . alert and knowing ... a versatile genius . . . mathematician, historian, musician ... an all-around kid . . . fleet-feeted . . . dances, runs with equal ease . . . socially conscious . . . the motivating force behind many a class party . . . quick appreciation of humOr . . . often a victim of uncontrollable laughter . . . open-minded, honest ... an eager listener and a ready helper . . . earnest, introspective. Deferential, glad to be of use, polific, cautious, and meticulous. — 1. S. Eliot Roy 15 Quote You fool! Likes a good time Pet Peeve the campus cop Noted For perpetual good humor Usually Seen grinning Song Pennies From Heaven NICHOLAS A. CALIFANO 29 Green Knolls Drive Pines Lake Jovial, full of fun ... a pun-pal . . . the friendly bus-driver . . . noted horticulturist . . . California . . . one of those do-it-yourself guys . . . sails, skates, skis . . . Nick the penny-pincher . . . intelligent, diligent . . . influential in class afFairs ... a popular and willing host . . . dependable headlines editor . . . agreeable, reliable, congenial. His wif is gaiety withouf a sf ng. — Georg Brandes 16 Nick JULIE HELEN LOUISE FORREST 52 Warfield Street Upper Montclair Interesting clothes keyed to an intriguing personality . . . classic profile . . . master of the teacher squelch . . . best-read . . . class grammarian and speller . . . Got anything for me to ' proof and copy ' ? . . . generally accompanied by one or more members of her widely diversified menage . . . the dryest of wits . . . independent, unimpressionable. The love of learning, fhe sequesiered nooks, And all fhe sweef serenify of books. — Longfellow Quote Oh, alright! Likes horror movies Pet Peeve Dick Clark Noted For cryptic remarks Usually Seen tolerating something Song That Old Black Magic HELEN BARBARA GORDON 298 Luddington Avenue Clifton Ingenuous, intent . . . fine of feature, fair of face . . . an un-selfconscious beauty . . . Juno-esque . . . Hey Helen! Take my ' informal ' now! . . . untiring camera- toter ... a real lady . . . graceful, patient, poised . . . yet slightly debonair . . . head in the clouds, both feet firmly on the ground . . . plagued by freckles and a sweet, modest blush . . . silver-throated . . . mellifluous laughter . . . captain of the Mares . . . artist, actress, athlete, aesthete. ' Devoted, anxious, generous, void of guile. And with her wholeheart ' s welcome in her smile. —Mrs. Norton Helen Quote I was just wondering . . . Likes black olives Pet Peeve green olives Noted For blushing Usually Seen taking pictures Song Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered Quote Have you ever! Likes chocolate ice cream Pet Peeve ._. Jimmy Noted For her polar bear coat Usually Seen usually heard Song Yakkefy-Yak VIRGINIA ALLISON HAYMAN 681 Broadv ay Paterson Neat, dark, petite . . . pixie-ish hair . . . lively and loquacious . . . famous for hilarious imitations of people . . . her Felicia-face . . . her frog-face . . . organized . . . ambitious . . . hardworking ... a girl who gets things done . . . extra energy . . . enthusiasm . . . It ' s the end! . . . admirable taste in clothes ... a way with colors . . . orange and yellow prom decorations . . . cute, well-dressed, attractive. Hasf so much wit, and mirih in spleen abouf fbee, There ' s no living wifh fhee or without thee. — Addison Jinny 19 Quote Hey! Do you have your car here? Likes staying up and sleeping late Pet Peeve people who don ' t believe in Santa Claus Noted For popularity Usually Seen wearing sunglasses Song While We ' re Young VIRGINIA RUTH KELLEY 113 Meade Avenue Passaic Our blonde editor-in-chief . . . backbone of the yearbook . . . competent, concerned . . . unfailing sense of propriety . . . inherent good taste . . . habitually active . . . strange, charming ways . . . youthful sophistication ... a true night people . . . refreshing honesty, tempered with tact ... wit touched with wisdom ... an often reckless imagination . . . rich with creative originality . . . discerning, discriminating . . . under- standing and sympathetic. Graceful ease, and sweetness void of pride. —Alexander Pope 20 Kelley Ellie ELLEN WYNNE LARSEN 18 Lynack Road Hawthorne Possessor of a pure intellect . . . vast vocabulary . . . whatever it is, Ellie has a word for it ... a keen apprecia- tion of humor . . . laughs equally uproariously at teachers ' bad jokes as she does at real humor ... a wealth of general knowledge . . . persevering in the pursuit of her studies and interests . . . folk-song enthusiast . . . willing to entertain with her guitar ... or with one of her amusing stories . . . This really happened! . . . startling insight, poignant comments . . . willingly lends herself to any worthy cause . . . down-to-earth . . . uninhibited, unprejudiced. The logic, and ihe wisdom, and the wif, and fhe loud oug i. — William Cowper Quote Freud would hove a lot to. say about that. Likes Mozart Pet Peeve Debussy Noted For seriousness of purpose Usually Seen _ collecting money Song ., We Don ' t Hove a Barrel of Money 21 JOHN ALLAN MAINES 15 Pine Terrace Packanack Lake Good-looking and well-mannered . . . resonant speech . . . smooth dancer . . . magnetic charm . . . She ' s my Number-One Girl . . . that ephemeral grin ... his original vocabulary . . . bompy . . . rotzlfratzl . . . casually athletic . . . well informed . . . intelligent opinions and conversation . . . epicurean philosophy . . . seriously nonchalant. Where youth and manhood keep an equal poise. —Walter Learned John Quote -— Is that funny, or is that funny? Likes - liberal-minded people Pet Peeve attitude Noted For _ his girlfriends Usually Seen flirting Song Thirteen Women Quote I love that little fella. Likes - Ronnie Pet Peeve girls Noted For cowboy swagger Usually Seen leering Song That ' s Amore VICTOR MARONI 35 Urma Avenue Clifton Senior class leader . . . effective controller of our unruly homeroom meetings . . . make-believe modesty . . . now coy and embarrassed, now daring and bold . . . uninhibited remarks ... an appetite for Califanos ' brew and Italian food . . . Let ' s have lasagna at the next Crier meeting! . . . distinctive walk . . . often compared to EIroy Hirsch . . . agreeable . . . patient headline-writer . . . obliging homework-helper . . . chemical wonder. ' Though not very bashful and not very bold. ' ' Vic 23 Quote Now down the shore . . . Likes Payola Pet Peeve People who don ' t appreciate Jean Shepard Noted For his safety record Usually Seen smirking Song Beoch Party RICHARD HUGHES MILLER 28 Glen Park Road Glen Ridge Arrestingly blue eyes . . . earned the inexplicable nickname of Old Gold . . . the Jersey shore his natural habitat ... a water-skier in drydock . . . oratorical talents . . . lawyer-to-be . . . does well in a casual sort of way . . . wants to learn how to drive . . . host at highly successful junior-senior picnic . . . down the shore, of course . . . subtle humorist ... a sharp mind, a keen wit. Choice word and meosured phrase, above fhe reach of ordinary men. — Wordsworth 24 Dick KATHLEEN ANNE PARR 15 Third Street Pequannock Long and silky-blonde hair ... an excellent seamstress . . . Yes, she made it herself! . . . many times our willing refreshment and cake sale chairman . . . mainstay of NJJCL . . . delegate to national conventions ... a class function enthusiast . . . girl sports writer . . . Three cheers for the Army! . . . sincere listener . . . ready with an unnervingly hysterical giggle at the slightest amusement . . . perpetual high spirits. ' Her hair that lay along her back was yellow like ripe corn — Rossetti Kafhie Quote ...., Oh for Petey ' s Sake! Likes JCL Pet Peeve disorganization Noted For that giggle Usually Seen eating fruit Song Blonde Bombshell GILBERT VAL PETERSON 21 Douglas Place Verona Ambitious, purposeful, and persevering . . . person- able and versatile . . . co-ordination paralleled by intelligence . . . football and baseball captain . . . skis in winter, sails in summer at Twin Lakes . . . Wind Song . . . custom car devotee . . . hard, strong, agile . . . chiselled features . . . quiet, penetrating humor . . . common sense and confidence. ' Though deep, yef clear; though gentle, yet not dull; strong without rage. — Sir John Denham Pete Quote She ' ll do in a pinch. Likes winning football seasons Pet Peeve the name Ponies Noted For self confidence Usually Seen leaning on something Song . You Gotta be a Football Hero Quote That ' s awful. Likes Gerry Mulligan Pet Peeve .... television at Crier meetings Noted For individualism Usually Seen laughing at someone Song She ' s Gof It ANTONIA RACHIELE 460 Clifton Avenue Newark I don ' t know — ask Tonil . . . beauty and brains . . . compliments and criticizes sincerely . . . her opinions highly valued . . . graceful hands betray two talents . . . an artist, an accomplished pianist . . . always in a hurry — but never too busy to laugh . . . expressive eyes . . . wondering, then knowing . . . laughing dark curls above a sometimes-cloudy brow . . . pensive, provocative, sensitive . . . innately