East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ)

 - Class of 1966

Page 1 of 254

 

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1966 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 254 of the 1966 volume:

As We See It When, in 1962, East Brunswick High School published its first Emerald and graduated its first Senior Class, it was a far different place from what it is today. Many of us who were here then can recall the warm friendliness of that small campus and some have tried to cling to that rapidly disappearing value, often not realizing that East Brunswick High has grown and, in growing, has changed markedly. The editors of this fifth anniversary edition of Emerald have tried, both in the new format and in their approach to the photographs and text, to capture the essence of that change. Hence, our theme . . . A New Dimension 1 N il EAST BRUNSWICK HIGH SCHOOL xv 1966 EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. Volume V Limited Edition MARK M. ROSENTHAL Editor in Chief JOYCE BARTSCH Art Editor ELIZABETH HOUSE Class Editor TEDDI FINE Copy Editor SUSAN BEDRICK Creative Arts Editor SANDRA CZAPF Feature Editor ALICE RABUCK Organizations Editor SHARON FINE Photography Editor EVERETT PAGE Sports Editor GREG MORGAN Business Manager MR. WILLIAM G. MUNYAN Advisor MRS. DOROTHY M. TONEY Business Advisor A Member of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association -i dam-3 WWW BRUNI 51: O Ho TABLE OF CONTENTS STUDENT LIFE 6 CURRICULUM 18 ORGANIZATIONS 52 FEATURES 74 CREATIVE ARTS 94 SPORTS 104 THE CLASSES 144 ADVERTISING 205 EPILOGUE 234 5 A CHAPTER ONE ITUDE T LIFE Having recently emerged from its period of infancy and growth, East Brunswick High this year found itself enter- ing its academic adolescence. And unlike older schools where tradition often dictates all policies and decisions, it found that its earlier experiences, more often than not, were inadequate as guidelines - that change was a by- word. But like the rest of the nation in 1965-66, the high school did not always find it easy either to accept or to adapt to change. For change meant the passing of what had become familiar and therefore comfortable. Hence the school en- dured most of the year with a split personality, one half of which was trying to perpetuate what was, while the other half worked for what was to be. While the administration and the faculty labored to re- solve this dichotomy on their respective levels, the real problem of adjustment fell to the student who, in the final analysis, would have to live with the situation. More often than not, his efforts were paradoxical. Consider the matter of the Seniors, who had been resident here since the sixth grade - the last of the long classes. Af- ter six years of waiting 'to be on top, they arrived only to find that values had changed and that no one was really impressed by their achievement. Or take the matter of the photo-identification cards. This proposal was quite practical for a large school such as this. Yet it was overwhelmed by the small-school syndrome that found such cards unthinkable because they reduced the in- dividual to a student number. Those who could recall that the popular student of a few years ago knew just about everybody in school were cha- grined to realize that, this year, he might be graduated not even knowing everyone in his class. Most of us rode to this metropolitan-sized high school on rural-type school buses. We still managed to become excited over our traditional rivalry with small-town South River High, yet we realized its days were numbered as bigger New Brunswick High loomed more and more as public enemy number one, from a Bear point of view. And so it went. Reticent students more frequently hesitat- ed to raise their hands in classes that now held ever-in- creasing numbers of students. More hopeful candidates tried out for berths on more varsity teams, with less chance of success. The same situation applied to clubs and student offices. Yet the negatives of change nurtured the positives. More competition brought about greater achievement. More courses made it possible to satisfy a wide range of student interests and needs. More participation and talent afforded all activities the opportunity to deepen and broaden their' range of effort. i But most important - the increasingly impersonal aspects of student life forced more and more of us to rely upon ourselves and, in the process, we discovered what we coul do on our own. We matured. And that was the purpose o it all to begin with. l l , Y ,W ,Wi , . PY fix. E W Y Mom made Dad tell me I shouldn't go out for football But I did anyway. It had to do with making my own decision and with facing some- thing that seemed a little bigger than I was . . . 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Those x there. too. sc-rvauning from thc' st November aftvrnoon or hollvring finish line, packing tlw gym in sr shouting ns honw from third i Spring. There was always something going on at the high school and I was a joiner. Mom used to get angry because I 'd either miss the late bus and she'd have to come get me, or else I 'd be late for supper and she'a' have to hold a plate for me in the oven . . . Lots of mothers had this complaint, for there was about as much activity here after the school day oiiicially ended as there was during the day. Clubs and organizations had regular meetings, plays or concerts were in various stages of rehearsal, one publication or the other was working to meet deadline, or kids were finishing up a report in the library. And in the evening, often, the activity continued: a dance, a movie, a spaghetti dinner, or - around the holidays - a tree lighting. No wonder the activities buses were always crowded - or why mothers turned gray. 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' ' bg, faggt . - - su. axmr wff 16 It got to the point with the telephone that the folks jinalbf gave me an extension as a Christmas present. Funny how I could be with the gang all day in school and still find all kinds of things to talk about at night . . . If it wasn't something at school that filled our conversa- tions, you can bet it was something around town. And, de- spite the lack of adowntown area in East Brunswick, the gang still managed to assemble at places like McDonald's or Ma1's or Brookwood to rehash the day's news and to make plans for the weekend. Seniors especially fotuid it easier to get around now that they were old enough to drive - provided Dad could be talked out of the car. CHAPTER TWO I RRICULU Once we have graduated from the classroom into what we sometimes call the outside world, we are likely to find that the day divides itself roughly into three eight-hour segments: eight hours of work, eight of play, and eight of sleeping. One can do without an education to accomplish the last of these three bits, but it is generally acknowl- edged that he does require academic preparation for the first two. The question is then raised, What is an education? And, in response, most people will think in terms of job pre- paration. While they will concede that the classroom situa- tion does not fully qualify a person in his given occupa- tion, they do expect that, in most cases, his schooling will train him sufliciently well to keep the cyanide out of the aspirin or a reasonable number of his clients out of the electric chair. Not everyone recognizes, however, that side of a person's education which deals with what educators love to call the worthy use of leisure. In speaking of this aspect, the eminent poet john Ciardi once remarked that unless a stu- dent had time for Shakespeare - and Shakespeare repre- sented all the arts - then he could not really say he had been through college. Rather, college had been through him, without leaving an impression. He fthe poetj sug- gested that to claim having an education is to claim that one is a human being. And no one, he declared, gets to be a human being all by himself. VVhen one scans the list of more than 120 courses offered at the high school this year, one cannot but wonder if the makers of the curriculum were not of the same mind as john Ciardi. For while he spoke of the college education to a college audience, his remarks are just as applicable to the potentials of the learning experiences to be found here: The high school operated again this year on a single-track curriculum. That is to say that, except for the minimum courses required by the laws of New jersey, the student was free to select his academic program from the myriad courses available. His choice was circumscribed somewhat, of course, by his post-graduate ambitions: the college- bound student would naturally select his program with an eye towards college entrance requirements while the girl with intentions of becoming a secretary would schedule appropriate subjects in the Business area. But the student was not bound to a rigid, pre-determined program once he announced his major interestg he could wander into other areas, out of curiosity and in search of his own level. In effect, East Brunswick High had as many different academ- ic programs as it had students. To meet these demands, the school had not only to in- crease its teaching staif but also to broaden its curriculum. A program was begun in Humanities, which state evalua- tors called unique in the county and one of the best in the state. The Sciences offered non college-bound a new course in General Biology. Industrial Arts inaugurated a program in Graphic Arts and opened its new Power Shop. So despite larger class sizes and a reduction in the number of sections in some electives, the program of instruction available here was such that no student was denied the opportunity to become a human being, in the Ciardian sense of the word. Q sv x , is Nyx. A hx! Q NX ,Xxx 'if' X - ' -ev F Y ' X I X Q5 . -.., 0 wk xx 5 5g1.f3: . xsxxx 'gsw ,X . ' 15 -3 jsfQT:e2e?f3Sl1. M wg xv N :wg . lx x L SRX iigzxggl 54 x x Q ,ai sle X xxx ix A X x Q X Xa PRINCIPAL As principal of the high school, Mr. Anthony Navickas is charged with the responsibility of administering the school. To fulfill his responsibility, he must be knowledgeable about the teachers on the staff, the student body, the com- munity, the relationship of this school to the others in the system, and the desires and aspirations of the school pa- trons. His duties are varied and entail his being spokesman for both the school board and his staff members. Ultimate decisions pertinent to school policy and program are his. Mr. Navickas did his imdergraduate work at Oklahoma State and received his M.A. degree from Columbia. Q , X li , I x 'Q X 'crest any NN. 'E 'Ria' SUPERI TE DE T As the administrative head of the East Brunswick public school system, Dr. Thomas R. Bowman has curriculum and instruction as his chief concern. At the same time, he must also be concerned with securing a qualified staff, obtaining adequate financial support for the system, preparing a sound budget, and providing a pleaszmt and useful environ- ment. Dr. Bowman received his B.S. and M.A. degrees from Ball State College and his doctorate from the University of Chi- cago. The superintendent since january, 1964, he has re- signed to accept the superintendency in Abington, Pennsyl- vania. Board of Education Elected by the voters of East Brunswick, the Board of Education is charged under the laws of New jersey with the task of providing for a thorough amd eilicient school system. Implied, of course, is the awesome task of planning not only for the current educational needs of the commu- nity, but also for those of the future, a problem made all the more difficult by the nature of this growing township. Board of Education offices are located in XVade School. Board meetings, open to the public, are held there every Monday evening at 8 p.m. MR. HERBERT ROGIN President of the Board of Education STANDING: joseph Vaillancourt, Dr. Robert VVoodruff, joseph Stanco, Dr. Thomas R. Bowman, Dr. Zola Horowitz, Vemon W. Blanchard, and Daniel R. Murray. SEATED, George F. Clark, Mrs. jean Walling, Mrs. jane Smith, Mrs. Marion Fenton, and Herbert Rogin, President of the Board, Vice Principals Mr. Guidoboni is charged with making final decisions re- garding office supervision, transportation, report card pro- cedures, student teacher placement, textbook control, curriculum development, daily bulletin and all public announcements. Mr. Guidoboni also has the responsibility of coordinating testing programs with Guidance. Mr. Caseiro is responsible for assisting staff members with problems conceming attendance, for cafeteria supervision, discipline, substitutes, building and grounds maintenance, and assembly procedures. He also makes final decisions on matters pertaining to assemblies, air raid drills, fire drills, and teacher evaluation. CARLO T. GUIDOBONI Vice Principal BS Tufts, MEd Boston U IQHN CASEIRO Vice Principal BS Glassboro, MA Newark State Art Department The Art Department endeavors to develop in its students those creative talents which find expression on canvas, in watercolors, in chalk, in clay, in fact in almost any materi- al. Its program of instruction is aimed both at those who intend to make a career in the field and those who find art a worthy avocation. In addition, the staff cooperates in the Humanities program. LLOYD S. ROGERS Coordinator Art, Humanities BFA Richmond Professional Inst NIA Columbia Adviser: Folio ROBERT.-K GRIFFIN BELI U. of Miami Adviser: Art Cluh 24 .Xxx SN Ny S 2. k ww x li ,, ? 2 X., ,X g . K x I Q A . Q N ' bit, . -1 x -TNT? I , ,E 5 3 wr., 5 ,B .Q s X-f , N s K xx xx . Nj: . e vm! CLIFFORD TAYLOR Coordinator, Business Education BS Rider MS Newark State ROSEMARY AUER Shorthand, Typing BA Trenton State Adviser: Cheerleaders RON KURAN Business Education BS Roclchurst JOHN J. Maynwsiu Business Education BS Rider DOMINICK N. PROCACCINO Coordinator, Distributive Education BS Rider Adviser: DECA, Green 6: VVhite Shoppe Business The Business Department strives to make a major con- tribution to the economic competency and the social-eco- nomic understanding of all its students by providing the kinds of training that will aid in the abolishment of eco- nomic illiteracy. Business Education prepares the students to engage in the kind of business that is operated in accordance with the American ideal of free enterprise and, at the same time, makes provision for the development of high ideals based on sound economic principles. PAUL A. NOVAK Business Law, Typing BS Penn State -V YVILLIAM PELLAGRINO Businem Education BA U. of Richmond Asst. Coach: Football 26 JOSEPH S. SAKOWSKI Businem Education BS Monmouth Adviser: Sophomore Class ELLA SZARKA Business Education BA, BS Rider Adviser: FBLA, Activities DOROTHY TONEY Business Education BS Bluefield State MA VVest Virginia Busiuesw Advisor: Publications ANGELA M. DEITCH Coordinator, Foreign Languages BA Douglass MEd Rutgers DONALD CLAUSEN French BA Lafayette BARBARA ANNE DEL.-XNEY Spanish BA Howard MS Yeshiva Sociedad Honoriallispamica Adviser: Ski Club, Human Relations Club, Foreign Languages Designed to meet the needs of the students by beginning a study of French, German, and Spanish in the seventh grade, and Latin in the ninth grade, Foreign Language in- struction is based on the premise that learning a foreign language is a method of sequential hearing, speaking, read- ing, and writing. Its aim on a broader scale is to acquaint the student with the culture and contributions of other peoples, as well as to present to him possible vocational, travel, and leisure opportunities. In so doing, it is hoped that each student will become a more responsible and tm- derstanding citizen of his country and the, world, prepared to make positive contributions to the betterment of inter- national relations. KARL FAETH Cemian, History, Economics BS Fordham MS Fordham ANNAMAE FRENKIEL Latin BA jackson Adviser: junior Clam EVA M. CLAS German BA Douglass Adviser: German Club CHARLES HARDNETT Spanish BA Bluefield State MA VVestem Reserve Director: Language Lab IOSEPH LATORRACA French BA Rutgers Advisor: junior Class, French Club JOAN OPALKA Spanish BA Montclair State Adviser: Freshmen, JV Cheerleaders Home Economics This subject area seeks to prepare its students for happy and successful family life. To this end, it offers a broad program that includes such subjects as cooking and sewing, housing and interior design, child care and development, family relationships, and the psychology of family living. The students receive much of their training in well- equipped laboratories and even have the experience of running a play school for yoiuigsters of the nursery age. At the same time it is teaching practical skills, it is also de- veloping more mature Lmderstanding and attitudes, and is providing for satisfgdng leisure pursuits. MARGARET E. SCHOEN DOROTHY PLOTZ Coordinator, Home Economics Home Economics BS Comell BS Indiana MEd Rutgers Adviser: FHA -. -is N --K fwafeltpei .ti ,Q J .xgtfgtgf - ' -- xg . i . K Y . f - , K xii-1, , A I .again 15 ntfai-ig ,. ,ext Z, was A. A MARY E. WARREN Family Living BS Ball State MA Michigan State 30 tf .3'gi- FW' x A Q v S 'V Q Q ww XF 'Q w,.-- 4 AMP' Q. S 'fr .,. I 4 X Ne A 6 ,wr wk' Kill . .. gi, 8, . S V, ssh., 44. ' as ' -3 ,-x-...Y 3. X :-:-Af,., : -. . 3 45 ,S ., 5 F...:p..-9.- 1 , ff-...X um v . K A. if isqgqr 1.5.59 A .. K fagx SQA r , 'fssirQ2:w..Q la wgX.53.XYSX . .wma Q-1 11 . ff' f x E. Us : .1 wx Q. ' iq: 1 xy Q . x j 9:2 Xl i .R . 2 I Q t 1 j ,I-355 . Q .. M. x. is iw, 0 'f v r fm if F M Ag 's ,xx N 2 . 1 'M X x x Q X XM . .SS S? L M FRANK ANTONIEVVICZ Indimtrial Arts BS Newark State ROBERT R. BENSON Industrial Arts BS Trenton State Adviser: Radio Club LOUIS R. DE CAROLIS Automotive Lali, Driver Education BS State U. of NY, Oswego CHARLES B. EATON Industrial Arts BS Trenton State JOHN C. LIBERTAZZO Engineering Drawing BS Trenton State GIL MANGIERI Industrial Arts BA New York Univ. MA Newark State ALBERT B. ZUSMAN Industrial Arts BA Newark State s , M.. M A A gg' Q A R, V Industrial Arts This area of study makes no attempt at vocational educa- tion, but rather - under the law - restricts itself to pre- vocational exploration of the materials, processes, and pro- ducts of manufacture and with the contributions of those engaged in industry. It contributes to complete living be- cause it meets individual needs that are real and satisfies impulses that are inherent. Above all, students experience critical thinking in solving technical problems, thereby de- veloping an understanding of the complex integration of industry into modern society. LOU HORVATH Coordinator, Industrial Arts BA Washington State Coach: Cross-Country eos ,Elica RICHARD BOEHLER Area Coordinator Language Arts BA Seton Hall MA Newark State Language Arts Language Arts - or English - aims to develop to the maxi- mum extent oral and written communications skills while also instilling an appreciation and understanding of our lit- erary heritage. One of subjects required by state law, Lan- guage Arts is supplemented by a program of electives that provide opportlmities for creative writing, dramatic expe- rience, public speaking. and introductory experiences in journalism. The subject area also provides a program of de- velopmental reading. Rutgers Seton Hall ERNEST ALBRECHT DINO G. IASPER Language Arts Language Arts BS Rutgers BS Mt. St. Mary's THOMAS F. KELLY MA Northwestern MA Seton Hall Language Arts Adviser: Fish Club, Golf Team BA Seton Hall BERNARD BLACK MA Seton Hall Reading Improvement PETER KAZNOSKY BA Nloravian Language Arts ROBERT C. LAWSON MSEd Temple BS West Virginia Language Arts Adviser: Chess Club, AFS Adviser: Sophomore Class BS Rutgers 34- PATRICIA MORGAN Language Arts BA Rutgers MA U. of Colorado STEPHEN MICHAUD Language Arts, Humanities BA Glassboro State Adviser: Folio WILLIAM G. MUNYAN Language Arts, joumalism, Creative Writing BS Rutgers Adviser: Emerald, Campus Courier HAL F. NUSBAUM Language Arts, Public Speaking BA Montclair State MA Montclair State Adviser: Senior Class. FTA SUSAN B. NVOOD Language Arts BS East Stroudsburg State NIA U. of Scranton MONA ROTH LILLIE SIPARS Language Arts BA Newark State Language Arts Adviser: Green Quill, Eye BA Rider MARTHA SI-IUCRUE Language Arts ELLIOT TAUBENSLAC BS Rutgers BA U. of Rochester MA Brown MA Rutgers Adviser: Drama Club 35 JOHN BODNAP. Coordinator, Mathematics BA Yale MS, MEd Rutgers Adviser: Student Council MILDRED W. AHLGREN Mathematics BS Howard MA Colmnbia Adviser: Twirlers LEON FLOREK Basic, General Math BS Glassboro State Coach: Soccer, IV Baseball RONALD 1, GONIER Mathematics BS U. of Richmond Adviser: Girls Booster Club Coach: Football SEYMOUR GRODST EIN Mathematics BA Brooklyn MA Brooklyn CHARLES E. HAMMOND Mathematics BS Bucknell MA Montclair State Adviser: NHS, Mu Alpha Theta, Math Team Mathematics Mathematics endeavors to develop in its students a proficiency at using one of mankind's oldest tools. Mathe- matics is a discipline, too, developing skills in critical thinking and the systematic, logical approach to problem solving. Beyond this, there are those who find this subject area to be one of the most esthetic of subjects. The department offers courses at various levels of student need, including an advanced program that is similar in scope to a college freshman math course. LOUIS KOSA Mathematics BA Trenton State Adviser: Freshman Clam ROBERT C. SIMPSON Mathematics MA U. of Glasgow Adviser: Folk Singing Coach: IV Soccer LOREN SMITH Mathematics BA Gettysburg THOMAS SULLEY Mathematics BS Maine Maritime Acad BEd Keene Teachers ROSALIE TRIOZZI Mathematics BA Hunter MA Rutgers 3 5 Q ii ! f Q' NN 55? 