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

 - Class of 1976

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East Brunswick High School - Emerald Yearbook (East Brunswick, NJ) online collection, 1976 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1976 volume:

1976 EMERALD VOLUME 1 5 East Brunswick High School East Brunswick. New Jersey- 08816 PAULLoSACCO. Editor-in-Chief HOWIE SHEMITZ. Managing Editor KAREN LESSO. Business Manager WILLIAM G. MUNYAN, Adviser VA-BOOM! 4 TWO HUNDRED YEARS seem a long time when you're in high school. But in the story of mankind, it was only yesterday that a young militiaman stood before a rude bridge at Concord and fired the shot heard 'round the world America had begun its quest for independence from Great Britain. ON THE COVER Fireworks explode over the Washington Monument and the White House as the Capital leads the Nation in celebrating two centuries of independence and freedom TO THE GOVERNORS of the fifty states, our thanks for providing the color photographs used in this Bicentennial edi- tion. We regret not being able, because of the cost of color reproduction, to use them all. In America's Bicentennial year, the editors examine what it was like to be a young American at a typical American high school. Included are glimpses of some of the events in the world around us that helped to make us what we were — or thought we were. ACTIVITIES 34 A September-to-June review of the events at the high school that helped to make this year different from any other—the plays, the con- certs, the dances, the trips. And a look at those who spent countless hours making these things possi- ble, often without due credit or recognition. ATHLETICS 64 Is interest in sports on the wane here? Was it another off-year for the Bears? This in-depth look provides some of the answers. An exciting recap of the year, team by team, complete with all team records and team photographs. ACADEMICS 122 What’s inside What happened in the classroom? How did budget cuts affect class size and the quality of education at the high school? Included in this probing essay are the ad- ministrators, faculty, and. staff. 2—CONTENTS • ••••• • Vv.v • • • • V.V.' .v.v .v.v.v wm mmm mmm •v.v.v.w.v. _•••• ••••••• .• • • • ••••••• •••••_• • • • • • •••••••• •v.v.w • • • _• • • • • ■ • • • • ..v.v.v • • • • • • ■ SENIORS 146 The graduates! Individual portraits and biographical bits, punctuated by a delightful series of mini-essays highlighting the trivialities that make this class and this school somehow different from the rest. UNDERCLASSMEN 192 The juniors and the sophomores, row after row of them. Plus a can- did look at their world—which is. after all, a vital part of ours. ORGANIZATIONS 220 Either we got better than usual response, or clubs are enjoying a renaissance here. Whatever, here they are—more than ever, hardy, robust, and active. DIRECTORIES 236 Biographical index of the staff and a convenient index that enables you to find quickly whoever you are hunting in this book. —3 CONTENTS It all started with Columbus, if you want to get technical about it. But it wasn't until 1776—two hundred years ago—that we followed his example and did our thing. Everyone probably laughed at us, too. and said it couldn't be done. All men created equal? Preposterous. Well, we did it. And here we are two centuries later. The United States of America. What is it? It's Bunker Hill and Trenton. Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, the Lafayette Escadrille and Black Jack Pershing. It's Corregidor. Guadalcanal. Bastogne. and Pork Chop Hill. It's Washington. Jeffer- son. Lincoln. Teddy Roosevelt, and Wilson. Silent Cal Coolidge and FDR, Truman and Ike and Kennedy and Nixon. It's Conestoga wagons west, steamboats on the Mississippi. Promontory Point. Greyhound buses, DC-3's and now 747's. It's corduroy roads, the Lincoln Highway. RoCite 66. the Penn- sylvania Turnpike and Interstate 80. Stanley Steamers. Model T's. Corvettes and Cadillacs. It's corn-on-the-cob. hamburgers, hotdogs. giant shakes and cherry pie. It's pizza, pierogis, kielbaski and kraut. It's lobsters from Maine, potatoes from Idaho, strawberrries from Jersey, wheat from Kansas, cheese from Wisconsin and beef from Texas. It's New York and Chicago and San Francisco. It's Peapack and Ishpeming and Tucumcari. It's Hi, and Howdy. Hi yawl. and Aloha. It's over 200-million people and we're part of it. STUDENT LIFE—5 AWESOME COLORADO boasts over forty mountains which reach over 14.000-feet high and which have earned for the state the nickname. The American Alps. This scene is from the Telluride Winter Sports Area in the southwest corner of the state Miles to go before I sleep If it hadn't been for the Puritan work ethic, we'd probably still be confined as a nation to the East Coast. And we'd probably still be an agricultural nation. But the idea that you glorified God by work made us a mighty industrial power and gave rise to the concept of manifest destiny. The work ethic has diminished somewhat in recent years, but many of us still hold that work comes before play. And if we tend to waver in that belief, our parents remind us: ‘'You can't go until you've finished your homework and taken out the trash.'' We are convinced that today's work will bring dividends tomorrow. And if our reward doesn't come from heaven, it will surely come from college or the conference, the state or the com- pany we eventually work for. 6—STUDENT LIFE COLLEGE BOUND students found they’d have to study harder to make it. and Presi- dent Ford discovered getting the GOP nomination would be no cinch. Even Prin- cipal Larry Ashley learned it was hard work bringing discipline back to the high school. YOU HAD TO HAVE FAITH that hard work now would bring future rewards, whether you were a gymnast working with the team to recapture the State championship or a sophomore struggling with the Pythagorean theorem or an editor learning about printing STUDENT LIFE—7 BITCH LEAVE IT TO SENIORS to find fun in any situation Howie Shemitz and Joe Devaney turned a tour of the Air Force Museum into a lark Even formal dances were less stuffy if you had the right attitude. And it wasn’t the end of the world if you were late to class. EVEN THE FACULTY realized that all work and no play made for a dull student and they organized—and won—a student-faculty cross country meet. It wasn't that we couldn't be serious It was more fun to be laughing and having a good time. Meantime, ain't we got fun? Maybe it was because we had grown up in Era of Affluence that work didn't seem so important to many of us. It wasn't as if any in- come we earned was needed at home to keep a roof over our heads or food on the table. Such jobs as we had were to earn money for a car, or dates, or perhaps to help reduce the expenses that might be needed for college. Mostly we worked to have fun. That attitude carried over to school. If you didn't like the 65-cent lunch in the cafeteria, you went off cam- pus. It cost more and was against school regulations, but we laughed. Sure studies were important, but having a good time took priority. In warm weather, many of us took four-day weekends and went to class only in midweek. When we were in class, we mastered the art of changing the subject if the lesson was too boring, or livened things up with a few pratical jokes. We made high school fun and told ourselves we'd settle down when we got to college or started work- ing. But we were never convinced we would—or that we could. U S. Astronaut Donald K. Slayton and Soviet cosmonaut Aleksey A Leonov float upside down to each other during linkup of an Apollo and Soyuz spacecraft in orbit above earth A bit of fun to lighten the demanding work. STUDENT LIFE—9 A i PORTLAND HEAD LIGHT on the coast of Maine stirs up memories of Yankee Clippers and whaling ships. They are things of the past, but so is America's blue-ribbon liner SS United States 10—STUDENT LIFE Show me the way to go home Since its birth. America has been a nation on the go, both literally and figuratively. The only difference now is a matter of style. Most of our dads commute to work in other parts of the county or in the city. The car has made that possible and East Brunswick is what you might call a bedroom community.'' Spread out as it is. most of rely on school buses to get us to school and on Mom to get us to the movies. Boy Scouts, church meetings, dance lessons, and what have you. Until we can drive, that is. Accustomed to not staying put, we go Florida for vacations, to New England for ski weekends, and in- variably choose anywhere but New Jersey for college. It's as if this were a nice place to visit but we wouldn't want to live here. PART OF THE MEGALOPOLIS that stretches from Boston to Washington. East Brunswick straddles a six-lane highway that chokes on commuters twice daily, and is only five miles from the mainline of Conrail. once the Penn Central and. before that, the Pennsylvania Railroad. THE CONCORDE SST may soon be flying overhead as it makes its final approach into Newark International Airport Just think: you could leave Newark and be over Iceland in about the time it takes to get home on the school bus 12—STUDENT LIFE SENIORS WON the Homecoming float contest which isn't very unusual But their float was generally credited with being the best one ever! Nature followed suit and hit us with the best flu virus ever—the Victoria A kind. The after-effects lasted for months THIS YEAR WAS DIFFERENT Girls joined the bowling team. Student Council dissolv- ed into a Student Union and tried out new ideas—like giving a friend a flower. We chose a Homecoming King for the first time, and AV did their own show on cable TV's channel 8. Something completely different Like most of our fellow countrymen down through the years, we tend to distrust the old and favor the new. We will tear down a fine old building to make room for a parking lot or a glass-and-chrome box. We will modify a traditional rite like commencement until we end up with a ceremony quite different from the first such. We do the same even with words. A valedictorian used to be the person who ranked tops in his class. Last year we graduated no less than seventeen from the same class! This year was no different as far as change went. Student Council became the Student Union and a committee replaced the usual cadre of officers. We went to an eight- period schedule. The attendace procedure was computerized and the machine was programmed to block out a passing grade for any subject you cut more than four times in a quarter. Football had a losing season for the first time in memory. Monty Python got more laughs than Mel Brooks and more kids watched Mary Hartman. Mary Hartman than All in the Family. Democrats seemed inclined to nominate Jimmy Carter for the fall's Presidential campaign, and Republicans were taking a se- cond look at Ronald Reagan. STUDENT LIFE—13 KANSAS WHEAT turns from gold to amber under the afternoon sun Best known for its farm products and its beef. Kansas also has a large aircraft industry It also produces yearbooks, including this one. Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie Most of us are mildly schizophrenic. You know, you stand in line for half an hour waiting to get a Big Mac, and all the while you tell yourself. This is crazy. Well, we like change but we also like nostalgia. We get angry if someone reminds us that the battle took place on Breed's Hill, not Bunker Hill. We re- sent being told that Paul Revere didn't make the whole ride himself. We don't like being told that a bear hibernates all winter. We retain Homecoming, though few here can tell you why the game is a homecoming. The l-hate-this- school crowd will cry at gradua- tion. We flock to sock hops. Bogart film festivals, and the county fair. We idolize Fonzie, dress like the greasers of the fifties, and drink like it were still Prohibition. Given the excesses of Progressive Education and Dr. Spoch, many are even yearning for the more traditional school and urging that education get back to the basics. 14—STUDENT LIFE NOSTALGIC ALUMNI return to campus every Christmas to sing again with the Chorus at their Tree Lighting concert, or to play once more with the Indigos at the Christmas dance. Some also get back for Homecoming and renew old friendships over hotdogs and hot chocolate. SOME THINGS DON’T CHANGE. For all you hear about Women's Lib. girls still enroll in Home Economics. Few boys do. We still forget everything else at World Series time Drama Club still scores with old favorites like Our Town” and we still have the orchard. STUDENT LIFE—15 You gotta be a football hero We don't need the campus flicks of the 'thirties to remind us that foot- ball players enjoy a status all their own in our society. Off the field, they seem to get all the pretty girls. They get the scholarships to prestigious colleges. And they get out of class early to suit up for prac- tice. Even at a school like East Brunswick which fields teams in just about every sport for both boys and girls, the football hero is something apart from the other athletes. Maybe it's because foot- ball is elevated to a kind of religious status—probably because the game began less than five miles away when Rutgers beat Princeton one November day in 1 869. Of course, all athletes stand higher in the pecking order than non- athletes around here. They are the doers and it is their achievements that thrill us and add excitement to an otherwise routine school day. If they compile a string of victories, we are awed. If they lose a bunch, we make excuses for them, and blame the refs. And we wait 'til next year. How typically American. STUDENT LIFE—1 7 FOUR GREAT PRESIDENTS are immor- talized in the stone of Mt. Rushmore. South Dakota, silent reminders of America's greatness and an inspiration in times of trou- ble. Times that try men's souls This wasn't exactly the best year for a Bicentennial. We were still try- ing to patch up the divisions rent in this country by Vietnam and Watergate. We hadn't yet resolved the civil rights problem or recovered from the worse recession since the Great Depression of the 1930's. Twice in September while visiting California, President Gerald Ford was the target of assassins. Both women were caught, tried, found guilty and given life sentences. Foreign fishing fleets off the East Coast (especially the Jersey coast) provoked Congress into extending U S. territorial limits to 200 miles to protect our fish resources. Busing continued to cause protests in Louisville and Boston. Patty Hearst was captured finally and convicted in the first of many trials. Governor Byrnes had horrendous problems with his budget and the proposed income tax. vandalism increased in township schools, and unemploy- ment continued to hold at 7.5 per- cent despite a record increase in the national work force. 18—STUDENT LIFE HOPE FOR TOMORROW can be found right here. The dedication to excellence is shown in the faces of these people, at work in the lab or the studio, on the stage or the 20—STUDENT LIFE playing field. ONE SOLUTION to Americas energy problems may lie just a few miles out to sea from Atlantic City, where men are drilling for oil The federal government has approved leases for private companies to search for oil on the continental shelf Somewhere over the rainbow The United States has endured dif- ficult times in the past and there is no reason to despair that it will not only endure but survive its latest period of trial. Indeed, the crisis of Watergate demonstrated that our system works. There is reason to dream. One need only look at today's high schoolers. They are involved. They do the legwork for the charity fund-raising campaigns. They volunteer to do hospital work, to help out in the nursing homes, to assist with the brain-injured children. They are the envelope-stuff ers and the literature-distributors during the election campaigns. They pick up bundles of newspapers around the neighborhoods for recycling and they line up to donate blood to help a fellow student in need. Sure, some kids get busted for drugs, or for creating a public dis- turbance. or for auto theft. But they are not in the mainstream anymore than the adult criminals. A typical American saying cautions that you should keep your eye on the doughnut, and not on the hole. That is applicable in this instance. STUDENT LIFE—21 SUNSET OVER THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER at its northern end in Wisconsin. One of the world's longest, this river will snake its way 2.350 miles southeastward to empty into the Gulf of Mexico. Down past St. Louis. Memphis. New Orleans. A long winter's nap Every year we have to contend with that long stretch between Christmas and Easter vacations. It means a seemingly endless string of full weeks of class, unbroken by anything but Lincoln's and Washington's birthdays. Valen- tine's Day doesn't count. The stretch was made a bit more interesting than usual this year by the excitement over Rutgers basketball. Everyone seemed to have Scarlet Fever as the Knights went undefeated in 32 games before losing to Michigan in the semi-finals of the NCAA tourna- ment. We joined the skiers in praying for snow. We tried not to think about the fate of our college applications. We longed for Spring and wished someone would invite us to Ft. Lauderdale. 22 —STUDENT LIFE ITS A LONG HAUL from Christmas to Easter You linger longer over a cigarette between classes It's a time for serious booking, waiting to hear from the colleges or—if you're a junior—looking for a college. Days and patience grow shorter. DELAYED OPENINGS on snowy mornings are hateful. You'd counted on a closing and stayed up to watch the late, late show on TV the night before But WCTC announced otherwise. You doze off in class and fall asleep in the library. You think you should have cut. STUDENT LIFE—23 FRIENDSHIPS BLOSSOM despite the size and the seeming impersonal nature of the school. You buddy with a lab partner, another kid on the bus. someone you meet every time you are called to Mr Mansfield's office. It goes from there. 24—STUDENT LIFE Together, wherever we go ! A FAVORITE SPOT for meeting old friends or making new ones is the Senior Hall. There’s always someone there to shoot the breeze with, both between classes and dur- ing. Also popular are the smoking areas, loosely identified as being the rear exits of the buildings. We are a gregarious lot; we like having other people around. To this end. we spend a lot of time worry- ing about whether we are liked. As a result of it, we find it hard to oc- cupy ourselves when no one else is around: Gee, ma, there's nothin' to do. And in response to it. we seek those careers that will enable us to help others. We no longer talk about becoming rich and famous. School fosters this togetherness. It is. after all. a place where 2.500 teenagers gather each day of the week. Also, to the chagrin of traditionalists in the community, much of the curriculum is devoted to teaching us how to get along with others. There is also the senior hall, the mini-park, and the apple orchard. As impersonal as it may be because of its size. East Brunswick High is social. And though you may no longer graduate knowing everyone in your class, you will have found a gang that shares your intersts. STUDENT LIFE—25 THE BIG APPLE had its financial woes this year but it still stands—the only one of its kind in the world. We love it for its Broadway shows, its rock concerts, the Garden, and Greenwich Village If my friends could see me now Much as we enjoyed being with people, there was that other side of us that was a loner. It rejected what everyone else told us and prompted us to do what we must. It was this that made each of us somehow different, despite the outward appearances: the jeans, the sneakers, the T-shirts, the hair styles. We all needed, at times, to shut the door and be by ourselves—to dream, to think, to reconsider, to pout, to cry. even to punish. When we emerged again, we were not the same—although the change may have been infinitesmal. We were a bit wiser, a bit more sure of ourselves, a bit more mature. 26—STUDENT LIFE AFTER THE NOISE of the crowds, you needed time by yourself to get it all together That solitary moment of introspection may have come in class or when you were doing what you like to do the most. You didn't have to be alone to be alone. And you weren't lonely YOU MADE THINGS HAPPEN on your own. You drew strength from your friends, the team, the cast. But when your moment came, you stopped the show or scored the points. Sometimes you failed and withdrew to yourself, to figure out why so you wouldn't fail again. STUDENT LIFE—27 INVENTIVE STUDENTS created these im- aginative excuses for getting out of class this year I lost my pen May I go the school store?” My son is not feeling well today, so I'm keeping him home. I have a report that's due tomorrow. May I go to the library? 28—STUDENT LIFE To catch a better mouse Americans have always been in- ventive. Ralph Waldo Emerson captured the spirit when he wrote: Build a better mousetrap to catch a better mouse. And an early French visitor to this country remarked that the typical American had a mechanic in his soul. This inventiveness has given us everything from the cotton gin to the Corvette, iced cream to iced tea. It is a quality that has passed from generation to generation. Still students, we haven't had the time yet to invent a replacement for the pizza, but we've tried. Our ef- forts. in the main, have been directed towards improving the lot of our fellow students. We invent excuses for getting out of homework, out of class, or out of school. As soon as one excuse wears out, we invent another. After all. how many times can your favorite grandmother pass on to a better world, or your dog eat your lab report. THESE EXCUSES ALSO WORKED: I'm sorry I'm late for class but there was a real long line in the cafeteria and I didn't have time to eat. Or I wasn't in class yesterday because I had to help my mother at home.” Don't add, Did I miss anything? STUDENT LIFE—29 PINNACLES AND BUTTES of red sandstone rise like skyscrapers from the valley floor in the Navajo Indian reservation at Monument Valley. Utah. Oh, what a relief it is Then suddenly the snow was gone, the Easter vacation was here, and Spring came to the campus. In tempo with the season, the school came to life: there were concerts, the Prom, the arts festival, the field day. trips to the Shore. Juniors turned seventeen and were able to get their driver's licenses. The library emptied as kids flocked outside. It was a time for the sun and for reminiscing. The year would soon to ending. It wasn't really a bad year. The war in Vietnam had ended. Despite its losing season, the football team had beaten South River. College acceptances were coming in —finally. You'd found a job for the summer—finally. And Sue made up with Jack in time for the Prom. All that remained was to pass Creative Writing. 30—STUDENT LIFE DRIVER MANUAL SUMMARY OF NEW JERSEY’S MOTOR VEHICLE AND TRAFFIC LAWS DEPARTMENT OF LAW AND PUBLIC SAFETY w I rn m, It's the real thing Suddenly it was all over. Gradua- tion. Ahead lay college, or a job. or the military if you chose. Behind you lay the tests, the quizzes, the homework, the research papers. Gone now were the football games. Homecoming floats. Friday night basketball games and pizza at the Crestwood afterward. Gone, too. were yearbook deadlines, play rehearsals, sock hops, and pajama parties. No more pencils, no more books, no more teacher's nasty looks. No more notes from home, late buses. Separate and sit at separate tables.'' off-campus lunches at Gino's. You looked back at the good and bad. Would you miss it? You bet! STUDENT LIFE—33 B iMutwuuaf teld lfttiwu I QJl in att'Anwikan iruutm witli Ijftatktt and [ytoafa and gab Traditionally. Homecoming is a time to welcome old grads back to the campus. Around here, where there aren't that many old grads because of the relative newness of the high schools, it has become a time to welcome the football team back from a string of early-season away games. This year. Homecom- ing was more a salute to the United States than anything else. Halftime shows by the bands were filled with patriotic music and a grand display of flags. The annual parade of floats took a bicentennial theme and the seniors won top honors, in true American come-from-behind fashion. For the past two years, their floats have finished in third place. Juniors and sophomores finished second and third behind them. Pam Matos was the Homecoming Queen and was attended by junior Judy Simon and sophomore Maggie Campobasso. Pam shared her crown with Bob Fein, chosen by the seniors as Homecoming King—a first in the school's tradi- tion of royalty”. Homecoming would have been perfect had it not been for the foot- ball game itself. In a thriller, the Bears lost to Madison when the Spartans tossed a long bomb with but seven seconds left on the clock and made it explode for the win, just as time expired. A 14-13 vic- tory became a 19-14 loss. 34—HOMECOMING BALLOONS soar skyward, bearing sign that read: Bomb the Spartans. Their release from the senior float coincided with firing of a cannon and change in the display shown on rotating columns. Seniors won top prize for it all. CAPACITY CROWD was on hand to see Pam Matos and Bob Fein crowned king and queen of Homecoming. Maggie Cam- pobasso. left, and Judy Simon, center, were sophomore and junior class attendants. CLASS FLOATS followed a bicentennial theme: Seniors won with a quote from Thomas Paine. Juniors took second place with Give me LiBEARty or give me death ” Sophomores came in third, interpreting John Paul Jones’ ”1 have just begun to fight. HOMECOMING—35 A COMEDY OF ERRORS was a showcase for the talents of Randy Horvath and Darrell Thompson. Michael Plotz and Thompson. Rosemary Daskiewicz. Shalynn Murphy. Heidi Weatherford. Clarke Farrer and Debbie Toth, and Randy Castellano, Joe Noto. Glenn Lemerich. Bob Scott. James Balsamello. David Freneaux. Ray Topoleski and Gene Kish, in scenes on this page. IT WASNT ME, explains Michael Plotz to skeptical Janet Duni as mistaken identities created comedy in Drama Club's fall produc- tion of Boys from Syracuse Sophomore Debbie Jones made a delightful debut and will brighten future musical comedies. 36—DRAMATICS D uurm rfut dfrulkd Ut dftuMed (Hi i Uti imtli Boya Sy iacu For its fall production, the Drama Club mounted a musical comedy version of Shakespeare's “The Two Gentlemen of Verona. This one was called “Boys from Syracuse. It. like the original, concerns itself with the adventures—or misadven- tures—of not one. but two sets of identical twins, one of which is aristocratic and the other of which serves as attendant slaves for the first. The rich pair have become separated and, years later, come together again. But not before Shakespeare, the Drama Club, and the audience have great fun with the comedy of errors that besets both sets of twins. An ambitious undertaking for so early in the year, the cast had a bit of trouble getting things together: lines were not learned as late as a week before opening, for example. And the large cast had in it many who have never performed before. But the cast responded as ex- perienced troopers in a dress rehearsal that doubled as a preview before an audience of senior citizens, and continued to polish the rough edges during the show's three-night run. It was, recalling Shakespeare, a case of “all's well that ends well.” Standouts were Clarke Farrer, Michael Plotz, Janet Duni, Darrell Thompson, David Freneaux, and Debbie Jones. For Mr. Elliott Taubenslag, another crowd-pleaser. DRAMATICS—37 The coincidental holidays of Christ- mas and Channukah naturally had everyone astir, and not only because of the two-week recess from school that they would bring. Holidays such as these had to be ushered in with appropriate fanfare. There was the traditional tree lighting ceremony, followed by a cocoa-and-cookies reception and a visit by Santa Claus, a chorale con- cert setting the tone. Halls were decorated with stained-glass pan- els, and most classes arranged for parties. Classes were suspended the afternoon of the last day before vacation to permit a variety of ac- tivities that included movies, a rock concert, games, and visits by alum- ni back from college. That evening, the Indigos spon- sored their annual Christmas ball, an affair which tradition has made a semi-formal affair. There was continuous dance music by the In- digos, augmented by former musicians who return to play with the dance band one more time. It was a time for flowers, candlelight and slow music. A Christmas eve snowfall guaranteed a white Christmas, to the joy of the skiers who took off during the vacation for New England, New York, and nearer New Jersey ski resorts. And. yes, the vacation was extended till the Monday after New Year's as an economy move. Money saved on fuel to heat the school for a two- day week originally scheduled after New Year's helped ease the pinch. 38—HOLIDAYS BRIGHTENING THE HOLIDAYS were the traditional tree and the Indigos who. with help from returning alumni, provided an evening of continuous music at the well- attended Christmas ball IT BEGAN TO LOOK A LOT LIKE CHRISTMAS when the chorus gave its holiday concert and when couples in semi- formal dress packed the cafeteria for the Christmas ball. HOLIDAYS—39 YOUNG LOVE in a small town was evoked by Sue Heitz and Joe Zyjynski as Rosemary Daskewicz. Debbie Toth and Doug Fisher look on. SMALL TOWN MORES, predominant in American until recently, were recalled in Our Town” which featured Zyjynski. Daskewicz. Toth. Fisher and others. 40—OUR TOWN Diuuiia cftit uvivcd Ou i 1m in toilmie to lurtuwt'a tentowitof For its winter production, which it dedicated to the nation's two- hundredth birthday celebration. Drama Club revived Thornton Wilder's play. Our Town. This warm and nostalgic piece was last seen here when it was presented by the Class of 1963. Though unconventional in its stag- ing, Our Town examines the con- ventions of a small town in New England, mores that dominated American life at least until World War II and which are still prevalent in much of the country outside the major metropolitan areas. At first blush, one might think that Our Town would be a bit dated for an audience accustomed to sex and violence. Indeed, unlike the 1 963 production, this staging did not play to a capacity house during its three-night run. But those who did attend were able to identify with the characters on stage and Emily's speech from the grave left few without a tear in the eye or a lump in the throat. Doug Fisher starred as the narrator and others in the cast included Sue Heitz, Joe Zyjynski. Mary Beth Amoroso. Debbie Toth, Paul LoSacco, and Rosemary Daskiewicz. OUR TOWN—41 THEY'RE OFF and the first annual Senior- Faculty Cross Country Classic is on its way. Opposite page: Tom Fiocco leads Peter Kaz- nosky and Mel Caseiro up the high school hill towards the finish line TEACHERS WON IT. paced by speedsters like Kaznosky and Caseiro. here trailing alumnus Ken Heitzenroder and Greg Saul. Below: Fiocco and Kaznosky race through the woods. 42 CROSS COUNTRY CLASSIC Fftwitoj mm edged a !m i cklkiuf in mu (Mt uj cWic It may have been that the seniors on the cross country team rebelled and challenged the coaches, If you can do better, prove it. It may have been that the coaches and other participants in the pre-school hour social runs thought it would be fun. It may have been a gimmick to stir up interest in the sport. Whatever the reason, the outcome was a classic cross country con- frontation that pitted a faculty team against a predominantly senior squad. The course would be the regulation three-mile one. The race, which attracted more spectators than a regularly-scheduled meet. was run after the regular season had ended. The teachers started Cross Country coaches George Boring and James Balsamello, Winter Track coaches Peter Kaznosky and Jack Brophy, and Football coaches Mel Caseiro and Bill Pellagrino. Running for the students were Mike Sneden, Steve Marino. Tom Fiocco, Bruce Krein and others from the Cross Country and Winter Track teams. The teachers won it, to their surprised delight and the seniors' chagrin. But it was close. The times? We were too excited to get that bit of information. CROSS COUNTRY CLASSIC—43 SwtiM Variety 8bur made t eacL (Hit cm at tiaM nmt If one came to the Senior Variety Show with the expectations of see- ing a professional revue, he was disappointed. This was an amateur production, with all the imperfec- tions and absence of talent that the term amateur” connotes. But amateur is a derivative of the Latin word amor — love. And whatever their flaws, the members of the cast obviously loved what they were up to. and this ambiance carried across the footlights to the audience. What they were up to was their an- nual show that, except for a few serious moments, spoofed school, student life, and contemporary fads and fashions. Most of it was pure cornball, classroom hijinks transported to the stage. The corn was mixed with a few more sub- stantial ingredients: selections by the barbershop quartet, original dances choreographed by members from Modern Dance, songs by Eunice Long, and guitar selections. The whole thing was baked for three nights before capacity crowds and, with ap- propriate fanfare, out came bread for the senior class. Over $2000 worth! Janet Duni and Michael Plotz were masters-of-ceremony, and headed a cast of thousands, not all of them seniors. No one checked membership cards; they were too busy making and having fun. 44—SENIOR VARIETY SHOW IT WASN'T ALL SLAPSTICK Paula Pikul provided serious relief to all the broad com- edy takeoffs on TV commercials, a male chorus line, and skits by such as Sue Heitz and Randy Horvath, spoofing a visit to the school nurse s office. NAIL-BITING TIME for Student Director Romayne Eaker as she ran things behind the curtain. Out front, it was up to MCs Mike Plotz and Janet Duni to keep things moving. TWIRLERS IN DRAG, a giggling chorus line. Eunice Long at the piano and selections by the Barbershop Quartet—all eight of them—put the variety into Senior Show. SENIOR VARIETY SHOW—45 MONTHS OF REHEARSAL were rewarded by a warmly-applauded concert this spring. Mr. Jerry Kupchynsky conducted orchestra members assembled from all the township schools. A SALUTE TO AMERICA concluded an evening of symphonic music. Featured were Richard Rodgers' Victory at Sea” and John Philip Sousa's stirring American Patrol.” 46—SYMPHONY M uMm (j KMri acIimIa iiM enmuiimA lm ttoi (Hitiknduuj Orchestra students from all the schools in the township system ended months of rehearsal with a springtime concert that evoked rousing applause from a near- capacity audience of proud parents and friends. The chauvinistic nature of the audience notwithstanding, the approval given the musicians was well-earned. They played as if they cared for the music. And well they should, for theirs are the masterworks of Beethoven and Brahms. Mozart and Mendelsohn. Debussy and Dvorak. And they are the students of the masterful Jerry Kupchynsky. Too often, high school orchestras sound like amateurs. Tempos drag. Clarinets and strings squeak, in- out another. That was not the case here. Oh, there were occasional stead ot sing. One section drowns fluffs. One expects that at any live performance. But these well- schooled performers were sharp with their attacks and cut-offs. There was good tonal balance and phrasing, especially with the more experienced high school orchestra. The only flaw was in the length of the program. That is inherent in the nature of the concert: it was a showcase for musicians of all school ages and each group got its moment in the spotlight. A few years back, the orchestra concert was recorded on long-play record. That should have been done again, for this concert was worth being re-played. SYMPHONY—47 This spring's annual arts festival wasn't very different from last year's—or from the one ten years ago, for that matter. There were the booths displaying ceramics, wood- craft, metalwork, and other hand - icrafts. Hallways were converted into galleries in which were hung watercolors. oil paintings, charcoal and pencil drawings, and photographs. There were short concerts by the chorus, the band, the Indigos, and the string orchestra. Modern dance presented a recital. Drama entertained with a one-act play, and gymnasts pleas- ed the audience with their ballet- like acrobatics. What continued to attract the large crowds was the diversity and ex- cellence of student talent on dis- play. Sure there were those who came only because their sons or daughters participated. But once there, they had to applaud the quality of what the son or daughter had accomplished. Some of the fur- niture, for example, built by students in woodshop. would easi- ly sell for hundreds of dollars in the most fastidious stores and grace the most elegant homes. In a time when tax-payers wonder just what the schools are teaching kids, this dazzling array provided a con- vincing answer, especially since the entire school system was represented. 48—ARTS FESTIVAL NISSEN AMERICAN KNOW-HOW isn't limited to adults Students from all school demonstrated their talents in electronics, wood-working, and dance at the annual arts festival Dave Goldstein and Diane Reardon presented a one-act play. WHAT TO SEE? There was a folk dance recital, several art exhibits, a pop concert featuring Debbie Jones, and a gymnast demonstration. Modern dancers honored Mrs. Celeste Hunter, their adviser, who retired at year's end. ARTS FESTIVAL—49 A GREAT DAY for East Brunswick HS. said the father of Danny Reich, hemophiliac, who will benefit from record-busting blood drive in May. School donated 31 7 pints of blood. STUDENTS AND FACULTY wait their turn to donate blood, then follow the doctors' orders and rest Later, after refreshments, it was back to class. Everyone survived 50—BLOOD DRIVE School M a tote imd Im] demoting 317 piitU ol Jkd in wirdftij cnlhdm When an appeal for blood went out in May for sophomore Daniel Reich, who is suffereing from the effects of hemophilia, the high school community responded by donating 317 pints, a new state record for a one-day collection. The previous high had been set by the students at Westfield High. The blood drive was sponsored by the National Honor Society with seniors Joyce Kaplan and Debbie Reich, Danny's sister, in charge. According to the boy's father. Arthur. Danny requires an average of 200 pints annually, but this need would increase considerably if an operation were required this summer. The blood donated will be deposited with the North Jersey Blood Center for a year. During that time, anyone who has given blood may request needed transfusions if an emergency ic- curs. The blood that is not used during that year will be credited to Danny's account. It is anticipated that he will receive 80 to 85 per cent of the amount donated here. Bleeding causes Danny severe pressure and pain, and ultimately results in arthritis, which has per- manently injured one leg. An opera- tion this summer is planned to remove painful spurs on his knee. BLOOD DRIVE—51 BALLAD FOR AMERICANS was the chorus tribute to the American Bicentennial, but the spring concert was a tribute to direc- tor Miss Barbara Allen who would leave at year's end. A BROAD REPERTOIRE was performed by the chorus. Bel Cantos. Barbershop Quartet and Mixed Ensemble. Chorus also made their traditional appearance at graduation. 52—CHORUS CONCERT Ckmt mce dnuuikd IjO mK appMm frjj Mia Alim The tree-lighting ceremony at Christmas wouldn't be the same without the concert by the chorus. Nor would the graduation, without the chorus there singing Battle Hymn of the Republic. And the music programs in the grade schools would be missing something if it weren't for yearly appearances by the high school singers. But the chorus' big affair is its spring concert, and this year's was going to be something extra special. As its tribute to the Bicentennial, the chorus would per- form Ballad for Americans” and chorus alumni would be invited back to perform with the high school group. So when it was announced that chorus director Miss Barbara Allen would not be returning to the high school next fall, this concert took on even more significance. Her farewell appearance would have to be extra special. It was Miss Allen, after all. who had built the chorus and its associated groups into what they were. It was she who had gotten the boys interested in choral music, who had started the Barbershop Quartet and who had developed the mixed ensemble. The spring performance was as much a tribute to her as it was a salute to the bicentennial. Giving full attention to her direction, they sang a broad repertoire in perfect pitch, with meticulous attention to attacks and cutoffs, enunciation and phrasing, modulation and balance. They never sounded better. CHORUS CONCERT—53 A BICENTENNIAL VOLLEY signalled the start of the second annual field day. More than a dozen teams competed in a series of events like pie-eating, a three-legged race, a sack race, and a tug-of-war. TAUBENSLAG'S TOUGHIES leap-frogged ahead of the other teams and maintained their standing in the volleyball competition They got quick energy, like team member Janet Duni. from sampling whipped cream not consumed in the pie-eating contest. 