sophisticated ... an impulsively warm-hearted friend. The delectable form which intelligence takes in its moments of surplus power — the form of wit. —Stuart Pratt Sherman Tor 27 Quote Hot Zing! Likes .. hockey, baseball, basketball, etc. Pet Peeve children Noted For that wild laugh Usually Seen talking sports Song Daddy Coo JOEL ROY RAVITZ 51 Noll Terrace Clifton Class dancer . . . Joely . . . Rabbitz . . . another one of those sports fanatics . . . pool shark . . . has this cousin Brian . . . ardent reader ... his ' 57 Chev . . . humor of understatement . . . sincerely hospitable . . . host to many and wild parties . . . the good old television room ... an easygoing person whose company is always enjoyed. As pafienf and as still And as full of good will. — John Skelton 28 Joel RICHARD CHRISTOPHER ROBINSON 67 Melrose Place Montclair First mate on the Lodestar . . . shutterbug . . . explorer of the deep six . . . big for his age . . . takes to underclasswomen . . . On the way to school this morning Rick said ... ... an earnest student . . . knows his physics . . . oceanography ... a bronze look . . . burnished tan, strong build, hard and handsome face . . . smiling and complacent. ' must go down to the sea again. — John Masefield Rick Quote Yeah. But I didn ' t bring flashbulbs. Likes - — - blondes Pet Peeve deadlines Noted For stoney-faced expression Usually Seen . .sitting with the junior girls Song Had A Litfle Sailboat ALAN THOMAS SACHTLEBEN 120 Westview Road Upper Montclair Sir Sachtleben . . . affectionately mocked for his fabled laziness . . . the best of good sports . . . Lot ... an able campaign speaker . . . liberal with his time and services . . . Chief Ladder-Climber and Crepe Paper Hanger . . . one-sixty-fourth honest injun . . . Think the stories ' ll be ready for headlines by ten o ' clock? ... an unsung hero of the CRIER staff . . . honest, forthright . . . discriminating sense of values . . . Williams-bound . . . proud, clear-eyed ... a calm, quiet leader. Studies serve for delight, for ornament, and for ability. —Sir Francis Bacon Quote Have you got gas money? Likes baby powder Pet Peeve enthusiasm Noted For immobility Usually Seen obstructing Miss Gallagher ' s path through the upper hall Song Summertime Quote It was a panic! Likes saurfleisch und knoedel Pet Peeve .... people who put on a show Noted For perseverance Usually Seen asking someone a question Song Haydn ' s violin concerto BARBARA JUDITH SEELBACH 81 McCosh Road Clifton The All-American Girl . . . outdoor lover . . . wholesome, healthy, and athletic . . . rosy and clear- complexioned with a beautiful smile . . . enviably natural blonde hair . . . naturally curly, too . . . ability and sensibility . . . top student . . . A-1 musician . . . All-State violinist . . . captain of the cheering squad ... a model of sincerity and maturity . . . Anything worth doing is worth doing well. Moderation is the sill en string running through the pearl chain of all v ' rfues. — Joseph Hall, Bishop of Norwich Barbara 31 Quote Don ' t rile me. Likes Elvis Presley Pet Peeve „... being one of the last to drive Noted For unobtrusiveness Usually Seen usually not seen Song It ' s Nof For Me To Say WILLIAM F. SHERSHIN 44 North Court Clifton The Silent Man ... our first new kid . . . joined us as a freshman . . . one of Dio ' s managers . . . Bucky . . . supposed to have a big cellar, good for a party . combination of the best of Clifton and College High cultures . . . individualistic hair-dos ... his distinctive stance known to ail . . . reserved comments often bear repeating . . . soft-spoken, obliging, polite. ' Sober, but not serious. Quiet, but not idle. —Anonymous 32 fi 7 DONALD K. SMITH 573 Park Street Upper Montclair Sir Smith . . . clean-cut collegiate . . . incredible amount of energy . . . quick mind and deliberate comments . . . able to see the ridiculous side of anything — or anybody . . . natural auto mechanic ... his sharp deals with motor scooters and Model A trucks . . . effective Student Council prexy . . . that quizzical expression . . . intent and conscientious student. The spirii of frufh, unity, and concord. — Anonymous Smitty Quote Let ' s cut oud. Likes dry breads Pet Peeve People who do nothing but occupy space Noted For pixie grin Usually Seen ._.. concentrating Song Poison Ivy MARGARET STANDISH 13 Post Road Pompton Plains Peggy the Pilgrim . . . her name forever the victim of comedy-bent professors . . . assiduously uncoordinated . . . the volley-ball chaser . . . she and her Volkswagen a formidable team . . . able to laugh at almost anything . . . and she usually does! . . . pleasantly reserved with a smile for all . . . rare and witty comments . . . intelligent and tolerant ... a many sided peg. Without hardness will be sage, and gay without frivolity. —Matthew Arnold Peggy Quote Anybody need a ride? Likes nothing Pet Peeve Intolerance Noted For that come day, go day attitude Usually Seen helping Song Beep beep Quote No, I ' m not a sophomore. Likes Alfred Hitchcock Pet Peeve American cars Noted For culture Usually Seen by the sophomores Song C ' esf si Bon CARRO LUCILLE SVENSON 48 Union Street Montclair An 8:40 scholar . . . complete with late slip . . . our most cosmopolitan classmate . . . well-traveled . . . classic Scandinavian coloring . . . European tastes . . . Parlez-vous francais? . . . artistic nature ... I don ' t know what it is — I haven ' t finished yet ... her internationally-acquired wardrobe the envy of many ... a basketball guard in the M.H.S. style . . . sophomore curriculum . . . quietly intellectual . . . gnomic wisdom. Said litfle, but to the purpose. — Lord Byron Carro 35 Quote Nice Talk Likes life Pet Peeve - „ people who call him Andy Noted For posture Usually Seen slouching Song Born Too Late ANDREW THORBURN R. D. 2 Dover Morris Plains Road Amazingly able — considering his age . . . Con help if if I ' m only 15? . . . Best Pivot Man In Fifty States . . . loose, limber . . . walking sports chronicle . . . that piercing dark-fringed glance . . . hazel eyes . . . long-distance commuter . . . It ' s really a lovely ride to Mt. Freedom . . . political debater from Dover High . . . erudite historian . . . sensitive, perceptive, self-assured. His mind his kingdom, and his will his aw ' — Cowper 36 The ANNE CRYA N WHITE 350 18th Avenue Paterson Gay gamin face . . . wide eyes . . . bright Irish humor . . . her fascinating world of cartoons . . . flair for the artistic and poetic . . . delightfully entertaining companion . . . talented and versatile actress . . . bell-like soprano . . . ideal dancing partner . . . high-spirited cheerleader . . . undaunted loyalty to Yale and the lake . . . . . . generous and sympathetic. All that ' s best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes. -Lord Byron Nancy Quote Watch out for trolls! Likes apples, sailing, going barefoot Pet Peeve tunnels Noted For her variety of talents Usually Seen in the center of a merry group of people Song Nancy with the laughing face BRENDA MARIE WOLAK 40 Laurel Avenue Clifton Cat-eyed and kittenish . . . goldy hair, greeny eyes . . . the cheeriest cheerleader . . . Miss Hospitality . . . I ' ll hove a party! . . . often seen in Daddy ' s Caddy . . . five feet of heaven in a pony-tail . . . the quintessence of effervescence ... as co-ordinated as a bouncing ball . . . contagious laugh . . . Hel -lo, people! . . . pert but polite . . . pleasing in dress and demeanor . . . deft, clever . . . confidante par excellance ... a thoughtful and understanding friend. Nothing greaf was ever achieved withouf enthusiasm. —Ralph Waldo Emerson Brenda Quote _ Oh, I ' m so excited! Likes .. football, bracelets, underclassmen Pet Peeve pessimism Noted For enthusiasm LIsually Seen bubbling over Song Honeybun; Personalify 38 Quote Nice talk! Likes athletics Pet Peeve people who don ' t come to practice Noted For big feet Song Mr. Wonderful RONALD JAMES YOUNG 2 Cayuga Trail Packanack Lake Monk . . . Scoop . . . Padre . . . Natural and spontaneous speaker . . . full of ideas and the ambition to carry them out . . . reliable sense of humor ... his clockwise sliderule . . . CRIER organizer . . . football and basketball captain . . . sensible . . . mature . . . Mr. Attitude ... a knowing smile and twinkling blue eyes . . . kind and sincere . . . forever understanding and helpful: a true friend. ' First to we come, foremost to defend — Lord Byron Ronnie 39 HARRIET MARY BOGRAD 41 1 East 41 Street Paterson Harriet has always been characterized by ambition. Her sincere intellect became immediately apparent to us in the seventh grade. We have since become accustomed to her genius for organization, her superior brain power, her incessant questions, and her innocent requests for homework. No homework was ever enough for Harriet. It was obvious that she would someday be a great credit to College High School. Harriet ' s first step toward success has already been taken. She was accepted at Bryn Mawr College during her junior year, and began attending college