5 . M, WN'1f f K H9389 Q :yi QWFFEC Q Bl S fb f ff-,. Ji 5'Qi?L, if - Q4 KX is J 2 'Y mx ff' ii. Qi. A St' asf E .Q fx -RL Y 3 . , J' X ' x .,, X ws 'X XNK' A is ,f XA Q is +R. - 1 x M My SF 1 9 , v Nw W f 5 4 'Nav' JAMES F. DOYLE Director of Athletics BS Rutgers, MEd Rutgers Coach: XVrestling CHARLOTTE D. BROVVNLEE Physical Education BS Panzer BRUNO M. DOCANIERI Physical Education BS Kansas State Teachers, MEL! Rutgers IRENE FORCE Health. Driver Education BA jersey City State CELESTE DORE HUNTER Physical Education BA Mount Union, MEd U, of Pittsburgh Adviser: Loaders' Corps, Dance Clulr MARY ANN MC RAE Physical Education BS Douglass Adviser: CAA, Girls Varsity Hockey, Baslzcthall, and Softball QQ V Physical Education The Physical Education department seeks to promote sound physical and mental health through its well-rotmded program of physical activity and its health education pro- gram. It has, as a secondary purpose, the development of those skills in sports which enables one to participate and enjoy an active sports recreation program. In addition to its regular schedule of gym and health classes, the depart- ment offers the student a wide range of interscholastic sports and a broad selection of intramural activities. GWENDOLYN ODENHEIMER Physical Education BS Troy State, MEd Rutgers ROBERT W. ODENHEIMER Physical Education BS Troy State, MEd Rutgers Coach: Baseball A. SPINAZZOLA Health, Driver Education BS Seton Hall, MA Seton Hall Athletic Trainer, Mst. VVrestling Coach VVILLIAM D. TICHE Physical Education BS Rutgers. MEd Rutgers Adviser: Track Club, Coach: Track. IV Basketball ELEANOR VERGILLO Health BA jersey City State NVAYNE A. MOYER Science Department The Sciences aim to develop not only technical pro- ficiency but also intellectual and esthetic values. For science is more than a tool for improving our control over natural processesg it is a luunane and liberal discipline in its own right, having important contributions to make to the enrichment of all areas of living. The first task of the program is to proxdde the information and skill necessary to apply science to personal and social problems. The sec- ond task is to train prospective scientists. And the third task is to satisfv and develop those interests and values which have always been a stimulus to the growth of knowl- edge. HELEN FINE Chemistry BA Brooklyn Coordinator, Science E- G- BURD MA New York U- BS Bucknell Chemistry Adviser: Chem Club, Lab MEcl Syracuse BA Wyoming Assistants MS Brown MELVIN A. CASEIRO KRISTA KIVIRAHK JOHN F. BLOQDWELL General Science Chemistry General Science BA U- of Ri'JlIm0l1d BA Douglass BS Louisiana State Aggt, Coach: Football Adviser, Senior C135 gif 42 GEORGE PINFIELD Physics RICHARD E. MC KEEBY BS Georgia Biologv Coach: Frosh Football BS Rutgers Adviser: AV, Rifle Club MS Ulli0ll Physics Lab Assts. WALTER G. PERRINE MATTHEW PRUSIK Sciences General Science, Biology BS Rutgers BS Rutgers MEd Rutgers MS Rutgers ROBERT E. WARWICK Biology BA North Carolina ABIT Coach: Frmh Baseball EDWARD YVESTON Science BS Monmouth 43 rf ff X 5? K A 5? .K E 'le ex ,K 1' N X 4, Y v 5 X-NX' if 'Mg . -2 x A iw xg , X .X x xg, .W .lm W-XNHM N N M-M NM X-.NKKWN N - M . ..... Q 1 W .izlgxkilijg ': , Sgzmpg, 'sv K Y'Q2?qQx f,-1-1-ki: X fir-K x x fm Q 8-fvffx k 1' - as Q, x I 1 1 9' 1 S , Sw , 'Y S ROBERT L. WINST ON Coordinator, Social Studies U.S. History II BS Suffolk MA Seton Hall Adviser: Poli. Sci. Club LESTER j. BROWNLEE, IR. Ancient History, Humanities BA, MAT Notre Dame JOHN BRUTHERS U.S. History II, Global Geography BA Trenton State Adviser: Poli. Sci., Debate ELIZABETH FITCH U.S. History I BA, M Ed Purdue Adviser: Drill Team ALFRED IACUKIENVICZ U.S. History II, Citizenship BA Claasboro State Adviser: Key Club ROBERT ORBAN History BA Northwestern Louisiana NANCY THOMSON U.S. History I BA South Dakota MA Michigan WYLLIS WENCIL Social Studies BA Westminster WALTER M. BOYLER Counselor BS Rider MA Seton Hall GLADYS K. CHRIST Counselor BA Douglass MEd Rutgers Guidance Through its testing procedure, its appraisal of academic rec- ords and its program of individual coimselling, the Guid- ance staff enables a student to make a wiser selection of courses than otherwise might be the case. The staff assists, too, when the student is making his post-graduate plans, providing Il0t only information but active assistance as well in areas like college placement, scholarships, job placement, technical training and enlistment information. Guidance also works closely with the teaching staff in meeting special needs of the students. Grams' 4-6 GERALD KASTING Counselor BS Tulsa MEd Oklahoma State IOSEPH G. CONZOLO Counselor BS Seton Hall MA Seton Hall CURTIS LIPPINCOTT Counselor AB Miami MEd Rutgers ROBERT T. OSBORNE Colmselor BA St. Vincent MEd Rutgers 47 Health Services The Health Services at the high school was one of the ar- eas to draw special praise of the state evaluators during their 1966 visitation. Aside from attending to the daily aches and pains, cuts and bruises of the student body, the Health office conducts annually extensive physical examina- tions in addition to annual examinations of ear, eye, and teeth. The office provides teachers with advisory informa- tion on students with special problems that might possibly affect their scholastic work. EDYTHE M. KIESSLINC Supervisor, Health Services BS St. Francis School of Nursing MS Seton Hall Adviser: Medical Careers ARDIS A. CONDON School Nurse BS Columbia Adviser: Medical Careers 3 F1 ld 3Fl E NELIBE MEUEM utlncauna 4 N N ,X Q ix 3 , X, QM 5 K ii 1 W GUIDANCE OFFICE ELIZABETH KEYES RUTH D. MOSER MARION A. OSBORNE Secretary Secretary Transcript Clerk HOPE A. BARG KIT HESS ROSEMARY K. MAY Secretary Secretary-Nurse Secretary Library Medical Office Athletic Office MAIN OFFICE ROSE FITZGERALD Secretary to Principal MARION ZOHOVETZ MARY C, WERNER Secretary Secretary The Secretaries just as the sergeant is the backbone of the Army, so the secretaries with respect to the Administration. Besides handling correspondence, they type everything from daily bulletins to athletic schedules, health records to col- lege transcripts. And they run the switchboards, lost and found department, not to mention the complaint de- partment and their own special counselling service . . . for' boss, faculty and student body. It seems to be a student's inherent right to complain especially about cafeteria food. 'The trait is universall But the cafeteria staff carries on nevertheless, preparing and serving well balanced meals to three lunch shifts dai- ly . . . and smiling! Ist ROW: M. Benitz, R. Faust, M. Merman, O. Balajthy, S. Kapusta R. Roth, E. Daku, K. Benit, R. Puff. 2nd ROW, M. Scheer, M. Papadi: nec, A. Wolff, S. Aftanski, M. Buizdowski, B. Flynn, E. Scott, R. Mor- ris, F. Coccari, M. Perroth. Missing: M. Femades. Maintenance of the high school complex is the responsibility of John LaSalle and his staff. Though limited in personnel and supplies by a reduced budget, they have done a creditable job in keeping the school ship-shape. Custodians STANDING, john Grobleny, Al Desautel, lim Curcuru, Dan Palumbo, Clifford Green, and Mike Corkery. SEATED, Iohn LaSalle, Doris Weir, and Anton Hruby. Missing: E. R. Cottrell, james Kane, Nick Menrath, and Amie Olsen. CHAPTER THREE RGANIZATIONS Not all the learning that goes on in a high school takes place in the classroom. The club program must be consid- ered a vital part of the total education picture, affording as it does unique experiences in the management of person- nel, finances, and other resources in the accomplishment of desired goals. The extra-curricular program found here is rich and var- ied. Its undertakings are ambitious and imaginative. Its achievements are, by and large, first rate and reflect a high degree of competence on the part of students and advisers. East Brunswick students, for example, have been elected to office in county and state associations of which their clubs and organizations are members. The publications have all been hailed for their excellence and have been used in oth- er schools as examples of what can be done in the field of scholastic journalism. The musical organizations have like- wise received high praise for their consistently superior performances. It is significant to note, too, that the clubs and organiza- tions have not confined their activities to the high school campus but have reached out into the broader world of community, state, and nation, thereby affording their members opportunities to meet new people, to see new places, and to refreshen with new ideas. Not only have the clubs gained thereby, but the students have had tremen- dously rich and rewarding experiences that might other- wise have been impossible. But the organizations have not been without their prob- lems, some of which have been brought about by the growth of the high school and will continue to be aggra- vated until the school population becomes stabilized. One such problem is that of student participation - and it has many facets. For instance, while many students do stay on for the after-school meetings of this club or that, many more who might like to participate find themselves faced with a transportation problem. Some 75 percent of our stu- dents rely on school buses and it becomes obvious that all cannot stay late, the activity buses notwithstanding. Nor are all mothers willing to interrupt supper preparations to come with a car to reclaim their sons and daughters. Sec- ondly, many students over-participate to the extent where they often are supposed to be in three or four places at the same time. Obviously when this happens, some clubs suffer. What is more, they have filled a slot or an oflice that someone else might have filled, and their aggressiveness often discourages the less outgoing student from partici- pating because he feels he either cannot compete with them or cannot match their contributions. In time, some control will be necessary to curtail the avid joiners. Finally there is the problem of finances. Fund raising drives that were appropriate to a small school are becoming more a source of irritation to the community and less a source of revenue. Some other means of financing - be it imderwriting by the Board of Education, greater alloca- tions from Student Council, or an activity ticket - will be needed to meet the demands of growth. 4 4 SOPHOMORE CLASS COUNCIL undertook, as a fund-raising project, a Spaghetti Dinner. It proved a hit, but a lot of work, too. FRESHMAN CLASS COUNCIL was elected in the fall and soon began the task of organizing a class that had come from two intermediate schools and diverse other places.It found its biggest task was the immedi- ate one of unifying the biggest of classes. Student Council, Class Councils Student govemment on the school-wide level rests with the Student Council. Led by its officers and an executive committee, its role is to organize and administer the stu- dent body and to promote worthy activities that will pre- serve and foster the traditions, school spirit, and good name of the high school. Individual classes have autonomous gov- erning bodies and elected officers, and these class councils are charged with the conduct of class activities and affairs. x 12, ' W s .Q Q 'i 1 f ' 1 ' A f ' P - -M ,1 ,uv 3 A X .X . 5- mn, if x M, . ' 'P if 9 A X .2 ' , ' XX 'Ei l Q , XY ' S Ki' Q, E . i 395' ' W f -xr x X' .. x - 553: j.g,,.,,i,., X X .nfx-fx: A 'x 1 'i . J. A f . ii' W ,. W . ,Q Q9 x , , i ffxenseu-S.. -M 55 Q x A x' 51 :g ig in x . 3.-Q - f.',.....x...,..... N , ff -' Q N 3 . X ..Ngv,:gigc A ,qmqqwmut x ,wi-w.miwmA 2 ls ,, x Q Q P ' Q 'P -'ig - - - X , xi xi N s 1 f we Q Q f- i 'L - r, X X Q-' vp A. H .Q A Q f , Q a M use H F k 7 , M sm ac X , Q - f .. 2 R S' ' NF ' F , . ' .. If .as-.Q.,..,NgvQ': - Qffgxt xx ' if A 1' . T .sf . '-ffwrx-2' 4' ww A , M a- Probably the highest compliment that can be paid any yearbook staff is to have its readers say after a book has been published, That's just the way it was. For a good yearbook is a sort of history book, telling the story of what happened that year. This concept is quite a departure from the traditional classboook one. But it has been an idea that has guided Emerald staffs for the past few years and has made Emerald sales sky-rocket over the 1,000 mark. In the process, the yearbook - under the guidance of its editor Mark Rosenthal and adviser Mr. William C. Munyan - has this year received national recognition. The amount of work that goes into a yearbook is astounding. Production of this edition, for example, began in March, 1965, and was completed in july, 1966. In the process, close to 3,000 photographs were taken, not counting the individual student portraits. Current and future editors of Emerald and Campus Courier asemble in New York each March to participate in the proceedings of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association convention. Mark Rosenthal was one of this year's conven- tion speakers. i S, .1 s at f. .... - Q5 THE CAMPUS 9 - '49 Q o scvo Campus Courier, the school newspaper, has earned two national awards under the editorship of jane Cutler: a first place at the Columbia Scholastic Press Association in 1965 and a second place in 1966. It has also received state awards. Published this year on a monthly basis, the paper brings to the student body news of its activities as well as interpretive features. The publication also serves as a training ground for beginning joumalists. Recent years have seen its number of subscribers triple. Mr. Munyan is the adviser. A r i slg, is ln- ' -ag ff, X 1 Folio, the art-literary magazine at the high school is now in its fourth year of publication and, like the other publi- cations at the school, has won much critical acclaim. Unique among art-literary efforts on the secondary level, Folio has resisted efforts by traditionalists to have the an- nual work bound and has prided itself in being what its name suggests: a folio of creative work that can be taken out, examined from different angles, and even put in frames for display. Folio is used in creative writing classes at Montclair State College as a model of outstanding work by high school students. Mr. Stephen Michaud and Mr. Lloyd Rogers are advisers. ML.-V Ls' mmm. Q. : ,L- -N. - .A 5 jsffxz - 1 s' il Q' 8 S www am i kg xx ' X , 1: -A vi if D-A k .V .. . 9. 3 5 1 X Ll -51,g,g3gLfv,x1g,:- ,AQ -QQ 3 ,. ' X -. K wfugg. .5 S J - fp.. . f tx F FNDYQI ' .. ,., iff? .Ya . :, 'Q fl ,II N I' ' gi? -ga ' 3 5 X Mk ag, X K J In M'm,..,,,..A....,,.,.... ,, 1 S15 1 - ,mg x X. A was K f '- x 3. ...gx A ki Y X - 5' f J rg:-sF.if,X X 13 X 'hw x .iq as - ' H: xg, gi f egg . E 3 W ri .Rx 3 WS Q . www- Hmm-E QUQQ Q 'S Eg QR x S e x 1 11: Fi ig f ' 55' FQ . A 16 Q -35151391 X N 5 Wg' GE' ,iw rf? P' Y 3 A' 'Z K .., ' WJ? . 3.5, uivxsm Y Y 3 N if X xx Xi m m 3 .K . gm..3i5,,., ,g r u , A '.X 'Qs k . SQ? 4, 3 YQ W xg ,K SX ' .35 W ,. S . - 1 LL-A W K-i' J' , Q 4. 3' ag' W ,.. Qs X , ' 2 ,. .grwgx mpg KQQMNAS kgxsi Q Q we F fe Q -X vi,efffxS,'f .. ,gi . :- x X X S, QL - X. 3 N., xi xv ST Q gifs M ix X M X X , 1 X Q my X , K- -f ' 'Q -'--'fi 1, Q N 40' . QS Q... Q , , x t K A W 1 A ff' - .K- X, gg' I runny,-,-.Q f ig, W' v W KX 'HD AS 4 X f . .dr 5 QQ? ' xg 5 W Mm is Career-oriented clubs at the high school include the FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS, ABOVE, FUTURE HOMEMAKERS, TOP RIGHT, and FUTURE TEACHERS, SHOVVN BELOW. Mu Alpha Theta, FH Green Quill, FBLA Chem Club, FTA Mu Alpha Theta - the mathematics club - is an organiza- tion of high-powered mathematicians who have made a name for themselves by beating other schools in the area in a series of math contests. Green Quill, the literary society, provides a discussion group for those with a keen interest in literature and draina, while the Chem Club probes the fascinating world of chemistry beyond the extent of the scheduled classroom lab exercises. Future Homemakers of America, Future Business Leaders of America and the Fu- ture Teachers of America all explore their respective areas of interest as potential career fields. Among their varied activities are the annual wool and cooking contests, visits to nearby teacher's colleges, seminars with student teach- ers, and practical experience in the field. Not pictured is the Distributive Education Club of America, which op- erates the Green and White Shoppe and gains practical ex- perience in merchandising. National Honor Society MEMBERS INDUCTED IN 1965 Barbara Bystrek Franklin Chu Susan Clark Kathleen Condon jane Cutler Sharon Fine Theodora Fine Ronald Gorham Charlotte Graf Leslie Hain Elizabeth House Gregory Morgan Wendell Openshaw Mark Rosenthal Craig Schaefer Thomas Seel Nancy Stab Holly Wideman SENIOR MEMBERS INDUCTED IN 1966 Alan Aftanski William Ahlgren Ilene Axelrod Donalyn Birch Kurt Boehm Constance Burbank Daniel Chen Barbara Cohen Patricia Compton joan Davison Frank DeRespinis Melissa Erickson Diane Goldsmith joan Gordon james Gratten Richard Habrukowich jesse Heines Madeline Hunter Lois Kady Diane Kaminski William Kirk Lennie Kleinberg jennifer Kroon Kenneth Langley Thomas McGuire Everett Page john Parky joseph Pilch Alice Rabuck Dinorah Ramirez Patricia Sadowski Arlene Shaw Lynn Shurnski Patricia Spishock Pamela Stokes Mary Tushinski Nancy Weck Celia Wristen Delores Zanetti jUNIOR MEMBERS INDUCTED IN 1966 Susan Adler Holly Berg Henry Berger Stephen Bieri Robert Black Susan Bowman William Chemowitz Celine Christensen Karen Cickay janice Clough Linda Cuddy Sandra Czapf Daryll Fickling Kathleen Former Linda Hamilton Susan Higgens Donna jung Pamela Lineberger Mareen McDermott janet Meyer Renee Poet Michael Samford Gregory Samak janet Schmitt james j. Sheridan Gail Sherwood Bonnie Stamm Susan Stout jeff Talan Charles Unice David Wohl Frank Zia NHS, Modern Dance, Medical Careers Club Pledged to uphold the principles of citizenship, schol- arship, leadership and service, the National Honor Society provides a tutorial service for all students, conducts a Sat- urday morning reading program, and has distributed books and school supplies to the indigent of Appalachia. Members of the Modern Dance Club are interested in new and exciting dance routines and have choreographed their own dance recital. In addition they have sponsored recit- als by outside dance groups. Those interested in careers in the medical field find an out- let for their interest in the Medical Careers Club which sponsors lectures and films on the many diverse opportu- nities in the field of medicine. wx xl 4 J.. Ml E xx N ' :QV R me 41. 'Q '- R , , X -rf X Q X 1 ,ji , .N ml . X , E .W K K . x x Sa . X 3 AE 1 a lg f.. r,r 3 X is V, .-1 ,, L ' ,1 f an f K4 E -wx, ..,, Q' ' 1 'fivask .W , X Nm. bi' ' ,JW if ui SENIORIUM member, ABOVE, checks a student's pass while VARSITY CLUB members, BOTTOM RIGHTL comtemplate trip to Madison Square Garden with their adviser. LEADERS' CORPS girl BELOW aids by taldng attendance. Seniorium, Key Club, Varsity Club, Boosters, Leaders' Corps The above-named are organizations whose primary pur- pose is that of service to the school community. Seniorium acts as semi-official hosts for visitors and provides a moni- toring service in the halls. Key Club and Varsity Club im- dertake projects within and without the school, such as canned food drives at holidays, clean-up campaigns on campus, and landscaping of the campus. Leaders, Corps provides an assist to girls' gym instructors by assisting in administrative areas. The Girls' Booster Club serves to pro- mote school spirit and attendance at athletic events. KEY CLUB, LEFT AND ABOVE, collected canned food for indigent. BOOSTER CLUB, BELOW, discusses ways and means of getting out the crowd for that big game coming up. 69 Chess, Ski Clubs Amateur Radio Club Clubs which concern themselves mainly with avocational interests are the Chess, Ski and Amateur Radio clubs, shown here. The Chess Club attracts a surprisingly large number of members for its meetings and tournaments. Meanwhile, both beginning and experienced skiers find the Ski Club's trips to the Shaker Village and the Poconos a big attraction. The Amateur Radio Club appeals to those with an interest in ham radio operation, Other musical organizations at the high school are shown on Pages 90 to 93 in the Features Section as they appeared during their annual Spring concert series. L . . '-SN' 1 -Y Q -I gsd x, .. . V, 3 qs - yd A , N , X5 Q X X XT 55115 A N, :X iiX xN XX Xa. i5f 'x is M x . ' - - - s , K .' yarn Q A 1 .x . A ,x PT X ' f ' ' X. , . -. -1:--can - gt k Y. :. fig: I Fixx, A 5 M .fs - Y A - i mga-' 6 1 -Y ' Mg-ef . - '-3? .v-5.x J ,I A MA.. 72 w Anyone who thinks that football is strictly for boys has another thought coming. Come halftime, and the girls take over the field. Cheerleaders, Twirlers Color Guard, Drill Team Without intending to detract from the football team itself, we believe that many folk are attracted to our games be- cause of the color and excitement generated by the groups on these pages - the cheerleaders, color guard, twirlers and drill team. Their spirited cheering and their splendid half-time performances, have brightened many a dull and chilly Saturday aftemoon. The cheerleaders, of course, per- form at all the various athletic contests. The drill team and twirlers occasionally appear during the winter's basketball games, in addition to their fall shows. CHAPTER FOUR EATURES The years of high school are often called golden ones. And we suspect that one reason for this poetic approbation is the fun and excitement surrounding such activities as field trips and plays, homecomings and dances, concerts and parties. For these are events that are peculiar - if not ex- clusive - to schools and, once a student has been gradu- -ated, they become part of the past to be relived in mem- ory and yearbooks. The special events here come in dilferent categories, there are those that are deemed educational and which add to the serious experiences one has as a student - Pro- ject Government, for example. Others are the culmination of a period of training and offer the student the chance to display his talents and to gain just recognition for his achievements - such as the concerts in the Spring. Finally others are purely entertaining and range in levity from that sort of divertissement which enriches as well as enter- tains to that which provides a moment of lightness and then is forgotten, like a play or a dance. The value of these features depends on the individual. To the student who comes to school only for the classes, there is no value at all. On the other hand, to the one who doesn't miss a thing, the value is great. In between these extremes, we suspect, lies the vast majority of students who have gained something from what they have supported but who could have supported and gained more. Those who have worked long hours, for example, pre- paring for a dance - especially on the decorations com- mittee - know that the preparation is more fun than the dance itself. The players who spent weeks in rehearsal before their play went on the boards know the tiresome monotony of doing the same scenes over and over again and they have seen funny lines go stale from repetition. They have experienced the emptiness in the pit of their stomachs on opening J l l l F night. But they have also had the rare thrill of winning thej audience and the bitter-sweet letdown when the -show has closed and itis all over. , Many have experienced the excitement of building the homecoming floats, or have been elated by the spirit en-Q gendered by bonfires and football rallies. Many, too, have experienced the delightful surprise of coming to a concert - more out of a sense of duty than a desire to hear thej music - and of Ending that the performance was really and truly enjoyable. l In the process of participating, we have gained more than pleasant times, memorable though they have been. We have gained insight and a different point of view. We have learned, during Senior Day for example, how a teacher feels meeting class after class, day after day. Or, through Project Government, we have realized the problems faced by our town's officials. We can appreciate more now play, a concert, or a dance recital because we understand the artistry involved, the training required. And we are more tolerant because we know the innumerable ways people can err. l Long after the intricacies of a math problem have escape' us, long after we have forgotten the rules of grammar, ,e will remember that it was here, through such activities, vsje really began to know the world around us. l l I l l 8 V .....--f 4 Q Qbgq Q . sf s x, puff H fk,5.g'X S, 2 gk? sg gy g fy Q2 if R w xi Q Q v . k ' J -Q - i a X! X Q - S O X X X g do .Q , I X TEX N if S not 5 f WX!- , u ,.-.,..- E , x K 7- ..W,--. A 1 g., L i 1 ,pq f ' fy .... --V I 1 E Q' f l 'x Ri xy' 'A ,u9 -' SQ-Q23 ,. - . ,, . sw V- .K . .- tvs .. 5 -Nfjw A fi . xx 4. : . F X x N Q - Q -ff W. J r ,puff ,A A fx' . 3 4 v his , ug a 5 S' kqfvifr Y K xg. 5' 5 i W -.,... S r H A i K x ax - 4 S A AN, - . Q' i.:. 5 ' v . f N F 3 . A - 13 S5 x..A Www if 4 f SS M TW if N . - A if--f. xg' 5 x . 5 NS! Q vs- L ' Syd.: . 1 ' x V , XL 5 -Q M Y- L' ' f if 1 'N M Q 1. Q' X xi 1 51 - QQ b . ' . 3 f Jffi QA' 5 X . Q , W X . 5.3-5,555 H - ' 5 3, Y 7525, 5 k - 5 x 5' 1 V, . T. x ' . Q: - igk, , ,Q Q.- ' x .tux V ' x x ' q A A 5' A A - 222525 3 if M + -5 x J' QQ5 can X . ,. x K Y' K , Q fa? 'lg x A ' 'is W' sf X , 1 fx . 5 wg' Jia v - if . - ' 3 As pq 1 K , 5 ' Qt-f':. ' Q .y i rg U. 15 . 