Everett High School - Crimson Tide / Memories Yearbook (Everett, MA) - Class of 1972 Page 1 of 208
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A Conservation About School School makes me so tired. Not just school, but homework too. No, maybe it ' s not school, but school is always the place where I ' m so tired because I do much other stuff. It ' s hard to be a good person when you ' re tired-when I ' m tired I get really self-centered and grumpy. People say I should stop doing all the other stuff I do and pay more attention to school. If I did, I ' d go crazy because I wouldn ' t have anything that meant anything to me any more- because school sure doesn ' t. My world at school really frustrates me- it ' s the hardest place I know of to live in. There ' s almost nothing there that really matters to me. There ' s noth¬ ing that touches me enough to make me want to do it. On top of this, it ' s sup¬ posed to be the center of my life. I ' m called a student; therefore, I suppose life at school should mean something to me, but it doesn ' t. There ' s nothing I ever wanted to get away from more than school. The classes, the tests, and the rules all seem so meaningless to me. I know this sounds like a lot of rhetoric, so I guess I should back it up with something. First, I have to think of what does matter to me. My friends, mostly, and the good times we have. By good times I mean our lives together, our love for one another. These words seem awfully out-of-place, or even grown-up, but I don ' t think they really are. You can learn to love anything, and I wish school had more to do with that. Anyway, the most important thing I ' ve learned in school is how to love-- how to value people and understand them. I guess I don ' t care much for the academic side, because it hasn ' t taught me that. Actually, most of what the academic world has taught me, I either never learned or just forgot. I ' ve had all this math and science and literature, and it doesn ' t seem to get me anywhere. I ' m not really sure if I know any of it, be¬ cause I never used it. What good is something I don ' t use? All the formulas I learned were good for passing tests. Is that worth it? I wish the things I have to study were worth something to me. I think we kid ourselves into thinking we ' re doing ourselves a favor by forcing ourselves to learn all that math and science. Some people tell me it ' ll help me understand the world better, but nobody ' s ever taught me how to understand--they ' ve only taught me things to understand. One of the hardest things to do in school is think! I mean really think. If I want to think of myself, or something really important to me, I ' m distracted. Formulas and figures, yes-but really learning something has to wait. But ideas die if you make them wait. A friend calls it getting sucked in. You feel like you ' ve just come out of a hole or a cage and you must get going and do what you want to do, but you get sucked back in again and all of the enthusiasm is gone. I hate it when that happens. I feel all dead inside. I feel like I ' ve given up something I shouldn ' t have. Sometimes, too, I feel like I just can ' t penetrate into an idea enough. I was reading a book the other day and the words the human condition came up. I wanted to figure out what it was, but I couldn ' t think. I really wanted to know. But I couldn ' t grasp it. I just didn ' t know how. It ' s like picking up a musical in¬ strument right after you ' ve heard a really good song, and you want to play it, but you can ' t because you just don ' t know how. It ' s frustrating. I wonder if all the stuff I ' ve learned is any good at all. I just wish they ' d taught me how to think. When I say learning to think , I guess it sounds kind of ambigous. It ' s hard to describe what thinking is, or what I mean by learning to think. I tried to describe it before, but I ' m still not sure I got it all across. A lot of people assume that anyone can think. I wonder. Thinking is like seeing both sides of an issue. That ' s hard to do. You see, when you ' re a kid, things can get pretty confusing. Right and wrong. Good and bad. All get confused, and you ' re never sure which is which. When you ' re unsure, both sides seem just as good or just as bad. That way, not knowing anything is good--you never have to hurt anybody ' s feelings by tell¬ ing him he ' s bad. But when I say that, people say that I ' m supposed to be strong and hurt him because he ' s bad But who says he ' s bad? Maybe he ' s wrong, maybe he ' s made a mistake, but why tell him he ' s bad? There ' s nothing bad about a mistake. It ' s human! If you call some¬ body bad, he starts to believe you and thinks he can ' t be a good friend for any¬ body. Then he ' s in trouble. But we still call people bad anyway. 