in the fall of 1959. Entering college after only three years of high school is not a common practice — even at College High. We are proud to say that Harriet is a member of the class of 1960. Here is a dear and hue indusfrious fr end — Shakespeare 40 ) Last Will and Testament We Bequeath . . . Bob Atkinson: leaves his wardrobe to Aly Khan Barbara Bannister: leaves Julie Jim Behrman: leaves a copy of Chinese Through Pictures to the library Roy Bernt: leaves his driving ability to Dr. Coder Nick Califano: leaves Pines Lake to the Grossingers Julie Forrest: leaves a voodoo handbook to Miss Gallagher Helen Gordon: leaves her swimming ability to Jerry Thimme Jinny Hayman: leaves peace and quiet Virginia Kelley: leaves her sunglasses to Dio Ellie Larsen: leaves her love letters to Schumy John Maines: leaves his pug nose to a pig Vic Maroni: leaves Rick Cenci to Susan Short Dick Miller: leaves the shore to the seagulls Kathie Parr: leaves a polished apple to Dr. MofFatt Gil Peterson: leaves his appendix to Ellie Larsen Toni Rachiele: leaves her cellar to the Department of Sanitation Joel Ravitz: leaves Jinny to anyone who can handle her Rick Robinson: leaves his money to the Scholarship Fund Al Sachtleben: leaves his sense of humor to Mr. Hamilton Barbara Seelbach: leaves her violin to Bev Ennis Bill Shershin: leaves his Man-Tan to Steve Ward Don Smith: leaves his carburetor, supercharger, etc. to Mr. Placek Peggy Standish: leaves her athletic ability to Jeff Jones Carro Svenson: leaves her green shoes to Kathy Hartz Andy Thorburn: leaves his posture to Dr. Bohn Nancy White: leaves her imitations to Sammy Davis Jr. Brenda Wolak: leaves her figure to Linda Opper Ron Young: leaves his altitude behind . a ql 0 WE ' LL NEV Day-long entrance exams . . . interviews ... the first baseball and Softball games against the seventh grade ... the first day in a strange school — when Toni got hit in the eye ... not understanding Mr. Humphreys . . . Miss Pennington ' s social adjust- ment pamphlets . . . Ellie ' s all-day party — when Ron and Don fell off the driveway wall and where we made records ... the bees at the Bronx Zoo . . . Julie stopping to buy animal food and getting lost . . . when Ron found the renegade turtle . . . Carnegie Holl with Miss Morse ... our first Christmas concert . . . noontime snowball fights — fights through the pipes . . . construction . . . our talent-hobby show — That ' s very innersting. ... the girls seating themselves in every other seat . . . waiting for an hour in the college basement to be photographed for the school records . .■. the girls wandering down to shop after Home Ec. . . . building dams, hiking through the cow pasture, and falling in the pond at Dr. Fincher ' s form - when Steve Palmer put a frog down Brenda ' s back . . . descending en masse on on already full cof . . . reports on our religions . . . seeing The Diary of Anne Frank from the second balcony with Miss P. . . . the song to Humphreys to the tune of Mr. Sandman . . . popping empty milk cartons in the caf . . . endless bookstore and cof lines . . . front row seats in the oud . . . Miss Pennington ' s teen-age book club . . . electing Alan something-or-other first class president . . . seeing the platypus . . . boys ' lunchtime sports . . . none of the boys came to Harriet ' s little kids party . . . jumping ditches . . . school-wide campaigns for class elections ... the initiation at Andie Wright ' s — no water to wash off all the spaghetti, cold cream, and raw eggs . . . Toni ' s Hallowe ' en party — Roy as a girl, Gil as a tiger ... the girls bringing food to the boys after Home Ec. . . . shop class till 2 - the discussions about flying saucers, rockets, etc. . . . Bob Shack hypnotised Barbara S. . . . our cheerleaders were stoned ... the trip to the U.N. ... the collection of English stories — putting it together in English doss . . . writing our class constitution and never being able to find it . . . the girls ' rating lists of the boys ... the toble groups in Miss Osgood ' s class — This table may go. So Toni and Jinny helped carry it out . . . learning why a CHS assembly was called on oud . . . gaping at the big seniors ... the girls following the senior couples ... our couples . . . health class . . . shop in the old garage . . . building great stellated icosahedrons . . . that class with Mr. Allen at the P.T.A. meeting . . . playing bridge and chess in the library . . . Steve Palmer ' s Sir Fig Newton stories . . . Roy lost his chart of 2 to the 1000th power . . . Barby and Nick in the pie-eating contest on Playdoy . . . jumping out the art room windows onto the gym roof . . . Toni and Brendo trying to cook a pizza and almost blowing up the school ... the first skating party at Craig ' s . . . hide and seek on the mountain . . . Jinny ' s 3000 committees for Mr. Humphreys . . . belting each other with hockey sticks . . . J.A.A. ... the Mrs. Knowlton song . . . Ron and 12 cokes as the surprise package at our Christmas party grab bog in English . . . our Christmas and Valentine cord boxes . . . Earth Angel at the Senior Carnival . . . Brenda and Barbara - our JV cheerleaders . . . the day on Rick ' s boat . . . ' Nancy having chicken pox for six months . . . almost electing Steve Clifford class treasurer sight unseen . . . taking a Public Service bus with Miss P. to see 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea . . . breaking two of Toni ' s pocketbooks in two days . . . waiting outside the Science Building before class because we made too much noise . . . walks in the woods with Miss Pennington and Dr. Fincher ... our first Spring Concert with four boy soprano solos . . . Hoyden Planetarium and Museum of Natural History . . . how far away graduation seemed . . . Meeting Steve Clifford ... Dr. Reed ' s experiments . . . burning the incense in Mr. Schumaker ' s class . . . throwing b eeble berries on the way to art . . . punching holes in all the water cups with compass points . . . Virginia ' s and Steve ' s parties . . . getting caught running in the halls by Mr. Placek . . . how scared we were of him . . . square dances in the gym and at the Califanos ' with Mr. Califono calling . . . toking notes in the art museums . . . the fabulous restaurant at the Metropolitan Museum of Art — throwing coins into the pool . . . exploring the incompleted build- ings . . . lunch hour detention in the oud for two weeks . . . Miss Pennington ' s hair ... her bi-Wednesday papers . . . writing our own ploys and adopting others — Miss P. toning them down . . . multi-colored pancakes and green milk for the boys at the Home Ec. breakfast . . . yearly medicals — the pins — the girls ' uniforms . . . Wapalane - when Jinny and Roy got lost in the woods . . . carrying the milk cans to Sunrise Mt. . . . the watermelon hunt ... the breath-taking coolness of Tillman Ravine . . . Antonio got lost and picked up . . . the farewell fire and presents for Miss P. and Craig . . . Ravioli, gentle ravioli ... the boys raided the girls ' bunks . . . swimming in May . . . reading in one English class per week . . . our Spanish cut-out notebook — spreading them out on our desks and glueing them together in math class . . . games in class with La Seriora deGravolos . . . when a college guy yelled at John, so we filled his convertible with crunched up paper towels — then he almost beat up Ron . . . bi-weekly bowling . . . Miss P. led her group up the wrong troll on the way to Sunrise Mt. . . . the Weeper . . . rock collections for Dr. Reed . . . finally Initiating the seventh grade girls in December ... the water purifying plant . . . sitting through Don Quixote and not understanding a word ... Mr. Kennedy taking over Mr. Boucher ' s class for the first semester . . . Nick occidently starting the motor scooter on the way back from gym ... the project on the Russian borders ... the book about Russia which we never printed . . . Nick ' s and Craig ' s swimming party . . . the trouble we caused for Spanish observers . . . passing around window poles and shades — the time Dr. Fulcomer came in . . . breaking the pmata at the college Spanish Club Christmas party . . . Cielito Leendo . . . writing cords and letters to absentees . . . Helen ' s pojomo party . . . staying at the donees until 11 . . . how great it was to line up 17 little cups of water on the crack between two tables and then pull the tables apart . . . throwing cloy around . . . Ellie ' s love letters to Mr. Schumoker . . . coming home with our pockets full of screw-on tops and plastic buttons from Mack Molding ... Kip Palmer taking a shower in the middle of Steve ' s party ... Mr. Schumaker ' s gold chalk holder ... the Newark Airport weather station . . . Toni ' s lipstick producing the most mold in the agar jars . . . current events plays ... the marrying booth at the Sadie Hawkins Dance — everyone marrying everyone else . . . fighting over the swivel chairs before Science every day . . . mop making ... we sot, facing the bock, on chairs on top of the desks in moth ... Mr. Boucher smoking . . . the girls taking advantage of their majority and electing o female government ... our portraits of Al and Rick B. . . . Ron and Nick threw water on the locker room celling and Dio threatened to fail them . . . Dio and John . . . co-ed jump rope in the amp. . . . the milk machine . . . water pistol fights . . . Meeting Ann and Bill . . . Esponal Para Los Ninos and Historias c e Don Quixote . . . working at our own speed in Mr. Steinen ' s class . . . when Virginia, Toni, Gil, and Roy DID hove a tea party . . . Mr. Sheppord ' s senses of humor and economy . . . A Tale of Two Cities . . . London Moll and Paris Times — editors and city editors . . . the Cloisters . . . Mr. Kops ' term paper . . . the time line . . . homerooms ' til 11 . . , the Pink Pachyderm Plod ... our rock-and-roll band . . . supper at Don ' s . . . joining Chorus and 12 in the new Choir . . . Practical English and Dr. Fulcomer ' s speed-reading tests . . . the time we brought our tools to Basic Business . . . parents ' visiting days when we had hardly any classes and Mr. Sheppard showed a movie . . . Borby ' s accident . . . acting out the Three Bears in Spanish ... the 2 o ' clock moo . . . Queen for o Day . . . learning all about income tax deductions . . . when the sophomores piled the junk from their lockers in front of the guidance room . . . cards, chess, noise, and jitterbugging in room 14 before the lounge was completed ... the opening of the CHS lounge in Life Hall . . . Mr. Kops ' guided tour through Life Hall just before the Christmas vacation . . . Nick ' s swimming party at Pines Lake — Helen almost drowned, but Jim saved her . . . Alan and John tipping Virginia and Nancy out of the rowboot with all their clothes on . . . the volleyball gome with ojr teachers . . . Harriet ' s come-os-you-are party . . . discussions with Mr. Kops in the cof. ... our objective class discussion of the founding of Christianity as part of a report on Rome . . . skating at Willowbrook ... the way Helen blushed . . . literary history book projects — state groups . . . mechanical drawing ... Mr. Goodman ' s ties ... the Bos. Bus. demonstration classes — on tv and In N. Y. . . . Spring Concert in the big, new auditorium . . . Virginia ' s aphrodisiac room ... the invisible Diogenes lantern . . . Der Fuhrer . . . ploydoys — watermelon hunts . . . always finding at least one . . . Chinese dinner at the Robinsons ' and square dancing in the gym . . . Ellie ' s all-day party in the drizzle — Brenda and Kothie chasing Bill around with ER FORGET badminton racquets . . . the fabulous dinner . . . Carole ' s party for Craig who didn ' t show up — the boys who wouldn ' t talk or dance . . . Brenda ' s Hallowe ' en party — Jimmy and Bob as the Bobsey twins, and John as little red riding hood . . . Nancy, Alan, Ricky, and Mr. Kops in the movie about teen-age drinking ... the Wall Street Journal . . . Vic, Joel, and Andy . . . Five of us missing ... the fight over busy work in Biology ... Mr. Pettegrove ' s murderous tests . . . Latin Club convention at Rutgers . . . tobogganing at night at the Montclair Golf Club courtesy of Gil . . first taste of College Boards . . . being sold as slaves by the Latin Club . . . lounge parties — sophomore girls and senior boys . . . the Choir singing at the Montclair Y . . . Mrs. Atkinson ' s nerve-wracking typing classes and those perfect papers! . . . getting class rings from the same old company . . . high pressure from another firm . . . that week Mr. Humphreys tried to teach us Geometry . . . giving a tricycle to Mr. Goodman after hearing so much about his kids — getting to hove the scheduled test not to count . . . cleaning up the Biology lab . . . dissections — worms, fish, etc. ... t he lobsters . . . when Mr. Kowalski mode us wear coots in the winter ... we moved our chairs up to Mr. Goodman ' s desk . . . new lockers in the upper hall — with a new coot of point . . . Shakespeare, poetry, Dostoyevski ' s characters and their names . . . co-ed gym classes ... 3 buses to the State Tournament basketball gome at Upsolo against Glen Ridge ... the Christmas Tree Boll ... A Christmas Carol ... Gil as Scrooge and Ron as Marley ' s ghost ... the trip to Rutgers College of Agriculture — the smell . . . evaluation week . . . Like unto that . . . Fair enough? . . . Kelley ' s operations . . . canteen . . . the fight at the Wordlow game . . . collecting leaves and bugs in the woods . . . eading for Mr. Ballare and making those reading selection books . . . his hieroglyphic symbols on the scripts of our oral readings . . . another one of Nick ' s great swimming parties after one postponement and one un-postponement . . . the hectic rash of hone colls before parties . . . car pools . . . Roy ' s girl costume at Harriet ' s . . . Let ' s get together now. . . . Ron having to spend all his free time working on his Eagle Scout badge . . . discussions about what ' s the matter with our class . . . animol projects . . . seven spending the night at Helen ' s during the sudden blizzard . . . watching horror movies on tv at lounge parties . . . building flowers ... the evening Dr. Atkinson and Miss Gallagher spoke to us and our parents about colleges . . . Alberto driving pins into his legs for Nancy . . . not understanding Dr. Bock the first week — her suhthen accent ... fish tanks, rabbits, worms, chickens, mice . . . Harriet and Roy always talking in Geometry . . . attending the frosh dance and college carnival simultaneously ... the girls helping for entrance exams and interviews . . . deciding what to do when water main hod its annual break . . . Peggy and Carro . . . trying to get choperones for CRIER meetings . . . taking over the CRIER after journalism and elections with Mr. Hamilton ... the football team getting suited up in the middle of New York City ... the Choir at Quockenbushes ... our three live models . . . S ' j hour lunch hours . . . free periods in the amp . . . College Boards . . . CRIER organization . . . Mr. Reed ' s class — his challenging tests and the heart-breaking makeups . . . Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, and the gong . . . over 20 juni or parties ... bus rides to the gomes . . . firy campaign speeches for S. C. president . . . the term paper on The Rime of the Ancienf Mariner ... Mr. Hamilton ' s sound effects . . . when Mr. Beckwith said, No, Vic, SEClionolism. ... two busloads of spectators to away football games . . . running the magazine drive . . . taking over the football team as the seniors were steadily injured . . . getting involved in o cor crash, while dressed for A Night in Greenwich Village and with stolen bottles in the bock seat ... the parties that fell through . . . the one time Miss Morse lost her temper in Chorus ... the junior-senior basketball gome when Dio charged admission . . . Mr. Hamilton ' s doily salute . . . running the pep rally and dinner — when the boys hod to push that monstrous stove-thing back and forth from the new gym . . . John and Vic as New York Times scouts . . . Allons-y, mes amis, notre closse est fini. . . . John Moines: fire marsholl . . . assistant fire morsholl, etc. . . . Crier meetings — pizzas from Mrs. Moroni . . . trips to Bond ' s . . . those ambiguous Chemistry tests . . . Nancy ' s cartoons . . . the Vene- tian blinds and the sporrow in moth class . . . acting in college ploys . . . when the bird flew into Mr. Reed ' s doss . . . seeing Twelfth Nighf by the Old Vic Company . . . laughing during Ron ' s benediction at the J.C.L. convention — Roy ' s campaign speech . . . Little Women . . . the bus ride to the junior-senior picnic . . . sunburn . . . We ' ll never forget . . . everyone going stag to dances . . . Caesar construction projects . . . mech jest tech . . . Miss Morse couldn ' t get around the piano on the stage at the Spring Concert ... the lounge party with the seniors afterwards . . . the general — his Irish accent ... his whistling while we were taking his tests . . . those three in senior moth . . . Rick ' s tan after every vocation ... the locker room showers which didn ' t work . . . watching the girls do calisthenics . . . another New Year ' s party at Toni ' s . . . Jinny ' s polar bear coot and Brenda ' s raccoon coat . . . Joel ' s surprise party for John . . . waiting for driving licenses . . .the junior-senior picnic at the Millers ' — woterskiing and then going swimming at Nick ' s half the night with an English final in the morning ... the best Junior-Senior Prom - those fancy sandwiches . . . Rick ' s party afterwards . . . Harriet ' s almost co-ed slumber party after the ' 59 graduation . . . Jinny ' s, Kathie ' s, and Brenda ' s sweet sixteen parties . . . Nick ' s party the day after Harriet ' s — good-bye to Ann and Harriet . . . Almost everybody working . . . letters never written . . . football practice right after Labor Day . . . how everybody changed over the summers ... Dr. Moffott ' s stories about Penn State . . . our senior door . . . playing ho-ho on the floor at Brenda ' s . . . Dr. Moffott ' s doily proverbs ... the first and last yearbook meeting in the lounge . . . when Helen took a time exposure of the hill, while Nancy held up oil the traffic ... Roy and Don featured in Seventeen . . . Observers, did you note that? . . . Dr. Bohn ' s reading list — belles lettres . . . writing stuff for we ' ll never forget — trying not to think of more after if was printed . . . yearbook deadlines . . . Gil ' s chronic appendicitis and Helen ' s hospitalization without the doctors ' knowing what was the matter . . . Barbara ' s violin solo, Ron ' s sermon, and the octette at the Thanksgiving Assembly ... the profitless senior dance — without on oud. . . . giving up the CRIER without reluctance . . . the carload that got lost on Hallowe ' en on the way to Mr. Placek ' s — finding the four of them later at Bob ' s ... the racket we made around Dr. Bock ' s apartment . . . caroling on the iciest, whitest, and coldest night of the year — Mr. Placek ' s beautiful Christmas tree ... the mob at the Atkinsons ' . . . lengthy college applications . . . College Boards for real this time . . . flowers and formols for the Christmas Dance . . . Christmas concert back in the CHS gym and sounding much better . . . the surprise page on the yearbook . . . seeing slides of operations and rolling on the floor listening to Shelley Bermon at Jinny ' s ... the Christmas party in P.A.D. — John ' s present . . . caroling oil over the campus during the math hour — silenced by Mr. Pettegrove . . . trips to Bellini ' s ... the Circus Carnival . . . Jinny ' s and Jim ' s fights ... the party instead of the test in Physics . . . getting harder Physics tests . . . people locking themselves in the CRIER office . . . Harriet going to Bryn Mowr o year early . . . Life just o bowl of cherry pits. . . . losing more football gomes in four days that in the previous eight years . . . poison ivy in the locker room . . . exshellent P.A.D. reports . . . Brenda wearing Gil ' s entire football uniform for Hallowe ' en ... the goof that started the theater club — La Plume de Mo Tante — that horse . . . running up the down escoloJor in the Port of Authority Terminal ... oil the times we put Brenda and Jinny in the garbage con . . . we locked Jinny in her locker and Mr. Plocek came down the hall ... oil the trips to colleges . . . Helen and her camera . . . trips to Applegate ' s and Taylor ' s . . . another tobogganing party ... ice skating at Pines Lake . . . o white Christmas . . . Dio ' s new soap dish . . . Toni ' s third New Year ' s party ... the game at the Carnival . . . the Winsoky oud. . . . Helen, Nancy, and Virginia tried to steal John ' s cor . . . Jim hit Jinny in the Face with o jelly sandwich . . . and Jinny got him bock with o chocolate-filled doughnut . . . Sadie Hawkins Day — the dance ... the lost spring concert . . . our appearance on May Day . . . waiting . . . being accepted . . . afternoons in the amp — spring fever . . . OUR Senior Prom . . . getting OUR yearbooks . . . signing each other ' s — and those of endless underclassmen . . . sunburning at the junior-senior picnic ... our last high school classes — the lost of everything . . . the final fling . . . deciding what to do offer Graduation . . . Baccolourote . . . the playdoy . . . Graduation . . . the seeming unreality of an end . . . and of a beginning . . . ♦ ♦♦♦■♦♦ r • • ♦ • • ' 4 tlTM 0r ' ' M • AV, „ ..  ,_il A « A W - .. I h m Merry have we met And merry have we been Merry let us part And merry meet again. —Old English Rhyme mmnnrSmf I • ♦ ♦ ♦ « nffSS9PHM| (Hr ' SK ni iinik JHPI ft ■«-■-•— ii! ' . i RCLASSES ■Ik. % FIRST ROW: Cynthia Janowski, Carolyn Hulst, Janet Fallon, Kathleen Parahus, Karen Westerberg, Mary Ellen Sheft. SECOND ROW: Jean Sked, Beverly Ennis, Linda Opper, Patricia Eberle, Phyllis Valentine, Virginia Lou Goldsmith, Susan Lee, Nancy Harmon. THIRD ROW: David Ruiter, William Carlson, Steven Halli Paul Caffrey Feene Willia Rubinso a Fendr -eene, Robert Cooke, David Nochimson, !nci, Laurence Rubinstein, Henry Schin- I. MISSING FROM PICTURE: Griffith ch, Catherine Hartz, Stephen Ward, JUNIORS Took over the responsibility of the Cr er . . . struggled with Algebra II . . . Who ' s taking the make-up on the make-up? . . . had a perambulating Christmas tree . . . saw the filming of Continental Classroom . . . girls gave sweet sixteen parties . . . competed with the Seniors ' Christmas caroling . . . always seen lounging in the upper hall . . . sabotaged the senior door . . . filled with school spirit . . . and always ready to help. President— David Ruiter Vice President— Steven Halliwell, Laurence Rubinstein Secretary— Carolyn Hulst, Karen Westerberg Treasurer— William Carlson, Kathleen Parhus Student Council Representof ves— Laurence Rubinson, Laurence Rubinstein, Patricia Eberle, David Nochimson 46 The whacky sophomores . . . leading the school in class romances . . . became upper classmen . . . moved upstairs . . . forgot to go home at night . . . gave a novel record dance, the Mystery Dance . . . thoroughly enjoyed themselves on Gayle Griffith ' s hayride . . . struggled through Shakespeare . . . participated in Spanish Christmas play . . . received their class rings . . . and were always having parties. Pres cienf— Robert DuVoll, Scott Gamlen Vice Presidenf— Edmund Thimme, Howard Mindus Secrefory— Barbara Kocis, Gayle Griffith Treosurer— Ruth Lehr, Patricia Smith Sfudenf Council Representatives— Gayle Griffith Arthur Meserve, Cecily Drucker SOPHOMORES FIRST ROW; Victa ia F uller, Vi rgi nia Redd ng, N ancy Tabe nkin, Linda Desme t, l; Ida G oldsm th R jth ehr, Patric a S mith. Eileen Peters on, Barba ra Kocis SECOND ROV : Gay e Gr ffith. Mary Atkinso n, Di ane W ndele r, Joh T Da miano. Scott Gar nien. Peter Loughnane, Allison Schleicher, Howard Mindus, Jane Mcllveen, Susan Short, Cecily Drucker. THIRD ROW: Bruce Bristol, Walter Romberg, Richard Dugan, Bruce Anderson, Edmund Thimme, Arthur Meserve, JefTry Jones, Mason Young, Robert DuVall, Barry Bernson. FIRST ROW: Katherine Brodie, Jane Spritzer, Mary Cox, Pamela Moorehead, MaryLee Bannister, Anne Hart, Constance Califano, Andria Aikman. SECOND ROW: Barbara Smith, Jean Strauchon, Cynthia Fox, John Hopp, Steven Rosenberg, Robert Bluestone, Richard Ehrenberg, Martin Baenninger, Lisa Bizlewicz, Suzanne Hill. THIRD ROW: Richard Huntington, Thomas Dryer, Ronald Olsen, Roger Kelley, David VanHoff, Steve Prystowsky, Stuart Kritzer, Dwight Harris, Bruce Bailey, James Heffler. MISSING FROM PICTURE: Roberta Wright. FRESHMEN Became freshmen, found that it was not much different from the eighth grade . . . active in school affairs . . . girls turned out in hordes for G.A.A. . . . saw Stock Exchange with Dr. Freeman . . . Invaded the Smiths ' for a New Year ' s Eve party . . . gave their first dance, the Shononee Bansh-Stansh, Yea! . . . and had a food concession in the lower hall during basketball half time. President— James Heffler, Richard Huntington Vice Pres ' dent— Martin Baenninger, Thomas Dryer Secretary— Jane Spritzer, Andria Aikman Treasurer— Barbara Smith Student Council Representatives— hAary Cox, Constance Califano, Stuart Kritzer 48 Now seasoned veterans . . . welcomed Abby Natelson as a new member . . . tackled the Spanish language . . . murdered the English language in Speech class . . . frantically took notes in Science class — while Dr. Reed slept . . . had unusual parties . . . went horseback riding and bowling . . . were exposed to culture at the Museum of Modern Art . . . and hoped that Miss Martin would fall off her gym scooter. Pres denf— John Young, Janice Halliwell Vice Pres ' c enf— Valerie Sheppard, Ronald Polderman Secretary— Martha Ackelsberg, Gordon Harrison Treasurer— James Von Suskil, Sue Todd Sfudeni Council RepresentafiVes— Sonford Biber, John Graeter, John Young, Abigail Natelson GRADE 8 FIRST ROW: Martha Ackelsberg, Abigail Natelson, Patricia Sheft, Judith Young, Joan Gamble, Valerie Sheppard, Vivian Wolak, Sue Todd, Edwina Wright. SECOND ROW: Robert Roche, John Graeter, Susan Ford, Janice Halliwell, Barbara Reuter, Susan White, Alice Cenci, Anne Mathews, Richard Farren, Jame VonSuskil. THIRD ROW: Ronald Polderman, Sanford Biber Robert Schwartz, Stephen Sheft, Richard Kalb, Frederick Thimme Robert Tuteur, Robert Seidmon, John Young, Gordon Harrison ,v- Jt  tS 3 1 ' • FIRST ROW: Ruth Burton, Jean Kahelin, Susan Reed, Nancy Shrom, Barbara VanDoren, Sally Haymon, Heather Wilson, Barbara Schinman, Cheryl Boucher, Marilyn Cook. SECOND ROW: David LaTouche, Ceroid Lewin, Cornelia Dean, Shelly Baiter, Carol Bunovich, Elizabeth Berle, Jeffry Van Orden, James Franciose. THIRD ROW: Gregory Robinson, Gregory ClifFord, Alan Ruiter, William Eberle, Karl Manheim, Michael Lehr, Glenn Kritzer, Robert Beckwith, Charles Tressler, Gerald Drinkuth. GRADE 7 The youngest members of College High . . . No, they do not get smaller every year . . . read many books for English . . . visited Carnegie Hall vith Miss Morse . . . decorated the lower htjil with their unusual Christmas