4 -' N Q' .. -ji. 1 . - '30 fy, 'f ,...,,f' f ,' . , ,. g .vi .v .4 , g . A I iii' :TFP I n 4 ',. I -' 1. Xiu! 4 ', . A . , . N , o.l.f.. ' - , SJ, ' ' Q 5 , ,V . K . L., tn, 'N 4 ff , . . , - U x X Mfg, Wx ' NF q ES? N xg . ,N A.. Q t f- M.. Q . A.: Q K Q Y s. s we Ws..i K -f I 'Q , , ' tiff Q f I f fp fa, i. siiiiw 1 v gg: 3 wa :we f 1 f H - 1 v Q gre J W -f L. '... .0- Q . V . . ir! i 1 earns gk Homecoming The annual Homecoming hoop-de-doo this year was scheduled for the Perth Amboy game, also the first home game of the season. The weather was ideal - one of those golden days of early Indian siunmer that you read about. Highlight of the halftime activity was the crowning of the Football Queen, Celia VVristen, by her predecessor, judy Blanchard. Included in her court were junior Linda Roth, sophomore Pat Falkowski, and freshman Nancy Brown. Also featured was the annual parade of Hoats, this year constructed around a theme of movie titles and competing for a trophy and cash prizes awarded by Combined Publi- cations. The sophomores took the honors with their version of Moby Dick. A dance followed later in the evening and alumni had themselves a reunion of sorts. - wi ,, . . First prize in float contest went to the Sophomores, as we said, for their Moby Dick entry. Art Club won second prize with their version of An- thony and Cleopatra, while the junior Class's Barefoot in the Park won third place. Dances If you had a Saturday night date coming up and weren't sure what to do, you could bet there would be a dance at the high school. And they were usually well-attended. In fact, they were so well attended by outsiders that a pro- posal was made in Student Council to issue photo- identification cards as a means of controlling the party crash- ers. The dances centered around every kind of theme im- agineable, from a Surfin' Safari to Leapin' Lepruchans. QDance committees here had a mania for alliterative namesj The Saturday night sock hops in the gym featured the popular electronic combos playing the twist, the frug, the ierk, the monkey, et cetera. Slow dancing was reserved, it seemed, for the more formal Christmas dance and the proms that came in the Spring. A S P Green and White Week Each year, during that long stretch from Christmas to Eas- ter, the Student Council sponsors Green and White Week to promote school spirit - and to give the students a chance to blow off steam, too, we think. The week began this year with a pep rally and a girls vs. boys basketball game, complete with boy cheerleaders. Dolly Zanetti was given the Green and White award at the rally. Then followed a succession of fun days, filled with such events as a Catch the Killer contest, Student Recognition Day, Teacher Appreciation Day, Green and White day and its antithesis, Dress Down Day. Each class selected a theme and dressed down accordingly. Seniors were the Wild Ones, juniors followed a TV show theme, sophomores mas- queraded as the old folks at'home, while freshmen went clash-bang. A basketball game and a dance sponsored by the seniors brought the week to a close. Proj ect Government As if to prove they could be serious after the nonsense of the week before, seniors culminated a lmit in municipal gov- ernment with Project Government, under which they elected a mayor and town council who then appointed various officials and took over the running of East Brunswick for a day. Everett Page was the mayor. The project was a cooperative venture of the Social Studies de- partment, the Student Cotuicil, the History and Political Science clubs, the,xSenior Class and - of course - the township oflicials. -3 ' rqn-P .fb X I 'Y 0 .sf :QQ S' . h X . ma r .JK ? S. 1 A . If K.. ,yw six I' xx X I 6 x 1 A 'F 'S RFQ f Q 1- xgf umgw.. ' f Q. Q 1,.X uf ,Qs x if XX .Q im ' xv f xy K w 'Q Christmas Was . . . . a time for lighting the tree, singing carols, seeing San- ta, and meeting graduates who were back for a holiday vis- it. Many returned in uniform this year because of the situa- tion in Viet-Nam, but we were able to forget that for the moment, caught up as we were congenial spirit of Christmas. The choir and orchestra presented their holiday assembly, Student Council had its annual tree lighting ceremony and treated the teachers to a tea, the choms toured the campus singing all the old favorites, and many clubs held after- school parties. But the season's highlight remained the big Christmas dances. juniors thought, for awhile, they wouldn't be able to attend the one for Seniors and Alumni because of the anticipated crowds. But they did and, as in the movies, everything turned out well. f . . v E Y K in 'K 'L k,s . 1 , n 1 ' l , - Q R Q x 1 ' ' I ' Q X .- Q . 'sf . h. .W , b . X .Q 'K X . ' . 5 , f . . x , , , . 6 'Q 4 U . I A S 5 I 3 affwffii . r . Q M- ' i Q 5' 'J ' ii XF? ' t . fs. EX I F 'K ,,,, -K AQ sf X4 , 9,1 M QQ . I o,f t gb , 5? C - x. 1 'Q Q. X I , Q I . 2 sw 8 A I 553 , 6 3. ,,gr s ' I I 't ' iff: 2 , 5 3' 5 .iT,?!f,,! ,fn is G : ' 3 f . M fix ' sf! S I 4 if fix' 1 W , nr N 'vm l .ga - S u. . . wg, e..L g f' 6 0 is' ' ' K2 5' I Q O ' 1 X 'rf?!,SEMQ1S,wQsm45x M441 so 'I . 5 N N N.H.S. Inductions Annual induction of new members to the National Honor Society in February swelled the ranks of that elite honors group to close to one hundred. For the second year in a row, the formal induction ceremonies were held in the evening and were followed by a formal reception for the new members, their parents, and invited guests. Highlight of the ceremony is the lighting of the four symbolic candles which represent the principles of the society: citizenship, scholarship, leadership, and service. From these candles is then taken the light which is passed candle by candle to the new members from the old. President of the society this year was jane Cutler. '?u..... ff' if K 4 i 86 Rutgers Glee Club Appearing here in March for its second benefit concert for the yearbook and newspaper, the Rutgers University Glee Club and its inimitable director, F. Austin VValter, scored a tremendous hit with the near-capacity audience and estab- lished itself as a tradition at the high school. Singing every- thing in the book from the highly sacred to the deeply Ro- mantic, from the rah-rah college song to the hilarious musi- cal adaptation of Walt Kelly's cartoon series, Pogo, the club demonstrated a high degree of musical competence and versatility not too often heard these days. Following the concert, the singers and audience were entertained at a reception and dance. if sag' L fk if 4 X A ss J Q 9' i ,x59 'V . min. i s ,f Q.: I, i i Qgigxjyki-it . . V w 4 S1 Q Y-XM r 1 fi 5 x wi 1 Ai A D. lasik gb ae- g ,,. ,, O S M X sw ' ,HH X ,ff if , 13 5 1 Y .S 5 sw giwfflw SWE . . Y N- NS k 1 'RSS-Q -f J! z Es! E l ' K i 1 r N E- I X .. N. VN 7. fi llx . -9 ,mgsgfx .2 J gl' E ' , K 'xx 4 I u - n:'i5'f9f ,1 S , i . 5 s N H x f' Q X R 1, I. 12 F V' i -1 I I J ' ' x 3 N A X, L ' 'e X., .- X. 1 E f -3 W ' - A A .nf i 7. .-gf .- L Qi wasvw 'M k fsf, Q . X A fs ' x 'JP Q QQ LJ' W A 195+ A , ' 4 me R K xl X K Xkgx Q in Wk 'Q ,QQ Q X ' E f ,ga X it 3 NAA I E x K 0 - X Q, , M.. A h 'gy 4 5 g 1 5 2 3' f 'S 1 Q 7 41. . A ,. if x. 4 KR L' mx mf . N F x 'Q H 1 X 'y b 4 'At x-xx A. x N T 'K IA k 8 I t K I : K 5 's sw ..- Ag- ,.,,. , .. I , 1 Nbr ,,----o--w--NI-e-1--wQ-Af-'---- sw S ' Q f Q' f - . c A .635 ti ,QA X W Q.. . ,,,w0 .h., 4 -P? Q H5 ' f' K '1 .W va! uf 'X K X x M . . . . 5 Aft: A Pi N , 3. 1-, f fi Q ' S Q v vf. L vm X Lag.: .A At, LA A Lt fx D wr 4 Q N5 ,I 1 kV,. , f P- . J ' kqagx -M.-....., .W G E E x CHAPTER FIVE 'RE TIVE RTS In a public high school like East Brunswick's - and indeed in a community as diversified in its background as East Brunswick - it is inevitable that athletic events will over- shadow the club activity, the special events, and the activi- ty in the less dramatic world of the creative and perform- ing arts. The majority recognizes the thrill and excitement of a long run for a touchdown, a winning goal in the Hnal seconds of a basketball game, or a tie-breaking homer. And it becomes conditioned by this kind of big thrill to the point where it overlooks or cannot recognize the lesser thrill of a painting, an imaginative essay in a literary mag- azine, a mood shot in a yearbook, a concert or dance recit- al, or a model built to scale from original plans. These ac- complishments may stir excitement in some circles, but they do not fill stadiums with wildly cheering throngs. Despite a lack of wide appreciation and recognition there is a significant artistic endeavor at the high school that, in its quiet way, is bringing the school a reputation that is wider-reaching than that won by its athletes. For it reaches beyond city, county, and state to extend throughout the nation and abroad. For example, samples of poetiy and art work from Folio have been reprinted in a German student magazine. Further- more, Folio has been used by professors at several col- leges as an example of superior achievement in the Arts by high school students. This book and its sister publication have won national ac- claim before they have received total acceptance here. 1 And this edition of Emerald will be seen in over 8,000 col- leges, universities, prep schools, academies, and high schools in this country and abroad. The high school symphony orchestra has attracted critical acclaim for its performances each year before the New Ier- sey Education Association's convention in Atlantic City and was, as a result, invited to perform in Pittsburgh. Pianist Diane Goldsmith carried East Brunswick's col- ors to the finals of a nationwide contest in Dallas. Musi- cians Paul Matlin and Ken Langley have been awarded siz- able scholarships for their musical abilities. More than one student here has found personal satisfaction appearing not only on the high school stage but also in Mr. Eliot Taubenslag's dramatic productions in New York City. Corrado Caterina, '63, has gone on to make acting his career. Annually, hundreds flock to the school for the Arts Festival to see and hear the works of hundreds of our students: paintings, sculpture, furniture, pottery, crafts, fashions, de- sign, metalcraft, music, dance. It would be foolish for us, of course, to expect pep rallies, cheerleaders and twirlers, and screaming fans to trumpet the accomplishments of our talented artists. But we feel they desire some well-earned kudos and hail them this way. What follows is symbolic of all those who End expres- sion through the creative arts. X X Q H ' '51 1: ' E W Q b ?' A SQ. - A. ui X 'Q 7 X Q59 PY fl, af xy- X it i is Q fy N 4 M.. ,N qs xv X W' Q9 , Q U1 y X t f ighg '- :Y ,, rmwggv . ., If '. X-1' 1 .M- f - gif., fi. Q X Qv- Lgwgi in Sign. - k ' Q Z0 Q wife QQTS K .. if if if? ,. Ms 1 95 si gl E Q -., S xx Q? ff wmv wr- A X X TX 'H S Xi A H gm, Creative Writing wwtuwaw Swdawws-ww wmmm ff' ir, O .o malwcnyflamgwg a 7 ' KF 5 1 -a g I .0 Wcmm I li fa Q. , - 'r FW mf. 1 ,AK I 'JW X ' .uf - -Hf Jmmdc afrfbyl yds X -X if ,f fx X., My Jfwllowv M Gvefkvffifyuiv -'ji I gy' awww ba 1, i i a ,, be s .ff M me mayb 41'05i!4q,j,,2gV' i, N pn www: r, ,,,' M711 N 5 ,J Mwffm Meg fxfkq Vx J 1 x 1 X M LX. v . be ff! I Wondering, I grasped your outstretched hand. Bewildered, I walked your offered land. I stroll sun-sifted sand, Marvelling. II Zorba's joy is mine new eyes see new earth each breath brings rebirth Dancing drunk with wine y that never touched my lips. Celis Wristen 96 Judy Wray 'Wlflvlllg by Glen Griff' AJ Q 5 97 N: faux ,f ' Qi I ,fl vi li Q fig' it Art Outstanding work in creative writing and in art is published annually in Folio, to whom we are indebted for the material reprinted on these two pages. Among the many talented writers and artists here, Celia Wristen and Melissa Erickson have been outstanding in their achievements. 3 , ,L f -K , S539 X. - vi -- x ' 'i . - X fifylg 11: gm T fi gl j i -- gf 9 ,X 4 P XX 1 S5 S54 A' 2 X Q xx X4 1 ,- ii x . 1 Q, i . hiv .if .ILA Q A .hifi - 2 fi. '53 My X ,sS.f?f35? - f f , f f .1 Q .+- N f -. xkx K X f pwgg 'X .f 5 Q SQQQSN , -S ' 2 ' - Sa - Q , if ,,. . ?,, ' km, ,RW 5 six .- .5 Sa .N .E gf, wk 3 , W A Q mmf i '4 M 46: E iw? fix ,, alll glllx 1!.!,v W ' - HWY :sig :L fl x. XY 9 Q 5' X' Wl'fv QL X Klllff u , IIIRW WL V pts? T: ww r ' F-hw H- llllll! lllillw lllllfw lllitf- QU!!! J ' Qdyefkfgfs, 4 Q 0 fw- 'JU h ds X W 5 K ,QQ 'Y 6 QE Qgi x 4 YN 1 M 1 X ' x1 . h f ' 1A Q A 'A txff 5 T-fx. 7 l R ihk Hunfer' 5 x mg :LQ Bass ,wi N i V . ' r in . 3:51. ,..M1.L-X .. X XN X S . - v- . 1M -.T nl K Q X 77 -Q- S' 5 512' 5 5. Yi :emi Q If xx in 3.5 S15 .. RW! ., f k X .. 1 , i 1-Q ,ax .A aff' .is , 93 ., ,W .X.k .1-521 ' -X QQ xii. age?-Q ., Nix U . ,MX 'swam x Ji' Swim w me c ' M. x , , XXX it-.3 -, R -X ww -x- ' .xx 3 V A x Y ' x x X' 1 X A xx A ik . J, J QQ Y Qin' X : ,,,f M f 3, M . Q E I . L A A252 ,gif Lgfgyw 3 . . ' MH'??MfsXs's?kf' X Philo oph ws X ' ,fd K ,..,,-f' ,1 c .1 K ,S 5:- ia A Architecture, Crafts, Drama Outstanding in the field of Architectural Design has been Roger Kennedy, who intends to pursue the art as a career. His imaginative creations have ranged from summer cot- tages to modemistic churches to high-rise apartment houses. As part of his work in Engineering Drawing, he has first developed the plans and then built scale models of his creations. Wesley Schwab exemplifies the talent here in the area of crafts, creating beauty from wood or from metal. His works range from the decorative stylistic bird above to the practical but equally beautiful area of furniture. The names Ramona, jucks and Donald Lang are synony- mous here with acting talent, the pair having scored success upon success on the East Brunswick stage. Their dramatic talents have been developed beyond the point of interpret- ing a role before the footlightsg they both have demon- strated abilities backstage in direction and in script-writ- mg. PGS ,afeteria Bovcott Draws Local Press I ' O O Cr1t1c g o magznes iholence , Campus Courier reportez 1 able to find anyth' LATE BULLETIN v' J Campus Courier learned late om ence a Wednesday that the Board of cation at its Mondav reviewed the the were un Lng ap nd, in fa ne incid Edu- v meetin cafeteri month of fin ' pi lac 1 Ct. witnesse 0 entxan eXChange o Hold I d between two studentsxthat requn- S' 161 the attention of a facult' e 1- a operations for It was not established it! tihnel? September and. finding dent was ,-elated to the b ancial conditions there improved, Dr. Bowman had ordered the reinstatement ot' Roard esserts with Class A hot lunches The addition of the desserts felt, es-uld be acc neducing oycolt . Sbealring before of Educaton sessionxwhic . -' was open to the public e lo , ' it was lhe flqvcott as a terriblexvgfm . omplishedtwithout of 8 democratic pmces the size of the portions. ,mat yall Wa In effect. the Boards order, which was th went into immediate effect, again raises East Brunsxvic-11's hot rogram above the .V the St . e s for getting nt, The consensus at the students shoul given the Board ti A lunch problem be m dictaijv level set ,e ate of New Jersey a affords the student buye' portions of me' Well scilss 1 esoi tin action ar ac s I6 etab essert e t10n g to sz an that o violen es as with Xtia uasc ie reat ce wel the de in re 1 o eiatio dhaxe elodi the fore- -' nd serious ', d th ibothlge ,t f 'i atand'g l . - asthed. ug heac' f. d'56dl' D f u S an e incompatible m0cratic systei disputes. o a sound ln . n o the sch and was not It of s n of set- cipal 001 said neces ' :dent Anthony J Navickas he. t0o. felt the boycott was 881.115, unfortunate and that the student protests. boqv should have tried to under- stand the Boards position and co- operated with it. By Fay Miller Iunglggs ich U01 bo boycott of the cafeteria over the exclus' fliom Class was roundl ' ' me FAY MILLER ards Serve hot ev come under a degree cf State control in order to be reim- ion of bursed for the f0od items they serve. A hot lunches One element of this control covers J criticllsed at a recent dietaig' requirements. eting of the Board of Education, Very simplv. to meet the require- Ba for the criticism of the Sw. ments in this area of State concem. fi .-S Ct- n W- th f t 5 a schvol may either serve Small crobe' balm, fhgdj 8 Io as 6 ac fha portions plus dessert or larger por- on the 0 in 1966,fBYe -gf the Board of Education mms Cf meat md vegetables - ourief sto? News 5'0rywPpin915lhbe1's, nor Superintendent of dessert. ' Camplls C the B05 W jer1eY' thesrieliools Dr. Thomas R. Bowman, whose wxdgfd. of Ne ghout nor Assistant Superintendent for Ill . . was! anon thx-ou , the cafeterlgress ANTI ewspapeli Business Mr. Joseph A. Stanco h fic hoo n received before the me Scholzicondafy sc dent Councils ffom which ad eting a Stu- letter, a Copy of had been distributed to all ' high school students prior boycott. Furth eflnll' WHS Q c tl e. the boycott issue ,ec apparentlv inflamed by reports HZ . 1 local newspapers ol' violence 7 hiercion by backers of the stue ent movement. - gg which ex- aggerated Nm Q a singl R0 'llgi' Eh k u ' 965559 . Mal' twl0 115111, asf h Id of Ioumauts for the P the fie the Sta,,d0 In been have 0 , e legend fgmadxsinehx' national aww to book eal' d the y an Per newSPa d as erald an h in-chief of tinijrhieisl , - r- ' n p ' . , tiilcuon. served as eilstgollner' gurIlti0nal0:tagmcO1'-unnlsts Mark :ister of Cgmgelectiorhigl Schoolrtipwfiting' ofts 1-ald 0 five 31 sp0 glided Flzfzleof tht: gage for gener ed n nam a Seco d WO an th . - hief- Bo . i ditof 'f C state' as Couner Seerafing mnggititiorl- erved tw0 Yjvasli a firstlgzcnationagvig a second has S ,, has awar 0 rece Jane her PaPe d place has als are dsecon k,She..-. SUS first Esng with rfgting abmues qiollgbgiird for he' P ac 103 without the past. East Brunswclc had gone bevnnd these minim' quireinents by sf' portions ' i to th CHAPTER SIX 'PORT There was a time when Group IV in New jersey schoolboy sports meant a rather small coterie of powerhouses, most of them located in the northem section of the state: Montclair, Jefferson, Irvington, Belleville, Passaic, East Or- ange, Newark Central, New Bnmswick, Trenton, Asbury Park and Long Branch, to name a few. But with the mi- gration from city to suburb in the 1950's, older Group III schools moved up a notch. Then brand new schools swelled the ranks, bringing about, for scheduling purposes mainly, the formation of various leagues and conferences within Group IV and also a gradual shift of power from north to central jersey. And East Brtmswick High has figured rather prominently in this growth and in this shift. In five years of interscholastic play, the Bears have climbed from Group III to Group IV and, in the main, have fielded winning teams each year. The noteable excep- tion has been basketball. Group IV represents the league of big schools where competition is keen. For size means depth, and depth can mean a rough game if you don't have it when your oppo- nent does. Further size suggests, to an extent, city schools, where players have a slightly different outlook on winning than their more easy-going suburban counterparts and where the athletic program is supported by a well-estab- lished supplementary program in the junior highs or inter- mediate schools, not to mention the parallel program of the flourishing city and industrial recreation leagues. The upshot of it all is that the complexion of the opponent will change now that East Brunswick concentrates more and more on Group IV competion and moves off the schedules of its Group III foes. It is quite apt to find victories harder to come by now than it did in the past. For a schedule loaded with Group IV teams is a tough row to hoe. But then again, sports is a big thing at East Bmnswick, at- tracting a greater number of boys than in most schools of comparable size. The varsity jacket represents more than status here, it is a way of life. With this continuing active interest in sports, it is not inconceiveable that Green and VVhite teams could go right on winning. X As to the athletes here, they participate in a wide range of athletics at the varsity, jayvee, and freshman level. There is not much to be had in the way of boys intramurals, every- thing apparently organized for interscholastic competion. The girls have a program equally as attractive and chal- lenging, though more on the intramural plane. However, the girls do participate in interscholastic sports in three areas: field hockey, basketball, and softball. , Contrary to popular belief, the athletes acquit themselves generally well in their studies and take the lead in campus life, occasionally to the detriment of the clubs they join for their first loyalty, of course, is to the team. Many earn let- ters in more than one sport. When polled last Spring by Campus Courier about its pre- ferences, the student body indicated only one sport as a fa- vorite that was not offered here: swimming. That the vari- ety of sports available has received such approval by tlfe students indicates that the Athletic Department has fulfilled its aim of meeting the needs of the student. Q Y' N 'if fs . it N al emi Steinert 13, Bears 12 Coach Ron Gonier unveiled the 1965 model of his football machine before an out-of-town audience at Steinert H.S. And, in the first quarter, anyway, his visions of an opening victory seemed to materialize as hard-hitting fullback joe Pilch scored. But with field goal specialists Ed Meagher and Dan jackson benched with injuries, the attempt at conversion fizzled. Steinert -struck backito take a 7-6 half- time lead. And this turned out to be the game. The second half saw both teams score and both teams miss the tries for extra point. Steinert won, 13-12, in the only major Group IV up- set of the opening week. QF , Q wx E U!0 QS HP M x gag-Q,,f5,vi 1 ig, A 'LS ci 1 .. .QI X' x X ki NY - x Ki ' im K fisiyfwx ffigs xr fix 1l','s!'W ' L , Q f , . x x,fx y A I si-9 f SEN? kv Q T X A A Q S . F i .- Q . fs? Q 1 s -i N' L fs. nl ' Q 'Q X , fi, 55 L xg Q- 5 L at uf A. L X, S ,x , ka -A ,sg if 4' 'Q 'idk WV A ! ll A, 5 'Sli 443. 1 ' Q Qs KN .. ,iq - ,., .val Nm 2 , Q: 9 LE Q Y mx fi,- Q ' 351 ali' .tak gi k ,t -P, -W 31,2 ,Nw -gm x Q 'W 1 fx . x 5 e Ml 'Q sg . ,1 P X 4: fi is E ,i , f Q .Q Q , if Q 1 1 QQ wg 5 MQ ,X Qi . ,Q K .NA. 0 3,5 It A 'RHF R Q Xi E? gqqunullu-mth I K . is-' f ME A K Q W x R fr 3, . , K -' NWN' mm L .. QR' R - A X .K K. i Wy A w A XR 5 Bears 21, Kennedy 13 Bears 13, Bridgewtr 6 Still winless, the Bears suffered heavily when, on the sec- ond play of the Kennedy game, Carl Appel separated his shoulder and was lost as quarterback. But his injury stirred the team and, shortly after, Pilch bucked across from the 2 for the first of three TDs. A pass from Dave Wohl to end Wayne Scherer covered 54 yards for the second tally, while another Wohl aerial, this time to Ken Popovitch, brought the third. Ed Meagher kicked three out of three tries for the extra point and the Bears roared! The following Saturday, winless Bridgewater led East Brunswick for more than three quarters, 6-0, in what looked like another upset until Pilch climaxed a 92-yard drive with a plunge from the 1 to knot the score. Meagher's kick was wide. Then, less than a minute later, Wohl uncorked another long bomb to Scherer, 59 yards downt-leld. Pilch went into paydirt on the next play, Meag- her converted, and - for the first time in history - EB gridders came from behind to win! f-it 5 2. ? X i i 5 . S l 2 gf , ' ls, X sleazy 5 i as aw s K : Arif Q E T? ' ,,,j, viii ea' is I page g W K, KX -' NTI? .4-f if ur b sa .s . . if 1 ., 1258 ag A as N, 1.5 ..ks R5 in .I X ig Y . X- V, N , f M yr - K 'ff 'ag' b X X QW 5 'si 4 ' v i Q, SZ' wi' N ,p Vi' . ..v.,.1:A :,Mp,,,Ztg3f t fa Jil , .x . Xl I S 1 if x if , ., V .sf Bears 13, Madison O Having finally reached the .500 mark, the Bears were con- fronted next with the problem of containing Madison's All- State quarterback Glen Davis. It was obvious from the first quarter that the underdog Bears were gunning for an up- set. The forward wall consistently outcharged the Spartans, and Davis spent a good portion of the game on his back. After a scoreless first half, Dave Wohl turned a broken play into a twisting run for a third period touchdown. Af- ter a missed conversion, EB kicked off and Madison roared back, driving to the EB 6. Davis uncorked what seemed to be a scoring pass but Wohl intercepted in the end zone and scooted 104 yards for the second TD. The Bears had their win and Wohl had New jersey's longest TD run of the 1965 season. 'D We if-we . mf. 110 Bears 28, Edison 13 This, the Bears' only morning game, turned out to be one of the most wide open games of the year. Ken Popovitch ran the opening kickoff back for a score that was nullified by a penalty. Edison took possession and snapped off a long run to score. EB and Edison then traded touchdowns and, with 28 seconds left to the half, Wohl hit Ken Henderick with a long pass for a 13-13 tie. Ed Meagher kicked the second of four extra points and the Bears enjoyed a scant halftime advantage. The second half was a fiasco, marked by ludicrous fumbles, dropped passes, and sloppy play execution. Wayne Scherer grabbed an Edison fumble that squirted into the air, for ex- ample, and ran 40 yards to score. VVhen the dust finally settled, EB had its fourth straight win, 28-13. J I I 1 . if R il t M5 A .r 1 f' K 1 1, t k rift' Q, ! Q sf. ,. ' 2 1 f K 3 ff' ! I p sw- . Af K K t 1 -ik. we-rig ,- ' ,.,, - f Q. 'la b le Eff-'.if???i-f 5.vsi5'Y fi Q ' gsgpx. sz,-if 4 Lg 1 fa: :BS 4 Ja x Y vqyg t 'Q' . 0 - fe fe r ib . . 'tx Y ..,-9' f 11-as 4 , K3 'sh ' .. .' i jx i E TQ di', im F - .