54—FIELD DAY ''TmiknA Totigluc staged farurfic upset in Ijidd dag cwupdita The senior jocks organized under coach Ron Gonier and seemed the team to beat. Girl athletes—almost to a man—formed up under the banner of Sonia Regalado. They seemed a good shot for second A dozen or so other teams that got together for the second annual field day were discounted. They were there just for the sport of it. Certain- ly no one gave a group that called themselves Taubenslag s Toughies much of a chance to win anything more than a prize at the Bucks County drama competition. After all. they weren't athletes; they were actors, ones that will do to swell a progress, start a scene or two. as T. S. Eliot might say. But when all the pies had been eaten, all the sack races run. all the frogs leaped over and the three- legged racers untied, it was Taubenslag's Toughies that had won first prize—a pizza party. For an encore, the team arranged itself in a gigantic T-formation and. led by cheerleaders Janet Duni and Randy Horvath, crowed lustily. T-T-T-T- T for the whole school to hear. It mattered little to the winners that the vanquished had slunk off even before the final results were an- nounced, or that more than half the student body skipped the after- noon festivities and weren’t aware even of their startling upset. For the moment, winning suit them to a T. FIELD DAY—55 Juntow again gave up p im fjM dm t ripU Panfe W to mdcut out (j ato ie For almost a decade following the first junior class at the high school, juniors looked forward to a prom. It was held in the gym and. shortly after New Year's, the class would begin work on the decorations that would transform the gym into a night club. They would search out big bands and talent for a floorshow. They would arrange for a caterer, haunt the area clothiers for gowns, and fuss over what kind of prom favors to give. It got to be almost as expensive as the Senior Prom so, in 1971, the juniors decided instead to take a class trip—a one-day outing at Culvermere. Each year since, they have done the same although they have picked other resorts. This year, they chose Hershey Park. And, for an out-of-state excursion, the planning committee managed to keep the cost per student in the $10 range. Everyone agreed it was a good deal. The three busloads of kids who went confirmed that it was. But three buses carry only 144. The rest of the near-800 person class didn't come to school. They opted for an unofficial trip to the shore. It was too cold to swim in the ocean and the rides weren't open. You figure it out. 56—JUNIOR TRIP IT WAS TAMER than the school driving range but the cars were nicer, according to the yearbook photographer Dave Zeidwerg. who conned someone else into taking this shot. GETTING ORIENTED are class adviser Mrs. Rosalie Triozzi and her husband. Another way was to take the cable car and do an aerial reconnaisance of the amusement park. AS COMPLEX AS RT. 18 crossing over U. S. 1 is the flume ride at Hershey Park, which attracted most of the juniors who made the trip Other attractions were the dolphins and the really good roller coaster ride. JUNIOR TRIP—57 The Senior Prom always signals the beginning of the end for the graduating class, and this year was no exception. The class gathered at The Pines in Edison on the Friday of Memorial Day weekend, resplen- dent in pastel-colored formal attire and intent on making the entire weekend memorable. They succeeded. They dined on roast prime ribs of beef au jus. They spent a small for- tune on prom pictures. And they danced till the wee hours of the morning. They adjourned to several breakfasts and parties, changed clothes, and then headed for the shore to continue the revelry on a more informal basis. It cannot be said that they were the last of the big-time spenders, but they were certainly the latest. They splurged on gowns, tuxedos, flowers, and photographs. The only concession to inflation was to forego entertainment at the prom. A floorshow only interrupted the dancing, anyway. With tux rentals in the range of $45. it was difficult for a senior boy to escape for under $100 for the weekend. Most spent more. Girls, too. paid a bundle for gown and accessories. But few complained, adopting the attitude that a Senior Prom comes once in a lifetime and was worth the expense. 58—SENIOR PROM IN SARTORIAL SPLENDOR, senior couples celebrated their upcoming gradua- tion. They joked, romanced, dreamed, and danced all night. BETWEEN THE HUSTLE AND THE CHA CHA there was a full-course dinner, a mo- ment for minor repairs, and songs by Eunice Long. Then it was off to the shore SENIOR PROM —59 SCHOLARSHIPS WERE AWARDED to Doug Fisher by Superintendent Dr. Joseph Sweeney, to Walter Yanchek by Dr. Larry Ashley, to Patrice Bell by Mrs. Sandra Korn of the Jaycettes. and to Craig DeBoer by former Board of Education president Lawrence Kelberg. ADDITIONAL AWARDS were presented to Vinnie Barba my S Sgt Martin S. Evans of the US Army, and to Deborah Young, by Mrs Ann Zar Taub. In all, more than 75 seniors were honored for academic ex- cellence and their contributions to the high school. 60—SENIOR AWARDS Top AWUMA (jded uiitk pnlg€4, toopkiw in koM n Scholarships and cash prizes worth $7500 and an array of trophies, plaques, medals and pins were awarded about-to-be-graduated seniors in a two-hour awards assembly the day prior to com- mencement. The prizes recognized their outstanding accomplishments in academics and in their activities other than athletics, and were granted by a faculty committee organized by Mr. Carlo T. Guidoboni, vice principal, who was in charge of the program for the fifteenth year. Scholarship winners included Nan- cy Cook, the EBEA four-year scholarship; Michael Lyons, the Booster Club four-year grant; Douglas Fisher, Murray A. Chittick Scholarship; Lorraine Curran, Women's Club grant; Kathleen Kel- ly. Vincent P. Thompson Memorial Scholarship; Kathryn Twaddell, Crossing Guards Scholarship, and Peggy Chaney. Lions Club Nursing Scholarship. Also, Patrice Bell. Jaycee-ettes Scholarship; Walter Yanchek. McCrory Company Scholarship; Paul Wait. Badgettes Scholarship; and Craig DeBoer, the Lawrence Kelberg Scholarship. Seniors, of course, have been awarded grants of varying sizes by the various colleges and universitities. These awards were not identified at this program. The various prizes are given an- nually by service organizations in the community, professional groups, clubs and activities, and by individuals as memorials or as professional incentives. SENIOR AWARDS—61 Pmp and d imnuiam, pc ijjM utfdk i kaikd ijjtecnUi g uidmtmg c!au With an estimated crowd of over 6.000 watching under cloudless skies. 734 members of the class of 1976 received their diplomas and moved on into the ranks of alumni in a traditional ceremony filled with pomp and circumstance. The ceremony was flawless and sur- prisingly short, considering the number of graduates involved. The green and white gowned seniors began their procession precisely at six; it was all over shortly after seven-thirty. Equally efficient was the crowd control. Picture-taking relatives were kept off the field so as not to interrupt the ceremonies or to block the view of those in the stands. Air- conditioned shuttle buses again were chartered to move the guests from the stadium to parking areas on route 1 8. Honored during the ceremonies were 12 valedictorians and. new this year, additional seniors who were graduated with academic honors. And. in another innovation, a crew from Video-Vision video- taped the entire ceremony for broadcast later that night and again the following Sunday. For the first time, the graduates were able to celebrate their commencement while watching it take place on TV. Needless to say, the exercises were followed by graduation parties all over town. 62—GRADUATION PARADE OF GRADUATES around the track is a colorful beginning to traditional commencement exercises. Robert Lawson. Joseph Latorraca and William Munyan serv- ed as marshals. CLASS PRESIDENT Nancy Brown made her farewell remarks to the graduates, the chorus and band joined in their stirring rendi- tion of Battle Hymn of the Republic. and then diplomas were awarded by Dr. Larry Ashley. Superintendent Dr. Joseph Sweeney and President of the Board of Education. Mr. Bertram Buckler GRADUATION —63 OFFENSIVE HIGHLIGHTS across top show Mark Lukenda busting through the South River defense to score, and leading Al Jennings on a sweep against Madison. Line clears way for Chip Gardner's handoff in nip- and-tuck Cedar Ridge game. FINE EFFORT in a losing cause as Steve Steitler fires for short gain against Madison and Mark Lukenda bulls through for early lead. Brian McLaughlin's plunge netted needed first down in upset victory over Edison Eagles. 6oturdoy night was the loneliest night of the week. 64—FOOTBALL And understandably. Not since the 1963 season had East Brunswick suffered a losing year in football. It was bound to happen sooner or later, but even that realiza- tion didn't take away the pain. How it happened, in fact, made the pain even worse. Coach Mel Caseiro's varsity, playing two-platoon ball for the first time, opened with a bang against Sayreville, scoring the first time they got the ball. But that was it until Fran Alvarez tore lose in the third period for a 54- yard TD run. A weak offense and Sayreville errors resulted in a 1 2-6 win. Against Cedar Ridge, the Bears scored again the first time they got their hands on the ball. And they bounced back in the second period after the Cougars had tied the game. But they were unable to generate an offense in the second half. Ridge knotted the score again at the end of the third period and won it. 22-14, in the end. East Brunswick had rallied to lead Madison. 14-13. with but seven seconds remaining on the clock in a wild Homecoming battle Madison was faced with a fourth down situation on their own 47. Everyone knew they'd try a desperation pass. They did. Long bombs seldom work. This one did. Junior quarterback John Fisher tossed it and Frank Harrison caught it. on the ten. scor- ing as the game ended. Madison 19, EB 14. FOOTBALL—65 DEFENSIVE ACE Vinnie Barba hauls down Madison back before he pitches out to his teammate. And Al Jennings searches for receiver as a horde of Cedar Ridge defenders closes in. His toss was good. SPEEDSTER Fran Alvarez manages to elude Madison tackier for a long gain. Skip Gardner holds while Shawn Kelly booms one deep downfield in fourth-down situa- tion against Madison's Spartans. So it went. The Bears took a 7-0 lead over Colonia in the first quarter, froze in the second and saw its rally fall short in the fourth. Eventual State champs. Colonia squeaked by 14-13. In a game postponed by rain, the Green and White took an early 8-0 advantage over Kennedy. JFK went ahead on a field goal and a 76-yard pass play. East Brunswick got back in front on Shawn Kelly's field goal—first ever for the Bears. But JFK won with less than three minutes remaining on a six-yard slash, 15-1 1. Only team really to blow the Bears off the field was Brick, who did it with a 40-10 wind. For the varsity, there was some solace. Between the losses were a 14- 6 upset victory over Edison, a 39-1 4 trouncing of South River in the final game of that series—the Rams will leave the conference—and a 28-0 shutout of Perth Am- boy. What happened? An inexperienced starting backfield, defensive line and secondary, a light-weight offensive line, and injuries—eight key ones. Plus the fickle finger of fate. 66—FOOTBALL VARSITY. FRONT: Vin Barba. Bob Foster. Shawn Kelly. Bill Cole. Craig DeBoer. Mark Lukenda. Andy Sundt, Fran Alvarez. Brian McLoughlin ROW 2: Michael Ben. Dorrian Schenk. Jim Arose. Mark Zaki, Bruce Ma- jewski, Chris Bertics, Al Jennings. Mark Anania. Chip Gardner. Paul Wait, Mike Toto ROW 3: Coach Mel Caseiro. Bill Varga. Chris Turi. Leon Wojno. Steve Costanzo. Tom Whittingslow. John Ray. Mike Lyons. Howie Loren. Dave Agey ROW 4: Coaches Dave Stout and Wayne Gordon, Tom Toto. Pete Gudzak. John Melnick. Steve Rummel. Doug Allenby, Coaches Sandy Horvath and Mike Spadafino. Trainer Tom Cockill. ROW 5: Mark Abbott. Coach John Emery. Dave Sar- nak. Jeff Knaus. Bob Collins. Al Todoroff. Coach Bill Pellegrino JAYVEES. FRONT: Margaret Mahony. Kevin Bay. Bob Fallon. Rich Hoerth. Hal Feldbaum, Alan Brennan. Andy Church. Jim Weis. Bob Murphy. Bill Baldizar. Laura Fischer. ROW 2: Elaine Allwine. Charlie Roedelbrown. Tom Olzewski. Paul Arose. Scott Goldshein. Ken Herman. Bill Gaffney, Dave Krakower. Todd Orensky, Chris Buckley, Bruce Redfield. Monique Syvertsen. ROW 3: Bob McNiven, Jack Saul. Jack McLean. Scott Huer. Dave Berkstresser. Tom Cole. Mike Weis. Alan Gracholske, Matt Sheerin. Wayne Belloff ROW 4: Coach Sandy Horvath. Ben McLaughlin. Jeff Chenoweth. Lou Toto. Pete Fiortino. Craig Veverka. Wally Janowski. Rich Brown. Coach Mike Spadafino. Trainer Tom Cockill. ROW 5: Adi Toth. Joe Magliula. Mike Owens, Glenn Stafford, Rich Bongiovanni. Bill Hennelly. Dan Charleston. SOPHS. FRONT: Ben McLaughlin, Jeff Chenoweth. Ken Herman, Bill Hennelly. Alan Grocholske. Bob Murphy. Bill Baldizar. ROW 2: Elaine Allwine. Michael Owens. Chris Buckley. Bruce Redfield. Tom Olzewski. Glenn Stafford. Dan Charleston. ROW 3: Charlie Roedelbrown. Bob McNiven. Joe Magliula. Scott Huer. Matt Sheerin. Monique Syvertsen. Laura Fischer ROW 4: Coach Wayne Gordon. Rich Bongiovanni, Lou Toto. Adi Toth. Wayne Belloff. Coach Mike Spadafino, Trainer Tom Cockill. VARSITY WE They 12 Sayreville 6 14 Cedar Ridge 22 13 Madison 19 13 Colonia 14 39 South River 14 14 Edison 6 10 Brick 40 28 Perth Amboy 0 1 1 J.F. Kennedy 15 Recap: 4-5-0 JAYVEES We They 12 Sayreville 7 6 Cedar Ridge O 8 Madison 6 31 Colonia 6 6 South River 22 0 Edison 28 19 Brick 18 16 Perth Amboy 0 Recap: 6-2-0 SOPHOMORES We They 6 Essex Catholic 0 8 J.F. Kennedy 0 14 Edison 15 14 Woodbridge 0 27 Sayreville 0 12 Brick 6 12 Hamilton West 6 12 Colonia 26 Recap: 6-2-0 FOOTBALL—67 ALL-COUNTY STARS Ed Ramirez, below, and Mike Kuzio. right below, paced Bears to their fourteenth winning season in a row. But their efforts to win a championship were frustrated. Soccer had another winning season—it has had only one losing year since it became a varsity sport fifteen years ago. Perhaps for that reason, just winning seems not enough to fans. They look for championships. And the way the season started, a title or two seemed in the making. But in the sixth game of the season, the booters tripped over Woodbridge, dropping a conference encounter. 2- 1. Coach Leon Florek said he thought his club might have gotten a little over-confident from big wins earlier in the season. Then they dropped a 2-1 decision to Edison, another conference tilt. In the Middlesex County Athletic Conference, a team rarely gets through its schedule un- scathed. But two losses makes it real iffy that the squad will wear the crown. The Bears' chances for the conference championship went a glimmering at season's end when they were bumped from contention by Cedar Ridge, 2-1. But there was still the Middlesex County Coaches' Tournament, and hopes flared when the Green and White advanced to the finals with a 2-1 win over always-tough Jamesburg. That south-county school doesn't play football and so soccer is the big sport there. 68—SOCCER BIG GUNS for the Bears included, clockwise. Dennis Ryan. Sadyck Delgado and goalie Kevin Garrett. Chuck Parkinson, and Mark Zambrovitz All three soccer teams had winning years. Pine season ended in frustration as two titles evaporate SOCCER—69 VARSITY. FRONT: Felix Glennon. Bob Clarke. Dan Kelley. Bruce Barr. Kevin Garrett. Sadyck Delgado. Tom Huchko. Ed Ramirez. BACK: Coach Leon Florek. Charles Parkinson. Greg Parkinson, Dennis Ryan. Bruce Krein. Dave Steinert. Bob Milazzo. Mike Kuzio. Mark Zambrovitz, Hani Zaki. Doug Ballon. James Medaglia JAYVEES. FRONT: Bob Curcio. Steve Kohen. John Thompson. Tony Philips. Dave Menninger. Toni Pontieri, Ben Fourman, Jim Vastardis. Jamie LeMieux. Wayne Bernard. BACK: Coach Robert Simpson. Mike Mahoney. Kevin Laffey. Ron Gentile, Bill Sorber. Bob Blanchard. Evan Douglis, Gil Shladofsky. Howie McCallen. Scott Gatarz, Tom Duffy. SOPHOMORES. FRONT: Marc McDer- mott. Scott Lesser. Mike Plichta, Dave Shladvosky. Greg Anderson, Dave Haut. Tim Riepl. Tony Braiusca. Mike Kaster- nakus. Mitch Siedman. Gary Stienert BACK: Marc DelCol. Lee Nestel. Alex Szydek, Dave Tyler, Gary Steinberg. Scott Weber, Neal Godt. Pete Marshall, John Adochio. Alex Groves, Greg Roth. Missing: Coach Lou Kosa. 70—SOCCER VARSITY JAYVEES SOPHS We They We They We They 6 Perth Amboy 4 2 Carteret 0 2 Katzenbach School 4 7 Madison 0 1 Cedar Ridge 1 1 Colonia 0 3 St. Joseph's 2 2 Colonia 0 1 Westfield 3 7 John F. Kennedy 0 4 Raritan 0 2 St. Joseph's 3 1 Woodbridge 2 2 Hamilton West 11 2 Katzenbach School 1 3 Sayreville O 5 Edison 1 0 Westfield 1 7 New Brunswick 2 3 John F. Kennedy 1 2 EB Vo-Tech 1 1 Hamilton West 6 3 Madison 0 0 St. Joseph's 0 2 Carteret 0 8 New Brunswick o 0 South Brunswick 1 4 Colonia 1 1 1 Perth Amboy 2 2 Colonia 1 4 South Plainfield 4 0 Hamilton West 3 1 EB Vo Tech O 1 Edison 2 3 South River 3 3 J.P. Stevens 0 3 J.P. Stevens 1 Recap: 5-5-1 3 South River 0 4 Woodbridge 3 1 Cedar Ridge 2 3 St. Joseph's 1 2 Jamesburg 1 0 Edison 1 Recap: 11-2-2 2 Neptune 4 Recap: 12-6-0 Won on corner kicks But the favored East Brunswick team was upset in the finals by Edison, 1-0. Which left only the state tournament. And the Bears could be rated as a dark-horse contender at best. The soccer powers have traditionally come from north Jersey and the Trenton area. East Brunswick was ousted from the states by Neptune. 4-2. A frustrating end to an otherwise grand season. The dearth of any trophies should not obscure the team's record: 1 2-6 overall, 9-3 in the conference. Nor the outstanding play of Mike Kuzio. named most- improved player, nor Ed Ramirez, picked as the team's most outstanding player. Both were also named to the All-County soccer team. Dan Kelly made the county's second team. SOCCER—71 6ong of the open rood hod o fomilior ring: rhythm ond blues 72—CROSS COUNTRY NEAR PERFECT RECORD during the season meant nothing as Edison grabbed conference title in MCAC meet at Buccleuch Park Best Bear time was Sneden's 16:05. Taylor of Eduson came in first with a 15:28.3 clocking. NEW COACHES George Boring and James Balsamello spur East Brunswick runners in conference run. while Track coach Dud Tighe clocks them across finish. Green and White finished second. Team was 13-1 for season. Although Cross Country had changed conductors this season (Coach George Boring replaced Lou Horvath on varsity and James Balsamello took over for Bob Benson on the jayvees). the band of runners made the same kind of music they have since 1962: one winning hit after another. The harriers stretched their victory record to 1 56 over a span of thirteen winning seasons. They have lost but 47. But while they had the right rhythm, their music also had a touch of the blues to it. For despite taking 1 3 of 1 4 meets this fall, that record wasn't good enough to win for them the Middlesex County Athletic Conference championship. They came in second to Edison. And although their performance was the best of any county entree, they could do no better than sixth place in the Central Jersey Group IV meet sponsored by the NJSIAA (New Jersey State Inter-scholastic Athletic Association.) Jayvees. too. played the same tune. They went un- beaten in fourteen outings and thus extended their un- defeated skein to 93. But in the winner-take-all con- ference meet, they finished second. Mike Sneden was named to cross country coaches' All- County team and Mark Roberts earned honorable men- CROSS COUNTRY—73 tion. Over the years. East Brunswick's runners have com- piled what is probably the best record in dual meets and tri-meets but seldom do they excel in the big ones: the conference or the state runs. One observer commented that East Brunswick is turned off by the horde of runners at the start. They do much better when the course is not jam-packed with plodders. It's mostly a matter of attitude. Cross country is a sport of loners. More than one team member is up at the crack of dawn, runs the distance from home to school to practice at 6:30 in the morning, then has breakfast before attending the day's classes. After school, it's back to the track for more practice or a meet. Running becomes a way of life, a pattern that continues through the year long after the Cross Country season ends. You find the squad members out for Winter Track and Spring Track, and see them jogging along the roads of the township during the summer. Theirs is not essentially a team sport nor is it one that at- tracts crowds of adoring fans. They are rarely spurred on by pretty cheerleaders or oom-pah bands. They com- pete against a stop-watch. They compete over a three mile course that can lead them up hill and down, through woods and fields, over grassy fields and paved parking lots. In this area, most 74-CROSS COUNTRY CROSS COUNTRY. FRONT: Coach James Balsamello, Art Jensen. Mike Barkann. Craig Brearley. Mark Roberts. Mike Sneden. Gary Tomchuck. Bill Chinchar. Coach George Boring BACK: Diane Lake. Chris White. Joseph Devaney. Doug Tomchuck, Alan Heller, Ira Levine, Steve Marino. Frank Asdourian, Arden Taub, Darlene Shiber. VARSITY JAYVEES We They We They 23 Hamilton West 32 23 Hamilton West 32 22 Woodbridge 37 New Brunswick 20 Carteret 37 15 J.P.Stevens 50 21 John F. Kennedy 34 26 Edison 32 18 New Brunswick 48 Perth Amboy 26 J.P. Stevens 29 15 South River 50 35 Edison 22 Colonia 26 Perth Amboy 30 Woodbridge 21 Colonia 34 Carteret 17 South River 39 Piscataway 24 Piscathaway 33 24 •Madison 37 19 Madison 34 16 Cedar Ridge 40 17 Cedar Ridge 40 18 John F. Kennedy 37 17 Sayreville 39 1 5 Sayreville 50 Edison Invitational: 12th Edison Invitational: 12th Middlesex County Meet: 5th MCAC Meet: 2nd MCAC Meet: 2nd Central Jersey Group IV: 6th •Forfeits Recap: 14-0-0 Recap: 1 3-1-0 courses tend to be flat. Most runners can cover the dis- tance in under seventeen minutes. Sneden, Roberts, and Craig Brearley did it in 1 6:05 to take a three-way tie for first against John F. Kennedy, but Ed Taylor ran it in 15:28.3 to win the conference meet for Edison. The success of East Brunswick runners, the dedication of its coach—himself a runner who has participated in the Boston marathon and finished—or the individual nature of the sport has proved contagious, and many students and townspeople have joined the team in early-morning social runs that has evolved into a Run for Fun program. CROSS COUNTRY—75 ON THE ATTACK, across top. are Kim Racz. Lisa Romano. Judy Bornheimer and Kathy Carrick. Also Elaine Chelli and Trish Bornheimer. At bottom right. Trish Bornheimer and Joanne Givas. ON DEFENSE, across bottom, are goalie Veronica Gudewicz. Debbie Deutsch. Elaine Chelli. and Janet Sorber. Bears retained MCAC crown and won the county coaches' tournament. Girls' field hockey won the honors with first championship 76—FIELD HOCKEY Where boys sports failed this fall, the girls succeeded. And the first of their teams to bring home a cham- pionship trophy was Field Hockey. Added to their motivation, no doubt, was the fact that they were defen- ding champs. They thus became one of the few varsity teams in the school's history to repeat as title winners. In winning the conference honors again. Field Hockey compiled an overall record of 1 2-2-1 and a conference mark of 5-0-1. The tie was 3-3 split with Sayreville, a team they would meet twice more during the campaign. Over the years, one of the few teams to have gained an edge over East Brunswick has been Sayreville in this sport. Last year, though they lost to the Bears in regular season, they edged EB in the finals of county coaches' tournament, 3-3 on time. In a nip-and-tuck fracas this year, the Bears got revenge, winning the tournament with a 3-2 victory over the Bombers, on Peggy Cowherd's second-half goal. But Sayreville bounced back in the third and final meeting in the second round of the state tournament and spoiled East Brunswick's bid for a triple crown. Final score was 1-1. with Sayreville winning as they had done in the coaches' tournament of a year ago—on time. FIELD HOCKEY—77 VARSITY JAYVEES AGGRESSIVE VETERANS included, counter-clockwise. Peggy Cowherd. Elaine Chelli, Trish Bornheimer, Debbie Deutsch. Joann Givas. Pat McBriarty and Janet Sorber. We They We They 1 South River 0 1 Westfield 2 1 Franklin 0 4 J.P. Stevens 1 1 Sayreville 0 3 South River 0 0 Madison 0 2 Franklin 0 0 Highland Park 0 10 Edison 0 1 Westfield 2 2 Raritan 0 0 Manville 0 3 Sayreville 3 o 2 Highland Park O Recap: 3-1-3 2 Highland Park 0 3 Sayreville 2 3 Madison 0 3 Highland Park 0 5 Cedar Ridge 0 2 Manville 0 5 Madison 0 1 Sayreville 1 •County Tourney ••State Tourney (Sayreville won State on time) Recap: 1 2-2-1 _______o At season's end. Coach Terry Leiblein announced that she would not return to the squad next fall; she would be on maternity leave. Two championship trophies out of three was a very nice going-away present. The varsity's successful defense of its MCAC cham- pionship and its winning the coaches' tournament trophy was aided by the return of several experienced lettermen: Elaine Chelli. Peggy Cowherd. Cindy Gar- boski. Cheryl Edwards, Joanne Givas. Sue Heitz, Pat McBriarty. Karen Scott, Trish Bornheimer. Debbie Deutsch, Janet Sorber, Tracy Smith. Veronica Gudewicz and Theresa Haremza. Included in that group were last season's second- ranking varsity scorer and top-ranking jayvee scorer. 78—FIELD HOCKEY VARSITY. FRONT: Pat McBriarty. Tracy Smith, Sue Heitz, Peggy Cowherd, Elaine Chelli. BACK: Kim Rapolla, Debbie Deutsch, Cindy Garboski, Joann Gives, Karen Scott, Trish Bornheimer. Janet Sorber. Coach Terry Leiblein. JAYVEES. FRONT: Sharon Kelly, Maryann Poole. Beth Babeu. Beth Voltz, Paula Casiere, Lisa Goetz. Robin Williscroft, Robin Kaplan. ROW 2: Barbara Olson, Bar- bara Bachman. Joan McCombie, Sharon Heitzman, Cheryl Edwards. Theresa Harem- za, Mary Lou Gavin, Valerie Giovanni, Coach Gail Petricek. BACK: Jane Timper. Kim Racz. Colleen MacNamara. Zoey Kellmen. Lisa Romano, Judy Bornheimer. Doris Popovich. Kathy Carrick, Jennifer Olson, Cathy Seidenberg. Veronica Gudewicz. Kim Kune. Mary Rebele. Trish Bornheimer. She did not let up this season and was honored as this year's best offensive player. An ap- propriate tribute to an athlete who scored all five goals in a state tournament game against Madison. Named best defensive player was Cindy Garboski and Ellen Chelli was cited as the most improved. Jayvees, coached by Gail Petricek. ran up three con- secutive victories before the rains came and changed their luck. After two contests were called off because of the inclement weather, the jayvees were unable to regain their winning stride. They tied Madison and Highland Park, lost to Westfield, and then tied Manville for a season mark of three wins, one loss, and three ties. FIELD HOCKEY—79 GIRLS GYMNASTICS We They 69.82 Kearny 21.00 80.20 Middletown 67.55 77.08 Holmdel 70.98 80.44 Carteret 64.43 86.07 Columbia 67.76 66.07 Cedar Ridge 52.00 81.55 Edison 41.00 82.00 North Brunswick 49.34 89.35 Sayreville 79.50 80.55 Madison 70.50 89.45 Raritan 59.15 89.94 J.P. Stevens 71.02 County Tourney: 2nd State Finals: 3rd Recap: 1 2-0 Paced by Bernadette Cybulski. Girls Gymnastics added to the embarrassment of the boys teams this fall by finishing their second regular season in a row un- defeated and by successfully defending their MCAC championship. No other school has ever won that con- ference title. The only disappointment of the year was their defeat in the county girls gymnastics tournament by also unbeaten Piscataway by a heartbreaking .6 of a point—82.1 5 to 81.55! They regained their stride with a third place finish in the NJSIAA statewide meet at season's end in Oakhurst. It was their best performance in the states in their history. Bernadette Cybulski was honored for the second time in her career as the team's best all-round gymnast. Jamie Nesh was named the most outstanding. Special recognition must be paid to Coach Eileen Wans who, in her two years, has produced two undefeated teams and two conference champions. A former gymnast at Montclair State, she believes her girls must never be satisfied, that there is always something more they can master. It takes a willingness to stick out the workouts, to work one's heart off, to ''feel a move, visualize it, and then have that extra ingredient—the courage to pull it off. 80—GIRLS GYMNASTICS UNBEATEN CHAMPS. FRONT: Dori Meranchik. Jill Ryer. Jamie Nesh. Ber- nadette Cybulski. Carol Lacina. Suzanne Bonnici. BACK: Irene Karl. Sue Christiansen. Anita Bilodeau. Sharon Stupay. Mardi Verbanic. Coach Eileen Wans. Sharon Solomon, Marlene Henry. Barb Rebele. Marta Lucak. Lisa Donzella. WINNING FORMS. Jamie Nesh and Marlene Henry perform on the balance beam. Bernadette Cybulski dismounts from the bar. Jamie was named most outstan- ding; Bernadette, the best all-round for se- cond straight year. Then the girl gymnasts checked in, wearing a crown of their own GIRLS GYMNASTICS—81 BOYS GYMNASTICS We They 80.80 St. Peter's 97.50 89.30 Ridgewood 99.30 97.05 Middletown 92.80 83.30 New 67.95 Brunswick 85.14 Wall 57.40 87.20 Hunterdon 98.10 96.30 Columbia 96.45 83.1 5 Cedar Ridge 73.80 92.30 Henry Hudson 105.95 98.95 Madison 81.35 99.20 Sayreville 84.70 lOI .90 jFranklin Recap: 7-5 63.90 ON THE COME-BACK. FRONT: Steve Whittingslow. Bob Connington, Ralph Yacovelli- BACK: Rich Schulz, Mark Fischer, Bob Schalhoub. Tom Tischhauser. Roy Kieffer, Rick Olivero. Coach Don Wieder. His teams had reigned supreme for no less than seven consecutive years as state gymnastic champs, but last year Coach Don Wieder saw them suffer through a dis- astrous 4-8 season. Building on returning lettermen, such as Tom Tischhauser, Roy Kieffer and Rick Olivero, he guided them back to a winning 7-5 season this fall, one that saw improvement meet after meet. Only a loss to perenially strong Henry Hudson team kept the Bears from finishing the second half of their campaign un- defeated. Still, the old flash and style that was evident in their glory years when they used to meet teams like West Point and Annapolis on a par were gone. Veteran gymnast Tom Tischhauser, who will attend Cornell on a scholarship, was named most outstanding gymnast. He won second in the state individual meet in parallel bars, with a 7.1 point performance, and was rated fifth in the state all-round, with 34.2 points. Roy Kieffer was named the team's best all-round per- former. and Rick Olivero won fourth in the state meet on the parallel bars, with a 6.75 point effort. For the record, it should be recorded that boys gym- nastics is not a sport in which an MCAC championship is awarded. If it were, they'd have been champs, having beaten every conference school against which they competed. 82 —BOYS GYMNASTICS BACK TO WINNING Across the top, Glenn Shapanka and Mark Fischer on the horse—or off it—Rich Schulz on rings. Roy Kieffer on the parallel bars, and state award winners Rick Olivero and Tom Tischhauser on bars. INDIVIDUAL STANDOUTS were Roy Kieffer. named the team's best all-round per- former and shown here on the rings, and Rick Olivero. who placed fourth in the state boys bounced bock to win-column but locked old pizzazz BOYS GYMNASTICS—83 Coal in cagers' Christmas stocking was for what lay ahead They opened the season in early December in whirlwind fashion, edging a good Madison five, 59-57, going away from a highly-regarded Ocean team. 69-60. and stopping Kennedy. 54-53. Maybe that was the problem. They were rated sixth in the state and some of the newspapers said they were the team to beat in the conference. For East Brunswick basketball, that's pretty heady stuff. The opposition apparently took the newspapers to heart, too, and—except for an upset win over Perth Am- boy—there was little to cheer about the rest of December. Sayreville beat them, Roselle did the same, and then came the Christmas tournament. The Bears waltzed over Hoffman only to be dumped by Madison in the semis and to be embarassed by South River in the consolation game. Some consolation. The lump of coal in that Christmas stocking was not as much for what they'd done, as for what they would do. They celebrated the New Year with a three-game losing streak. A win over little Highland Park was another loss to South River. And so it went. A win, a loss, another win, three losses. Until finally a rout by Piscataway in the first round of the state tournament. What went wrong? The only returning starter from last year's team was Chris Chian. He set a new scoring GOOD FOR TWO points were Jeff Knaus' jump shot. left, and both of Chris Chian s attempts. Chian set a new school scoring record but it wasn't enough as team ended below the 500 mark on the season. ON THE OFFENSE for the Bears were, clockwise. Dennis Ryan. Bob Milazzo. and Jeff Knaus. All three were seniors. Coach John Emery will face a rebuilding problem in '76-’77. BASKETBALL—85 record for the school. But there wasn't the balanced scoring needed. Bob Milazzo. who had started with last year's varsity, provided Coach Emery with experience in the forecourt. Dennis Ryan added speed and a nice jumper. Jeff Knaus. up from the jayvees, developed well. But. once you got past the starting five, there wasn't much depth. When the starters had foul problems, there wasn't much hope for a victory. Fans looking ahead to next year had little to hope for as the jayvees were struggling though a losing season of their own. They ended with a 5-1 5 record. While basketball has been a popular sport with the fans here. East Brunswick teams have, over the years, not been that successful at the game. Since they have played interscholastic ball, they have won 161 and lost 153. barely making it over .500 in the 15-year span. The reasons seem to be that there are other sports that attract the athletes' interest, that many basketball players have just come from football, and there isn't that fabric of school-yard basketball games feeding game- wise youngsters into the high school. RAMS WON AGAIN despite Chris Chian's game-high scoring total of 29 points, and timely layups such as this one by Steve Costanzo. And they leave the conference because they can't compete against big schools like East Brunswick. VARSITY. FRONT: Dennis Ryan. Brian Costello, Evan Douglis. Jeff Zajoc. Bruce McCormick. BACK: Bob Milazzo. Chris Chian, Steve Costanzo. Ed Herbert. Jeff Knaus. Coach John Emery. 86—BASKETBALL i VARSITY JAYVEES We They We They 59 Madison 57 53 Madison 44 69 Ocean 60 58 Ocean 39 54 John F. Kennedy 53 48 John F. Kennedy 53 50 Sayreville 67 39 Sayreville 61 70 Roselle 74 37 Roselle 62 71 Perth Amboy 69 50 Perth Amboy 66 74 Hoffman 42 58 Carteret 60 47 Madison 55 35 New Brunswick 42 50 South River 60 37 Madison 46 54 Carteret 71 32 Highland Park 45 45 New Brunswick 73 52 South River 46 49 Madison 56 48 Cedar Ridge 46 67 Highland Park 51 51 Colonia 58 61 South River 64 60 Edison 68 63 Cedar Ridge 51 41 J.P. Stevens 49 57 Colonia 65 43 New Brunswick 62 64 Edison 59 59 South River 61 54 J.P. Stevens 65 43 Sayreville 46 60 New Brunswick 72 59 Woodbridge 54 57 South River 66 60 Raritan 67 53 Sayreville 41 40 Woodbridge 64 Recap. 5-1 5-0 63 Raritan 65 51 Piscataway 76 •Christmas Tourney NJSIAA Tourney Recap: 9-1 5-0 IPSLkRS mm ' u 13 TENACIOUS DEFENSE by the Rams threw Jeff Knaus off stride and generally stymied the Bear offense each time the teams met this season. South River won all three games. JAYVEES. FRONT: Tom Pollock. Mike Owens, Scott Lesser, Evan Douglis. ROW 2: Jeff Zajac, Dave Menninger, Jeff Temple, Gary Steinert, Dave Zeidwerg BACK: Coach Dud Tighe, Lamont Jackson, Mike Switlyk, Don Reardon, Tom Ozewski, John Adochio. Coach Hnery Stankiewicz. BASKETBALL—87 Girls team continued to ploy Lucy to boys' Charlie Brown SCORING PUNCH for the Bears came on team's most valuable player. Team ended fine shooting from Debbie Hanna (3) and second best in conference. Veronica Gudewicz. Debbie was named 88—GIRLS BASKETBALL JAYVEES 0 We They 41 Madison 17 35 John F. Kennedy 28 56 Sayrevilte 40 33 Perth Amboy 24 34 Carteret 39 43 New Brunswick 19 37 Madison 18 52 Highland Park 30 34 South River 29 53 Cedar Ridge 26 37 Colonia 30 43 Edison 19 44 J.P. Stevens 16 47 New Brunswick 34 35 South River 16 53 Sayreville 45 52 St. Peter's 26 41 Woodbridge 19 Recap: 17-1-0 Like the obstreperous Lucy in the Charles Schultz car- toon strip, girls basketball vexed the Charlie Browns of the boys' team by winning sixteen of their 24 outings this winter. And though they were losers in their All- Brunswick Christmas tournament and in the county and NJSIAA classics, they did well enough to come in se- cond in the conference standings. The girls jayvees did even better, registering a 17-1 mark. Trish Bornheimer won the team's best defensive player honors and Karen Scott was named best on offense. Debbie Hanna was the most valuable player while Cin- dy Garboski was tabbed the most improved. In the Christmas tournament, the girls advanced to the finals where they lost to North Brunswick. 68-45. They also made it to the finals of the county coaches' tourna- ment, before bowing to South Plainfield, 76-48. Still, two second-place trophies in basketball was something to crow about and, Lucy-like, they did. All the boys could say was, ''Good grief.'' VARSITY We They 45 Madison 37 49 John F. Kennedy 29 42 Sayreville 49 45 New Brunswick 39 45 North Brunswick 68 64 Carteret 52 47 New Brunswick 38 44 Madison 35 51 Highland Park 56 51 South River 31 51 Cedar Ridge 49 58 Colonia 44 58 Edison 45 55 J.P. Stevens 28 56 New Brunswick 43 53 South River 26 67 Sayreville 76 46 St. Peter's 61 36 Woodbridge 41 61 Sayreville 58 48 South Plainfield 76 63 Hamilton East 59 36 Woodbridge 41 •Christmas Tourney ••County Coaches Tourney •••NJSIAA Tourney Recap: 1 6-8-0 VARSITY. FRONT: Debbie Hanna. Trish Bornheimer. Cindy Garboski. Jeanne Wadsworth, Tracy Smith. ROW 2: Cathy Carrick, Veronica Gudewicz. Mark Cockill. Karen Scott. Joanne Givas. Janet Sorber BACK: Coach Sonyia Regalado. Sal Picarello. Kim Rapolla. Judy Burtick. Carol Pinizzotta. Barbara Bachman. JAYVEES. FRONT: Cindy Teusch. Paula Casiere ROW 2: Judy Burtick. Theresa Haremza, Mary Lou Gavin. Judy Bornheimer. Colleen McNamara. Lisa Goetz. Kim Rapolla BACK: Coach Sonyia Regalado. Carol Pinizzotta. Mary Compton. Patty Cuff. Mary Cockill. Robin Williscroft. Sue Halasz. Barbara Bachman. Coach Sal Picarello. GIRLS BASKETBALL—89 It was the worst wrestling season ever for the Bears: 3 wins. 6 losses and one tie. What used to be one of the most successful sports had, like football, had sufferred through its bleakest campaign in its fifteen-year history. Able to boast only one district champ—Craig DeBoer in the heavyweight class—returning wrestlers could only look to next year and hope for something better. Even that hope was dampened somewhat by the resignation, at season's end, of coach Karl Faeth. Trainer for the United State Weightlifting team, Faeth said that he had found his time stretched too thin and that he preferred to devote his non-classroom time to his duties with the weightlifting team. (You may have seen him during the ABC television coverage of the Olympic games from Montreal this summer.) The Bears seemed to catch hold after dropping their first two meets to Edison and J. P. Stevens. They walloped Perth Amboy, 54-6, trounced Carteret, 36-1 5, and edg- ed Sayreville. 26-24. But they were losers in the next five outings, a slump only slightly relieved by a 27-27 draw with Woodbridge. Then two more losses. The team got fairly good results in the lighter weight classifications: Ralph Meade at 101, Larry Frazer at 108, and Alex Koken at 118. Most consistent at this end of the scale was senior Bruce Roehrig, wrestling this year at 1 22. But that was it except for Jim Lamo, at 1 88 and Mark Lukenda at heavyweight. DeBoer saw only limited action because of an injury. When he did perform, he won. 90—WRESTLING Foeth endured but hope didn't os chority took o flier TENSE MOMENTS engage interest of Chip Gardner. Dave Berkstresser and Alex Koken. Bruce Roehrig got his pin. center top. and Jim Lamo, top right, did the same Lamo was the only one to win in disastrous 6-56 meet against Piscataway. IN ACTION across the bottom are Larry Frazer and Bob Connington. while Coach Faeth stops Chip Gardner's bleeding nose WRESTLING —91 Looking at the conference, the Bears could take some consolation in the fact that they were not the doormat. They finished in eighth place out of thirteen MCAC teams, trailed by Colonia. Stevens. Sayreville, Cedar Ridge, and New Brunswick. Whoever succeeds Faeth as coach will have some rebuilding to do and will face the problem of reversing a losing trend that began in 1 973 with the death of Coach Jay Doyle in mid-season and which seemed to be accelerated the following year with the accidental death of Doyle's successor. James Rishar. Save for district championship in Faeth's first year as coach in 1 974. it's been a downhill slide. VARSITY We They 12 Edison 35 15 J. P. Stevens 31 54 Perth Amboy 6 36 Carteret 15 26 Sayreville 24 18 John F. Kennedy 26 13 Madison 39 22 Union 27 6 Piscataway 56 18 South River 22 27 Woodbridge 27 14 Cedar Ridge 35 20 South Brunswick 27 Recap: 3-9-1 92—WRESTLING Here's the picture since 1966: 1966: 8 wins, 4 losses. 1967: 8 wins, 4 losses. 1968: 5 wins. 7 losses. 1969: 8 wins, 5 losses. 1 tie. 1 970: 8 wins, 3 losses. 1971: 9 wins, 4 losses. 1 tie. 1972: 7 wins. 6 losses. 1973: 7 wins. 7 losses. 