tree . . . sold school stationery and candy canes . . . had fun at their numerous parties . . . J.V. supporters . . . boys also had Home Ec. . . . full of pep and energy. Pres c ent— Robert Beckwith, William Eberle Vice Pres dent— William Eberle, Heather Willson Secre ary— Christine Vanderberg, Sally Hayman Treosurer— Cornelia Dean, Barbara VanDoren Student Council Representatives— G enn Kritzer, Barbara VanDoren, Alan Ruiter, Carol Bunevich 50 f -♦ ICKY CALIFANO 4 GINIA HAYMAN f f% ) RGINIA KELLEY « F Jfr -— - ii NTONIA RACHIELE GRADE 7 1954 I B 7,{ - C l.HU Ill.i.i NANCY WHITE ■H ' The time to be happy is now The place to be happy is here —Robert Green Ingersoll ACTIVITIES SEATED: Helen Gordon, Nancy White, Andrew Thorburn, Virginia Kelley, Elle Brenda Wolak, Virginia Hayman. STANDING: Rick Robinson, Kathleen Pi Forrest, Roy Bernt, Gil Peterson, Barbara Seelbach, Toni Rachiele, Don Smith, Ediior-in-Chief VIRGINIA KELLEY Ass ' t. Editor Andrew Thorburn Business Mgr. _ Ellen Larsen Adv ' f. Editors Brenda Wolak, Virginia Hayman Associate Joel Ravitz Photog. Editors Helen Gordon, Richard Robinson Art Editor Nancy White Assistant Carro Svenson Sr. Write-ups ,- Antonio Rachiele Assistant James Behrman Sr. Activities Roy Bernt Assistant Alan Sochtleben Underclasses Kathleen Parr Assistant Robert Atkinson Activities Donald Smith Assistant Margaret Standish Sports Barbara Seelbach, Gilbert Peterson Literary Editor .... Julie Forrest Assistant Barbara Bannister La Campanilla SEATED: Bill Shershin, Peggy Standish, Carro Svenson, Barbara Bannister, Jim Behrman. STANDING: Victor Moroni, Dick Miller, Nick Califono, John Maines, Alan Sochtleben, Bob Atkinson, Ron Young, Joel Ravitz. iili B? ' ' j| KW V 1 Ci l H F fe K ' : f Myn j l M K s wk I H i i SKit B Kt JKK Ki B Wmm SEATED: Ron Young. STANDING: Gil Peterson, Kothie Parr, Roy Bernt, Virginia Kelley, Ton! Rachiele. CRIER Editor-in-Chief RONALD YOUNG Associate Editors Managing Roy Bernt News Virginia Kelley Assistant James Behrman Features Antonia Rachiele Assistant Robert Atkinson Sports Kathleen Parr, Gilbert Peterson Assistants Brenda Wolak, John Maines Proof and Copy __ Julie Forrest Assistant Margaret Standish Pbotograpfiy Helen Gordon, Richard Robinson Headlines Nicholas Califano Assistants Victor Moroni, Alan Sachtleben Art Carro Svenson Assistant Barbara Seelbach Alumni Nancy White Circulation . Barbara Bannister Typists Virginia Hoymon, Ellen Lorsen Reporfers Donald Smith, Andrew Thorburn, William Shershin, Richard Miller, Joel Ravitz SEATED: Carro Svenson. STANDING, FIRST ROW: Helen Gordon, Barbara Bannister, Julie Forrest, Nancy White. SECOND ROW: Rick Robinson, Nick Califano. FIRST ROW: Barbara Seelbach, Brenda Wolak, Virginia Hayman. SECOND ROW: Bob Atkinson, Alan Sachtleben, Bill Shershin, Victor Moroni. THIRD ROW: Jim Behrman, Andrew Thorburn, John Maines, Joel Ravitz, Dick Miller. B tb sst CHORUS Oh discord thy name is chorus . . . Nick Califano president . . . Don Smith vice- president . . . Carolyn Hulst secretary . . . Alan Sachtleben business manager . . . rocking on the risers ... no Prima Donna this year ... no volume this year . . . voices blend better . . . Christmas Concert returns to the College High Gym and Dio ' s acousti- cal ceiling . . . Little Drummer Boy one of highlights of the Christmas Concert . . . new piano produces no change in the quality of voices. FIRST ROW: Cynthia Janowski, Carolyn Hulst, Susan Short, Gilbert Peterson, Barry Bernson, Bruce Ander- son, Roger Kelley, Dwight Harris, Bruce Bailey, Nancy Harmon, Constance Califano. SECOND ROV : Barbara Seelbach, Virginia Goldsmith, Alan Sochtleber, Donald Smith, Jock Greene, Roy Bernt, Nicholas Califano, Robert DuVall, Larry Ruben- stein, David Ruiter, Beverly Ennis, Helen Gordon. Missing from picture: Janet Fallon, Barbara Bennister, Pat Eberle, Nancy White, Julie Forrest, Daren Wester- berg, Linda Desmet, Bill Carlson, Steve Halliwell. FIRST ROW: Victor Tobenkin, Cynthia F Hulst, Janet Fallon, rginic Ho Fuller, Kathleen Po Virginia Lou Goldsn on, Karen Westerberg, B Nancy White, Susan Short. ohus, Patricia Eberle, Nancy ith, Cynthia Janowski, Carolyn renda Wolok, Barbara Kocis, SECOND ROW: Kathleen Parr, Linda Desmet, Barbara Bannister, Julie Forrest, Carro Svenson, Beverly Ennis, Andrio Aikmon, Constance Califano, Lisa Bizlewicz, Ruth Lehr, Eileen Peterson, Diane Windeler, Susan Lee, Gayle Griffith, Virginia Kelley. THIRD ROW: Mary Lee Bannister, Pamela Moorehead, Kotherine Brodie, Virginia Redding, Linda Goldsmith, Mory Ellen Sheft, Suzanne Hill, Cecily Drucker, CHOIR College High ' s thirty-two best voices . . . almost didn ' t make it this year . . . chosen in November . . . sang at Christmas concert . . . Spring concert . . . graduation . . . under direction of Miss Morse . . . laudable talent. Anne Hart, Nancy Harmon, Jane Spritzer, Barbara Smith, Mary Atkinson, Jane Mcllveen, Patricia Smith. FOURTH ROW: Miss Dorothy Morse, director, Dwight Harris, Allison Schleicher, John Hopp, Richard Ehrenberg, Roger Kelley, Mary Cox, Jean Strauchon, Roberta Wright, Arthur Meserve, Helen Gordon, Edmund Thimme, Bruce Anderson. FIFTH ROW: Richard Dugan, Donald Smith, David Ruiter, William Carlson, William DeSmedt, Walter Romberg. SIXTH ROW: Bruce Bailey, Laurence Rubenstein, Robert DuVall, Stuart Kritzer, Roy Bernt, Nicholas Califono, Alan Sachtleben, John Moines, Gilbert Peterson, John Greene, Steven Halliwell, Barry Bernson. The stands that don ' t stay stood . . . seven members . . . losing two members to All-State Orchestra . . . Miss Morse ' s soggy blotters and scratched piano bench . . . reading up an octave, key keepers, schedul- ing rehearsals, tuning at con- certs, stage fright . . . String Festival . . . Helen ' s stringless violin . . . playing on the old ladyi ' s piano . . . the voice of Mr. Zerbe. FIRST ROW: Martha Ackelsburg, Hank Schinman, Susan Lee, Joel Ravltr, Howard Mindus, David Nochimson, Gil Peterson. SECOND ROW: Kathie Parr, Undo Desmet, Sue Ford, Ginny Lou Goldsmith, Barbo. Fendrich, Vivian Walak, Sue Todd, Rog. Kelley, Ronald Young. TENNIS CLUB Founded, owned, and oper- ated by Ron Young ... no advisor this year . . . Saturday practices . . . known for its highly competitive spirit . . . tournament for club trophy a must . . . seasonal popularity . . . whom will they elect presi- dent? da Goldsmith, Nancy Tabenkin, Virginia Seelbach, Helen Gordon, Brenda Wolok, ox, Roberta Wright, Pamela Moreheod, le Mcllveen. FOURTH ROW: Constance joyle Griffith, Mary Atkinson, Susan Lee. JCL-ers . . . advised by Dr. Bock . . . attended state conven- tion . . president president secretary treasurer elected Ron Young . . Kathie Parr vice- . . Carolyn Hulst . Karen Westerberg . . officers went to State Executive Board meetings . . . club held dance . . . sold sophomores at annual slave sale. FIRST ROW: Gayle Griffith, Jean Sked, Barbara Kocis, Kathleen Parr, Linda Desmet, Susan Lee, Beverly Ennis. SECOND ROW: Eileen Peterson, Ruth Lehr, Nancy Tabenkin, Barbara Bannister, Julie Forrest, Mary Ellen Sheft, Kathleen Porohus, Brenda Wolak. THIRD ROW: Walter Romberg, Robert DuVall, Moson Young, John Damiano, Barry Bernson, Robert Atkinson, Ronald Young. 11 I r FIRST ROW: Glenn Kritzer, Karl Manheim, William Eberle, Michael Lehr, David LaTouche. SECOND ROW: John Young, Mrs. Dorothy Walter, advisor, Charles Tressler, Arthur Meserve, Linda Desinet, Barbara Kocis, Mary Ellen Sheft, Susan Lee, Virginia Haymqn. THIRD ROW: Sue Todd, Carro Svenson, Kathleen Parr, Virginia Lou Goldsmith, Shelly Baiter, Ruth Barton. LIBRARY COUNCIL Met monthly . . . elected Kathie Parr president . . . Linda Desmet vice-president . . . Carro Svenson secretary . . . Barbara Kocis treasurer . . . library help- ers .. . gave annual tea for faculty . . . Mrs. Walter ' s pride and joy. 59 Abundant with intellectual activity . . . Jerry Thimme presi- dent . . . Allison Schleicher vice president . . . competes with the big schools . . . challenged by Montclair High . . . plans to have a tournament . . . clubs active members ploy with each other . . . achievement at chess everyone ' s goal. FIRST ROW: Howard Mindus, Arthur Meserve, Edmund Thimme, Allison Schleicher. SECOND ROW: Ceroid Lewin, Robert Schwartz, Glenn Kritzer, William Eberle, Richard Kalb, Ronald Olsen, Richard Farren, Julie Forrest, Stephen Ward, Barbara Bannister, Frederick Thimme, Bruce Bailey, Sonford Biber, Robert Tuteur, Barry Bernson, Michael Lehr, Karl Manheim, Gerald Drinkuth. 