+ . . p - exit-wr. -,XFX gtk? , .sriksswig . . . - - . A , , tkgi-.Lil-5 st- 1. .gm K gl -ig'-gg? r Q71 gk ,frpk . K. A 2 an ,sy .51 .Q 1 ,Nnfff Bears 21, So. River 12 Gunning for its fifth straight win, East Brunswick traveled to South River for the fifth renewal of this traditional neigh- borhood brawl, a series in which the Bears held a 1 win. 2 loss, 1 tie record. Although the game had its exciting moments, the Bears were generally superior and the outcome, not too much in doubt. Wohl and Pilch scored on short thrusts and Scherer caught a 28-yard scoring pass from Wohl. Meagher's three extra points completed the EB scoring. South River's scor- ing efforts were too late and too meager, but - in the final analysis, it was East Brunswick's joe Pilch who was their undoing. The 200-pound senior fullback gaining 179 yards rushing, often dragging two or three tacklers forward with him or making key tackles on the defensive. f S . x, Q2 . w Nhx . x 9, Y Q. . :,i'?igf QQ' 'X x K Q si X g 5 X.: N 'vx ,X r 4 x . QS f-pkg x Q51 :Q ' A-,, K X. xi fx N A . - - me M Q . . M . -'GS ' ' . ff 4 'E if ' .-Q x- 6 A' 1, . 6 'L' . . , x , 1 8, f ,' A -: 9 s A ,-f 1 .iiix 1- - A-iff ,' '- in 2, .5 V i, 1 ::i,N?i?,,' +41 an 3 'lvgf PQ ah ns A- . 5151. 1 -' if .ii Q .u,.- s. .AK 5 .wh x!v :IQ Ak.-M .. Ai 4-x J . ,K,1l,. xr lm '34 . uf? 3 T - yx swf- xx , Hx Q r A ala, Yi A , V L13 xgxmii ,WS Q gk' V, ',1ff3,x.3LLxiMi5Q,xA ilkihhf, hdfqpr TL: V r M- K 1 ,ya ,L-Xxx S54-,fx v v . f--w - M: f x . 1 K X 'xx ' ' K 4 I . ' x ' x x tw S ---. x-fsfw .- fgmy -0555 X ' . -uw. x ..,f:1yxf1QN ' 1:1 Mi , fill egg .1 - - v?Qrf 'A3?Jf353sffA'mvi-:QE ,Q-K 'l x f .cp 5 .. we , V :X gg Q fu 1M-,gm :N-Q -'vfijjgfx wgi'lEgirSQ'?fS? 4 gl. ififv ML 4913 + Bears 27, Sayreville 13 Despite the crushing defeat by New Brunswick the preceeding Saturday, the Bears' morale had been wounded only slightly and the Green and White squad traveled to Sayreville for its closing game with every expectation of winning. What resulted was a tough and brutal display of football, clearly dominated by the Bears. During the course of the afternoon, the visiting East Brunswick team rolled up 27 points on two short runs by Pilch, Wohl passes to Fred Muller and Ken Popovitch, and three extra points by Meagher. The closing victory illustrated the Bears' ability to execute a game plan with rugged brutality and yet with finesse. It also focused attention on several underclassmen upon whom would rest the fortunes of next year's varsity gridders. x u N I Y ' ' 7 . Y V' i e , N -we-Q tx 2-- .t e X, g ri 1 W Pk t 5 .xii A X Q' . S' fe t 33 3 1 -f get L 'qi'x -' ' . es t A Q Q A -'flftlf-:F bf. ' at r A ':- r X 9 i V 'Q f ,- -E s Ll, at 234-131355 1 4. . gf! tn, .X g . Q5 A if , iff: l is 1 L3-:legs .iugwlrqge is if ws a t Q is Lg' f ffsltifetff 1 rf isa' ' fiiiftf t r :elf it -1- tt - .. 1- s A . was Q83 V Wit- fr -' tw far A. 5 at- is Y ' NH .K f of : aka tpZmW,5 T L' est' ' ' . K e i K X s-18.5-3-A qiggms ik it ,Q tri t Hftifefr Lev: ' ' ' ev sw- leiffsstfff X so e e --Qg'w5iiMff'rx-4 el vt' X, - it t 7 ' ., X , - fy I V- . izgliisaigx Kgsxrfrsqwsy P l ' ff' Sh sf A K ll M .v t fxxiisilfiitssfrt. if-,iss We Prospects for a 1966 season record as good as this year's - if not better - look especially bright because of out- standing performances by six returning junior lettermen: Ken Popovitch, Dave Wohl, Tim Dowling, Tony Selvag- gio, Ielf Ta.l'an, and jim Blumig. Lg ' . . 4 t - as s, 3 if e e iii f 12 627 so use u F 5 115 1965 Junior Varsity East Brunswick East Bnmswick East Brunswick Bridgewater East Brunswick East Bnmswick East Brunswick New Brunswick Sayreville 6 12 7 25 6 20 18 18 27 Steinert Perth Amboy john F. Kennedy East Brunswick Madison Edison South River East Brunswick East Brunswick 1965 Freshman Squad East Brunswick 13 Perth Amboy Bridgewater 18 East Brunswick Madison 13 East Brunswick f X East Brunswick 14 Scotch Plains FRESHMEN. STANDING, T. Ferrara, B. Malana, F. Ferrara, K. Doran, - - G. Semens, K. Lubowicki, R. Fife, R. Morrison, B. Miller, R. McHa.rty, R. East Bmnswlck 12 South River Morris, C. Dax-ris, I. Bedrick, D. Stout, R. Manetta, J. Baker, and Asst. - - Coach Wieder. KNEELING, K. O'Rourke, I. Gerwig, I. Page, R. Weck, New Brunswick 7 East B wlck T. Moomjy, R. McOwen, R. Chibbara, D. McFarland, G. Pack, D. Koch- . . ref, 1. Feskovnch, and coach G. Pinfield. SITTING, B. Schmidt, M. EaftB1'mSW1Ck 14 Sayrevlue Grundt, 1. Neiss, G. Kronowski, I. Makowski, K. Stockton, 1. Sgroi, M. Wristen, G. Cutty, P. Williams, P. Sarnak, 1. Williams. 'ig E QQBSQ ig? 5-QQQQ if 39 is Bai ' 7 .r w - gang f 116 5-11,8 Q1 MQ, BOTTOM: M. Rooney, I. Dutton, C. Schaefer, J. Kuzmann, I. Pilch, W. Scherer, I. Kolacki, W. Kirk, V. Intravartola, E. Page, W. Lalwlaestrag ROW 2, I. Blumig, H. Morris, I. Mennona, K. Popovich, D. Wohl, T. Selvaggio, F. Muller, T. Dowling, G. Chohamin, 1. FedongiROW 3, K. Leak, R. Wristen, T. Legodais, G. Engel, T. Morton, I. Talan, D. jack- ...S . ir . X son, M. Walling, A. Wells, ROW 4, Coach R. Gonier, I. Emery, S. Horvath, R. Boig, W. Koehler, Helstowslri, E. Meagher, C. Sarnak, W. Pellagrino, M. Caseiro, TOP ROW, E. Young, G. Williams, W Gibbaro, I. L.ingren,,C. Bunting, C. Elefante, W. Alford, D. Roe, R. Rudders. 117 VARSITY AND IAYVEE, below. STANDING, Coach L. Horvath, T. Zyskowski, D. Rishar, E. Duffy, R. Flanagan, T. Zimmermann, I. Bartsch, I. Lock, E. Debkowski, B. Oehrlein, R. Szuito, R. Kiessling, R. Baily, CROSS-COUNTRY The consistently-good Cross-Country team once again turned in a fine season. In dual meets, the record stood at 10 wins and 4 losses. In addition, they placed third in the County meet, second in the Greater jersey Group IV con- ference, and fifth in the NISIAA trials. The record is even more impressive when one analyzes the season. Three of their losses - those to Union, Edison, and Perth Amboy Catholic were by a combined total of 4 points. The other loss was to St. joseph's, which went on to become county and state champ. On the plus side, the Bears downed New Brunswick for the first time in history, 17-40. VVhen one thinks of the harriers success, one must immedi- ately call to mind the top two runners, junior Carl Pack and senior Don Sullivan. Pack was clearly the Bears' best, on the basis of his accumulating 4 first places, 4 second places, 2 third places, and a fourth. In so doing, he also broke the home course record with a scorching 12:09 clocking. Much of his success resulted from the competi- tion provided by Sullivan who twice finished first and amassed 214 team points C9 less than Packl. Shanko, E. Classheim, D. Smith. KNEELING, D. Helmers, C. Pack. L. Santonostasi, D. Sullivan, I. Miller, R. Baily, Casey, R. Wideman. Varsity, kneeling, is also shown above. 118 With the retum of ace Carl Pack in the 1966-67 season and with the improvement of other varsity runners, the fu- ture looks extremely bright for the Cross-Country team. Not a little hope rests with the Iunior Varsity runners, who this year compiled a 7 win-2 loss record. The freshmen ran in only one meet, which they won, so it remains to see how they perform as jayvees in the coming season before anything can be said definitively about their potential. Knowing Coach Lou Horvath, though, one can safely predict that he's already got his eye on beating St. Ioseph's and going after the state title. 0 'x ! ' Q I I X x F 1,.fi 5 m 3 3 . i Y ' . ,Q 7 . X, F , A D, fg. Q , . Y Q . Af. Nurs: nf' , ' . ' . M... NN, . , j,,x.--e. Niwfa-1-wMa Q... X W xsw x Rym . LM if ,f -- .. Q x , . Q A, g - 1 Aj- 'K , Q- lf' ..a, . . ,. . . X . M- .X as 'Ya .. ,if ' 'il-K x 4gf3Qs,'-k,fii N. KS fy' 355 1 X , ,gil X 212 fb' .. in v . 'SK K 0 'S Y . -,A , A i v ' N. A , F K K in -... --,vi-. , ' .EL ,:-.4 TT, . x K is 12: -:M 4-N.-. , ' J-A-M... A ' 2 i.f-N.. . DK3,-31-5.57 K KK K KK Qt M.. Km awww gr ' WL -- ff ., X.. .- , ,- . .fm K xi . KKK ,K. QK 1 I 1' 3 -f l 1 K . I , i K 5 . , , - wi-fC : ftq.f, .s ,.. , an - , .5 Sim 4 eb H ' ' A W1 iw QWVEQ k . ., 'K .6 Agyfjj if ,. .K k Q-.5 M., ww.. FFF wx-Xf-sa. '. ' K A' Q V K K JNK.. Ny. Q-K . .x ..-.-.KM ,R - X X A.. . Qwwfil.X33gxi?'g1ggMzQs..1QgRvgxKa WKKK1 KK, ,. H . ' -- qv X KK Wa, W W' ., .Y .Q 'f -Tw 5 L., .1 'iwigmfi 'N 'f- 1,.. ff-g. X L ' .N 'xXT,2'f?kL'-N-,ya fggsvg X f K,.. .wxK5G : .- X5 .-...- . gig, 'Q' .Q -K .. .KK '. .3K.f.5-.W w.,KK,.iKK,K,. W,K'KKKA.'K4 K .L..s.KKA.N.s. MA.. . ar KA .KKK f lf'-'M - .. MH .,. ., ., Y , -ff Q ' f ff . if -' K :g 'Kgs Q. K, aj K famksg 1.-'giQf....+.Q KK .. '-H' ffl., KK KK' Nj 4 , .Q -..,.fw W... , ,MQ KK 3. f - 4 ,K -. mb M 'J ,K-r ,M QA. ,KK K . V Q- ,J 2 KA W 3,1 A . 1 K' V . .-H-1? - - MX -J Q :QQ 'cv Q . ax , W -,K V. W, , -.KK if Y. ,Kg A. 3, Ki , F , ,H hwy' - 'N ff ,.. - -4 ' ,pmt-5 W K,,,, wk M K. .. KQX.. uf. 'rx .. KK Q ,IS 'K .. K X K . mr , -- , 'A 1 , . W K , . . ,Y -.' K - . N ff- m'.a , , . ' ? 6 ' wif- - ?..,.ig , . ,S ,G+ xf K ' QQ w , KK w -4 , -', , fb f K 7' W' ' '-fx K4 'K - K'TY.T'lx ' 93 ' f' , , . if f,.3 3 ...Q - . gf . ff .i,.'f.-T.. -' v K K-f - .. W - A-ww S KK KKK K... ' Q ' .K f' 'K' Q W ,,. ,V K f . K ,,, .ff i ,sg-x 3 K K Q 'fjlhlfk ' A VK .. M. K A , , Q 'IKQSNK , , 'if Q5 .Wig ,M Q . K X fm, X KK ,W .. ......, - .. . , - - :npr-xv: wo. 1 VARSITY, above. STANDING, I. Ciprich, I. Koty, S. Graves, B. Cher- ham, W. Larence, 1. O'Reilly, 1. Colpitts, D. joyce, H. Miller, D. Col- nowitz, I. Skistmas, C. Miller, C. Wodjciechowicz, R. Chohamin, D. pitts, D. Hayston, S. Refi. Team ranked fourth in Middlesex County Soc- Schuster, G. Chirco, B. Balogh, and Coach L. Florek. KNEELING, R. Cor- Cer League standings in 1965. IAYVEE, below. STANDING, B. I-Ieney, G. Lennon, B. Noonan, R. Black D. Burtick, E. Miller, B. Kelmer, A. Spishock, A. Kreilis, I. Ruppert, I Siebem, G. Packard, G. Holdsworth, C. Cowell, R. Balogh, K. Kuss, B Zavetz, IV Coach R. Simpson. KNEELING, R. Rambo, D. Herdegan, R. Kane, S. Biery, L. Ehrich, D. Turrett, N. Rosenhack, T. Hydrusko, L. Hil- sky, M. Koogler, T. Gallagher, C. Shallock, P. Pavlak, A. Wong. SITTING, W. Wamebold, T. Nixon, S. Shiff, S. Zuchek, G. Clark, S. Smith, N Hunter, T. Ciccarelli, V. Lineberger, M. Donahue, M. Wilcock, I. Sher- wood, Chlan. 4, ,mx Q Q was-PAX f . k' va. ,. gl sf: , gs +,,. x A 'QS A f ies I gs xv' ,, '?S . ,- 56 X KC A gay' ASW, fa, Ax ' Q-DP' f 'ls- QP' A QE, 3 -if ix ' A X , T I8 -if Nui!!! Q' 2 if QQQQSQ i1!'1 sz ,SWL i 3 kiln' ' u xx S 'Sa KW! Q :swsk g -Q-..,,,M .L 'Y E Over the years, the popularity of wrestling as a spectator sport has increased, probably because of action such as this, photographed during the District NVrestling Tournament held here in February. 126 P- 'Mm tt- . 1 1-615- iw-unmyggs. 'vdxha- 3 if bf QV tl 3. , QS, , 1 . Q Y. ix . . Six M , x, 1 , S S . ...Q-' '11 'F we -. , X.: -.FN I 2. Q ki, 9 S . 17 - Ainmvsiaf Mwfslssx FRESHMEN, below, STANDING, N. Hunter, D. Koehler, R. Schlesinger, K. Dorrian, I. Page, P. Kady, R. Weck, P. Samak, M. Gmndt. KNEEL- INC, VVilliams, C. Semens, A. Rothchild, B. Rheinbold, Pardy, T. McDem1ott, 1. Bedrick, and B. Morris. 7 if I as ,N vfz 1.5 fx. 5 .w. NZ' 4 1 1' fx 5 .YQ 'kk' wx 1 !g,,f41-. Q . 5 Q Q gnmi S is S2 f s 'Q , f' 3' .N if ,- ww, F NS is 3' fs N 4 1 I ' S A X ffl, 0 A dhcp k i .pgf,f 1 X . . X 73 T 5 ' L . ik. ' , K gi H Y. X .JN mmf 'J ax . -' 'Ak-if Yay Q Ixxxgd X . xx X is if Q X6 sf? 3 ASKK D k N V,A A' vi G Q A, an w i s f xx . , is ,W 2' N h R N' I ,:.,.-' Exif? ' , f S 'h- Z 1f'f 'X x fi h' ' , 'X E ' Q 4 W N M B I T i . ' Q 1.-,.s f R M N 5 1 N ff QQ X x x Y X i s 4' A-,gf K X Qi 1 1 5 . v iw . if VARSITY. C. Unice. D. jackson, W. Kirk, W. Beck, B. Giles, R. Habrukow- ich, D. Wohl, R. Rommers, Coach 1. Emery. JUNIOR VARSITY. TOP ROVC R. Harding, S. Howath, C. Mickett, E. Niedziecki, R. Bailey, G. Williams. BOTTOM ROW B. Wristen, R. Hil- lenmayer, W. Gibbard, I. Koty, F. Zia. Coach D. Tighe. FRESHMEN. TOP ROW T. Nixon, I Serwig, M. Wristen, S. Schiff, G. Kro- nowski, I. Fine, D. Krotosek. BOT- TOM ROVK B. Schlegel, Hanlen, B Schmidt, M. Wilcock, Smith, E Klecan, Coach M. Caseiro. VARSITY RECORD Woodbridge 63 Bears Edison 63 Bears Bears 66 Madison Kennedy 75 Bears Beans 61 N. Brunswick P. Amboy 88 Bears So. River 48 Bears Kennedy 6-1 Bears Bears 65 Madison P. Amboy 96 Bears Bears 59 Piscataway Highland Pk 63 Bears Sayreville 71 Bears Edison 65 Bears BCHT5 82 Somerville BSHTS 58 N. Brunswick Piscataway 56 Bears Bears 81 Sayreville BCHTS 74 So. River VVoodbridge 72 Beals Recap: 8 wins, 12 losses Gymnastics Though only in their second year of actual varsity competi- tion, the gymnasts turned in an excellent 4-2-2 record for the season. One of the losses came at the hands of Henry Hudson High, a perennial powerhouse, while the second defeat was a two-point loss to always tough South Free- hold. Balancing this, however, was an exciting 49-47 upset of Snyder High. In regional and state meets, the outstanding performer was Tom McGuire who placed third in the loughorse in the re- .gionals and fifth in the state. Bob Balogh took a third in the regionals on the parellel bars and a third place overall. Ian Wyndham took a third place in tumbling in the re- gional meet and Mike O,Connor, a fourth in the parallel bars plus a fifth place overall. Steve Lund placed fifth in the regionals on the high bar and eighth in the state meet in that event. GYMNASTS. SEATED, R. Kroon, M. O'Connor, S. Llmd, F. Dellespinis, B. Balogh, I. Wyndham. STANDING, Coach D. VVeider, 1. Siebum, B. Balogh, R. Iucks, T. McGuire, M. Noga, VV. Bell, K. O'Connor. 1 f fi f 1' X Ma - :W Q L iv 1 i ffx 3 3 if ,E 14 i 1 XA.- V3 'rs , I f C' mi 1 i V 4' in 1 Baseball Depth and experience combined to make the 1966 edition of East Brunswick's baseball team a winning one. The Bears had it all: pitching, hitting, fielding, and speed on the bases. The biggest asset was the possession of four cracker-jack pitchers. jim Martin, a senior lefthander, turned in such exceptional performances as a one hitter against Madison and a twenty -one strike out, eleven inning shutout win over a tough Woodbridge nine. Hitting also came from unexpected as well as expected sources. joe Pilch, last year's batting cnamp, again mt a .350 average while Gary Burlew stung the ball at a .360 clip, up from .320 of last year. Tony Selvaggio also blasted over .300 while pitcher Whitey Beck delivered several timely hits. The fielding was cemented by shortstop Bob Balogh's ma- gic glove, Pilch's strong arm, and Burlew's speed in center field. With Bob Odenheimefs coaching, the Bears were one of the strongest of Central jersey Group IV teams. Www 'Vs Klgxffffix l a ,j fx.. -S 5 'Fi' ' ! as A x nw, A x g 7 2 3 a H . mg any xl A Q. f X Y A K .14 gl , ::f v. X. 'B I F? R Q- ? v .4 1 1 Q5 . 'iilzfb x 5 A , D ,..f M-ww:-xs11sl1 ' 1 K Q E RK i mqymw ,. ,mag Q am wssk gk .S iggxfx . .S N is if K 'f-f sm?2S 's' w . .f3-Q Z 3 V X ix . 'V 35 vm QX .. swag? ' fiii- .Y va, Qs N ff ., 1A f m 1 . . .-M, M' ,x o S , 8, M . 5 a ,A Qf s r- sf: ...X 'z is 5 .O 3 f' f' .f m f 2 RN 5 M .M 9 'xQ1woanv - .,,,..qn-m0 ' .x,.,.,.- N N...-' MASK XX SM '1 '12 A, 4,499 1 ' -'SSX x 1-E In 4 . N f ,f 'gs?k 1 1 : X MW. , , Y . .x ' iff' 41 Ek --H i. X ff' fi - HX .N Ti W' f- . 5. ii :Q qw ' lf ' .Ki-N: ...W A - x 'YN-X VARSITY, above, STANDING: Pilch. J. Blumig, NV. Beck, Grattan R. HilbTllk0X!'lCl1, C. Burlew, Martin. Coach R. Odcnlleimer. KNEELING: F. Mueller, E. jackson, R. Chlnn, A. Salvaggio, E. Lucas, R. Casey. IAYVEE, below, STANDING: Conch L. Florek, 1. Barko, C. lndrisano, B Kane, T. McNeil, W. Giblmrd. G. Williams, D. Romez, P. Matecki SEATED: D. Bertelsen, D. Grattan. C. Bunting, T. Molchan, E. Glass heim, G. DeCarolis. D. Kulcsza. S. Horvutlx, R. Compton. L I x., 1-, 4 - M . Q Q i . - 5 5. s 5 Q K J , . -R, KE . . t .Q g sg ,. 5 'R Q' A 1 f ,X f if N N, ,R W N 'KS Q f fi E35 M .W X Q5 Q X .N x um X' f X TN ' Q X SQ Q me , A. K. Q KJ .wk E X ,gf My X mmgh - 'Q . -1 f- Af' Axis, Q w 'x , , Q ix ' Q.. X 5 S . N , x 1 X VARSITY TRACK: BACK ROW: S. Roed, D. Raphel, B. Lock, 1. Ciprich, R. Chirco, F. Ferrara, M. Zimmerman, D. Greene, J. Sheridan, S. Ayers, R. Kiessling. 5th ROW: L. Santanostasis, B. Alford, Skistmas, R. Bailey, Petersak, L. Allen, B. Zwonet- schek, R. Ragone, I. Miller. 4th ROW: T. Dowling, j. Coady, E. Iackson, T. Morton, K. Popovitch, H. Morris, H. Berger, D. Schuster, R. Widman, M. Fitzgerald. 3rd ROW: Coach L. Horvath, C. Schlun, A. Benko, R. Astorino, R. Sellers, R. Oehrlein, R. Resko, R. Carnbet, S. Knap, j. Barth, G. Pack, Coach P. Kaz- nosky. 2nd ROW: A. VVells, R. Lockhart, F. Price, W. Scherer D. Wohl, B. Kirk, T. McGuire, R. Lingren, T. McBride. Ist ROW C. Pack, D. Colpitts, B. Hoyt, I. Colpitts, 1. Domino, C. Cowell D. Sullivan, YV. Rodgers, R. Koenigsberg, B. Bannon, E. Yoiuig. ' Tennis, under coach Bill Pellagrino, suffered a losing season but one, like that of Track, which showed signs of a better future. Though it loses its top player, Franklin Chu, through gradua- tion, the other two singles men and the four doubles players are all underclassmen. Bob Black and Frank Zia should produce some punch in the singles while Cary Syvertson, Tom LaTouche, Al Wong, and Pat Pavlak continue their winning ways in the doubles. Generally a sport that has failed to generate much interest here, Tennis seems to have created a surging interest in the upcoming classes. And that always encourages and helps a coach. in x xv, The Golf team suffered a discouraging sea- son owing to the lack of one outstanding golfer. The first five golfers were all consistent and capable of doing a nine-hole course in the middle forties. But, while most opposing teams lacked the uniformity of the Bears, they'did have a standout or two whose scores were enough to edge the Green and White. junior jim Koty, generally regarded as the ace of the team, had the misfortune of drawing the State's best for his op- ponents in match after match, as did Rich Sowa, the num- ber two man. just no rest for the weary . . . or for coach Dino jasper. IAYVEE TRACK: 3111 ROW: Neiss, B. Oehrlein, R. Schlesinger, K. Weaver, F. Ferrara, S. Ristich, T. Prezyrmki, S. Shanko, T. Summers. 2nd ROW: K. Meyer, Pollack, B. Menetta, Domino, G. Pack, M. Donahue, G. Clarke, D. Koehler. Ist ROW: C. Holland, j. Gerwig, D. Mazzi, B. Bott, W. Selnow, D. Marsh, S. Pack, A. Iustic, F. Wasiowicz, I. Sherwood. Iayvee Track coach is Peter Kaznosky. CHAPTER SEVEN . HE CLASSES East Brunswick High accommodates four classes, freshman through senior. And they come in either of two sizes, medium or extra-large. The graduating class and the Class of '67 are both medium-sized, numbering about 380 and measured against the class of ,62, first to graduate from here and small. On the other hand, the lower classes, freshman and sophomore, are extra-large, numbering over 600 each. And it is this disparity of size which furnishes the most dramatic proof of that new dimension we talked about earlier. The freshmen who will arrive in September will exceed 700, about double the number of seniors. Yet the senior class will have in it 100 or so more members than did the graduating class of 1964! So big are the classes becoming that the auditorium will no longer accommodate any two classes together, holding as it does only 758 seats, and so assemblies, beginning in the fall of 1966, will be con- ducted solely on a class basis. In time, according to pres- ent policy and plan, East Brunswick will become a three- year high school, the freshmen being dropped as Ham- marskjold and Churchill schools become junior highs. Till then, we will be jammed. It is interesting to note that East Brunswick has always had stronger class spirit than school spirit, the individuals feeling stronger ties for, and raising bigger heads of steam over their classes than the school. If this be the case, it will become even more prevalent next year in the absence of all-school assemblies and meetings. Yet, there is a feeling shared by many, that instead of being a divisive factor, the class sentiment actually generates enthusiasm for the school and draws students into school activities they might not otherwise join. That the classes do act as a catalyst in this way is an argument that is not without merit e proof of which is furnished by the crowds at basketball games during class nights, the spirit generated for Home- coming by t.he class float contest, and the interest in elec- tions evolving from class rivalry. Each class has its own set of officers and a governing body of elected representatives from the homerooms. And each annually embarks on a variety of ventures, most of which are designed to make money to defray the costly spectaculars of the senior year. In a school as young as this, it is not too surprising to find that the bulk of tradition has developed around the core of the classes. Sophomores have their traditional car wash and movies. juniors have a traditional candy sale to finance a prom that is traditionally in the gym. Seniors, by tra- dition, have for have not, depending on your point bf viewj their senior rights. And, as graduation approaches, they have a traditional play, traditional carnival, tradi- tional trip, and traditional off-campus prom. If we'ye omitted the frosh, it's because they traditionally do nothing. Not all traditions are good. 7 So strong is class influence that recent attempts to form an exclusive council, made up of members from each class cotmcil, was rigorously opposed by Student Cotmcil who, ever-jealous of its prerogatives, argued that such a super- committee would duplicate its efforts and would, there- fore, be BAD. Advocates, on the other hand, responded that the proposed committee would perform a separate function and would be GOOD. In the end, a COMPROMISE was affected and both groups will have a more active liaison l in the future. , Q x K Xi 'Y ins ? sc' QV . Q NB QSM- XR I ' f. S. 5. 