1974: 6 wins. 7 losses. 1975: 5 wins. 9 losses. 1976: 3 wins. 6 losses, 1 tie. Departing the team via the graduation route are Roehrig at 122; Dennis Mooney at 128; Chip Gardner, 141; Mike Lyons. 170; Doug Allenby, 188; and heavyweights Lukenda and DeBoer. ON THEIR WAY TO WINS, opposite page, are Mike Doyle and Dave Berkstresser. Coach Faeth encourages Mike Lyons before final period of Mike's bout. And Jim Lamo tries to figure how to stop his man as he comes to sidelines between periods of his bout. VARSITY. FRONT: Ralph Meade. Larry Frazer. Alex Koken, Bruce Roehrig. Bob Connington. Mike Doyle. Neal Baker BACK: Coach Karl Faeth. Dave Berkstresser, Chip Gardner. Pete Gudzak. Jim Lamo. Mike Lyons. Mark Lukenda JAYVEES. FRONT. Bob Greenfest. Bob Connolly. Geoff Luce. Dave Fourman. Frank Asdourian, Tony Phillips. Ben Fourman. Bill Homeyer. Paul Katcher. Dave Regenic. BACK: Jack Goldrossen, Alex Groves. Kevin Clarke. Glenn Stafford. Jim Varga. Dave Edwards. Scott Goldschein. Bill Sorber. Art Vash. Tony Ippolito. Coach Paul Quirk. WRESTLING—93 We uiu robbed: quirk in rules cost unbeaten team a crown Winter Track had another undefeated regular season but ironically did not win the coveted Middlesex County Athletic Conference championship. In this particular sport, the crown goes to the school who wins the MCAC Meet. That school was Edison, who did it up brown, setting four new records in the process. Even more frustrating for Coach Peter Kaznosky and his team is the fact that the conference rules change next year and the title will be awarded to the school with the best record. The Bears had their closest call during the season in the meet with Madison, a team that edged them for second place in the MCAC championship meet. East Brunswick squeaked by. 40-37. They enjoyed a 9-point advantage over Edison in regular season, winning 43-34. Most of the winter track runners also are on the Cross Country squad. The season may change, but not their aversion to big meets. They seem to run for fun and a mob scene at the start or on the course is not their idea of fun. In any case, they won none of the big meets they were entered in this winter. In their own East Brunswick Invitational, they came in second. The Bears did manage to set two new records and tie a third. They broke old marks with an 1 1 :08.6 distance medley and an 1 1'8 high jump, a two-man event. Their time of 32.2 ties the old mark in the shuttle UNDER THE CRITICAL EYE of Coach Peter Kaznosky and the pressure of the stop watch are. across top. Craig Brearley. Mike Sneden. John Maher and hurdler Bob Greene. MOST VALUABLE PLAYER award went to high-jump artist Bob Jones, a junior. Jones tied Ron Liteplo's record of 6'4 in the MCAC championship meet and. with Greg Saul, took first in two-man high jump in State finals. WINTER TRACK—95 hurdles. In the County Relays, they placed fourth. In this meet. East Brunswick's three-year domination of the high jump was ended when Vince Reilly of St. Joseph's cleared 6'4 , edging Bob Jones at 6'2 . Jones was involved in a three-way tie for second in the State Developmental Meet a month later. His 6'2 effort was bested by another 6'4” leap, this one by Ed Ki- iewski of Plainfield. Jones finally cashed in on the gold in the MCAC championship meet. His leap of 6'4 tied the old record set by East Brunswick's Ron Liteplo two years ago. Greg Saul was second with a jump of 6'2' Their efforts as well as a second-place finish by Craig Brearley in the mile run helped ease the pain that came with the loss of the crown. In the State Group IV Meet, where the Bears wound up eight, Jones and Saul won the two-man high jump event. Jones was measured at 6'2” and Saul, at 5'10” A junior, Jones was named the team's most valuable member at season's end. SEASON RECORD MEANT NOTHING as MCAC meet would determine cham- pionship in Winter Track. Mark Roberts is on the inside at the start of the mile, makes his move to the outside near the finish. But Edison man won in record 4:22.5. IN REGULAR SEASON MEET. East Brunswick won every event but the two- mile in trouncing Perth Amboy, 67-10. Bears couldn't seem to get things together, however, in big meets. 96—WINTER TRACK For the record, the team ran again this season without a board track. The one it had constructed a few years back after a “Buy a Board for a Buck fund-raising campaign was partly the victim of normal wear-and-tear but mostly, of vandals who coveted the lumber for patio fur- niture and workshop shelves. Money to replace the por- table wooden oval has not been budgeted and no effort has been mounted for another fund-raising campaign or do-it-yourself construction program. The team will con- tinue to train in the high school corridors or, when weather permits, on the driving range and parking lots. WINTER TRACK We They 46 John F. Kennedy 31 43 Edison 34 64 South River 13 40 Madison 37 60 J. P. Stevens 17 67 Perth Amboy 10 51 Colonia 26 Recap: 7-0 EB Invitational: 2nd MCAC Tourney: 3rd County Relays: 4th State Relays: 8th UNDEFEATED. FRONT: Colleen Casey. Amy French. Art Jensen. Arden Taub. Mike Toto. Greg Saul. Lee Nestel. Ernie Erdosi ROW TWO: Debbie Deutsch. Anita Rakow. Bob Jones. Kevin Dembinski, Al Jennings. John Maher. Tom Koletis. Pete Fiorentino. Craig Brearley. Doug Tomchuk, Mike Ben BACK: Coach Jack Brophy. Jeff Keck. Howie Wertheim. Bob Green. Steve Marino. Bill Chinchar, Gary Tomchuk. Colin Moore. Bruce Krein. Brian Walsh. Scott Heuer. Walt Pienciak. Coach Peter Kaznosky. WINTER TRACK—97 Corning off a debut last season that saw them win only once, the swim team apparently decided they'd had enough of losing. Overcoming the handicaps of having no pool at the high school and 6:30 a.m. practices at the YMCA pool in downtown New Brunswick, they posted a record of 8-3 in their second go. Their ascendancy was boosted by no less than five double-winners during the season: Bob Clark in the 1 OO-yard freestyle and 1 00-yard backstroke. Ron Stott in the 200 freestyle and 1 00 breaststroke. Ken Wahler in the 200 individual medley and 100-yard butterfly. Bob Blanchard in the 500 freestyle and individual medley, and Genie Abbott in the girls 200-yard in- dividual medley and 300-yard breaststroke. End-of-season honors were awarded Robyn Redfield, Ken Wahler and Bob Blanchard, the trio being named most valuable. And to Tracy MacMillan. Dan Davision and Rico Ronchi, named most improved. Twenty-one boys and girls lettered, which gives some indication of the team's success. Last year's team photo had only nine swimmers. SWIM TEAM FRONT: Felix Glennon. Larry Greenley. Howie Shemitz. Mike Yuhas. Bob Blanchard. Robert Clarke. Joanne Syrokwash. Ken Wahler. Darryl Thompson. Emanuel Psyhojos. Dan Davison. Dan Koft. ROW TWO: Sharon Letson. Jesse Hirsh. Beverly Liddicotte. Ceryl MacDonald. Tracy MacMillan. Doreen Ronchi. Genie Abbott. Kay Schindler. Meryl Polcari. Katie Wilkens. Beth Ruch. Robin Redfield. Barbara Hanson. BACK: Coach Doug Jordan. Dan Reich. Mike Kasternakis. Vinnie Gangi. Mark Hirsh. George Psyhojos. Ed Field. Scott Haskell. Ron Stott. Joe Noto. John Tarantino. 98—SWIMMING 5wimmers sploshed to prominence in second seoson SWIMMING We They 59.5 Toms River South 109.5 66.0 Union 86.0 85.0 Hamilton East 83.0 98.0 Hamilton West 71.0 45.0 Union Catholic 31.0 82.0 North Brunswick 72.0 83.0 Hopewell Valley 73.0 22.0 St. Joseph's 54.0 42.0 Bridgewater East 34.0 46.0 R utgers Prep 30.0 84.0 Red Bank Recap: 8-3-0 74.0 WINNER OF THE 50-YARD FREESTYLE against Bridgewater East was George Psyhojos, opposite page. Bob Blanchard took the 200 and 500-yard freestyle in that meet Kay Schindler goes off the block in a relay event as Joanne Syrokwash. Blanchard and Psyhojos watch. BACKSTROKE WINNER Bob Clark strokes toward another win against Union Catholic That's Clark, too. with teammate Chuck Parkinson in Lane 1 at the start against Hamilton West. Vinnie Gangi and Tracy MacMillan are off. while teammates hold ears against the bang of the starter's gun. Kay Schindler is shown in the breaststroke. SWIMMING—99 Girls joined league and bouiled over sceptics with third-place finish GIRLS TEAM FRONT: Kathy Heilman. Debbie Rucklin. BACK: Heather Sheehan, Lori Schuckman. Coach Gil Mangieri. Tricia Conti. Pat Cuff MOST OUTSTANDING BOWLER for the second year was Art Mahnken. right. Other veterans included Peter Tobasco. above, and oc!f Gordon. HELP WANTED. Experience helpful. Coach Mangieri will have to replace seniors Loren Morse. Mark Klein. Rich Rau and Dan Susik. on opposite page 10O—BOWLING -Vv Bowling, in only its second year as an interscholastic sport, expanded this winter and got a new coach. A girls league was formed and Mr. Gil Mangieri took over the co-ed team from Athletic Director Charles King. The ex- pansion was a success. The boys maintained their fourth-place standing in the conference—same as last year—while the girls played one-upmanship and con- founded the sceptics with a third place finish. Most Outstanding Bowler awards went to Art Mahnken and Heather Sheehan. Mahnken. a repeat winner as MVP, led the league with an average of 1 85. Heather, only a junior, rolled a high game of 2 55. during which she had eight strikes in a row. East Brunswick boys lost 3 of 5 games against the league champion. Stevens. The girls won only 1 of 8 games against girls champion, Carteret. The boys en- joyed a 5-3 edge over second-place Edison and split 4- 4 with third-place Colonia. The girls trailed second- place Edison 3 games to 5. GIRLS BOWLING We They 4 Perth Amboy 0 2 South Plainfield 2 4 John F. Kennedy 0 4 J. P. Stevens 0 3 Union Catholic 1 1 Colonia 3 2 Woodbridge 2 0 Edison 4 4 St. Peter's 0 0 Carteret 4 3 Perth Amboy 1 1 South Plainfield 3 4 John F. Kennedy 0 4 J. P Stevens 0 3 Union Catholic 1 4 Colonia 0 3 Edison 1 3 Woodbridge 1 4 St. Peter's 0 1 Carteret 3 Recap: 54-2 5 BOYS BOWLING We They 3 Perth Amboy 1 2 Brearley Regl 2 2 John F. Kennedy 2 2 J. P.Stevens 2 2 Union Catholic 2 3 Colonia 1 2 Edison 2 1 Woodbridge 3 1 St. Joseph's 3 4 St. Peter's O 4 Carteret 0 2 Perth Amboy 2 3 Brearley Reg'l 1 1 John F. Kennedy 3 1 J. P. Stevens 3 3 Union Catholic 1 1 Colonia 3 3 Edison 1 3 Woodbridge 1 1 St. Joseph's 3 4 St. Peter's 0 2 Carteret 2 Recap: 52-38 BOWLING—101 CHAMPIONSHIP FORM is displayed by Jim Medaglia. Tom Fiocco and Dave Steinert. across top. Tom and Dave were voted Most Improved golfers. MOST VALUABLE GOLFER was Howie Gugig. shown putting for his par Tom Fioc- co practices an approach shot to the green while, on next page. Tom Toto and Rich Rau tote their own bags after long drives from the tee. When they were county and conference champs a few seasons back, they were dubbed the Golden Schlepps by their coach. Dino Jasper. They lost their championships when a few of the schlepps turned pro and opted for a January graduation. The last of them was supposed to have graduated last June after bring- ing the team back to a second-place finish with a 2 1 -4 record. But the Golden Schlepps —or at least their spirit—stalked the golf courses again this Spring. Paced by Howie Gugig. Tom Fiocco. and Dave Steinert, they not only bettered last season's mark by winning 24 of 26 matches, but they also recaptured the Middlesex Athletic Conference championship. They averaged in the low 40's for nine holes, which would be low 80's for 1 8—a dream score for most golfers. Gugig was named Most Valuable Golfer and Fiocco and Steinert shared the honors for Most Improved. If Golf lacked anything, it was a decent press. Their win- ning ways rarely were recounted in the local sports pages. Jasper's teams have been among the high school's winningest, with a five-year record of 90 wins. 1 3 losses and 1 tie. In the five years since the formation of the MCAC. the green and white golfers have won three chempionships. 102—GOLF GOLF We They 235 J. P. Stevens 234 235 Carteret 256 219 St. Joseph's 242 210 South River 221 210 Wood bridge 249 217 Cedar Ridge 239 217 New Brunswick 293 201 Edison 237 201 John F. Kennedy 229 208 Piscataway 238 203 South River 228 203 Wood bridge 241 14 Union 4 197 St. Peter's 232 200 Carteret 232 200 J. P. Stevens 222 206 Colonia 213 206 Madison 239 195 John F. Kennedy 203 209 Edison 237 219 Cedar Ridge 214 Win New Brunswick 211 Colonia 216 211 Madison 241 209 Raritan 255 197 St. Joseph's 232 •Union scores differently from other schools: win over New Brunswick by forfeit. Recap: 24-2 CONFERENCE CHAMPS FRONT: Coach Dino Jasper, Rich Rau. Jim Medaglia. Tot Toto. Tom Fiocco. BACK: Dave Steinert. John Mercer. Howie Gugig. Golden 6chlepp ” staged come bock, regained MCflC title GOLF—103 SOFTBALL We They 7 Sayreville 14 13 Woodbridge 9 17 North Brunswick 4 19 Edison 2 12 Cedar Ridge 8 7 St. Peter's 4 13 New Brunswick 4 5 Madison 0 13 South Brunswick 5 9 South Brunswick 1 33 Highland Park 2 1 1 South River 3 1 5 Colonia 7 30 Perth Amboy 3 10 J. P. Stevens 5 8 St. Peter s 3 8 North Brunswick 4 5 St. Mary's 7 Recap: 1 6-2 POWER HITTING lifted Bears to a co- championship of the conference with Sayreville Bears knocked in an average 1 4 runs per game, ran up a win streak of sixteen games VARSITY. FRONT: Imelda Osten. Tricia Conti. Lisa Goetz, Mary Ann Poole. Debbie Hanna. Nadine Tadrick. Jackie Matheny. Trish Bornheimer. BACK: Coach Sonyia Regalado. Ronnie Gudewicz. Mary Comp- ton. Kim Racz. Colleen MacNamara. Cheryl Edwards. Mary Wollman. Kim Rapolla, Tracy Smith. Dornheimer C McNamara slammed team into tie for loop's laurels 104—SOFTBALL ON THE WAY TO A CROWN are Mary Wollman and Jackie Matheny. across top. Bears matched potent offense with strong defense that limited opposition to fours run per game. CONTRIBUTING TO THE DRIVE for top spot in the league were Imelda Osten, op- posite page, and Lisa Goetz andTricia Conti, this page Coach Sonia Regalado maintains a watchful eye. An opening-game loss to Sayreville and an upset by St. Mary's in the end-of-season county tournament bracketed an otherwise all-winning season like a pair of bookends. What really counted was what came in between. What came in between was good enough, in this case, for a tie for the championship of the con- ference. The girls were propelled to the top by the power hitting of Trish Bornheimer and Colleen McNamara, who had season batting averages of .500 and .434 respectively. Trish, who has earned herself six varsity letters, was named MVP while Colleen was chosen as Best Offen- sive Player. Defensive honors went to Veronica Gudewicz. Trish, a junior, and Colleen and Veronica, both sophomores, will return for next spring's cam- paign, determined to bounce Sayreville, this year’s co- champ, from the top spot. In its sixteen-game win streak, the Bears made winning a championship look easy. The narrowest squeak they had was a 7-4 game with St. Peter's. They averaged 1 4 runs per game and allowed but four to the opposition. They humiliated Highland Park, 33-2, and Perth Amboy 30-3. But for a 7-14 defeat by Sayreville, they'd have had the MCAC title to themselves. And but for a 5-7 up- set by St. Mary's, they'd have also had the county title. SOFTBALL—105 IN A JAM. Coach Leon Florek, Bob Herbst. Shawn Kelly and Dave Berkstresser confer at mound to figure a way out. Berkstresser's bunt, top right, advanced a run later in the game. WE RE SAFE. THEY'RE OUT. PeteTobasco beat the throw to home plate, but Cedar Ridge runner was out in race with throw to Herbst. Kuzio and Rich Presller watch. Of all the varsity sports. Baseball has one of the weakest won-loss records, if indeed not the weakest. In the past five seasons, for example, it has won 50, lost 57, and tied 2. Not until this season had it gone over .500 since 1 973. But the varsity nine ended in the black this spring, though by the barest of margins, beating eleven opponents and losing to ten. They were not selected to participate in the state tournament because, at the time invitations were issued, they were below the requisite .500 mark. In what is becoming a trademark of Leon Florek-coached baseball squads, the team show- ed marked improvement in the second half of the season, winning seven of the last 1 1. They managed to take only four of their first 1 O. In conference play, they were 9-7, good enough for a fourth place ranking. The so-so season was brightened by Rich Pressler's no- hitter against Plainfield in the tail end of a double hitter. And by the overall performance of Shawn Kelly that won for him the MVP award. Kelly had a 5-3 pitching record, a 1.57 ERA. and a batting average of .31 3. Top batter for the Bears was Mike Kuzio, who hit .362 for the season and who had a career average of .31 7. Other bright spots: one-hitters pitched by Kevin Dembinski and Bob Henriques. and a two-hitter by PeteTobasco multiple triples off the bats of Kelly. Ken Kavanagh. and Dave Berkstresser. 106—BASEBALL TOP BATTER Mike Kuzio was also a fine fielder. He had an easy out against Madison, above. MVP honors went to Shawn Kelly, below, who had a 5-3 record, a 1.57 earned run average. No extra innings: varsity nine matched wins with losses BASEBALL—107 HIS FRIGHTENING MIEN awed opposing batters if his pitching talents didn't. MVP Shawn Kelly at work, above. Below. Gary Benedict watches his pop go foul. Or was he asking Divine assistance in his turn at bat? RUNNING OUT THE THROW to the plate, Ken Kavanagh is home safe, top right But the late throw sometimes helped the oppo- nent. as seen in the photo at the top of ad- joining page 108—BASEBALL VARSITY We They 1 Raritan 6 2 Sayre ville 6 2 Perth Amboy 0 3 Woodbridge 2 7 J. P. Stevens 5 2 South River 3 0 Madison 1 1 0 South Brunswick 5 3 Edison 2 0 Cedar Ridge 8 7 Carteret 4 1 1 John F. Kennedy 15 1 New Brunswick 2 0 Colonia 5 3 South River 2 7 Plainfield 6 6 Plainfield O 0 Hamilton East 3 3 Woodbridge 2 ,6 Madison 4 7 J. P. Stevens 1 Recap: 1 1-10 JAYVEES We They 9 Raritan 3 3 Sayreville 1 1 2 Perth Amboy 6 3 Woodbridge 5 10 J. P. Stevens 3 8 South River 1 2 Madison 3 3 South Brunswick 5 5 Edison 9 8 Cedar Ridge 0 6 Carteret 5 8 John F. Kennedy 9 16 New Brunswick 6 3 Colonia 12 3 South River 4 9 Plainfield 3 8 Plainfield 6 18 Hamilton East 2 10 Woodbridge 5 5 Madison 6 3 J. P. Stevens 7 Recap: 10-11 REFLECTIVE Coach Leon Florek probably wished record books didn’t show scores for first half of season. He turned his team around second half, saw them win seven of their last 1 1. Below. Gary Benedict crosses plate to score, apparently having been answered in his prayer earlier (opposite page, bottom.) VARSITY FRONT: Bruce McCormick, Gary Benedict. Dave Berkstresser. PeteTobasco, Shawn Kelly. Ken Kavanaugh. Mike Kuzio. Kevin Dembinski. BACK: Cathy Ayuso. Nancy Lonski. Scott Gatarz. Howie Loren. Al Jennings. Bob Henriques. Jerry Walsh. Rich Pressler. Bob Herbst, Coach Leon Florek. Betty Cohen. JAYVEES FRONT: Rich Colbert. Bobby Kruse. Jim Weis. Pete Gudzak. Bob Fallon. Kevin Laffey. Jeff Temple. Bob Connington. ROW TWO: Bob Tommy, Tony Bryuka. Scott Gatarz, Mai Braich, Paul Basicouski. Jeff Gordon, Stan Tommy. BACK: Coach Lou Kosa, Glenn Siesser. Danny Charleston, Paul Munck. Oddy Toth. Laurell Lewis. Sharon Rittman. BASEBALL—109 Girls tennis took third but the boys squcid stayed in o slump 1 10—TENNIS CAUGHT IN A SLUMP, boys team battled to regain winning form Shown here. Alan Syzdek. Ed Herbert. Jeff Zajac and Randy Mintz. ANOTHER WINNING SEASON was in store for the girls team and contibuting to the success were Susan Wald. Susan Ostapiej and Laurie Bilder. Girls ranked third in conference. In Tennis, as in other sports where both boys and girls fielded teams this year, the girls posted a better won- loss record against the teams they played than did the boys. The girls team, coached by Donalyn Brophy, were victorious in 1 4 of 2 1 battles, earning a third place rank- ing in the Middlesex County Athletic Association. Coach Bill Pellagrino's boys, suffering through the third year of a slump—they had been two-time conference champs—ended below .500, with a record of 8-12. Honored as top performers at season's end were Jaymie Brauer who had a season record of 18-7. and Ed Herbert. Lacking courts at the high school for either practice or home matches, both squads had to travel to Johnson Park for home encounters. Tennis courts had been planned for the orchard site under an expansion program that was defeated by voters in December. Standouts for the Bears were Debbie Blajian, Pam Gilbert and Susan Ostapiej. singles, and Amy Kreiger- Joanne Syrokwash, Brauer-Patrice Bell, and Laurie Bilder-Daphne Istathiou. doubles. Also Jeff Berk and Jeff Zajac. boys singles, and Randy Mintz-Gary Ziemski, doubles. TENNIS—1 1 1 BOYS TENNIS GIRLS TENNIS GRADUATING SENIORS on the two ten- nis teams include Patrice Bell, above, and Gary Ziemski. We They 5 Edison O 0 Westfield 5 3 Woodbridge 2 4 South Brunswick 1 3 Cedar Ridge 2 2 Sayreville 3 1 J. P. Stevens 4 4 Madison 1 3 North Brunswick 2 1 Carteret 4 0 Metuchen 5 2 J. P. Stevens 3 4 Colonia 1 4 Madison 1 4 South Brunswick 1 3 Cedar Ridge 2 4 Sayreville 1 5 St. Peter's 0 5 New Brunswick O 2 Cedar Ridge 3 3 Raritan 2 Recap: 14-7 We They 2 Edison 3 0 St. Joseph's 5 3 Woodbridge 2 5 St. Peter's 0 1 Cedar Ridge 4 3 Sayreville 2 0 J. P. Stevens 5 3 Madison 2 3 Carteret 2 2 Franklin 3 0 J. P. Stevens 5 2 St. Joseph's 3 O Colonia 5 2 Madison 3 2 Cedar Ridge 3 1 John F. Kennedy 4 3 Sayreville 2 4 Perth Amboy 1 5 New Brunswick O 2 Colonia 3 Recap: 8-12 KEEPING WARM against a chilly Spring wind, one girl huddled under her coat. Ed Herbert and Randy Mintz heated things up in a doubles match. GIRLS' TEAM. FRONT: Donna Brearley. Pam Gilbert, Patrice Bell, Jaymie Brauer. Laurie Bilder. ROW TWO: Uebbie Blajian Amy Krieger. Linda Krisel, Joanne Syrokwash BACK: Coach Donnalyn Brophy. Ellen Levy. Cheryl Williams. Sue Ostapiej. Daphne Epfstathiou, Susan Wald. BOYS' TEAM. FRONT: Dave Brodsky. Steve Gold. David Haut, Richard Nacht. Randy Mintz. BACK: Alan Syzdek. Jeff Berk. Ed Herbert. Gary Ziemski. Jeff Zajac 1 12—TENNIS itxm MORE GRADUATING SENIORS are Jeff Berk. Debbie Blajian. Susan Ostapiej (with her back to camera), and Joanne Syrokwash. MVP FOR THE GIRLS was Jaymie Brauer. who was in every match this season and won 1 8 of them. She returns next year. TENNIS—1 1 3 RECORD HOLDERS Bob Jones and Jack Saul are in near-perfect harmony as they soar over the bar in the high jump. Carteret's John McNelis edged the closest Bear in the 220. THIS UNDEFEATED SEASON ended in a championship, unlike Winter Track—a gratification to those like Craig Brearley and Mike Sneden who ran this spring with that in mind. Spring track went undefeated in thirteen meets, in- cluding twelve against conference opponents. They were first in the conference relays and they regained the conference championship. But they were eclipsed by St. Joseph's in the county meet and finished fifth in the state Group IV contest. Somehow, the county and state titles didn't seem to matter. The conference cham- pionship meant a big thirteen points toward East Brunswick's drive for the Jay Doyle Trophy, emblematic of MCAC supremacy. The Bears had never won the award named for their former athletic director. The Bears battled second-ranked Madison throughout the season. In regular season, their 79-52 victory over the Spartans was Madison's sole defeat. In the county relays. East Brunswick trailed Madison throughout. Then, with but two events remaining, the Green and White took the lead with a second place finish in the high jump and a critical fourth place in the pole vault. Those six points boosted the Bears into first place, a scant one point ahead of Madison. We simply didn't anticipate winning this meet, claim- ed coach Dud Tighe. We felt Madison would run away with it. We figured we would score 35 points, but we thought Madison would score better than 50. Regular season meets were not so close as the con- 1 14—TRACK Track championship uias frosting on the cake after perfect season FOR COACH TIG HE. this was the sixteenth winning season in a row. second undefeated team. East Brunswick has never had a losing season in its track history, which goes back to 1961 ference relays. The Bears won most in a walk. J. P. Stevens came the closest of any opponent to stopping the Green Machine but even they lost by a solid 15 points. Not surprising in an undefeated season, the trackmen set several new records. Walt Pienchiak set a record in the intermediate hurdles only to see it fall in the very next race to teammate Tommy Koletis. Mark Anania es- tablished a new mark for the javelin, as did Mark Zam- brovitz, Rob Jones and Bob Green in the long jump. Mike Lyon. Jack Saul and Pete Fribitski in the pole vault, Jones. Saul and Green in the three-man high jump relay, and Jones and Saul in the two-man high jump relay. The Winged Foot award to the outstanding trackman went to Mike Ben this year. Ben was second in county in the 220, fourth in the county in the 100-yard dash, and fourth in the state in both the 1 00 and 200-yard events. He started the season taking seconds and thirds in his two specialties but by season's end, he was taking seconds and firsts. 1 16—TRACK We SPRING TRACK They 102 Cedar Ridge 29 89 Woodbridge 42 77 Edison 54 102 New Brunswick 25 79 Hamilton West 52 79 Madison 52 1 10 Perth Amboy 21 75 Sayreville 56 86 Carteret 45 73 J. P. Stevens 58 123 South River 7 94 John F. Kennedy 47 79 Colonia Recap: 1 3-0 52 UNBEATEN CHAMPIONS FRONT: Mike Sneden. Mark Roberts. Bob Green. Mike Ben. Walt Pienchiak, Gary Tomchuk, John Maher. Mark Zambrovitz. Ira Levine. Dorrian Schenk ROW TWO: Brian Walsh. Jack Saul. Colin Moore. Pete Fribitski. Craig Brearley. Tom Koletis. Kevin Biro. Mike Feneis. ROW THREE: Arden Taub. Mark Wortheim. John Thompson. Mike Barkann. Lamont Jackson. Dan Gunia. Bob Hauer. Lee Nestel. Craig Veverka. ROW FOUR: Dave Edwards. Bill Shioers. Al Todoroff. Bill Meyers. Jeff Chenoweth, Greg Thompson. Mike Fadosa. John Moke. BACK: Mike Lyons. Rob Jones. Jack Saul. Coach Jack Brophy, Eddie Hammond. Coach Mike Spadafino. Dan Aks. Coach Dud Tighe, Ron Stott. Dave Tomchuk, Tom Eaton. A special award was presented to coach Tighe by the coaches of all other sports at the high school in recogni- tion of his success in track, not only this year but since his appointment as head coach sixteen years ago when the school took up track as an interscholastic sport. During that time, he has not had a losing season. His teams have won a total of 1 14 meets against 34 losses. Two of the teams, the current one and the squad of 1972. were undefeated, while three more—1970, 1971, and 1974—lost only once during the season. He has twice won the Middlesex County Athletic Association championship, retired the New Brunswick Invitational trophy after four consecutive wins in that annual event, been champs of Division II of the Greater Jersey Group IV Conference that preceded the MCAA. and has produced six individual state champions: Paul Ondre, 1 962, pole vault; Bill Muir, 1 964, half-mile; Ron Bailey. 1 968, two mile; Paul Graves. 1 972, long jump; and Ron Liteplo, 1973 and 1974, high jump. TRACK—1 1 7 GIRLS TRACK FRONT: Cindi Garboski. Elissa Martini, Barbara Jewett. Kathy Carrick. Karen Scott. Terri Collins. Joanne Givas. Helke Stroebel ROW 2: Juduth Isaacson. Kathleen Moses. Amy Zerman. Teresa Lucikhowec. Cathy Sneden. Debbie Deutsch. Rita Patel. Susan Blum. Tracey MacMillan. ROW 3: Donna Pearl. Sue Halasz. Helen Romatowski. Colleen Casey. Sharon Stupay. Carrie Snyder. Carol Jackson, Deborah Zelnick. Jean Mazza. Donna Caubet BACK: Coach Robert Scott. Anita Bilodeau. Elaine Myhowich. Barbara Pape. Jill Farrell. Linda Johnson. Nancy Piasecki. Kim Dickinson. Anne Murray. Judith Bornheimer. Karen Kolter. Coach Paula King. Win in season wind-up wrapped up the crown for girls track squad 1 18—GIRLS TRACK COMPLETE TEAM EFFORT brought girls championships in the Highland Park Relays and in the conference. Debbie Deutsch, below, was a consistent four-event winner, but others set records in their specialties GIRLS TRACK We They 58 Middletown 60 83 Woodbridge 35 80 Edison 38 49 New Brunswick 69 69 Madison 49 74 Perth Amboy 44 100.5 Sayreville 1 7.5 76.5 Carteret 41.5 80 J. P. Stevens 38 103 South River 1 5 66 John F. Kennedy 52 64 Colonia 54 58 Piscataway 60 64 Cedar Ridge 54 Recap: 11-3 A win over previously unbeaten Cedar Ridge in the final meet of the season clinched the conference cham- pionship for Girls Track. And that win was fashioned by complete team effort. Susan Blum won the 100-yard dash in a record time of 1 1.6. Tracy MacMillan took the mile in a record time of 5:48.5. Heike Stroebel, Carrie Snyder, Susan Blum and Robin Johnson took the 440- relay in a blazing 51.7. Kathy Sneden, Cindy Garboski, Susan Blum and Debbie Deutsch won the mile relay in a record-busting 4:1 1.2, a full eight seconds off the old mark. First place winners in the Highland Park relays and se- cond behind Cedar Ridge in the conference relays, the girls team had what coach Bob Scott called a team season. Four girls set individual records: Anne Murray in the high jump, 5'2 ; Debbie Deutsch, in the long jump, 1 7'1' and in the hurdles, 1 4.3; and Blum, in the 100-yard dash, 1 1.6. Deutsch, winner of the Winged Foot Award, was a four-event winner in at least five meets. In addition to the hurdles and long jump, she ran the 440 (59.5) and the 880 (2:20.3). Karen Scott was a standout in the discus (102'1 1”). Strobel and Garboski were awarded Coaches trophies and Robin Johnson became the first ninth-grader ever to receive a varsity letter, thanks to her efforts and a March change in state rules. GIRLS TRACK—1 19 Joy Doyle trophy- for best in conference- comes home ot lost EAST BRUNSWICK Sport MCAC MCAC Pts. Roc. Rank Football 4-4 7 th 6.5 Soccer 9-3 3rd 10.5 Cross Country 11-1 2nd 12 0 Gymnastics 6-0 1 St 13.0 Field Hockey 5-0-1 1st 13.0 Boys Basketball 6-10 7 th 5.0 Girls Basketball 13-3 2nd 12.0 Winter Track 7-0 3rd 1 1.0 Wrestling 3-6-1 8th 6.0 Boys Bowling 4th 10.0 Girls Bowling 3rd 1 1.0 Baseball 9-7 5th 8.5 Softball 10-1 1st 12.5 Boys Track 12-0 1 St 13.0 Girls Track 1 1-1 1 St 12.5 BoysTennis 7-9 6th 7.5 Girls Tennis 1 1-5 3rd 11.0 Golf 18-2 1st 12.5 Totals: 1 St 187 5 •Tie in Rankings FIELD HOCKEY Champions of the Conference. GIRLS GYMNASTICS Champs of the Conference EDISON Sport MCAC MCAC Pts. Rec. Rank Football 4-3-1 5th 8.5 Soccer 10-1-1 1st 12.5 Cross Country 12-0 1st 13.0 Gymnastics 0-6 7th 7.0 Field Hockey 0-6 7th 7.0 Boys Basketball 3-13 1 1th 2.5 Girts Basketball 8-8 7 th 6.5 Winter Track 1st 13.0 Wrestling 8-2 3rd 1 1.0 Boys Bowling 2nd 12 0 Girls Bowling 2nd 12.0 Baseball 12-4 2nd 12.0 Softball 9-2 3rd 1 1.0 Boys Track 8-4 4th 9.5 Girls Track 5-7 8th 6.0 Boys Tennis 10-6 5th 9.0 Girls Tennis 0-16 12th 2.0 Golf 9-1 1 6th 8.0 Totals: 2nd 162.5 •Tie in Rankings GIRLS TRACK: Co-Champs with Cedar Ridge J. P. STEVENS Sport MCAC MCAC Pts. Rec. Rank Football 5-2-1 3rd 10-5 Soccer 9-3 3rd 10 5 Cross Country 6-6 6th 7.5 Gymnastics 2-4 5th 9.0 Field Hockey 2-2-2 3rd 10 5 Boys Basketball 8-8 7th 7.0 Girls Basketball 9-7 5th 8.5 Winter Track 7th 7.0 Wrestling 7-3 4th 9.5 Boys Bowling 1 st 13.0 Girls Bowling 7th 7.0 Baseball 5-10-1 1 1th 3.0 Softball 4-7 9th 5.0 Boys Track 8-4 4th 9.5 Girls Track 6-5-1 7th 7.0 Boys Tennis 16-0 1 st 13.0 Girls Tennis 16-0 1st 13.0 Golf 17-3 3rd 1 1.0 Totals: 3rd 1615 •Tie in Ranking 120—SPORTS SUMMARY Jay Doyle was, until his untimely death at 41. athletic director here, wrestling coach, and supervisor of health and physical education for the town's school system. He had made such a mark on county athletics that the Middlesex County Athletic Conference established the Jay Doyle Memorial Trophy after his death as the emblem of supremacy in conference sports. That trophy came home to East Brunswick this spring after three years. The Bears won it going away from the nearest competitor. And the manner in which they won it would have pleased Jay. to whom there were no ma- jor sports and minor sports. Each team was important as the next. In placing first in the conference. East Brunswick gained championships in six sports: Girls Gymnastics. Field Hockey. Softball, Boys Track, Girls Track and Golf. Four of the top teams were girls teams. Six more teams finished in the top three and only two teams finished in the bottom half of the conference rankings, none of them below eighth of thirteen. Trailing East Brunswick, in order, were Edison, J. P. Stevens. Colonia. Madison. Carteret, Cedar Ridge, Woodbridge. Sayreville, J. F. Kennedy, Perth Amboy, South River and New Brunswick. GOLF: Conference Champs. WINTER TRACK: Unbeaten. BOYS TRACK: Undefeated and Conference SOFTBALL: Co-Champs with Sayreville. Champs. COLONIA MADISON Sport MCAC MCAC Pts. Sport MCAC MCAC Pts. Rec. Rank Rec. Rank Football 8-0 1st 13.0 Football 4-3-1 5th 8.5 Soccer 6-5-1 6th 8.0 Soccer 0-9-3 12th 1.5 Cross Country 6-6 6th 7.5 Cross Country 7-5 5th 9.0 Gymnastics No Team Gymnastics 4-2 3rd 1 1.0 Field Hockey No Team • Field Hockey 2-3-1 5th 9.0 Boys Basketball 10-6 5th 8.5 Boys Basketball 3-13 11th 2.5 Girls Basketball 1-15 12th 2.0 Girls Basketball 6-10 10th 4.0 Winter Track 5th 9.0 Winter Track 2nd 12.0 Wrestling 7-3 4th 9.5 Wrestling 10-1 1st 13.0 Boys Bowling 3rd 1 1.0 Boys Bowling NoTeam Girls Bowling 4th 10.0 Girls Bowling NoTeam Baseball 8-8 7th 6.5 Baseball 10-6 3rd 10.5 Softball 1-9-1 19th 4.0 Softball 7-4 4th 10.0 Boys Track 10-2 3rd 1 1.0 Boys Track H-1 2nd 12.0 Girls Track 8-4 4th 10.0 Girls Track 8-3-1 3rd 1 1.0 Boys Tennis 15-1 2nd 12.0 Boys Tennis 12-4 3rd 1 1.0 Girls Tennis 8-8 6th 8.0 Girls Tennis 6-10 8th 6.0 Golf 13-7 5th 9.0 Golf 7-13 8th 6.0 Totals: 4th 139.0 Totals: 5th 137 0 •Tie in Ranking •Tie in Rankings SPORTS SUMMARY—121 BOARD OF EDUCATION M . BUCKLER BERTRAM BUCKLER President JOSEPH HUDAK DR EDWARD J. JABLONOWSKI GUNTER LEWIN ALBERT M. SIMON ROBERT VAN WAGNER RUSSELL WALKER 1 22—ADMINISTRATION PRISCILLA BOHRER Vice President DR JOSEPH J SWEENEY Superintendent of Schools LORRAINE SCHOENTHALER DANIEL MURRAY Asst. Superintendent BRENDA WITT Asst. Superintendent JUDY LIPSITZ Student Liaison DR KENNETH S. BURNETT Director of Curriculum NORBERT H. RENNICK Business Manager ADMINISTRATION —123 A DAY WITH DOC IN HIS SECOND YEAR as principal. Dr. Larry Ashley sets a fast pace. He greets arriving staff members in the morning, makes a point at a budget meeting, clears day's correspondence with his secretary, grabs a quick lunch at his desk, discusses a scheduling problem with Guidance and con- fers on the phone with a parent. AN AFTERNOON conference with staff and Detective Chief Louis Rutolo about a weekend break-in at the school, a meeting with a student, and a phone call home to check on dinner arrangements. He'll return to office after and work till near midnight. 1 24—ADMINISTRATION JOHN CASEIRO Vice Principal CARLO T GUIDOBONI Vice Principal JOHN MANSFIELD Vice Principal ADMINISTRATION 125 HENRY ACKERSON Science BARBARA ALLEN Music DENNIS ANDERSON Science FRANK ANTONIEWICZ Metals WILLIAM AXELROD Social Science JAMES BALSAMELLO Health RAY BEIER Social Studies BERNARD BLACK English JOHN BODNAR Mathematics RICHARD BOEHLER English GEORGE BORING Science DONALYN BROPHY Physical Ed JACK BROPHY Physical Ed JANE ROSEMARY BROWN BROWN Music Mathematics 126—ACADEMICS N. J. SUPREME COURT CLOSED SCHOOLS While most of us were enjoying our vacations and planning how to celebrate the upcoming Fourth of July. 175 others in the high school's summer school program had to change their plans. So did the teachers and administrators in- volved in preparing for school's reopening next fall. And so. too. those who were preparing final copy of this yearbook for the printer. In a move unprecedented in the history of public education in the United States, the New Jersey Supreme Court ordered the entire public school system of the state closed down on July 1 because the state was not providing thorough and efficient education for all New Jersey students as required by the state constitution. The shut-down order was the out- growth of a lawsuit filed in Jersey City six years ago on behalf of seven-year old Kenneth Robinson. Like many other states. New Jersey has financed its schools largely by local property taxes. The boy's lawyers argued that this system resulted in wide variations of expenditures because of the wide variation in property tax revenues from district to district, and thus violated the constitution's BUDDY. CAN YA SPARE A DIME? Gov. Brendan Byrne presents his budget with no funds for schools. Board of Education wrestles with budget problem at public meeting in high school. Dr. Larry Ashley watches assembly debate income tax bill that could reopen schools, closed July 1 by court order. ACADEMICS—127 THOROUGH AND EFFICIENT EDUCATION embraces more than just the academic subjects. It includes vocational training, the arts, and supporting services like Guidance. Free to the student, these things cost the taxpayer. WHO PAYS FOR FREE EDUCATION? “thorough and efficient require- ment. A 1 973 Supreme Cout deci- sion supported that contention and the court ordered the state legislature to find other ways of paying for the schools. The obvious solution was to pass a state income tax but that was anathema, given the state's reluc- tance over the years to taxing wages. Governor Brendan Byrne, who had campaigned in 1 974 on a no-income-tax promise, found himself in political trouble when he had to reverse himself after taking office and recommend just such a levy. So the legislature dragged its heels. Last year, they did pass a new education act that increased New Jersey's share of school costs and that provided more equitable dis- tribution of the money. The gover- nor signed the bill into law, and the 128—ACADEMICS JOHN BRUTHERS Social Science CHRISTINA BURLEW Business JOHN CANARY English MEL CASIERO Science LOUIS CHALUPA Humanities CAROLE CHESKIN English ARDIS CONDON School Nurse MARTHA DAVIS Librarian MARIO DE CAROLIS Music WILLIAM DRAKE Mathematics JOHN DROZDOWSKI Electronics GERTRUDE DUBIN English JOHN EMERY Physical Ed. HELEN REGINA FINE FIORE Science Mathematics ACADEMICS—129 KAREN FLOREK Physical Ed. LEON FLOREK Mathematics MARY ANN GAVRON English LORETTA GAWRONIAK MARGIE GERWIG RONALD GONIER Health Home Economics Mathematics SEYMOUR GRODSTEIN Mathematics CHARLES KENNETH HAMMOND HENDEREK Mathematics Art ANNE TIFFT HITCHNER Science KENNETH HITCHNER Guidance ALEXANDER HORVATH Science LOUIS HORVATH Industrial Arts CELESTE HUNTER Lively Arts JOYCE HUNTER Home Economics CLASSROOM ACTIVITIES got top priority in reduced budgets. Still class size increased, low-enrollment courses were dropped, and equipment and supplies were sometimes hard to get In an economy move, the English Department ordered paperbacks without covers and got them for a dime apiece. 130—ACADEMICS VOTERS REJECTED BOND AND BUDGET Supreme Court nodded in approval. But when the state budget came out the new law was not funded at all. This threw the local school boards into a dither. They had drawn up next year's budgets anticipating so much aid. and were in the process of submitting those budgets for voter approval. They had to withdraw their proposals and com- pute them all over again. Trenton tried to provide guidelines by issu- ing periodic sets of figures representing amounts of aid it thought the local districts could reasonably expect. But as the situa- tion in state house changed, so did those sets of figures. Clarification became obfuscation. When it became apparent that the legislature was going to do nothing, the governor appealed to the courts which finally imposed the July 1 deadline. ACADEMICS —131 ENDANGERED SPECIES? When budgets have to be cut. budget cutters look for frills It was suggested that winter and spring sports be eliminated to save money, but fans argued successfully against that. The loss of an aide may mean library service will be trimmed starting in September. STATE INCOME TAX ENDED IMPASSE July 1 came, the schools were clos- ed, and still the legislature had not responded. The assembly had passed an income tax bill which the senate rejected. Then the senate passed one that the assembly found unacceptable. There was talk of increasing the state sales tax and of imposing a state property tax. The state's School Boards Associa- tion went to federal court to block the school closing order, charging that the New Jersey Supreme Court had violated the students' constitutional right to an education. New Jersey argued a state's right position that education was a matter left by the federal constitu- tion to the individual states and was not a matter of concern for the federal courts. Attorneys for the U. S. maintained that the right to a free public education was not a con- stitutional guarantee. All eleven federal judges in the state heard the arguments and decided. 