60 DRAMATIC CLUB Girls galore . . . Nancy White president . . . Helen Gordon vice- president . . . Virginia Kelley secretary . . . their performances directed by John Charles McGreevy . . . plays with all girl casts are hard to find . . . one appearance this year. FIRST ROW: Joan Gamble, V SECOND ROW: Susan Lee, C( Lou Goldsmith. THIRD ROW: e Sheppard, Solly Hoymon, Barbara Schinman, Vivian Wolak. Bunavich, Ruth Barton, Judith Young, Barbara Reuter, Virginio cy White, Virginia Kelley, Brenda Wolak, Helen Gordon. President— Don Smith V ' ice-Presidenf—Dawe Nochimson Secrefary— Pat Eberle FIRST ROW: Pat Eberle, Don Sn Kritzer, Mary Cox, John Graeter, Arthur Meserve, Nick Califano, Larry Rubinson ive Nochimson SECOND ROW: Larry Rubenstein, Glen a Van Dorn THIRD ROW: Sandy Biber, Gayle Griffith, Gordon, Connie Colifano MISSING FROM PICTURE: STUDENT COUNCIL Where are the eighth, tenth, and eleventh grade representatives? . . . They ' re out looking for the other representatives. . . . Let ' s form a committee to look into it. . . . spectator buses trailing the team to many away games . . . better salesmanship . . . Well, what is the Council selling today? ... a subsequent increase in the treasury . . . ingenuity . . . innovations . . . a new trend in assembly programs . . . intellectual auds . . . Pet Project: A Student Handbook, guide to seventh graders in years to come . . . two representatives Instead of one from each class . . . power in numbers. Miss Joan E. Gallagher Student Council Advisor President— Nick Califano Vice-President— Roy Bernt Secretory— Jane Mc llveen FIRST ROW: Roy Bernt, Nick Califano SECOND ROW: Carol Bunevich, Miss Gallagher, Cecily Drucker, Abby Natelson THIRD ROW: Ron Young, Peggy Stondish, Stuart Kritzer, Dave Nochimson MISSING FROM PICTURE: Jane Mc llveen, Pat Eberle, Arthur Meserve, Mary Cox, John Young, Al Ruiter 61 SPORTS ' We ' re Ponies born and Ponies bred . . . ' FOOTBALL Finished third in the Metropolitan Conference with a 2-3 record . . . directed by Coach Dioguardi . . . led by Co-Captains Gil Peterson and Ron Young . . . early practice and attitude . . . Peterson scores 44 points, Cenci 30 points . . . crush Collegiate in opener 31-6 .. . Young catches pass . . . smash McBurney 38-7 with 6 touchdowns, 452 total yards . . . Peterson to Cenci — Cenci to Peterson . . . Randall ' s Island Stadium — capacity 45,000 . . . injuries again plague C.H.S. Forces . . . lose heartbreaker to Hoisted 19-20 . . . Killer Smith flattened . . . injured captains sit on bench as Croydon ' s P.G. ' s win, 6-32 . . . Maines and Caiifano knock- ing out teeth . . . Cenci just being great . . . Oakland edges Ponies 12-24 in season ' s finale . . . fullback Maines scores twice as C.H.S. grinds Oakland into dust in futile second-half rally ... we gave our all. GIL PETERSON Quarferbock Co-Captoin RON YOUNG End Co-Captain INSET: Coach William Dioguardi FIRST ROW: Don Smith, Ron Young, Gil Peterson, Rick Cenci SECOND ROW; Bob Cooke, Jerry Thimme, Nick Califono, Alan Sachtleben, Jeff Jones THIRD ROW: Jack Greene, Paul ' fS : .: JIM BEHRMAN Fullback VIC MARONI End JOHN MAINES Center ■i i fsans 1959 C.H.S. 31 „. 38 ...... 19 ..... 6 .. 12 .... SCOREBOARD Opp. --- Collegiate 6 ... McBurney 7 ... Halsted 20 . Croydon Hall 32 . - Oakland 24 Caffrey, Bruce Anderson, Dick Dugan, Roy Bernt, Mason Young MISSING FROM PICTURE: John Moines, Vic Moroni, Jim Behrman, Dick Miller, Asst. Coach Bruce Morgan, Mgr. Howard Mindus JERRY THIMME BOB COOKE Halfback End NICK CAUFANO ALAN SACHTLEBEN Center End FIRST ROW: Jack Greene, Bill Carlson, Hank Schinman, Rick Cenci SECOND ROW: Coach William Dioguardi, Jerry Thimme, John Maines, Ron Young, Dave Nochimson, Jeff Jones 20 f Baskefball Coach William Dioguardi and Captain Ron Young. C.H.S. Cagers win 8, lose 8 . . . play erratic basket- ball . . . Ron Young team captain . . . only two seniors left . . . varsity beats alumni by 10 points . . . lose opener to Eastern . . . good first halves . . . gentleman John ' s elbows . . . score 95 points against Carteret Academy . . . Dave Nochimson nets 34 points in one game . . . two starting sophomores . . . Ron fouls out . . . Ponies make great showing against the top rank- ing Newark five in last game of this season . . . next year? ... Ivy League Crown. Jump Ron! ! BASKETBALL 66 Gil connecfs! BASEBALL Asst. Coach Jim Agnew, Coach Ray Yagiello, and Capfain Gil Peferson. 1959 North Jersey Ivy League Champions . . . first time ever . . . overall mark 7-2 ... 6-1 in league play . . . Captain Drinkuth leads ' em . . . big three — Remig .400, Peterson .361, Drinkuth .300 . . . Hurler Remig wins 6, loses 1 . . . Young pitches no-hitter . . . Aikman and Kenney team up for run against Delborton . . . Remig ' s 6 perfect innings . . . Ponies shatter opponents — Carteret 11-0, Eastern 13-0, Montclair 8-0, Newark 5-3, Oratory 5-0 . . . only loss — Delbarton 1-2 ... Gil Peterson captains ' 60 squad ... 5 returning starters . . . team looks strong. FIRST ROW: Rick Cenci, Barry Bernson, Jim Behrman, Ro. Carlson, Steve Prystowsky, Roy Bernt, Gil Peterson, Bob Co Stuart Kritzer, Alan Sachtleben, John Maines, Dave Nochimsi Kelley, Dave Ruiter SECOND ROW: BrI THIRD ROW: Rick Robinson, Ron Young Nick Califano FIRST ROW: Bruce Bristol, Captain Bill Carlson, Steve Holliwell SECOND ROW: Rob DuVcIi, John Damiano, Hoak Schinman, Dove Nochimson CROSS COUNTRY Winless season . . . record 0-6 ... no senior on squad . . . close races with Morristown and Montclair Academy . . . lost to Wardlaw by one point and one second . . . soundly beaten by good teams from Eastern Christian and Delbarton . . . the November 4th championship — the race that never was . . . briar bushes and an empty gas tank . . . Captain Carlson and whole squad bock next year. GOLF Young, inexperienced, but willing... Ravitz, Schinman, Prystowski, and Rub- inson . . . The Four Horsemen . . . the first big win against Carteret . . . Rub- inson picks off a 1957 Ford . . . Schin- man and Prystowski sweep their match . . . soundly thrashed by Montclair Academy . . . John Maines recruited for Ivy League Meet . . . three out of four quit after nine holes ... it figures. FIRST ROW: Brendo Wolak, Honk Schinman SECOND ROW: Ca ptain Joel Ravitz, Larry Rubinson, Dave Nochimson LEFT TO RIGHT: Heather Wilsc Barbara Reuter, Elizabeth Berle 68 Abigail Natelson, Alice Cenci, Barbara Van Dorn, Susan White, Joan Gamble J. V. CHEERLEADERS Noted for their pep . . . Cheering Extra into the referees . . . learning new cheers . . . Snap Our Fingers . . . Square Dance . . . Pep Steam - . . . being excused from class for games . . . Delbarton ' s number nine . . . arriving at Essex Fells during half-time . . . avoiding Putnam on the court . . . Favorite cheer — Welcome . . . riding out of the last game on Putnam. CHEERLEADERS LEFT TO RIGHT: Brenda Wplak, Barbara Seelbach, Barbara Kocij Virginia Goldsmith, Nancy White, Jeanie Sked, Beverly Enni MISSING FROM PICTURE: Jane Mc llveen, Cynthia Janowski A sparkling squad . . . Come on kids - YELL! . . . Shall we do a cartwheel? . . . Tie my bow, please . . . making pom- poms . . . giving the Kick-OfF and making a profit . . . creating a new constitution . . . attending the Cheerleading Clinic . . . joining the N.J.A.H.P.E.R. . . . maintaining a C average . . . practicing in Room 4 . . . New Cheers . . . V-i-V-i-V-i-c-t-f-o-t-o-t-o-r-y . . . 1-2-3-4 . . . Stamp Clap . 69 5r ' ' 74 Look not mournfully into the Past. It comes Not hack again. Wisely improve the Present. It is thine. Go forth to meet the shadowy Future, without fear, and with a manly heart. —Longfellow 75 The Seniors Wish to Express Their Sincere Gratitude To All The Patrons and Advertisers Who Have Helped Make Our Yearbook Possible We Hope You Will Patronize Their Businesses Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bunevich Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Cooke Mr. and Mrs. William Edwin Upper Montclair Toy Shop Nann ' s Florists Montclair Pet Shop Bellevue Esso Station Stanley M. Cromwell, Guild Opticians Dr. and Mrs. Phillip Opper and Linda Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Kritzer Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Goldsmith Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Hart Dr. and Mrs. Milton Prystowsky Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Gamlen Uncle George Mr. and Mrs. Bert Carlson Dr. and Mrs. Leo Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. F. Van Orden, Jr. Samuel L. Biber and Family Park Diner Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thorburn J and J Meyers 5 10 Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Dresner Mr. and Mrs. Van Dorn Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Harmon Mr. and Mrs. Allison R. Schleiker, Jr. S. S. Kresge Co. Ajax Photos Ablem Stamp Co. Dominic M. Testa, Optician Mr. and Mrs. Edward ]. Kocis Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Rubinson Mr. and Mrs. Franklin E. Standish Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Reuter Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Dugan A Friend William Ross, Optician Bill Holler Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth O. Smith 76 to the S e eS eniord rom f J _ 13 Mothers and Dads LJl 77 liVl Pilgrim 6-9491 CApital 6-7275 y ie L opper Ifllne Hand Wrought Jewelry, Hand Made Leather Belts JAMES YOUNG and Bags, Gifts New Jersey ' s distinctive shop of originals . . . Photographer ... — 10% Discount to All Students — 597 VALLEY ROAD UPPER MONTCLAIR Pilgrim 4-0044 Sporting Goods THE OLYMPIC SHOP 321 Bloomfield Avenue Men ' s, Women ' s and Boys ' Caldwell, N. J. Sportsivear — Shoes 630 VALLEY ROAD UPPER MONTCLAIR, N. J. MT- CLAIR -VIEW, INC. APARTMENTS 16 Seymour Street and In East Orange Montclair 116 Prospect Street 384 William Street F. H. MILLER 96 N. Walnut Street 191-5 Main Street Pilgrim 3-6193 78 J . 