3-18 ' Q W XX, RQ-ik .iw ' K' Y X X N Q2 .Q am, 1-A Q .xhhk U X X Di .XSS ifify 15, I 'R+ K sw ,,...QmN, w Pm nt. RQ- X xx 'X 5 A 1 1 X 'Nm R NX X 1 'if N. . if Nw Wwfmw sv ...Q- WANDA LEAN BAARS Airline tewardess . . . Yearbook 44 FTA 44 FBLA 44 Drill Team 2,3,44 Bowling Club 1,2.. JOSEPH BACSKO Navy . . . Footbal 1,2,3Q Baseball I4 Track 2. GRACE BALINT IBM O rator. . . Class Council 2 QTreasurerJ4 FBLA 34 Modem Dance Cllleib 2. JOHN ALAN AFTANSKI Al Mt. St. Mary's College . . . History Club 2 fPresidentj 3 fPresidentl 44 German Club 2,4 fTreasurerJ4 National Honor Society 44 Key Club 4. WILLIAM L. AHLGREN Bill Michigan State . . . National Honor Society 4. CAROL BETH ALDRICH Carol Middlesex County College . . . Student Council 14 Float Committee 44 Prom Committee 3. EILEEN FRANCES ALGOSINO Algey Caldwell . . . Spanish Honor Society 44 Seniorium 44 Yearbook 24 Cho- rus 2,3,44 Drama 1,2,44 Leaders Corps 24 GAA 2,3. STEVEN AMST ER Fritz Newark College of Engineeripag . . . Newspaper 14 Key Club 44 History Club 3,44 Intramural asket l l,2,4. CARL APPEL Alpp A Air Force . . . ootball 1,2,3,44 Track I4 Class Council 1,24 A.V. 14 In- tramural Volleyball I. PATRICIA AQUINO Tish Beautician . . . Class Council 14 GAA 14 Art Club 14 Prom Committee 3,4. MARK JAMES ASHBY Flash College . . . Yearbook 4. ILENE AXELROD Lene Vermont I . . History Club 1,2,3 QTreasurerJ 4 fSecretaryJ4 Newspaper 1,2,3,4 fTyping EditorJ4 Yearbook 3,4 fPublicity EditoraISki Club 3,4 KTTBRSUISTDQ National Honor Society 44 Green 6: YVhite eek Commit- tee 3,44 Seniorium 44 Class Council 1,44 French Club 2,3,44 Biology Re- search Club 2. ROBERT JAMES BALOCH Bob Central Michigan U . . . Gymnastics 2,3,4 fCaptainj4 Varsity Club 3,43 Soccer 2,44 Baseball 1,2,3,4. BERNICE BETTY BARR Bemice Douglass . . . FTA 44 Archery Club 3. JOYCE BARTSCH Pinky Muhlenberg Hospital . . . Art Club 1,2, fSecreta.ry7 3 QSecretaryJ 4 iPresidentl4 Art Folio 1,2,3 fSecret Q4 Yearbook 1,2,3,4 fArt EditorQ4 Prom Committee 3 CDecorationsa3hai1-rnanj 4 fChairmanj4 Future Nurse's Club 1,2Q Class Council 1,24 Seniorium 4. LINDA JOYCE BAUDOUY Lynn College . . . Class Council 14 FTA 1,2,3,4Q Yearbook 1,44 Seniorium 44 GAA 1,2,3,44 Float Committee 3. MICHAEL BEATTY Mike Seton Hall . . . Clam Council 1,22 Track 1. SUSAN MARSHA BEDRICK Sue U of Miami . . . Newspaper 3,4 QFeatures Editorl4 Yearbook 44 Folio 2,34 Drill Team 34 Seniorium 44 Green 6: White Week Committee 44 Color Guard 44 Prom Committee 3,4. GLENN BRIAN BELL Glenn History Club 4. ROBERT M. BENNETT Ben Air Force . . . FTA 1,25 Football Ig Basketball 15 Intramurals 3,4. DONALYN F AYE BIRCH Kelly Madison Colle e . . . Cheerleading 3 1CaptainJ 45 Leaders Corps 2 fVice Presideng 3,45 National Honor Society 45 FTA 1,25 GAA l,2,3,45 Student Council 1,2,45 Yearbook 4. SYLVIA LEE BISHOP Bish Executive Secretary . . . Student Council 15 FBLA 45 Float Committee 4. PAMELA JEAN BLUM Pam Telephone Operator . . . Class Council 2,35 FBLA 4. PATRICIAJANE BLUM Pat General Rice WVorker . . . FBLA 4. KURT IVINS BOEHM Kip College . . . A.V. 1,2,3,4 QChairmanl5 National Honor Society 45 Stage Crew 1,2,3,45 Class Council 2,35 Seniorium 45 Chemistry Lab Ass't 45 Intra.rnurals 2,3,4. THOMAS BOCUSZ Tom Football 1 fCo-Captainj 2,35 Track I. KENNETH LEWIS BORKON Kenny Parsons Colleie . . . Class Council l,25 Key Club 3,45 Biology Club 15 Track 15 Foot all 15 Basketball 2,35 Intramurals 1,2,3,4. DONNA MARIE BOYLE Dorman Girl's Booster Club 3,4 QPresidentJ5 Yearbook 3,45 Newspaper 45 Drama Club 2,3,45 Class Council 2,3,4: Student Coimcil 2,45 Seniorium 45 Prom Committee 3,4 fChairmanJ. DOLORES F. BRANCO Dee Berkeley Secretarial School . . . Twirling 3,45 Yearbook 3,45 GAA 1,3545 Class Council 15 Bowling Club 2. RICHARD BRENNER Richie Tri-State College. GAIL BRODZINSKI College. CARL BROWN Carl Texas U . . . Wrestling 1,2,3,45 Class Council 1,25 Student Council 2,35 Baseball 15 Intramurals 1,2,3,4. EDITH D. BROWN Edie jeweler . . . Art Folio 3,45 Art Club 1,2,3,4. TIMOTHY BROWN LEE Tim College. STEPHEN BUDWAY Uncle Bud IBM Computer Programmer . . . Class Council 25 History Club 45 Baseball 3,4. GERALD BULOVA Gen Collegiate Business Institute . . . History Club 4. GARY WAYNE BURLEYV Cary Newark State . . . Student Council 1,35 Class Council 45 Varsity Club 45 Baseball 1,2,3,45 Intramurals 1,2,3,4. SUSAN ELIZABETH BURLEW Shorty Middlesex Coimlzty College . . . Student Council 25 Newspaper 35 Lead- ers Corps 2,35 LA 45 Chorus 45 Library Club 25 Seniorium 45 Girl's Booster Club 15 GAA 2. ROBERT IOSEPH BUSHKIN Bob Northwestem . . . Folio 3,45 fAss't Editorp5 Student Council 3,45 Key Club 45 Math Club 1,2,3,-15 Drama Club 1,2,3,4. BARBARA DIANE BYSTREK Barb,' Douglass . . . Class Council 2 fSecretaryj 3 QSecretarvl5 Student Coun- cil 2,3,4 fSecreta Q5 Leaders Corps 2,3 fSecretaryJ 45 Spanish Honor So- ciety 4 fhesidenlti National Honor Society 3,45 Seniorium 45 Executive Committee 2,3,45 Drill Team 1,25 GAA 1,2,3,-4, BARBARA CAMPBELL Barb Secretary. LINDA CAMPOS Linda General Clerical Work. CATHERINE E. CARGILL Cath U of South Carolina . . . Class Council 45 Student Council 1,3,45 Dra- ma Club 15 Variety Show 45 CAA 15 Float Committee 3,4. IAMES KEVIN CASEY Case Rider College . . . Cross-Country 2,3,45 Varsity Club 3,45 Track 3,4 History Clu 3,4. LEONARD CASSIDY Lennie Varsity Club 2,3,45 Wrestling 1,2,3,4. ELINORE CHAPKOWSKI El College. DANIEL DAVID CHEN Dan Rutgers . . . German Club 1,4 fPresidentj5 National Honor Society 4 Chemistry Club 35 Chess Club 1,2,3,45 Biology Club 3. RUTH CHESTER Ruthie Secretary. Q E SUSAN CLARK Sue Bookkeeping . . . National Honor Society 3,4g Folio 3: Drill Team 12,34 Color Guard -ig Girl's Booster Club 45 Prom Committee 35 Float Committee 3. KEMPT ON 1. COADY, III 'AKemp Bates . . . Key Club 2,3g Seniorium 4g Newspaper 1,-15 Human Rela- tions Council 3g Chess Club 1,25 Track 1,25 YVrestling 3,-4. LINDA RUTH COBLEIGH Linda Newark State .... Ar t Club l,2,3.4. BARBARA ANN COHEN Hev Cohen Utica College . . . National Honor Society 4g Ski Club 39 French Club -43 Scnioriuin 4, RITA SHEILA COHON Rita College . . . Art Folio -lg Spanish Club 2g Girl's Booster Club lg GAA o BARRY GLENN COLE Air Force. DAVID COLPITTS Dave Newark State . . . Soccer 4g Spring Track 1,2,3,4g Xvinter Track 3,-ig Varsity Club 4. JONATHAN COLPITTS jon Middlesex County College . . . Soccer 3,-ig Spring Track 1,45 Winter Track 4. PATRICIA COMPTON Pat Rider College . . . Math Club 2,3 QSecretaryj -I QV ice Presiclentjq Na- tional Honor Society 45 Folio 3,-lg Senioriuui 43 Prom Committee 3g Float Committee -1. KATHLEEN A. CONDON KathY Mount Holyoke . . , National Honor Society 3,4 fSecretarylg Leaders Corps 3,41 Seniorium -ig Mu Alpha Theta 3,41 Green Quill 4: Band lg GAA I,2,3,-I. GEORGE CONOVER Bud Trenton Technical Inst. . . . Track I,2g Gymnastics 2,3. STEPHEN C. CORNELIUS Corny Student Council 24 Wrestling 1,2g Football I. CHARLES P. COVVELL Charlie', Washington 6: Lee . . . Gemian Club 2 fPresident7g Chemistry Club 2,35 Key Club 113,45 Chess Club 1,2,3g Soccer 45 VVinter Track 44 Spring Track 4. IAIN CUNNINGI-IAM Jain Airline Stewardess. IANE ELIZABETH CUTLER jane Smith . . . National Honor Society 3,4 QPresidentlg Newspaper l,2,3,4 QEditor-in-Chieflg French Club 2 QPresidentj 3,4g Math Club 2g Mu Al- pha Theta 3,41 GAA 2.3 fVice Presidentjg Student Council lg Seniorium 4g Folio 2,3,-lg Leaders Corps 2,3,4. EDWARD DABKOWSKI roam St. Gregory's . . . Varsity Club 4g Cross-Country 3,45 Spring Track 43 Amateur Radio Club 4. CARY DAKU PATRICIA DALTON Pat DIANE MARIE DIETRICH Diane Trenton State . . . Spanish Club 2 tSccretaryl5 Girl's Bocmter Club 1 fTreasurerJ5 Class Council 25 Art Club 1525 Yearbook 45 FTA 45 CAA 1525 Bowling Club I5 Prom Committee 3 QChairmanJ. MARY ELLEN DOBRZYNSKI Mary Ellen Ashland . . . Leaders Corps 2,3545 Yearbook 45 GAA 15253545 French Club 25 FTA 45 Girl's Booster Club 1545 Float Committee 3545 Prom Connnittee 3545 Bowling Club 1. ERIC R. DREYLING Rick Industrial Arts Lab Ms't 4. IOHN DUTTON john College . . . Key Club 45 History Club 3545 Football 253,45 Track 354. THOMAS DZIUBECK Tom Football 1. SANDRA CAROL EAKER Sandee Paterson State . . . Gaa 152,354 fTreasurerJ5 Cheerleading 35 Leaders Cor s 45 Girl's Booster Club 1545 Prom Committee 3,45 FTA 2,3545 Guisance aid 4. ALICE L. DANIELS Class Council 25 History Club 15 Latin Club 15 GAA 1. KATHRYN M. DANIELSON Kathy FBLA 45 GAA 25 Prom Committee 3. ELAINE DAVID Elaine Student Council 1525 Drill Team 15 FTA 15 Drama Club 152. JOAN ALETHA DAVISON Rutgers Newark . . . National Honor Society 45 Class Coimcil 3545 CAA 2,3545 Leaders Corps 3545 French Club 25 Latin Club 2. ERNEST DEBELLA Ernie RAYMOND DePAUL Cross-Country 1, FRANCIS PAUL DeRE.SP1NIS Frank Penn State . . . Clam Council 152 Nice President? 3 fPresidentJ 45 Gymnastics 25354 fCaptainD5 Chonis 1 Nice Presiclentj 25 National Hon- or Societv 45 Varsity Club 3,45 Student Coimcil 15 Executive Coimcil 2,3545 MCAHSC 45 Key Club 45 Seniorium 45 AFS 3545 Football 15 In- tramurals 1,2535 Drama Club 2. RUTH DeSTEFANO Ruthie Marriage . . . Cheerleading 3545 CAA 253,45 Class Council 35 Girl's Booster Club 1,45 FTA 3545 Prom Committee 4. CAMILLE DeVARTI Float Committee 4. BEVERLY M. DEVLIN Bev Menlo Park School of Business Machines. ROSEMARY ANNE DiCARA Rosie Nancy Taylor Secretarial 61 Finishing School . . . FHA 4. PATRICIA SUE DICKERMAN Patti U of Wisconsin . . . Newspaper 1 fClass Editorj 2 fClass Editorl 3 fFeature Editor? 4 QNews Editorlg Student Council 153545 GAA 15 Ski Club 35 Prom Committee 3 fChairmanJ 4 fChairmanJ5 Seniorium 45 French Club 2535 Class Play 4. EDWARD EDWARDS Dee Wrestling 1,2,3,45 Class Council I5 Student Council 35 Varsity Club 3,4. HARRY WALTER ELLIOT Fanaga H Truck Driver . . . Class Council I5 French Club I. MELISSA SUE ERICKSEN Lissa Philadel hia College of Art . . . Art Club 1,25 Folio 45 French Club 25 NationaIJI-Ionor Society 45 Seniorium 45 Prom Committee 3. MICHAEL YV. ESTABROOK Mike Adelphi U . . . Gymnastics 25 Dance Band 35 History Club 35 Class Play 4. SHIELA FAIRCHILD Shiel Legal Secretary . . . Student Council 1,2,3,4. RICHARD FREDRICK F ASINSKI Richie NVrestling I,2. JOHN FEDON jack Parsons . . . Football 8,45 Baseball 1,3,45 History Club 3,4. JOHN FERNANDES Chico Soccer 1,2. SHARON LEAH FINE Sharon Tem le U . . . Cheerleading 3,4 fTreasurerJ5 French Club 2,3 CTrea- surerg 45 Yearbook 4 QPhotography EditorJ5 National Honor Society 3,45 Student Council 2,3,-45 Executive Committee 35 Class Council I,2,3,45 Leaders Corps 45 Drill Team 1,25 Seniorium 45 Prom Connnittee 3 lChairmanj 45 Class Play 4. THEODORA FINE Teddi Brandeis U . . . Folio, Literary Staff 1,2,3 QAss't Copy Editorj 4 fCop EditorQ5 Yearbook 3,4 fCopy EditorJ5 National Honor Society 3,45 Mocz ern Dance Club 1,25 Chorus 1,2,3,45 Select Choir 2,35 Spanish Honor Society 45 French Club 25 Folksinging Club 45 Newspaper 1,25 Drama Club I5 Biology Lab Ass't 35 Variety Show 2,4. DANIEL ARNOLD FORCE Buddy Ricker College. DAVID A. FREESE Frost Electrical Technician. Michi an State U . . . Class ouncil 1,25 Leaders Cor S 2,3g CAA 1,24 FTA ,2,3,4g National Honor Society 45 Seniorium 4, ki Club 3 1Vice Presiclentj 4 fVice Presidentjg Variety Show 4. ' JOAN LORRAINE GORDON 'Eoanien i E RONALD RAYMOND GORHAM Ron Stevens Inst .... Varsity Club 3,4 fsecretaryjg National Honor Society 3,4g Student Council 45 Executive Committee 4, Math Club 3,45 Chem- istry Club 2q Soccer 3,4g NVrestling 3, Tennis 3, WVinter Track 23 Spring Track 2, Amatelu' Radio Club 4g Model Airplane Club l,2. GAIL A. CARSON Gail Newark State ...A Ar t Folio 1,2,3 CTreasurerlg Art Club 1,2,3g Drill Team 1,2. MARGARET MARY GARTNER Peggy Trenton State . . . GAA 1,2,3,4g FTA 4, Yearbook 4, Chorus lg Drill Team 3,4g Leaders Corps 4, Prom Committee 3,4. EVA GAUTHIER Eve Secretary . . . GAA 1,2g French Club 2, Prom Committee 3. DAVID CEORES Dakota Vllesleyan U . . . A.V. l,2,3,4g Stage Crew 1,2,3,4. LILLIAN JOAN CIACOBBE Lil Claremont Secretarial School . . . Student Council I,2,4g FBLA 4g His- tory Club 33 FHA 2. GRACE MARIE GILES Marie Bookkeeper . . . Girl's Booster Club 4. BILL GILES Stickf' College . . . Varsity Club 3,44 Basketball 1,2,3,4g Football L3. GEORGE GOLDBERC Gold Finger Rider College. Dou lass, Concert Pianist . . . Green Quill 3,4 QVice Presidentjg Na- tion Honor Society 4g Orchestra 1,2,3,4g Chorus 1,2,3,4, Newspaper 25 Political Science Club 4g Art Club 2g Folio 2. DIANE COLDSMITH CHARLOTTE MAY GRAF Charlotte IBM Operator . . . FBLA 4g National Honor Society 3,44 Leaders Corps 3,45 GAA 3. JAMES ALEX CRATTAN Jamie College of the Holy Cross . . . Student Council 4g Football lg Basket- ball lg Baseball 2,3,4g Chemistry Lab Ass't 45 Math Club 4, Chemistry Club 4, Intramurals 1,3,4g National Honor Society 4. GERALD CRASSO 'gerryu St. Phillip of Nier ollege. STEVE CRAVES Steve YVheeling . . . Baseball l,2,3,4g Soccer 3,4. DAVE CRENNEN Dave Trimmer. LORRAINE CUSZ Lorri Secretary. ANTHONY HAASZ Tony VVALTER ALFRED HASTINGS NVallv Chess Club 1,2g Shop Lab Ass't 45 Football Ig Bowling Club 1,25 Intra- murals 1,2. PHILIP HATSIS Phil Newark College of Engineering . . . Class Comuicil 25 History Club 4g Key Club 45 Band 1. DAVID HAWVKS Dave Army. RICHARD G. HABRUKOWICH Hahn Rutgers . . . Basketball 1,2,3,4 fCaptainjg Baseball 1,2,3,4g Varsity Club 3,4 QTreasurer7g Key Club 3,45 Chemistry Lab Ass't 4g National Honor Societv 4. CHARLES HAGER Charlie IOANNE MARIE HAHN joani College . . . Leaders Corps 2,35 GAA l,2,3,4g Art Club 3,4. LESLIE JEAN I-IAIN Leslie Bryn Mawr . . . Class Council 2,3,4 fSecretaryjg String Orchestra 6: S phonette 1 fLibrarianj 2 fS8CI'6IBlyl 3 fPresidentJ 4 LPresidentjg F?dIio 2,3 fCopy Editorj 4 fAss't Editor, Secretarybg National Honor So- ciety 3,-ig Math Club 29 Mu Alpha Theta 3,4 fSecretaryjg Human Rela- tions Council 2,3g Chemistry C ub 3g Seniorium 45 Drill Team 2. RONALD HAINES Ron Auto-mechanic . . . Cross-Country lg Track 1,23 Auto Club 3. BRIAN C. HAMILTON Brian Trenton State . . . Newspaper 1,3,4g Latin Club 2g Seniorium Ag French Club 3g Library Club 3,4g Green Quill 3. SUSAN LEE HANLEY Sue Secretary . . . FHA lg Choms lg Library Club 1,3g Guidance Aid 1. GREGORY HANSEN Greg College . . . Auto Club 3g Intramurals l. WILLIE HARDUBY Will Henderson State. JESSE HEINES Jess M.I.T .... Dance Band 2,3,4 fpresidentjg Gymnastics 3,4 CMana erii Student Council 4, National Honor Society 4g Seniorium 4, Math glu 3,4, Band 2,3,4g Orchestra 2, Chemistr Lab Ass't 4g Biolo Lab Ass't 2: Football Mascot Ig Intramurals lg Chorus Ig Drama Cab lg Prom Committee 3 fChaix-many. CHARLES HEITZENRODER Roder Mechanic . . . Football 1, Intramurals 2,4. JOHN HEITZENRODER Football 1. KENNETH FRANK HENDEREK Ken Pratt Institute . . . Football I,2,3,4g FI' A 1,2,3g Baseball 15 Track 25 Basketball 1,25 Spanish Club 2, Class Council 1. CHARLES HENRY Chuck Service . . . Wrestling 1,2,3. PAUL HENSHAW P. T. Aviation . . . Football Ig Intramurals 1,2. JOHN HOMAN John Service. I ELIZABETH HOUSE Betsy Middlebury . . . Class Council 1 fSecretaryJ 2 Ureasurerj 3,4 fVice Presidentjg GAA 1,2 CTreasurerJ 3,45 Leaders Corps 2,3 Nice Presidentj 4g Yearbook 4 QSr. Class Editorjg Math Club 2, Mu Alpha Theta 3,4g National Honor Society 3,4g Folio 2,3,4g Drill Team 1.2, Seniorium 4. SHERRI HUBBELL Douglass , . . Seniorium 4 fExecutive Committeej, Prom Committee 3 fChairmz-mb, Chorus 2 fSecretaryJg Human Relations Council 3, Biology Club 2,3g Biology Lab Ass't 3, Drill Team 3, Drama Club 1,2. SALLY LOUISE HUCK Sally Wisconsin State at Lacrosse . . . Class Council 1 fVice-Presidentj 4, Student Council 1,34 CAA 45 Band 1,2,3g FTA 4, Prom Committee 3,4 QChairmanJg Drama Club 1,34 Seniorium 4. TERRANCE WES HUTCHINSON Hutch Key Club 4, Intramurals 1,2g Football 1, Wrestling 1, Prom Committee 3. VICTOR INTRAVARTOLA Vie Football 1,2,3,-4. RUSSEL JACOBS Russ JOHN EDWARD JACOBSON Jake Sheet Metal Lay-out . . . Industrial Arts Lab Ass't 4, Auto Club 3,44 A.V. 15 Intramurals. HELENA JEFIMOWICZ Lena FTA 2,3g Orchestra l,2,3,4, Choms 1, Library Club 2, Guidance Aid 4. LINDA JOYCE JENNERS Lyn Paterson State . . . CAA 1,2,3,4 QVice Presidentjg Leaders Corgs 2 fTreasurerJ 3,4 fVice Presidentjg French Club 2 fTreasurerj 3, rill Team 1,2,3,4g Student Council 1,2,3g Class Council 3,43 Seniorium 45 Girl's Booster Club 3,49 Newspaper 1, Prom Committee 3,4. WILLIAM HUNT Willie A.V. 3,4g Gun Club 2, Football 2. MADELINE CORDRAY HUNTER Madeline Connecticut College . . . Class Coiuicil I,2,3,4 fTreasurerJq Student Council I, French Club 2,3,4g Seniorium 4: National Honor Society 45 Leaders Corps 2,3,4g CAA 1,2,3,4, Modern Dance Club 1,2,3,4g Drill Team 1,2. DIANA KAMINSKI Diana Trenton State . . . National Honor Society 45 Yearbook 45 FTA 45 FBLA 45 Chorus 45 GAA 2. GEORGANNA MARIE KANE Sugar Secretary . . . Class Council 2,35 Drama Club 35 Prom Committee 35 Float Committee 4. VIRGINIA MARIE KANE Ginny Newark State . . . FHA 1,254 fSecretaryj5 GAA 25 Seniorium 45 Drill Team 4. RICHARD JOSEPH KARCZ Rick Utah State . . . Football 4 fManagerj5 Baseball 4. FRED KATZ Cat Heidelberg . . . Chem Club 15 Rifle Club lg Bowling Club 1. MITCHELL F. KEIL Mitch Rut ers, Politician . . . Political Science Club 3 Clzresidentj 4 QPresi- dengk Histo Club 3 CVice Presidentj 4 QVice PresidentJ5 Folio 45 Stu- dent Councilyfig Biology Club 35 Biology Lab Ass't 3. SHARON L. LOHNSTON Sherry Middlesex ounty College . . . Cheerleading 3 fCo-Captainj 45 Seniori- um 45 CAA 2,3,45 Class Play 45 Prom Committee 3. CAROL ANN JONES Banker . . . Class Cotmcil 1,35 Float Committee 4. RAMONA IUCKS Moriah Nurse . . . Drama Club 3,45 Modem Dance Club 15 Eye 45 Choms 3. LOIS ANN KADY Lois Trenton State . . . National Honor Society 45 Student Council l,2,3,45 Newspa er 35 Leaders Corps 2,3,45 Seniorium 45 GAA 152,35 Modem Dance glub 1,25 Prom Committee 3. IOHN KAFARSKI John Navy KATHLEEN KAF KA Kath 158 GWENDOLYN KELLY Gwen College . . . History Club 45 FTA 45 GAA 15 Spanish Club 2,3 QSecre+ taryj. ROGER H. KENNEDY College . . . Baseball 1,25 Gymnastics 25 Intramurals 25354. WILLIAM D. KIRK, III Bill Lafagette , . . National Honor Society 45 Student Council 1,25 Football 3,45 asketball 3,45 Baseball 2,35 Track 45 Seniorirmi 45 Key Club 4. IUDITH ANN KIRKMAN Judy Trenton State . . . French Club 2 Nice Presidentj5 Student Council 15 FTA 3,45 Class Colurcil 2,45 News a er 35 Leaders Corps 3,45 GAA 1,25 Drill Team 2,3545 Girl's Booster Cqul: 45 Drama Club 1,25 Seniorium 45 Chorus 1. DOLORES MARIE KLARMAN Dollie Trenton State . . . FFA 45 Art Club 1,25 Girlls Booster Club 35 Drama Club I5 Chorus 45 CAA 3. LENNIE H. KLEINBERG Len Temple U . . . French Club 2 fSecretaryj 3 QVice Presidentl 4 1Presi- dentj5 National Honor Society 45 Variety Show 4 fCo-Chairmanl5 Year- book 4 fAss't Sr. Class Editorl5 Seniorium 45 AFS 45 Human Relations Council 2,35 Folio 253,45 Leaders Corps 45 Newspaper 15 GAA 15253545 Green Quill 354. WALTER KLUSKA 'fWalter F udge College . . . Chess Club 1,2,3,45 Track 2,3,45 Wrestling 354. WILBUR EMBLEY KNAPP, IR. The Mystic College . . . Political Science Club 3,45 A.V. 1,2,3,45 Stage Crew 152.3545 Drama Club l,2,3,45 Eye 45 Chorus 2,35 History Club 2. PATRICIA ANN KOCH Patsy Seniorium 45 Rille Club 4. CANDICE DOREEN KOENIG Candy Art Club 25 Chorus I5 GAA 2. VVILLIAM ADOLPH KOHLHEPP Bill College . , . Student Council 1,25 Class Council 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,3,45 German Club 1,25 Football I5 Basketball 1,2,35 Baseball 1,25 Intramu- rals 1,2535-4. IAM ES KOKEN jim 1 JOHN DAVID KOLACKI Bolo Air Force . . . Student Council 1,25 Class Council 152,35 Football 1,2,3,45 Track 1,25 Prom Committee 3. HELEN S. KOSTYSHYN Helen Secretary . . . FBLA 1. JOE KOZLOWSKI Koz Rider . . . Class Council 35 Baseball 1,25 Intramurals 1,2,3. ALAN MICHAEL KRAUT Al University of Rhode Island . . . Band 152,35 Key Club 3,45 History Club 45 Newspaper 1,25 Yearbook 4, MONA KRAVIS Douglass . . . Yearbook 45 Math Club 15 Latin Club 15 Spanish Club 1. IENNIFER KROON len Douglass . . . FTA 1,2 fSecretaryl 3,45 National Honor Society 45 Stu- dent Council 1,2,3,45 Seniorium 45 Green Quill 253,45 Chorus 2,35 Float Committee 3. SUSAN LaRUE uSue College . . . Drama Club 35 Prom Committee 3,45 Float Committee 4. PATRICIA MARY LAUZON Patti Hofstra U . . . News a er 1,2,3,45 Student Council 25 French Club 1,2,35 Drama Club 1,21 Chorus 1,25 Drill Team 3,45 Yearbook 45 GAA 1,25 Girl's Booster Club 3,45 Language Lab Ass't 15 Class Play 4. MILDRED ANNE LEONARD Millie Secretary . . . Drill Team 25 FBLA 45 Yearbook 4. ARLENE FRANCES LeVAY Pennsylvania Military College . . . GAA 1,2,3,45 Leaders Corps 2,35 FTA 2,35 Drill Team 3,45 Chorus 1,2. LAWVRENCE CHARLES LINDSLEY Larry College . . . Student Council 25 Key Club 45 Intramurals 45 Hockey Club 35 Basketball 1. MARIANN LINFANTE Mare Newark State College . . . Class Council 25 GAA 2,8,45 German Club 1,2,45 Leaders Corps 2,3g Cirl's Booster Club 3,45 Drill Team 4. l JAMES I. KROVATH Km Memphis State . . . Wrestling 1,25 Baseball 1. FRED KRUG Mouse jazz Musician . . . Student Council lg Football 1,25 Xvrestling 1,2.. LOIS DIANE KRYPEL Lois Maryland Institute . . . French Club 2,35 Drill Team 2,3,-4, Girl's Boost- er Club 45 Art Club 3. CELESTE ELIZABETH KUCHNA Celeste Middlesex Coiuity College. LINDA KUZMANN Linda College . . . Student Council 2,35 Class Council 25 GAA 1,25 Drill Team 15 Prom Committee 3,45 Float Committee 4. IOHN KUZMANN Kuzzy U of New Hampshire . . . Football 1,2,3,45 Student Coluicil 45 Class Council 35 Gymnastics 25 Ski Club 35 Intramurals 1,25 Varsity Club 3,-1. DENNIS EDWARD KWIATKOWSKI Horse Track 25 Football 15 Intramurals 1,3545 Bowling Club 1. YVILLIAM EUGENE LACINA Bill DOUGLASS LaFORGE Doug WILLIAM LaMAESTRA Bill Stanton Military Academ . . . Football 1,2,3,45 Golf 1,2,45 Class Coun- cil 45 Track 35 Intramurals 1,45 Class Play 4. DONALD PAUL LANG Barrymore Glassboro, Theatre . . . Drama Club 2,3515 Eye 4. KENNETH JOHN LANGLEY Ken Manhattan School of Music . . . National Honor Society 45 Sym hony Orchestra 1,2,3,45 String Orchestra 1,2,3,45 Eye 45 Human Refations Council 2. 160 7 Larr LAW RENCE G. LUERY 'A zu Boston U . . . Chess Club 1,Lg Chorus 1 2 4 Intramurals 0 4 JEFFREY EDWVARD LUMA ISE Rider College . . . Intramurals 1,2,3,4 CAROL ANN LUPCO Ca Beautician . . . Girl's Booster Club 1. JOHN P. LYNCH Lvnch Arm' . . . Prom Committee 3g Senio Traclc 3g Football 1. CHARLES LYONS GREGORY BRIAN MARPLE Harpo Football 35 Basketball 1,2. PAULA MARGARET McCORMICK Paula College . . . Cheerleader 3,4, CAA 1,4g Guidance Aid 4, Seniorium 4, Drama Club 2, Prom Committee 3,4. CHARLES PATRICK MCCULLY Pat RCA Inst .... Student Council lg History Club 3,44 Key Club 3,44 Track 44 Intramurals 2. DONALD MCFARREN Don N.B.I. YVILLIAM MCGARVEY i'Bill THOMAS McGUIRE Tom Rutgers . . . Class Council 1,2,3g Student Council 1,2,4g Gvm- nastics 2,3,4, National Honor Society 4g Track I,2,4g Basketball Ig Football 23 Chemistry Lab Asst. 4g Key Club, Varsity Club 4, Prom Committee 34 Hoat Committee 3,4g Seniorium 4. LINDA LEA MCHALE Lin-Lin College . . . Student Council 1,2,4g Class Council 1,2g GAA 1,25 Prom Committee 3,4g Variety Show 4. ROBERT MCINTYRE Berger Police Officer . . . Class Council 1,25 Bowling Club 1,25 Intramurals 1. EDWARD A. MEAGI-IER, III Eddie Chamberlayne jr. College, Politician . . . Class Council 1,2,3,-lg Student Council I,l5,4g Executive Committee 33 Key Club 3,4 QPres.jg Football I,2,3,4g Baseball 1,2,3g Chorus 4g Basketball lg VVrestling 2g Seniorium 4g Newspaper 4, Varsity Club 4g Prom Committee 45 Intramurals 1. EDWIN MEISSNER Buz Football 1. MIKE MERSON Mike Syracuse U .... Key Club 2,3,4 fSec.jg Student Council I,3, Seniori- um 4, Chess Club I. CRAIG MESEROLL Mez Navy. IERRY MICHALAK Mick Baseball I,2,3, Basketball I,2,3. MARY ANN BERNADETTE MILAZZO Menlo Park School of Business Machines . . . F.B.L.A. 1. GREGG ALAN MILLER Gregg College . . . Key Club 2,3,4 fV.P.j, Track 2,3,4, Soccer 4, Varsity Club 4, Seniorium 4, Winter Track 4, Newspaper 4, Intramurals 1,2g Prom Committee 4. IOANNE MARY MILLER jo Stenographer . . . Class Council 2,35 F.B.L.A. 34 Yearbook 4, Float Committee 3,-4, Prom.Committee 3,-4. IOHANNA MENEDIS Io School of Business Machines Club 2. ODETTE MENEDIS Sam School of Businem Machines Club 2. MAR-IORIE MENNONA Gigi Float Committee 4. FHA 3, Drama Club 3g Spanish FI-IA 3, FNA 2g Modern Dance t l INA REBECCA NEIDICH Ina Colle e . . . Drill Team 3,44 Seniorium -lg Chorus 1,25 French Club 2,3g afloat Committee 35 Green and WVhite NVeek Committee 3, Prom Committee 3. IOANNE NICK Nicky Secretary . . . GAA 3. CHARLES NIGLIO Charlie College . . . Science Club Ig History Club 3. LINDA MARIE MINICHINI Linda Hofstra College . . . Newspaper 1,2,3,-lg French Club 2,3g Booster Club 3.4, G.A.A. 2,35 Class Council 3,4g Student Council 2, Drama Club 1, Chorus 1, Prom Committee 3. FRANCES LUCILLE MOLLOY Frani IBM Operator . . . Drill Team 2, FBLA 4: Yearbook -lg Prom Committee 4. LINDA KATHRYN MONROE Tex U of Texas . . . Drama Club 1,2,3,4g Class Council lg Senioriiun -lg Chorus 1,3,4g FTA 3,45 Bel Cantos 4, Special Chorus 1,3. LINDA MOOBQY 4'Lin U of South arolina . . . Class Council 2,3,4, Prom Committee 3,4 ghairmanjg Student Council 1,2,3, Seniorium 45 Float Committee 3,42 AA 1,2. ROBERT G. MOORE Landscape Artist. NOEL MORALES College . . . Basketball 1,2 QMgr,lg Biology Club I. GREGORY BYRON MORGAN Morg Rutgers . . . Band 1,2,3,4 QPres.l, Political Science Club 3,4 QTreas.lg Yearbook 4 fBus. M r.jg History Club 2,3,4g Dance Band 2,3,4g Key Club 35 Biology Clui lg Gymnastics 2. FREDRICK M. MULLER FreCl', College . . . Football I,2,3,-4: Baseball 1,2,3,-4. CAROL MYERS P BARBARA PAPP Barb Airline Stewardess . . . Student Council 1,2,3g Class Council 1,25 Float Committee 4. WILLIAM A. PAPP 'iBill Electrical Technician. MARGARET PARKINSON Mar e R .gistered Nurse . . . Spanish Club 2,3g Cirl's Booster Club I,4g Span- isz Honor Society 44 Medical Careers Club 1,2g Prom Committee 3. .SQ , X, IEANNE M. O'BRIEN jean Secretarv . . . Class Council 2,3,4g Float Committee 4g Senior Play 44 Yearbook 3g History Club 3 fSec.jg FBLA 4 CTreas.Q. KEVIN O'CONNOR Kev College . . . Gymnastics 3,45 Newspaper 3. ROBERT WILLIAM ODENHEIMER 'iOdie College . . . Tennis Ig Gymnastics 2. PAUL OKONIESKI HAROLD WENDELL OPENSHAW Wendell Dartmouth . . . Mu Alpha Theta 1,2,3,4 QPres.lg Yearbook 4 fSales Mgnjg Key Club 3,4g National Honor Society 3,44 Band 1,2g Chemistry Club 2,3,4g Chemistry Lab Ass't 3g Seniorium 4. IAMES A. O'REILLY Jim College . . . Baseball l,2,3g Soccer 3,4. LAURA ANN OSKROBA Laura Secretary. BARBARA OSTAPOVICH Barb Secretarv . . . Student Council 1,24 Class Council Ig GAA 1,2g Drill Team If Yearbook 4. EVERETT PAGE Ev U of New Hampshire . . . Baseball 1,2,3,-Ig Key Club 3,4g Football 3,4g Yearbook 4g History Club 2. JOHN PARKY College . , . Float Committee 3,45 Chemistry Lab Ass't 4g National Honor Society 4. DUANE PEARCE Duane College . . . Clax Council lg Student Council 45 GAA Ig Drill Team 2g Yearbook 4. LINDA PENCE College . . . Folio 2,3,4g Class Coimcil 3. NENA PERAGALLO Nena University of Chile . . . Student Council 4g Green Quill 4g AFS 44 Se- niorium 4. IOSEPH P. PERCIACCANTO Percy Service . . . Gymnmtics 3. GERALDINE PERKINS jerie Fashion Model . . . Class Council 1g Student Council 2g Prom Com- mittee 8,4. JUDY PERRI WARREN PESETSKY Flash N avy. IOAN ELIZABETH PHILLIPS 'QORDH College . . . Class Cotmcil 24 tudent Council 3g Seniorium 4. VVALTER PICH THOMAS VINCENT PIDGEON Walter U of Colorado . . . Football 1,24 Ski Club 2,3,4. IOSEPH JOHN PILCH Pup VVilliam and Mary, Professional Football . . . National Honor Society 45 Seniorium 4 flixecutive Committeejg Varsitv Club 3,4 CPresidentlg Student Council 4g Baseball 1,2,3,4g Football 1,2,3,-43 Key Club 45 Wrestling 3,4. KENNETH H. PITCHER Jud CAROL ANN PLEVA Carol College . . . Clam Council 25 GAA lg FBLA 3. PEGGY L. POLLARD Lynda Cgllege . . . Class Council 1,35 Art Club 1,2,3,4g Medical Careers Club SIMONETTE IOAN POMANEK Simone Mansfield State College . . . Folio 4g Art Club 4g Chorus lg Modem Dance Club 45 Chorus lg FTA 45 GAA 2g Girl's Booster Club I. JOSEPH M. PUGLIESE joe Service. LINDA QUIIANO Quigy Nancy Taylor Secretarial School. ALICE LANE RABUCK Al U of entucky . . . Color Guard 4 fCaptainlg Yearbook 4 fOrganiza- tions Editorlg National Honor Society 44 Drill Team I,2,3g Newspaper 3,45 Fojo 2,35 Modern Dance Club lg Seniorium 4. MARY IO RADEMACHER fo Secretary . . . Latin Club g FBLA 4. BARBARA RADICK School of Business Machines. Barnard, Di lomatic Service . . . National Honor Society 4g Student Council 44 rench Club 1,2,3,4 fVice-Presidentlg Folio 4g Green Quill 3,4 fPresidentjg AFS 49 Seniorium 4. DIN ORAH RAMIREZ VVALTER REBELE lValt St. Peter's College. STEVE REFF Stevie College . . . Soccer 3,4. ROBERT j. REMM Bob Navy. jOI-IN F. REYNOLDS Service . . . Winter Track 1. JOSEPH RICE joe U.S. Army. JAMES D. RICHARDSON Jim LINDA RICKLE Lynn College . . . Student Council 1,2,3,4g CAA 2,35 Drama Club 4. IULIE RISTICH jul Social Worker . . . Student Council Ig Human Relations Conmcil 3 fSecretaryl. 