9-2, not to enter the case. So the hot potato was passed back to Trenton. Schools remained clos- ed for a week until, after several all- night sessions, the assembly and senate finally compromised on an income tax bill that imposed a two percent levy on incomes up to $1 5,000 and a two-and-a-half per- cent bite on incomes above that Relief would be granted property owners and tenants. Satisfied for the moment, the court lifted its order and those summer school programs that had not cancelled 132—ACADEMICS DINO JASPER Cooperative Ed PETER KAZNOSKY English MITCHELL KEIL Humanities PAUL KIMMEL Science KRISTA KIVIRAHK Science PHYLLIS KLUGERMAN Social Science LEONARD JUDITH KOLAKOWSKI KOPPEL Social Science Art KENNETH KOPPEL Art LOUIS KOSA Mathematics DAVID KOTLER Special Ed JERRY KUPCHYNSKY Music DORIS JOSEPH ROBERT LA MAESTRA LATORRACA LAWSON Mathematics Foreign Language English ACADEMICS—133 GLENN BETTE LEMERICH LERNER Mathematics Art ALAN LESITSKY Foreign Language DOROTHY LESTER Business JOHN LIBERTAZZO Industrial Arts ELAINE LEVINE English CURTIS LIPPINCOTT Guidance TERRY LIEBLEIN Physical Ed THELMA LINDEN English MAGISTRO MAJEWSKI MANGIERI Guidance Cooperative Ed Cooperative Ed 134—ACADEMICS SHORTENED YEAR WAS “NO IDLE THREAT out resumed. But, as late as mid- August, the education bill had still not been funded. Incidentally, summer school students had to make up the time they were locked out in order for their credits to be certified. They did it here by attending class an extra hour a day for the next four weeks, starting at 7:30 a m. and going until 12:30 p.m. The school, for the record, is not air-conditioned. The prolonged standoff at the state level had an inevitable effect on the local level. Themselves caught in an inflation that fluctuated between an annual rate of 1 2 and six percent, taxpayers were loath to approve budgets and bond issues that would only add to their financial burdens. Their inclination to vote no was only reinforced by the prospect that things were happen- ing in Trenton that would relieve them of their plight. So even though they had approved a bond issue only a year before that enabl- ed the Board of Education to ACADEMICS—1 35 FORTY COURSES were either eliminated, combined, revised or offerred on an alter- native basis after a cost-effectiveness study. Heavily subscribed courses weren’t affected Journalism, cut a few years back, was offerred as a Saturday morning workshop on four winter weekends. 40 COURSES AFFECTED AFTER COST ANALYSIS purchase 47 acres adjoining the high school for future expansion, they now rejected a December referendum that would have, in effect, authorized that expansion. The $3.080,000-bond issue that was defeated would have added to the existing high school additional rooms for industrial arts, art, and special education. And it would have provided tennis courts, a soccer field, a baseball field, ad- ditional parking facilities, ramps for the handicapped where there are now only stairs, and a connecting road from the campus to Summerhill Road. While the bond issue matter was clouded somewhat by disagree- ment over whether it was wise to further enlarge the high school or to build another one in a different part of town, its turn-down was primarily because of the money. When the 1976-77 budget was offered to the voters in March, it had already been pared by the Board in anticipation of their receiv- ing a minimum amount of state aid. But. as had been the case just three months before with the bond, the community mood was negative and the budget was voted down overwhelming. It went to the town council who, after conference with a school board that had become more conservative as a result of the school elections, cut still another half million dollars from it. So school officials braced for yet another lean year. They had just been through a rough one. Two months into the 1975-76 budget year, it was discovered that East Brunswick would receive con- siderably less state aid than it had anticipated. It was forced to com- press the remaining ten months budget into eight months. That problem was complicated by the fact that supplies had already been ordered and money committed. Strict economic controls were im- posed on the schools and at the central office level and, during two separate one-month periods, a freeze was imposed on all but the most critical expenditures. What was the impact of all this on the high school? After the defeat of the bond issue, administrators developed 136—ACADEMICS MICHAEL MARKOT Mathematics WILLIAM MARSH Art WILLIAM MATTHEWS English SHIRLEY DOLORES GERALD MELNYK MEYERHOFF MINGIN Business Social Science Cooperative Ed SANDRA WILLIAM WILLIAM MULLER MUNYAN MURPHY Science English Art CONRAD MUSTILLO Foreign Language CATHERINE NEIDE Foreign Language PAUL NOVAK Business GWEN ROBERT NEIL ODENHEIMER ODENHEIMER OLUFSEN Driver Ed Physical Ed Industrial Arts ACADEMICS—137 ROBERT ROBERT WILLIAM ORBAN OSBORNE PARKINSON Social Science Guidance Industrial Arts MANFRED PEIL English WILLIAM PELLAGRINO Social Science RICHARD PETERSEN Science GAIL PETRICEK Physical Ed GEORGE PINFIELD Science DOROTHY PLOTZ Home Economics ANNA VERNE POSKAITIS PRUS Froeign Language Library MATTHEW PRUSIK Science GEORGE RACZ English SHIRLEY READ Science STEVEN REDMAN English 138—ACADEMICS IN CONSTANT USE by students for serious study, not so serious study, browsing, con- ferences. and lounging, the library may have to close during part of the day next fall LOSS OF AIDES LOOMS AS THREAT TO LIBRARY emergency plans to relieve the severe overcrowding by utilizing portable classrooms. They had hoped for four. Rising costs of por- tables forced them to cut back to three. When bids were received, all were rejected by the Board of Education as being too expensive. New bids were asked for and, as a hedge against another set of too- high prices, the board asked for alternate bids on substandard and or used portables. Substan- dard ones would require emergen- cy approval from the county superintendent of schools. If ap- proved, they could be available for use by October 1. forcing tem- porary relocation of some students in the meantime. Non-certified aides were also released at school's end in an economy measure. Their loss would force curtailment of library and media center services, and have a decided impact on the atten- dance office. The board had voted to rehire four aides at the high school dismissed in the general layoff, but then rescinded that ac- tion. Without the aides, the library and the audio-visual center would have to close several periods a day. operating on a part-time basis. That prospect prompted the department chairman this spring to threaten writing to the Middles States Association of High Schools and Colleges asking for a reevaluation of EBHS. Board member Priscilla Bohrer commented: When we had to cut ACADEMICS—139 MEDIA CENTER FACES FALL CUTBACKS the budget, we had to cut aides from all the schools. I don't think it's fair to put them back at the high school alone. I know it's hard, but all schools are hurting.'' She suggested, as an alternative, using student help Presumably, that would be a volunteer basis. The matter had not been resolved in late August. Based on a study of cost effec- tiveness of courses offerered at the high school, done by outside con- sultants. recommendations for course changes were made and accepted. As a result, about 40 courses were either eliminated, revised, combined or offered on an alternative basis. The major effects. said Superintendent of Schools Dr. Joseph J. Sweeney in his annual report, should be more effective use of space, staff, and other resources at the school, more efficient student scheduling, and more evenly distributed class size and staff workloads. 140—ACADEMICS SONIA BERNADETTE ROY REGALADO RICHVALSKY RISLEY Physical Ed Mathematics Art LLOYD ROGERS Art LEONA SALZMAN Special Ed ROBERT SCOTT Health MICHAEL SPADAFINO Science ROBERT SIMPSON Mathematics HARRIET SIEBELS Nurse HENRY STANKIEWICZ Industrial Arts DAVID STOUT Foreign Language ROBERT SULLIVAN Guidance ELLA SZARKA Cooperative Ed MARIANNE TAKACS Business ELLIOTT TAUBENSLAG English ACADEMICS —141 CLIFFORD TAYLOR Business WILLIAM D. TIGHE Physical Ed VALENTIN TOPLISKY Foreign Language RAYMOND TOPOLESKI Industrial Arts ROSALIE TRIOZZI Mathematics JOANNE VEREB Librarian ELEANOR VERGILLO Health ARISTOTLE VERGOS Foreign Language ANTHONY EILEEN ROBERT WILLIAM VOCOLO WANS WARWICK WEIGEL Guidance Physical Ed Science Foreign Language EDWARD WESTON Science DONALD WIEDER Physical Ed WILLIAM WILLIAMSON Industrial Arts VINCENT YANETTI Science ANTHONY YUHAS Science ARLENE 2IELINSKI English 142—ACADEMICS PROPOSED PARK would provide tennis courts, soccer field, baseball and softball diamonds, handball courts and practice fields for football, all of which would also be available for phys ed classes which are often pressed for space for varied activities. PARK WOULD RELIEVE PRESSURE ON PHYS ED Generally, those classes that were scrubbed were those with low enrollments and which were singletons (offerred only once a day). These were, in most cases, advanced courses. In a few in- stances, to permit students to com- plete a course of study, a course was folded into another one. Spanish VI. let's say. would meet coincidentally with Spanish V. And in still other cases, a course would be offerred students on an every- other-year basis. A student might not get Shakespeare in his junior year, but could enroll as a senior. It was all a little bit like watching a long-range TV weather forecast in the middle of a prolonged wet spell. It was raining at the moment and the outlook was for rain tomorrow. But there was a clearing trend on the way and, if the trend held, the sun should break through in another three to four days. One sign of clearing, of course, was the state income tax. Another was a $1.2 million plan to develop a multi-purpose recreational area around the high school, put forth in late summer. It is the work of a joint school board-township planning committee. While the plan would not relieve internal crowding at the school, it did present possibilities for physical education and athletics. Proposed facilities include an ad- ditional road from the campus to Summerhill Road, parking to ac- comodate 60-240 more cars, a large retention pond similar to the one by the municipal building that ACADEMICS—143 TAXPAYERS NOW ASK “WHAT DO TAXES BUY?” would be used for ice skating in the winter, tennis courts, a softball field, a baseball diamond, a soccer field, and handball courts. Space would remain for future high school expansion. There is no question that education is expensive at any level these days. And those who pay the bills are. more and more, asking just what they are getting for their money. Colleges complain because the secondary schools send them students who require remedial work in reading, writing, and 'rithmetic. Yet they. too. have been criticised for graduating students who are 'functional illiterates. Schools that relaxed their academic standards during the tumultuous years of the 1960's and early 1 970's and offerred easy electives in response to student demands for relevance are now reexamining what they did. Pass-fail grading is being replaced by more traditional grading. Curriculums are being revised with strong emphasis on achieving competence in basic skills. Even more, basic aims of education are being reevaluated. More and more students are being directed into vocational education, a move- ment not unrelated to the fact that so many college graduates are un- employed. Yet the nagging ques- tion persists, are these college grads unemployed because they specialized in fields that are saturated? Would they have been more employable had they the flex- ibility that comes from a broader liberal arts background? While the money issue is dominant, it will engender debate on educational philosophy, curriculum, and methods. That's not so bad. 144—ACADEMICS CHILDREN ARE THE FOCAL POINT of the East Brunswick school system, according to the Superintendent's report. More and more, taxpayers are questioning what kind of education these children receive. So. too. administrators and staff as they reexamine programs, materials, and methods. AUGUSTA APMANN Main Office PEGGY BEAUREGAARD Main Office MARSHA BROAD Attendance ELEANOR CATHCART Mr. Mansfield's Office ROSE FITZGERALD Main Office RUTH KENNEDY Guidance DEBRA KIST Guidance JOAN LA PORTE Attendance ROSEMARY MARY Athletic Office SANDI MARGARET ANDIE MERANCHEK PAPADINEC POLLOCK Registrar Attendance Nurse's Office MARY RESKO Guidance LOUISE SCOLES Media Center MARION ZOHOVETZ Mr. Caseiro's Office ACADEMICS—145 Senior Stats A B B OTT-B A R SIM A NTO PHILOMENA ADAMO Phil Middlesex County College Ski Club 1.2.3 Student Council 1 SUE ADELMAN College Clarion 1.2. Mgn Ed 3 FT A 1 NHS Hist 2. VP 3 ANGELA ALIFERIS Angie. College. Stu- dent Council 2 Drama 2.3 Dance 2.3. Varieties 2.3 Track Mgr 1.2 Dance Concert 2.3 Teen Arts 2.3 RICHARD ALLEN Mercer County College MARILYN ALLERUZZO Employment Student Council 1 FBLA 2,3 VICTOR ALONSO Irving. Employment Philosophy Club 3 FRANCISCO ALVAREZ Schmez Employ- ment. Football 1.2. Capt 3 MARY AMOROSO Beth College Clarion 3 PAVAS 3 Drama 2.3 Dos-y-Dos 3 MARTHA AMRHEIN Middlesex County College MARK ANANIA Trade school Football 1.2.3 Track 1.2.3 DOUGLAS ANDERSON College Ski Club 1.2.3 Bicycle Club 1. Pres 2.3 NHS 3 RALPH ANDERSON Buzzie. College. Bas- ketball 2 Baseball 2 SHARI ARONIN Williams College AFS 1. Pres 2 NHS 2. Exec Bd 3 Biology Club 1.2. Sec 3 Chem Club 1.3 French Club 2. Treas 3 Who's Who among HS Students 2.3 National Merit Com- mendation. JAMES AROSE Jim College Football 1.2.3 JOHN ASCH Employment. PATRICIA ASHJIAN Trice. College SUSAN BACKUS College Folio 2.3 THEANO BANOS Pinky Middlesex Coun- ty College Color Guard 2.3 DIANE BARAN Cleo College PAVAS 2 Color Guard 2.3 Girls Boosters 1.2. Sec 3. Class Council 3 NHS 2,3 Stu- dent Union 3. Summer Theatre 2 Teen Arts 2.3 Varieties 2.3 VINCENT BARBA Lafayette College NHS 2.3 Student Rep to Evening School 3 Football 1.2. Capt 3 Winter Track 1.2.3. Track 1.2.3 BRUCE BARR. College Soccer 1.2.3 MICHAEL ABBOTT PHILOMENA ADAMO SUE ADELMAN DAVID AGEY DOUGLAS ALLENBY MARILYN ALLERUZZO DONALD ALM VICTOR ALONSO MARK ANANIA DANIEL ANCONA DOUGLAS ANDERSON RALPH ANDERSON JUDITH AQUINO ERICA ARKOWITZ KEITH ARNOTT SHARI ARONIN NEAL BAKER DOUGLAS BALLON PAUL BAMBURAK THEANO BANOS 146—SENIORS oa Xc As soon as winter snows began to clear, seniors made tracks for all the local hang-outs. Pete's. Riddle Martin's, MacDonald's. Gino's—any place but our own cafeteria. Though technically in violation of school policy, the out-to-lunch bunch was winked at. And they did help to relieve overcrowding in the lunchroom. Especially popular were subs. Riddle Martin's has become almost a tradition at EBHS. Those with cars and an Open took orders for friends and made deliveries during other lunch periods. All the running around made it difficult to finish an R M special in only twenty minutes. But somehow, they managed. Mmm, good! —Anne Trupkiewicz JONATHAN AKS ANGELA ALIFERIS RICHARD ALLEN FRANCISCO ALVAREZ MARY AMOROSO MARTHA AMRHEIN SCOTT ANDERSON STANLEY ANDRUCYK ROBERT ANKOSKO JAMES AROSE GEORGE ARRANTS JOHN ASCH PATRICE ASHJIAN SUSAN BACKUS DENISE BAILEY DIANE BARAN VINCENT BARBA EUGENE BARNES NORMAN BAROFSKI BRUCE BARR GRACIELA BARSIMANTO SENIORS— 147 CYNTHIA BAUMHARDT ROBIN BAYLIS JAMES BECHNER ANTHONY BASILE GISELE BASTOS TODD BAUER MICHAEL BEN DEBRA BENEDICT RICHARD BENSCO JEFFREY BERK PETER BERLANDT CHRISTOPHER BERTICS LORRAINE BLYSKAL DOUGLAS BOLGER LISA BOLTAS SUSAN BORLAN JEFFREY BOTTS ELMA BOWNE NANCY BROWN x p One way to tell a senior—he won't kiss his girlfriend in the hall- way before lunch. Only precocious sophomores and second-se- mester juniors do that. First- semester juniors tend to ignore the opposite sex and most sopho- mores haven't yet discovered it. We know of one junior section in Study Skills that sat itself 1 4 boys on one side of the classroom and 1 4 girls on the other! What then, you ask, about all those couples loving against the lockers? They must be from the junior highs. 148—SENIORS DIANE BEECHER JACKI BELIN PATRICE BELL TAMARA BELTZ COLLEEN BEVINGTON MARY BIEHL KENNETH BITTAY DEBRA BLAJIAN CYNTHIA BOYCE KATHLEEN BOYD JAMES BRAVO DONNA BREARLEY STEVEN BRITSKE DAVID BRODSKY JANET BROKER HELEN BROWN Senior Stats BASILE —BURRELL GISELE BASTOS College Dance Club 1 Drama 1 NHS 3 CYNTHIA BAUMHARDT Cindy Bean Col- lege. Drama Club 1.2.3 Student Union 1.2.3 Class Council 1.2.3 Ski Club 1.2. 3 Float Comm 1.2.3 Teen Arts 2.3. Dance Concert 2.3 Varieties 2.3 PATRICE I BELL College Class Council Sec 1 Ski Club 1.2. Treas 3 Student Union 1.2. Rec Sec 3 Tennis 1.2.3 Ski Team 2. NHS 2.3. Chorus 1.2.3. Russian Club 3 TAMARA BELTZ Murray State Univer- sity. Drama Club 1 Outdoor Club 2 Girls Softball Mgr 2. Ensemble 3 MICHAEL BEN College Football 1.2 Winter Track 2.3. Track 1.2.3. NHS 3. RICHARD BENSCO Skil Club 1.2.3 Sk. Team 1.2.3 PETER BERLANDT Syracuse University NHS 3. Video Vision 1. Pres 2.3 AV and Stagecrafts 1. Pres 2.3 Varieties 1.2.3. Appeals Board 2 P-8 Comm 1 National Merit Commendation Cable TV Taskforce 2.3 CHRISTOPHER BERTICS Duke Univer- sity. NHS 2,3 German Honor Society 3 Football 1,2.3 Basketball 1. Young Republicans Chrm 2.3 National Merit Commendation. DENNIS BLACKMIRE. Military service. DEBRA BLAJIAN Debbie Float Comm 1. 2.3. Prom Comm 1.2.3 Tennis 1.2.3 SUSAN BOR LAN Douglass College Sk. Club 1.2.3 JEFFREY BOTTS College DONNA BREARLEY Breeze College Float Comm 1.2.3 Student Union 1 Ski Club VP 1. Treas 2. Pres 3. Prom Comm 3 Ski Team 1.2.3 BETH BRECKHEIMER Rutgers College of Pharmacy Girls Boosters 1.2 Clarion 1. Chorus 1 Spanish Honor Society 1 NHS 2.3 Biology Club 2. VP 3 Chem Club 2. Sec Treas 3 Bridge Club 3. Dos- y-Dos 3. DAVID BRODSKY Boston University NHS 2.3. Astronomy Club Pres 2.3 Young Republicans 1.2.3. Tennis 3 NJ State Scholarship. JANET BROKER Employment. Chorus 1. Student Union 1.2.3 PAVAS 1.2.3. FBLA 2. Pres 3 NANCY BROWN. College Class Council 1.2. Pres 3 Student Union 1.2.3. Save-the-Children VP 2. Softball 2 Exchange Day 2 Communications Comm 2. Co-Chrm 3 Who's Who among US Students 3 LYNN BURLEW Employment CINDY BRYAN LEROY BURKE LYNN BURLEW SUSAN BURRELL SENIORS—149 Senior Stats BURTICK —CONTI ALAN BURTICK Big Al US Army. Bike Club 2 DEBORA CARR Peanut Butter College Folio 2.3 Dos-y-Dos 3 Student Union 1. KATHRYN CARRICK College. Ski Club 1. 2.3 Basketball 1.2.3. Track 1. Softball 2. Field Hockey 3 DAWN CASALE College Bike Club 1 Cho- rus 1.2 Marching Band 2.3 Girls Boost- ers 3 Drill Team 1.2 Majorette 2.3 LAURENCE CHAITYN Fairleigh Dickinson University. Key Club 3. FBLA 3 Gymnas- tics 1.2 MARGARET CHANEY College Student Union 1.2 Color Guard 2 Drama Club 2 Track 1 Gymnastics Mgr 2 ANNETTE CHANG Ning-a-Ning. Penn State University Bible Study 1.2.3 Bel Cantos 3 PAVAS 2.3 MICHAEL CHANG Harvard University Clarion 2. Ed in Chf 3 NHS 2. VP 3 Chem Club 1.2. Pres 3 Chem League 1. 2 State Science Day 2. Fencing Club 2 Appeals Board 2 National Merit Finalist Haverford Magill Rhoads Scholar. Swarthmore National Scholar ELAINE CHELLI College. Student Union 1. Chorus 2 Softball 2 Field Hockey 2.3 LOIS CHERNOWETZ Employment MARY COCK ILL Glassboro State College FBLA Treas 3 Basketball 1.2 Field Hoc- key 1.2.3 MARY COFFEY Rutgers University Track 1.2.3. KATHY COHEN College Class Council 2 WILLIAM COLE College. Varsity Club 1.2. 3 NHS 3 Football 1. Co-Capt 2. Capt 3 Baseball 1.2.3 Coach's Award (Football) 3 All-Sentinal Football 2. All-County Football 3 TERRI COLLINS Southeastern Massachu- setts College NHS 3. Ski Club 1.2.3. Float Comm 1.2.3 Prom Comm 3. Track 1.2.3 Swimming 3 JAMES CONTI College ALAN BURTICK LINDA CACELLA JEANANN CAMPBELL MARGARET CHANEY ANNETTE CHANG MICHAEL CHANG ELAINE CHELLI LOIS CHERNOWETZ DOLORES CHILLSCYZN CLAIRE CHRIST KAREN CIAK HENRY CICERALE 1 50—SENIORS KATHLEEN CANNING WILLIAM CHARETTE CHRISTOPHER CHLAN KELLY ANN CLARK MARYANN CLARK PAUL CLARK ROBERT CLARK TERESA CLARK ANDREA CARANGELO DEBORA CARR KATHRYN CARRICK DAWN CASALE EMI CAUBET LAWRENCE CHAITYN Who sits here?” the message pencilled on the desk reads. And so, in turn, eight students add their names and period. Then follows a continuing dialogue until a custodian cleans the desks. Graffiti. It's one way to communicate in a school so big that communication is not the easiest thing in the world. Lonely and looking for a date? Call 2 59-9999. Ask for Lou, you are advised. Facing an unexpected test you're sure to fail? Attendance Office 2 57-8300” the wall helpfully announces. Some of the scribbling is done out of frustration: “I'm bored. This class will never end. Some is. of course, amorous: Mike and Ruth. Forever. Some is downright funny: My mother made me a homosexual to which was added If I buy the wool, will she make me one? When applied with spray paint to the exterior walls, graffiti can be ugly and someone is bound to get upset, as in the case of THIS SCHOOL IS A PRISON. It can usually be removed with a coat of paint or plain soap and water. But it's ubiquitous and keeps coming back. It must serve some mysterious purpose. MARY COCKILL KATHY COHEN WILLIAM COLE TERRI COLLINS FLORENCE CONNORS JAMES CONTI SENIORS—151 NANCY COOK MARY COOPER TERESA CORCORAN THERESA MARGARET EILEEN CREAMER COSTELLO COWHERD LORRAINE CURRAN MICHAEL NICHOLAS DARGENTO DARIANO GAIL DAWSON KENNETH DAWSON CRAIG DeBOER Qu iZci eAltrt One of the doubtful joys of Open was that you could go to the cafeteria and have a cup of coffee, a soft drink or a snack—provided the machines were working and you had change. Oh. good. you think, it’s not got an 'out-of-order' sign on it. So you deposit your quarter, which is promptly returned. You try again. Another clunk. You try a different coin. This one works. Then you push the button for coffee with cream and sugar. Down drops the cup into the slot. But that's it. No coffee. So you try again, using the original quarter. It works this time. Again you push the button. You can’t wait for that cup of coffee. The machine whirrs. Out pours the coffee. No cup. You kick the machine. The administration called this vandalism. Enough vandalism was committed that, by mid-term, the machines were gone. And they thought they were punishing us for our misbehavior. AMERICO BARBARA JOSEPH DEVANEY JOSEPH DEVINE PERRY Dl AM ANTIS BRENDA DICKSON DeSANTIS DeSTAFANO 1 52—SENIORS ELLEN CORNELL DEBRA CORSON STEPHEN BRIAN COSTELLO COSTANZO JEFFREY CROCKER PATRICIA CUFF REGINA CULLARI SUSAN CURLEY PAUL DASKIEWICZ CYNTHIA DAVIDSON NANCY DAVINO BARBARA DAWSON JAMES DECKER JENNIFER DECKER WALTER DECKER KEVIN DeGRAW Senior Stats COOK —DONALDSON NANCY COOK College FTA 1. Pres 2.3 Folio 1.2.3. Key Club 1.2. Sec 3 Save- the-Children 2.3 Chorus 1,2,3. Chorus Council 2.3 NHS 3. Special Ed Club 1. THERESA CORCORAN. Cork Middlesex County College ELLEN CORNELL. College. THERESA COSTELLO Terry College. Ger- man Club 1.2 EARTH 1.2 Gymnastics 1.2 FTA 3 Dram Club 3. Color Guard 1. 2 MARGARET COWHERD Peggy College NHS 2.3 Ski Club 1 Spanish Honor So- ciety 2. Sec 3 PAVAS 3. AFS 1.2.3. Track 1.2. Field Hockey 2.3 All-State Field Hockey 3. EILEEN CREAMER College. Ski Club 1,2,- 3 Track 2 PATRICIA CUFF College Bowling 1.3 Film Club 3. SUSAN CURLEY. Lehigh University NHS 2.3. Class Council 1.2.3 Drama Club 1.2.3 Spanish Honor Society 2.3. AFS 2 Girls Boosters 2 Merit Scholar LORRAINE CURRAN Nursing School. Or- chestra 1.2 German Club 2.3 German Honor Society 3 Guidance Helper 1.2 Class Council 1. NICHOLAS DARIANO Nick US Army Drama Club 2,3. Ski Club 2. Dos-y- Dos 3 Hot Line 1.2.3. PAUL DASKIEWICZ Virginia Tech NHS 3 Marching Band 1.2.3 Indigos 3. Clarion 2 Tennis 1 CYNTHIA DAVIDSON College Class Council 1. Treas 2.3 Float Comm 1.2.3 Student Union 1.2. Exec Comm 3. Track 1 Drama Club 1.2.3. Ski Club 1.2.3 BARBARA DAWSON Bop Employment. GAIL DAWSON University of Delaware Exec Comm 1 Student Union 1 P-8 Comm 1 Drill Team 2. Latin Club 3. Ju- nior Classical League 3 CRAIG DeBOER. Cook College. Varsity Club Pres 2. Student Union Exec Comm 1.2.3. Chorus 1.2.3 Ensemble 1.2.3 Choir 1.2.3 Barbershop Quartet 1.2.3 Football 1.2. Capt 3 All-County Football 1.3. Outstanding Lineman Award 3 All- Sentinal Football 1.3 NY Daily News All- Star Football 3 Wrestling 1. Capt 2.3 County Wrestling Champ 3. Jay Doyle Memorial Award 2 Middlesex County Scholar—Athlete Who's Who among HS Students. Teen Arts 2.3 JENNIFER DECKER Laboratory Institute of Merchandising. Ski Club 1.2.3 Spa- nish Honor Society 2 BARBARA DeSTEFANO. Employment Secretarial Co-op 3. FBLA 3. JOSEPH DEVANEY Rutgers University Emerald 2. Sports Ed 3. Track 1.2.3. Winter Track 3. Ohio University Summer Journalism Workshop 2 JOSEPH DEVINE Employment. DESIREE DILDINE. Desi. US Navy. Chorus 1 Child Care 2. Co-op 3. STEPHANIE DLOSS American University Bike Club 1.2.3. Drill Team 2.3. Ski Club 1.2.3. Ski Team 2 DESIREE DILDINE SUSAN DIMAIO STEPHANIE DLOSS JILL DONALDSON SENIORS— 1 53 Senior Stats DONZELLA-FISHER LISA DONZELLA. College Ski Club 1.2.3 Girls Boosters 1.2. Student Union 3 Class Council 1.2. Sec 3 NHS 3. Spanish Honor Society 3 Emerald 1 Gymnas- tics Mgr 2.3. Varieties 3 Float Comm 3 Prom Comm 3 Graduation Comm 3 MARY DOWLING College Ski Club 1.2. VP 3 Ski Team 1.2.3 KATHRYN DOYLE College Girls Boosters 1. Save-the-Children 2.3. NHS 3 MARYELLEN DOYLE Mair Virginia Tech Class Council 1.2.3 NHS 3 Ski Club 1.2. 3 Float Comm 1.2.3. Prom Comm 3 Cheerleader 2.3 DIANE DREYLING Randolph-Macon Col- lege NHS 2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Student Union 1.2.3 Chorus 1.2. Sec 3 Choir 2. 3 Ensemble 2.3 Dance Club 1 Cheer- leader 1.2. Capt 3 Who's Who among HS Students. Teen Arts 1.2.3 GARY DUBOVICK Boston University Class Council 1.2. Treas 3 Student Union 2.3 Frisbee Club Co-Capt 3 Wrestling 1.2.3 JANET DUNI University of Maryland. PAVAS 1.2 Drama Club 1.2.3 NHS 3 Varieties 1.2.3. Student Union 1.2.3 Hello. Dolly M A S H The Boys from Syracuse Children's Winter Theatre 3 County Drama Competition 2.3 State Drama Competition 2.3. Bucks County Competition 2.3 SHARON DUNN College Band 1.2. Sec 3 Indigos 1.2.3 Orchestra 2.3. Chorus 2.3 Dos-y-Dos 3. Hello. Dolly The Boys from Syracuse NHS 3. PAVAS 3 Re- gional Orchestra 3 Bike Club 1 ROMAYNEEAKER College Student Union 1.2.3. Track 1.3 Drama Club 1.2.3 ROBERT EDELSTEIN. College. Film Club 3 NHS 3 JEFFREY EDGECOMB Middlesex County College Marching Band 1.2.3. Concert Band 1.2 Sk. Club 1.3 AV 1.2. DAPHNEY EFSTATHIOU Stockton State College. Class Council 1.2. Drill Team 1. 2 Ski Club 1.2. Tennis 1.2.3 ROBERT ELLSWORTH Tex College ANGELA ERNST. College Marching Band 1.2.3 Concert Band 1.2.3. Hello. Dolly. Sk. Club 1.2.3 CLARKE FARRER Brigham Young Univer- sity Student Union 2. Drama Club 2.3 The Boys from Syracuse Our Town. Chorus 1.2,3 Ensemble 2.3 Wrestling 1 Track 1 Football 2 GREG FARRUGGIO Fairleigh Dickinson University NANCY FAVIANO College Save-the- Children 3. Dance Club 2. Drama 3. Class Council 1.2.3. Varieties 1.3. FT A 3. Track 2 DIANA FERLAUTO Springfield College Drill Team 1.2 Ski Club 1.2.3. Bike Club 1.2. Pres 3 Ski Team 1.2. Capt 3. PATRICIA FINNERAN Trish College NHS 3 French Honor Society 3 FBLA VP 1.3 Tennis 2.3 Basketball 1 Field Hockey 2 Color Guard 1 Who's Who among HS Students. THOMAS FIOCCO College. Cross Country 2 Track 1.2 Golf 1.2.3 Varsity Club 2.3 NHS 3 Ski Club 1.2.3 MARK FISCHER College Ski Club 1.2.3 NHS 2.3 Gymnastics 2.3. PATRICIA FISCHER Employment Student Secretary to Dr Ashley FBLA 3. ANN FISHER College NHS 2. Exec Comm 3 Track 2 Young Judaea 1.2. Pres 3 LISA DONZELLA ALEXANDER DORKO MARY DOWLING KATHRYN DOYLE DEBBIE DZURO ROMAYNE EAKER PAMELA ECK ROBERT EDELSTEIN ANGELA ERNST BARBARA FAATZ CLARKE FARRER GREGORY FARRUGGIO NANCY FAVIANO ROBERT FEIN DIANA FERLAUTO JAMES FERRARA PATRICIA FINNERAN THOMAS FIOCCO PATRICIA FISCHER MARK FISCHER 154 SENIORS MARYELLEN DOYLE DIANE DREYLING KATHLEEN GARY DUBOVICK JANET DUNI SHARON DUNN DUMMOND CATHERINE ENGEL JEFFREY EDGECOMB CHERYL EDWARDS DAPHNE EFSTATHIOU ROBERT ELLSWORTH WILLIAM ELLENBERG Arts and Crafts and Homemaking aren't confined to Building 3 or the workshops; they're alive and well, and living in any number of hall lockers. Most lockers are decorated to suit the tastes and personal- ities of the occupants. They thus make the school a bit less impersonal. Magazine cutouts of snow, ski- weekends. and ice hockey were prominent during midwinter months. As the year progressed towards spring, surf. sun. and sand became the popular motifs. Often advertising the owner's year of graduation, the kind of car he or she drives, and favorite friends or places, most lockers were giant memorabilia boxes and souvenir-collectors' junk drawers. Less romantic souls used their lockers as lockers, stuffing them with yesterday's tests, this morning's notes, textbooks, stale pretzels and last week's lunch. DENISE FASCIALE ANN FISHER SENIORS- 1 55 DOUGLAS FISHER SUSAN FISHER KELLEY FLACHNER TRACEY FLACHNER KAREN FLOY STEPHEN FLUEGEL MARTIN FRENCH MERYL FRIEDMAN ANDREA FUCHS VINCENT HUGH GALBRAITH GAY GALGANO FULLERTON KEVIN GARRETT ELIZABETH NANCY GAVIN STEVEN GAYLOR SUSAN GELBER DIANE GIBBARD GARRIDO There was good news and there was bad. First the good: we had been trying for years, it seemed, to get pass-fail grading. We got it. We could choose one course in which we wanted a Pass or Fail instead of the traditional letter grade. Now the bad: we also got pass-fail in another way. After the first ten minutes of a period had elapsed, you needed a pass to be in the hallways or you failed to get where you were headed. Enforcing faculty members were stationed throughout the school to challenge student passersby. And rumor has it that next year will see even that ten-minute grace period go. 156 SENIORS ROBERT FOSTER ROBERT FRANKLE SUSAN FRANKOSKY ELIZABETH FRAZER DENISE GALLO ROSE GANZI CYNTHIA WARREN GARDNER GARBOSKI PAMELA GILBERT ANTHONY GILIBERTI JOANNE GIVAS ROBERT GLASSHEIM FELIX GLENNON MATTHEW GLIDDON KENNETH GLINKA SUSAN GOLDMAN JOHN GOLEY DIANE GONZALEZ ROBERT GREEN MARLENE GREENBERG Senior Stats FISHER—GREENBERG SUSAN FISHER College. Dance Club 1.2. 3 Dos-y-Dos 3 NHS 2.3. Bicentennial Square Dance Club 2 KELLEY FLACHNER Vocational School Bowling 1 TRACEY JO FLACHNER College Bowling 1 NHS 2.3 FBLA VP 3. STEPHEN FLUEGEL. Rutgers University Ski Club 3 Basketball 1.2. Football 1 Track 1. NHS 3 ROBERT FOSTER College. Class Council 1. Pres 2. 3 Football 1.2. Capt 3 Ski Team 1.3. Junior Classical League 2 ROBERT FRANKLE Art School Folio 1. Art Ed 2.3. PAVAS 2.3 Clarion Asst Art Ed 3 Outdoor Club 2.3 NHS 3 SUSAN FRANKOSKY Employment Dra- ma 2. ELIZABETH FRAZER Randi College Spa- nish Honor Society 3 Dance Club 3 MARTIN FRENCH Cook College Ski Club 2.3 Wrestling 1.2 T SCOTT FRENEAUX University of Dela- ware Chess Club VP 1 Bowling 2.3 Chess Team 2. Pres 3. Cross Country 1 MERYL FRIEDMAN Middlesex County College Girls Boosters 3 ANDREA FUCHS College Clarion 2.3 B'nai Brith Sec 1.2.3 HUGH GALBRAITH. College Bike Club 2. 3. GAY GALGANO University of Georgia Student Union 1 Basketball 2 4-H Council 1. Sec 2. 3. ROSE GANGI. College Psychology Club 2 Film Club 3. CYNTHIA GARBOSKI Rutgers University Explorers 3 Field Hockey 1.2.3 Basket- ball 1.2,3 Track 1.2.3. NHS 3. WARREN GARDNER. Chip Lehigh Univer- sity. Student Council 3. Football 1.2.3 Wrestling 1,2.3 NHS 2.3 ELIZABETH GARRIDO College. Student Union Exec Comm 1.2.3 Spanish Honor society 2. Ski Club 1.2.3. PAVAS 2. Junior Classical League 2. Sec 3. Cheer- leader 1.2, Co-capt 3. Track 1 NANCY GAVIN College Class Council 1. VP 2. NHS 2. Pres 3 Student Union Ex- ec Comm 1.2 Field Hockey 1.2 STEVEN GAYLOR. College Winter Track 2 SUSAN GELBER College German Club 2. 3 German Honor Society 3 NHS 3 AFS 3 Dos-y-Dos 3 Gymnastics 3 PAMELA GILBERT College. Student Union 1.2.3 Drama Club 2 Ski Club 1.2.3. Ten- nis 1.2.3 JOANNE GIVAS College NHS 2.3 PAVAS 2. Field Hockey 1.2.3 Basketball 1.2.3. Track 1.2.3. ROBERT GLASSHEIM Military Key Club 1. Pres 2. Treas 3. Class Council 1.2 KENNETH GLINKA Montclair State Col- lege AFS 1 German Club 1.2.3 German Honor Society VP 3 Emerald 2. Activi- ties Ed 3. Dos-y-Dos 3. SUSAN GOLDMAN Syracuse University NHS 2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Class Council 1.2. 3 Student Union 1.3 AFS 1. VP 2. Pres 3 Band 1. Color Guard 2 Drill Team 3 Emerald 1 Ski Club 1.2.3. Track 1 Gymnastics 1. JOHN GOLEY Employment. ROBERT GREEN Fairleigh Dickinson Uni- versity Winter Track 1.2.3 Track 1.2.3 MARLENE GREENBERG College Girls Boosters 1.2.3. PAVAS 3. Dos-y-Dos 3 SENIORS- 1 57 Senior Stats GREEN BURY— HETTLER CHERYL GROVER College. PAUL GRZYBOWSKI. Griz. US Air Force. Football 1 Twilight Tech 2 HOWARD GUGIG. College. Golf 2. Capt 3 FREDERICK HAFNER Rick. Trenton State College. Track 2 ANN HALLIDAY College. EB s bear 2. JAMES HAMMOND. Stevens Institute of Technology PAUL HANSEN Student Council 2 Ski Club 1.2. Football 1. Swimming 2, Co- Capt 3. PHILLIP HARRIS. University of Colorado Ski Club 1.2.3. Sti Team 3. KATHERINE HEALY. Katie. Cittone School of Machine Shorthand. Chorus 1.2.3. Choir 1,2.3 Bel Cantos 1.2.3 Ensemble 2.3. Chorus Council 2. Trees 3 PAVAS 2 Birls Boosters 1.2. Trees 3. NHS 3. SUSAN HEITZ Tufts University Drama Club 2.3. NHS 2.3. Varieties 3. Cheer- leader 2 Field Hockey 2.3. Softball 2. ALAN HELLER College. NHS 3 Film Club 3. Spanish Honor Society 3 Cross Coun- try 1.2.3 B'nai Brith VP 2. Pres 3. ROBERT HENRIQUES College Baseball 1.2. DANIEL HERBERT College. Band 1.2.3. Indigos 2.3 Orchestra 2.3. Chorus 3 ROBERT HERBST College. Class Council 2. Save-the-Children 3 Baseball 2. Bas- ketball 2. CYO Bicentennial Comm. JODI HERSKOWITZ College Student Union 1.2.3. Constitutional Revision Comm 2. Open Hallways Comm 2. Spanish Honor Society 2.3 NHS 3. PAUL HESSEK. College NHS 3. Girls Boosters 1.2.3. PHYLLIS KENNETH LINDA GROSSMAN CHERYL GROVER GREENBURY GREENLEE PAUL GRZYBOWSKI HOWARD GUGIG SHARON GUSHANAS LYNN GWOZDZIEWICZ DONNA HADLAND FREDERICK DONNA HAHN ANN HALLIDAY HEFNER MARK HALMO PAUL HANSEN VICTORIA HANSEN GERALYN HARRINGTON ROBERT DANIEL HERBERT ROBERT HERBST RICHARD HERCZEG HENRIQUES 158 SENIORS Four cuts in any class meant an automatic failure for the quarter in that class. They even contacted your parents on the second one! And they were enforcing it. When you couldn't convince your mom that you were really not feeling well, when she wouldn't buy the line about it being an official skip-out day. when you didn't have a legitimate note from home— there was always a friend and the tele- phone. It didn't take long to learn that phoned in excuses were as good as notes from home. Dangerous? Only when they called back home to confirm your absence Mostly they were too busy. It was all another way to beat the system, and it sometimes worked. Unless someone had vandalized the telephone and it wasn't working. Or unless you were dumb enough to hang around the school and be seen by the teacher whose class you'd just cut. Then it was a visit to Mr. Mansfield or Mr. Guidoboni, an automatic zero for the day. and a three-day suspension. Sometimes, it just wasn't worth it. PHILLIP HARRIS MICHAEL HART KATHERINE HEALY SUSAN HEITZ ALAN HELLER THOMAS HELWIG CAROLYN HERRING JODI HERSKOWITZ KARL HERWIG CAROL HESS PAULA HESSEK JOANNE HETTLER SENIORS—159 Senior Stats HIGGINS-KATZ BRENDA HNATUK Goldie Vocational School Band 1.2.3 Class Council 1 Clarion 1 FTA 2.3 Girls Boosters 3 NHS 3 RANDALL HORVATH Broadway Drama Club 1.2,3. Ensemble 3 Bible Study Club 1.2.3 Dance Club 2 Varieties 2.3 PAVAS 2 Student Union 1.2.3.'Chorus 3 Class Council 1.2.3. Float Comm 3. Homecoming Comm 3. Prom Comm 3. NHS 3. Community Players 3 Summer Theatre Winter Theatre KAREN HUNDERT College NHS 2. Treas 3. Film Club 1. Sec 2. 3 Junior Classical League Sec 2.3. National Merit Com- mendation. DANIEL HUNT Employment CAROL ISAACSON Fuzzy. Kent State University. Clarion 1.2. Film Club 3 Stu- dent Union 1.2 Model Congress 2. Com- mission on Aging 3 Student Intern at State House 2 EDWARD JABLONOWSKI. Virginia Tech Ski Club 1 NHS 3 Winter Track 1.2 Track 1 MIRA JACOB College. FTA 1 Student Union Exec Board 2 Clarion 2. News Ed 3 Latin Club VP 3. DIANE JARVAIS. Starsky College. Co-op 3 EB s bear 3 Child Care 2. ALVIN JENNINGS JJ. Middlesex County College Football 1.2.3. Baseball 1.3 Winter Track 3 Track 2 ARTHUR JENSEN. Artie. College. Student Union 2 Cross Country 1.2.3 Winter Track 1,2.3 Track 1.2.3 NHS 2.3. VALERIE JENSEN. Employment. Drama Club 1.2 BARBARA JEWETT College Choir 1.2.3 Track 1.3. NHS 3. DIANA JOHNSON College Marching Band 1.2.3 Concert Band 1.2.3 Bike Club 1 Dos-y-Dos 3. Tennis 1 NHS 2,3 PHYLLIS KADIN College. Girls Boosters 1 FBLA 3. AUDREY KAPLAN Aud Employment JOYCE KAPLAN College. Cheerleader 2.3 Student Union 2 Bicentennial Dance Group 3 County Dance Company 1.2 Track 1. NHS 3 STEVEN KAPLAN. Middlesex County Col- lege Band 1.2. Pres 3 Indigos 1. VP 2. Pres 3 NHS 2.3. Region II Stage Band 1.3. Region II Wind Ensemble 3 All- State Band 3 IRENE KARL College Girls Boosters 1.2 Emerald 1 Ski Club 1.2,3. Class Coun- cil 1.2.3 Student Union 3 Chorus 1 Float Comm 2,3 Graduation Comm 3 Varieties 3. Prom Comm 3. Gymnastics Mgr 2.3. NHS 3 STEPHEN KARLOWSKI. Middlesex Coun- ty College Track 1.2.3 RANDY KATZ Medical School Math Club 1.2.3. Math Team 2.3 NHS 2.3. Film Club 1.2.3 JOHN HIGGINS ROBERT HILMAN MARY HIRSCH BRENDA HNATUK BRUCE HOFFMAN DAVID ROSE MARIE KAREN HORNER HOLLA BAUGH HOLLI FI ELD KAREN HUNDERT DANIEL HUNT JOHN HUTCHINS CAROL ISAACSON MIRA JACOB DIANE JARVAIS VALERIE ALVIN JENNINGS JENDINGS 160 SENIORS PHYLLIS KADEN KEVIN KALBACH KATHLEEN KALBER PAUL KANCYLARZ To the outsider, a school seems a serene place, disturbed only by the sound of a bell announcing the end of a period, the nor- mal chatter of kids passing to their next class, and maybe an occas- ional shout from a gym class. It comes as a surprise, then, to find a surprising number of stu- dents wearing arm casts, collared by a neck brace or suspended between two crutches. These are the combat casualties, victims of an assortment of bruises, sprains, dislocations and fractures, sustained in gym classes, on the athletic fields, and skiing. Despite the discomfiture, there is a certain amount of honor and glory attached to the heavy casts and wooden crutches, akin to the red badge of courage, the purple heart. And you get attention— you can leave class early and arrive late. A buddy carries your books and gets your lunch. And everyone signs your cast. LISA HOPES CAROL HODGES RANDALL HORVATH THOMAS HUCHKO EDWARD LAURIE JACOB JABLONOWSKI ARTHUR JENSEN VALERIE JENSEN BARBARA JEWETT DIANA JOHNSON JUDY JOHNSON KEVIN JOHNSON JOYCE KAPLAN STEVEN KAPLAN RANDY KATZ AUDREY KAPLAN IRENE KARL STEPHEN KARLOWSKI SENIORS 161 JOHN K KATHLEEN KELLY SHAWN KELLY THOMAS KELLY JOANNE KEMPF JAMES KENNEY KAVANAGH CO'tWb' ’A “Ten-four, what's your twenty? Have ya got yer ears on. East Brunswick? CB radio has arrived. This year saw a phenomenal rise in the popularity of Citizen's Band radio. Songs like “Convoy got us acquainted with truckers' lingo, and even the school store was selling a booklet of CB jargon for a nickle. Used in cars, trucks, vans or just about anything. CB keeps you in touch with people like Bub- bles. Free Spirit, and all the other “good buddies within range. Info like traffic tie- ups and the whereabouts of Smokies is passed along freely over a CB. Friends are made quickly and they say that once you're into CB. you'll never give it up. So threes and eights to ya. DANIEL KOFT MARTIN KOLINER KENNETH KRAWSEK LOR IE KRAYNAK DIANNE LAKE MARK LARROUSE 162 SENIORS BRADLEY KESSEL ROY KIEFFER SUSAN KIENZLE KAREN KIMMEL MATTHEW KLECAN MARK KLEIN WILLIAM KLINGER JOHN KNOF ROBERT KOLINER LISA KORAB DAVID KOSTEN CHRISTINE KOY BRUCE KREIN LAWRENCE MICHAEL KUZIO LOUISE KRIEGER KUZMINSKI Senior Stats KAVANAGH-LESSO KEN KAVANAGH College Baseball 1.2.3 KATHLEEN KELLY College. Drill Team 2.3 Class Council 1 NHS 2.3 Spanish Hon- or Society 1.2,3 PAVAS 2 P-8 Comm 1 Clarion 1 Girls Boosters 1.2.3 Chorus 1.2.3. Choir 3 Enemble 3 Student Union 3 SHAWN KELLY Moravian College Barber- shop Quartet 1.2.3 Ensemble 2.3. Choir 2.3. Chorus 1.2.3 Football 1.2. Capt 3 Baseball 1.2.3 Basketball 1.2 JOANNE KEMPF Middlesex County Col- lege German Club 2. VP 3. Language Festival Co-Chrm 2 Gymnastics 1 JAMES KENNEY Middlesex County Col- lege. BRADLEY KESSEL Brad College. Soccer 1. Ski Club 1.2.3 ROY KIEFFER. College Varsity Club 2.3 . Gymnastics 1.2. Capt 3 SUSAN KIENZLE Rutgers College Band 1. 2.3. Orchestra 1.2.3 KAREN KIMMEL US Air Force Field Hock- ey 1.2.3 Track 1.2.3 VIRGINIA KINGSTON US Air Force. Math Club 1 Spanish Club 1. Drama Club 2.3 Dance Club 2.3 Gymnastics 1 Softball 1 The Boys from Syracuse Our Town EUGENE KISH College. Drama Club 1.2.3 CAROL KISSLING Douglass College Dance Club 2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Outdoor Club 2.3 MATTHEW KLECAN Kleak. Track 1 MARK KLEIN University of Vermont Key Club 3 NHS 2.3 Chess Team 3 Bow- ling 2.3 Varsity Club 2.3 DANIEL KOFT Middlesex County College Swimming 3. MARTIN KOLINER Middlesex County Col- lege. Marching Band 1.2.3 ROBERT KOLINER Robbie College Film Club 2 KENNETH KRAWSEK. College LOR IE KRAYNAK Rutgers College Spa- nish Honor Society 2. Pres 3 Float Comm 2.3. Twirling 1. Featured Twirler 2.3 BRUCE KREIN Bucknell University NHS 3 Soccer 1.2.3 Gymnastics 1 Track 1.2.3. Winter Track 2.3 MICHAEL KUZIO College Soccer 1.2. Co- Capt 3 Baseball 1.2.3 All-County Soc- cer 3 All-State Soccer 3 Varsity Club 1. 2.3 LOUISE KUZMINSKI College Orchestra 1. 2.3 KATHERINE LAUFER Katie College Spa nish Honor Society 2. VP 3 Spanish newspaper 2.3 NHS 3 KAREN LESSON College. Color Guard 2. Co-Capt 3. Emerald 1. Bus Mgr 2.3 Girls Boosters 1 VP 2. Pres 3 Bike Club 1 Chorus 1 Russian Club 2.3 Gymnas- tics Mgr 2.3 NHS 3 Folio 3. Varieties 3. KATHERINE RICHARD THOMAS KAREN LESSO LAUFER LEDERMAN LEONARD SENIORS—163 Senior Stats LETSON—MARTZ IRA LEVINE Franklin Pierce College. Cross Country 3 Winter Track 3 Track 3 LYNNE LEVY College. Ski Club 1.2.3 Stu- dent Union 2. Cheerleader 1. Capt 2 NHS 2.3. LISETTE LIEBERMAN College NHS 2.3. French Honor Society 2.3 AFS 1.2.3 Drama Club 1 Girls State 2 RHONDA LIPMAN Rutgers College. NHS 2.3 Spanish Honor Society 2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Orchestra 1.2.3 Band 1.2.3. Re- gional Band 3 KATHERINE LIU College. NHS 2.3. French Honor Society 1.2 French Club 1. Pres 2. 