2 Take sex. (That sure is one thing school hasn ' t taught me anything about!) Suppose a guy and a girl want to make out and fool around. Whom are they hurting? Are they making a mistake? Some people think they are. I ' m not really sure. But anyway, in¬ stead of just telling them that they ' ve made a mistake, we go and tell them they ' re bad and evil and sinful and all of that. They get bawled out and everyone gets all flustered. Why? Why can ' t we just sit down calmly and try to talk to them and see whether or not they ' re doing the right thing? Instead of that, they get blasted for being bad, and worse than that, they believe it and start to think that they are really bad. I brought this up because it happens so much in school. When a kid gets a problem right, he ' s a good boy. If he does not, he ' s a bad boy. Why is he bad? What ' s wrong with a mistake? Why does one kid have to suffer so that another kid can get a high mark? People talk to me about love and understanding, and then I see kids worried sick because their marks aren ' t good, or they couldn ' t get a right ans¬ wer. It seems as though the teacher can not take enough time to understand a kid. He only has to give the kid a mark on a piece of paper. I wish I could be friends with more of the teachers, but school work always get in the way. I ' ve heard that school is supposed to prepare me for life. Are the quadratic equations and the proper tenses of a French verb teaching me how to love? After all, the most important thing in life is learning to love, isn ' t it? If it isn ' t I ' m sure I ' ll be leaving soon. My schoolwork doesn ' t prepare me to love and understand my friends. I ' ve learned more about helping people from the science fiction I ' ve read than the things I ' ve learned in school. I just read over the stuff I ' ve written and I guess I ' m being a little one-sided. I hate it when I do that, because it ' s really not giving everyone a real chance. I just can ' t be all negative, for nothing is all negative. I feel guilty because I ' ve been screaming about how bad school is. I said before that I ' ve learned a lot about how to love and love in high school, and that ' s really important to me. All my friends have helped me a lot- and they ' ve made a lot of school a good time. I just get mad when I see so much time wasted and so many people hurt. I think a lot of my teachers feel trapped by the situation because they do make mistakes and hurt people. I wish more of them wouldn ' t be so afraid to be friends with me. A tr -g J Mr W ' ; M V. ' % k im Hi Jr -{ A ' ? | |i if.. ' .r lV ' ' .‘•j 4 Well, I guess I ' ve said a lot of things about how much time I think I ' ve wasted learning stuff like that. I bet you ' re wondering what I would like to learn. I ' d like to learn how to be your friend, you whoever you are, reading this. I ' d like to know how to defeat all the fears that keep me from knowing and trusting you. Whoever you are, I don ' t even know you, but I think you must be a beautiful person. If I ever meet you, and I ' m foolish enough not to like you, it ' s my fault, not yours. It ' s just that I ' m human, and I can ' t make it all the time. I wish I could learn how to make it and be someone ' s friend, more of the time, because friends are what life is for. I guess it seems like I ' m skipping all around, writing this, and getting off the subject. Really, I ' m not. I ' ll agree it ' s probably confusing, but I ' m just think¬ ing about school, and writing what comes to mind. If I were to try to write the perfect paper, I ' d only be able to write about certain things and I might miss something about school we ' ve never seen before. It ' s good sometimes just to let yourself go, and write freely, and don ' t chop out anything because all we chop out is part of us too, and part of everything- so maybe we should look at them once in a while. Maybe there ' s a clue here to what ' s going on in the world. After all, we really do want to know what ' s going on, don ' t we? Isn ' t that what matters? We can ' t follow the rules and find out what the guy before us learned, can we? Don ' t we want to know new things? I like to learn new things, and if I can, why can ' t we share them? Maybe if we found out something new together we could be friends. Greg Tucker 5 d? bp Edward Leo Through the years, the students of Everett High School have dedicated their yearbooks to a member of the faculty, who, to them had been an outstanding fig¬ ure throughout their three years at Everett High. This year we are proud to dedicate our yearbook to a man who has been more than just an outstanding figure to us, Mr. Edward Leo. To the Class of 72 he has shown warmth, understanding, and kind¬ ness. He has portrayed to us the necessity for discipline, which has helped to make the graduating class of 1972 an outstand¬ ing figure in the history of Everett High School. 4 « - a Pi rsa ! 1 i illlli HU Everybody listen to me I ' m your captain, I ' m your captain. 6 Mr. Leo has shown to us, contrary to belief, that students are able to actually talk with members of the faculty. He has advised us, when requested, about our attitudes towards school, our family life, and he has even given ideas to members of the football team. To sum up our feelings for Mr. Leo, let us only say that to this year ' s graduating class of 72 he ' s been ALL RIGHT !. We get by with a little help from our friends mmn w r W V % ' i ■sr-JE-asB wm Two and 1 V 0 make four they never make five, and as long as we know it we all can survive. 