1 i CAROL LEE RITFERSON Carol Marriage. STEVEN ROED Steve Middlesex County College . . . Spring Track 4g Chess Club 2. ROBERT ROGIN A'Rogue College. MICHAEL ROONEY Mike Rutgers . . . Class Council 1,2,3 fTreasurerj 4g Football 1,2,3,4g Varsity Clu 4g Seniorilun 4. DONNA ROSELLI NEIL ROSENHACK Neil College . . , FTA I,2'Q'l'reasurerl 3,43 Key Club 2,3,4g Class Council I,3g Student Council 2.4: Hockey Club 3 fCo-Captainjg Baseball I flvianagerlg History Club 34 Seniorium 4g Football Ig Basketball I. KENNETH SAMPSON Kenny U.S. Air Force . . .Track 1,21 Band 1,2,3. LOUIS SANTANOSTASI, IR. Lon College . . . Cross-Coxmtry 3,-ig Winter Track 3: Spring Track 3,-1. MICHAEL SANTIAGO Mike jazz INIIISICIHII . . . Track Ig Cross-Country 1. KARYN LEE SAUVICNE Karyn Fashion Coordinator . . . Student Council 1,4: FTA 1: GAA I. PAUL B. SCACCIO Benutician. CRAIG OHN SCHAEFER Crai f 5- Rutgels . . . Class Council 4 QPresidentlg Student Council 1,2,3g Execu- tive Committee 4g Football 1,2,3,4g National Honor Society 3,-ig Se- niorinm gig Choms 1. MARK ROSENTHAL Mark Vllesleyan . . . Student Council 1,2,3,-4 fTreasurerjg Yearbook 3,4 QEdi- tor-in-Chieijg Newspaper 1,2,3,4 fSports Editorlg Mu Alpha Theta 1,2,3 fTreasurerj -ig Keyi Club 3,4g Track 34 Chemistry Club 2: Folio 33 Na- tional Honor Society 3,-1. CHRISTINE RUSAK Chris College . . . Student Council 1,2,3,4. RUSSELL SAC HS Russ CRAIG SADOWSKY College . . . Art Club 2,35 Ski Club 4. PARTICIA IANICE SADOWSKI Putt Le al Secretary . . . Student Council 1 QRules Advisorj 2 fRules Advi- sor? 45 Class Council 4g FBLA 4 Qllresidentlg Drill Team 1,23 Seniorilun 49 National Honor Society -lg Yearbook 41 Float Committee 3,45 Guid- ance Aid 3. DIANE JEAN SAKAL Diane College. RICHARD THOMAS SCHERER Nibs WAYNE SCHERER College . . . Football l,2,3,4g Varsity Club 3,4. RONALD SCHLANSKY Ron Rider College. VVILLIAM SCHLECEL Bill College . . . Gand 1,2,3,-44 Eye 4g Class Play 4, AV 1,2,3,4. KAREN BETH SCHLEIMER Karen U of Pennsylvania . . . Folio 1,2 fAss't Editorj 3 CSecreta.ryJg Biology Lab Ass't 2,45 Yearbook 34 Senioriiun 4g Guidance Aid 1,2,3, Class Council 1, Newspaper 1. THOMAS BRUCE SCHMIDT Bm Trenton jr. Colleffe . . . Student Council 33 Varsity Club 3,45 Football 2,3,4, Basketball 2,31 French Club 2. CAROL SCHULZ Schulzie Airline Stewardess . . . Student Colmcil 1,35 Class Council 2,44 GAA 2. DOUGLAS SCHUSTER Si:liust Lea College . . . Soccer 3,4, Track 4, History Club 4, Class Council 3, Varsity Club 4, Chorus 1,2. WESLEY H. SCHWAB Animal Service. CHERYL SCILLA Cheryl Secretary . . . Bowling Club 1,2g GAA 1,2g FBLA 4, Choms 1, Year- book 4, Float Committee 3. THOMAS RICHARD SEEL Tom Rutgers . . . History Club 2,3,4 iPresidentj, National Honor Society 3,4 fVice-Presidentj. RICHARD SELOVER Richie Football 1,2,3,-lg Key Club 4, Track 1, Rifle Club 1,2. 168 NANCY ROSE ANN STAB Nance Newark State . . . Cheerleading 23,4 fCo-CaptainJ5 GAA 1,2,3,4 fPresi- dentjg Leaders Corps 2,3,4 fSecretaryl5 German Club 2 fSecretaryJ5 Na- tional Honor Society 3,45 Seniorium 45 Girl's Booster Club 3,45 Student Council 1. LILY VALERIE STAHELI Lil College . . . German Club 2,4 QSecretaryj5 Class Council 45 Drill Team 45 Seniorium 4. CATHERINE STECH Cathie Middlesex jr. College . . . Prom Committee 3. SUSAN PATRICIA STEFAN Stell ' Ministz of Music . . . GAA I,2,3,45 Leaders Corps 2,3,45 FTA 15 Cho- ms 2: reen and White Week Committee 35 Float Committee 3,-4. CAROL LOUISE STEPHENS Carol College . . . CAA 1,2,3,45 Leaders Corps 2,3,45 Chorus 1,25 German Club I,2. HOWARD LAY STERN Howie U of Roc ester . . . Student Council 1,2,3,45 Executive Committee 35 Class Coimcil 1,2,3 QVice-President? 45 Football 1,2,35 Wrestling 1,2,35 Chemistry Club 4. FLORENCE MARIE SERENCSES Cookie Float Committee 4. Connecticut College . . . Folio 2,3 fAss't Editorl 4 fEditor-in-Chie 5 Student Council 45 Executive Committee 45 Newspaper 3,45 Yearboo 45 National Honor Society 4. ARLEEN SHANV Ar SUSAN LYNN SHONK Sue Nancy Taylor Secretarial School. LYNN SHUMSKI Lynn Newa.rk State . . . Clam Council 2,3,45 German Club 2,4 fPresidentJ5 Leaders Corps 35 Drill Team 35 Girl's Booster Club 45 National Honor Society 4. BETTY SIGLE Bet Nancy Taylor Secretarial School . . . FHA 1,2. IOHN BRUCE SILVEST ER john Middlesex Hospital School of X-ray. BARBARA ANN SIMMONDS Barbara College . . . FHA 1. IAMES A. SKISTIMAS Skis U of Oklahoma . . . Soccer 1,2,3,-45 Basketball 15 NVinter Track 2,35 Wrestling 45 Spring Track 1,2,3,45 Varsity Club 3,4. PEGGY SKORUPSKY Peggy Yvestminster Choir College . . . Student Council 25 Seniorium 45 Cho- rus 1,2,3,45 Drama Club 25 French Club 15 Human Relations Council 1. VVAYNE SMITH Smitty College . . . Wrestling 1,2,3,45 Physical Fitness Club 4. SUSAN RUE SNYDER Sue Cplfge . . . Student Council 35 FTA I,2,3,45 History Club 3,45 Ski Cu 3,4. PARTICIA MARY SPISHOCK Speesh Douglass . . . GAA 1,2,3 fTreasurerJ 45 Student Council 1,35 Class Council 45 Band l,2,3,45 National Honor Society 45 Folio 3,45 Leaders Corps 2,3,45 Orchestra 3,45 French Club 25 Seniorium 4. PAMELA MARGARET STOKES Pam College . . . Green Quill 2,3 fEditorial Boardj 4 QSecretarylg Ski Club 3g Language Lab Asst Ig Folio 3,4g French Club 2,34 National Honor Society 49 Seniorium 4. LINDA STROMBERG Strom Secretary . . . Drill Team I,2. IOANNE SUCHON jo Airline Stewardess . . . Medical Careers Club I,2. DONALD FRANCIS SULLIVAN t'Don College . . . Student Council 3: Cross-Country I,:2,8,4g NVinter Track 3.4: Spring Track I,2,3,-1. IUDITI-I ANN SULLIVAN jimi-, ' Fairleigh Dickinson U . . . FTA 1,2 QTreasurerl 3g Green Quill 2,3,4 QTreasurerJg GAA 1,25 Ski Club 3g Folio 3,45 Leaders Corps 3g Seniorium 45 French Club 3,-lg Yearbook 4. FRANK SZABO Brucie State Policeman . . . Art Club 1,2. RONALD TANASY Ron IAMES THEODORE THOMPSON Irish Seton Hall U . . . Art Club l,2g Key Club 25 Central jersey Surf Club 45 Prom Committee 3. GAIL HELENE TINSDALE Gail Receptionist. , I RICHARD TOMCHUK Rick U.S. Air Force . . . Cross-Country 24 Band I. MARY LYNN TRAWICK Mary College . . . Cheerleading 2,334 Girl's Booster Club 3,44 Leaders Corps 2,3,4g GAA I.2.3,4g rench Club 3,-lg Seniorium 45 Drill Team 2. EILEEN TUNILLA College . . . Drill Team 2g Majorette 3 QAss'tJ 41 Yearbook 4g Modern Dance Club -ig Claw Play 4. MICHAEL WALLING Mike Montclair . . . Newspaper 1,25 Football 3,45 Drama Club 2,45 Track 25 Photography Club 1. MYRON TILGHMAN WEAVER MiCrin i College . . . Spring Track 1,25 Winter Track 25 Rifle Club 2. RANDOLPH ARNOLD WEBB Randy Newark College of Engineering . . . Key Club 3 QBoard of Directorsj 4 iLieutenant Govemorlg Chorus 1,2 fPresident75 Folk Club 4 fPresidentj5 Seniorium 4 QExecutive Committeeli Student Council 1,3,45 Clam Council 35 Football 1,35 Track 1,25 Cross-Country 25 Drama Club 2. MARY TUSHINSKI Mare Nancy Taalor Secretarial School . . . FHA 2,3 fSecretaryJ 4 fPresidentj5 National onor Society 45 FBLA 1,25 Girl's Booster Club 3. PATRICIA RUTH VALLELY Pat Secretary . . . Class Council 15 GAA 1,25 Drill Team 2. RICHARD M. VAN BRUMMELEN Brum Passaic School of Drafting . . . Art Club 1,2,35 Central jersey Surf Club 4. PEGGY LYNN VARICK Peg Beautician. JOHN VASTARDIS Greek College . . . Soccer 25 Central jersey Surf Club 45 Prom Committee 35 Variety Show 4. SALLY ANN T. VER STRATEN Sally Fashion Model . . . GAA 1. JANE ELLEN vRooM Jane Culver-Stockton College . . . FHA 45 French Club 35 Bowling Club 15 Chorus 45 Guidance Aid 2. BARBARA YVAGNER BRUCE A. YVALDMAN College . . . History Club 3,4 QTreasurerJ5 German Club 2,45 Key Club 45 Ski Club 4. NANCY WECK Nancy East Stroudsburg . . . Cheerleading 2,3,4 fCaptainj5 Leaders Corps 2,3,4 QPresidentJ5 Orchestra 1,2,3 QSecretaryj5 CAA 1,2,3,45 Girl's Boost- er Club 3,45 National Honor Society 45 Seniorium 45 Drill Team 1, French Club 1. SHIRLEY ANN WELLMAN Shirley I.B.M. Programmer . . . GAA 2,3,4. ION MICHAEL WERCHOLAK Werch Electronics Training Center . . . Class Council 45 Student Council 25 Central jersey Surf Club 4. ROBERT PAUL WERNER Bob Hiram Scott . . . Football 1,2,35 Class Council 1. KATHLEEN YVHITE U Kathyl' Marriage. ' FRANCES HOLLY WIDEMAN Holly Douglass . . . National Honor Society 3,4 iTreasurerl5 Green Quill 3 QTreasurerJ 45 Seniorium 4 fExecutive Committeejg Class Council 2,45 Mixed Chorus 1,2,3,45 Bel Canto's 45 Girl's Booster Club 3,45 Drama Club 2,35 French Club 35 Language Lab Ass't 2. CELIA W'RlS1'EN T'Ceil Douglass . . . Class Council 1 fPresidentl 3, Student Council 2,4 CVice- Presidentlg FTA 1,2 QVice-Presidentl 3614 fPresidentlg Drill Team I,2,3 LCD-Captainj 4 QCaptainlg French Club 2,3 QSecretaryl 4, National Hon- or Society 4g Seniorium 4, Newspaper 2,3. IAN VVYNDHAM College . . . Gymnastics 2,3 CCaptainl 4, Class Council 2,4g Student Council 1, Varsity Club 3,4g Chorus 1,4g Key Club 4, Seniorium 4g Prom Committee 3,4. RONALD CARL WIDMAN Ron Sheet Metal Apprentice . . . Class Council 24 Football Ig Baseball I. PATRICIA WILLIS Pat KAREN VICTORIA WILSON Karen Katherine Gibbs . . . FTA 2,34 Spanish Honor Society 4, Human Rela- tions Council 3. DALE WINTEMUTE Dale Dakota NVesleyan U . . . AV Club 1,2,3,4g Track 1,2,3,4g Drama Club 1,2,3,4g Stage Service Club 1,2,3,4g Chorus 1. ANTOINETTE ALEXANDRIA WISNIEVVSKI Sandy Receptionist . . . Student Council I,2,3, Leaders Corps 2. CHESTER WOICIECHOWICZ lVoj Navy . . . Soccer 2,3,4. SHARON KATHLEEN ANNE WOOD Sherry College . . . Math Club 3,4, History Club 3,-ig Girl's Booster Club 4. SUZANNE ROBERTA VVOOLLIS Sue Nancy Taylor Secretarial School . . . GAA 2,3,4g Drill Team 2,3,4g Se- niorium 4, Leaders Colaps 2,35 Girl's Booster Club 3,4g Spanish Honor Society 4, Green and I ite Week Committee 4g Prom Committee 3,4. BEN CONLEY NVORCESTER, III Lee College . . . Student Council 2, Track 3. DELORES MARY ZANETTI Dollg College . . . Class Council 1, ,3, Student Council 1,34 Executive Committee 4g GAA 1,2,3g Variety Show 4 fChairma.nJg French Club 3,45 National Honor Society 45 Seniorium 4, FTA I. KATHLEEN ZAPF Kitty Riding Master. WILLIAM ZYDYCRYN Zidd Service . . . Intramurals Ig Rifle Club 1. WAYNE JOHN ZYCMUND Zigfried Marine Corps . . . Intramurals 2,4. IEANNE MARIE DESMOND jean College. CAMERA SHY: Constance Burbank Linda Nagy Henry Hanselman Edward Pergola Herbert Maibauer Hedy Poplowski Edward M. Manris, Ir. Daniel Ro ers Henry McVay oseph A.gI'rivisone, Ir, Ted G. Miller ohn Robert VanCampenhout 172 The Class of 1966 in Retrospect September, 1959: As we recall it, we were standing before a door of what we desperately hoped was Building 5, staring at all the strange faces. We had just arrived on the hill and from then on, for the next four years, we would be doomed to be the lowest ranking class - career freshmen and yet not even that high at that moment. Yet, despite our disappointment at having been born too early for the coming junior high schools, we rallied to the opportunity of building a high school. As eighth graders, we laid the foundation of class govern- ment, having elected Franklin Chu our president. And we stood back amid cardboard penguins to applaud Frank DeRespinis and Dolly Zannetti, twist champs of our Winter Wonderland. A class picnic at Thompson Park highlighted the year - even Mrs. Sweeney and Mr. Chapkowski ran in the three-legged race! Then, after much ado and a mov- ing-up ceremony in the auditorimn, we were promoted to the rank of . . . Freshmen and officially welcomed into EBHS, Though still very much underclassmen. We elected Celia Wristen to lead us in our new year. Somehow the cinder blocks became a palace and many of us had visions of making the school over in our image as our honorary certificates became official club memberships. For a few of us, scheduling was a disappointment when we discovered that a history of hayfever on your father's side was a prerequisite for Ancient and Medieval History. Remember the one-eyed Lucky cats that stared at us during our Seven Come Eleven dance? Or the disgusted looks on the faces of our advisors, Miss Roth and Mr. Al- brecht, as they steadied the ladders for the star hangers ? Before leaving the stars, we whisked olf our finals with un- studied ease and elected a new slate of officers to guide us through our . . . Sophomore Year Franklin Chu resumed the presidency as we affected a cold, aloof superiority for the first time in our careers here and began to terrorize freshmen. Our sophomore fund-raising project, movies, would become a tradition at the high school. Members of oiu' class, flushed with joy at being re- leased from the onus of being low men on the totem pole, joined every activity imaginable. Patty Lauzon, Chu and DeRespinis took top billing in the drama club's production of the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta The Mikado. The class trip to the New York World's Fair somehow brought an early end to our study that year - Julius Caesar seemed to end after Act I! The summer fun began in May as Mrs. Krull, a new adviser, joined us in stuffing pastel colored napkins into chicken wire for our sophomore ball decorations. Rhapsody in Blue. Time struggled on and we moved, even upward, into another year as . . . Juniors Upperclassmen at lastl We took a month to reorganize. Frank DeRespinis was our new president. Mr. Nusbaum, another new advisor, backed our class president's enthusi- astic campaign to promote school spirit and boost class participation to new heights. Our candy sale was a tremen- dous success, raising over 83,000 for our prom fund. juniors were honored by state athletic and music associa- tions and were tapped by National Honor Society and Mu Alpha Theta. In the Spring, Mrs. Kivirahk joined forces with Mr. Nus- baum and the class oliicers to complete preparations for the long-awaited prom - Ebb Tide. 'Then we plunged into a hectic and lively campaign for next year's officers. Chu became Student Council president and Craig Schae- fer, Senior Class president. The timorous 8th graders had become not too serious juniors on the threshold of their Senior Year And we leave the telling of that to the classmates of ours who became editors of The 1966 Emerald. - Leslie Hain si 1 is W iw.-0 . Lx .Q 3 xg X X smwwxx-wife 1 ,R ' :Wm X E fl . . 3 www X w W ' - . k E. S, Q l . X X X - I , A iw 1, ss. in x 3 , X 3 Xiifqgnisk Q5 - Q S Q AX S+ H Q Mx N . lf E f' .- ww ' Q .,k - N , . . A sl? Q. , Q 0 S N Q X ev 32 Jg' 3:1 mih, ,gk Q QEAETCS 8.8 ggi E 1. . X X 'N rx Fi ,tl x I Xygx . f . , x Q Q- If . far m si fx i lk ,Ill K C . SS . - . u- la Y: ' T ns' .r if 3. ' 'Sm' x. , -9, 259, 3 a x f A pi 5 Q .2 s. g. f- . ik. . , A ' ? . i ' 'I ' ' 176 .f is I. Abbott, C. Adams, Agug- liaro, Allen, M. Armhold, R. Astorino, S. Ayers R. Baily, NV. Bannon, W. Beck, I Bell, A. Benko, H. Br rg, H. Berger I. Berrini, D. Bertelsen, B. Beran T. Bialy, M. Biehl, S. Bieri, R Black I. Blumig, C. Bodley, M. Borup, S Bowman, M. Branco, I. Brown, M Brush j. Bruton, j. Burgeson, W. Burns N. Cadmus, I. Calabro, C. Campo I. Canazaro M. Caruso, R. Casey, C. Chap- kowski, 1. Chaplowski, W. Cher- nowitz, K. Cickay, D. Clark K. Dunn, S. Dziubeck, G. Ebner B. Eckert, N. Eden, R. Edley, W Edwards L. Ehrick, R. Ellison, G. Engel, K. Engelhardt, M. Falkowski, B. Fan- non, M. Fauntain A. Fenton, Femandes, P. Fer- rara, I. Fetzko, D. Fickling, S. Fitch, R. Flanagan S. Flanagan, C. Fraser, D. Fromme, K. Gatarz, D. Germain, P. Giacobbe, J. Giamarese L. Gillespie, L. Godfrey, B. God- lewski, I. Goley, L. Gorham, I Graves, P. Greene B. Griffin, B. Gross, R. Grote, M. Guerriero, B. Gundersen, I. Gur- rion, K. Hahn G. Clark, G. Clay, J. Clough, C Coabey, j. Coady, I. Cohee, E Cominsky B. Compton, W. Compton, R Cotter, A. Covello, G. Cox, I Croce, L. Cuddy B. Currie, S. Czapf, C. Czochan- ski, R. Daniels, R. Darragh, M. Darry, P. DeAngelo R. Dix, D. Domanski, Domby, M. Donohue, T. Dowling, C. Dreyling, E. Duffy 3 fr ,ff E965 WWW Cx K. Haller, W. Halpin, I. Hamilton L. Hamilton, R. Hanclelman, R: Hansen, A. Hardy M. Hayes, D. Hayston, B. Heeny M. Heiry, F. Heflner, P. Helmers j. Helstowski H. Hendricks, I. Henry, B. Hessek, W. Hetler, C. Herge, L. Higgins, S. Higgins L. Helsky, C. Hoffman, K. Hoover, T. Hydrusko, M. Italiano. L. jack- son, N. Jacobsen L. Iefimowicz, M. Iohnson, B jones, D. joyce, D. lung, K. Ka dingo, I. Kady M. Karell, I. Kasics, R. Katz, M Keiser, R. Keithler, P. Kelly, C Kennedy , 4 . l 2 P. Kerr, D. Kerwin, M. Keuhns, R. 1, L . E R 4, S Kiessling, N. Kirk, B. Klauss, A. .X P l x, 3 1 .7 Kobesak '5 A li - A - QQ L I 'IS Q A , Q -ag, an l s Q 1. . K. Kobesak, R. Konigsberg, j. Koty, 9 1 A. 1 -- , . E. Kovacs, S. Kowalski, S. Kowal- . Q ' Q N ' X i 3 Q ski, M. Kravit L Y, 'P S K-X ,' . K I y fi J -3' . T w W 4: :,,. 4 R. Krosnowski, L. Krupa, I. Ku- Za. V .,,.Q', charski, D. Kulessa, I. Kulesza, M. Q f , x all . Kull, K. Kuso - 1 ' N P - 1 --' Q 'xv .K is . 1 5 I. f . T .f?1..,x-.xiii K . 1 2 A lg ' sy. 515- 1 . 1 -J' -if ' if '. - 1 H. LaChance, S. Lamm, D. La- L Rosh, j. Lasko, W. Lawrence, B. GX '. 5193 Leach, B. Lederman I V K X Ns I f P M-L.. G. Lee, T. Legodais, P. Lenahan, i . W K J. Lenta, L. Linden, C. Lins, S. Lo- ,A 1 Y kk 'al cha A 99-S 5 -15 V .I , fi ,R . 'K 1 H R. Loman, R. Lucas, M. Macaluso, X -5- 1 M. Man-one, R. Marshall, T. Mar- V . X vuglio, A. Masoni A V F K l fs 3 11 . Y r 1 i fa K iffy? i A 1 .w A is P. Matecki, G. May, M. McAdams, if no ,E K. McAnneny, K. McGninness, P. , P ' ? P McGuire. D. McKnight la . f ? A ' X I l x ' f . - . N-J , . 5' L., L R. Medagua, G. Mendez, 1. Men- - - . jg 8 nona, 1. Mershon, J. Meyer, j. 'QQ ' A S P Mevers, C. Michalak t ix ' K Q i K. l , K , ig P 0' c. Mickeu, R. Mahok, E. Miner, F. 5 X5 Q' as -P X sv ,M ' Miller, R. Miller, S. Morganstein, A , . P . it P P. Morrow x 'vin ,' - ' L S - . Q , L -- i .5 . .V 'S .gf 3 QR A ' fi W v M T. Morton, H. Murphy, I. Musta- Lg 41 S v ' L kas, RA MYHCII, G. Nmh. A. Neiss, wx x. .. .. .N K , mmf . 'Q 'P I ' , , - J I. Newmeyer H f S L 55 e' 179 J Q 1:, i ' wg St 'Srl' ,s ,x ' X T W . - - N A ' ' 1 ev M. fm -.1 , R Q X Q X Q Q . s s. X My u up W x r Q , .Q .. ., . ... .. . i.f.vsos mf x 2 5 ,Q-4 - ,.,.' . W X ,X , is if S, 'm K- Si X3 W gi 180 K. Nichols, P. Niclas, 1. Niglio, M. Norton, R. Novello, W. Nowicki, C. O'Neill B. Oscroba, E. Osowiecky, j. Osowski, H. Ossif, C. Pack, 1. Pa- dilla, G. Paulson P. Pavlak, j. Pelham, R. Perkins, 1. Petersak, M. Petrena, M. Piat- kowski, R. Poet D. Pohlig, M. Pomanek, D. Pomar- ici, K. Popovitch, T. Prusakowski, C. Rabin, R. Rambo R. Rayhon, S. Redford, P. Remm, M. Ristich, R. Rogan, W. Rogers, D. Rommes j. Rosekrans, L. Roth, I. Rothstein, B. Rudders, K. Rodziewicz, B. Rugg, P. Russell 1. Russo, 1. Rusuk, H. sm. P. Samson, W. Scimone, C. Samu. M. Sanford C. Samak, C. Scararnozzino, T. Schalhoub, B. Schlosberg, G. Schluer, I. Schmitt, R. Schulter B. Schwab, W. Schwarz, V. Scoles, C. Seaman, T. Selvaggio, Semon, L. Servis P. Servis, I. Shoblock, I. Sheridan, G. Sherwood, D. Shipers, W. Shank, M. Sichta L. Smith, R, Sowa, S. Speldos, C Spiro, W. Stefan, D. Stocks, R Stolzer D. Stromenger. I. Strubel, I. Sut- ton, G. Syvertsen, K. Syvertsen, D Syczepanik, B. Tabor I. Talan, H. Teitelbaum, M. Terra- nova, D. Timoner, B. Tittel, I. To- mori, B. Tribiano L. Trivisone, D.Truit, B. Ulyak. C. Unice, M. Vaganek, P. Vail, R. Varadi S. Vasta, B. Vanllouten, S. Volk, B Walling, C. VVamock, K. Weber, B. Wellington B. Welsh, R. Wendling, R. Wide man, K. VVilliams, D. Wohl, I Wojciechowicz, L. Wolff P. Wondoloski, A. Wong, L Wright, B. Wybranski, Yorke, R Zelehoski, C. Zohovetz SOPHOMORES F A ...K Quail I. Adams, I. Adamski, B. Alford, B Allen, L. Allen, B. Ames, I. Andru- cyk M. Anglin, D. Armstrong, B Arose, C. Bader, E. Bain, S. Baker, B. Balogh W. Banziger, R. Baran, I. Barko, I Barth, E. Bateau, F. Beans, I. Bearer B. Belansky, L. Belansky, VV. Bell, R. Belavich, D. Begley, 1. Benko, T. Bennett K. Beringer, I. Berlin, Berry, T. Bibby, D. Blajian, B. Bolb, W. Bolton A. Boode, L. Bonnan, R. Borgs- tede, D. Bors, K. Bosies, L. Bott, R. Bouch D. Bowman, I. Boxrer, G. Boyd, C. Broker, K. Brown, W. Broyles, A. Bucker C. Bunting, T. Bunyon, C. Burke, D. Burtick, L. Callahan, L. Cal- vert, R. Campbell L. Cantor, L. Carson, F, Casti- glione, G. Chohamin, I. Ciak, D Ciecko, G. Coady D. Cobleigh, T. Cockill, B. Cohee, L. Cohen, B. Cohn, S. Collester, B. Compton T. Conasgcguk, K. Conovour, B Cook, B. Cook, K. Cook, B. Coop- er, V. Crompton D. Crosbey, j. Cummings, C. Czaph, A. Dabroski, D. Dainty, R. Daley, L. Dan M. DeBella, G. DeCarolis, S. De- Criscio, S. Dell, G. DeStefano, 1. Devarti, A. Dichario M. Donnelly, M. Dougherty, VL. Douglis, E. Dowling, R. Drugos. R- Dubin, S. Dutton K. Eberhardt, T. Ebinger, 1. Edels- tein, B. Eigen, G. Elefante, I. El- kins, D. Elliot I. Engelhardt, H. Ennis, K. Emy, G. Fairchild, P. Falkowski, V. Fal- kowski, L. Fish B. Fisher, K. Foran, S. Foyles, K. Faran, B. Frank, D. Freeman, C. Freeman T. Gallagher, J. Garcia, I. Gar- rabrant, M. Gaydas, J. Gaymor, M. Geiger, S. Genung C. Gerard, W. Gibbard, I. Gill, G. Glagola, C. Glinsky, Gobbo, G. Goodsell T. Grahowski, E. Graham, D. Grattan, K. Grote, D. Groves, C. Gundersen, S. Gunther B. Hadzimichalis, K. Hain, I. Hal- ka, 1. Hall, D. Hansen, H. Harding, C. Hardy D. Hartford, L. Helluk, M. Heluk B. Herbert, D. Herdigan, A. Her man, M. Hess S. Hess, D. Heyden, R. Hillenmar E. Hirsch, K. Hoelzer, G Holdsworth, S. Horvath P. House, R. Hoyt, B. Hunt, C Husbands, L. Imbmgno, C. In drisano, D. jackson E. jackson, C. jvames, R. Johnston M. Kafarski, R. Kahora, W. Karnin ski, Katz K. Keating, B. Kelmer, I. Kirczow D. Kish, M. Kish, C. Klitsch, S KMPP E. Knoblock, I. Kootman, W. Koehler, S. Koft, M. Koogler, M. Kowzun, C. Kraft C. Krakowski, A. Kreilis, A. Krieg- man, A. Kruk, R. Krunynsky, G Lacina, R. Larkins S. Larlee, T. LaVia, B. Lawrence, B. Legg, G. Lennon, A Leonard E. Levine M. Linden, R. Lindgren, P. Litz B. Lock, B. Lockhart, C. Lorah, R Luma Y 3 1 Q' 5 xy x. 'eg Q ' ix W' 5 '- ,If ,f 9. Wa g' S 8 JE . 'f M ff- .ff . W-'1 . , - -. we , b sr :ig e in Y Q, if Q' X La! ' ir- SX' i fel KL, .QB ' x :7. W ' .,4, Q 2, ' ',4 351 Y , zm,q.f'f Q . Jw-g g ' X ,Q gg Nh i wr . i .- fl - 'K' y F . . Q 'I . - 1 F K k,. , l Q. az K Q: l rs .rv s .. K i . .gif N 9 ' - ' i S . ' ' -Q I A X' xx Sir ix K' Q, . fc: X ' C 'Q if . i k . X r - . ,xt L- ,F ' Y . is 'f Q' l i X 56.5 .J ., ,- v if 1 5'-l -- L? W - Q 5 Tran -f fl , fy' . +151 5' A ' ' Y '-- -.'