3 Chem Club Treas 2.3 AFS 1 2. Sec 3. Biology Club 3 Orchestra 1. Libr 2.3. Chorus 1 Dos-y-Dos 3. Regional Or- chestra 1 All-State Orchestra 2.3 LINDA LOGAN. St Francis Nursing School. Class Council 1.2 Cheerleader 2.3. EUNICE LONG Nunme. Ohio University. Key Club Sec 1 Marching Band 1,2 Concert Band 1 Orchestra 1.2 Pit Or chestra 2 PAVAS 2.3 Girls Barbershop 2 Ensemble 3 All-State Chorus 3 HOWARD LOREN College Baseball 1.2.3 Football 2.3 Basketball 1. DONNA LOS College PAUL LoSACCO Lafayette College Emer- ald Asst Ed 1. Ed in Chf 2.3 NHS 3 Dra- ma Club 3 Please. No Flowers. Our Town Ohio University Summer Journal- ism Workshop 2.3 Columbia University Scholastic Press Assoc 2 CHER IE LUCAS Glassboro State College Student Union 1.2 Latin Club 2. Pres 3 Track 1 MARK LUKENDA University of Connecti- cut. Football 1.2. Capt 3 Wrestling 1.2.3 MICHAEL LYONS Cook College Football 1.2.3 Wrestling 1.2. Co-Capt 3. Track 1. 2. Co-Capt 3 NHS 2.3 KATHLEEN MACHUZAK Cook College. NHS 2. Sec 3. French Club 1. Sec 2. VP 3 French Honor Society 1.2 Orchestra Libr 1. Treas 2.3 AFS 1. Sec 2.3 PAVAS 2 Cheaper by the Dozen Regional Orch- estra 1 All-State Orchestra 3 BARBARA MAGLIOZZI College French Club 1.2 Film Club 3. NHS 3. JOHN MAHER. Ian Rutgers College of Pharmacy Varsity Club 2.3 Winter Track 2.3 Track 2.3 ARTHUR MAHNKEN. College. Bowling Capt 2.3. All-County Bowling 2 KATHY MAKWINSKI College PAVAS 3 DAWNE MALINOFSKY Employment MICHELLE MARCHESE Meek Employ- ment Co-op 3 FBLA 3 DENISE MARCHISOTTO Employment Ski Club 1 Outdoors Club 3. STEPHEN MARINO College Ski Club 1.2. 3 Varsity Club 2.3 NHS 3 Cross Coun- try 2.3 Winter Track 2.3. Track 2.3. JANET MARKIEWICZ. Employment Co- op 3 RONDA MARKS University of Texas. SUSAN MARLIN Monmouth College PAVAS Treas 3 ELISSA MARTINI Chip College. Drill Team 2.3 Ski Club 1.2.3 Drama Club 1. Dance Club 1. Track 2.3 Varieties 2 Dance Concert 1.2 SHARON LETSON IRA LEVINE LYNN LEVY PAMELA LIBBY EUNICE LONG MATT LOPATIN HOWARD LOREN DONNA LOS BRUCE KATHLEEN DAWNE DONNA MAJEWSKI MAKWINSKI MALINOFSKY MANGIERI MICHAEL STEPHEN MICHELLE DENISE MANICONE MANSFIELD MARCHESE MARCHISOTTO 164 SENIORS LISETTE RHONDA MITCHELL PATRICIA LITZ KATHERINE LIU LINDA LOGAN LIEBERMAN LIPMAN LITTLEFIELD PAUL LoSACCO CHERIE LUCAS MARK LUKENDA GLEN LUSK MICHAEL LYONS KATHLEEN MACHUZAK It's the start of second period English and you're not quite ready for it, right? You haven't gotten over first period Health. So you catch the teacher's attention. My pen just ran out of ink. May I go to the school store to get another? Yes, she nods, but be back in a few minutes. Over you go to Building 4 Oh, you buy a pen all right. But that wasn't your real reason. The school store sells these big, salty pretzels. You buy three for yourself—that should get you through second period—and four more for your neighbors. She's sure to get a whiff of that just-baked aroma. Oh. well, you'll just have to chance it. But she's engrossed in the lesson when you return. So it's chow time! lit j eXyi STEPHEN JANET RONDA MARKS SUSAN MARLIN ELISSA MARTINI DONNA MARTZ MARINO MARKIEWICZ SENIORS—165 JULANN MARVEL ANTHONY MASSAROS CYNTHIA ALBERT PAMELA WILLIAM MASTERTON MASTROGlOVANNI MATOS MATTHEWS MADELYN DAVID McCarthy McConnell KATHLEEN JOSEPH McNICHOLAS McSWEEN MARK JOHN MERCER MENDELSOHN ALYSON MILLER MICHAEL MILLER fi+ It would seem that the high school's favorite indoor sport is card-playing and that one out of every two students has a deck of cards in his pocket or her purse. The games go on daily from the time the first bus ar- rives in the morning until the last late bus departs at night. tuj an unwritten rule: no money on the table. They play everything from poker to pinochle, bridge to solitaire. The more esoteric fans even meet daily after school and receive bridge lessons from that latter-day Hoyle, Mr. Robert Lawson. There's a regulation against it, but it's another one of those dicta that go unenforced. The card-players recognize that and. to keep the status quo, enforce among themselves And if cards aren't available, we hear there's a card game that doesn't need them, called liar's poker. Serial numbers on dollar bills serve as pasteboards. 166 SENIORS CAROLYN ELAYNE PATRICIA DENISE MAVER MAVRAKIS McBRIARTY MCCARTHY SUSAN McFIE BRYAN McLAUGHLIN KATHLEEN McLOUGHLIN ROBIN McMullen Senior Stats MARVEL—Ml MNAUGH CYNTHIA MASTERTON. Cindy College Drill Team 1.2.3. Girls Boosters 3. NHS 2.3. ALBERT MASTROGIOVANNI Al Career training. PAMELA MASTOS. Employment Track 1 Gymnastics 3 Homecoming Queen 3 CAROLYN MAVER Musical career PAVAS 2.3 PATRICIA McBRIARTY Nursing Varsity Club 2.3 Student Union 1 Field Hockey 1.2.3 Basketball 1.2.3. Softball 1.2.3 MADELYN MCCARTHY College Chem Club 1 Spanish Club 1 Band 1 Chorus 1 Drama Club 2 Drill Team 1,2. Capt 3 NHS 3 Golf 1.2. Swimming 1 BRYAN McLAUGHLIN College Football 1. 2.3 Baseball 1.2.3 ROBIN McMULLEN Stockton State Col- lege JOSEPH A McSWEEN. College Basketball 1.2.3. Track 1.2.3 NHS 3 GRACE MEDAGLIA College Girls Boost- ers 2 PAVAS 3 Dos-y-Dos 3 JOHN MERCER Clarkson College of Tech- nology. Ski Club 1.2.3. Golf 2.3 ELAINE MESHOWSKI College. Ski Club 1. 2.3 LYNNE MIMNAUGH Rutgers College Class Council 1,2.3. NHS 3 Spanish Honor Society 2.3 AFS 2 Girls Boost- ers 2 DANIEL GRACE JAMES LEE McSWEENEY MEDAGLIA MEDAGLIA MELCHOIR ELAINE STEPHEN RENAI MIHOK ROBERT MESHOWSKI MIGLIORE MILAZZO NANCY MILLIAN DONNA MILLS ROBERT LYNNE MILLWARD MIMNAUGH SENIORS—167 Senior Stats MOB ILIAN —PALADIN I JEROME MONAGHAN Jay Washington State University DONNA LEE MONCHEK Employment LYNN MONDAY College Emerald 1. Track Mgr 2. NHS 2.3. SHARON MORAN Employment Ski Club 1.2.3. LOREN MORSE. College. NHS 2.3. March- ing Band Mgr. 3. Indigos 2.3. Bowling 1. 3 Young Republicans 2.3 THERESA' NATALICCHIO Teri College Drill Team 1,2.3 Class Council 1.2.3. Student Union Treas 3 PAVAS Corr Sec 3. Track 1. JOHN NEILL Virginia Tech. Young Repub- licans Treas 2.3 VIRGINIA NENNINGER Ginny. College Wilderness Adventure Club 2.3. Dance Club 3 PAVAS 3 JAMIE NESH. College Ski Club 1.2.3 Gymnastics 1.2. Co-Capt 3. Gymnastics Award 3 KERRY NEWBERT Skip Employment. BARBARA NIELSON US Navy Student Union 2 Bowling 1 ANN NOVELLO Pocohantas. Employment. Class Council 1.2 Student Union 1.2. HARRY NUTILE. College. Student Union 2. Class Council 3. Wrestling 1.2. Swim- ming 3 KELLY O'BRYAN Lycoming College Stu- dent Union 3 Clarion 3 JOHN O'CONNOR Oak. College Ski Club 3 ELLEN OKREND. Cyd. College Bike Club 1. Pres. 2.3 Spanish Honor Society 2.3. Ski Club 2.3 Clarion 1.2 ETHEL OLCSVAY. Employment RICHARD OLIVERO Trenton State Col- lege Wrestling 1. Gymnastics 2.3. JANICE ORLANDO Employment. SUSAN OSTAPIEJ College. Tennis 1.2.3 LORRAINE PALADINI Dale. College. Drill Team 1.2.3. Teen Arts 1.2.3. PAVAS 1 JANICE MOBILIAN JEROME MONAGHAN DONNA MONCHEK LYNN MONDAY LOREN MORSE SUSAN MULLER JANET MURPHY JOANN MURRAY SUSAN NADDEO THERESA MICHAEL NAU JOHN NEILL NATALICCHIO KERRY NEWBERT AMY JEAN NEWELL ANN NOVELLO HARRY NUTILE ELLEN OKREND ETHEL OLCSVAY RICHARD OLIVERO JANICE ORLANDO 168—SENIORS Q,6 t0 I was in the cafeteria second period the other day during my Open, and I kept smelling these brownies baking. I told the cafeteria lady that the brownies sure smelled good, hoping she'd offer me a sample. Those ain't brownies.' she said. 'It's lasagna.' It could have happened only here. This is the home of gas- tronomic surprises. Where else is spaghetti served with french fries? Where else is pizza made from an English muffin, some tomato paste, and a slice of Kraft cheese? What other eatery goes to the trouble of gluing the rice ker- nels together into a ball? Strong on Italian foods a la Chef Boyardi. soggy sandwiches and frozen milk, the cafeteria struggles daily to feed six shifts of sullen students. They lose the battle usually. By second lunch, it's hard to find a clean spot to eat. By sixth lunch, it's impossible. Tables are littered with dirty trays, emply lunch bags, and other assorted litter. Uneaten food is on the table, the floors, the walls, and the chairs. It's a dirty, noisy, hot. and smelly place. The food is unap- petizing. But it's cheap. And it's another place to socialize. The mess is our fault, but it reflects our frustration at not being able to go out for lunch. DENNIS MOONEY SHARON MORAN ROBERT MURRAY LEO MURSKY VIRGINIA JAMIE NESH NENNINGER KELLY O'BRYAN MARGARET O'KANE SUSAN OSTAPIEJ IMELDA OSTEN FLORENCE O'SUCH JANICE OWENS DEBORAH PAIGE LORRAINE PALADINI SENIORS—169 DAVID PALOMBI RANDALL RONALD PAPALEO JOSEPH PARADISE MARY ANN PARDUN PATRICE PARKE PAPADINEC They were meant for quiet study, and sometimes they are used for that purpose. But you devised other uses for the carrels. They offer sufficient privacy for you to snooze. They offer an air-conditioned place for a quiet lunch. They are ideal for chatting with a friend. They are the nearest thing you have here to a room of your own. Even the librarians seem to recognize this, and generally don't bother you back there. They don’t require a reservation, although that would be helpful when you aren't the only one who wants to get away from it all. JEFFREY LINDA PETER LOU ANN ELIZABETH PESETSKY PETERSON PETRY DIANE JOHN PICH PETRZILKA MICHAEL PLOTZ ANTHONY POLCARI JOSEPH POLLINA DEBORAH POLLOCK RAYMOND RAISSA PRUS POPLAWSKI 170—SENIORS JODEE PARKER CHARLES GREGORY KATHLEEN PARR PARKINSON PARKINSON WENDY LYNN KATHERINE NANCY PEARL STEPHANIE PATTERSON PAWLENKO PEARLMAN WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER ELLEN CYNTHIA PEGER PELLECHIO PEMSTEIN PERKINS Senior Stats PALOMBI —RASKIN JOSEPH PARADISE. St. John's University Ecology Club 1 Clarion Dist Mgr 2 PATRICIA PARKE College PAVAS 3 Ski Club 2.3. Float Comm 3. Softball Mgr 2, 3 JODEE PARKER Middlesex County Col- lege KATHLEEN PARR Kit Rutgers College Chorus 1.2.3. Choir 2.3. Ensemble 2.3 Harmonettes 2. Bel Cantos 3. Marching Band 1,2,3 Concert Band 1.2,3. Indigos 1. Sec 2. 3 French Club 2. Pres 3 NHS 3 Drama Club 2 Pit Orchestra 1.2.3 Va- rieties 2. Dos-y-Dos 1. VP 3. Key Club 2. Film Club 2. Class Council 2 Student Union 3. PAVAS 2.3 All-State Chorus 2 WENDY PATTERSON College Dos-y-Dos 1.3. Band 1. NANCY PEARL St. Peter s Nursing School Save-the-Children Sec 3. STEPHANIE PEARLMAN College FTA 1. Sec 2. Trees 3. Class Council 1. Student Union 2.3. ELLEN PEMSTEIN Rutgers College Cho- rus 1. PAVAS 2.3 NHS 2.3 CYNTHIA PERKINS College. LINDA PETER. Pete. College Drill Team 2. 3 Ski Club 1.2 NHS 3 Spanish Honor Society 3. Drama Club 3 Track 1. ELIZABETH PETRY Middlesex County College DIANE PETRZILKA Bryman School. Stu- dent Union 1 PAVAS 1.2.3 WALTER PIENCIAK Chucker Michigan State University. Winter Track 1.2,3 Track 1.2.3 Cross Country 2.3. MICHAEL PLOTZ Drama Club 1.2.3 Clar- ion 2.3. Chorus 1.2,3 Varieties 1.2.3 Student Union Exec Bd 1.2 All-State Chorus 3 PAVAS 2.3 NHS 3 ANTHONY POLCARI Idge. College Var- sity Club 2.3. Soccer 2 Bowling 2,3 DEBORAH POLLOCK US Army. Drama Club 1 Latin Club 1,2 Junior Classical League 1.2. NHS 3. Student Union 3 Cheerleader 2. Fencing 2. Varieties 3. Hot Line 3 Chorus 1.2.3 Choir 2.3 Bel Can- tos 3. Ensemble 3. Dos-y-Dos Treas 3 RAISSA PRUS. College. NHS 2.3. Ski Club 1.2.3 Clarion 3 FTA 2.3 PATRICIA RALSTON Trish. College Co-op 3. Child Care 3. WALTER PIENCIAK PAULA PIKUL LISA PIPPI FRANCIS PISANO ANTHONY PUCCIO KAREN PUNTURNO PATRICIA RANDALL RASKIN RALSTON SENIORS 171 Senior Stats RAY—SABO JOHN RAY. College. Student Union 3 Football 1.2.3 Golf 1.2 CARYL REARDON College PAVAS 2. Sec 3 DEBRA REICH Debi College. Class Coun- cil 1.2.3 Drama Club 1.2.3 Student Union 1.2.3 Float Comm 1.2.3. NHS 3. Track 1. Swimming 3. Blood Drive Chrm 3. ANNETTE RELLA. Net Nancy Taylor Busi- ness School. FBLA Sec 3. Float Comm 3 ERIC REUTER College AFS 2.3 RENEE RIDDICK College Drill Team 1.2. Co-Capt 3 PAUL RIDDLEBERGER Cook College Marching Band 1.2.3 Concert Band 1.2. 3 Winter Track 2.3 Track 1.2 BRUCE ROEHRIG. Ursinus College Junior Classical League 2.3 NHS 3. Wrestling 1.2.3 LISA ROMANO University of West Virgin- ia. FTA 1.2.3. Ski Club 1.2.3 Float Comm 1.2.3. Class Council 1 Student Union 2.3 Track 1 Field Hockey 2.3 RICHARD ROSEN College. DONNA ROSENTHAL Middlesex County College HELENE ROTH College LISA ROTH. Lee College Student Union 1. 2.3 MARGARET ROTH Employment. Co-op Newsletter 3. MARK ROTHMAN College Film Club 3 Chess Club 3 ANNE RUBY Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti- tute NHS 2.3. French Club 2. Sec 3 AFS 2.3 Bike Club 1 French Honor Society 3. Marching Band 3. Chorus 3. Drill Team 1.2 Who's Who among HS Students. STEVEN RUMMEL Rutgers College. NHS 2.3 Ski Club 1.2.3 Football 1.2.3. Track 1 Wrestling 2.3. KATHLEEN RUPP. College. Ski Club 1.2.3 LAURALYNNE RUSCH. College Math Club 2. German Club 1.2.3. NHS 2.3 Clarion 3 Fencing 2 Bridge Club 3 EDWARD RYAN Employment. Marching Band 2.3 Indigos 3. BRADLEY RYER Brad College. Tennis 1.3 KIMBERLY SABO Kim College Ski Club 1.2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Softball Mgr 2.3. Gymnastics Mgr 3 Track 3 JOHN RAY DENISE REALE CARYL REARDON MICHELE REDDY ANNETTE RELLA ERIC REUTER RENEE RIDDICK PAUL RIDDLEBERGER BRUCE ROEHRIG MICHAEL ROHAL THOMAS ROMAN KAREN ROMANO RICHARD ROSEN MARI ROSENBERG DONNA ROSENTHAL HELENE ROTH ANNE RUBY SARA RUCH MICHAEL RUFFLEY STEVEN RUMMEL 1 72—SENIORS Guidance counsellors help you plan your academic program and advise you on career possibilities. And they do more: they serve as resident psychiatrists, soothing the battered egos and calming distraught nerves. They are buffers between frantic mamas convinced that those teachers have it in for their daughters who never got below A before, upset teachers who are certain the administration goofed in assigning 34 students to their fourth period classes, and persistent students who ab- solutely have to switch into those classes because their current ones are too hard (and their friends are all in the other). They tactfully direct over-eager 300-SAT scores away from Princeton, encourage 600-scores away from the Marines. They patiently explain why you have to take Phys Ed and why you can't have 5 Opens a day. Each counsellor has a cubicle. It should have a couch in it. DEBRA REICH KENNETH REID PATRICIA REIMBOLD MARK ROBERTS YVONNE ROBERTS RICHARD ROBINSON LISA ROMANO DIANNE RONE EUGENE ROSA LISA ROTH MARGARET ROTH MARK ROTHMAN KATHLEEN RUPP LAURALYNNE DENNIS RYAN EDWARD RYAN BRADLEY RYER KIMBERLY SABO RUSCH SENIORS—1 73 SANDRA SACHS ROBERT SADOFSKY LARRY SANDERS GERALDINE SANTERRE LUCY SANTOS JILL SARNOFF MARGARET DORRIAN SCHENCK SCHANKLER RICHARD SCHULZ SANDI SCHWARTZ MARY SELVAGGIO CYNTHIA SEMCHENKO MICHAEL SEXTON JOHN SHAFER It was late in your junior year when you turned seventeen and were old enough to get your driver's license. Hooray! No more late buses, hoofing it to school, sitting in the back seat with your date while her mother drove you to the movies. You had wheels — or at least your parents did. which you could borrow. But after a few months of waiting your turn to put dents into the family wagon, you wanted a car of your very own. So you got a summer job. borrowed from your savings fund with the promise that you'd commute to college instead of living on campus, and hurried on down to Arky's. The '65 Ford you got was almost like a Mark IV. With a CB and a tape deck, it would be. So what if it burned oil? A valve job would fix that. And the tires? The rubber would last till next summer. It was ecstasy! Driving to school. Going out to lunch. Staying late beyond the late bus. Cutting out to the shore. Drive ins. Harts Lane. Cruising Route 18. Buying gas. Insurance payments. Meeting the policemen. Minor repairs. A few fender-benders. Ah. yes! New tires. Finding a new insurance company when yours gave up its license to insure in New Jersey. Not having to find a ride to the Prom. Having a place to go during the day to sit and listen to music, to be with yqur girl and share a cigarette. The freedom. By the way. hon. did you put out the cigarette in the car? 1 74—SENIORS AMY SAUL JERRY SAUL RICHARD SCALIA ROBERT SCHALHOUB TERESA SCHILLER LINDA RICHARD DARLENE SCHULTZ SCHLICHTING SCHNEIDER SUSAN MICHAEL SCOLES KAREN SCOTT RONNIE SELLO SCHWEITZER Senior Stats SACHS—SH EM ITZ SANDRA SACHS. College Drama Club 1. 2.3 Student Union 1.2.3 Varieties 1.2.3. Class Council 1.2.3. Junior Classical League 2. Treas 3 Float Comm 1.2.3 Bi- centennial Dance 3 PAVAS 3 Track Mgr 1.2 LARRY SANDERS. College. LUCY SANTOS Employment. JILL SARNOFF College Float Comm 1.2 Track 1. JERRY SAUL Rider College Clarion 1.3 NHS 3 ROBERT SCHALHOUB US Air Force Wrestling 1.2. Gymnastics 3. Track 1. DORRIAN SCHENK Turkey College Stu- dent Union 1.2. Officer 3. Chorus 2, VP 3 Choir 2.3 Band 2.3. Orchestra 1.2.3 Football 1,2.3 Track 1.2.3 LINDA SCHLICHTING Employment RICHARD SCHULTZ. Schulzy College Class Council 1 Student Union 2. Wres- tling 1.2.3 Gymnastics 2.3 SANDI SCHWARTZ. Northeastern Univer- sity Student Union 2,3 Ski Club 1.2.3 Bike Club 3. SUSAN SCHWEITZER College MICHAEL SCOLES College Float Comm 1.2. Class Council 1. Student Union 1 Wrestling 1.2 KAREN SCOTT. Scottie. College. Student Union 3 Field Hockey 2.3. Basketball 1. 2.3 Track 1.2.3 RONNIE SELLO JT. College CYNTHIA SEMCHENKO. Military service. MARY ANNE SERENCSES Mouse Em- ployment TERESE SERVIS. Employment. SCOTT SERVIS Shortie. US Navy KAREN SHANLEY College Student Union 3 GLENN SHAPANKA College. Gymnastics 1.2.3. Ski Team 3. HOWARD SHEMITZ Rider College Emer- ald Activities Ed 2. Mng Ed 3. Ohio Uni- versity Summer Journalism Workshop 2 Soccer 1.2. Skiing 2,3. Swimming 3 MARY ANNE THERESA SERHUS CHRISTOPHER SCOTT SERVIS SERENCSES SERVIS KAREN SHANLEY GLENN SHAPANKA LAURA ANN HOWARD SHEMITZ SHEERIN SENIORS—175 Senior Stats SHI BER — SUSSMAN DARLENE SHIBER College. Class Council 1.2 Student Union 1.2 Christmas Comm 3 Clarion 2.3 Track 1. Cross Country Mgr 2.3. Winter Track Mgr 2.3. Track Mgr 3 NHS 3. BRUCE SHUGART Shuge College Con- cert Band 1.2.3. Marching Band 1.2.3. Indigos 1.2.3 Bowling 2 ELLEN SHUHALA College Orchestra 1.2. 3 PAVAS 2.3. Regional Orchestra 2 MICHAEL SNEDEN Snede College. NHS 2.3 Cross Country 1.2.3 Winter Track 1. 2.3 Track 1.2.3 All-County Cross Coun- try 3. All-Conference Cross Country 3. Most Valuable Runner 3 DONNA SOCHA Trinity College Girls Boosters 1 Showcase 2 Latin Club 3 Junior Classical League 3. Fencing 3. Clarion 3 NHS 3 Young Republicans 3 WILLIAM SOKOLOWSKY Sok College. Orchestra Mgr 1.2. Pres 3 Student Union 1.2.3. AFS 2.3 Basketball 1.3. NHS 3. Regional Orchestra 2. All-State Orchestra 3. JACQUELINE SOLOWEY Jage University of Bridgeport. FTA 3. Track Mgr 1 Cross Country Mgr 1 NHS 3 RICHARD SORRENTINO The Professor. College Student Union 1.2.3 Chess Team 3 Biology Club 2 Philosophy Club 3 JO ANNE SPATAFORA Middlesex County College JULES SPILL College CYNTHIA SPISHOCK Middlesex County College Marching Band 1.2. Concert Band 1.2 LINDA SPRINGER. College FTA 3. Bible Study Club 2 NHS 3 Track 2.3 SUSAN STEIGER University of Pennsylva- nia. Band 1 Math club Sec 2 Junior Classical League 3 Clarion 2. News Ed 3 NHS 3 Spanish Honor Society 3 Board of Ed Student Rep 3. Fencing 2 DAVID STEINERT College. Soccer 1.2.3 Track 2.3. Golf 2.3. BARRY STEMPEL Bear. College HOWARD STERN. Swarthmore College NHS 2.3 Math Club 1.2. Pres 3. Chem Club 1.2.3. Math Team 2.3. Chem Team 2.3 State Science Day 2.3 JOHN STRIEDNIG. MIT. Biology Club 3. Math Club 3 Football 1 Wrestling 2 Na- tional Merit Commendation. NHS 3. MICHAEL STUPAY University of Dela- ware Soccer 1.2. Film Club 3. Bowling 3. ANDREW SUNDT Ottis. Kutztown State College Football 1.2. Capt 3. Wrestling 1 Track 1 DANIEL SUSIK Rutgers University. Gym- nastics 1 Bowling 2.3 NHS 2.3 DARLYNE SHIBER LIBBY SHIFMAN BRADFORD ELLEN SHUHALA SHUGART GERALDINE SMITH MICHAEL SNEDEN CHARLES SNIFFEN HEIDI SNYDER DONNA SOCHA WILLIAM MARK SOLOMON JACQUELINE SOKOLOWSKY SOLOWEY RICHARD JOANNE DONNA SPEIZER JULES SPILL SORRENTINO SPATAFORA BARRY STEMPEL HOWARD STERN DANIEL STOFMAN JOHN STRIEDNIG 1 76 —SENIORS KENNETH SHUMSKI LISA SIEGEL PATRICIA SIETZ JAMES SKISLAK STUART SKLAR ROBERT SLIWINSKI If it wasn't a genuine alarm, like the one the time the kid's car burned in the parking lot, chances are it was false. State law requires two practice drills a month, but these are never called during the lunch periods or at dismissal. The rash of false alarms at the start of the school year ended when officials powdered the alarm boxes and the suspects were caught when black light showed up the powder on their fingers. But as June arrived, the clang of fire bells was heard in the land. It became a regular thing at 3:05 on Fridays. As practical jokes go, false alarms are bummers. You can t take your lunch with you. so it's cold when you get back. And the alarm system ties into the fire department. Volunteers rush to the firehouse, clam- ber aboard the rigs, and race over here. It's a waste and a potential danger to these men and to others— motorists, pedestrians. If anyone is so desperate to get out of a test, best he should cut. CYNTHIA SPISHOCK JANICE SPITZER LINDA SPRINGER EDMOND STALOFF SUSAN STEIGER DAVID STEINERT HEIKE STROBEL NELSON STRYKER MICHAEL STUPAY ANDREW SUNDT DANIEL SUSIK JOY SUSSMAN SENIORS—1 77 JOANNE SYROKWASH THERESA SZABO FRANK TARTANELLA CYNTHIA TASSEFF JANET THOMPSON DOREEN TINSMAN DEBORAH TOTH MARGARET TOTH GISELA TRONCOSO RAYMOND TRUITT Remember spending hours doing pages of math homework? Only four problems. But you had to show all the work and each problem had several steps. Well, since the price has come down on pocket electronic calculators, math homework is a cinch now. And physics, too. You still have to study it so know the steps to go through in arriving at an answer, but all the figuring is easy now. The machine does it. Of course, if the batteries in the thing go dead while you're working the problems during your Open, you still have to do it the hard way. And you can't use the calculator on tests. Still, its a time-saver and sure beats the old-fashioned slide rule. Even teachers are using them when the quarter ends to figure averages. One of them commented that he hasn't had so many of his students argue about grades since he switched to running them off on his calculator. It's impressive to be told your equivalent numerical average to the fourth decimal place. How can you argue with that, even when you know the original grades were subjective to start with? Machines don't make mistakes, do they? 1 78-SENIORS LORRAINE CHRISTINE PETER SZILARD NADINE TADRICK SZAFASZ SZAJKO JOSHUA TAUB DEBRA TAYLOR VELMA DEBRA THOMPSON THEOPHILAKOS THOMAS PETER TOBASCO GARY TOMCHUK DONNA TORNABENE TISCHHAUSER MICHAEL TOTO MARIANNE DOMINIQUE KIM TROGER TRAUTWEIN TRISIANO Senior Stats SYROKWASH—TURI JOANNE SYROKWASH College NHS 2. 3 Spanish Honor Society 2. Trees 3 Or- chestra 1.2. Sec 3 Student Union Exec Comm 1.2. Chrm 3. Class Council 3. Ski Club 1.2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Swim Team 2. Capt 3 Tennis 2.3 Cheerleader 1.2 Drill Team 3. Homecoming Queen 2 Regional Orchestra 2 THERESA SZABO. College Chorus 1. Choir 2.3 Student Union 1.3 Class Council 1 Drill Team 2.3. NADINE TADRICK. Ball State University Drill Team 1, Co-Capt 2. Capt 3. NHS 3. Float Comm 1.3. Latin Club 3. Junior Classical League 3 PAVAS 1.2.3. Track 1 Softball 2.3 Teen Arts 1. Who's Who among HS Students. FRANK TARTANELLA. College CYNTHIA TASSEFF College Ski Club 1. VP 2.3 Student Union 1.2 Track 1 Ski Team 1,2. JOSHUA TAUB Jose Livingston College. Soccer 1 VELMA THEOPHILAKOS. College Drill Team 2 Chorus 2.3. Track 2.3. Ski Club 2.3 NHS 2.3 DEBRA THOMPSON College AFS 1.2. Treas 3. Ski Club 1.3. Varsity Club 3 French Club 3 Student Union 3 Track 1.2.3 Field Hockey 2 NHS 2.3. JANET THOMPSON William Paterson Col- lege Ski Club 1.2 DOREEN TINSMAN Professional Dancer. PAVAS 2.3 NHS 3 Dance Club 1 State Arts Festival 1.2.3 Fencing 2 Varieties 1.2.3 Ski Club 2 Gymnastics 1 Float Comm 1.3 THOMAS TISCHHAUSER. Cornell Univer sity Bike Club 1. Pres 2.3 Varsity Club 1. 2.3 Gymnastics 1.2.3 All-State Parallel Bars. Best All-Around 3 PETER TOBASCO. Buchnell University Student Union 2 NHS 3 Soccer 2 Bas- ketball 1 Bowling 3 Baseball 1,2,3 GARY TOMCHUK College. NHS 2.3 Var- sity Club 1.2.3 Football 1 Winter Track 1.2.3 Cross Country 2.3. Coaches Award 3 DEBORAH TOTH. Dorothy. College. Drama Club 1.2.3 Varieties 2.3 Prom Comm 3 Summer Theatre 1.2.3. Winter Theatre 2 MICHAEL TOTO Totes. College. Varsity Club 3. Football 1.2.3 Baseball 2.3. Win- ter Track 3 DOMINIQUE TRISANO College. Dance Club 2.3. PAVAS 1.2.3. Gymnastics Mgr 3. GISELA TRONCOSO College of St Eliza- beth Student Union 1. Exec Comm 2 Chorus 2 Color Guard 2. NHS 3 ANNE TRUPKEWICZ University of Colo- rado Biology Club 1.2. Treas 3 Emerald 3 AFS 1.2 MICHAEL TRZASKA. College Chess Club 2.3 Football 2 ANNE MICHAEL TRZASKA BRIAN TURI CHRIS TURI TRUPKIEWICZ SENIORS—179 Senior Stats TWADDELL—YINGLING KATHRYN TWADDELL. Houghton College NHS 2.3. French Club 2.3 French Honor Society 2. Pres 3 FTA 3. Bible Study Club 1.2.3 Save-the Children 3. Basket- ball Mgr 2 ALLISON UMPLEBY College Ski Club 1.2. 3 Drama Club 2.3 Student Union 3. Track 1 JEANNE WADSWORTH. College German Club 3 German Honor Society 3 Ski Club 2.3 Folio 3 Class Council 1 Drill Team 1 Gymnastics 2 Basketball 2.3 Softball 2 NHS 2.3 PAUL WAIT Rutgers College Football 1.2. 3 LYNN WEBSTER College Float Comm 1. 2.3 Ski Club 1.2.3 Class Council Pres 2. Track 1 Ski Team 1.2 ERNEST WELLER Airline School JILL WIENER Ski Club 1.2.3 AFS 2. VP 3 Color Guard 2.3 Girls Boosters 1.2 NHS 2.3 Track 1 ANITA WILBUR Castleton State College Emerald 1.2. Class Ed 3 Folio 3 Clar- ion 1 NHS 3 Spanish Honor Society 3 Bike Club 1.2. Columbia University Press Association 2. Poor Richard Award JUDY WILLIAMS College Ski Club 2 WADE WINTER College Bike Club 1.2.3 German Club 3. German Honor Society 3 NHS 3 Wrestling 1.2. CYNTHIA WOLFF Employment CHRISTOPHER WOLFS LAYER College NHS 3 Track 1.2 BRIAN WRIGHT Middlesex County Col- lege PAVAS 1.2.3 Ski Club 3 Bike Club 3 WILLIAM YINGLING Bill Military service KATHRYN ALLISON PAMELA PETER TWADDELL UMPLEBY VAN WAGNER VERBITSKI GRACE VIDAL ANITA VIZNEAU CHRISTOS JEANNE VLACHAKIS WADSWORTH PAUL WAIT JEREMIAH WALSH KAREN WALSIFER GARY WASYLYK JILL WIENER ANITA WILBUR DAVID WILLIAMS JUDY ANN WILLIAMS 1 80—SENIORS ANN WOLFE CYNTHIA WOLFE CHRISTOPHER WOLFS LAYER MARY WOLLMANN Pinball machines have always been a mild attraction for those with time and money on their hands. But it really took off after the rock movie Tommy made the run of local theatres. Before long, one of the fads was pinball machines and T-shirts imprinted Pinball Wizard. Kids coming here from New York City were especially vulnerable to the craze. The games are illegal in The Big Apple. Here was one area of western culture where we were one up. Of course, gambling isn't permitted here but you can win free games if you score high enough on the game you paid for. Each machine is different. Once you figure how much body-English you can use with- out tilting the thing, you have it made and can ride for hours free. LYNN WEBSTER STEVEN ERIC HOWARD WERTHEIM JODY WEXLER THOMAS WEINSTEIN WEISENBACH WHITTINGSLOW KATHLEEN DANIEL WILSON JANET WILSON LINDA WINCH WADE WINTER LEON WOJNO WILLIAMS LORRI WRAY BRIAN WRIGHT GREGORY WULSTER DALE WYCOFF EILEEN WILLIAM YACOVELLI YINGLING SENIORS—181 Senior Stats YOUNG— ZUCKER DEBORAH YOUNG. Military service Cla- rion 3 Girls Boosters 3. Chorus 3 MIRIAM YOUNG Ohio State University. Marching Band 1 Concert Band 1.2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Orchestra 1.2.3 LISA YUSKO Northeastern University Ski Club 1.2.3 PAVAS 2.3 Student Union 1.2. Float Comm 3 Track 1 HANI ZAKI College. Soccer 1.2.3. MARK ZAKI College Band 1.2.3 Orches- tra 1.2.3 MARK ZAMBROVITZ. Marquette Univer- sity. Ski Club 1.2.3. Class Council 3. NHS 3 Latin Club 2 Junior Classical League 2 Soccer 1.2. Capt 3 Varsity Club 1,2,3. Track 2.3 CAROLYN ZANGARA Douglass College. Girls Boosters 3. Save-the-Children 3 GARY ZIEMSKI. College Civil Air Patrol 1. 2.3 4-H 1. Tennis 1.2.3. Fencing 3. LOLITA ZIKMANIS Douglass College Emerald 1 German Club 1,2 NHS 2,3 ANNE ZINCHUK Employment. Explorers 1.2. Sec 3 KEVIN ZOGBAUM College Chess 1.2. Bike Club 2 LORI ZUCKER. College. Track 2 DEBORAH YOUNG MIRIAM YOUNG LISA YUSKO HANI GEORGE ZAKI MARK ZAKI MARK ZAMBROVITZ CAROLYN ZANGARA GARY ZIEMSKI DONALD ZIERDT LOLITA ZIKMANIS ANN ZINCHUK KEVIN ZOGBAUM LORI ZUCKER TOGETHER FOR THE LAST TIME, seniors line up before taking their ceremonial march around the track and commencement exercises. Many would never see each other after this night. 1 82—SENIORS Seniors not photographed: LINDA ALLEN GARY AMBROSY GARY BACHER LISA BARRETO WILLIAM BIELING MICHAEL BIRO SCOTT BOLEY GENE BRANCIFORTE JOHN BRAUTIGAN META BROWN GARY BUTCHER DAVID CACKOWSKI MARILYN CALLAHAN RALPH CARRITO DEBRA CARSON JEAN CASE STEVEN CATAPANO LYNN CEMBOR MERRYL CHAIT JOYCE CHMELEW DAVID CLARK BARBARA COAKLEY MARY LOU COFFEY MARY BETH CROWE CLAUDIA CZOK MARCUS DAVIS PATRICK DE ANGELO DONNA DE MARCKY KEVIN DESMOND IRENE DUCOTE JUDITH DVORZSAK ERNEST ERDOSI RONALD FRANKOSKY THOMAS FRENEAUX STEVEN GALAYDA RICHARD GIBBONS JAMES GILLILAND ROBERT J. GLASSHEIM FLETCHER GRAYSON JAMES HAMMOND CHRISTOPHER HAUN VINCENT HEIRY LEE HERBERT DOUGLAS HOBBY ROBERT HUGGINS JOHN HUNTER CARMINE IANNACONE FRANK I ATI JOANNIS ILIOPOULOS JOHN JADCZAK LAWRENCE JOHNSON EYAL KALISH DIONISIA KATSAITIS THOMAS KISH JAMES KLEIN EMILY KOSTY BAINES KOZIA PAUL MALLON ROBERT MARSHALL CHARLES MAST MICHAEL McANDREW JOSEPH McGLYNN TIMOTHY McNALLY ROBERT MILINCHUK WILLIAM MILONAS PAMELA MORGAN JEFFREY MOZEIKA KATHRYN MURRAY WILLIAM NEWMEYER ANTHONY NIELSEN BARBARA NIELSEN CAROL O'BRIEN JOHN O'CONNOR SUSAN OFFERMAN JOHN PAVELOCK DAVID PERKINS PETER PERNICE ALAN PETITT ALEXANDRA POLANSKY WILLIAM POWERS ALICE ROSENBERG MITCHELL ROSENSTEIN MARK ROSKEY PATRICIA SALKOWITZ KEITH SALVATORI ELLO RHONDA SCHNITZER RANDY SCHWARTZMAN BIAGINO SCOLA CLAIRE SERHUS DANIEL SHEPPARD ROBERT SHERIDAN ROBERT SOFIKANICH ROBERT SPELLS SUSAN STANKOWITZ GREGORY STROKUS LOUIS STRUGALA ROBERT SUDNIK JOSEPH TIMKO THOMAS TROAST COLLEEN TURI GARY VAGANEK MARGARET VERBANIC STEPHEN WADSWORTH CHARLES WARFIELD ERNEST WELLER CLAUDIUS WESTPHAL DOUGLAS WHITE JEANETTE WILLIAMS VICTORIA WILLIAMS JOANNE YERT KATHLEEN ZAHS MICHAEL ZALESKI 1126 SENIORS—183 Like any other sophomore class entering the high school, we were ambivalent about the experience. On the one hand, we were excited about being here where the action was but. on the other, we were apprehensive about the size of the place. And if we had come from Churchill Junior High, we were not at all certain we could make the adjustment from the modular scheduling to the more traditional routine of the high school. But. like the other sophomore classes that came before us, we adjusted in no time. We might never be able to tell you room numbers, but we found our way to class and were soon as much a part of the scene as the upper classmen. We organized our class council un- der the leadership of Patrice Bell, Cindy Davidson, Cheryl Bailey and Margaret Shankler. Mrs. Anne Poskaitis and Mr. Leonard Kolakowski were our ad- visers—and would be throughout our three years. We entered the Homecoming float contest. We thought our entry We've Only Just Begun was a winner but the judges thought otherwise and gave us a third-place award. Susan McFie was our Queen. This was the year American in- volvement in Vietnam ended and the draft law was allowed to expire. fZ 1 84—CLASS HISTORY IT WAS THE YEAR the orchestra joined in concert with the one from Moorestown, when gas was in demand and seniors rode bikes, when New Jersey gave 1 8-year-olds the vote. IT Dl DN'T TAKE LONG for us to get used to the place. Our sophomore float took third place. We adjusted to traditional scheduling and were soon joining teams and clubs. CLASS HISTORY—185 NOT THE LEAST BIT RETICENT, we joined the chorus, band, and orchestra. We acted in Hello. Dolly and M A S H and raised funds in diverse ways for our activities. AND WE HELPED bring girls sports onto the scene. Our efforts contributed to two un- defeated seasons for Girls gymnastics and to the start of Swimming as a varsity team. WITH SOME TREPIDATION, we bid farewell to Dr. Kenneth Burnett, principal during our sophomore year. His was an OPEN administration and we saw. in his leaving, changes. 186—CLASS HISTORY New Jersey's 1 8-year-old majority law became effective, giving teens the right to vote—and drink. The Yom Kippur War erupted when Egypt and Syria invaded Isreal. It was the year that wrestling coach Jim Rishar was killed in an automobile accident, that a select Senate committee began in- vestigating Watergate, and that Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned after pleading nolo con- tendere to a tax evasion charge. It was the year that streaking was a fad, that we waited in long lines for hours for gasoline, and that Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was globe-hopping in pursuit of detente and a solution to the Arab- Israeli crisis. The chorus' Christmas concert was cancelled because of the energy crisis and we went on Daylight Savings Time in mid-winter. Foot- ball came from a 1 -3 start to win its last five games, four of them by shoutout. Gymnastics won its seventh consecutive State cham- pionship. Wrestling stunned everyone when it won the district title. Girls track became a varsity sport and Boys track won its fourth straight New Brunswick In- vitational as well as the State crown. The orchestra performed in joint concert with one from Moorestown and drama staged Guys and Dolls . There was a lot to do, and we were helping to do it. CLASS HISTORY—187 At the year's end. it was announced that Dr. Kenneth Burnett would be elevated to Director of Secondary Education and that Dr. Larry Ashley would be our new principal. A com- mittee of students, faculty, and parents was named to recommend changes in the discipline and atten- dance codes. We sensed that things would be different when we returned in the fall as juniors. We were right. Our junior year was the one of the appeals board, of hall monitors. It was the year of gaudily-painted hallways and the mini-park. Speed bumps came in and lounging in the library went out. We were led by Bob Foster. Nancy Gavin. Kathy Canning and Jacki Belin. Our Homecoming Queen was Joanne Syrokwash. and our float was third again. We'd have to VbJJU tA- do something about that. This was year President Richard Nixon resigned rather than face certain impeachment, and Gerald Ford succeeded him in office. Nelson Rockefeller was confirmed as vice president. The Ski Club flew off to Utah and the band, to Disneyworld in Florida. Voters approved the purchase of the orchard as an addition to the high school campus but would later nix construction of an addition to the high school itself. Mayor Jean Walling passed away, a victim of cancer. The days flew by. It was time of Patti Hearst. of Wilbur Mills and Fanny Foxxe. Rutgers Glee Club and Stan Kenton appeared on cam- pus, Hank Aaron eclipsed Babe Ruth's homeroom record. Field Day 188—CLASS HISTORY IN OUR JUNIOR YEAR. Dr. Ashley became our principal. Craig DeBoer led wrestling to a district championship, we inaugurated Field Day, and our float came in third again. JUNIORS SHOWED THE WAY There was no prettier queen than Joanne Syrokwash nor more active competitor than Terri Collins. And where would the mini-park be if not for us? CLASS HISTORY—189 A LOT HAPPENED in our junior year. The nation was spared the agony of an impeach- ment when President Nixon resigned. We went skiing in Utah and marching in Disneyworld. 190—CLASS HISTORY CHAMPIONSHIPS were hard to come by but few teams had losing seasons. Budget cuts meant more crowded classes. Tighten- ed discipline still permitted smoking in cer- tain areas. TRIUMPH AND TRAGEDY. Our junior year was brightened by the appearances on cam- pus of the Rutgers Glee Club and Stan Ken- ton. We were saddened by the death of Mayor Walling. filL OA was introduced that spring, and Foreign Language department held a weekend festival. Gymnastics became a fall sport and didn't win the State championship. But Girls gymnastics went un- defeated under Coach Wans. Swimming and Bowling and Soft- ball became varsity sports. Field Hockey won the County title. We took part in drama's ''Hello, Dolly and M A S H , par- ticipated in the Summer Jour- nalism Workshop at Ohio Universi- ty. planned the reorganization of student government, sent student reps to the Board of Education and the Adult School. We published a newspaper for the county fair and were preparing to take over the leadership as seniors. How we fared as seniors is told in the pages of this edition of Emerald. Our record, we feel, was best summed up by the newspaper story about our graduation that headlined ''A Special Class.'' In the short time allotted to us, we tried to make our mark a distinguished one. CLASS HISTORY—191 COMP I AND STUDY SKILLS, both popular skills courses with juniors, require carefully researched and organized writing. Typing adds that extra touch that can make an A. Juniors ABBOTT-BENDER ROW 1: Genie Abbott. Mark Abbott. Cindy Abecker, Linda Abramson. Michelle Adesman. ROW 2: Diane Adinolfi. Michael Agresti. Jennie Agugliaro. Russ Ahmed. Susan Albach. ROW 3 Bill Aldrich. Mark Alexander. Robert Alex- ander. Margaret Allenby. Carol Amity. ROW 4: Joann Amrhein. Timothy Anderson, Steve Angeline. Paul Arose. Carolyn Arrants. ROW 5: Frank Asdarian. Jay Asher. Paulette Ash- jian. Debbie Avery. Cathy Ayuso. ROW 6: Beth Babeu. Judi Babo, Mike Bailey. Janice Baker. Mark Baker ROW 7: Stephen Baker. Joe Baldesweiler. Donna Balon, Beverly Barkalow. Tom Barszcz. ROW 8: Linda Bartolino, Kevin Bay. Barbara Beecher, Dawn Beecher. Mike Belcheff. ROW 9: Nola Beldegreen. Diane Bellettiere. An- toinette Bellezza. Janet Bellino. Donna Bender 192—JUNIORS JUNIORS—193 Juniors BENEDICT—CLARK ROW 1: Gary Benedict, Don Bennett, Dave Berkstresser, Wayne Bernard. Philip Bevington. ROW 2: John Bielski, Anita Bilodeau, Brendan Bingham. Robert Blanchard. Pat Blewett. ROW 3: Kim Bongiovanni. Sue Bonnici. Randy Borneman. Karen Bornheimer. Trish Bornheimer. ROW 4: Priscilla Bowne. Jim Bozza. Marie Braiuca. Cathy Brandt. Jaymie Brauer. ROW 5: Margaret Brautigan. David Brazer. Craig Brearley. Chuck Brelsford. Alan Brennan. ROW 6: Debbie Brim. Janet Brodhead. Ruth Brodhead. Alan Brodman. Jay Brodsky. Keith Brown. Meta Brown, Steven Brown. Mark Bruno. David Bubrow ROW 7: Steve Buller, Kathy Burak. Doug Burghardt. Grace Burke. Brenda Burtick. Linda Byrn, Jean Byrnes. Barry Cacella. Susan Cacoso. Diane Cain. ROW 8: Mike Calantoni, Tony Capraro. Laura Carter. Tom Caruso, Kelle Casey. Paula Casieri. Randy Castellano. Fred Catelli, Barry Cavell. Mark Cedrone. ROW 9: Nancy Celano. John Cheppo. Bill Chinchar. Robert Chian. John Christianson. Andy Church. Marie Ciatto. Filomena Cipriani. Carol Clark. Patrice Clark. Juniors CLARK—DOUGLIS ROW 1 : Peter Clark. Nancy Clinton. Leslie Cochrane. Robert Coffey. Betti Cohen. ROW 2: David Cohen, Rich Colbert. Thomas Cole. Cynthia Comer. Mary Compton. ROW 3: Dave Conway. Lucille Corcoran. Dana Cowen. Jackie Crawford. Alan Cummings ROW 4: Robert Curcio. Bob Curran. Bernadette Cybulski. Joan Dalfonzo. Donna Davis. ROW 5: Diane DeBlass. Mark DeCastro, Amy Decker. Richard Dell, Mary Ann DelRosso. ROW 6: Michele DeMarco. Kevin Dembinski. Bet- sy Denton. Cathy Denyeau ROW 7: Fran DeStefano. Lisanne DeStefano, Debbie Deutsch. Mike Devaney. ROW 8: Steve Devlin. Diane DiLalo, Pat DiMar- tino, Shari Dloss ROW 9: John Doll. Diane Donner. Debroah Donohue. Evan Douglis. OBLIVIOUS TO TRAFFIC around him. Jacque Saul catnaps during his afternoon Open. He awoke in time for his Math class. Comfortable library is conducive to snoozes. 194—JUNIORS -V- Juniors DOWLING —HAM MEL ROW 1: Tom Downing. Pat Downing. Mike Doyle. Don Drummond. Tom Eaton. Carol Egnatoff. Lauren Eisler. Gayle Eisner. Thomas Ellingham. JoAnne Enema. ROW 2: Mike Evans. Joy Falk. Bob Fallon. Ken Farber. Carol Fasciano, Maria Fedak. Marge Feigenbaum, Hal Feldbaum. Ken Feldman. Joanne Ferrara. ROW 3: Teresa Fetter. Brian Feurlicht, Pam Field. Bonnie Finfer. David Fink. Peter Finkel. Peter Fiorentino. Mary Beth Fischer. Leslie Fisher. Jerry Fishinger. ROW 4: Rich Foggio. Sarah Forney. Ben Fourman. Amy French. Nancy Fullerton. Kim Funice. Bill Gaffney. Tom Galbraith. Mary Gallagher. Tracy Galloway. ROW 5: Frank Garcia, Doris Gash, Cindi Gassaro. Scott Gatarz. Jasmine Geanopoulous. James Greiger, Arthur Geller. Ronnie Gentile. Bob Getty. Anthony Giarillo. ROW 6: Robert Giglia. Patricia Gill. Kathy Gilliland. Patty Gilliland. Judith Gilsleider. ROW 7: Chris Glidden. Dave Goldstein. Andrea Goldberg. Hal Goldberg. Robert Goldstein. ROW 8: Jay Goldwasser. Cathy Golombeski. Keith Goodwin, Bruce Gottleib, Eric Green. ROW 9: Lillian Greenberg. Greg Griggs. Debbie Haas. Rose Hack. Stacy Hammel. JUNIORS 195 Juniors HANDELMAN—KNAUS ROW 1 : Dave Handelman. Chris Harris. Robin Harrold. Scott Haskell. Adam Haut, Lisa Hayes. Scott Heimberg. Sharon Heitzman, Warren Hen- dricks. Irene Hennelly ROW 2: Greg Henninger, Peter Henry, Edward Herbert. Marc Hirsh. Lisa Hodgkins. Rich Hoerth. Kathy Hollabaugh. Linda Horwath, Sandy Howard. Sharon Howarth. ROW 3: Suzanne Hulse. Lou Hupp. Peggy Hutchens. Al lannacone. Anthony Ippolito. Madeline Ippolito. Robert Jackowitz. Johanna Jacob. Eric Jacobson. Rob Jacovsky ROW 4: Carole Jagt. Diane Jakubowski. Andrea Jamieson. Beth Janco. Wally Janowski, Michelle Jarosz. Halina Jaskiel. Cindy Jastrebski. David Jewett. Aileen Johnson. ROW 5: Erik Johnson. Linda Johnson. Bob Jones. Michele Jones. Richard Julius. Robert Kabus. Ann Kaltunowicz. Kenneth Kancylarz. Beth Kaplan. Robin Kaplan ROW 6: Jeff Keck. Paul Kelberg, Dan Kelly. Daniel T Kelly. Margaret Kelman. ROW 7: Stephen Kenney. Kelly Kercheval. Dave Kesler. Jeffrey Kestenbaum. Linda Kilcoyne. ROW 8: Kevin Kirk. Kim Kirk. Kenneth Kirkley. Erica Klein. Marcee Klein. ROW 9: George Klimcsak. Eileen Klose. Robert Klug. Michael Knatz. Jeff Knaus. 