4 It ' s been a long time cornin ' it ' s goin to be a long time gone. But you know, the dark¬ est hour, is always just before dawn and it appears to be a long time such a long long, long time before the dawn. (Crosby) Wisdom is something we cannot be born with, it is ac¬ quired. Our teachers, throughout the twelve years of school, have left within us a piece of their wisdom. For this we thank them. administration MR. ARIGO L. LATANZI Superintendant of Schools MR. GIBSON Asst. Superintendant MR. ROMBOLI Asst. Superintendant mr . james McCauley Principal MR. EDWARD LEO Subm aster MR. JAMES MULLOY Submaster guidance MR. CECERE MR. WALSH MRS. STOWELL MR. CLAY MR. CONWAY our office secretaries MRS. KELLDHER MRS. MENDA MRS. MacLAUGHLIN english MR. BEEGAN MR. FOLEY MR. GALAGHER MRS. HANNON 22 science MR. HUDSON MISS LoPILATO MR. KUTRUBES MR. MICARELLI MR. WALLACE MR. WHITTEMORE MR. ZANOR 27 business department MISS GIBBONS MISS MURPHY MR. PASCOUCHI MR. MERENDA MRS. FINNEGAN MR. DeSESA MISS CALLAHAN MISS BARSTOW MISS WHELAN foreign languages MR. DeRUBIS MISS D ' ANGELO MISS DiTULLIO MISS DORN MR. PREVITE MISS FORD MR. MARINO home economics MISS BISSELL MISS STOWELL MISS DRAGO mechanic arts MR. CASTELLANO MR. MASTRANGELO 30 phys. ed. MR. BRICKLEY 9 f % ' MR. MARQUES l MISS BRESLOFF MRS. NORTON MRS. GORDINIER Liabrarian MRS. KEEFE Nurse 31 MR. RALDI Driver ' s Ed. MRS. CHESTNA Art Department ( 7eache A t of the uccl ' l There are many kinds of teachers, each with his own style of teaching. One might consider a good teacher as being a teacher who uses a lot of big words and speaks in what sometimes seems to be a foreign language. Others might con¬ sider a good teacher as being one who gives everybody in his classes an A . But a good teacher is nothing more than a true teacher. Not just someone who teaches in the everyday manner of his daily planbook, but one who extends his abilities beyond the classroom and into the actual lives of his students. vhn VfUuUon He is an interested teacher; inter¬ ested in his work and the people with whom he comes in contact during his work. For how can a student find a tea¬ cher interesting if the teacher himself is not interested in what he is doing? Such a true teacher is John Hudson. He is a man who does not confine his work to the limitations of his classroom walls but involves himself with the entire school and all related areas. In addition to teaching classes in Earth Science and Biology, he is currently the advisor to the school newspaper and the advisor to the yearbook. He is an individual with¬ out whose cooperation this book might not have yet been published. 32 §f 5$ I ' M: - MARIE ABBATONIZZI and it ' s a fair wind blowing over my shoulder, guess I ' ll set a course and go! MARY ADAMS I give sympathy and toler¬ ance to the ignorant. . Don ' t put off for tomorrow, What you can do today. . . ROSE ADDONIZIO Love is the strange bewilderment Which takes over one person on Account of another person. ANDREA ACQUAVIVA With a friend at hand, You will see the light. If your friends are there, Then everything ' s alright! - KXN JACK ALBERTI AN Some rtien see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say why not? THOMAS ALLSTON The most humane people in America today are those who have seen its poison and set themselves against it. This is the task given to those young, gifted, and black. ROBERT ALMON A conservative government is An organized hypocisy. VALERIE ANDERSON Within you there is a still¬ ness and sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself. JOHN ARSENAULT It gives me youth to learn something new every day. For my nature is to know Because knowledge is power DAVID AMOROSO In reason ' s ear they all rejoice, And utter forth a glorious voice, Forever singing as they shine; Than hand that made us is divine. -Adison STEVE ANZALONE Everything comes to a man, If he will only wait You have nothing to fear in life, But fear itself. - G.P. A. EDWARD ARSENAULT I ' m free - I ' m free, And freedom tastes of reality, I ' m free - I ' m free, An ' I ' m waiting for you to follow me. DIANE AUGER Love is God, and to die means that I, A particle of love, shall return to the General and eternal source. LORRAINE BAER Here ' s to the past for all we learned and shared, ROBERT BAGGS I would live all my life in nonchalance and Here to the future for all insouciance Were it not for making a living, which is rather a nouciance that we hoped and dreamed. SHELLY BAKEMAN Life seems to be divided into two periods; In the first we indulge, in the second we preach. . . ANITA BACH Life is eternal; and love is immortal; and death is only a horizon; and a hor¬ izon is nothing save The limit of our sight. ROBERT BAKER I ' d rather be in Philadelphia. THOMAS BARROWS Try t o realize it ' s all within