.. ' i Q ' . f iq M. Machampin, B. Mackay, G. Mackenzie, D. Maimone, E. Mak- oski, M. Malone, M. Manchini S. Marchuk, K. Marozine, F. Mar- shall, R. Matlin, G. Matts, M. Mazer, C. McCann B. McBriarty, T. McBriarty, L. Mc Dowell, L. McFie, S. McGarvey, P. McGrath, C. McGuire D. McGuire, T. McNeff, H. Meiss- ner, B. Melkowits, M. Mercovich, C. Metzger, M. Meucci S. Michalap, R. Mierta, K. Mi- gliore, H. Miller, 1. Miller, I. Mill- er, R. Miller M. Minkin, Mixner, A. Mohar, P. Mohar, Molinario, S. Morris, B. Morrow 187 . 'wa 61X ' ,gr 'Y ' Y . .S K X..-4' m -n,A P A, ff. . ' ll: NS: ,-.' Si 'Y L K AM, , .mix 5 S LM pi . 5' . V kk ' nal X ' ' C w- C - wr s . . ,. K N. . ..'. '-'Q , if . ' A sh XX' gif? A 5 is l gm A '8 L x L., ' K r . .Q VX A 'qi gn, cl 'lf - ' ag.. M D rn -'+ , Q . K ' I nba X. p , , , . . 1. X K 6 y . . . Q ,G Q 3- S' im. .X Q-Q. L s Cf' v ,- S. Iu- -swinf, 1 .. . Q sw x . .lil Aix at il V 73 Q 3 42 H45 Sf NA 1? , .X . B. Moschel, M. Moses, G. Mur- phey, R. Murray, B. Nealy, E. Ni- edzwiecki, E. Neilson B. Ness, A. Newman, C. Newman, D. Norrell, H. Noonan, M. O'Con- ner, P. O'Heam B. Okanieski, L. Olsen, C. O'Neill, K. Osowski, C. Pack, C. Packard, I. Paitakan G. Palko, D. Papp, G. Pardun, S. Pardun, Parky, P. Parsons, F. Patrick M. Pauciello, C. Pawson, D. Peger, L. Pekarski, B. Penman, P. Perla, K. Peterson L. Peterson, V. Petrjcik, B. Phil- lips, P. Pipero, D. Pogoszeiuski, C. Pomanek, S. Porter B. Potasznik, A. Powers, S. Pravdo I. Prefatch, D. Priest, P. Protko, C Puff B. Pulltole, I. Pychevicz, R. Ra- gone, R. Ramage, S. Rameri, S. Ra- mirez, D. Raphel I. Rebele, G. Reid, B. Reilly, R Resko, S. Richards, A. Rice, H. Ri- gas 1. Ripash, D. Rishak, B. Ritz, 1. Rodziewicz, D. Roe, P. Ralston, E. Rooney K. Romez, D. Rose, E. Rubenstein R. Iucls, R. Rupp, Ruppert, Rl Rush M. Russo, S. Ryan, Rynk, Sak- el, 1. Salzmann, P. Sauvigne, K. Schalhoub K. Schallock, R. Scher, A. Schin, L Schumacher, D. Schwenk, P. Seen- is, R. Sellers S. Setzer, P. Shafer, V. Shaputnik, H. Shank, D. Shultz, I. Shultz, A. Sicola 1. Siebem, C. Siegel, R. Siegerd, D. Skiba, M. Shea, D. Sledzik, I. Smalley B. Smith, C. Smith, D. Smith, E. Smith, C. Smith, Sabin, P. Sohn- lein S. Solar, M. Soto, A. Spishock, W. Staheli, C. Stanik, T. Stapleton, S. Stark B. Stepps, L. Stem, M. Stem, C. Steuben, I. Steuber, D. Stokes, D. Stopyra N. Stuhler, I. Suchon, S. Sullivan, S. Switlyk, K. Szaplinski, Szcges- ry, T. Tarantino B. Terhue, B. Theodore, L. Thom- . as, E. Tannenbaum, Tieze, P. Titus, B. Tocco X. A A gk .1 1 . ' T. S ' K if , K A S I SHA at Six S U S 5 Q if rl ' I :V ,r S X . Q 'X .O . .f . 5 , - f' , A X ig: ' I 7' ,,.. A ' . gf Z ' - if .laik s if r 'Q fl X K, X rx f. . , Q 5-5 K . - aff Cl ' f be: D ff! ' N J, . ffl 7 if s if 2 190 P. Tomori, L. Tumer, D. Turrett, D. Ur, M. Van der Noot, L. Volpe, I. Walchan 9. ww 1: . ,Q L A .sm 9 by fl L. Al sail .- . ws: X A 'Q . R , B. walling, K. vvalling, R. NValus, Q. 'L . K s - .fi W K. WVargo, K. Wasis, I. Waznee, E. L LLL 'K Lt L L ' Lfx L Webster P - W f X 'N 5 Q 5 , 1, . y j Q . . , .59 N. ..h.. . 1 P, XVedlick, S. Weissman, A. G' - -'T K. ' L .ff Wells, P. Xvelsby, B. NVengrgynek, cl I 35 5' L V l 1 ,F 1. VVest, H. White - J L A HL' lf .. .. - 2- xi . S T , -sw ' I. Wieczorek, K. Wilder, G. A it W Q A Wildman, c. Williams, M. wil- 1- A nw 1 A' hams, D. Wilson, G. Winn 's L . w X X . , sf . , X S I IL E I 1 f . I. tl, LL 5 .L L . ' gl . ml' Q , 5, N. Wnek, c. wojgik, P. VVolf, C 31' ' i r Q . , Wondoloski, A. Wong, B. wood , ,Q 551- ' . s R. xvoodmn . -.P sy Q. ng W: f, W s L! f D. Woscyna, B. wrislen, K. Wy- J QM E ' N LL branski, B. VVyckoH', B. YVonn, G X F' X' H L Yablonski, E. Yommg L a ww gs L . 4 as 9 6 l sr FQ L 3. K L. Zager, I. Zarzana, D. Zastko, B .x my A , K X , . Zavitz, QI. Zawaski, M. Zimmer- L LN . ff LL L L 'L L ' man, C. Zohovetz, B. Zwonet- , if fs rg.. ss . L gchelg lf.. xx - 'ff L +L ' 'L LL 5 flue sf, zflll 3 i FRESHMEN wig 'Wir W Fifi . . .X at Q X MQQSIQ. mm wk N, Sw. .Q X M ws 'NNQ V :Xxx Q N MM..M:'f Yv Ny? Q. . ,K 'M x. S! Sis X W .. Q N X. M 3 W S 2 Y 3 i S Q Q 5 3 5 ,NS N + . ....,. 4 . ,L ii .Q . gem W if Q ff . .yn .5 ig X eg Qi, , M QE xx H X 1 45:2 xx R ii Q f ' W- x l A X il H: r , JR Q e B' B1 im .K-W i ? x-.b Q 3 ' ,s -P 3 . . M r S ,J X X 1 B. Adams, D. Adams, R. Adams, P Agugliaro, T. Agugliaro, K. Ankas S. Antipin R. Apmann, I. Aquino, S. Ashby R. Bachmann, K. Baird, 1. Baker E. Balajdhy W. Baller, K. Bames, L. Barone, A. Bartel, H. Bartel, H. Baume, W. Baurias E. Becze, Bedrick, Beerman, B. Belavich, I. Bell, S. Biehl, 1. Bi- gos B. Bishop, B. Bieri, 1. Blasingame, S. Blum, E. Bundy, Boring, I. Borsdam B. Bott, L. Blumig, I. Boume, K. Bours, T. Bozza, K. Brasko, E. Bralczyk T. Brewer, S. Brooks, L. Bross, M. Brovo, D. Brookman, E. Browa, B. Brown I. Brown, K. Brown, N. Brown, R. Brownlee, B. Bruce, G. Bruton, B. Bruzdowski L. Buchanan, L. Buck, K. Burbank, M. Butcher, B. Butt, R. Bymes, E Cahill I. Cambon, D. Carrick, P. Carroll I. Carson, E, Chagnon, F. Chang I. Chateauvert y u 1 G. Chemowitz, R. Chibbaro, R Chirco, I. Chlan, L. Chrapowicki M. Christ, L. Ciak T. Ciccarelli, F. Cicerale, Cickay C. Clark, G. Clark, N. Clegg, V Clegg D. Coccaro, 1. Cohen, P. Cohen, I Compton, C. Condon, F. Connelly G. Conover C. Conslick, E. Cook, S. Costelle, B. Crane, J. Csak, G. Cuddy, D. Cullinan M. Cunningham, C. Currie, R Czochanski, M. Dalton, P. Dam D. Daniels, C. Daras L. Daskiewicz, T. David, P. Davis C. DeCoccaro, D. Dietka, E. Del tieurf, M. DeLucia K. Denton, S. Dereckailo, D. De- Stefano, B. Devlin, D. Dewitz. P Dibling, B. Dobryznski I. Domino, I. Donahue, M. Dona- hue, K. Dorrian, A. DuBois, B. Dubovick, T. Dvorszak C. Dwyer, 1. Eaker, C. Eckert, L. Elefante, j. Embody, S. Engel, D. Eregan I. Erickson, I. Fahey, I. Farkas, S. Fate, I. Fershovics, D. Fenton, E. Ferber xx for six as v si , v 5 xg Y if git .SHN-6--33 A we D. Goddard, P. Goldeski, B. Gocl- lewski, I. Gonder, M. Graifeo, C. Crondzki, W. Greenberg I. Greengarten, S. Greene, A. Grennen, R. Cross, S. Grote, L. Grotenstein, M. Gnmdt I. Gnmgarten, S. Gudaidis, C Hahn, B. Haller, A. Halsy, P. Ha- lyaman, B. Hanley I. Hanlon, L. Hansen, I. Hardy, A Haremza, B. Hartman, D. Hart man, N. Hartman A. Hastings, B. Hatsis, R. Haug, I Hawks, I. Hayes, H. Enrich, D Heint I. Henckler, P. Henninger, G. Her bert, D. Herzlich, B. Heydom, A. Higgins, D. Hill I. Femino, F . Ferrara, T. Ferrara, R. Fijife, L. Fisher, C. Flag, K. Flynn D. Freeland, L. Fougere, R. F ried- man, S. Friedman, M. Froling, S. Frutchey, C. Galbraith N. Gall, T. Gartarz, 1. Gartner, A. Gataize, D. Gatsch, M. Gault, 1. Gerwig G. Giacobbi, A. Gillen, Y. Gilles- pie, A. Giroux, K. Glodowski, T. Gleclrner, I. Clutch we-N X . ,r Q it I af Q , L , I f ,filo Q o Q Q u 5, xfw' ai . 5 A S QS .-.X it z . ,x il X . 3 .Q 5 Y . if 2 K X' lgof Q N? X -X 3 . .X . 2 Q. if - X R 21, . kg X s R ' in 197 C. Holland, D. Holtaway, S. Hoop er, C. Huck, N. Hunter, S. Hutter 1. Hydrusko I. lndri, jablowski, jay, K. jer- nee, D. Johnston, A. joynes. A. Irm- tic P. Kady, P. Kalber, S. Kananovich, M. Kane, L. Kasner, T. Kayes, L Kelly K. Kelmer, I. Kinard, B. Kirk, M. Kirwin, R. Kish, Klebacher, E. Klecan C. Klett, B. Klincsak, 1. Klose, B. Koo, D. Koehler, Knonen, N. Ko- styshyn R. Korpman, D. Knwit, C. Kro- nowski. R. Kroon, D. Krotosek, K. Kupper, D. Kwiatkowski .,. .1 .iii t is Q - 'f' - mf. R DQ .e zz 1 R,-9 N -V. . E x S Q . ,E 4 X 3 f' Y . 1 X. 3 'sr ' . x ' K v w ra-re f . . :aww . w X 'fx vw ..- Q Y - . 2 QS' X .. RG A is . . 5, W .xl . . h :Q X sg Q .3 , 5 N F X . fwef .. .- ' ffaui.. ' V' H 'iizg .. .H 4. Q..- 1.5 . ., ...sw f :wir ' Q s Y K f il. TIN X . 'Q S . 1 '56, fm , I YSQ SY 1... is . .Q , xL.EX ll ' G. Labor, G. LaForge, VV. Lahey P. Lamo, L. Lanzo, P. Leach, S Lenclenmann R. Leppler, D. Letcher, A. Le wandowski, D. Limeux, V. Line berger, R. Linfante, P. Lolloy I. LoSardo, S. Lublinski, K. Lu bowicld, S. Lupco, P. Luschinski R. Lyon, S. Macys M. Magretto, B. Maharty, D Maies, Makowsky, S. Mandel, B. Manetta, D. Mansfield D. Markham. D. Marsh, M. Mar- shall, I. Matthews, D. Maver, D Muzures, D. Mazzel B. McCall, K. McKluskey, A. Mc Cully, I. McDermott, W. McDow ell, D. McFarland, M. McHale L Moora D Muir B Mullen P Murphy D. Murray S. Mustakas L. Nagy I. Neiss, R. Nemes, D. Nersovich D. Newman, R. Niglio, T. Nixon, I Nourk I. Novello, S. Nugent, D. O'Con- nell, B, Oehrlein, M. O'Neill, M. O'Reilly, K. O'Rourke D. Orey, M. Ostrolf, B. Ostrowski, L. Ostrowski, T. Owens, G. Pack, S. Pack I. Page, I. Pardi, I. Pardy, D. Park- erson, R. Pawson, S. Pence, I. Perci- accant 0 C. Perkins, B. Perry, K. Petzold, R. Pierce, B. Pleva, C. Ploplis, I. Poir- ier y I. McKay, H. McKinley, L. McKin zie, D. McMullen, P. McMullen R. McOwen, S. Medaglia T. Medric, B. Meiher, 1. Meinroth C. Mele, E. Mendaglia, D. Mesti- chelli, E. Meyers K. Meyer, R. Mihok, B. Miller, M Miller, W. Miller, R. Minnehaw P. Mole B. Mollema, R. Molton. M. Mon- roe, T. Moomjy, B. Morris, V Morris, K. Mott L. Poletti, J. Pollack, C. Pamarici, B. Potlukski, L. Preller, P. Quigley, L. Rademacher C. Radick, F. Railerty, D. Ranvo- vetz, K. Reese, B. Reimbold, 1. Reuter, T. Reynolds 1. Rigas. R. Rigici, C. Ripisi, S. Ris- tich, D. Ritter, M. Robbs, B. Robinson I. Robinson, A. Romutowski, A. Rothschild, D. Ruperto, I. Russell, S. Salvas, D. Samford D. Sandor, Sangiorgio, I. Santo- nostasi, Santisi, R. Santo, E. San- tore, P. Sarnak T. Sasso, R. Seilla, D. Schab, I. Schin, B. Schlegel, R. Schlesinger, D. Schlueter B. Schmidt. E. SL-hreir, B. Schroth. N. Scola, S. Scott, W. Scupp, I. Seel L. Seiden, R. Serencsex, P. Sellers, W. Selnow, J. Sgroi, N. Seigel, G. Siemons S. Shamko, B. Shaw, I. Sherwood S. Shiff, R. Shilling, D. Shmink, Sh utsky R. Skorupsky, K. Skidmore, N Skarznski, B. Slovak, M. Smalclone P. Smaldone, B. Smith R. Smith, D. Smith, M. Struble, G. Stuart, I. Summers, F. Surina, L. Sypher B. Szczepanik, M. Szczesny, E. Tan, N. Tanasy, M. Terhune, K. Thomas, L. Thompson E. Tomasko, D. Tompkins, 1. Tu- nilla, F. Traflcante, L. Uborka, D. Ulcej, P. VanderLeuuw j. Varga, K. Varga, D. Vengen, T. Victor, B. Volpe, B. Walker, R. Walker B. Walters, I. Walters, P. Wasio- wich, F. Wasiowich, W. Wearnel- rod, B. Weatherford, K. Weaver C. Webster, R. Weck, B, Weigel, C. Weinbrenner, B. Werta, C. Widman, L. Wiebold L. Wieland. M. Wilcoqk, D. Wil- liams, Williams, P. NVilliams, S. Williams, T. lVilliams j. Witman, S. Witkowski, P. WVit- mari, K. Wolter, C. Womelsdorf, L. Wood, D. Wooten M. Wristen, 1. Yakubowski, E. Yorke, M. Yorke, A. Zaabadick. Zager, K. Zeno S. Ziachuk, E. Zlrch, M. Zogg, I. Zuckerman. S. Zuczek, G. Zupeck, T. Zyshrwski V? 5 fx H' x A , 5lf!'Q.f Q SXT I ' Q WT? -: . - 4- - 9 i:Pi: mfbgtzif . M Wm Fx ENR '3'-. ' 5 S- 5 5- . ' xiwnasf '15-fem-if mf? 1 wi - is-Ni -5 K 2-fi if A x f-rgfrf-fggHMi4 . 1 K, L X' . ,wX.g?-fi-VH-X kx,1f- 51 - X. mx x fliffbwa X K . ' M 51 A ,ff -' f is ,K ff -5 x f igfw-wk-1 T K Sfffxa 1' KS K Q - f f . 'J X . 1-Q SX -v. N. .Q E . : Forgive my grief for one removed, Thy creature, whom I found so fair. I trust he lives in thee, and there I find him worthier to be loved. Forgive these wild and wandering cries, Confusions of a wasted youthg Forgive them where they fail in truth, And in thy wisdom me wise. From In Memoriam, A.H.H. Alfred, Lord Tennyson IN MEMORY OF KEITH ALLEN RAPHAEL 1948-1963 ll 1.1! o - T WMM Za! Congrafulafions and lhe besi of luclc! We ai Thomas are proud of 'rhe part we have had in helping +0 malce your classbook a permanenr reminder of your school years, recording wiih pholo- graphs one of fhe happiesf and mosl' excifing limes of your life! We hope +ha'r, iusf as you have chosen us as your class phofographer, you will conlinue ro lhinlc of Thomas Sfudios when you wan+ phofographs fo help you remember ofher momenfous days 'ro come! When you choose Thomas porlraifs, you are sure of the fines? craffsmanship ai fhe mosi moderafe prices! TH0lVlA A TUDIU Foremoslr School Phofoqraphers in 'rhe Easf IIIWWWWWMI If you are going to college, you ought to consider fraternities . . . . For the college fraternity has a unique contribution to make to your education, one that cannot be dupli- cated in classroom or dorm. What's more, on campus after campus across this country, fraternities have established the reputation for themselves of being the leaders - in scholarship, in student life, in the activities and in sports. And for the freshman who finds it difficult to adjust from high school to college routine, who feels he is just another student number on a huge campus, whose home seems a million miles away, the fraternity, more often than not, is the deciding factor in his remaining in school. Delta Sigma Phi raternity THE FRATERNITY OF ENGINEERED LEADERSHIP Founded in 1899 at the College of the City of New York Found Today at 112 Colleges in the United States and Canada William G. Munyan, Area Supervisor Even after graduation, it is the fraternity that draws the alumni back to the campus. Surveys have shown that as high as ninety per cent of those alumni who con- tribute actively to their colleges' support are those who have been fraternity men. So we think you owe it to yourself to consider becoming a member of one of the many fraternities on our na- tion's campuses. And when you consider, look in on the Delta Sig chapter where you are. We know that you'll find a friendly wel- come . . . and probably a dozen or so good reasons for staying. .K . - I Booksellers and Stationers 391 and 393 George St New Brunswick, N.J. SINCE 1848 HANNA'S FLORIST 48 N. Main Street , Milltown, N.J. Fl.,- ies QUACKENBOSS FUNERAL HOME 7 I I 5 545-ooos 156 Livingston Ave. New Brunswick A Fine Spot for Juniors New Brunswick New Jersey HOME ' AUTO - BOAT ' BUSINESS ' LIFE - HEALTH JOHN FALLON INSURANCE AGENCY 380 Highway 18 East Brunswick, New Jersey O Phone 257-7100 You're Safe and Secure, Save Money Too Best Wishes fam SHELLEY'S COLLEGE BOOK STORE 108 Somerset Street New Brunswick, N.J. Ed' McConnell, Owner East B YU FISWICK Air-conditioned Academy of M u Sic Soundproof Studios Free Use of Instruments 'Z Phone 254-5995 ' V 228 Highway 18 Lessons, Sales and Repair 'Q 'E East Brunswick, N.J. ' Magnavox Organs DAVID B. MARSHALL COMPANY Real Estate - Insurance 524 HIGHWAY 18 EAST BRUNSWICK TELEPHONE 257-4444 ALFRED TOMCHUK JOHN TOMCHUK WAGON WHEEL INN HALL FOR HIRE - MEETING ROOM WEDDINGS - BANQUETS - AIR CONDITIONED 158 Joseph St. CL 4-9629 East Brunswick SECRETARIAL . . . ACCOUNTING . . . TYPEWRITING . . . .ff X 5 x 1 if Q sei f ' L, i 'f X, ' .ii Ye? K, ,K X ,Q 's Q X, t , CAREER IN BUSINESS BEGIN AT DRAKE New Jerseyys prestige co-ed Business College. Professional instruction plus the most modern fac'l't'es t chniques and equipment HSSUTC yOl1l' 6 SUCCESS. SINCE 1883 NEW IERSE Y,S F OREMOST BUSINESS COLLEGE COLLEGE OF BUSINESS Approved by the State of New jersey Department of Education. SCHOOLS CONVENIENTLY LOCATED THROUGHOUT NEW IERSEY Newark, Elizabeth, Orange, New Brunswick, Passaic, No. Plainfield ,L PHONE CH 7-6828 Mariano Press Letterpress and Offset PRINTING 13 TALMADCE ST. NEW BRUNSWICK, N CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1966 EAST BRUNSWICK HIGH SCHOOL P.T.A. TRANS-WORLD TELEGRAPHIC DELIVERY Mm wb 181 Main Street South River, NJ. CL 7-2357 We take pride in our profession . . . and in those who follow in our' Barbara Bennett '65 Susan Wachter '64 Pat Salonis '63 I Recipients of the scholarship awarded 'each year by dent who most nearly exemplifies the East Brunswick Education Association to the stu- and who will make teaching his ca EAST BRUNSWICK EDUCATION ASSC CL 7-1883 Best Wishes from FLOREK Plumbing 81 Heati Cream-o-Land Dairy JOE FLOREP Liao FLoRE+ New Brunswick, N.J. CH 7-1414 47 GORDON S'I SOUTH RIVER WAGNER-HETMAN AUTO SALES, INC. Rambler - Jeep - Honda Sales 81 Service Prospect St. 81 Turnpike Rd. South River, N.J. Phone 257-0656 I Sood Luck and Best Wishes from EBHS DRILL TEAM Celia Wristen Captain Sallie Volk Co-Captain Adviser 1 -I Mrs. Elizabeth Fitch i AMERICAN YEARBOOK COMPANY REPRESENTATIVE I WYNNE MURCHISON WNEW DIMENSION ENEW DIMENSION 'KNEW DIMENSION f NEW DIMENSION STUDIOS AND PLANTS: 'Af CAMBRIDGE,MARYLAND if HANNIBAL MISSOURI ik' TOPEKA KANSAS 'A' vISALIA CALIFORNIA LACKEY SALES 81 SERVICE, INC. AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR IMPERIAL, CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, VALIANT Highway 18 - Phone 254-2300 - East Brunswick, N.J. LOUIS E. REZEM MAIN STREET SOUTH RIVER, N.J. SOUTH RIVER METAL PRODUCTS, INC. 377-379 Old Bridge Turnpike East Brunswick, N.J. One of East Brunswick's Oldest Industries Best Wishes from IVIID STATE BOWL Old Bridge Turnpike East Brunswick, N.J. CL 4-1400 THE COMPLETE MEN'S AND BOYS' STORE Mi1ler's on the Mall IVlid-State IVIaII East Brunswick, N.J. THE PLACE TO GO FOR BRANDS YOU KNOW LAFFIN MAIN AND WATER STREETS SOUTH RIVER PHONE 254-2120 Be a Winner Your Goal After the Game M 81 S Cleaner The Crestwood 5 For Pizza Formal Wear and Rental Service Tasty Snacks Tuxedos for all Occasions 260 TURNPIKE 97-99 NWN ST- SOUTH RIVER, NIJ- SOUTH RIVER, N.J. Best Wishes to the Class of '66 UID ST E WMS, C00 fForn1erly South River Trust Co.Q The Friendbf Bankv Student Loans for College Expenses Available to Qualilied Persons, Under Provisions of The New Jersey Higher Education Assistance Authority Program FOR INFORMATION CONTACT EITHER OFFICE 215 Main Street Highway 18 8: Arthur St. South River East Brunswick M b fh FDIC CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF '66 Your Graduation Day Has Finally Arrived. What Lies Ahead? A college degree . . . a venture into the competitive world of business? Whatever your decision, set your goal with the determination to succeed and . . . PLAN FOR A SECURE FUTURE BY SAVING REGULARLY THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MIDDLESEX COUNTY 710 Turnpike Road East Brunswick South River - Spotswood - Jamesburg - Leisure World - Sayreville - Parlin Member FDIC and Federal Reserve System SCHWARTZ-TAUB PHARMACY 609 Highway 18 East Brunswick, N.J. Phone 254-0131 Arthur L. Taub, R.P. CLifford 4-6665 PETE'S LA-PIZZA The Best Name in Pizza PIES TO TAKE OUT Grandway Shopping Center Highway 18 CONGRATULATIONS, SENIORS FROM THE STAFF OF THE Gwowiw' KQM-rf BUILDING 7, ROOM 7C YOUR BEST BUYS IN SCHOOL SUPPLIES LOUISE Beauty Salon Personalized Hair Cutting Permanent Hair Waving Specialist in Hair-Coloring West Prospect St., Opposite Mid-State Mall, East Brunswick Phone 257-5756 Bill Lambert Jim Gaffney HERBERT CORNER G 8C L COINS T.V. CENTER 422 Ryders Lane East Brunswick BUY Phone CL 4-7580 SELL P.O. Box 738 TRADE Spotswood, NJ. Real Estate A Insurance I X- 254.7817 ' 5 4 Hobby House Flowers and Gifts AGENCY For All Occasions 281 Highway 18, East Brunswick 257-7800 230 Main Street South River CL 7-5000 215 Highway 18 East Brunswick National Assoc of Real Estate Boards 257-8128 Next to PAL SHO HY-WAY MUSIC CENTER ES One of America's Largest Musical Instrument Stores WE BUY, SELL 272 HIGHWAY 18 AND EXCHANGE EAST BRUNSWICK Albert Page, Prop. CLifford 4-2275 Mobile Radio Dispatch Service RUSSELL BLOODGOOD Plumbing 81 Heating Co., Inc. Air Conditioning - Septic Tank 81 Drainage - Sheet Metal Work SOUTH RIVER, N.J. 151 HILLSIDE AVE. Bernard Buck Air Photos, Inc. EDISON, N.J. An Emerald Photographer ii.. r PATRONS Adventure Co. Travel Agency . . . Mrs. Ahlgren . . . Allgiers Beverages . . . Alumni of '63 . . . Art Amos . . . Mr. and Mrs. Alex Amster and family . . . Linda Armhold . . . Art and Alice . . . Eddie Baird . . . Mrs. Leonard Baird, Ir .... Mrs. Leonard Baird, Sr. . . . Sophie Bakulewicz . . . Barb and jack . . . Mrs. Charles A. Barg . . . Alice Barrett . . . Mr. Fred Beans . . . Gail Bee . . . Bell Drug Company . . . Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Bell . . . Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Bennett . . . Terry Bennett . . . Mildred Bentivoglio . . . Stephen Bieri . . . Mr.and Mrs. Eugene Biringer . . . Mr. Kenneth Blumig . . . Mrs. Bugusz . . . Wende Bolton . . . Russell Borgstede . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Bott . . . Mr. and Mrs. joseph Boyle . . . Mr. and Mrs. K. Brown . . . Brunswick Sporting Goods . . . Betty Budish . . . Mr. BLu'd . . . Camille and Al . . . Linda Campos . . . Anne B. Cantor . . . Anne S. Cantor . . . Eric Scott Cantor . . . Lynn Io Cantor . . . Robert Lloyd Cantor . . . Wm. Mitchell Cantor . . . Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Cargill . . . Carolier Lanes . . . Carousel Paint Center . . . Walt Carroll . . . Mrs. Rudy Choborda . . . Kenneth Christensen . . . Mrs. F. Church, Jr .... Mrs. Helena Church . . . Circle Printing Company . . . Mr. and Mrs. Harry Clark . . . Mr. Robert Cobb . . . Mr. and Mrs. james Cochenour . . . Mrs. C. Cochrane . . . Columbia Tavern . . . Mr. and, Mrs. Connolly . . . Mr. and Mrs. Owille Cook . . . Cooks Boys . . . Corvette Powered . . . Crabiel Funeral Home . . . Craig and Holly . . . Emily Cromey . . . Debbie Csizmar . . . Dale and Sue . . . Mr. and Mrs. D. D'Angiolillio . . . Danny and Winnie . . . Stanley Danuszka . . . Mr. I. Darmiento . . . Mr. and Mrs. Stewart L. Davis . . . M. A. DeCarolis . . . Marilyn DeBoer . . . Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. DeBoer . . . Miss Barbara Anne Delaney . . . Tom DeNapoli . . . Mr. and Mrs. Joseph DePhino . . . Mr. and Mrs. DeStefano- . . . Mr. and Mrs. John A. DeVarti . . . Diane and Jeff . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Diamantis . . . june M. Diehl, R.N .... Mary Dob- rosky . . . Mr. and Mrs. Iohn Dobryzynski . . . Mary Ellen Dobry- zynski . . . Mr. George Duffe . . . Michael Duffy '65 . . . Mr. David Dunham . . . Mr. Julius Dvorak . . . Rick Dwyer . . . PATRONS Mr. James Earley . . . Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Eaton . . . Mr. and Mrs. Edward Eigen . . . Miss Karen Eberhart . . . Mr. Jack Ellis . . . Mr. and Mrs. John Emery . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Erdman . . . Muriel Estabrook . . . Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Evans . . . Everett and Sandee . . . Gladys Fallon . . . Josephine Fallon . . . Pat Ferrara . . . Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fine . . . Miggles Fish . . . Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Fleming . . . Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Flinchum . . . Mr. William Fberster . . . Sue Foiles . . . Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas Fortner . . . Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fox . . . Mrs. Fradsen . . . Mrs. B. Francesco . . . Frank . . . Frank's Barber Shop . . . Mrs. Eugene Friedman . . . A Friend . . . A Friend -. L.M. . . . Mrs. G. Frey . . . Dot Fromme . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fromme . . . Melanie Galbraith . . . C. Galganski . . . Garland and Kathy . . . Ida Gawlak . . . Ghost . . . George S. Gladden . . . Mrs. Glas . . . Mr. and Mrs. Williain Glenn . . . Linda Gorham . . . Jow Gwozdziewicz . . . Lawrence Goldsmith . . . Mr. and Mrs. Howard Goldstein . . . Mr. Ronald Gonier . . . John Grabowski . . . Mr. and Mrs. Orland W. Grant . . . Mr. and Mrs. Jerome F. Grattan . . . Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Grote . . . Mr.'and Mrs. John Gurriero . . . Gus . . . Mr. and Mrs. George Gutman . . . Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hahn . . . Sandy Hall . . . Debbie Hansen . . . Randy Hansen . . . Mr. C. Hardnett . . . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harkless . . . Mr. and Mrs. John E. Harrison . . . Mr. R. C. Hartlander . . . A. J. Hartman . . . Mr. A. Hartman . . . Tom Hassel Transport Company . . . Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Heines . . . Mrs. Heiry . . . Donald F . Heitz . . . Mrs. Ann Heitzenroder . . . Mr. and Mrs. Guy Heller . . . Herbie and Naomi . . . Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hess . . . Mrs. Charles F . Hickey . . . Alfred W. Hofer . . . Homeroom 62 . . . Homeroom 65 . . . Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Hooper . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Horne, Jr .... Mr. and Mrs. Louis Horvath . . . Mark Horvath . . . Dean and Mrs. S. J. House . . . Marlene Hudak '65 . . . Howard Hulick . . . Hutch . . . Jo and Joey . . . Joel and Georgiana . . . John and Lois . . . Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Jucks . . . Tom K'and Janet MCC . . . Mr. and PATRONS Mrs. Ben Kaczorowski . . . Mary and joseph Kady, Ir .... William Kady, Ir .... Mr. and Mrs. William Kady, Sr .... M. Kapp . . . Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Kay . . . The Keane Twins . . . Mitch Keil . . . Mrs. Viola Keiser . . . Thomas F. Kelly . . . Mrs. Andrew Kenahan . . . Kinney Shoes . . . Miss Christine E. Kirk . . . Mr. and Mrs. William D. Kirk, Ir .... Mr. and Mrs. james F. Kirkman . . . Judy Kirkman . . . Mrs. Frank Kish . . . Mr. and Mrs. jerry Klausner . . . F. Koenig . . . Mr. and Mrs. S. Kolo . . . Mr. and Mrs. David Kotler . . . Mr. and Mrs. George Krauzer . . . Mr. and Mrs. joseph Krypel . . . Lois Krypel . Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Kuchta . . . Mr. and Mrs. Kuhlthau . . . Mrs. Leo Kunkel . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Lambert . . . Mrs. M. Lander . . . joseph La- Torraca . . . Pvt. Lennie Leach . . . Mrs. Susan Leaf . . . Leneve Music School . . . Millie Leonard . . . Mr. and Mrs. G. David Lewis . . . Mr. and Mrs. Michael Libove . . . Linlin and Denden . . . Sally Lipari . . . Mr. Joseph Lublinski . . . Mrs. B. Lundy . . . Janie McCord . . . Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur B. McDowell . . . Miss M. McGillis . . . Mr. and Mrs. Martin McLaughlin . . . Mr. Iames P. McLoughlin . . . Mrs. Mary Ann McRae . . . Mr. and Mrs. Majewski . . . Michael Majewski . . . The Mall Barber Shop . . . James Martin . . . Mary Ann and Ronnie . . . Mr. and Mrs. Albert Medaglia . . . Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Medaglia and family . . . Mrs. Vincent Mele . . . Melissa and Erin . . . Karen and Elaine Meltzer . . . George Mendez . . . Mr. and Mrs. Merring . . . Mr. and Mrs. R. Mershon . . . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Meyer, Jr .... Mike and Pat . . . Mike and Patti . . . Mrs. A. Milazzo . . . The Mill End Shop . . . Walter E. Miller . . . Margie Mina . . . The Minkin Family . . . Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Molloy . . . Mrs. Rose Moore . . . Mr. Morgan . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Morgan . . . Fred Moser . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ioseph T. Munyan . . . Mr. and Mrs. Al Murasko . . . Charlotte Nawrocki . . . Mrs. Walter Neidlinger . . . Mr. and Mrs. Al Niedziecki . . . Leslie C. Nelson, Ir . . . Mrs. Frank Norton . . . julia Oakley . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Odenheimer . . . O. K. Building Company . . . Mr. Robert F. O'Su1livan . . . Mrs. Oszie PATRCNS . . . Suzanne Pardun . . . Pat and Arley . . . Theresa M. Patrick . . . Penny . . . Mr. R. J. Perugino . . . Mr. and Mrs. George W. Pinfield . . . Mrs. Peter Peters, Sr . . . Mr. William Petzold . . . Col. john I. Pidgeon . . . Pinky . . . Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Pollack . . . Mrs. Pomiesnieks . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Poynter . . . Mrs. Quigley . . . Helen Rabuck . . . Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Rabuck . . . Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Rado . . . john Ragone . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Raisis . . . The Richard Rands . . . Mrs. jane Redford . . . Mrs. Ann Reynolds . . . Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Reynolds . . . Richie and Lil . . . Anne Ritterson . . . Mr. and Mrs. joseph Romero . . . Mark Rosenthal . . . Mr. and Mrs. Murray Rosenthal . . . Mr. and Mrs. Alesio Rossi, Ir .... Ellen Rubenstein . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ruela . . . Grandma and Grandpa Rusak . . . Kathy Rusak . . . Mr. and Mrs. john Rusak . . . Ruthie and Freddie . . . Mrs. Gordon Ryan . . . Mrs. Anne Sabo . . . Mrs. Elizabeth Sabo . . . Mr. and Mrs. Sanders . . . Mr. Ioseph S. Sakowski . . . Mr. Robert Sarn . . . Mr. L. Sasso . . . Mrs. Sauders . . . Dr. and Mrs..Carl Schaefer . . . Leo F. Schlegel . . . Else Schnell . . . Schwartz Furniture Company, Inc .... Mr. and Mrs. julius Schwartz . . . jim Seel . . . Mr. Leon Sempkowski . . . Robert Sheehan . . . jim Sheridan . Sherry and Wayne . . . Shiela and john . . . Mr. and Mrs. I. Simmonds . . . Mr. and Mrs. Al Singer . . . Mr. John Skaritka . . . Mr. and Mrs. john Sliwka . . . Mrs. Karolina Sliwka . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Sliwka . . . George Smith . . . Joseph and Cecilia Smith . . . Mrs. Olga Solar . . . Ralph Sole . . . Andy Spadaro . . . Mr. and Mrs. Emery Spiros . . . Lily Staheli . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Steiniger . . . Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Stern . . . Mrs Phyllis I. Stout . . . Mr. and Mrs. Edward Suchania . . . Mrs. M. Sumal . . . Mr. and Mrs. Syrokwash . . . Larry Thomas . . . Sassy Thompson . . . Mr. and Mrs. I. Tomello . . . Mr. and Mrs. Philip Triozzi . . . Mr. and Mrs. john Turner . . . 11221 . . . Iohnny VanDerver . . . John and Larty Valek . . . V Judy Anne VanDerveer . . . Rosella VanDerveer . . . Mr. and Mrs. Louis Vastardis . . . Mr. and Mrs. Charles VerStratten . . . Mr. Woscik . . . Walter Wronski . . . Al. PATRoNs and Mrs. Herman Vrowsky and family . . . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Waddington . . . Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Webb . . . Doris S. Weir . . . Mrs. Kathryn Weiss . . . Mrs. Werner . . . Mr. Weston . Mr. and Mrs. joseph Wieczotek . . . Betty jane Witkowski . Joann Witkowski . . . Lynn Witkowski . . . Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wojcik . . . Mr. and Mrs. E. Wolff . . . Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wong . . . Albie Wong. Mrs. Wood . . . Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wood . . . Sherry Wood . . . Mr. and Mrs. john Woollis . . . Woody . . . Mr. and Mrs Frank Zandomenego . . . Mildred Zielinski . . . Mrs. Zohovetz 257-3737 TWIN JOY Chinese Restaurant Open Daily Mid-State Mall 11:30 to 9:30 Highway 18 Sunday: 12:30 to 9 East Bruns. Food th t is different! HOUSE OF HAIR DESIGN Phone: CL 4-1105 78 Summerhill Road East Brunswick, N.J. a PHONE 257-7300 Benjamin Moore Wallpaper Cook 81 Dunn McClosky Finishes Seal-Rite Sundries PAINT AND WALLPAPER CENTER ROUTE 18 SHOPPING CENTER OLD BRIDGE, N.J. PATRONS The staff of the Emerald and the staff of the Combined Publications of East Brunswick High School take this opportunity to thank our- many advertisers and patrons for their exceptional and generous support. It is through their kindness that we are able to publish the fine publications we do. We trust that the student body will recognize their efforts on our behalf and, when the opportunity arises, extend a measure of thanks by shopping at their places of business. When you do, be sure to tell them you saw their advertisement in the yearbook . . . or The Athletic News or Campus Courier. RUSAK'S FLOWER SHOP CLifford 4-0207 64 Main Street South River, N.J. We Cater to the Action Crowd ' EAST BRUNSWICK HIGH 3?-UN '9 scifi flletiofxlavaf Nothing Else Like It - Sold Every Home Game - 25qt Above: Paddle your own canoe. Below: There's johnl Below: I guess it's worth 81.50 a year. Preferences of I FAVORITE EXCUSES: I left it on the bus. But you didn't assign any homework. But we're Seniors. FAVORITE PERIODS: Assembly Language Arts 8th FAVORITE ACTIVITIES: F.T.A. G.A.A. Student Council FAVORITE PASTIMES: Corridor-strolling Protesting Mal's FAVORITE FADS: Senior hats Saddle shoes Freshmen jerseys FAVORITE CLOTHES: Sweat shirts Levis Bathing suits, fur coats, and pajamas 1 l FAVORITE CAFETERIA LUNCH: i Roast Beef Pizza l Ice Cream N FAVORITE -BEVERACES: Chemistry Cocoa Coke Dad's FAVORITE CHEWING GUM: i juicy Fruit , Other People's Q THINGS WE CAN DO MOST WITHOUT: I College Boards i Senior Clearances 10-pound English books THINGS WE NEED MOST: Smoking Lounge ' Senior Rights Money l FAVORITE T.V. PROGRAMS: Batman Man from U.N.C.L.E. I SPV the Class of 966 FAVORITE T.V. ACTORS, ACTRESSES: Robert Vaughn David McCallum Mary Tyler Moore FAVORITE SONGS: Shalom Downtown EBHS Pep Song FAVORITE BOOKS: Emerald Moby Dick The Return of the Native Above: Come to Culvermerel Below: Rock on. FAVORITE NEWSPAPERS: Campus Courier The Daily Home News The New York Times FAVORITE MAGAZINES: Folio Playboy Seventeen FAVORITE MOVIE THEATERS: Brunswick Drive In Capitol Strand ' FAVORITE MOVIE ACTORS, ACTRESSES Richard Buxton Elizabeth Taylor Below: It tastes as good as it looks. Sean Connery Ursula Andress FAVORITE DANCE COMBOS: The Indigos The Esquires Lawrence Welk GQ FAVORITE VOCALISTS: Bob Dylan Nancy Sinatra Frank Sinatra FAVORITE SINGING GROUPS: E Ruby and the Romantics g The Spinners Q 5- The Supremes FAVORITE CARTOON CHARACTER: Peanuts and his friends. FAVORITE COLLEGES: ' -HO' Rutgers Douglass Parsons nl 231 MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED jane Cutler Mark Rosenthal Personalities of Diane Goldsmith Donald Lang MOST ARTISTIC MOST INTELLIGENT Leslie Hain WVendell Openshaw BEST ALL 'ROUND Celia Wristen Everett Page BEST LOOKING MOST ATHLETIC Betsy House joe Pilch 232 Cathy Stech Fred Muller MUTT AND JEFF Donna Mazares Steve Amster MOST CLEVER Cathy Cargill Bob Bushldn the Class of '66 BEST DRESSED Celeste Kuchna Frank Defiespinis Donna Boyle Ed Meagher MOST POPULAR CLASS CLOWNS jean O'Brien john Lynch DID MOST FOR E.B.H.S. Dolly Zanetti Franklin Chu C 233 CHAPTER NINE PILOGUE Usually things begin coming to an end about the time of the Easter recess. Warm weather is here by then and that's always the signal for the seniors - and the rest of the classes, in turn - to begin anticipating the close of school. This year, that anticipation was postponed a bit because of cold, rainy weather that continued till Memorial Day and late exams which had a dampening effect of some degree into june. But suddenly came Culvermere and the Senior Prom and the realization that the end was just a few days away. Spring is always a crazy season. Columbia boys raid the adjoining Barnard campus for panties, Rutgers usually has a teach-in to rekindle the Genovese controversy, and East Brunswick High bristles with water pistols, at least in the hands of those who haven't gone over the fence and into the woods on the first leg of a school-day trip to the Shore. The Proms come and go, the fun of Culvermere becomes a fond memory, and suddenly the seniors find it's all over. Even those of the present class, hardened as they became by seven years' residence here, found the occasion a time for a lump in the throat, a tear in the eye. Within a few summer weeks, the class would be scattered across the country in a score or more different colleges, imiversities, prep schools, business colleges, trade schools, and institutes of fashion or hair design. Some would be married while others would be taking orders from the mili- tary and facing, quite possibly, an assignment in Viet Nam, which up till now had been just another topic for current events in a history class. Coincidentally, lime of 1966 also marked the college com- mencement of those of the first graduating class who had gone on with their education after leaving East Brimswick High. And herein lies our means of summarizing what we set out to demonstrate on page one of this book. That class of four years ago was quite small in comparison with the current crop of seniors. They went to such col- leges as Cal Tech, Dartmouth, Rutgers, Glassboro State, and Monmouth College. This year's class will go on to much the same spread of colleges, with perhaps a slightly higher proportion attending the prestige schools of the East: Harvard, Wellesley, Smith, Bryn Mawr, M.I.T., to name a few. Over the short span of four years, the reputation of EBHS has been carried forth by its graduates to the aforenamed schools and others: Stanford, Lafayette, Lehigh, Colorado, Air Force Academy, Yale, Douglass, Princeton. Similarly, EBHS men and women have done well in business and in the service. The reputation they have carried forth and enhanced by their performance has benefitted the Class of '66 and it remains for them now to continue that tradition. We feel that what has happened at East Brunswick since 1962 has equipped them for this challenge. But their suc- cess will be the real determinant as to whether the New Dimension, which we have reported in this book, is as beneficial to the student as we see it. N -N 5, ., Sims W 1.1 s ' nu... ,. 2 SSI? E 'ls , 55 mmm: . 3312 L, A K , ,,.6,,, bf Q...-H..-5 IS what - ' . 1 ,J Q 1 ff. 7 K M' wp X xx. , .. ' Q. 1 M ' N H ' E -wk .,,-,0..l3.t'f:S4 ff ig . E S ..,-',. ..-'x. M ,X Ni - H ,. H. X. , A . N 1-'n' 0' '- ,..v-' Hg' , ' -.pm-'fn' if ..:,,,,....,13,4 4 I' g a 1 - 1 ' K E , .- x .xv , f. -1- f .1'1Q. ', x lil '1Zl11 '. ' , ,f ,- -f N- f...' ,. e ' ' ' . .-- . 3 5 x ' ,. ' .. ,,,- . -ij. ' , . ' , , . . M' mit' S i ' X SX f 5 .5 N nf 4: ...N,. ,vw Qf f ww f.. , K 5 SQ. '...., , , N Q Q . xiii! :H Q, is 5 I Ni: I I . x Q NX 'mg -w S Q Junior Prom The Class of 1967 started the spring social season with their junior Prom, Shangri-La. Sue Ram- pel was chairman of the committee, which did a masterful job of convert- ing the gym into an Ori- ental paradise. X Q ' if My gi S f is X I g?-Q 21 is . z ' X X5 Q K J V Nik 4 fx .res il' v.- u ,J . W l. E ff 0' lf? ' A I Aww ff, . ,my . 'L Q ',E'. I '- J KEN mx S 2, sf N 3 ' ' 1 N: ,SJ 1' L N? x V 1 1-gl X Wi - fx ' ' N - X S 3 QQ ' 2 A NV 9 'lil 2 X ,x x ,J x x Ni iv f S' ' I :Eg . .... A I - K QM ,- - Q -M: QQ xi ix 5-,,xX'iRgf' ' K , 5 f 1 'w - g v A M A I X A A 'im-Rf? ,-e.. -V' 4.-., - f ,..- u 1 4' Y' 1 Cx 'Nix ww- 'ul Yf:Q:. W- g r 'V 6 'S il X , n xx rf . ' If X- 4:5 Xb if RQ N ' 4 , x .. ' . fab! N A V u c. N' 5 f 3 0 ,.a Ampqx 45,53 .l W ii as Q X :E ,A LYS' 3 s iw Q5 +1-'V JP' F 1553322 ., if is 'tba wx - Q K. 11,5 Y 1 :IN xnxx K ., x ' an . ff? Him , v--- - s s ,- f Q3 we 1 ff.--My W' ifv: iff - Way - ,.- ,QQ bin ff ww . lil! ill! mi ml' sm e Z! V Q L: K 4 iq Ri 1 Qi .Q K y ' K Q E A S f i U, ' M A fn . . . . x L' . xxx A 34 K A Q w A NN.. 1 x WN s ' :KW ,gm 5 Q N tn pw' 5 A . 2 x Nl' -pw. AZN ,Si iw V' ESM Qff ' 1 .f '45 'W i The Senior Prom High point of the social activities in one's school career seems to be the Senior Prom. And so that it might have the biggest and best prom ever, each class works and saves diligently. Girls make the prom a project of their own, studying fashion with the fervor of a scholar before selec- ting their gowns, enduring agonizing hours at the hair dressers, and praying deeply that everything will be just right. This year was no exception. The Seniors held their prom at North Plainfield's Washington House. They had their usual midnight dinner, preceded by an assortment of hors d'oeuvres. They danced to the music of Mort Brody's Orchestra and were entertained by hypnotist Norman Ross and by Ruby and the Romantics, popular recording group. When the prom had ended, the couples returned to the school for the P.T.A.'s breakfast and then headed for the shore. The weather was clear, the sun bright, but the air was cool. The prom and the weekend were unqualified SUCCCSSCS. kgs, One of the highlights of the evening was the performance by the hypno- tist who proved so effective that he even got to Mike Estabrook in the au- dience. Right, Donna Roselli asks why everyone is dressed in bathing suits. 242 X P ? . lx 3 f a X. X. -A 1 9..l'i'X' 1 'Vfffx ' QP'- 'ffm .gvirl R f?f. ii, QS' it 'K 'Y X ' if A S A Q 'Y galfff. Selected from the audience after it had undergone two susceptibility tests, seniors above respond to hypnotic suggestion and shout, Hurrav for the Class of '66. Top, Ruby and the Romantics iwon a standing ovation for their perfomuance. ,,,,..,....-an-umlvl ........... W Celia VVristen receives EBEA Scholarship from Dr. Bowman, Super- intendent of Schools. Murray A. Chittick Scholarship Brian Hamilton East Brunswick Education Assoc. Scholarship Celia Wristen East Brunswick Iewish Center Award Diane Goldsmith Victor Failmezger Engineering Award james O'Reilly Helen Klecan Scholarship Susan Burlew jersey Blue Chapter, D.A.R. Award Thomas Seel Pine Ridge Civic Association Award ,lane Cutler Mark Rosenthal Vincent P. Thompson Memorial Award Mananne Linfante East Brunswick High School P.T.A. Awards Boys Physical Education - Ioe Pilch C-irl's Physical Education - Betsy House Biology - Leslie Hain Chemistry - H. Wendall Openshaw Physics - William Ahlgren Social Studies - Mitch Keil Latin - Mona Kraois Spanish - Barbara Bystrek Home Economics - Mary Tushinski Industrial Arts - Gary Burlew Language Arts - William Ahlgren Mathematics - Franklin Chu German - Lynn Shumski French - Celia Wristen Business Education - Mary Tushinski Music - Diane Goldsmith Art - Melissa Erickson Valedictorian - Franklin Chu Salutatorian - Betsy House Fifth Annual East Brunswick Kiwanis Club Awards Mary Tushinski John Siloester Nancy Stab East Brunswick Lions Club Awards Betsy House Franklin Chu Dolores Zanetti Michael Rooney East Brunswick Women's Club Award Joyce Bartsch East Brunswick Chamber of Commerce Award Wanda Jean Baars East Brunswick Jaycees Award Thomas Seel East Bmnswick WOll1CH,S Democratic Club Award Sherri Hubbell 1st National Bank of Middlesex County Award Pat Sadowski Franklin Chu East Brunswick Womenls Republican Club Award Jane Cutler Sgt. Sheldon Sheinfein Post 311, j.W.V. Award Mark Rosenthal South River Order of Elks, Lodge 2033 Award Leslie Hain Knights of Columbus, St. Thomas the Apostle Council No. 4815 Award John Parky Ilene Axelrod Schwartz-Taub Pharmacy Award Ioan Davison Diane Goldsmith wins Jewish Center Award for cultural achievement 1 . . 1 . East Brunswick High School Art Award Senior Awards South River Trust Company Award Susan Stefan Green and VVhite Shoppe Award Camille DeVarti Girl's Physical Education Award Linda Ienners Girls's Athletic Association Award Ioanne Hahn Keith Allen Raphael Memorial Award Linda Monroe East Bruswick Community Players Award William Schlegel Dr. Robert Lloyd Cantor Art Award Ken Henderek Lynda Coaby Dr. Aleck Borman Science Award Franklin Chu Nat'l Assoc. of Accountants, Raritan Valley Chapter Award Susan Clark Hazel E. Wagner Award Virginia Kane Margaret Schoen Award Donna Boyle General Foods Award Linda Stromberg Washington Square Award Leslie Hain Principal Anthony Navickas presents the Thompson Memorial Award to Marianne Linfante. Brian Hamilton accepts Chittick Scholarship from former Superintendent of Schools Murray A. Chittick. The Cambridge Cup Jane Cutler Mark Rosenthal Future Teachers of America Scholarship Sandee Eaker Senior Class Scholarship Barbara Bystrek East Bnmswick High School Music Awards Diane Goldsmith Helen Iefirnowicz Ken Langley Leslie Hain Pat Spishock Iesse,Heines William Schlegel Michael Estabrook Greg Morgan Eileen Tunilla East Bnmswick High School Dramatic Awards Dale Wintemute Wilbur Knapp Dinorah Ramirez lean OBrien Donald Lang Paul Matlin John Lynch Everett Page Best Actor and Actress Ramona Iucks East Brunswick High School Science Awards Howard Stem Charles Cowell H. Wendall Openshaw William Ahlgren Shiela Fairchild Charlotte Graf Kathy Kafka Business Education Awards Pat Sadoibski Library Awards Brian Hamilton National Honor Society Award Plymouth Trouble Shooting Contest Award Ronald Haines Donna Boyle Rick Dreyling Class of 1966 Spirit Award Ed Meagher ff. L2 , lif t .am-fr: :j.'g:'f' s Ll ' Q I X ' K F ' G . .f V U. 1 ha YI-wg? , 'F' r'-'f .U ,.g. . Q V . 1' vb - 1 x 1 --.-....,..,,.,, .W QA 'QQ fa 'pzffq rf .A '?L? f?5' .Ti,,Q-T gy A 4- 4. Ji I X ws. -A . 'Z' jd : -- , 48 5,1 x 'w .V ' ' vs--Q1 x 1 v 41 .,x.A5N .' 9 K it . Q eww , , L - A x' 4 , K A in-,x,.'4x Jfyqgtva-.vga-gf-Q. Exw ., q 3,4935- NQQ I kfsx X -Lf ', , fi:-. -5 About the Editor Mark M. Rosenthal won the coveted position of Editor- in-Chief after having come from nowhere two years ago to write his Mark My Words sports column for Campus Courier, a column which was an instantaneous success and has been adjudged one of the five best such efforts in high school newspapers within the state. A natural joumalist with an inherent sense of what is newsworthy and with a flare for tuming a phrase, Mark also has served the school newspaper as its Sports Editor for two seasons. Also a trea- surer of the Student Council as well as a top notch student, Mark will continue his education this coming fall at Wes- leyan University in Connecticut, where he will pursue a liberal arts program. Beyond college, his plans are as yet indefinite but he has his eye on , the field of journalism. Mark is in no hurry to de- cide, however, for his interests are many, as demonstrated by his activities record at East Brunswick High. Besides his work for the newspaper and yearbook and his service as treasurer of the Student Coun- I cil, he has also been a member y of the track team, Mu Alpha Theta, Chem Club, Folio, and the National Honor Society. . . and the 1966 The 1966 edition of Emerald has been printed and bound by the American Yearbook Company, Cambridge, Mary- land. Printed on Meade Moist-rite 100-pound mat. Text set in 10 and 12-point Laurel with italic. Headings in 24 and 30-point Times Roman. Captions in 8-point Laurel. Cover by S. K. Smith Company, Chicago, Illinois. Hard case 160- point binders' board. Base material black embossed Spanish Grain with Metalay application and black overtone. Official photographers are Lorstan-Thomas Studios of Ne- wark, New Jersey, with studios in New Brunswick, NJ. Additional photos: Vincent Scoles, Class of 1967: color plate, pp. 2-3, Bemard Buck: color plates, pp. 9, 12-13, 14-15, and pp. 3, 4, 8, '16-17, 205 and 203, and Frank Mitek, College Photographers, New Brunswick, N.j.: pp. 106-107, 109-119, 122-127, 129, 143, 246-247. Art by Anna Boode, Class of 1969, and Roger Kennedy, Class of 1966. Special thanks are due to the following people who played . the Adviser . Mr. William G. Munyan came to East Brunswick in 1962 after eight years duty with the U.S. Army as a career officer. A 1954 graduate of Rutgers, he has been the guiding force behind the Combined Publications and has seen the Campus Courier win top honors in both state and national contests and this edition of Emerald win selection by American Yearbook Company as a national sampler. Mr. Mimyan gained his joimialistic acumen as editor of his high school newspaper and yearbook, as a staff member of Rutgers' Targum, as a student correspondent for the Elizabeth Daily Ioumal, and as adviser for the Purple and Gold of Lancaster fOhioj High, where he taught immedi- ately after college. He also finds time to edit one of the publications of his national fraternity, Delta Sigma Phi. Originally from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Mr. Munyan grew up in Elizabeth, New jersey, where he attended jefferson High School. He now resides in New Bruns- wick, where he is active in the affairs of his college and his fraternity, which he serves locally as President of the Alumni Control Board and 'W nationally as one of seven Area Supervisors. Edition of Emerald so important a role in the successful completion of this effort: To Richard Lawall and Wynne Murchison of Aruerican Yearbook Company for their criticism and advice, their consideration and their always-superior service. To Frank Merin of Lorstan-Thomas Studios for his pa- tience and understanding, and for assigning us such a top- notch crew of photographers: Messers Oxford and Ohler, Lambert and Beatty. To Bemie Buck for his plane, his color camera, his heated car on a cold winter night, and his genuine interest in our book and our students. To Frank Mitek, whose sport camera knows no equal and whose advice has been invaluable. Most important, to the staff and students of East Bruns- wick High School who are, in the final analysis, Emerald for 1966. 248 57 ...Q-:M mme- me-nv ap- ,i,,,- eq! 1 Q -'... W Q K' M... X - fr? ' K ,A W ix ' ' W- w , V A xx , ' Q .Lg,:. 2 5 fi kr, Q, . Q., ' , ,' W, ' ,A M 'X N Q 5 ,I ll ,l 'L b A .- .' x ' ,y . ,I - ' 1 J 4' r , ' - ' , . x ' 5 2' 1 ', K if f Af b s V X 4 2 . ' -', in A K ' 5 i !' 4 31 S 2 Q Q v il i .-, ' I W , W k 1 W I 'V if ' VA, ' u ' Q 2 ' 1 W r .' z vl .Q I1 Mr. ' f uw, r , 'i I 3 W V 32 P3 ci F fx H Q NK I 1,2 I s 4 ' F W 5 fd YI. .X I , 'I . ' '. i 1 N W, 9 , , ! 4 V


Suggestions in the East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) collection:

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976


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