01 tKat; euer-LjLuhere uouc|o Cjoall haued lot of cn- and just 3b tt t snouJ. the BEST WISHES DAMIANO PHARMACY FROM ROCUMBOLO JOS. DAMIANO, Ph.G. Prescription Chemist Phone Service PRescott 9-2684-9-9468 PRescott 9-4546 Residential - Business - Industrial Night Emergency ALBERT A. STIER, INC. GRegory 3-8558 Progressive Development Since 1922 . . . Real Estate . . . • Service in All its Phases 270 Parker Avenue Slyertowne 1051 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE CUfton, N. I. CLIFTON, N. I. Pilgrim 6-5600 Cable: Roundstrav Snap a picture note See it forever MRS. CHARLOTTE L. BOBISINK The Ansiver to your Manager Photo needs is at Rounds Travel Service, Inc. 594 VALLEY ROAD y =y UPPER MONTCLAIR, N. I. ( l COMPLIMENTS OF S CORBO JEWELERS - EST. 1882 - of Styertowne 720 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE MONTCLAIR, N. J. 1055 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE CLIFTON, N. I. Pilgrim 6-1234 PRescott 7-1635 f-. i k xn Shelly Bob Elizabeth Sheryl Ruth Carol Marilyn Dave ( 1 BEST WISHES I TO THE SENIOR CLASS o U From The I Class of ' 65 I i { Nancy Barbara Greg Alan Susan Karl Gary Glenn N. J. ' s Largest Collection of Date and Dance Dresses BEST WISHES for Teenagers — MR. AND MRS. Beautiful Designer ' s SAMUEL S. NOCHIMSON Samples and Originals — Pilgrim 6-5811 VERA PLUMB SAMPLES RUSSELL A. FITT Real Estate - Insurance 203 Bellevue Avenue Upper Montclair 628 VALLEY ROAD UPPER MONTCLAIR. N. J. ?? 4. KQ o -tuxn (■GOOD UlCH V THE Hmwflns 3aCLDOBb p ' A ' ' ,0 w BEST WISHES Good Luck FROM to the THE HULSTS Class of 1960 from DR. AND MRS. Pilgrim 4-0350 VICTOR F. DESMET THOMPSON ' S HARDWARE — Open Friday Night — 257 PARK STREET UPPER MONTCLAIR, N. I. Pilgrim 4-9898 Best Wishes FRANK RICK ' S, INC. from _ Gulf — TUNE-UP SPECIALISTS MRS. CLIFFORD E. DYNA-VISION COR. VALLEY RD. BLOOMFIELD AVE. HARRISON MONTCLAIR, N. J. RAYMOND G. MARSHALL Prescription Optician — Zenith Hearing Aids — 464 FRANKLIN STREET BLOOMFIELD, N. J. Pilgrim 3-6590 317 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE CALDWELL, N. I. CApital 8-0590 241 WANAQUE AVENUE POMPTON LAKES, N. I. TEmpIe 5-4651 83 ,. l ♦ Congratulations from A FRIEND THE WHITE HOUSE ♦ Mr. and Mrs. WilUam B. White Phone Pilgrim 4-5137 LOUIS WALENSKY DEPARTMENT STORE ♦ Wearing Apparel For The Entire Family 100 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE MONTCLAIR, N. I. Pilgrim 6-3038 PRescott 8-8400 FRANK AND EDDIE ' S MARKET M. EHRENBERG SONS 43 V ATCHUNG PLAZA Manufacturers of Pilgrim 4-7515 Men ' s Coats and Overcoats KING ' S TOY SHOP ♦ Educational ■TOYS - Stuffed - - Your Child Is My Favorite Customer — 118 Ninth Street Passodc, N. J. 33 SO. PARK STREET Bed Wisk e6 rom Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kelley and Ro er C O ' G t t 85 •c 0. CO Aikman Baenninger Bailey Bannister Bizlewicz Best Wishes From The Ninth Grade Parents v JB 1 M m I K ' HiU Hopp Huntingdon Kelley Kritzer COMPLIMENTS OF FREDERICK ' S DR. AND MRS. Importer SAMUEL T. BERNSON fashion futures since 1919 where the college girl finds the most important PAUL ' S UPPER MONTCLAIR fashions for her wardrobe PHARMACY INC. 629B VALLEY ROAD Montclair - Spring Lake - AUenhurst UPPER MONTCLAIR NEW JERSEY Pilgrim 4-1655 THE STUDENT COUNCIL of College High School Extends Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1960 87 | ; Phone: Pilgrim 6-0666 4-9745 PETER IBSEN INC. Radio and Television Service Open Daily 9 A.M. Sundays 1 P.M. 40 VALLEY ROAD VALLEY BOWL MONTCLAIR NEW JERSEY 150 VaUey Road Pilgrim 4-5100 Distributor of the Pilgrim 4-7676 D. A. FUSILLI, B.S.C., R.P. Ebonite Bowling Ball ROBERT D. BRADNER, JR« — Balls Drilled on Premises — INC. 14 Automatic Pinsetters Prescriptions Instructions Free 33 WATCHUNG PLAZA MONTCLAIR, N. J. LODE STAR Rick Greg 26 CHURCH STREET TSS PAUL ' S MONTCLAIR, N. I. TEXACO SERVICE Pilgrim 4-3473 INC. CASHMERE 120 Watchung Avenue BOUTIQUE Upper Montclcrir B 193 RIDGEWOOD AVENUE RIDGEWOOD, N. J. A Gilbert 4-6504 T T T I E R GOOD LUCK R E I S FROM E THE BANNISTERS S Pilgrim 4-9606 George Hathaway Donald Krom COLLEGE HIGH No. ' 63 DATE I960 AMOUNT l e Eeil of WiiLi TO CicLii of ' 60 FROM Claii of ' 63 Everything in Music, Radio and Television GOOD LUCK TO THE NATIONAL MUSIC SHOP Class of 1960 — Open Every Evening — MR. AND MRS. 570 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE MONTCLAIR NEW JERSEY I. RACHIELE Pilgrim 4-6320 BEST WISHES FROM THE YOUNGS  i 90 W;J Congratulations to the Senior Class Tom m and W.S. VviaAln IlKavltz 1 fl n . J 91 s ' f . BEST WISHES K) THE B 6 TREE FROhTHE LITTLE TREE 1920 1960 BOGRAD BROTHERS CO. RALPH E. MARSHAT.T. Guild Opticians For the Nation ' s HINCK BUILDING 5 CHURCH STREET MONTCLAIR, N. I. Leading Brands Pilgrim 4-6128 of Fine Furniture • VAT.T.F.Y DINER 288 Main Street • A Good Place to Eat! Paterson BEST WISHES SCHAIT AND SON MR. AND MRS. Dry Cleaners F. C. MAINES Shirt Launderers Since 1897 ♦ • Montclcnr ♦ Upper Montclcnr Verona COMPLIMENTS OF Millbum OLYMPIC BOOTERY Packonack Lake Caldwell ♦ Pilgrim 4-5400 93 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ' 60 BEST WISHES FRANK MARKER INC. DR. AND MRS. Quality Barbers Since 1915 MATTHEW J. SHEET S49 VALLEY ROAD UPPER MONTCLAIR, N. J. Pilgrim 4-2583 MR. AND MRS. SAUNDERS P. GORDON HARDWARE, INC. Use Moore Paint — AUTHORIZED SCOTT DEALER — ♦ 627 VALLEY ROAD UPPER MONTCLAIR Pilgrim 6-8600 H. Y. Picker Pilgrim 4-6255 JACOBSEN ' S BURT GALE Photo Supplies SPORT SHOP ' ' Everything for the Sportsman — School and Team Supplies — OUR ONLY STORE 254 PARK STREET MONTCLAIR, N. I. 596 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE MONTCLAIR. N. I. Pilgrim 4-2210 BEST WISHES W. B. HUGG MR. AND MRS. Auto Electric ARTHUR SACHTLEBEN and Ignition Specialists 152 VALLEY ROAD MONTCLAIR, N. I. 94 Caftrey Carlson Cenci Cooke DeSmedt L omptimentd in ojr tlti Eleventh Grade Parents o •0 •0 Hartz Hulst Janowski Lee Nochimson 95 QocD Ljl;c bcHLOrs rrom 62, BEST WISHES TO THE Class of 1960 Books - Stationery - Gifts Leather Goods - Cameras DR. AND MRS. School Supplies ARTHUR L. SVENSON MADISON ' S Pilgrim 4-9553 TUMMEL ' S 427-429 Bloomfield Avenue Home Made Candy Montclair, N. J. and Ice Cream Pilgrim 4-1600 641 VALLEY ROAD. UPPER MONTCLAIR •.•.•.■. ■. •. :: v -gi - .jyiii ii i 96 Best Wishes Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larsen 97 GUARDIAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA W. R. HUNTINGDON AGENCY 116 Main Street Orange. N. J. ORange 5-7191 C. W. PERDUE Custom Stereophonic Best Wishes Home Music Systems to the 8 10 PARK STREET MONTCLAIR Class of ' 60 from COMPLIMENTS OF MR. AND MRS. HASSLER ' S BAKERY VICTOR MARONI ♦ Anderson Atkinson Bernson Bristol Damiano I K onarutuiationd and iBeit Wishes fn The Tenth Grade Parents Lehr Loughnane Mcllveen Meserve Mindus W4 f Quote: Grrrrr Usually seen: sleeping Likes: liverwurst and pillows Pet peeve: that bird Peter! Noted for: personality plus Song: Wild One Among the faithless, the ja ' ithjid only he. — JOHN MiLTON Colonel Bruiicks Wolak 40 Laurel Avenue Clifton, New Jersey Bruucksie . . . full of fun . . . loves the Wolak family . . . and the Tornquist Company, Metal Fabricers . . . likes Christmas and his birthday ... a good host at any party . . . hates to see people leave ... a trusted friend . . . best guard on the basketball team . . . very athletic . . . extremely intelligent. V - Best Wishes to the CLASS OF ' 60 from THE WOLAKS AND BRUUCKSIE 100 Pilgrim 6-2600 GARDEN STATE TITLE INSURANCE Best Wishes COMPANY Mortgage Loans to the and Title Insurance 295 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE Class of ' 60 MONTCLAIR, N. I. from Telephone Pilgrim 6-4884 JOHN NIGHLAND MR. AND MRS. Pictures and Mirrors S. W. BEHRMAN — Artists Materials — 13-15 MIDLAND AVENUE MONTCLAIB, N. J. 101 Telephone Pilgrim 4-6440 O ' DOWD ' S DAffiY 21 MIDLAND AVENUE MONTCLAIR NEW JERSEY Pilgrim 6-4223 CAMERA MART HARVEY WILLNER, Manager Leitz - Zeiss - Kodak - Ansco Polaroid - Eumig 16 CHURCH STREET MONTCLAIR, N. I. BEST WISHES to THE SENIORS from THE CHORUS F i 102 Bona Fortuna Seniores O .IogI eOGU ClBsllttC MACK DRUG COMPANY Much Success and Happiness ♦ to the 520 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE MONTCLAIR, N. J. Class of 1960 PRescott 3-3062 Lunch Bar ♦ COUNTRY STYLE DONUTS — 56 VARIETIES — Trot In With This Ad And Get A Bakers Dozen 69c MR. AND MRS. G. C. PETERSON Discounts On Orders For Parlies 1170 BROAD STREET CLIFTON y. G A ' .H l 103 Nt . publishers of fine yearbooks since 19H 1 N C O R PO R AT E D 22 CALIFORNIA AVENUE • PATERSON, NEW JERSEY MULBERRY 4-4322 104 3 3000 OOflls 3™ tOnlint Ref LD 3780 .N3 N43 1960 Montclair State College. College High School. La Campanula
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