yourself No one else can make you change. DIANA BARISANO For everything there is a sea¬ son: A time to be born a time to die, A time to hate a time to love, A time for joy a time to weep. LOUANNE BARISANO Mountain- Rose petals; fall¬ ing, falling; Falling now. . . Watrefall music; Life But¬ terfly on; Swaying grass. That ' s all - But exquisite. JEAN BARTOLO . . . To love is to place our happiness in the happiness of another. .. KRISTINE BARRETT . . . It ' s medicine for the soul, Food for love, the es¬ sence of divinity, A reason for being. .. LYDIA BASH . . . And life flows on, Within you and Without you... -George Harrison LINDA BELLAFATTO Does it matter what I do? Live life right or stand to bend? Does it matter what I do? Is there anyone to judge? -K. S. PAUL BELLAFATTO NANCY BERTE Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others, Cannot keep it from themselves. . . w JEAN BETTENCOURT It is a very funny thing about life, If you refuse to accept any¬ thing but the best, You very often get it. -W. Sommerset Maugham EILEEN BIGGI Time is eternity. Horses fly. . . Flowers die New days. . . New ways. . . pass by. .. Love Stays. ROBERT BILOTTA As the area of light in¬ creases, so does the cir¬ cumference of darkness CARLA BIRARELLI We are not helpless We are men. What lies between us Can be set aside and mended. SUSAN BLAQUIERE CECELIA BOCCHINO . . . The price of hating other human beings Is loving oneself less. . . - Chi- Chi flair wind blowin And it warm out of the south over my shoulder. Guess I ' ll set a course and go. LINDA BLANK Maybe tomorrow... JOHN BORELLA BARBARA BONTEMPO Sweeping cobwebs from the edges of my mind, Had to get away to seek what we could find. Hope the days that lie ahead bring us back to where they led. -G. N. SHARON BOOKMAN - Gemini- The love in your heart wasn ' t put there to stay, Love isn ' t love till you give it away. PATRICIA BOURQUE When you ' re down and out When you ' re in the street When evening falls so hard I will comfort you I ' ll take your part BARBARA BOWDEN Can you say in parting Of the day thats slipping past that you helped a single person of the many you have passed. SHARON BRADLEY The loudest cry Under the sun above Is the silent Good-Bye From the one you love -Melanie WILLIAM BRIGGS In every part and corner of our life, to lose oneself is to be gainer; to forget oneself is to be happy. - Stevenson mm a YVONNE BRENNAN On, I have roamed over many lands, and many friends I ' ve met Not one fair scene or kindly smile, can this fond heart forget. MARILYN BRILEY I spent my eyes in noisy places, only seeing and re¬ cording every vision within the elusion true and false it mattered not. RALPH BROGNA Because of her I live, For her I would die. NANCY BRUCE Suffering can bring under¬ standing; and understanding can free one to love-with¬ out limits. .. BARBARA BURGESS Amid the noise and confus¬ ions of life, keep peace within your soul and stride for happiness, for you are a child of the universe. STEPHEN BUSBY There is always a certain meanness In the argument of conservatism, Joined with a certain super¬ iority in its facts. The Conservative MARGIT BYRON Let those who never loved before love now, Let those who always loved before now love the more -Thomas Parnell- ANNA CACCHIOTI I ' ve looked at life from both sides now, From win and lose and still somehow, It ' s life ' s illusions I recall, I really don ' t know life at all. LUCILLE CACCIOLA Love means never having to say your sorry. .. Do this! Don ' t do that! Can ' t you read the sign? 44 HELENE CAHILL Carry on Love is coming, Love is coming To Us All! -Crosby, Stills, Nash G Young DIANE CAFARELLA . . .And it ' s the giving that makes you what you are. . . JOAN CAIAZZO There are two things in life for which we are never fully prepared and that is. . . Twins. JEAN CAIAZZO Life is to be strengten by many friendships, To love and to be loved, Is the greatest happiness around. PATRICIA CALL Long ago and oh so far away -The Carpenters Superstar Patti e SUSAN CAIAZZO Friendship is the only thing in the world concerning The usefulness of which all mankind agree - Cicero i DEBORAH CALLAPIAN RONALD CALO Everyone is beautiful, in his own way. Unto God ' s heaven the world ' s gonna find a way. ' % % ... ■ KAREN CAPONE The most I can do for my friend, Is to be his friend. KAREN CAPPUCCIO For you will still be here tomorrow, but your dreams may not. QBKK -Cat Stevens JOHN CAPRA You have to hustle to win. -Charlie Hustle GPA DEBBIE CAPUA Kindness in words creates confidence, Kindness in thinking creates profoundness kindness in giving creates Love. Libra JOELLEN CAPUANO Life is to be fortified by many friendships. To love and to be loved is the greatest happiness of existence. - Sidney Smith PETER CASEY ELLEN CAPUANO Happiness comes of the cap¬ acity to feel deeply, to en¬ joy simply, to think freely, to risk life, to be needed. . . -Storm Jameson DOLORES CAPUA Here ' s To the past for all that we ' ve learned To the present for all that we share And to the future for all that we