1 96—JUNIORS Juniors KNIGHT—LONSKI ROW 1: Bob Knight. Judy Kochis. Steve Kohn. Tom Koletis. Denise Koproski ROW 2: Diane Kraatz. Julanne Kozielec. Deane Krakower. Linda Kravet. Kevin Krevack. ROW 3: Linda Krisel. Bill Kroeschel. Bob Kruse. Debbie Kruse. Elaine Kulischenko. ROW 4: Kim Kune. Carol Lacina. Susan Lackey. Anthony LaFazia. Kevin Laffey. ROW 5: Jim Lamo. Andrea Lane. Rich Lang. Robert Langer. Judy LaPerna ROW 6: Karen Lawless. Suzanne Lazare. Jim LeBlon. Mike Leddy. Janet Lederman. ROW 7: Jeanne LeFebvre. Stewart Leftow. Holly Lelling. Jim Lemieux. Ruth Lemire. ROW 8: Mindy Lerman, Marcy Levine. Laurell Lewis. Sue Liddy. Elvin Lightcap. ROW 9: Carol Lin. Ted Linke. Debbie Liss. Theresa Logan. Nancy Lonski. CHANGES IN RULES made the library somewhat quieter this year, affording those who wished the chance to study or to read for pleasure. Loungers moved to the cafeteria or patio. JUNIORS—197 Juniors LUCK HOWEC—Ml LLER ROW 1: Teresa Luckhowec. Marta Lukac, Allan Maandi. Cheryl MacDonald. Debbie Macek. ROW 2: Tracy MacMillan. Edward Magram. Susan Mahnken. Margaret Mahoney, Michael Mahoney. ROW 3: Joell Maine. Cori Malkin. Barbara Malone. Glenn Manganella. Sharon Mann. ROW 4: Roy Manning. Suzette Marchese. Mitch Margolin. Ellen Margulies. Mark Marino. ROW 5: Steve Markowski. James Marks. Steve Marks. Melissa Marosy. Michael Marozine. ROW 6: Lisz Martin. Steve Martin. Joe Masitti. Pam Mason, Dottie Massaros. Dean Mast. Frank Mattina. Lorraine Matyskiel. Pam Mazer. Lenny Mazza. ROW 7: Darlene Mazzei. Sera Mazzola. Peter McCabe. Howard McCallen, Kevin McCarthy. Patricia McCarthy. Bill McCormack. Bruce McCor- mick. Bev McCracken, Linda McCully. ROW 8: Tom McDermott, Kevin McDonald. Edward McDonnell. Ron McGowan. Mary Ann McGuinness. Bill McHugh. Jenny McKendrick. John McLean. Scott McNamara. Pat McSweeney. ROW 9: David Melchior, John Melnik, Mike Melton. Brian Mendelsohn. David Menninger, Jeff Meyerhoff. Lenore Miles. Beth Miller, Cindy Miller. Donna Miller. 198—JUNIORS LITTLE THINGS add up during the day and can produce tension. Craig DeBoer explains that he couldn't get the car today to go out to lunch but promises tomorrow. Juniors MILLER —PAWSON ROW 1 : Susan Miller. Cindi Millian, Randy Mintz. Stacey Mironov. Wayne Misner ROW 2: Michele Monchek, Carol Moore. Colin Moore. LuAnn Mormando. Brian Morse. ROW 3: Kathy Moses. Lou Mueller. MaryAnn Muhlberg. Jennifer Mullen. Shelley Mumford. ROW 4: Paul Munck. Shalyn Murphy. Stephen Murray. Richard Nacht. Arthur Nahan. ROW 5: Geri Natalicchio. Jay Neadle. Bob Nemes. Paul Nielsen, Michael Niglio ROW 6: Larry Nilsen. Joe Noto. Joan Nunes. Susan Obst. Kathy O'Connor. ROW 7: Don Odato, Carol Offenberger. Barbara Olson. Bill O'Neill. Todd Orensky. ROW 8: Bill Pandos. Chris Pardun. Wayne Park. Richard Parr. Regina Parreira. ROW 9: Rosa Pascarella. Maureen Pate. Rita Patel. Ellen Paulus. David Pawson. JUNIORS—199 Juniors PEGER —RULLO ROW 1 : Ed Peger. Rudolph Petke. Carol Pfiefer. Charlie Phelps. Tony Phillips ROW 2: Michelle Pogroszewski. Garry Pohl, Peggy Polansky. Tony Pontieri. Mary Ann Poole ROW 3: Doris Popovich, Richard Pressler. David Price. Patty Prigge. Joan Prinzo. ROW 4: Rosanne Puccio. Kim Racz, Robbin Rader. Suzanne Radogna. Ed Ramirez ROW 5: Stacy Randall. Kim Repolla. Nancy Rayman. Diane Reardon. Rosemarie Rebele. ROW 6: Chet Regen. David Regiec. Charles Reiff, Barbara Reuter. Allison Revelj. ROW 7: Anne Ricci. Sharon Rittman. Bill Robin- son. Michael Rodman, Lourdes Rodriquez. ROW 8: Doreen Ronchi. Richard Ross. Michael Rozycki. Will Rubin. Beth Ruch. ROW 9: Debra Ruchlin. Debbie Rudders. George Rudnitsky, Cathy Ruffe. Iris Rullo. IT'S A PARTY WEEKEND and just everyone is going. Laura Jacoby ponders how she can squeeze in a report due Mon- day morning. 200—JUNIORS Juniors RUMMEL—STEIN ROW 1: Shari Rummel. Frank Russo. Donna Rynk. Stuart Sackman, Carole Sanders. ROW 2: Pat Sanders. Robert Sanford, Sue Santo. Grace Santora. Jenny Lynn Santora. ROW 3: David Sarnak. Jacque Saul, Donald Saunders. Cindy Savlov. Jill Scalzone. ROW 4: Jean Scardino. Gail Scharfenstein, Bruce Scheckter. Jeanne Scherer. Kevin Scherer ROW 5: Carrie Schindler. Kay Schindler. Gretchen Schmidt. Chris Schmutz. Karen Schubert. ROW 6: Daniel Schwarcz. Karen Schwartz. Michael Schwartz, Calvin Schwarz. Cathy Seidenberg. George Semen. Lynn Seppi. Alan Shafer. Linli Shamy. Sue Shanko ROW 7: Heather Sheehan. Michael Sheridan. William Shipers. Gil Shladovsky. Scott Silver. Ellen Simha. Judy Simon. Bernard Skarzynski. Linda Skirka, Bill Skold. ROW 8: Sue Sliwinski, Liz Sloane. David Smith, Minda Smith. Tracy Smith. Cathy Sneden. Dave Sokolowsky, Alice Solocha, Mary Solocha. Sharon Solomon. ROW 9: Howie Solowey. Janet Sorber. Timothy South. Myra Spezio. Michelle Spivack. Jay Stack. Arthur Stanton. Cindy Steffich, Greta Steigerwald. Janet Stein. JUNIORS—201 Juniors STEINBERG—VASH ROW 1: David Steinberg. Amy Sternberger. Louise Stine. Ricky Stine. Steve Stiteler. ROW 2: Leslie Stone. Mary Lou Stypolkowski. Jane Sullivan. Kim Sumner. Art Swidler. ROW 3: Michael Switlyk. Bill Sypniewski, lldiko Szilard. Linda Tabor. Mike Tagarty. ROW 4: John Tarantino. Renee Tarullo, Arden Taub. Warren Taureck. Jeff Temple. ROW 5: Cindy Teusch, Art Thomas. John Thomp- son. Sandy Thompson. William Tighe. ROW 6: Alex Todoroff. Sharon Tomchuk. Julie Toner. Joan Toraitis. Jeffery Tortora ROW 7: Alex Toth, Janet Traficante. Edward Trautwein. Nina Troicki, Tina Trump. ROW 8: David Tschorpe, John Tuttle, Teresa Twomey. Rob Updegraff. Steve Urowsky. ROW 9: Diane VanDeursen, Jim VanNess, Michelle VanVorst. Jim Varga. Arthur Vash. WAITING HIS TURN. Clark Farrer studies the technique of applying pancake makeup as Mr. Taubenslag readies Dave Freneaux for his role in this winter's Our Town. lpWJSi -L 202—JUNIORS Juniors VASTAR D IS—ZYTYNS KI ROW 1: Jim Vastardis. Steve Velsor. Craig Veverka. Patricia Vignault. Sandy Vitale. Betty Vogt. John Volinski. Mark VonDeeston. Teri Voorhees. Eileen Voyna ROW 2: Susan Wald. Robin Walker. Brian Walsh. Annie Wang, Kathleen Wardrop. Steve Warman, Terry Watt. Renee Waxman, Heidi Weatherford. John Weber. Row 3: Madeline Weber. Jody Weckstein. Reid Weinman, Jim Weis. Mike Weis. Judi Wengr- zynek. Chris White. Dianne White. Suzanne Whitlock. Steve Whittingslow ROW 4: Dayna Winston, Mary Ellen Wisniewski. Tom Wong. Joseph Wruble. Breann Wulster, Dean Yatauro. Robert Yetman. Sandy York. Steve Youngerman, Kathy Yuhas ROW 5: Gregg Zahs. Jeffrey Zajak. Robert Zalinsky. Gary Zastocki. Craig Zavetz. Joseph Zavoda. Jon Zdatny. Dan Zeck. Dave Zeidwerg. J. Wade Zelenak ROW 6: Amy Zerman, Shelley Ziemski. ROW 7: Mara Zikmanis. Patricia Ziment. ROW 8: Mary Zimmerman, Kathy Zinevich. ROW 9: Denver Zogg. Joe Zytynski. JUNIORS—203 Sophomores ABBOTT—BOHADEL ROW 1 : Marlene Abbott. Jamie Ackerman. Lori Adams. John Adochio. Mike Aita. Daniel Aks. Bill Albach. Steve Alberts. Cathy Albright. George Aliferis. ROW 2: Gail Allen. Joseph Allen. Elaine Allwine. Sue Altamore. Charlene Alusik. Patti Ambrosy. Gregory Anderson. Jenifer Anderson. Robert Anderson. Barbara Andronico. ROW 3: Maria Angelakes. Ellen Arky. Catherine Armstrong. Chris Arnold, Greg Arnott. Mitchell Auerbach. Nena Babich. Barbara Bachman. Kelley Baker. Liz Baker. ROW 4: Roger Baker. Keith Baldwin. Bob Balland. Nora Ballon. Janice Balon. Peter Banos, Cynthia Banziger. George Baran. Bob Barkalow. Michael Barkann ROW 5: Judi Barnes. Debbie Baron. Nancy Baron. Brian Barreto. Kathy Barth. Terri Basile. Diane Basso. Paul Bastkowski. Shari Bauman. Joanne Beamer. ROW 6: Tom Belcheff. Gary Bellettiere. Valene Bellezza. Steve Belowsky. Lori Ben ROW 7: Sydney Bendl. Linda Bergen. Laura Berger. Sheryl Bergeron. Jim Berkstresser. ROW 8: Wayne Bernknoph. Thomas Berry. Scott Best. Kim Bieg. Laurel Bilder ROW 9: Leticia Blandino. Sheila Blewett. Susan Blum. Donna Bochis. Ed Bohadel. 204-SOPHOMORES Sophomores BOHR ER—CHAMBERS ROW 1 : Gretchen Bohrer. Mark Bongiovanni. Rich Bongiovanni. Judy Bornheimer. Tatjana Borodin ROW 2: Dave Boyd, Dawna Boyle. Kelly Boysen. Mai Braich. Tony Braiuca ROW 3: Marcia Bramson, Keith Brauer. John Brede. Barbara Brennan. Lesley Broad ROW 4: Karen Brodbar. Renee Brodbar. Robert Bronzellino. Kathleen Brown. Lawrence Brown ROW 5: Sarah Brown. Scott Bryan. Chris Buckley. Andy Budde. Lyle Butler ROW 6: Chris Burns. Judy Burtick. Sue Byrnes. Carol Cacoso. ROW 7: Ann Calogrides. Maggie Campobasso. Thomas Compobasso, Barbara Cantor. ROW 8: Joseph Caporrino. Dom Carlucci. Dennis Carroll. Tim Carstens. ROW 9: Colleen Casey. Talia Caterina. Donna Caubert. Nancy Chambers deterrent effect on guys with ideas. SOPHOMORES—205 Sophomores CHARLESTON —DUNN ROW 1: Kathy Charleston. Jeff Chenoweth. Paul Chernek. Frank Chernowetz. Jamie Chillscyzn. ROW 2: Michael Chinchar. Louis Chirico. Susan Christiansen. Carol Christie. Stephanie Chrobak. ROW 3: Janet Chuang. Kathy Clark. Tim Clark. Kevin Clarke. Connie Cobb. ROW 4: Kathy Coffey. Dave Cohen. Laura Cohen, Paul Cohen. Stephen Cohen. ROW 5: Jill Cohn. Peggy Coleman. Richard Coltharp. Bob Connington, Bob Connolly. ROW 6: Carol Connors. Patricia Conti. Jennifer Cooper. Jeff Core. Linda Costigan. Claudia Costello. Kristine Cotter. Carolyn Cowherd. John Covello. Rosemarie Cresti. ROW 7: Debbie Csizmar. Carol Cuff. Faith Cullen, Martin Daiello. Leslie D Amico. Lillian Darmefal. Rosemary Daskiewicz. Diane Davidson. Daniel Davison. Karen Dean. ROW 8: Marg Deegan. John DeGraw. Mark Delcol. Rich Denton. Denise Desrosier. Patricia DeWitt. Anthony Dichiaro. Kim Dickinson. Mary DiCola. Bev DiMartino. ROW 9: Dave Donner. Mark Dorak. Paul Doran, Eileen Dorin, Tom Doyle. Susan Dreher. Ruth Drummond. Bill Duffell. Thomas Duffy. Bill Dunn. 206—SOPHOMORES FOUR MINUTES BETWEEN CLASSES isn't enough time when you have to cross campus through crowded halls. Teachers tolerate it when you arrive a minute or two late, though. Sophomores DU NSTAN —FRAZER ROW 1: Betty Dunstan, Barry Dwork. Dara Dwyer. Patricia Earls ROW 2: Dave Edwards. James Efstathiou, Rich Ehrenman. Carol Eininger. ROW 3: Joel Elkins, Frank Elm Marie Enama. Mike Epinger. ROW 4: Lori Essenfeld. Barry Evans. Pat Ezarsky. Liz Farrer. ROW 5: Jill Farrell. Doug Fasciale. Barbara Fasciano, Kathy Fedock. ROW 6: Richard Fedosh. Eric Feldman, Debbie Feltman. Mike Feneis, John Ferko. ROW 7: Steve Ferlauto, John Ferrick. Ed Field, Ira Finkelstein. Laura Fischer. ROW 8: William Fischer. Sherry Fixelle. Tony Flachner. Connie Flanagan. Joseph Fleming. ROW 9: Janet Forgrieve, Dave Fourman, Phillip Frandza. Lloyd Franklin, Larry Frazer SOPHOMORES—207 Sophomores FREEHAN—GOLEY ROW 1 : Cindy Freehan, David Freneaux. Paul Fried. ROW 2: Jay Friedman. Randy Friedman, Rich Gahrmann. ROW 3: Steve Galambvari. Joanne Gallo. Robert Galperin ROW 4: Bill Galuchie. Donna Gambino. Vincent Gangi ROW 5: Bhanu Gara, Maryanna Garcia. Jeff Gardner. ROW 6: Karen Gassaro. Mary Lou Gavin. Nadia Geberth. Chris Geist. Diana Gfrerer. ROW 7: Joseph Gianaras. Cathy Gibson. Linda Gilmartin. Val Giovanni, Cindy Glaser ROW 8: Richard Glickman, Cathy Glinka. Neal Godt. Liza Goetz. Jay Goldberg. ROW 9: Scott Goldschein. Jack Goldrosen. Dave Goldstein. Lisa Goldstein. David Goley. 208—SOPHOMORES Sophomores GO LI NELLO—HUTCHINSON ROW 1: Gayle Golinello, Diane Gomes. Jeff Gor- don. Kathy Gorman. Eric Gottfried ROW 2: Brian Graham, Leslie Graver, Andrew Grayson, Robert Greenfest. Ken Greenlee ROW 3: Larry Greenley, Sue Griffin, William Grip. Alan Grocholske. Ellen Grossman ROW 4: Alex Groves. Cindy Gruber. Matthew Grundt. Steve Guadagno. Vernoica Gudewicz. ROW 5: Mike Guerriero, George Gunia, B.J. Gushanas. Sue Gwodziewicz, Heidi Haeusser. ROW 6: Beverly Hague. Susan Halasz. Valerie Haller, Brian Hallack, Edward Hammond, Debbie Hanna. Barbara Hanson, Theresa Haremza. Mike Harmyk. Andrew Harrington. ROW 7: Cindi Harris. David Hartie. Robert Hart- man. David Haut, Gina Hawks. James Haydu. Carol Heaney. Rebecca Hearn. Kathy Heilman. Bill Hennelly. ROW 8: Marlene Henry. Glenn Hering. Kenneth Herman. Grant Herring. Steve Herwig. Jim Hetherington. Scott Heuer, Edwin Hewitt. Jesse Hirsch. Kyle Hodges. ROW 9: Peter Hodges, Leonard Hollabaugh. Doug Holtz, Bill Homeyer. Michael Homner, Cynthia Howe. Dawn Hulse. Doug Hunt. Donna Hupp. Bob Hutchinson. SOPHOMORES—209 Sophomores IELMINI —KLETZKIN ROW 1: Patti lelmini, Dan Isaacson. Judy Isaac- son. Billy Jackson. Carol Jackson. ROW 2: Lamont Jackson. Gary Jacobson. Laura Jacoby. April Janwich. Michael Jenkins. ROW 3: Eric Jensen. Carol Johnson. Garry John- son. Debera Jones. Mike Kajano ROW 4: Donna Kalbach. Donna Kaplan. Gary Kaplan. Ruth Kaplan. Chris Kapusta. ROW 5: Patricia Karl. Lisa Karmazin. Bernice Karsch. Mike Kasternakis. Kevin Kasunic. ROW 6: Paul Katcher. Jack Katz. Stuart Katz. Chris Kavanagh. Kevin Keating ROW 7: Leslie Keck. Bev Keeling. Scott Kelliher. Patricia Kelly. Sharon Kelly. ROW 8: Alan Kelton, Coleen Kerwin. Yong Hun Kim. Diane Kioski. Tory Kirbos. ROW 9: Richard Kirchmeier. Diane Kish. George Kitzler. Barry Klein. Marshall Kletzkin. 210 -SOPHOMORES TWO HEADS ARE BETTER than one in solving a complex problem in math, in translating a tricky passage in Latin, or in solving a problem in logic. We help each other. Sophomores KLING — MARLIN ROW 1: Larry Kling, Jill Klugerman. Alex Koken. Carol Koliner, Mark Kolsky, Adrienne Koss. Sonya Kosty. Mary Kostyshyn, Kevin Koy. Marty Krahe. ROW 2: Keith Kramer. Laurie Krein. Jeff Kroon. Madeline Krygier, Sue Kosczynski. Cathy Kulbacki. Michele Kurtz. Suzanne Kuzminski. Larry Lacina. Laura LaForge. ROW 3: Laura Lambert. Eric Larson. Larry Larstan- na. Alice Lawrence. Timmy LeBeau. Donald Lecorchick. Betina Leiderman. Alex Lementowicz, Jim Lemire. Steve Leonard. ROW 4: Scott Lesser, Gail Levine. Steve Levine. Traci Levine. Ellen Levy. Jodi Lewis. Scott Lewkowitz. Scott Lichtenstein. Beverly Liddicote. Steve Lins. ROW 5: Laura Lipschitz. Judie Lipsitz. David Lis. Linda Litchko. Caroline Liteplo. Bill Little. Sherman Liu. Lynn LoCastro. Paul Losiewicz. Lori Lowens- tein. ROW 6: Ron Lowenstein. Dave Lucas. Geoffrey Luce. Tibor Lukac. Robyn Lukenda. ROW 7: Mark Lyall. Pam Lyons. Drew Mackay. Robert MacNiven. Maxine Mager ROW 8: Paula Magliozzi. Joe Magliula. Kathy Maher. Mark Makwinski. Lisa Malinofsky ROW 9: Roxanne Manginelli. Tony Manicone. Pat Mansfield. Donna Markiewicz. Julie Marlin SOPHOMORES—21 1 Sophomores MARSHALL—OGRODN IK ROW 1: Pete Marshall, Mark Marsicano, Lori Martin, Lynn Martin, Susan Martin, Vincent Mar- tinez. Chris Matecki. Jackie Matheny, Jayme Matysik. Gail Maver. ROW 2: Jean Mazza. Mickey Mazzei. Anna Maz- zola. Sue McCarthy. Joan McCombie. Valerie McConnell. Bob McCully. Mark McDermott. Tricia McDermott. David McDonnell ROW 3: Shaun McFarland. Bennett McLaughlin. Thomas McLoughlin, Colleen McNamara, Ralph Meade. Keith Megow. James Meinkoth, Karen Meisenhelter. Alain Melkowits, David Melnikov. ROW 4: Robert Melton. Dori Meranchik. Jeff Metzger. James Meyers. Barbara Michalad, Paul Migliore. Rich Milazzo. Georgeanne Miles, Karen Mills. Ruth Minnehan. ROW 5: Jolene Mirenna. Charlie Mitchell. John Moke. Louis Monaco. Barry Monday. Karyn Monte. Lynne Morgan, Carol Mosco. Kim Moyer. Glenn Mulvihill. ROW 6: Robert Murphy. Anne Murray, Lynda Murray. Karyn Mutarelli. Elaine Myhowich. ROW 7: Cynthia Neff, Kathy Neill. Michael Neka. Greg Nenninger. Lee Nestel. ROW 8: Lisa Nickas. Jan Niedzwicki, Kathy Niglio. Jim Nitzberg. Jill Noar. ROW 9: David Noshay. Kevin O'Brien. Brian O'Connor. Wayne Odato. Peter Ogrodnik 212—SOPHOMORES Sophomores O'HARA—PRIGGE ROW 1 : Bridget O'Hara. Mark Ollander. Greg Olsen. Jennifer Olson. Tom Olszewski. ROW 2: Brian O'Malley. Anne Ostapiej. Mike Owen. Donna Pagano. Ellen Pancza ROW 3: Barbara Pape. Kathy Paradise. Cathy Parillo. Ralph Parillo. John Pastor. ROW 4: Robert Patterson. Suzette Pawson. Don- na Pearl. Karen Pento. Andrea Perr. ROW 5: Sharon Persmg. Susan Pesetsky. Robert Peterson. Diane Petruska. Ella May Petry. ROW 6: Nancy Piasecki. Elizabeth Pickens, Liz Pienciak, Tim Pikul. Glenn Piller. ROW 7: Carole Pinizzotto. Diana Pippi. Michael Plichta. Theresa Podeszwa. Meryl Polcari. ROW 8: Craig Polefka. Tom Pollack, Rick Popiak, Peter Popsuy. Susan Potts. ROW 9: Robert Powell. Rich Pozsonyi. Linda Preville. Betty Pribila. John Prigge YOU CANT TURN ON creative genious like a water tap. Robert Chian ponders at the drawing board an upcoming weekend con- cert. SOPHOMORES—213 Sophomores PSYHOJOS —SAUL ROW 1: Emanuel Psyhojos. George Psyhojos, Serge Radionoff. Kathy Rakos. Patty Rakos. ROW 2: Anita Rakow, Debbie Ramsen, Jody Rand. Richard Rau. Amy Rautenberg. ROW 3: Sandi Rauer. Susan Razzano. Don Rear- don. Mary Rebele. Bruce Redfield. ROW 4: Robyn Redfield. Danny Reich. Russel Reid. Dan Reiff. Jay Riback ROW 5: Robert Riccio. Eric Riddleberger. Rich Riegler. Tim Riepl. Steve Robba. ROW 6: Sue Roberts. Marci Robins. Brian Robin- son. George Rodriquez. Charles Roedelbrown, Darren Roehrig. Mike Rogers. Tom Rogers. John Rolfe. Ken Romano. ROW 7: Helen Romatowski. Paul Romero, San- dra Romer. Mark Rosell. Jerry Rosenberg. Robin Rosenfeld. Robyn Rosenstein. Bob Rossi. Greg Roth. Chris Rothman. ROW 8: Lisa Roy. Janet Roynestad. Ken Rubin. Dean Rubine. Robert Ruffe. Kevin Ruffley, Salvatore Rullo, Ken Rupert. Bonnie Jean Ryan. Denise Ryan. ROW 9: Doreen Ryan. Jill Ryer, Joseph Rypisi. Jill Sacalis. Lilibeth Sadler. Pat Salkowicz. Marty Saltzman, Nick Sanford. Frank Sarcone. Greg Saul. 214—SOPHOMORES IF YOU LEAVE EARLY and aren't eighteen, a parent has to come to school to sign you out. A note from home just isn't enough. Sophomores SAVINO—SMITH ROW 1 : Lynn Savino. Sharon Saxon. Marie Scar- pa. Caryn Schatz. John Schibinger. ROW 2: Steve Schiffman. Jason Schiffman. Terry Schmidt. John Schoenthaler. Robin Schomstein. ROW 3: Cary Schubert. Lori Schuckman. Shawn Schultz. Joseph Schwartzer. Vikki Schwartzman. ROW 4: John Schweitzer. Rebecca Scilla. Mitchell Seidman. Theresa Serjeant. Andy Sesser ROW 5: Thomas Sewell. Shawn Sexton, Corrie Shames. Andrew Shapiro. Deb Sharmila. ROW 6: Matthew Sheerin, Raymond Sheerin. Cindi Sheridan. Howard Sherman. Beth Sherwood ROW 7: David Shladovsky. Bradford Shugart. Reggy Siebern. Jeff Siegel. Staci Siegel ROW 8: Susan Sierotko. Lis Silfries. Jesse Silvers- tein. Mark Silverstein. Charlotte Simpson. ROW 9: Gail Sinai. Ethan Singer. Kendall Slorance. Peri Smilow. Albert Smith. SOPHOMORES—21 5 PRE-SCHOOL TOTS leave nursery school run by students enrolled in Child-Care Oc- cupations. And you thought they were sophs. Sophomores SMITH—TOMMY ROW 1 : George Smith. Steve Smith, Carrie Snyder. Jill Solomons. Vincent Soto. ROW 2: Laura Sparrow, Lori Speizer, Dana Spencer. Lisa Spiegel. Lynn Spinoso. ROW 3: Jeff Springer. James Staffa. Glenn Staf- ford. Ken Stary. Gary Steinert ROW 4: Gary Steinberg. Max Sterbakov. Kenneth Stern, Rhonda Sternberger, Ronald Stott. ROW 5: Mike Strauss. Gwen Strokus, Michelle Stromenger. Debbie Stryker. Sharon Stupay. ROW 6: Karen Sudall. Bonnie Sullivan. Joe Surowiec. Vickie Swanson. Barbara Swensen. ROW 7: Monique Syvertsen. Alan Syzdek. Olga Szilard. Erin Tarrant. Robert Tarullo. ROW 8: Chris Tasseff. Sue Teitelbaum. Helene Thau. Darrell Thompson. Greg Thompson. ROW 9: Jayne Timper. Tim Tinsman. Lisa Lobasco. Douglas Tomchuk. Bob Tommy. 216—SOPHOMORES Sophomores TOM MY—ZWOLINSKI ROW 1: Stan Tommy. Patricia Toner. Adi Toth. Kathy Toth. Tom Toto. ROW 2: Laura Trisiano. Linda Trostle. Susan Trotter, John Trupkiewicz. Susan Turkowits. ROW 3: Gemma Turi. Julie Turi. Sheila Turi. Dave Turner. Sharon Twaddell. ROW 4: David Tyler. Paul Vaillancourt. Marie Veccnia-Relli. Sara Verbitski. David Verderosa ROW 5: Michele Vitello. Roger Vogel. Susan Vojir, Beth Volz, Ken Wahler. ROW 6: Dennis Walsh. Robert Warfield. Cathy Watson. Scott Weber. Nancy Webster, Rita Weckenmann. Gerard Weckesser. Don Wehrenberg. Lee Ann Weinstein, Ron Weisfeld. ROW 7: Mike Weiss. Michelle Werber. Mark Wertheim. Michele Whitlock. Diane Whitman. Katherine Wilkens. Cheryl Williams. Robin Williscroft. Keith Winter, Bobby Winters. ROW 8: Sue Wirtenberg. Cheryl Witt. David Wohl. Chris Wojiechowski. Debby Wolt. Joe Wolf- gang. Wilson Wong, Dave Wood. Michael Woronoff. Ralph Yacovelli. ROW 9: Larry Yellin, Franklin Yien. Robert Young. Cyndi Yrshus. Debbie Zalenski. MaryZaleski. Greg Zelenak. Debbie Zelnick. Ellen Zucker. Bob Zwolinski. SOPHOMORES—2 1 7 Juniors not photographed ALAN ABRAMSON FRANK GILMARTIN GAIL OLSON PATRICIA ALLEN JUDY GLENNON NANCY O'ROURKE GEORGE ANCSIN JODY GOLDMAN DIANE PITCHER STEVEN ANTELIS STEVEN GRUNDT BARBARA PLICHTA LORI ARTENSTEIN GRACE HAGUE SUSAN POLSKY KEITH ASHTON BRIAN HALL JOHN PROVELL JUDY BABU MICHAEL HALLOCK MARK PURI STEPHEN BAKER DAVID HANDELMAN ROBERT QUIJANO KENNETH BANACKI ELIZABETH HELUK RAYMOND RASMUSSEN GISELE BASTOS WILLIAM HERCHENRODER RICHARD REITANO STEPHEN BISHOP DOUGLAS HOBBY LINDA RESSLER PEGGY BOWEN LESLIE HOE JAMES ROBINSON LAURA BOWNE BARBARA HOLMAN WENDY ROLFE EVELYN BRADLEY DAVID HUFF THOMAS ROONEY THERESA BROSS JOHN HUGGINS SIGMUND ROYNESTAD LISA BROWN ROBERT HUGGINS DEBORAH RUOTOLO LEROY BURKE KAREN JADCZAK SHARON RYDBOM MARY CALLAWAY GLENN KAUNE KEITH SALVATORIELLO ROSS CAMERON PAUL KERTESZ PHYLLIS SAX JOSEPH CANAZARO AMY KRIEGER KATHIE SCHMIDT TAMMY CHANDLEE THOMAS KUZMA PENNY SCHUSTER NANCY CHI RICH ELLA RICHARD LaFORGE BARBARA SEEL RAYMOND ClAK SCOTT LANE SHARI SEMCHENKO SAL CICIO FRANK LaROSE NANCY SHEPONSKI ROBERT COLLINS SUZANNE LeBUIS GLENN SIESER MARY CONNOLLY JANET LEDERMAN ROBIN SILVERMAN ERIC CREWS LINDA LINDQUIST SUSAN SLIWINSKI RICHARD CURTIS PAMELA LINN THEODORE SLOVAK MARK DeCASTRO PAMELA LOREN HAROLD SMITH DEBORAH DECKER TIMOTHY LOUCKS LAUREN SMITH SADLYK DELGADO SUSAN LUPCO THERESE SMITH LOUIS DENMARK JOHN LYONS SHARON SOLOMON KEVIN DESMOND RICHARD MAGRETTO WILLIAM SOCHER FRANCES DeSTEFANO PAUL MALLON MARK SPIVAK THOMAS DeWITT DARLEEN MANEY DAVID STEIN SHANE DELMAN DENISE MARCHISOTTO ERIC TAETSZCH ANN DiNICOLA edward McClellan PAUL THIBAULT LISA DiNICOLA Raymond McConnell FRED TORNABENE GORDON DIX LISA McNICHOLAS COLEEN TURI LAUREN DONOVAN KATHLEEN MEYERS JAMES VAN NESS DONNA DOUGHTY BETH MILLER MICHELLE VAN VORST JUDITH DZIEDZIAK MICHAEL MOREELS WILLIAM VARGO BILLY ERICKSEN JOHN MORRIS VICKI VASQUEZ LESLIE FISHER GREGORY MULVIHILL MARY WEBER THOMAS FOILES ARTHUR NAHAN DIANE WHITE DAVID FORCE EDMUND NAUSMAISKIS JOEL WOELTJEN JAMES GAGNON WILLIAM NEMETH RICHARD WROBLEWSKI KAREN GALAYDA WILLIAM NEWMAN RICHARD YIEN DEBORAH GARRABRANT ANTHONY NIELSEN MARY YOUNG CATHERINE GIANARIS JOHN NOVELLO JILL ZANGARA FERNANDO GIANCOLA JILL NUGENT ROBYN OLSEN LINDA ZUCZEK 218—JUNIORS Sophomores not photographed GLENN ABBOTT DIANE ANDOLSEKO PETER BANOS CYNTHIA BANZIGER GEORGE BARAN DEBORAH BARON DEBORAH BARLOW CHRISTINE BENDER SHERYL BERGERON WILLIAM BIEHLING STEVEN BILODEAU WILLIAM BOLDIZAR MARGARET BOYLES MARILYN CALLAHAN NATHANIEL CARPENTER ALFRED CHELLI STEVEN COBB DAVID COHEN GARY CROSBY PETER D'ALLESSANDRO EDWARD DAM SHARMILA DEB SUSAN DeFILIPPO REGINA DeGENNARO CATHERINE DiVINO GEORGE ECKHARDT PAUL EIDMAN JEFFREY FLOREZ TAMMY FOURMAN JUDY FRIED STEVEN GALAMBRARI DONALD GARRABRANT THERESA GAVIN ANN GIARILLO MICHAEL GTACCIO STEPHEN GOLD PETER GUDZAK THERESA HAREMZA JOHN HARGREAVE LINDA HARTMAN JOHN HIGGINS CHRIS HOLLIDAY ROBERT HORNE GEORGE KELEMAN SARA KELMAN ALAN KELTON ALEC KENT JAMES KERTEZ COLEEN KERWIN EUNICE KIM CHERYL KOPOROSKI JOHN KROSNOWSKI SUSAN KUCZYNSKI CAROL KURI RICHARD LAND I LORI LEDERMAN SUSAN LIU HOLLY LOSSO THOMAS LUVAS MARY MAYNARD PATRICK McHUGH DONALD McNEILL JOHN MICHAEL PAUL MILLER MONIKA MULLIGAN ROBERT MILLWARD NANCY NEWMEYER DEBORAH NIELSEN WAYNE ODATO JENNIFER OLSEN ISABEL OWENS ANTHONY PAITAKIS GLENN PILLER CAROLE PINIZZOTTO MICHELLE POLLINA STEPHEN PREFACH WILLIAM QUIJANO BARBARA REBELE MICHAEL RUPINSKI LYNN SAVINO MARGARET SCHAB DENNIS SCOLA TERESA SEMCHENKO MATTHEW SERHUS WARREN SHANLEE MARY SHANNON CHRISTOPHER SIEGEL BRUCE SMITH JOHANNA SMITH THOMAS STAUFFER ROBERT SUTTON PATRICIA SWANSON THERESA TEAHL LOUIS TOTO JACK TROAST BRENDA UPDIKE KAREN VAUGHAN MICHAEL VEDROOK BETH VOLZ GARY WARADE SANDRA WEBER SCOTT WEBER ANN WEIDLER LEE ANN WEINSTEIN CRAIG WIEDERKEHR CHERYL WILLIAMS KIM WILLIAMS SUSAN WILLIAMS JANET WILSON DEBRA WOLF ROD WURTZEL MICHAEL YUHAS LINDA ZARZANO MICHAEL ZINOVOY SOPHOMORES—21 9 STUDENT UNION FRONT: Margaret Shankler. Teri Natalicchio. Debbie Reich. Beth Garrido. Lisa Roy. Adviser Anne Hitchner. BACK: Ken Kirkley. Judy Lipsitz. Dorrian Schenck, Shalynn Murphy, Adviser Dennis Anderson. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS. FRONT: Ad- viser Anne Poskaitis. Nancy Brown. Adviser Leonard Kolakowski BACK: Emily Kosty. Lisa Donzella, Gary Dubovick. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS. Adviser Rosalie Triozzi. Madeline Ippolito. Steve Whittingslow. Suzanne Lazar, Laurel! Lewis. Adviser Bernadette Richvalsky 220—ORGANIZATIONS EMERALD FOLIO CLARION EMERALD EDITORS TOP: Paul LoSacco. Howie Shemitz ROW TWO: Karen Lesso. Anita Wilbur ROW THREE: Joe Devaney. Ken Glinka. BOTTOM: Adviser William G. Munyan. CLARION. FRONT: Adviser Amy Fisher. Michael Chang, Sue Steiger. Mira Jacob BACK: Art Geller. Sue Adleman, Bill Pan- dos. Art Nahan. Bob Previte. FOLIO FRONT: Sue Backus. Kendall Slorance. Lillian Greenberg. Dominique Trisciano. ROW TWO: Anita Wilbur. Ildiko Szilard. Sue Backus. Debbie Carr. Erica Klein. Joy Falk BACK: Adviser Steve Red- man. Rob Frankel. Rudy Petke. Karen Lesso. Helen Brown. Mike Rapp. Chris Haun. Ad- viser Judith Koppel. ORGANIZATIONS—22 1 AUDIO-VISUAL AIDS. FRONT: Bruce Schechter. Mark DeCastro ROW 2: Kevin Kasunic, Rich Fedosh. Mike Rodman. Eric Jacobson ROW 3: Paul Nielson. Robert Warfield. David Pawson. Dan Schwartz. Larry Kling BACK: Arthur Geller. Adviser George Pinfield. Gemma Turi. Ed Magrum. Jill Noar, David Fink. Gary Johnson. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY. FRONT: Carrie Schindler. Annie Wang. Gisela Bastos. Sue Wald. Diane Dreyling. Mary Ellen Doyle ROW 2: Steve Warman. Gail Scharfentstein. Cindy Savlov, Brendan Bingham. Rudolph Petke. Jerry Saul. Peter Finkel Row 3: Sera Mazzola. Gail Eisner. Erika Klein. Margaret Mahoney. Nancy Lonski. Kathy Kelly. Melissa Marosy ROW 4: Carol Offenberger. Kathy Moses. Debra Brim, Patty Ziment. Karen Bornheimer. Teresa Twomey. Ellen Simha. ROW 5: Sharon Solomon. Donna Balon. Dean Mast. Bill Pandos. Tony LaFazia. BACK: John Neill. Adviser Alan Lesitsky, Michael Chang. 222—ORGANIZATIONS SAVE-TH E-CHI LD R EN CLUB KEY CLUB GIRLS BOOSTER CLUB GIRLS BOOSTER CLUB FRONT: Janet Chuang, Janet Forgrieve. Sharon Kelly. Jody Rand. Sara Brown. Anna Mazolla. Lori Mar- tin. Julie Marlin. Jill Noar MIDDLE: Patty lelmini, Eunice Kim. Barbara Olsen, Margie Fiegenbaum. Sera Mazolla. Sue Albach. Nancy Celano. Mary Ann DelRosso. Joan Toraitis. Ellen Simha. Margaret Mahoney. Debbie Ramsen. BACK: Nancy Lonski, Carolyn Zangara. Marlene Goldberg. Paula Hessek. Kathy Kelly. Diane Baran. Lynn Healey. Doreen Ronchi. Karen Lesso. KEY CLUB. Glenn Stafford. Dan Herbert. Lisz Martin. Nola Beldegreen, Theresa Fetter. Cindy Comer. Pam Mason. Adviser Michael Spadafino. SAVE-THE-CHILDREN CLUB Lillian Greenberg. Gail Scharfenstein. Adviser Joseph LaTorraca. Cindy Savlov. ORGANIZATIONS—223 FRENCH HONOR SOCIETY GERMAN HONOR SOCIETY SPANISH HONOR SOCIETY FRENCH HONOR SOCIETY. FRONT: Carol Offenburger, Susan Albach. Annie Wang. Nancy Celano BACK: Adviser Conrad Mustillo, Cathy Twaddell. Carrie Schindler. Sara Mazolla, Nola Beldegreen. Kathy Liu. Anna Mazolla. GERMAN HONOR SOCIETY. FRONT: Melissa Morosy. Sue Gelber. Dean Mast, Pat Reimbold. Lorraine Curran. BACK: Ken Glinka. Rudy Petke, John Christianson. Rich Foggio. Kay Schindler, Jeanne Wadsworth. Adviser William Weigel. SPANISH HONOR SOCIETY FRONT: Anita Wilbur. Sue Hulse. Katie Laufer. Peggy Cowherd, Joanne Syrokwash. Lorie Kraynak BACK: Tony LaFazia, Mike Schwartz. Art Geller. Kirn Bongiovanni. Teresa Twomey, Dave Zeidwerg. Pete Kinkel, Bill Pandos. Diane DiLalo. Randi Frazer. Ellen Simha. Sharon Solomon. 224—ORGANIZATIONS GERMAN CLUB FRENCH CLUB LATIN CLUB GERMAN CLUB. FRONT: Larry Brown. Lisz Martin. Lorraine Curran. Tommy Four- man MIDDLE: Pat Reimbold. Melissa Morosy, Sue Gelber. Kay Schindler, Jeanne Wadsworth. Eunice Kim. BACK: Ken Glinka, Rudy Petke. Dean Mast, John Christianson. Rich Foggio. Ed Magram, Bet- ty Vogt. Adviser William Weigel. FRENCH CLUB FRONT: Adviser Valentin Toplisky. Kathy Massutchak. Kit Parr. Ann Ruby. Leslie Broad. BACK: Sherman Liu, Kathryn Liu. Nancy Celano, Sue Albach. Kathy Twaddell, Anna Mazzola. Carrie Schindler. Sera Mazzola. Eric Jacobson. Nola Beldegreen. Cindy Neff. Patricia Karl. Pat Kelly LATIN CLUB. FRONT: Sara Kelman. Ad- visor Catherine Neide. Donna Socha. Mira Jacob. BACK: Sandy Saks. Nadine Tadrick. Gail Dawson. Cherie Lucas. Margaret Shankler. Suzanne Whitlock. ORGANIZATIONS—225 BIOLOGY CLUB BIOLOGY CLUB FRONT: Beth Beckheimer. Shari Aronin. Kathy Liu. Melissa Marosy. Anne Trupkiewicz. BACK: Adviser Robert Warwick. Kathy Zahs. Peter Szilard. Stuart Sklak. Sherman Liu. John Striednig CHEMISTRY CLUB Jonathan Aks. Daniel Aks. John Hunter, Lloyd Franklin. Howard Stern, Adviser Dr. Paul Kimmel. Kathy Liu. Sheri Aronin. Kathy Zahs. Michael Chang, Peter Szilard. MATH CLUB FRONT: Ken Stern. Dean Rubine. Ethan Singer BACK: Adviser Charles Hammond. Robert Powell. Howard Stern, Michael Chang. David Price. Tibor Lukas, George Psyhojos. John Streidmg. 226—ORGANIZATIONS FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS OF AMERICA FRONT: Trish Fineran. Patricia Fisher, Christine Sazjko. Michelle Marchese. Phyllis Kadin, Mary Cockill BACK: Barbara DeStefano, Tracey Flachner, Marilyn Alleruzzo, Janet Broker. Annette Rella, Patti Litz. Adviser Ella Szarka. PHILOSOPHY CLUB FRONT: Rick Sorrentino. Mark Baker. Chris Haun, Alan Leipson BACK: Erica Klein, Tony Puccio. Eunice Kim. John Hunter. Gayle Eisner, Robert Galperin. Kendall Slorence FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS OF AMERICA BIBLE STUDY CLUB PHILOSOPHY CLUB BIBLE STUDY CLUB ORGANIZATIONS—227 BOWLING CLUB BRIDGE CLUB. CLOCKWISE: Beth Breckheimer. Adviser Robert Lawson. Ethan Singer, Dave Price, Bob Hartman. Michael Yien. BICYCLE CLUB. Adviser Seymour Grods- tein. Kathy Ayuso. Rosemary Daskiewicz. Hugh Galbraith. Elaine Allwine. Steve Ferlauto. Donna Bochis. Scott Bryan, Doug Anderson. Adviser Ray Beier, Jeff Croon. 228—ORGANIZATIONS CHESS CLUB FILM CLUB CHESS CLUB FRONT: Ethan Singer. Barry Cacella. Philip Bevington, Don Wilson. Joe Zavoda. Rick Sorrentino. Adviser Edward Weston. BACK: Robert Hartman. Mike Traszka. Mike Zaleski. DOS-Y-DOS. FRONT: Karen Schubert. Kit Parr. Kathy Liu. Pat Reimbold. Janet Brodhead. Cindy Glaser. Grace Medaglia. BACK: Sue Gelber. Nick Dariano. Beth Amoroso. Ken Glinka. Dan Isaacson. Ad- viser Helen Fine. Daniel Aks. Charles Mast. Adviser Paul Kimmel. Adviser Krista Kivirahk. Mark Solomon FILM CLUB ORGANIZATIONS—229 JAYVEE CHEERLEADERS Winter Season VARSITY CHEERLEADERS (Fall Season) FRONT: Diane Dreyling. Marie Ciatto, Joyce Kaplan. Beth Garrido ROW TWO: Judy Simon. Carol Offenberger. Debbie Brim ROW THREE: Kathy Kalber, Donna Balon, Linda Logan. BACK: Jeanne Scherer. Mary Ellen Doyle. 230—ORGANIZATIONS JAYVEE CHEERLEADERS Fall Season VARSITY CHEERLEADERS Winter Season JAYVEE CHEERLEADERS (Fall Season) FRONT: Pam Lyons ROW 2: Lisa Roy. Jeanne Mazza. Leticia Blandino. Karen Lawless. Renee Brodbar. BACK: Sue Wirtenberg. Diane Whitman. Tricia Toner. Carol Jackson, Judi Lewis. Karen Pento. ORGANIZATIONS —231 TWIRLERS FRONT: Terry Schmidt ROW TWO: Dawn Hulse. Laurell Lewis. Michelle Adesman. Andrea Perr BACK: Mary Zaleski. Nancy Webster. DRILL TEAM FRONT: Nadine Tadrick. Renee Riddick ROW TWO: Elissa Martin. Sue Goldman. Stephanie Dloss. Linda Peter ROW THREE: Lorraine Paladini. Joanne Syrokwash, Lori Ben. ROW FOUR: Madeline McCarthy. Cindy Masterton. Vicki Palmer. ROW FIVE: Ellen Arky. Shari Dloss Cathie Ayuso. ROW SIX: Kelly Baker. San dy Thompson, Carole Jagt. Doris Gash. Kim Dickinson BACK: Jill Farrell. Kelly Boysen. Laura Cohen. Nancy Lonski. Kathy Kelly. Sherry Fixelle. Cindy Gruber. Kathy Moses. Jenny Sanford 232—ORGANIZATIONS COLOR GUARD COLOR GUARD FRONT: Mary Ann DelRosso. Dara Dwyer ROW 2: Doreen Ronchi. Diana Baran. Mary Solocha BACK: Pat DeWitt. Carolyn Arrants. Lori Martin, Tracy MacMillan. Joan Prinzo. Karen Lesso. Theano Banos. Joan Toraitis ORGANIZATIONS—233 FENCING CLUB FRONT: Shelly Ziemski. Ellen Simha. Sue Turkowitz. Tatjana Borodin. Helene Thau BACK: Adviser Gail Petricek. Greg Zelenak. Gary Ziemski. Don na Socha, Nola Boldegreen. Cindy Gruber 234—ORGANIZATIONS FENCING CLUB MAJORETTES: Lori Kraynak Laurell Lewis Patrons Mr. Mrs. Lester Alleruzzo Amber Mr. Mrs. Amerescu April 1, 1975 April 22, 1978 (Can't wait) William Archer Sons, Inc. Al Peggy Tom Geri Avery Sharon Warren Avery Linda Axelrod Mr. Mrs. Herman Bartel Sun Beam Debi Benedict Mrs. Berman Al Beyrouth Billy Diane Mrs. JoAnn Boschi Brian Janet Mrs. Burlew Mrs. Carr Cheryl Ken Jean Cho Mr. Choudry Mrs. Choudry Chris Kathy '75 Cindy Donnie Mrs. Clay Cool Dudes Live! Cute, but dumb Betty Davis Donna Davis Melissa Dawny Mrs. Bonnie Dimun Dor, Net, Rom, Dom, Don Dumb, but cute Mrs. Ray Fernandez Mary Foerster Franney Phillip Frascinella French Fries B'way Babe From Graciela: Thanks Noreen Hamaty Hay Versary Ron Herr Edie Hirschhorn Horatio Gris Troncoso Parr Cindy Howe Howie Shari, May '75 Pam Hutchens Peggy Hutchens William Hutchens Idge I Love Poopsie I Love You. Christopher Irving Mr. Mrs. Neil Isenberg Jack. Love. Grisela Joby Doreen John Marilyn Karen The Gang Ken Cheryl Coleen Kerwin Mr. Mrs. Thomas Kerwin Glenn Kinky Mr. Richard Kline Claire Lawless Les Sue '76 Mrs. Linden Little Thing Paul LoSacco (9) Robert Annette '76 Mr. Mrs. Stephen Roth The Rule Family Mr. Mrs. John H. Runyon Dot Tony Sacca Pauline Sachanoff Scott Mary Scott Rose Sheba Sir Arthur's Pub Alan M To Ma Pa, From the Kids Mr. Mrs. John Machuzak Kathy Machuzak Mark, I Love You. V.O. Mrs. Marks Lorraine Matash Dan Miller Ed Miller David Morgan Mother William G. Munyan Mr. Mrs. James Murray Irene Dan Murray Paul Anita, Forever Mr. John Pember East Brunswick Phillips 66 Pieces of April Pinball Wizard Vincent Pino Danny Pluss Kenny Poo LaVerne Prus Stan Przybylko R., Our day will come. Alan Raab Mr. Albert Raab Mrs. Albert Raab Anne Ricci Richie Michelle Ricky Andy Ann Mr. Mrs. W. Sobol Mr. Richard Sol Steve Abby To Stuey: Nancy Donna Mr. Mrs. Charles Szarka Marianne Takacs Mrs. Tarangello Tashie. Peaches, Doobles Terry Karen Thwins Clifford N. Tinsman, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Clifford N. Tinsman, Sr. Nancy Tompkins To my Fortune Cookie! Larry Torchio Ray Toth Township of East Brunswick Mrs. Trotter Velma Marty Ray Walker Gary Weber Jill Wiener Anita Marie Wilbur Mr. Mrs. Thomas Williamson Patrons PATRONS—235 STAFF DIRECTORY — F — ADMINISTRATION ASHLEY. DR LARRY Principal. BS. Hofstre University; MA. EdD. New York University. CASEIRO. JOHN Vice Principal BS. Glassboro State College; MA, Kean State College GUIDOBONI. CARLO T. Vice Principal BS. Tufts University; MEd. Boston Universi- ty MANSFIELD. JOHN R. Vice Principal BSE. Memphis State University; MEd. Penn- sylvania State University STAFF —A— ACKERSON. HENRY E. Biology. Chemistry BS. Rutgers University. MS. Pennsylvania State University. ALLEN. BARBARA Chorus. Choir. Music Experience I. Electronic Music. Adviser Chorus Council. Bel Cantos. Barbershop. Mixed Ensemble B of Music. M of Music. Westminster Choir College. ANDERSON. DENNIS B Chemistry Ad- viser: Student Union, Outdoor Club. Camping Canoeing, BS. University of Arizona; MS. Arizona State University MA. Kean State College ANTON IEWICZ. FRANK. Metals. BA. Kean State College. AXELROD. WILLIAM N.J. Role. America Today. BA. Rutgers University; MA. Trenton State College. — B — BALSAMELLO, JAMES V. Health, Driver Ed Asst Coach; Cross Country BA. MA. Trenton State College. BEIER. RAY. Contemporary Issues. Psychology I II. Adviser: Ski Club. Ski Team, Bicycle Club. BA. MA. Fairleigh Dickinson University. BLACK. BERNARD. Reading Improve- ment. Corrective Reading, English II. Entertainment Novel Author: Building Sentences or the Terminological Illness of English Grammar. BA. Moravian College; MSc. Temple University. BODNAR. JOHN. Chairman of Mathematics. Math II.IV. Columbia Workshop. BA. Yale University; MA. MEd. Rutgers University. BOEHLER. RICHARD Chairman of English Composition I BA. Seton Hall Universi- ty; MA. Rutgers University. BORING. GEORGE. Physics. Coach: Cross Country BSEE. University of Florida; MSEE. Stevens Institute. BROPHY. DONALYN Physical Education. Coach: Girls Tennis BS. Madison College. BROPHY. JOHN Physical Education Coach Winter Track. Boys Track BS. Seton Hall University. BROWN. JANE. Music Experience II.III. Modern Music Workshop. Folk Guitar. Beginning Piano. Adviser PAVAS BA. Douglass College. BROWN. LOUIS. Contemporary Issues. Minorities. Ancient History. BA. EdM. Rutgers University. BROWN. ROSEMARY Math 11,111.IV.VIII. Adviser: Bible Club BS. Auburn Univer- sity; EdM. Rutgers University. BRUTHERS. JOHN Winning the West. 1776-1976-2006. Popular American History. BA. Trenton State College BURLEW. CHRISTINA Bookkeeping. ABC Steno. BS. Rider College —c— CANARY. JOHN. English II. Adviser: Film Club. AB. St. Peter's College. CASEIRO. MEL. Chemistry. Biology Coach Football BA, University of Rich- mond; MS. Virginia State University CHALUPA. LOUIS. Humanities. English II. BS. Seton Hall University, MA, Montclair State College. CHESKIN. CAROLE. Hooked on Books, English II BA. Douglass College CONDON. ARDIS A. School Nurse. BS. Teachers College. Columbia University MA. Trenton State College — D — DAVIS. MARTHA Librarian, BA. West Virginia Institute of Technology. DeCAROLIS. MARIO. Instrumental Music. Concert Band Adviser: Indigos. Color Guard. Marching Band. BA. Fredonia State College. DRAKE. WILLIAM. Math II.III. Adviser: Ski Club. BA. Florida Atlantic University; MEd. Trenton State College. DROZDOWSKI, JOHN W. Electronics. Amateur Radio. BA. Trenton State College. DUBIN. GERTRUDE. English II, Modern Poetry Short Fiction. Science Fiction. BA. Douglass College. MA. Rutgers University. —E— EMERY. JOHN D III. Chairman of Physical Education Coach Basketball. Football. Adviser: Intramural BS. MEd. Rutgers University. FAETH, KARL. German I.II. Winning the West. You and the World. Adaptive Remedial Physical Education Coach Wrestling. BS. Fordham College. MS Fordham University. FINE. HELEN Chemistry. Contemporary Issues in Science. Adviser Dos-y-Dos BA. Brooklyn College; MA. New York University. FINE. NATALIE. Hooked on Books Ml. BA. Brooklyn College; MA. New York Univer- sity. FIORE. REGINA Math II.Ml. Adviser Cheerleaders. BA. Douglass College. FLOREK, KAREN. Physical Education. BA. Kean State College FLOREK, LEON. Math l.ll. Coach: Soccer Baseball BS. Glassboro State College —G— GAVRON. MARY ANN Masterpieces of British Literature. American British Humor. Adviser: AFS. AB. Albertus Magnus College GAWRONIAK. LORETTA Health BA Jersey City State College. RN. Perth Am- boy General Hospital School of Nursing GERWIG. MARGIE. Chairman of Home Economics. BS. MS. University of West Virginia. GONIER. RONALD J. Math III.IV. Coach Football. Adviser: Girls Booster Club BS. University of Richmond. GRODSTEIN, SEYMOUR Math IV.VI.IX. Columbia II Adviser Ski Club. Director: Summer School. BA.MA. Brooklyn College. — H — HAMMOND. CHARLES. Math III.IV.VIII Adviser: Mu Alpha Theta. Math Team BS. Bucknell University; MA. Montclair State College. HARDNETT. CHARLES Chairman of Foreign Language. Spanish III.IV.V. HENDEREK, KENNETH. Filmmaking. Intro to Ceramics. BFA. Pratt Institute HITCHNER, ANNE TIFFT. Physics. Astronomy Meteorology. All About Motion Adviser Student Union. BA. Georgian Court College; MA, St. John's University. HITCHNER. KENNETH W.. JR. Guidance AB. Dickinson College; EdM. Rutgers University. HODE, LOUIS A. Special Education BS Southeastern Louisiana University; MA. Trenton State College HORVATH. ALEXANDER L Biology Coach: Football BS. Bloomsburg State College. HORVATH. LOUIS Chairman of Industrial 236 — STAFF DIRECTORY BEFORE MOVING ON to another point in her lesson. Chemistry teacher Helen Fine pauses to respond to a student question. That hand continued to clear the board however — L— Arts Photography, Engineering Drawing. BA. Washington State University; MA. Trenton State College HUNTER. CELESTE DORE. Dance Ex- perience. Lively Arts. Examining Vour Values. BA. Mount Union College; MEd. University of Pittsburgh HUNTER. JOYCE. Human Development. Child Care. Cooking I. Boys Chef BA. Montclair State College —J — JASPER. DINO Cooperative Industrial Education. Coach Golf. BS. Mt. St Mary's College; MA. Seton Hall University. — K — KAZNOSKY. PETER R. Sports Literature. Secretarial English, Practical English. Coach Winter Track BS. University of West Virginia. KEIL, MITCHELL Humanities Adviser Outdoor Club. BS. Rutgers University. KIMMEL, PAUL Chemistry. Advanced Chemistry Adviser: Chem Club. Musical Director for Boys from