High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 29 text:
“
QlaAA WiAJbAJL} Timid and somewhat fearful of what lay before us in the next six years, we entered the seventh grade of Everett Southern High School in 1960. As we scurried from class to class, we learned to accept the upper classmen as our friends and the fact that there were no more recesses. We entered the eighth grade with a little more confidence, having survived a full year of high school life. We began to participate in the school activities and form the friendships which would last us the rest of our high school career. Time passed, and the next year we were given the title of Freshmen. As such, we received the right to choose our course of study for the future years and became thoroughly settled in high school life. With our fourth, and in many respects our most difficult year, we became Senior High. It was a year composed of a variety of activities—from madly studying World Cultures to listening to a new group, the Beatles. We undertook the selling of candles, our first project, to build our treasury for our senior trip, which was now not too many years away. As our sophomore year was our hardest year, our junior year was the busiest. Practicing long hours for the Variety Show (the best yet), selling Christmas cards on Saturdays, and unwinding miles of crepe paper for the Prom kept us occupied in our spare time. The climax of the year was the arrival of the class rings for which we had worked hard and waited impatiently. With our successful magazine sales behind us, we are now in the midst of our senior year and are eagerly awaiting the class play and our trip to Washington, D.C. Also, we look forward to the remainder of the year and the association with the faculty, whom we have come to know and appreciate throughout our high school years. These six years have all but passed, we are the first class to be graduated in the second decade of the “new high school and the last class to refer to our Alma Mater as Everett Southern High School. Next year the school will have a new name, but the memories of the time spent here can never be erased. —James Barndollar and Terry Edwards Twenty Five
”
Page 28 text:
“
QIoaa oft 7966 JAMES FOOR President CLASS OFFICERS GERALD ROBINETTE Vice President BARBARA STUCKEY Secretary MONA BROWELL Treasurer Motto: KNOWLEDGE IS OUR PATH; GOD IS OUR LIGHT. Colors: RED AND WHITE Flower: CARNATION ADVISERS MISS CULLEN MRS. BARNDOLLAR MISS DREXLER MR. KENNEDY Twenty Four
”
Page 30 text:
“
Smuoaa RETA AKERS ROBERT BAKER BARRY BARKMAN RICHARD BARNDOLLAR DANIEL BENNETT RETA ANN AKERS Rcta August 31 Reta's ambition is to become an elementary teacher. Her favorite subject is health, while her dislikes are people who talk a lot. Although her favorite possession is her Candy Stripers cap, she also enjoys reading, playing the piano, and skating. Reta was active in band, G.A.A., Spanish Club, Caduceus Club, and chorus. Her bequest: Her fun in school to her sister Jeanne. ROBERT E. BAKER Bob February 3 Guess whose dislike is Fords and favorite class is math? That's right! It's Bob, one of our commercial students who enjoys football, baseball, and roller skating. His favorite possession is his car, and the color red rates high on his list of likes. Football and Gym Club have kept him busy. Bob was honored by being on the Football King's Court. His ambition is to attend a business school. His bequest: His seat in shorthand to a certain girl. BARRY ROBERT BARKMAN Barry September 13 This future dairy farmer enjoys hunting, skating, and fishing. A tall lad with black hair and brown eyes, Barry enjoys health class but is dismayed at the thought of P.O.D. His favorite possession is his '60 blue Dodge. Barry's activities included Junior Science Club, chorus, and F.F.A. His bequest: His shooting ability to his brother Bill. RICHARD JAMES BARNDOLLAR Jim April 18 This five-foot-ten blond wrestler can be seen in Room 114 preparing, by means of shaky experiments, for a future in chemistry. We wonder whether he will take his favorite possession, a shrunken head, to the college campus with him. Jim's pet peeves are history and asparagus, and his favorite class is physics. Along with reading and Japanese culture as his hobbies, he loves to debate and to participate in politics for the teen-age set. Besides wrestling, his extra-curricular activities include track. Press Club. Junior Variety Show, Gym Club, and the Warrior staff. He was elected to the National Honor Society as a Junior and was on the court for the Varsity Drag as a Senior. At home football games this year, he could also be heard as an announcer. His bequest: His hunting ability to Mike King. DANIEL ALLEN BENNETT Hobc November 19 Hobe, our brown-eyed industrial arts major, enjoys hunting, fishing, and archery. His favorite possession is a '38 Chevy sedan. P.O.D. is his dislike, while health is his best-liked subject. Next year Danny intends to work in Washington, D. C., but his real ambition is to become an engineer. Wrestling rates high with him — he devoted four years to the squad. His bequest: The keys to his car to Rodney Mearkle. Twenty Six
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.