hope. KAREN CAUFIELD Friends depart, and mem¬ ory takes them to her cavern, pure and deep. JAMES CENSULLO . . . and in the end the love you take, Is equal to the love you make. . . -Beatles MICHAEL CATANZANO When this you see remember me And bear in your mind Let all the world say what they may Speak of me as you find. SALVATORE CATANZANO ' Tis something to be willing to commend; But my best praise is, that I am your friend. NANCY CHURCHILL If two loaves alone to thee are left, Sell one, and with the dole Buy hyacinths to feed thy soul -Leo ROSEMARIE CICCARELLI Take time to give Its too short a day to be selfish MARIANNE CIFRA Within you there is a still¬ ness and sanctuary to which you can retreat at anytime and be yourself. JOHN CIOFFI -Herman Hesse Judd ROSEANN CIULLA Have a wonderful today and a million bright tomorrows. -Ro- DOUGLAS CLARKE Our youth we can have but today; We can always find time to grow old. GPA ROBERT COLAMETA To try and educate a born fool, Is like trying to fertilize a stone. FRANCESCA COLORUSSO The best way to double your happiness is to share it that ' s right just plain give it away. WILLIAM COLLIBEE . . . Within you there is a stillness and sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself. . . STEPHEN CONCANNON The direction in which ed¬ ucation starts a man, will determine his future life. -Plato BARBARA CONLEY It ' s not so much the world outside; That makes us sigh or smile. . . It ' s more the thoughts within our hearts; That make life seem worthwhile. JULIE CONNOLLY Through the years we reap what we saw. Our lives are like garden, And we plant the flowers. . God gives us the privilege To choose what ' s in ours. ROBERT CONROY So much time for change it ' s unbelievable; so much time for life I can ' t believe; So much time for laughte r it ' s so beautiful; I could cry. -Bobby- ROBERT CORRIGAN A university should be a place of light of liberty and of learning. li DOUGLAS CONNERS No lies, no brags, if it ' s all right with me, then I ' ll let it be. -Dougie CAROL CONTI I am the light of life, He who walks with me Will not walk in darkness And will have the light of life. -Jesus Christ LINDA CONTI You of tender years can ' t know the fear that your elder grew by, And so please help them with your youth, they seek the truth before they can die. -Crosby, Stills, and Nash MARY LYNN CONTI When this you see remember me and bear me in your mind. Let all the world say what they may speak of me as you find. RICHARD COOGAN To share all our good mem¬ ories of times gone by, Go out and get one cold; a bottle of Coste de ' Sol MICHAEL COOLEN Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. ANN MARIE COSTAS Supposing I dreamed this only imagine day has thrilled You are a house around which I am the wind... EMILY CROCKER . . . And the tear that we shed, though in secret it rolls, Shall long keep these mem¬ ories ingraved in our souls... CAROL CROCKET Peace is a morbid condition, where there is a surplus of civilians which war seeks to correct. DONNA CUBETUS Without honesty there is no truth Without truth there Without love there is nothing. is no love MILDRED DEAN Friends I will remember you, Think of you, and pray for you, And when another day is through, I ' ll still be friends with you. NICOLO D ' ALLEYA JOHN CULWELL Experience only can teach men not to prefer what strikes them for the present moment to what will have much greater weight with them hereafter. JOSEPH DALY You who are on the road must have a code that you can live by, And so, become yourself, because the past is just a good-bye. -Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young PATRICIA D ' AMELIO . . Imagine all the people Living life in peace . . . -John Lennon DEBORAH D ' ANGELO The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved-loved for ourselves; say; rather, loved in spite of ourselves. JANET D ' ANGELO This above all; To thine own self be true. - Shakespeare STEPHEN DANIELI We are leaving E.H.S. The fun, learning, and understanding, Taking only the best of memories that Will someday be the past. JOSEPH DAVID IAN GARY D ' AVOLIO PATRICIA DARRAGH To live long is almost every¬ one ' s wish, But to live well is the ambi¬ A true friend will see you through when others see that you are through. tion of few. -John Hughes MICHAEL DEANGELIS . .. There ' s nothing to fear in life, But fear itself . . . . . . Winning isn ' t everything, it ' s the only thing!. . . - Mike. G. P. A. NUNZIO DIBENDETTO A journey of a thousand miles Begins with but a single step. KEVIN DECHICO Life is a dead end street, which you have to meet. - Chico MARY DELLA SANDRO Don ' t compromise yourself it ' s all you got. -Janis Joplin PATRICIA DELVECCHIO I am on the outside looking inside What do I see? Much confusion, disillusion all around me. DEBORAH DEFLUMERI Love is: To be made of all sighs and tears, . .. To be made of all faith and services, ... It is to be all made of fantasy. CHERYL DEGREGORIO You may say I ' m a dreamer but I ' m not the only one I hope some day you ' ll join us and the world will live as one. -John Lennon JOSEPH DEFLUMERI If man is a rational animal, Why can ' t he live in peace. DONALD DELLCPIANA Down on the road I go. FRANK DELLE DONNE You can hardly make a friend In a year, but you can lose one in an hour. RICHARD DEMAMBRO life is nothing without friendship. -Cicero- S. S. P. A1 FRANCIS DEMARTINO And were an epitaph to be my story; I ' d have a short one ready for my own. I would have written of me on my stone; I had a quarrel with the world. JOHN DEMATO Out here in the fields I fought for my meals, I don ' t need to be forgiven. MARGARET DENISH If you dry because the sun went down Your tears will blind you from seeing the stars. 