Syracuse. AB. Columbia University. PhD. University of California at Berkeley. KING. CHARLES M Supervisor of Physical Education. Health. Driver Education and Athletics. BA. MS. St. Bonaventure University. KIVIRAHK. KRISTA. Chemistry. Honors Chemistry. BA. Douglass College; MA. Rutgers University KLUGERMAN. PHYLLIS. Seminar: Contemporary American Problems Director: Evening School BA, Brooklyn College; MA. Trenton State College. KOLAKOWSKI. LEN Psychology. Sociology. Adviser: Senior Class BA. Rider College. KOPPEL. JUDITH Painting Drawing. Commercial Art. Lively Arts: Adviser: FOLIO BA. Syracuse University; MA. New York University KOPPEL, KENNETH. Supervisor of Art and Humanities BS. Pratt Institute; MA. Teachers College. Columbia University. KOSA, LOUIS Math III.IV.V Coach Soccer. Baseball BA. Trenton State College; EdM. Rutgers University. KOTLER. DAVID Special Needs, Employ- ment Orientation Coordinator. Adviser: School Store. BA. Jersey City State College; MA. Kean College. KUPCHYNSKY. JERRY Supervisor of Music. Orchestra BME, MA. Murray State University; MEd. Rutgers Universi- ty- KURAN. RONALD Investments. Consumer Education, Distributive Education BS. Rockhurst College LaMAESTRA. DORIS Math 11,111. BS. Douglass College LaTORRACA. French II.III.IV.V Adviser Save-the-Children Club. School Rings. Graduation. BA. MEd. Rutgers Universi- ty. LAWSON. ROBERT. Composition Ml. Ad- viser: Bridge Club. President. Faculty Council. BS. Rutgers University; MA. Trenton State College LEMERICH. GLENN. Math I.II.III. Probabili- ty Statistics. Adviser Cheerleaders BA. Trenton State College. LERNER, BETTE. Sculpture. Weaving Rugmaking, Painting Drawing. BA. Douglass College. LESISTKY. ALAN S Spanish II. Conver- sational Spanish. Adviser: Spanish. Adviser Spanish Honor Society. NHS AB. Rutgers University. LESTER. DOROTHY Shorthand. Typing BA. Bluefield State College. LEVINE. ELAINE English II BA. Trenton State College LIBERTAZOO. JOHN. Industrial Arts BS. Trenton State College. LIEBLEIN. TERRI. Physical Education. Coach: Field Hockey BA. Trenton State College. LINDEN. THELMA. Literature Culture. English II. Adviser Hustle Club. BA. STAFF DIRECTORY 237 STAFF DIRECTORY —P— Rutgers University LIPPINCOTT. CURTIS Guidance. Adviser: AFS AB. Miami University (Ohio). MEd. Rutgers University. LoPRESTI. FRANK. Guidance. BEd. MEd. University of Miami (Fla.) LYTLE, MARY DIANE. Biology BA. Univer- sity of California at Santa Barbara — M — MacKAY. PHYLLIS R. Guidance. BS, Bloomsburg State College. MEd. Shippensburg State College. MAGISTRO. JO ANN. Guidance. BA. MA, Glassboro State College MAJEWSKI, JOHN J. Undergraduate Cooperative Education. BS. Rider College; MEd, Rutgers University. i MANGIERI. GIL. Cooperative Education. Coach. Bowling. BA. New York Univer- sity. MA. Kean State College; MA. Rutgers University. MARKOT. MICHAEL. Math 1,111. AB. Cornell University; EdM. Rutgers Univer- sity. MARSH, WILLIAM A.. JR. Independent Ceramics Workshop BA. Rutgers University. MATTHEWS. WILLIAM G. English II. Entertainment Novel. Adviser: Future Writers of America BA. Dartmouth College; MA. Seton Hall University. MELNYK. SHIRLEY A. Business BS. Caldwell College. MEYERHOFF. DOLORES Chairman of Social Science. US History. Institute of Political Legal Education BA. MEd. Rutgers University. MICHAUD. STEPHEN. Masterpieces in American Literature. BA. Glassboro State College: MA. Montclair State College. MINGIN. GERALD C. Cooperative Educa- tion. BA. Jersey City State College; MA. Kean State College. MORRIS. WESLEY J. Guidance. BA. Glassboro State College; MA. Kean State College. MULLER. SANDRA. Biology. Adviser: FTA. BA. Douglass College; MST. Rutgers University. MUNYAN. WILLIAM G. English II. Study Skills. Adviser: EMERALD. ATHLETIC NEWS Instructor. Ohio University Summer Journalism Workshop BS. Rutgers University. MURPHY. WILLIAM Photography, Print Making. Figure Drawing BA. Jersey City State College. MA. Kean State College. MUSTILLO. CONRAD. French II.IV. Conversational French. Adviser: French Club BA. Montclair State College — N — NEIDE. CATHERINE. Latin I.II Philosophy Anthropology. Ancient Medieval Studies Adviser: Philosophy Club. Junior Classical League. BA. Montclair State College; MA. Trinity College NOVAK. PAUL A. Business Law. Personal Typing. Bookkeeping II. Faculty Manager of Athletics. BS. Pennsylvania State University; MBA. Seton Hall University. —o— ODENHEIMER. GWEN Driver Education. BS. Troy State University; MEd. Rutgers University. ODENHEIMER. ROBERT W. Physical Education. Behind-the-Wheel Driver Education. BS. Troy State University; MEd. Rutgers University. OLUFSEN, NEIL Small Engine Mechanics. BA. Trenton State College. ORBAN. ROBERT War Revolution. Cold War. America Today. BA. Northwestern Louisiana State College OSBORNE. ROBERT T. Guidance. AB. St. Vincent College; MEd. Rutgers University. PARKINSON. WILLIAM. Wood. BA. Tren- ton State College. PEIL. MANFRED H English. AB. MEd. Rutgers University. PELLAGRINO. WILLIAM. US History. Psychology I. War Revolution. American Political Science. Coach: Foot- ball. Boys Tennis. Adviser Varsity Club BA. University of Richmond. PETERSEN. RICHARD. Chemistry. BS. Monmouth College; MAS. NJ Institute of Technology. PETRICEK, GAIL L Physical Education. Coach: Field Hockey. Softball. Intramural Fencing BS, Trenton State College MEd. Trenton State College. PINFIELD. GEORGE W. Physics. Video Producation. Adviser: AV. Video-Vision. Date Line East Brunswick. BS. MEd. University of Georgia. PLOTZ. DOROTHY Psychology Sociology. Interior Decorating l.ll; Foods II. Clothing I. Clothing Workshop. BS. University of Indiana. POSKAITIS. ANNA Spanish. Adviser Senior Class. BA. Douglass College PRUS. La VERNE Librarian. PRUSIK, MATTHEW. Biology. Instructor in Biology at Union College. BS. MS. Rutgers University. I KNOW WHAT YOU INTENDED. com- ments Miss Arlene Zielinski as she critiques a paper by Dennis Ryan in Comp I, but wouldn't it be more clear if you broke the sentence here. 238 — STAFF DIRECTORY —R — RACZ. GEORGE E. Masterpieces of American Literature. BA. Davis Elkins College. READ. SHIRLEY. Biology. BA, Rutgers University. REDMAN. STEVEN English II. Creative Writing. Composition I Adviser FOLIO BA. Rider college. REGALADO. SONIA M Physical Educa- tion Coach: Basketball. Softball. In- tramural Basketball Paddleball. BA. University of South Florida RICHVALSKY. BERNADETTE Math I.II. Adviser Junior Class. BA. Kean State College RISLEY. ROY E. Jewelry, Crafts. Ceramics. Adviser: PAVAS. BA. Montclair State College. ROGERS. LLOYD S. Art. Humanities. BFA. Richmond Professional Institute. MA. Teachers College. Columbia University. —s— SALZMANN. LEONA. Occupational Educa- tion. BS. Rutgers University. MEd. Kean State College SCOTT. ROBERT. Health Education Coach: Girls Track. Adviser: Sophomore Class. BS. Trenton State College SIEBELS. HARRIET. School Nurse. SIMPSON. ROBERT CAMPBELL. Math II. Coach Soccer. Diploma in Education. Jordanhill College of Education; MA. University of Glasgow. SPADAFINO. MICHAEL. Biology. Adviser: Key Club Coach: Football. BA, Universi- ty of Northern Colorado. STANKlEWICZ. HENRY L, JR. Drafting. Metals, Auto. Asst Coach: Basketball. AA, Union College: BA. Montclair State College. STOUT. DAVID A. Spanish l.ll.lll. Coach Football. 2nd VP of EBEA. AB. Rutgers University. SULLEY. THOMAS. Math II.III.IV. BS. Maine Maritime Academy; BEd. Keene Teachers College SULLIVAN. ROBERT E Guidance BA. Kean State College; MA. Seton Hall University. SZARKA. ELLA M Cooperative Secretarial Education. Business. Adviser FBLA. BA. Rider College. —T— TAKACS. MARIANNE Office Machines. Business Math. General Business. Per- sonal Typing. BA. Trenton State College. TAUBENSLAG. ELLIOTT. Public Speaking. Drama Workshop. Current Theatre Ad- viser: Drama Club. BS. MA. Rutgers University. TAYLOR. CLIFFORD. Chairman of Business Education. BS, Rider College; MA. Kean State College. TIGHE. WILLIAM D Physical Education Coach: Basketball. Track. BS. EdM. Rutgers University. TOPLINSKY. VALENTIN. French. Russian Adviser French Club. Russian Club. BA. College Francais; MA. Columbia Univer- sity. TOPOLESKI. RAYMOND J. Photography. Electronics BA. Kean State College TRIOZZI. ROSALIE Math III.IV.VMI. Columbia Math 111.IV. Adviser Junior class. BA. Hunter College; MA. MST. Rutgers University. —V— VEREB. JOANNE. Librarian. BS. Carnegie Mellon Institute: MLS. University of Pittsburgh. VERGILLO. ELEANOR Health Education. Driver Education. Faculty Council. BA. Jersey City State College; RN. Flower- Fifth Avenue Hospital School of Nursing VERGOS. ARISTOTLE. Foreign Languages VOCOLO. ANTHONY C Guidance. BA. Columbia University; MA. Trenton State College. —W— WANS. EILEEN R. Physical Education. Coach Girls Gymnastics. Intramural Volleyball. BA. Montclair State College. WARWICK. ROBERT E. Chairman of Science. Biology Adviser: Biology Club BS. MS. North Carolina A T University. WEIGEL. WILLIAM German II.III.IV Ad- viser: German Club. German Honor Society, German Student Exchange Program. BA. MA, Rutgers University. WESTON. EDWARD. Physics. Adviser; Chess Club. Chess Team BS. Mon- mouth College. WIEDER. DONALD Physical Education. Coach: Gymnastics. BS. MS. East Stroudsburg State College. WILLIAMSON. WILLIAM. Photography. Offset. Graphics. Silk Screen. BS. Kean State College. WOOD. SUSAN English II. World Literature. Composition I. Shakespeare. Adviser Bridge Club, Faculty Council. BA. Marywood College; MA. University of Scranton. —Y— YANETTI. VINCENT Project Physics Ad- viser: Astronomy Club. Coach: Churchill JHS Wrestling BS. Rutgers University. MAT. University of Miami (Ohio). YUHAS. ANTHONY Chemistry. MS. Mon- mouth College; MAS. NJ Institute of Technology. —Z— ZIELINSKI. ARLENE. Composition I. Ad- vanced Placement English. Faculty Council. BA. Douglass College. MA. University of Bridgeport. STAFF DIRECTORY — 239 Index -A- Abbott. Eugenia..........1 92 Abbott. Mark.............. 192 Abbott. Marlene............204 Abbott. Michael 1 46 Abecker. Cynthia......... 1 92 Abramson. Linda.......... 1 92 Ackerman. Jamie..........204 Ackerson. Henry ......... 126 Adamo. Philomena......... 146 Adams. Lori................204 Adelman. Suzanne ......... 146 Adesman, Michelle........1 92 Adinolfi. Diane ......... 192 Adochio. John .............204 Agey. David..............1 46 Agresti. Michael......... 192 Agugliaro. Jennie......... 192 Ahmed. Russell ........... 192 Aita. Michael............204 Aks. Daniel ...............204 Aks, Jonathan ............ 147 Albach. Susan............. 192 Albach. William .......... 204 Alberts. Stephen ..........204 Albright. Catherine 204 Aldrich, William ........ 192 Alexander. Mark ......... 192 Alexander. Robert 192 Aliferis, Angela ......... 147 Aliferis. George...........204 Allen. Barbara............ 126 Allen. Gail................204 Allen, Joseph .............204 Allen. Richard............ 147 Allenby. Douglas.........146 Allenby. Margaret ........ 192 Alleruzzo. Marilyn ...... 146 Allwine, Elaine............204 Aim. Donald .............. 146 Alonso. Victor............ 146 Altamore. Susan .......... 204 Alusik. Charlene...........204 Alvarez. Francisco........ 147 Ambrosy. Patty Lynn . 204 Amity. Carol ............ 192 Amoroso. Mary ........... 147 Amrhein. Joanne........... 192 Amrhein. Martha.......... 147 AMTRAK...................10-11 Anania. Mark ............ 146 Ancona. Daniel............ 146 Anderson. Dennis......... 126 Anderson. Douglas........ 146 Anderson. Gregory........204 Anderson. Jennifer ........204 Anderson. Ralph ...........146 Anderson. Robert ..........204 Anderson. Scott........... 147 Anderson, Timothy 192 Andronico. Barbara.......204 Andrucyk, Stanley......... 147 Angelakes. Maria...........204 Angeline. Steven ......... 192 Ankosko. Robert .......... 147 Antoniewicz. Frank....... 126 Apmann, Augusta 1 45 Aquino. Judith ........... 146 Arkowitz. Erica.......... 1 46 Arky. Ellen................204 Armstrong. Catherine . . 204 Arnold. Christopher......204 Arnott. Gregory 204 Arnott. Keith............ 146 Aronin. Shari............ 146 Arose. James.............. 147 Arose, Paul .............. 192 Arrants, Carolyn.......... 192 Arrants. George........... 147 ARTS FESTIVAL........48-49 Asch. John .............. 147 Asdourian, Frank......... 192 Asher, Jay............... 192 Ashjian. Patrice..... 1 47 Ashjian, Paulette...... 1 92 Ashley. Dr. Larry . 124-125 AUDIO-VISUAL AIDS . 222 Auerbach, Mitchell .......204 Avery, Debra............. 192 Axelrod. William......... 126 Ayuso, Catherine ....... 1 92 -B- Babeu. Beth ............. 192 Babich. Nena .............204 Babo. Judy ............. 1 92 Bachman. Barbara........204 Backus. Susan........ 147 Bailey. Denise.......... 147 Bailey. Michael......... 192 Baker. Elizabeth........204 Baker. Janice .......... 192 Baker. Kelley...........204 Baker. Mark............. 1 92 Baker. Neal ............ 146 Baker. Roger............204 Baker. Stephen.......... 1 92 Baldesweiler. Joseph . 192 Baldwin. Keith..........204 Balland. Robert ........204 Ballon. Douglas ........ 146 Ballon. Nora ...........204 Baton, Donna ........... 192 Balon, Janice .......... 204 Balsamello. James . .. 126 Bamburak. Paul ......... 146 BAND. MARCHING .............. 232-233 Bands. Peter............ 204 Banos, Theano........... 146 Banziger. Cynthia 204 Baran, Deborah ......... 204 Baran. Diane............ 147 Baran. George ..........204 Barba, Vincent ......... 1 47 Barkalow. Beverly....... 1 92 Barkalow. Robert .......204 Barkann. Michael........204 Barnes. Eugene ......... 147 Barnes. Judi ...........204 Barofski. Norman ....... 147 Baron, Nancy ...........204 Barr, Bruce ............ 147 Barreto, Brian..........204 Barsimanto. Graciella . . . 147 Barszcz. Thomas ........1 92 Barth, Kathryn .........204 Bartolino. Linda ....... 192 BASEBALL. JAYVEE....... 108-109 BASEBALL. VARSITY ..... 106-109 Basile. Anthony ............. 1 48 Basile. Theresa................ 204 BASKETBALL. GIRLS . 88-89 BASKETBALL, BOYS JV 87 BASKETBALL. BOYS VAR . 84-87 Basso. Diane............. 204 Bastos, Gisele.......... 1 48 Bastowski, Paul 204 Bauer. Todd............. 148 Bauman. Shari ............204 Baumhardt. Cynthia . 148 Bay. Kevin.............. 192 Baylis, Robin........... 148 Beamer. Joanne 204 Beauregaard. Peggy . 145 Beckner. James.......... 148 Beecher. Barbara 1 92 Beecher. Dawn .......... 192 Beecher, Diane.......... 1 49 Beier. Ray .............. 126 Belcheff. Michael........ 192 Belcheff. Thomas..........204 Beldegreen, Nola........192 Belin. Jacki ........... 1 49 Bell. Patrice............ 149 Bellettiere. Diane . 1 92 Bellettiere. Gary.........204 Bellezza. Antoinette ... 192 Bellezza. Valerie........ 204 Bellino. Janet 1 92 Belowsky, Steven..........204 Beltz. Tamara ........... 149 Ben. Lori................ 204 Ben. Michael ........... 148 Bender. Donna........... 192 Bendl. Sydney ........... 204 Benedict. Debby ........ 148 Bennedict, Gary.......... 193 Bennett. Donald.......... 193 Bensco. Richard...........148 Bergen. Linda ............204 Berger, Laura ............204 Bergeron. Sheryl .........204 Berk. Jeffrey............ 148 Berkstresser. David..... 1 93 Berkstresser, James.....204 Berlant. Peter ......... 148 Bernard. Wayne........... 193 Bernknopf, Wayne . 204 Berry. Thomas ........... 204 Bertics. Christopher ... 148 Best, Scott...............204 Bevington. Coleen ....... 149 Bevington, Philip....... 1 93 BIBLE STUDY CLUB . 227 BICYCLE CLUB 228 Bieg. Kimmerley...........204 Biehl. Mary ............ 149 Bielski, John........... 1 93 Bilder. Laurel............204 Bilodeau. Anita.......... 193 Bingham, Brendan ....... 1 93 BIOLOGY CLUB..............226 Bittay. Kenneth ......... 149 Black, Bernard .......... 126 Blajian. Debra........... 149 Blanchard. Robert....... 193 Blandino, Leticia.........204 Blewett, Patrick........ 1 93 Blewett. Sheila.......... 204 BLOOD DRIVE ............50-51 Blum, Susan...............204 Blyskal. Lorraine....... 1 48 BOARD OF EDUCATION ... 1 22-123 Bochis. Donna.............204 Bodnar, John ........... 126 Boehler. Richard .........126 Bohadel. Edward...........204 Bohrer, Gretchen..........205 Bohrer, Priscilla ....... 123 Bolger. Douglas 148 Boltas. Lisa ........... 148 BOOSTER CLUB. GIRLS 223 Bongiovanni. Kim ....... 193 Bongiovanni. Mark.......205 Bongiovanni, Richard . 205 Bonnici. Suzanne 1 93 Boring, George........... 126 Borlan. Susan............ 148 Borneman. Randy......... 1 93 Bornheimer, Judith......205 Bornheimer, Karen ....... 193 Bornheimer. Patricia.... 1 93 Borodin, Tatjana..........205 Botts. Jeffrey ......... 1 48 BOWLING CLUB .............228 BOWLING TEAMS 100-101 Bowne. Elma ............ 148 Bowne. Priscilla........ 193 Boyce. Cynthia.......... 149 Boyd. David...............205 Boyd. Kathy.............. 149 Boyle. Dawna............. 205 Boysen. Kelsey............205 BOYS FROM SYRACUSE 36-37 Bozza, James............. 193 Braiuca. Anthony..........205 Braiuca, Marie .......... 193 Braich, Malvinder 205 Bramson. Marcia.......... 205 Brandt. Catherine ....... 193 Brauer. Jaymie........... 193 Brauer. Keith.............205 Brautigan, Margaret..... 193 Bravo. James ............ 149 Brazer. David ........... 193 Brearley. Craig . 193 Brearley, Donna.......... 149 Breckheimer, Beth ....... 148 Brede. John...............205 Brelsford. Charles ...... 193 Brennan. Alan........... 1 93 Brennan. Barbara..........205 BRIDGE CLUB ..............228 Brim. Debra.............. 193 Britske. Steven.......... 149 Broad. Lesley ........... 205 Broad. Marsha............ 145 Brodbar, Karen............205 Brodbar. Renee ...........205 Brodhead. Janet ......... 193 Brodhead. Ruth........... 193 Brodman. Alan............ 193 Brodsky. Daivd........... 149 Brodsky. Jay............. 193 Broker. Janet ........... 149 Bronzellino, Robert.......205 Brophy, Donalyn ......... 126 Brophy, Jack............. 126 Brown. Helen..............149 Brown. Jane.............. 126 Brown, Kathleen ..........205 Brown. Keith............. 193 Brown. Laurence...........205 Brown. Meta.............. 193 Brown, Nancy .............148 Brown. Rosemary.......... 126 Brown. Sarah..............205 Brown, Stephen........... 193 Bruno. Mark ..............193 Bruthers, John........... 129 Bryan. Cindy............. 149 Bryan. Scott .............205 Bubrow. David............ 193 Buckler, Bertram ........ 122 Buckley. Christopher . 205 Budde. Harry..............205 Buller. Lyle..............205 Buller. Steven........... 193 Burak. Kathy..............193 Burghardt, Douglas........193 Burke. Grace............. 193 Burke. Leroy ............ 149 Burlew. Christina........ 129 Burlew, Lynn............. 149 Burnett. Dr. Kenneth ... 123 Burns. Christine..........205 Burrell. Susan........... 149 Burtick. Alan........... 1 50 Burtick. Brenda ......... 193 Burtick. Judith ..........205 BUSSING. IN BOSTON .19 Byrn. Linda ............ 193 Byrne. Gov. Brendan . 18.126 Byrnes. Jean............ 1 93 Byrnes. Susan ............205 -C- Cacella. Barry........... 193 Cacella, Linda ......... 1 50 Cacoso. Carol.............205 Cacoso, Susan............ 193 Cain. Daine ............. 193 Calantoni. Michael....... 193 240—INDEX Calogrides. Ann ..........205 Campbell. Jeann Ann . . . 150 Campobasso. Margaret 205 Campobasso. Thomas . 205 Canary. John.............. 129 Canning. Kathleen......... 150 Cantor, Barbara ..........205 Caporrino. Joseph.........205 Capraro. Anthony ......... 193 Carangelo. Andrea......... 151 Carlucci. Dominick .......205 Carr. Debora..............151 Carrick. Kathryn . ....... 151 Carroll. Dennis ..........205 Cerstens. Timothy.........205 Carter. Laura............. 193 Caruso. Thomas............ 1 93 Casale. Dawn.............. 151 Caseiro. Mel..............129 Caseiro. John............. 125 Casey. Colleen ...........205 Casey. Kelle.............. 193 Casiere. Paula............ 193 Castellano. Randy......... 193 Catelli. Frederick........ 1 93 Caterina. Talia...........205 Cathcart. Eleanor......... 145 Caubet. Donna.............205 Caubet. Emi............... 151 Cavell. Barry............. 193 Cedrone. Mark............. 193 Celano. Nancy ............ 193 Chaityn. Laurence......... 151 Chalupa. Louis ........... 129 Chambers, Nancy...........205 Chaney. Peggy 1 50 Chang. Annette ........... 1 50 Chang, Michael 1 50 Charette. William......... 1 50 Charleston. Katherine .... 206 CHEERLEADERS 230-231 Chelli. Elaine............. 150 CHEMISTRY CLUB 226 Chenoweth, Jeffrey ....... 206 Cheppo. John............. 1 93 Chernek, Paul..............206 Chernowetz. Lois......... 1 50 Chernowetz. Frank 206 Cheskin, Carole .........1 29 CHESS CLUB ................229 Chillscyzn. Dolores 1 50 Chillscyzn. Tammie.......206 Chinchar. Michael .........206 Chinchar. William ....... 193 Chirico. Louis ........... 206 Chian. Christopher ...... 150 Chian, Robert ........... 1 93 CHORUS..............52-53 Christ. Claire........... 150 Christiansen, John ...... 193 Christiansen. Susan 206 Christie. Carol............206 CHRISTMAS ...............38-39 Chrobak. Stephanie ....... 206 Chuang. Janet .............206 Church. Andrew........... 1 93 Ciak, Karen ............. 150 Ciatto. Marie............ 193 Cicerale. Henry.......... 150 Cipriani. Filomena 1 93 CLARION..................221 Clark. Carol ............ 193 Clark. Catherine.......... 206 Clark. Kelly.............1 50 Clary. Mary ............. 1 50 Clark. Patrice........... 193 Clark. Paul ............. 150 Clark. Peter ............ 194 Clark. Robert............ 1 50 Clark. Teresa............ 150 Clark. Timothy ............206 Clarke. Kevin..............206 Cobb. Connie ............. 206 Cochrane. Leslie......... 1 94 Cockill. Mary........... 151 Coffey. Kathleen ........206 Coffey. Robert ......... 194 Cohen. Betti Jo ........ 1 94 Cohen. David ........... 194 Cohen. David ........... 206 Cohen. Kathy ........... 151 Cohen, Laura.............206 Cohen. Paul............. 206 Cohen. Stephen.......... 206 Cohn. Jill ..............206 Colbert. Richard........ 194 Cole. Thomas 1 94 Cole. William........... 151 Coleman. Margaret.......206 Collins. Terri ......... 151 COLOR GUARD ............ 233 Coltharp. Richard....... 206 Comer. Cynthia ......... 194 Compton. Mary...........194 CONCORDE SST..............11 Condon, Ardis........... 1 29 Connington. Robert 206 Connolly. Robert ........206 Connors. Carol ..........206 Connors. Florence.......151 Conti. James............ 151 Conti. Patricia ........ 206 Conway. David........... 1 94 CONVENTION. DEMOCRATIC...........255 Cook. Nancy 1 52 Cooper. Jennifer ........206 Cooper. Mary Louise .... 152 Corcoran, Lucille.......194 Corcoran. Teresa ....... 1 52 Core. Jeffrey............206 Cornell. Ellen..........1 53 Corson. Debra .......... 153 Costanzo. Stephen ...... 1 53 Costello. Brian ........ 1 53 Costello. Claudia .......206 Index Costello. Theresa...... 152 Costigan, Linda .......206 Cotter. Kristine.......206 Covello. John..........206 Cowen, Dana ........... 194 Cowherd. Carolyn.......206 Cowherd. Margaret...... 1 52 Crawford. Jacqueline .... 1 94 Creamer. Eileen .......1 52 Cresti. Rosemarie .....206 Crocker, Jeffrey ...... 153 CROSS COUNTRY. JAYVEE 75 CROSS COUNTRY. FACULTY VS. SENIORS..........42-43 CROSS COUNTRY. VARSITY .............72-75 Csizmar. Debra...........206 Cuff. Carol............. 206 Cuff. Patricia ........ 153 Cullari. Regina ....... 153 Cullen. Faith .......... 206 Cummings. Alan ........ 194 Curcio. Robert ........ 194 Curley. Susan 1 53 Curran. Lorraine....... 1 52 Curran. Robert ........ 194 Cybulski. Bernadette 1 94 -D- Daiello. Martin 206 Dalfonzo. Joan......... 194 D Amico. Leslie ........ 206 Dargento. Michael .....152 Dariano. Nicholas ..... 152 Darmofal. Lillia.........206 Daskiewicz. Paul ...... 1 53 INDEX—241 I ndex Daskiewicz. Rosemary . 206 Davidson. Cynthia...... 1 53 Davidson. Diane........206 Davino. Nancy ......... 153 Davis. Donna ..........194 Davis. Martha.......... 1 29 Davison. Daniel 206 Dawson. Barbara 1 53 Dawson. Gail ........... 152 Dawson. Kenneth..........152 Dean. Karen ...........206 DeBlass. Diane......... 194 DeBoer. Craig........... 152 DeCarolis. Mario 129 DeCastro. Mark......... 194 Decker. Amy 1 94 Decker. James.......... 1 53 Decker. Jennifer....... 1 53 Decker, Walter......... 1 53 Deegan. Margaret 206 DeGraw. John . .....206 DeGraw. Kevin........... 153 Delcol. Mark...........206 Dell. Richard.......... 194 DelRosso. Maryann . . 194 DeMarco. Michelle 194 Dembinski. Kevin....... 1 94 Denton. Elizabeth ..... 194 Denton. Richard........ 206 Denyeau. Catherine .... 194 DeSantis. Americo ...... 152 DesRosier, Denise........206 DeStefano. Barbara 152 DeStefano, Frances .... 194 DeStefano. Lisanne.....1 94 Deutsch. Debra ........ 194 Devaney. Joseph........ 152 Devaney, Michael ...... 194 Devine. Joseph ........ 152 Devlin. Stephen ....... 194 DeWitt. Patricia........ 206 Diamantis. Perry....... 152 DiChiaro. Anthony........206 Dickinson, Kim.......... 206 Dickson, Brenda ....... 152 DiCola. Mary Ellen ......206 DiLalo. Diane ......... 1 94 Dildine. Desiree ...... 1 53 DiMaio. Susan ......... 1 53 DiMartino. Beverly ......206 DiMartino. Patricia 1 94 Dloss. Shari........... 1 94 Dloss, Stephanie....... 153 Doll. John ............ 194 Donaldson. Jill ....... 1 53 Donner. David .......... 206 Donner. Diane ......... 194 Donohue. Deborah ...... 194 Donzella. Lisa ........ 1 54 Dorak. Mark ............ 206 Doran. Paul............. 206 Dorin. Eileen .......... 206 Dorko. Alexander....... 1 54 DOS-Y-DOS ...............229 Douglis. Evan .......... 194 Dowling, Mary..........1 54 Downing. Patricia......195 Downing. Thomas........ 1 95 JAY DOYLE TROPHY 120-121 Doyle. Kathryn......... 1 54 Doyle. Mary Ellen ..... 1 55 Doyle. Michael......... 195 Doyle. Thomas........... 206 Drake. William ...... 1 29 Dreher. Susan 206 Dreyling. Diane......... 155 DRILL TEAM ............. 232 Drozdowski. John 1 29 Drummond. Donald ...... 195 Drummond, Kathy........ 155 Drummond. Ruth Ann . . . 206 Dubin. Gertrude.......... 129 Dubovick. Gary............ 155 Duffell. William...........206 Duffy, Thomas .............206 Duni, Janet ............. 1 55 Dunn. Sharon.............. 155 Dunn. William..............206 Dunsten, Betty.............207 Dwork. Barry ..............207 Dwyer. Dara ...............207 Dzuro. Debbie............1 54 -E- Eaker. Romayne........... 154 Earls. Patricia ...........207 Eaton, Thomas............ 195 Eck. Pamela ............. 1 54 Edelstein. Robert........ 154 Edgecomb. Jeffrey ....... 155 Edwards. Cheryl.......... 1 55 Edwards. David ............207 Efstathiou. Daphne....... 155 Efstathiou. James .........207 Egnatoff, Carol.......... 195 Eisler. Laurie .......... 195 Ehrenman. Richard ......... 207 Eininger. Carol ............207 Eisner. Gayle.............. 195 Elkins. Joel ...............207 Ellenberg, William ...... 1 55 Ellingham. Thomas........ 195 Ellsworth, Robert.......... 155 Elm. Frank ..............207 EMERALD..................221 Emery. John ............... 129 Enama. Joanne ............. 195 Enama. Marie.............207 Engel. Catherine........... 155 Epinger. Michael .......... 207 Ernst. Angela............ 154 Essenfeld. Lori ............207 Evans. Barry ...............207 Evans. Michael........... 195 Ezersky. Patricia...........207 -F- Faatz. Barbara............. 154 Falk. Joy ................. 195 Fallon. Robert............. 195 Farber. Kenneth............ 195 Farrell. Jill............207 Farrer. Clarke............. 154 Farrer. Elizabeth...........207 Farruggio. Greg ........... 154 Fasciale. Denise........... 155 Fasciale. Douglas...........207 Fasciano, Barbara 207 Fasciano. Carol............ 195 Faviano, Nancy............. 154 Fedak. Maria................195 Fedock. Kathy...............207 Fedosh. Richard............ 207 Feigenbaum. Marjorie .. 195 Fein. Robert............... 154 Feldbaum. Hal ............. 195 Feldman. Eric ............. 207 Feldman. Kenneth............195 Feltman. Deborah .......... 207 FENCING CLUB .............. 234 Feneis. Michael ............207 Ferko. John.................207 Ferlauto. Diana.............154 Ferlauto. Steven............207 Ferrara. James ............ 154 Ferrara. Joanne ........... 195 Ferrick. John...............207 Fetherolf. Stephen...... . 155 Fetter. Theresa............ 195 242—INDEX Feuerlicht. Brian............. 195 FIELD DAY....................54-55 Field. Edward 207 FIELD HOCKEY. JAYVEE 78-79 FIELD HOCKEY. VARSITY . 76-79 Field. Pamela................ 195 FILM CLUB.....................229 Fine. Helen.................. 129 Finfer. Bonnie................195 Finneran. Patricia......... 1 54 Fink. David.................. 195 Finkel. Peter 195 Finkelstein. Ira . 207 Fiocco. Thomas ............ 1 54 Fiore. Regina 129 Fiorentino. Peter............ 195 Fischer, Laura................207 Fischer. Mark ............. 1 54 Fischer. Mary ............... 195 Fischer. Patricia ........... 154 Fischer. William .............207 Fisher. Ann ............... 155 Fisher. Douglas 1 56 Fisher, Leslie............... 195 Fisher. Susan ............. 156 Fishinger. Gerald ........... 195 Fitzgerald. Rose............. 145 Fixelle. Sherry...............207 Flachner. Anthony.............207 Flachner. Kelley .......... 1 56 Flachner. Tracey 1 56 Flanagan. Connie .............207 Fleming, Joseph...............207 Florek, Karen...............1 30 Florek. Leon............... 1 30 Floy. Karen................ 1 56 Fleugel. Stephen .......... 1 56 Foggio. Richard ............. 195 FOLIO ....................... 221 FOOTBALL. JAYVEE...............67 FOOTBALL. SOPHOMORE . 67 FOOTBALL. VARSITY 64-67 Ford. President Gerald . . . 6.1 9 Forgrieve. Janet..........207 Forney. Sarah............ 195 Foster. Robert........... 157 Fourman. Benjamin........ 195 Fourman. David 207 FOURTH OF JULY . 250.256 Frandza. Phillip..........207 Frankie. Robert......... 1 57 Franklin. Lloyd...........207 Frankosky. Susan ....... 157 Frazer. Elizabeth.........157 Frazer, Lawrence..........207 Freehan. Cynthia..........208 French. Amy.............. 195 FRENCH CLUB...............225 FRENCH MONOR SOCIETY .............. 224 French. Martin ......... 1 56 Freneaux. Mark ...........208 Fried. Paul ..............208 Friedman. Jay.............208 Friedman. Meryl......... 1 56 Friedman. Randy 208 Fuchs. Andrea 1 56 Fullerston. Nancy....... 1 95 Fullerton, Vincent...... 1 56 Funice. Kim . . 195 FUTURE BUSINESS LEADERS OF AMERICA 227 -G- Gaffney. William ........ 195 Gahrmann, Richard.......208 Galambrari. Steven......208 Galbraith. Hugh ......... 156 Galbraith, Thomas 195 Galgano. Gay ...............156 Gallagher, Mary............ 195 Gallo. Denise............ 157 Gallo. Joanne 208 Galloway. Tracy............ 195 Galperin. Robert............208 Galuchie. William.......... 208 Gambino. Donna..............208 Gangi. Rose.............. 157 Gangi. Vincent..............208 Gara. Bhanu ................208 Garboski. Cynthia ....... 157 Garcia. Frank............195 Garcia. Maryanne ...........208 Gardner. Jeffrey........... 208 Gardner. Warren.......... 157 Garrett. Kevin .......... 1 56 Garrido. Elizabeth ...... 1 56 Gash. Doris.............. 195 Gassaro. Cynthia............195 Gassaro. Karen............. 208 Gatarz. Scott...............195 Gavin. Mary Lou ............208 Gavin. Nancy ............ 156 Gavron. Mary Ann 1 30 Gawroniak, Loretta........ 1 30 Gaylor, Steven .......... 1 56 Geanopoulos. Jasmine 195 Geberth, Nadia..............208 Geist. Christopher..........208 Gelber, Susan............ 1 56 Geller. Arthur 195 Gentile. Ronald............ 195 GERMAN CLUB.................225 GERMAN HONOR SOCIETY .................224 Gerwig. Margie .......... 1 30 Getty. Robert ............. 195 Gfrerer. Diane 208 Gianaras. Joseph........... 208 Giarillo. Anthony ......... 195 Gibbard. Diane........... 1 56 Gibson, Catherine........ 208 Giglia. Robert ............ 195 Gilbert. Pamela............ 157 Giliberti. Anthony....... 157 Gill. Patricia............. 195 Gilliland. Katherine .... 195 Gilliland. Patricia 195 Gilmartin. Linda............208 Gilsleider. Judith ........ 195 Giovanni. Valerie.......... 208 Gives. Joanne............. 1 57 Glaser. Cindy...............208 Glassheim. Robert .... 157 Glennon. Felix............. 157 Glickman. Richard.......... 208 Gliddon. Christopher . 195 Gliddon. Matthew......... 1 57 Glinka, Catherine...........208 Glinka, Kenneth.......... 1 57 Godt. Neal..................208 Goetz, Lisa................ 208 Goldberg. Andrea 195 Goldberg. Hal ........... 195 Goldberg. Jay...............208 Goldenstein. David 1 95 Goldman. Susan ............ 157 Goldrosen. Jack............ 208 Goldschein. Scott 208 Goldstein. David .......... 208 Goldstein, Lisa ........... 208 Goldstein. Robert ....... 195 Goldwasser, Jay ........... 195 Golembeski, Catherine .1 95 Goley, David............... 208 Goley, John................ 157 GOLF................... 102-103 Golinello. Gayle .......... 209 Gomes. Diane............... 209 Gonier. Ronald............. 130 Gonzalez. Diane ......... 157 Goodwin. Keith ............ 195 Gordon. Jeffrey ..........209 Gorman, Kathleen .........209 Gottfried. Eric.......... 209 Gottlieb. Bruce............ 1 95 GRADUATION..............62-63 Graham. Brian ............209 Grauer. Leslie............209 Grayson. Andrew ..........209 Green. Eric............. 195 Green. Robert 1 57 Greenberg. Lillian....... 195 Greenberg. Marlene ..... 1 57 Greenbury. Phyllis...... 1 58 Greenfest, Robert ........209 Greenlee. Kenneth.........209 Greenley. Kenneth 1 58 Greenley. Lawrence . . 209 Greiger. James........... 195 Griffin. Archie............16 Griffin. Susan ...........209 Griggs. Gregory.......... 195 Grip. William.............209 Grocholske. Alan..........209 Grodstein, Seymour...... 1 30 Grossman, Ellen ..........209 Grossman. Linda 1 58 Grover, Cheryl..........1 58 Groves. Alexander 209 Gruber. Cindy.............209 Grundt. Matthew...........209 Grzybowski. Paul........ 1 58 Guadagno. Steven..........209 Gudewicz. Veronica .......209 Guerriero. Michael........209 Gugig. Howard 1 58 Guidoboni. Carlo..........125 Gunia. George.............209 Gushanas. Betty ......... 209 Gushanas. Sharon........ 1 58 Gwozdziewicz. Lynn .1 58 Gwozdziewicz. Susan 209 GYMNASTICS. BOYS 82-83 GYMNASTICS. GIRLS 80-81 -H- Haas. Debra.............1 95 Hack. Rosmarie ......... 195 Hadland. Donna..........1 58 Haeusser. Heide.........209 Hafner, Frederick....... 1 58 Hague. Beverly..........209 Hahn. Donna............. 1 58 Halasz. Susan.............209 Haller. Valerie ..........209 Halliday. Ann........... 1 58 Hallock, Brian ......... 209 Halmo. Mark.............1 58 Hammel. Stacy.............195 Hammond, Charles........ 1 30 Hammond. Edward.........209 Handelman. David........ 1 96 Hanna. Debra............209 Hansen. Paul............ 1 58 Hansen. Victoria......... 158 Hanson, Barbara ........209 Haremza. Theresa 209 Harmyk. Michael ........209 Harrington, Andrew .......209 Harrington. Geralyn 158 Harris. Christopher .... 196 Harris, Cindi.............209 Harris, Philip..........1 59 Harrold. Robbin ........ 196 Hart. Michael .......... 159 Hartie. David.............209 Hartman. Robert ..........209 Haskell. Scott ......... 196 Haut. Adam..............1 96 Haut. David...............209 Hawks. Gina.............. 209 Haydu. James..............209 Hayes. Lisa ............. 196 Healy. Katherine........ 1 59 I ndex Heaney. Carol.............209 Hearn, Rebecca ...........209 Hearst. Patty............. 18 Heilman. Kathy............209 Heimberg, Scott.......... 196 Heitz. Susan ........... 1 59 Heller. Alan ........... 1 59 Helwig, Thomas.......... 1 59 Henderek, Kenneth 1 30 Hennelly. Irene......... 196 Hennelly. William.........209 Henninger. Gregory . 196 Henriques. Robert....... 1 58 Henry, Marlene............209 Henry, Peter............196 Herbert. Daniel......... 1 58 Herbert. Edward ........ 196 Herbst. Robert..........1 58 Herczeg. Richard......... 158 Hering. Glenn.............209 Herring. Carolyn........ 1 59 HERSHEY PARK ...........56-57 Herskowitz. Jodi ....... 1 59 Herwig. Karl..............159 Herwig. Stephen...........209 Hess. Carol ............ 159 Hessek, Paula...........1 59 Hetherington. James . . 209 Hettler. Joanne......... 1 59 Heuer, Scott ............ 209 Hewitt. Edwin ............209 Higgins. John............ 160 Hilman, Robert ......... 1 60 Hirsch, Mary............. 160 Hirsh. Jesse..............209 Hirsh. Marc............. 1 96 Hitchner. Anne Tifft 1 30 Hitchner, Kenneth........ 130 Hnatuk. Brenda . . 160 Hodes. Lisa ..............16' Hodges. Carol............ 161 Hodges. Kyle..............209 Hodges. Peter.............209 Hodgkins. Lisa .......... 196 Hoerth, Richard ......... 196 Hoffman. Bruce........... 160 Hollabaugh. David........ 160 Hollabaugh, Katherine . 1 96 Hollabaugh. Leonard 209 Hollifield. Rosemarie... 1 60 Holtz. Douglas .......... 209 HOMECOMING 34-35 Homeyer. William............. 209 Homner. Michael.......... 209 Horner. Karen........... 1 60 Horvath. Alexander....... 130 Horvath, Louis ......... 130 Horvath. Randall . 161 Horwath. Linda ......... 196 Howarth. Sharon.......... 196 Howard. Sandra 1 96 Howe. Cynthia.............209 Huchko. Thomas........... 161 Hudak, Joseph............ 122 Hulse. Dawn...............209 Hulse. Suzanne .......... 196 Hundert. Karen...........1 60 Hunt. Daniel ............ 160 Hunt. Douglas ............209 Hunter. Celeste ......... 130 Hunter. Joyce 130 Hupp. Donna ..............209 Hupp. Ludwig............. 196 Hutchins. John........... 160 Hutchins. Peggy.......... 196 Hutchinson, Robert........... 196 -I- lannoconne. Alphonse 196 INDEX—243 I ndex lelmini. Patricia....... 210 INDIGOS 15 Ippolito. Anthony....... 196 Ippolito. Madeline 196 Isaacson. Carol......... 160 Isaacson, Daniel........ 210 Isaacson, Judith........210 -J- Jablonowski, Edward . 161 Jablonowski. Dr. Edward 1 22 Jackowitz, Robert....... 196 Jackson. Carol .........210 Jackson. Lamont...........210 Jackson. William..........210 Jacob. Johanna ......... 196 Jacob. Laurie........... 161 Jacob. Mira............. 160 Jacobson, Eric ......... 196 Jacobson. Gary 210 Jacoby. Laura...........210 Jacovsky. Robert........ 196 Jagt. Carole.............. i 96 Jakubowski. Diane....... 196 Jamieson. Andrea.........1 96 Janco. Beth.............196 Janowski. Wallace ...... 196 Janwich. April..........210 Jarosz. Michele 196 Jarvais. Diane.......... 160 Jaskiel, Halina......... 196 Jasper. Dino............ 133 Jastrebski. Cindy....... 196 Jenkins, Michael ..... 210 Jedings. Valerie........160 Jennings. Alvin......... 160 Jensen. Arthur.......... 161 Jensen. Eric............210 Jensen. Valerie......... 161 Jewett, Barbara......... 161 Jewett. David 1 96 Johnson. Aileen......... 196 Johnson. Carol..........210 Johnson. Diana..........161 Johnson. Erik .......... 1 96 Johnson. Garrett .......210 Johnson. Judy........... 161 Johnson. Kevin ......... 161 Johnson. Linda.......... 196 Jones, Deborah ...........210 Jones. Michele........... 196 Jones. Robert............ 196 Julius. Richard.......... 196 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS ...............220 TRIP..................56-67 -K- Kabus. Robert ........... 196 Kadin. Phyllis .......... 160 Kajano, Michael...........210 Kalbach. Donna .......... 210 Kalbach. Kevin .......... 160 Kalber. Kathleen........ 1 60 Kaltunowicz. Ann 1 96 Kancylarz. Kenneth 196 Kancylarz. Paul......... 1 60 KANSAS WHEATFIELDS 14 Kaplan. Audrey.......... 161 Kaplan, Beth............ 196 Kaplan. Donna ..........210 Kaplan, Gary............210 Kaplan. Joyce........... 161 Kaplan. Robin......... 196 Kaplan, Ruth.......... 210 Kaplan, Steven........ 161 Kapusta. Christine 210 Karl, Irene.............. 161 Karl. Patricia ...........210 Karlowski, Steven...........161 Karmazin, Lisa ........... 210 Karsch, Berenice..........210 Kasternakis. Michael ... 210 Kasunic. Kevin ...........210 Katcher. Paul.............210 Katz. Jack ...............210 Katz. Randy............... 161 Katz. Stuart..............210 Kavanagh. Christopher .210 Kavanagh. John............. 162 Kaznosky. Peter.............133 Keating. Kevin ...........210 Keck, Jeffrey............. 1 96 Keck, Leslie..............210 Keeling. Beverly..........210 Keil. Mitchell............ 133 Kelberg. Paul.............1 96 Kelliher. Scott...........210 Kelly. Daniel ............ 196 Kelly. Daniel T .......... 196 Kelly, Kathleen .......... 162 Kelly. Patricia ..........210 Kelly. Sharon.............210 Kelman. Margaret..........196 Kelton. Alan..............210 Kempf. Joanne.............. 162 Kennedy. Ruth 145 Kenney. James.............. 162 Kenney. Stephen............ 196 Kercheval. Kelly........... 196 Kerwin. Coleen............. 210 Kesler. David............. 1 96 Kessel. Bradley........... 1 63 Kestenbaum. Jeffrey 1 96 KEY CLUB..................223 Kieffer. Roy............... 163 Kienzle. Susan ........... 163 Kilcoyne, Linda........... 1 96 Kim. Young Hun............210 Kimmel. Karen ............ 163 Kimmel, Dr. Paul........... 133 Kinard, James............. 1 62 King, Donna .............. 162 Kingston. Virginia ........ 162 Kidski. Diane.............210 Kirbos, Anthony...........210 Kirchmeier. Richard.......210 Kirk. Kevin...............196 Kirk. Kim................. 196 Kirkley. Kenneth........... 196 Kirsner. Susan ............ 162 Kish. Diane ..............210 Kish. Eugene.............. 162 Kissling. Carol........... 162 Kist. Debra...............145 Kitzler, George ..........210 Kivirahk. Krista.......... 133 Klecan, Matthew........... 163 Klein, Barry .............210 Klein. Erica.............. 196 Klein. Marcee............. 196 Klein. Mark .............. 163 Kletzkin. Marshall .......210 Klimcsak. George .........196 Kling. Lawrence........... 