55 WILLIAM DETORE There are two ways to get ahead in this country; one is to sell liquor, and the other is to drink it. ELLA DEVITO Go out and make things better, You can make if if you try. WILLIAM DODGE I just got by with a little help from my friends. . . THOMAS DOHERTY So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see So long lives this and this gives life to all. KIRK DOUGLAS All my life I never really knew me till today, Now I know why, I ' m just another step along the way. SSP EDWARD DONDERO I ' d love to change the world, But I don ' t know what to do! -Alvin Lee ANN DOLAN War is not healthy for child¬ ren and other living things. JUDY D ' ORTONA Imagine there ' s no heaven it ' s easy if you try no hell below us above us only sky imagine all the people liv¬ ing for Today. . . -John Lennon- MB JANICE DOYLE It is better to break off A thousand friendships, Than to endure the sight of a single enemy. JOHN DOYLE It is not true that life is one damn thing after another, It ' s one damn thing over and over. VALERIE DICKISON One of the most beautiful qualities Of true friendship is to understand one to be understood. VALERIE DICECCA Freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose. JOSEPH DiGEORGE Football isn ' t the best sport, It ' s the only sport. . . -GPA FRANK DIMARLA Think like a man of action, and act like a man of thought. -Henri Bergson MARIA DiLEBERTO My mind ' s distracted and diffused; My thoughts are many miles away They lie with you when you ' re asleep; And kiss you when you start your day. . . GEORGE DILLON - Bird DANIEL Dik DiLORENZO I ' d love to change the world, but I don ' t know what to do, So I ' ll leave it up to you. ANTHONY DIGIORNLAMO ELIZABETH DIMITRUK There can never be deep peace between two spirits, never mutual respect, until, in their dialogue, Each stands for the whole world. - Betsy LOUIS DIMOND If you go to war pray once; If you go on a sea journey Pray twice; but pray three times when you are going to be married. • RICHARD DiPLATZI A friend is someone with whom you can share your choicest thoughts. -Ricky- GPA RICHARD DiNAPOLI So long as men can breathe or eyes can see So long lives this, and this gives life to thee JAMES DiNUCCIO How do I know where I ' m going when I don ' t know where I am now. - Kanu- GPA DIANE DiPIETRO Love has no windows to look through, but so many doors to walk out of. JOSEPH DISTEFANO VINCENT DOUCETTE The world of fantasy is about to go. The hardships of reality about to set in. The solution: I ' m going to be cool. SSP -R.M. m DARLENE DITTER Peace is the ultimate aim of mankind with just one ob¬ stacle, hate, obstructing it. ELAINE DIVER The greatest things happen to you when you have some¬ one to love for the rest of your life. 3 ROBERT DRAKE DRAKA doesn ' t know what the future will hold, j That ' s what we ' ve been told, | Whatever he picks for his plan, He ' ll be a successful man. JAMES DRISCOLL Militry madness is killing our country Solitary sadness creeps over -G. N. EILEEN ELIBERO No friendship can survive the gift of gold. The gener¬ ous can indeed forget, that they have given, but the grateful can never forget DONALD DUMPHY they they have received. OP SOUTH DAKOTA 1 PETER EDMONDS Tell me not, in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream! For the soul is dead that slumbers, And things are not what they seem. MICHAEL ELLIOT Some owe success in life to luck -Some owe it to their mothers. But most acclaim the good advice they didn ' t take from others. PATRICIA ELLS People live from day to day but they do not count the time They don ' t see their days slipping by. .. -James Taylor CARYN EVANGELISTA The main thing in life is not be afraid to be human. RITA FANTASIA Love Peace and Happiness Start From Within. . . And in the end the love you take is equal to the love you make. . . - McCarthey-Lennon DAVID FINER Be free. .. no guilt. . . be whoever you are. .. do what¬ ever you want. . . just so you don ' t hurt anyone. STEPHEN FIORILLO The big trouble with being a leader is. . . You don ' t know if people are following you or changing vou. nH STEPHEN FINOS There are three faithful fri ends— And olf wife, and old dog, and ready money. -Ben Franklin- KATHELEEN FITZGERALD The smile of a friend brings sunshine any season of the year. CHARLENE FOLLETT The most I can do for my friend is simply to be his friend. - Thoreau- Charly JOSEPH FOTI He either fears his fate too much Or his deserts are small That dares not put it to the touch To gain or lose it all. JUDY FITZPATRICK You can do what you want to do. You can be who you want to be. Just remember that you and me, ain ' t all there is to being free. . . - Steven Stills EILEEN FOURNIER There is advantage in the wisdom won from pain. - Aeschylus- HENRY FLESSOR Push on. . . Move ahead. mam JOAN FRACKLETON Each day is a beginning Each day I am new -Alastair Reid ilif: 1 ‘ rii; ' V i , i , i n |iiv : .1 l,n l ? d rAvi r iiU . ' | If ' : 1 • ■’ . • lliv,. 11 1 IrtvW.Ta. , i ' Tv 1 I ' - •U 4 ' - . i M-i THOMAS FRANCA The direction in which ed¬ ucation starts a man, will determine his future life. PAUL FREGOSI When this you see, remem¬ ber me and bear me in your mind, Let all the world say what they may, speak of me as you find. DAVID GAFFEY Rise let us see you Dawning is the day Miss Misty Meadow You will find your way. Wake up in the morning to yourself And leave this crazy world behind you. LINDA FRATUS On, how beautiful is love. . and how wonderful life is for those who share it.. . ANGELLA GALLUCCI The light of love, the purity of grace, The mind, the music breath¬ ing from her face, The heart whose softness harmonized the whole, And oh! The eye was in it¬ self a soul! LEONARD GARDINO Some performers take pains with their music others give them. VALERIE GAGLIONE You ' ve got to get up every morning with a smile on your face and show the world all the love in your heart. -Carol King ROBERT GARGAN Men may become rich by making their wants few. CONSTANCE GALLANT Within you there is a still¬ ness in sanctuary to which you can retreat at any time and be yourself. -Herman Hesse- CAROL GARRETT It ' s nice to be natural if one ' s naturally nice only art creates life. DEBORAH GATEAS I don ' t know what to say When everyone turns away. But now ' s the time to ask and see Is this the way it ought to be. . . CHARLES GLACOBBE Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it not. - Em erson G. P. A. ANNE GENERAZZO Imagine no possessions I wonder if you can No need for greed or hunger a brotherhood of man Imagine all the people Sharing all the world. LAWRENCE GAYNOR In peace, sons bury their fathers; In war, fathers bury their sons. - Herodotus- MARIE GAUTREAU Love is the business of the idle But the idleness of the busy EUGENE GIACOBBE Stand for the things you feel are real There is you to complete and there is no deal! -Sly and the Family Stone- STEPHEN GILL The greatest ability of all Is the ability to recognize one ' s own ability. PRISCILLA GINDY Ambition: To be a Medical Doctor. Love is the gentle smile Upon the lips of Beauty. . . JOHN GLENCROSS Today is the doorstep of tomorrow. And tomorrow is the essence of the rest of your life. JOANNE GOCHIS Why should all life be work when we can all borrow? Let ' s only think of today, and not worry about tomorrow. -BSMU- KEITH GOODWIN Keith will go through life With the wind at his back, And the earth at his feet, His head in the clouds. JOHN GORDAN In order to have a friend, You have to be one. SUSAN GREENE And its a fair wind, Mowin ' warn out of the south Over my shoulder. Guess I ' ll set a course and go. ANTHONY GROSSI . . . And my advice to those who die! Put leather pennies on your eyes. . . -G. Harrison- MICHAEL GREELY If the world keeps on like it is now, What will be left? Close your eyes and what do you see? GERARD GUARNO I wish I was What I was When I wished I was What I am now. RICHARD GUENARD Never give a sucker an even break. -W. C. Fields- f r PATRICIA HAGGERTY Save tomorrow for tomorrow. . . Think about today instead. ANTHONY COLLELA BARBARA HADDAD Imagine all the people liv¬ ing life in peace You may say I ' m a dreamer, But I ' m not the only one. NORMAN HAMMOND The only thing more enter¬ taining than anticipation of the unexpected is expecta¬ tion of the impossible. SUSAN HANEFFANT And in the end remember it ' s with you. . . You have to live. -Graham Nash ROBERT HANSON We once had a savior, But by our behavior, the one that was worth it Is gone. KATHLEEN HIGGINS . .. And in my hour of darkness There is still a light that shines on me Shine until tomorrow-let it be. JAMES HOGAN Hosanna Heysanna Sanna Hey sanna Ho sanna Hey J. C. won ' t you fight for me? Sanna Ho Sanna Hey Superstar. FRANK HOWARD The better part of every man ' s education is that which he gives himself. DAVID HUDSON Man is not the creature of circumstances. Circumstances are the crea¬ tures of man. PAUL HOENIG Sometimes we may learn more from a man ' s errors than from his virtues. . ANTHONY GRAZIANO Never worry about the future. . . it never comes serious until it is. . .the present. KEVIN GREEN A man doesn ' t deserve to live if he hasn ' t found anything worth dying for. GPA DEBORAH GRIFFEN Life is going round in cir¬ cles. . .wonder if it will ever end. .. if I die brave . . .will you miss me? Or just find another friend? GRIFF + SWAS LINDA GOODINE The most beautiful thing you