211 Klinger, William ......... 163 Klose. Eileen............. 196 Klug. Robert ............. 196 Klugerman. Jill...........211 Klugerman. Phyllis ....... 133 Knatz, Michael ........... 196 Knaus, Jeffrey............ 196 Knight. Robert ........... 197 Knof. John................ 163 Kochis. Judith............ 197 Koft. Daniel 1 62 Kohn. Steven ............. 197 Koken. Alex............... 211 Kolakowski. Leonard ... 1 33 Koletis. Thomas 1 97 Koliner, Carol ........... 211 Koliner, Martin........... 162 Koliner. Robert........... 163 Kolsky, Mark..............211 Koppel. Judith ..........133 Koppel. Kenneth ......... 133 Koproski. Denise......... 197 Korab. Lisa.............. 163 Kosa. Louis ............. 133 Koss, Adrienne.............211 Kosten. Daivd............ 163 Kosty. Sonya...............211 Kostyshyn. Mary............211 Kotler. David ........... 133 Koy. Christine........... 1 63 Koy. Kevin.................211 Kozielec. Julienne ...... 197 Kraatz. Diane . . . 197 Krahe. Martin ...........211 Krakower, Deane.......... 1 97 Kramer. Keith............211 Kravet. Linda............ 1 97 Krawsek, Kenneth......... 1 62 Kraynak. Lorie...........162 Krein, Bruce............. 1 63 Krein. Laurie ...........211 Krevack. Kevin........... 197 Krieger, Lawrence 1 63 Krisel. Linda............ 1 97 Kroeschel. William....... 1 97 Kroon. Jeffrey........... 211 Kruse, Debra............. 197 Kruse, Robert ........... 197 Krygier, Madeline .......211 Kuczynski, Susan ........211 Kulbacki. Kathleen.......211 Kulischenko. Elaine. 197 Kune. Kimberley..........197 Kupchynsky. Jerry........ 1 33 Kurtz, Michele...........211 Kuzio. Michael...........163 Kuzminski. Louise........ 163 Kuzminski. Suzann .......211 -L- Lacina. Carol............ 197 Lacina. Larry............211 Lackey. Susan............ 197 LaFazia. Anthony.........197 Laffey, Kevin............ 197 LaForge. Laura...........211 Lake. Dianne............. 162 LaMaestra. Doris......... 133 Lambert. Laura...........211 Lamo. James ............. 197 Lane. Andrea............. 197 Lang, Richard............197 Langer. Robert .......... 197 La Perna. Judith ........ 197 La Porte. Joan........... 145 Larrousse, Mark.......... 162 Larsen. Eric ............211 Larstanna. Lawrence . . 211 LATIN CLUB ..............225 LaTorraca. Joseph 1 33 Laufer. Katherine........163 Lawless. Karen........... 197 Lawrence. Alice..........211 Lawson. Robert .......... 133 Lazare. Suzanne.......... 197 LeBeau. Timothy..........211 LeBlon. James............ 1 97 Lecorchick. Donald ......211 Leddy. Michael...........197 Lederman. Janet 197 Lederman, Richard ....... 163 LeFebvre. Jeanne 1 97 Leftow. Stewart 197 Leiderman. Betina........211 Lelling, Holly .......... 1 97 Lementowicz. Alex........211 Lemerich, Glenn.......... 134 Lemieux. James........... 197 Lemire, James ........... 211 Lemire. Ruth............. 1 97 Leonard. Steven..........211 Leonard. Thomas . . . . 1 63 Leonov, Cosmonaut Aleksey 9 Lerman. Mindy.............. ig7 Lerner. Bette.............. 134 Lesitsky. Alan..............134 Lesser, Scott...............211 Lesso, Karen............... 163 Lester. Dorothy.............134 Letson. Sharon............ 1 64 Levine. Elaine ............ 134 Levine. Gail................211 Levine. Ira .............. 1 64 Levine. Mercy.............. 197 Levine. Steven .............211 Levine. Traci . ............211 Levy. Ellen............... .211 Levy. Lynn..................164 Lewin, Gunter...............122 Lewis. Jodi ............... 211 Lewis. Laurell ............ 197 Lewkowitz. Scott........... 211 Libertazzo. John............134 Libby. Pamela.............. 164 Liddy. Susan 197 Lieberman. Lisette..........165 Lieblein, Terri............ 134 Lightcap. Elvin ........... 197 Lin. Carolyn............... 197 Linden. Thelma............. 134 Linke, Albert ............. 197 Lins. Stephen........ 211 Lipman. Rhonda............. 165 Lippincott. Curtis..........134 Lipschitz. Laura........... 211 Lipsitz. Judith.............211 Lis. Daivd..................211 Liss, Debra 197 Litchko. Linda............. 211 Liteplo, Caroline...........211 Little. William.............211 Littlefield. Mitchell ......165 Litz. Patricia............. 165 Liu. Katherine............. 165 Liu, Sherman................211 LoCastro. Lynn..............211 Logan, Linda .............. 165 Logan, Theresa..............197 Long. Eunice................164 Lonski. Nancy.............. 197 Lopatin. Matt .......... 164 LoPresti, Frank............ 134 Loren. Howard.............. 164 Los. Donna..................164 LoSacco. Paul.............. 165 Losiewicz. Paul.............211 Lowenstein. Lori ...........211 Lowenstein. Ronald . 211 Lucas. Cherie ............. 165 Lucas. David................211 Luce. Geoffrey .............211 Luckhowec. Teresa.......... 198 Lukac. Marta............... 198 Lukac. Tibor................211 Lukenda. Robyn..............211 Lukenda. Mark.............. 165 Lusk. Glen ................ 165 Lyall. Mark.................211 Lyons, Michael............ 1 65 Lyons. Pamela ............ 211 Lytle, Mary Diane ......... 134 -M- Maandi, Allan........... 198 MacDonald. Cheryl.......198 Macek. Debra............ 1 98 Machuzak, Kathleen . 1 65 Mackay. Drew .............. 211 Mackay. Phyllis ........ 1 34 MacMillan. Tracy........... 198 MacNiven, Robert........ 211 Mager. Maxine.............. 211 Magistro. JoAnn ........ 1 34 Magliozzi. Barbara ........ 164 Magliozzi. Paula............211 Magliula. Joseph............211 Magos. Nicholas . 164 244—INDEX Magram, Edward 1 98 Maher. John............. 1 64 Maher, Kathleen ..........211 Mahnken. Arthur 1 64 Mahnken. Susan .......... 198 Mahoney, Margaret ... 1 98 Mahoney. Michael ........ 198 Maine. Joell............. 198 Majewski, Bruce ........ 1 64 Majewski, John.......... 1 34 MAJORETTES................234 Makwinski. Kathy........ 1 64 Makwinski. Mark 211 Malinofsky. Dawne.......1 64 Malinofsky. Lisa 211 Malkin. Cori............ 1 98 Malone. Barbara ......... 198 Manganella. Glenn ...... 1 98 Mangieri. Donna......... 1 64 Mangieri, Gil ........... 134 Manginella. Roxanne 211 Manicone. Anthony . 211 Manicone. Michael ...... 164 Mann, Sharon............ 1 98 Manning, Roy 1 98 Mansfield. John......... 125 Mansfield. Patrick .....211 Mansfield. Stephen 1 64 Marchese. Michelle...... 1 64 Marchese. Suzette 1 98 Marchisotto. Denise 1 64 Margolin, Mitchell...... 198 Margulies. Ellen........ 198 Marino. Mark............198 Marino. Stephen ........ 165 Markiewicz. Donna.......211 Markiewicz. Janet.......1 65 Markot. Michael......... 1 37 Markowski. Steven . . 198 Marks. James..............198 Marks. Ronda............ 1 65 Marks. Steven .......... 198 Marlin. Julie.............211 Marlin. Susan........... 165 Marosy. Melissa ......... 198 Marozine. Michael........1 98 Marsh. William 1 37 Marshall. Peter...........212 Marsicano, Mark...........212 Martin. Elizabeth ....... 198 Martin. Lori .............212 Martin. Lynn..............212 Martin. Steven 1 98 Martin. Steven ..........1 98 Martinez, Vincent.........212 Martini, Elissa.......... 1 65 Martz. Donna ............ 165 Marvel. Julann........... 166 Masitti, Joseph 1 98 Mason. Pamela 1 98 Massaros. Anthony........ 1 66 Massaros. Dorothy 1 98 Mast. Dean............... 198 Masterton. Cynthia....... 166 Mastrogiovanni. Albert . . 1 66 Matecki. Christopher 212 MATH CLUB ................226 Matheny, Jacqueline . . . . 212 Matos. Pamela 1 66 Matthews. William........ 137 Matthews, William........ 166 Mattina. Frank............198 Matysik, Jayme............212 Matyskeil. Lorraine ..... 198 Maver. Carolyn...........1 67 Maver. Gail ..............212 Mavrakis, Elayne......... 167 May. Rosemary 145 Mazer. Pamela............198 Mazza. Jean ..............212 Mazza. Leonard 198 Mazzei. Darlene..........198 Mazzei. Mickey............212 Mazzola, Anna.............212 Mazzola. Serafina 198 McBriarty. Patricia......1 67 McCabe, Peter............ 198 McCallen. Howard 1 98 McCarthy. Denise......... 1 67 McCarthy, Kevin..........198 McCarthy. Madelyn .... 166 McCarthy, Patricia 1 98 McCarthy. Susan........... 212 McCombie. Joan.............212 McConnell. David ..... 166 McConnell, Valerie....212 McCormack. William .198 McCormick. Bruce . . . 1 98 McCracken, Beverly 1 98 McCulley. Linda....... 1 98 McCulley. Robert.......... 212 McDermott. Mark........... 212 McDermott. Patricia...212 McDermott. Thomas . . . 1 98 McDonald. Kevin....... 198 McDonnell. David...... 212 McDonnell. Edward . 1 98 McFarland. Shaun ......... 212 McFie. Susan ......... 167 McGowan, Ronald ...... 198 McGuinness. Mary Ann 198 McHugh. William ...... 1 98 McKendrick. Jennie ... 1 98 McLaughlin. Bennett 212 McLaughlin. Bryan 1 67 McLean. John.......... 1 98 McLoughlin. Kathleen . 1 67 McLoughlin. Thomas 212 McMullen, Robin....... 1 67 McNamara, Colleen .........212 McNamara. Scott 1 98 McNicholas. Kathleen ... 166 McSween. Joseph .......... 166 McSweeney. Daniel . .1 67 McSweeney. Patricia 1 98 Meade. Ralph.............. 212 Medaglia. Grace 167 Medaglia. James ...... 1 67 Megow, Keith...............212 Meinkoth. James............212 Meisenhelter. Karen ... 212 Melchoir. David ...... 198 Melchoir. Lee ........ 167 Melkowits. Elaine.....212 Melnick, John............. 198 Melnikov. Daivd..........212 Melnyk. Shirley 1 37 Melton. Michael.......... 1 98 Melton, Robert...........212 Mendelsohn, Brian ....... 1 98 Mendelsohn. Mark ........ 1 66 Menninger, David ........ 198 Meranchik. Dori............212 Meranchik. Sandi...........145 Mercer. John............. 1 66 Meshowski. Elaine........ 167 Metzger. Jeffrey 212 Meyerhoff. Dolores....... 137 Meyerhoff. Jeffrey.......198 Meyers. James..............212 Michalap, Barbara........212 Migliore. Paul ............212 Migliore. Stephen ....... 167 Mihok. Renai............. 1 67 Milazzo. Richard...........212 Milazzo. Robert ......... 167 Miles. Georgeanne .........212 Miles, Lenore ........... 198 Miller. Allyson.......... 1 66 Miller. Beth ............ 198 Miller. Cynthia ......... 198 Miller. Donna ........... 198 Miller. Michael..........166 Miller. Susan............ 1 99 Miller. Cynthia .......... 199 Millian. Nancy............ 167 Mills. Donna ............. 167 Mills. Karen...............212 Millward. Robert 167 Mimnaugh. Lynne..........1 67 Mingin. Gerald .......... 137 Minnehan. Ruth.............212 Mintz. Randy............. 199 MINUTE MAN...................2 Mirenna. Jolene............212 Mironiv. Stacey ......... 199 Misner. Wayne............. 199 MISSISSIPPI RIVER........22 Mitchell. Charles........ 212 Moblilian. Janice........ 1 68 INDEX—245 I ndex Moke. John...............212 Monaco. Louis ...........212 Monaghan, Jerome. . 168 Monchek. Donna......... 1 68 Monchek. Michele....... 1 99 Monday. Barry 212 Monday. Lynn . 168 Monte. Karen ............212 MONUMENT VALLEY. UTAH...................30 Mooney. Dennis ........ 169 Moore. Carol 1 99 Moore. Colin............ 199 Moran. Sharon........... 169 Morgan. Lynne............212 Mormendo. Luann........1 99 Morse. Brian............ 199 Morse. Loren........... 1 68 Mosco. Carol.............212 Moses. Kathleen .........199 MOUNT RUSHMORE 18 Moyer. Kim...............212 Mueller. Louis.......... 199 Muhlberg. Maryann . . 199 Mullen. Jennifer....... 1 99 Muller. Sandra ........ 137 Muller. Susan........... 168 Mulvihill, Glenn ....... 212 Mumford. Shelley ...... 1 99 Munck. Paul ........... 1 99 Munyan. William........ 1 37 Murphy, Janet ......... 1 68 Murphy. Robert.......... 212 Murphy. Shalynn........ 1 99 Murphy. William ....... 1 37 Murray. Anne............ 212 Murray. Daniel ......... 123 Murray. Joann ......... 1 68 Murray. Linda............212 Murray. Robert ..........169 Murray. Stephen ........ 199 Mursky. Leo ............ 169 Mustillo. Conrad ....... 137 Mutarelli. Karen.........212 Myhowich. Elaine ........212 -N- Nacht. Richard ........ 1 99 Naddeo. Susan........... 168 Nahan. Arthur.......... 1 99 Natalicchio. Geriann... 199 Natalicchio. Theresa... 1 68 NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY ..............222 Nau. Michael........... 1 68 Neadle. Jay............. 199 Neff. Cynthia........... 212 Neide. Catherine ....... 137 Neill, Kathleen .........212 Neill. John ............ 168 Neka. Michael............212 Nemes. Robert........... 199 Nenninger. Gregory 212 Nennmger. Virginia . . .169 Nesh. Jamie ............ 169 Nestel. Lee..............212 Newbert. Kerry......... 1 68 Newell. Amy............. 168 NEW YORK CITY 26.256 Nickes. Lisa.............212 Niedzwicki. Jan .........212 Nielsen. Paul 199 Niglio. Kathleen ....... 212 Niglio. Michael......... 199 Nilsen, Larry ......... 199 Nitzberg. James..........212 Noar. Jill...............212 Noshay. David ...........212 Noto. Joseph .......... 1 99 Novak. Paul..............137 Novello. Annmarie 1 68 Nunes. Joan ............... 199 Nutile. Harry ............. 168 -O- O'Brien. Kevin..............212 O'Bryan. Kelly..............169 Obst. Susan.................199 O'Connor. Brian 212 O'Connor. Kathy ........... 199 Odato. Donald .......... 199 Odato. Wayne..............212 Odenheimer. Gwen........ 1 37 Odenheimer. Robert...... 137 Offenburger. Carol........ 1 99 Ogrondnik. Peter 212 O'Hara. Bridgit...........213 OIL OFF-SHORE ...............21 O'Kane. Margaret 169 Okrend, Ellen...............168 Olcsvay. Ethel............ 1 68 Olivero. Richard .......... 168 Ollander. Mark .............213 Olsen. Gregory..............213 Olson. Barbara..............199 Olson. Jennifer.............213 Olszewski. Thomas.......213 Olufsen. Neil.............137 OLYMPIC GAMES...........254 O'Malley. Brain..... 213 O'Neill. William 199 Orban. Robert..............138 Orensky. Todd ........... 1 99 Orlando. Janice..........1 68 Osborne. Robert .......... 138 Ostapiej, Anne ..........213 Ostapiej. Susan ......... 169 Osten. Imelda............ 1 69 O Such. Florence.......... 169 OUR TOWN ................40-41 Owens. Janice............ 1 69 Owen. Michael............ 213 -P- Pagano, Donna............213 Paige. Deborah.............169 Paladini. Lorraine....... 1 69 Palombi. David........... 170 Pancza. Ellen............213 Pandos. William.......... 1 99 Papadinec, Margaret .... 145 Papadinec, Randall....... 170 Papaleo. Ronald.......... 170 Pape. Barbara..............213 Paradise. Joseph.........1 70 Paradise. Kathleen 213 Pardun. Christopher ..... 199 Pardun, Mary Ann......... 1 70 Parillo. Cathy............ 213 Parillo. Ralph............ 213 Park. Wayne ............... 199 Parke. Patrice............ 1 70 Parker. Jodee............. 171 Parkinson. Charles . 171 Parkinson. Gregory........ 171 Parkinson. William 138 Parr. Kathleen 171 Parr. Richard.............. 199 Parreira. Regina ......... 1 99 Pascarella, Rosa .......... 199 Pastor. John 213 Pate. Maureen ............. 199 Patel. Rita................ 199 Patterson. Robert...........213 Patterson. Wendy..........171 Paulus. Ellen...............199 Pawlenko. Katherine 171 Pawson, David............. 199 Pawson, Suzette.............213 Pearl. Donna................213 Pearl, Nancy..............171 Pearlman. Stephanie....... 171 Peger. Edward ..............200 Peger. William ........... 171 Peil. Manfred............. 138 Pellagrino. William....... 1 38 Pellechia, Christopher 171 Pemstein. Ellen.............171 246—INDEX Pento. Karen.................213 Perkins, Cynthia.......... 171 Pen. Andrea .................213 Persing, Sharon...........213 Pesetsky. Jeffrey............170 Pesetsky. Susan..............213 Peter, Linda.............. 170 Petersen, Richard ........ 138 Peterson, Lu Ann 1 70 Peterson. Robert 213 Petke. Rudolph...............200 Petricek, Gail............ 1 38 Petruska. Diane...........213 Petry, Elizabeth.......... 1 70 Petry, Ella..................213 Petrzilka. Diane 1 70 Pfeifer, Carol...............200 Phelps. Charles..............200 Phillips, Anthony............200 PHILOSOPHY CLUB 227 Piasecki. Nancy..............213 Pich. John ................. 170 Pickens. Elizabeth 213 Pienciak. Elizabeth.......213 Pienciak, Walter.......... 171 Pikul. Paula.................171 Pikul. Timothy.............. 213 Piller. Glenn................213 Pinfield. George ........... 138 Pinizzotto. Carole...........213 Pippi, Diana.................213 Pippi. Lisa................. 171 Pisano. Francis...........171 Plichta. Michael ............213 Plotz, Dorothy.............. 138 Plotz, Michael............1 70 Podeszwa. Theresa............213 Pogroszewski. Michael 200 Pohl, Garry..................200 Polansky. Margaret 200 Polcari, Anthony ........... 170 Polcari. Meryl...............213 Polefka. Craig ..............213 Pollack. Thomas..............213 Pollina, Joseph............. 170 Pollock, Andie ..............145 Pollock, Deborah............ 170 Pontieri, Anthony............200 Poole. Mary Ann..............200 Popiak. Rick.................213 Poplawski. Raymond 1 70 Popovich. Doris 200 Popsuy. Peter................213 PORTLAND HEAD LIGHT. MAINE .....................10 Poskaitis. Anna .......... 138 Potts. Susan.................213 Powell. Robert 213 Pozsonyi, Richard............213 Pressler. Richard ...........200 Preville. Linda..............213 Pribila. Betty 213 Price. David.................200 Prigge, John ............... 213 Prigge. Patricia 200 PRINCE PHILIP................253 Prinzo. Joan ................200 Prus. Raissa ............. 170 Prus. Verne.................1 38 Prusik. Matthew .......... 138 Psyhojos. Emanuel 214 Psyhojos. George ............214 Puccio. Anthony............. 171 Puccio. Rosanne 200 Punturno. Karen............. 171 -Q- QUEEN ELIZABETH II 253 -R- Racz. George............ 1 38 Racz. Kim...............200 Rader. Robbin........... 200 Radionoff. Serge..........214 Radogna. Suzanne ........ 200 Rakos. Kathleen.......... 214 Rakos. Patricia...........214 Rakow, Anita ............ 214 Ralston. Patricia....... 171 Ramirez. Eduardo 200 Ramsen. Debra ............214 Rand, Jody .............. 214 Randall, Stacy............200 Rapolla. Kim .............200 Raskin. Randy .......... 171 Rau, Richard............. 214 Rautenberg. Amy ......... 214 Rauer, Sandra............ 214 Ray. John............... 172 Rayman. Nancy........... 200 Razzano. Susan 214 Read. Shirley 1 38 Reale. Denise........... 172 Reardon. Caryl ......... 172 Reardon. Diane 200 Reardon. Donald ..........214 Rebele. Mary .............214 Rebele, Rosemarie ........200 Reddy. Michele .........172 Redfield, Bruce.........214 Redfield, Robyn ........214 Redman. Steven .........138 Regalado. Sonia......... 141 Regen. Chester........... 200 Regiec, David 200 Reich. Daniel.............214 Reich, Debra ............ 173 Reid. Kenneth............ 173 Reid. Russell.............214 Retff. Charles............200 Rieff, Daniel.............214 Reimbold. Patricia...... 1 73 Rella. Annette........... 172 Rennick. Norbert..........123 Resko. Mary 145 Reuter, Barbara ..........200 Reuter, Eric ............ 172 Revelj. Allison ..........200 Riback. Jay ............. 214 Ricci, Anne ..............200 Riccio, Roberta 214 Richvalsky. Bernadette 141 Riddick. Renee........... 172 Riddleberger. Eric 214 Riddleberger. Paul....... 172 Riegler. Richard..........214 Riepl. Timothy ...........214 Risley, Roy...............141 Rittman, Sharon 200 Robba. Steven............ 214 Roberts. Mark............ 173 Roberts. Susan............214 Roberts. Yvonne ......... 173 Robins, Marci 214 Robinson, Brian 214 Robinson. Richard 173 Robinson, William 200 Rodman. Michael ......... 200 Rodriguez, George ........214 Rodriquez. Lourdes......200 Roedelbronn. Charles . 214 Roehrig. Bruce............172 Roehrig. Darren ..........214 Rogers. Lloyd............ 141 Rogers. Michael ..........214 Rogers. Thomas....... . 214 Rohal. Michael .......... 172 Rolfe. John ..............214 Roman. Thomas .......... 172 Romano. Karen 172 Romano. Kenneth...........214 Romano. Lisa............. 173 Romatowski. Helen 214 Romero. Paul . 214 Romer. Sandra.............214 Ronchi. Doreen 200 Rone. Diane.............. 173 Rosa. Eugene............. 173 Rosell. Mark 214 Rosen. Richard..........1 72 Rosenberg. Mari ........ 172 Rosenfeld. Robin..........214 Rosenstein, Robyn.......214 Rosenthal. Donna........ 172 Ross. Richard.............200 Rossi. Robert ............214 Roth. Gregory.............214 Roth. Helene............ 172 Roth. Lisa............... 173 Roth. Margaret........... 173 Rothman, Christopher . 214 Rothman. Mark............ 173 ROUTE 18...................10 Roy. Lisa .. 214 Roynestad. Janet 214 Rozycki. Michael .........200 Rubin. Jill...............214 Rubin. Kenneth . .. 214 Rubine. Dean .............214 Ruby. Anne.............. 172 Ruch, Elizabeth...........200 Ruch. Sara 1 72 Ruchlin. Debra............200 Rudders. Deborah......... 200 Rudnitsky. George 200 Ruffe. Catherine..........200 Ruffe. Robert ........... 214 Ruff ley. Kevin 214 Ruffley. Michael......... 172 Rullo. Iris ............. 200 Rullo, Salvatore......... 214 Rummel, Shari 201 Rummel. Steven 1 72 Rupert. Kenneth.......... 214 Rupp. Kathleen 173 Rusch. Lauralynne....... 173 RUSSIAN FISHING SHIP 19 Russo. Frank............201 Ryan. Bonnie..............214 Ryan. Denise..............214 Ryan. Dennis ........... 173 Ryan. Doreen..............214 Ryan. Edward............. 173 Ryer. Bradley ..........173 Ryer. Jill................214 Rynk, Donna............. 201 Rypisi. Joseph............214 -S- Sabo. Kimberly........... 173 Sacalis. Jill.............214 Sackman, Stuart 201 Sacks. Sandra 174 Sadler. Lilibeth .........214 Sadofsky, Robert 174 Salkowicz. Pat 214 Saltzman. Martin..........214 Salzmann, Leona.......... 141 Sanders. Carole ..........201 Sanders. Larry........... 174 Sanders. Patricia 201 Sanford. Nicholas 214 Sanford. Robert...........201 Santerre. Geraldine .... 174 Santo, Susan ............ 201 Santora. Grace............201 Santoro. Jenny........... 201 Santos, Lucy .. 174 Sarnoff. Jill ........... 174 Sarcone. Frank 214 Sarnak. David ..........201 Saul. Amy ............... 175 Saul. Gregory 214 Saul. Jacque..............201 Saul. Jerry.............. 175 Saunders. Donald..........201 S A V E-TH E-C HILD R E N CLUB...................223 Savino. Lynn..............215 Savlov. Cynthia ......... 201 Saxon. Sharon ............215 Index Scalia. Richard ......... 175 Scalzone. Jill............201 Scardino. Jean ...........201 Scarpa. Maria.............215 Scarfenstein. Gail...... 201 Schalhoub. Robert 175 Schatz. Caryn ............215 Schankler, Margaret...... 174 Schechter. Bruce......... 201 Schenck. Dorrian........1 74 Scherer, Jeanne...........201 Scherer. Kevin .......... 201 Schibinger. John......... 215 Schiffman. Jason......... 215 Schiffman, Steven.........215 Schiller. Teresa........ 1 75 Schindler. Carrie.........201 Schindler. Kathleen..... 201 Schlichting. Linda ...... 175 Schmidt. Gretchen ....... 201 Schmidt. Terrie...........215 Schmutz. Christopher 201 Schneider. Richard ...... 175 Schoenthaler, John........215 Schoenthaler. Lorraine 123 Schornstein, Robin........... 215 Schubert. Gary............215 Shubert. Karen............201 Schuckman. Lori ......... 215 Schultz, Darlene......... 175 Schultz, Shawn ...........215 Schulz. Richard 174 Schwarcz. Daniel..........201 Schwartz. Karen 201 Schwartz. Michael........ 201 Schwartz. Sandi.......... 174 Schwartzer. Joseph 215 Schwartzman. Vikki .215 Schwarz. Calvin...........201 Schweitzer. John......... 215 Schweitzer. Susan 175 Scilla. Rebecca.......... 215 Scoles, Louise.......... 1 45 Scoles. Michael ......... 175 Scott. Karen ............ 175 Scott. Robert............ 141 Seidenberg. Catherine 201 Seidman. Mitchell.........215 Sello. Ronnie............ 175 Selvaggio. Mary 174 Semchenko. Cynthia 174 SENIOR CLASS: AWARDS................60-61 OFFICERS .............. 220 PROM..................58-59 VARIETY SHOW 44-45 Seppi. Linda..............201 Serencses. Mary Ann 175 Serhus. Theresa 175 Serjeant. Theresa 215 Servis, Christopher 175 Servis. Scott ........... 175 Sesser. Andrew............215 Sewell. Thomas............215 Sexton. Michael............174 Sexton. Shawn ............215 Shafer, Alan 201 Shafer, John 174 Shames. Carrie............215 Shamy. Linli.............. 201 Shanko. Susan 201 Shanley. Karen........... 175 Shapanka. Glenn........... 175 Shapiro, Andrew 215 Sharmila. Deb 215 Sheehan. Heather 201 Sheerin, Laurie 175 Sheerin. Matthew..........215 Sheerin. Raymond..........215 Shemitz. Howard............175 INDEX—247 Index Sheridan. Cynthia ......215 Sheridan. Michael ......201 Sherman. Howard.........215 Sherwood. Beth..........215 Shiber. Darlene.........176 Shifman. Libby..........176 Shipers. William........201 Shladovsky. David 215 Shladovsky. Gil ........201 Shugart. Bruce.......... 176 Shugart, Bradford 215 Shuhala. Ellen ......... 176 Shumski. Kenneth........ 177 Siebels. Harriet........ 141 Siebern. Peggy..........215 Siegel. Jeffrey.........215 Siegel. Lisa............ 1 77 Siegel. Staci...........215 Sierotko. Susan ........215 Sietz. Patricia ........ 177 Silfies. Lisa...........215 Silver. Scott...........201 Silverstein. Jesse......215 Silverstein. Mark 215 Simha. Ellen ...........201 Simon. Albert .......... 122 Simon. Judy ............201 Simpson. Charlotte......215 Simpson. Robert ........ 141 Sinai. Gail............. 215 Singer. Ethan ..........215 Skarzynski. Bernard ....201 Skirka. Linda........... 201 Skislak. James 177 Sklar. Stuart .......... 177 Skold. William.......... 201 SLAYTON. ASTRONAUT DONALD K.................9 Sliwinski. Susan ........ 201 Sliwinski. Robert....... 1 77 Sloane. Elizabeth........ 201 Slorance, Kendall.........215 Smilow. Peri .............215 Smith. Albert 215 Smith. David............201 Smith. George ..........216 Smith. Geraldine........ 1 76 Smith. Minda ...........201 Smith. Stephen .........216 Smith. Tracy............201 Sneden. Catherine.........201 Sneden, Michael ......... 176 Sniffen. Charles..........176 Snyder. Carrie 216 Snyder. Heidi ........... 176 SOCCER. JAYVEE 70-71 SOCCER. SOPHOMORE............ 70-71 SOCCER. VARSITY .. 68-71 Socha, Donna............. 176 SOFTBALL ............ 104-105 Sokolowsky. David.........201 Sokolowsky. William 1 76 Solacha. Alice..........201 Solacha. Mary...........201 Solomon. Mark ........... 176 Solomon, Sharon.........201 Solomos. Jill...........216 Solowey. Howard ........201 Solowey. Jacqueline 176 Sorber. Janet ..........201 Sorrentino. Richard...... 176 Soto. Vincent ............216 South. Timothy .........201 Spadafino. Michael........141 SPAN ISH HONOR SOCIETY .................224 Sparrow. Laura............216 Spatafora. Joanne........ 176 Speizer. Donna .1 76 Speizer. Lori.............216 Spencer. Dana ............216 Spezio. Myra..............201 Spiegel. Lisa 216 Spills. Jules............. 1 76 Spinoso. Lynn.............216 Spishock, Cynthia......... 1 77 Spitzer. Janice ........... 177 Springer, Jeff ...........216 Springer. Linda............ 177 Spivack. Michelle.........201 Stack. Jay ...............201 Staff a. James............216 Stafford. Glenn...........216 Staloff. Edmond........... 1 77 Stankiewicz. Henry........ 141 Stanton. Arthur ..........201 Stary. Kenneth..............216 Steffich. Cindy ............201 Steiger. Susan ............ 177 Steigerwald. Greta .......201 Stein. Janet..............201 Steinberg. David .......... 202 Steinberg. Gary .......... 216 Steinert, David............ 177 Steinert. Gary..............216 Stempel. Barry............ 176 Sterbakov. Max..............216 Stern. Howard.............. 176 Stern. Kenneth..............216 Stern berger, Amy ..........202 Sternberger, Rhonda . 216 Stine. Louise...............202 Stiteler. Stephen ..........202 Stofman. Daniel............ 176 Stone. Leslie ............. 202 Stott. Ronald.............. 216 Stout. David ............. 141 Strauss, Michael ...........216 Striednig. John........... 1 76 Strobel. Heike............ 1 77 Strokus. Gwendolyn........216 Stromenger. Michelle . . . 216 Stryker. Deborah ...........216 Stryker. Nelson............ 177 STUDENT UNION ............. 220 Stupay. Michael........... 1 77 Stupay. Sharon .............216 Stypolkowski. Mary Lou 202 Sudall. Karen...............216 Sullivan. Bonnie............216 Sullivan. Jane .............202 Sullivan. Robert .......... 141 Sumner. Kimberly............202 Sundt. Andrew............. 1 77 Surowiec, Josephy.........216 Susik. Daniel.............. 177 Sussman, Joy.............. 1 77 Swanson, Victoria...........216 Sweeney. Dr. Joseph J. . 123 Swensen, Barbara 216 Swidler. Arthur.............202 SWIMMING..................98-99 Switlyk. Michael ...........202 SYMPHONY..................46-47 Sypniewski, William.......202 Syrokwash, Joanne ......... 178 Syvertsen, Monique 216 Syzdek. Alan................216 Szabo. Theresa............. 178 Szafasz. Lorri 179 Szajko. Christine ......... 179 Szarka, Ella .............. 141 Szilard, lldiko.............202 Szilard, Olga ..............216 Szilard, Peter............. 179 -T- Tabor. Linda ...............202 Tadrick. Nadine ........... 179 Tagerty. Michael ...........202 Takacs. Marianne..........141 TALL SHIPS..................250 Tarantino. John.............202 Tarrant. Erin...............216 Tartanella. Frank ...... 178 Tarullo. Renee............202 Tarullo. Robert...........216 Tasseff. Cynthia 1 78 Tasseff. Chris ...........216 Taub, Arden.............202 Taub. Joshua ........... 1 79 Taubenslag. Elliott...... 141 Taureck. Warren...........202 Taylor. Clifford 1 42 Taylor. Debra .......... 179 Teitelbaum. Suzanne . . . 216 Temple, Jeffrey...........202 TENNIS 110-113 Teusch, Cynthia...........202 Thau. Helene............. 216 Theophilakos. Velma .1 79 Thomas. Arthur ...........202 Thompson, Darrell.........216 Thompson. Debra ......... 179 Thompson. Gregg...........216 Thompson. Janet...........178 Thompson. John............202 Thompson. Sandra........202 Tighe. William............202 Tighe. William D 142 Timper. Jayne............ 216 Tinsman. Doreen......... 1 78 Tinsman. Timothy..........216 Tischhauser. Thomas .1 79 Tobasco. Lisa ............216 Tobasco. Peter........... 179 Todoroff. Alexander 202 Tomchuk. Douglas..........216 Tomchuk. Gary........... 1 79 Tomchuk. Sharon ..........202 Tommy. Robert ............216 Tommy. Stanley............217 Toner, Julie ............ 202 Toner. Patricia...........217 Toplinsky. Valentin ..... 142 Topoleski. Raymond 1 42 Toraitis. Joan ...........202 Tornabene. Donna......... 179 Tort ora, Jeffrey.........202 Toth. Adrian .............217 Toth. Alexander...........202 Toth. Deborah............ 178 Toth. Kathleen ...........217 Toth. Margaret........... 178 Toto. Michael ........... 179 Toto. Thomas..............217 TRACK. BOYS........ 114-117 TRACK. GIRLS .... 118-119 TRACK. WINTER 94-97 Traficante. Janet ........202 Trautwein. Edward.........202 Tautwein. Marianne 1 79 Triozzi. Rosalie......... 142 Trisiano. Dominique...... 179 Trisiano, Laura ..........217 Troger, Kim........ 1 79 Troicki. Nina ............202 Tromp. Tina...............202 Troncoso. Gisela 178 Trostle. Amy..............217 Trostle. Linda ...........217 Trotter. Susan........... 217 Truitt. Raymond.......... 178 Trupkiewicz, Anne....... 1 79 Trupkiewicz, John.........217 Trzaska. Michael 179 Tschoepe. David ..........202 TULLERIDE. COLORADO 6 Turi. Brian ............. 179 Turi. Christopher ...... 1 79 Turi, Gemma...............217 Turi. Julie...............217 Turi. Sheila............. 217 Turkowitz. Susan..........217 Turner, David ............217 Tuttle. John..............202 Twaddell. Kathryn....... 1 80 Twaddell. Sharon .........217 TWIRLERS .................232 Twomey. Teresa .......... 202 Tyler. David..............217 -U- Umpleby. Allison 1 8C UNEMPLOYMENT. 18 Updegraff. William ... 202 Urowsky. Steven...........202 -V- Vaillancourt. Paul........217 VanDeursen. Diane.......202 VanNess. James 202 VanVorst. Michelle . 202 VanWagner, Pamela 1 80 VanWagner. Robert 122 Varga. James 202 Vash, Arthur .............202 Vastardis. James..........203 Vecchiarelli. Marie.......217 Velsor. Stephen 203 Verbitski. Peter......... 180 Verbitski. Sara ..........217 Verderosa. David 217 Vereb. Joanne............ 142 Vergilio, Eleanor........ 142 Vergos, Aristotle 142 Veverka. Craig .......... 203 Vidal. Grace............ 1 80 Vigneault, Patricia 203 Vitale. Sandra............203 Vitello. Michele..........217 Vizneau. Anita..........1 80 Vlachakis. Christos 180 Vocolo. Anthony ..........142 Vogel, Roger .............217 Vogt. Betty...............203 Vojir. Susan..............217 Volinski. John............203 Volz. Beth Anne...........217 VonDeesten. Mark 203 Voorhees. Teri............203 Voyna, Eileen ............203 -W- Wadsworth. Jeanne 1 80 Wahler. Kenneth ..........217 Wait. Paul .............. 180 Wald. Susan ..............203 Walker, Robin.............203 Walker. Russell ......... 122 Walsh. Brian ............ 203 Walsh, Dennis.............217 Walsh, Jeremiah ......... 180 Walsifer. Karen.........1 80 Wang. Annie ............. 203 Wans. Eileen............ 142 Wardrop, Kathleen ....... 203 Warfield. Robert..........217 Warman. Stephen.........203 Warwick. Robert......... 142 Wasylyk. Gary........... 1 80 Watson. Catherine ........217 Watt, Terry...............203 Waxman. Renee . 203 Weatherford. Heidi .......203 Weber. John.............. 203 Weber. Madeline.......... 203 Weber. Scott ............ 217 Webster, Lynn ........... 181 Webster. Nancy 217 Weckesser. Gerard ....... 217 Weckenmann. Rita........ 217 Weckstein. Jodi...........203 Wehrenberg. Donald . .. . 217 Weigel. William ......... 142 Weinman. Reid.............203 Weinstein. Lee .......... 217 Weinstein. Steven........ 181 Weis, James.............. 203 Weisenbach. Eric......... 181 Weisfled. Ronald..........217 248—INDEX Weiss. Michael........... 217 Wengrzynek. Judith ......203 Werber. Michelle.........217 Wertheim, Howard......... 181 Wertheim. Mark........... 217 Weston. Edward .......... 142 Wexler. Jodi ............ 181 White. Christopher ......203 White. Dianne............203 Whitlock. Michelle.......217 Whitlock, Suzanne .......203 Whitman. Dine............217 Whittingslow. Steven . . 203 Whittingslow. Thomas . . 181 Wieder. Donald .......... 142 Wiener. Jill.............. 180 Wilbur. Anita ........... 1 80 Wilkens. Katherine ......217 Williams. Cheryl.........217 Williams. David .......... 180 Williams. Judy Ann . . 180 Williams. Kathleen ...... 181 Williamson. William . . . 142 Williscroft. Robin.......217 Wilson, Daniel .......... 181 Wilson, Janet............181 Winch, Linda............. 181 Winston, Dayna...........203 Winter, Keith............217 Winter. Wade............ 181 Winters. Robert......... 217 Wisniewski. Maryellen . 203 Witt. Brenda............ 123 Witt. Cheryl.............217 Wittenberg. Sue..........217 Wohl, David .............217 Wojiechowski, John.....217 Wojno. Leon..............181 Wolf. Debra............. 217 Wolfe. Ann............. 1 80 Wolff. Cynthia 180 Wolfgang. Joseph.........217 Wolfslayer. Chris.......1 80 Wollmann. Mary ......... 180 Wong. Tom................203 Wong, Wilson.............217 Wood. David..............217 WORLD SERIES..............15 Woronoff. Michael .......217 Wray. Lori ............. 181 WRESTLING. JAYVEE .... 93 WRESTLING. VARSITY.......... 90-93 Wright. Brian........... 181 Wruble, Joseph 203 Wulster. Breann......... 203 Wulster. Gregory........ 181 Wyckoff. Dale........... 181 -XYZ- Yacovelli. Eileen........181 Yacovelli. Ralph ........217 Yanetti. Vincent ........ 142 Yatauro. Dean 203 Yellin, Lawrence.......... 217 Yetman. Robert ..........203 Yien, Franklin .......... 217 Yingling. William ....... 181 York. Sandra...............203 Young. Deborah........... 1 82 Young. Miriam............ 1 82 Young. Robert ............ 217 Youngerman, Steven 203 Yrshus. Cindy .............217 Yuhas, Anthony 1 42 Yuhas. Katherine 203 Yusko. Lisa ............. 182 Zahs. Gregory..............203 Zajac. Jeffrey.............203 Zaki. Hani............... 182 Zaki. Mark............... 182 Zalenski. Deborah .........217 Zaleski. Mary..............217 Zalinsky. Robert 203 Zambrovitz. Mark 182 Zangara. Carolyn......... 182 Zastocki. Gary............203 Zavetz. Craig............. 203 Zavoda. Joseph ............ 203 Zdatny. Jon...............203 Zeck. Daniel..............203 Zeidwerg. David...........203 Zelenak. Gregory............217 Zelenak. Jonathan...........203 Zelnick. Deborah .......... 217 Zerman. Amy.................203 Zielinski. Arlene 142 Ziemski. Gary ............. 182 Ziemski, Shelley........... 203 Zierdt. Donald............ 182 Zikmanis. Lolita ......... 182 Zikmanis. Mara............203 Ziment. Patricia .......... 203 Zimmerman. Mary............ 203 Zinchuk, Ann.............. 1 82 Zinevich. Kathleen 203 Zogbaum. Kevin............. 182 Zogg. Denver .............203 Zohovetz. Marion 1 45 Zucker. Ellen.............217 Zucker, Lori ............. 182 Zwolinski. Robert ........ 217 Zytynski. Joseph ......... 203 INDEX—249 Happy birthday, America Hardly had school ended in June than the Fourth of July was upon us. And. it being the Bicentennial year, an especially glorious Fourth it was. We seemed to be where the most spectacular celebration of all took place. The tall ships came to New York harbor to participate in OpSail and the International Naval Review. We were part of the crowd of seven million who lined the shores of the harbor and the Hud- son River to watch the square- rigged sailing vessels pass in state- ly procession, while cannon from the warships of many nations boomed in salute. Who can forget the fireworks, the bands, the displays of Americana at the fair grounds? Many of us spent the day glued to TV, watching as the networks roamed the country to bring us highlights of the birth- day party across the land. After the turmoil and division of the Vietnam War era. it was pure joy to see such unmitigated patriotism. The mind's eye lingers over such sights as the thousands of young people waving flags and cheering as Arthur Fielder led the Boston Pops in Stars and Strips Forever. SUMMER OF '76—251 When the livin' is easy The Bicentennial party continued after the Fourth of July. We were on hand when Queen Elizabeth II arrived in Philadelphia on the royal yacht Britannia to present to the American people the Bicentennial Bell, a gift from the government of Great Britain, and later in the week when she visited New York City. In between, we swam, picnicked, rode the rides at Great Adventure and the shore amusement parks. Some of us worked, but mostly we took it easy, storing up warm- weather memories that would help sustain us through the cold months of winter that were coming too soon. Peppermint Patty in the Peanuts cartoon strip said it: Summer flies, but winter walks. 252—SUMMER OF '76 SUMMER OF '76—253 254—SUMMER OF '76 The greatest show on earth Our memories of the summer of '76 were made all the more vivid by the Olympic Games in nearby Montreal, the Democratic National Convention in New York and the Republican get-together out in Kansas City, and the county fair. It was one spectacular after another. The mind is a blur of names and events: Nadia Comaneci getting perfect 10's as she twisted, spun, and soared to gold medals in gym- nastics; Bruce Jenner setting a new decathlon record while fans waved a record-sized American flag in the stands; John Naber swimming to gold for the US men. Jimmy Carter winning the Democratic nomination and then naming Walter F. Mondale as his running mate; President Ford squeaking past challenger Ronald Reagan for the GOP nod and then picking Robert Dole to fill the ticket. Cotton candy, rides, games, and exhibits at a saw-dust covered fairground. All part of an exciting year, with you smack in the middle of it. SUMMER OF '76—255 I I . . ♦ 't VA-BOOM! Fireworks explode over the Statue of Liberty in New York harbor in a spectacular finish to the area's Bicentennial celebration. It was the best birthday party we ever had and you were part of it. This edition of Emerald was printed and bound by Inter Collegiate Press, Inc., Shawnee Mission, Kansas, who also manufactured the cover. Cover photograph was provided by Wide World Photos. New York City. The paper is 80-pound dull coat enamel stock, manufactured by S. D. Warren Company. Boston, Massachusetts. The book is Smythe-sewn, rounded, and back- ed. Basic type style is Univers wide. Text is set in 10-point, captions and identifications are in 8-point. Special headings were set by the staff, using Formatt transfer type made by Graphic Products, Corp. Rolling Meadows, Illinois. Fonts used included Friar for Activities, Diplomat Bold for Athletics, Caslon Antique for Academics, and Mistral for the mini-essays in the Senior Section. The official yearbook photographer was Lorstan-Thomas Studios, Union, New Jersey. News photographs used in the opening and closing sections were by Wide World Photos. Additional candid photography and group photos were taken by David Zeidwerg. Joseph Baldesweiler. and Mr. William G. Munyan. of the year- book staff. Special thanks are extended to: Dr. Larry Ashley, whose enthusiastic support and en- couragement was like money in the bank . . . Russ Robinson of Inter Collegia Press for his assistance in easir our move to a new publisher, ar for sending us Don Quigley, who taught us what to ask for . . . Frank Merin, of Lorstan-Thomas whom we welcome back to the Emerald family . . . Miss Nancy Patterson,of Roanoke. Virginia for the buckeye the 1 903 Bobcat, and the Velve teen Rabbit . . . Jim, for taking extra good care the office for us . . . Everyone at EBHS for being such good copy. 256—COLOPHON


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