can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science. JANET HALL Love is a very special thing. Joy and happiness does it bring. And to a person near and dear, to someone who really cares, Love is everything. - Janet PETER HUDSON Be not afraid of death. Un¬ derstand the world ' s strife. Live life to its fullest breath, and you will have a joyous life. . . PAUL HUSSEY Nothing is so impudent as success. .. unless it be those he favors. IAMELLI For what is faith unless it is to believe what you cannot see. DOMINIC IANDOLO ' I ' ll laugh and be fat; for care kills a cat. ELAINE IMP ERA TO You can ' t always get what you want Peace ALBERT INDELICATO Each one of us should be¬ come so completely him¬ self, so utterly faithful to the seed of nature within him and live in accordance with it. GORDAN IVEY He who throws away his friend is as Bad as he who throws away his life. ADELINE IZZICUPO One morning I woke up and knew you were really gone A new day, a new way, and new eyes to see the dawn Go your way, I ' ll go mine, and carry on. -Steven Stills- ROBERT JACOBSEN To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven. Ecc. 3:1 MARK JAGIELLO Full knowledge of death constitutes a better under¬ standing of life. THOMAS JULIAN So close than I get so far away, where are the answers, I hear them every day. .. - Steven Stills— LYNNE KELLEHER Imagine all the people liv¬ ing life in peace. JOHN KELLEHER I began my comedy as its only actor, And I come to the end of it as its only spectator. SHIELA KELLY Everyone has choice, when to and not to; Raise their voices; it ' s you that decides; Which way you will turn, while feeling that; Our love ' s not your concern; it ' s you that decides. THOMAS KELLY A little rule, a little sway, A sunbeam in a winter ' s day, Is all the proud and mighty have, Between the cradle and the grave. GARY KIBBY I ' ll give them a piece of my mind For the peace of mankind, Peace is not an awful lot to ask.. . JACALYN KING The generation gap isn ' t necessary between genera¬ tions, but between people who think differently. LAWRENCE KELLEHER The greatest essential of happiness are. .. Something to do, something to love, and Something to hope for. ARTHUR KYLLONEN The happiest people seem to be those who have no par¬ ticular reason for being, ex¬ cept that they are. JOSEPH LA BELLA Let ' s learn to live, for we must die alone. - Crabbe SANDRA KRANE I can ' t be contented with yesterday ' s glory. I can ' t live on promises, winter to springtime. Today is my moment and now is my story. .. QCk TIMOTHY KING By education most have been misled. -Dryden MARK KORNHAUSER There is a feeling immor¬ tality in youth. The vast, the unbounded prospect lies before us in which we see no limit to our hopes and wishes. STEVEN KOSTEGAN Sometimes I ' m right and I can be wrong. My own beliefs are in my song. The butcher, the banker, the drummer, and them, make no difference what the group I ' m in. I am everyday people. DONNA LA ID LEY When you first see your smile on someone else ' s face, you ' ve just discovered the gold of friendship. 11 CHERYL LASERS ON Yesterday my troubles seemed so far away Now I need a place to hide away Oh, I believe in yesterday. To be loved, be lovable. SEBASTIAN© LATINA When I write, it ' s a mess, When I speak, nobody under¬ stands. My name is Sebastiano Latina. SUSAN LAWYER The night in gales are singing, in orchards of our mothers And hearts that we broke long ago, have long been breaking others. -W.H. Auden- JOHN MACDONALD VERONICA MACDONALD If a man does not keep pace with his companions, per¬ haps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. -Henry David Thoreau JOANNE MAGEE Imagine there ' s no coun¬ tries, it isn ' t hard to do. Nothing to kill or die for, no religion too. Imagine all the people living life in PEACE. . . -Lennon MAUREEN MACNEIL People need love, people need trust, People need one another, and that means us. .. MAC -Stephen Stills KATHY MAGNOTTA Love means never having to say. . . your sorry. COOKIE ARIES PAULA MAGRO Find the cost of freedom, buried in the ground, Mother earth will swallow you, lay your body down. - Stephen Stills ■ RICHARD MAGNO To set a goal and achieving it, is the most important thing in life. NEIL MALATZKY Never allow your schooling interfere with your education. ASA -Mark Twain ROBERT LEE But the sunshine eye shall light the sky, as round and round we run; and the truth shall ever come uppermost, and justice shall be done. CHIPPY KAREN MANNETTA . . . . The time has come, for closing books and long last looks MUST END. . . JOHN MARINO Ask and you will receive; seek and you will find; knock, and the door will open to you. CHRISTINE MARKEVICH If today was not an endless highway, If tonight was not a crooked trail, Then, lone¬ some would mean nothing to you at all. DIANE MARTORANA Come on people now, smile on your brother. Everybody get together, try to love lone another right now. -Y oungbloods LINDA MASI The more we love, the bet¬ ter we are; and the greater our friendships are, the dear¬ er we are to God. -Jeremy Taylor DIANE MEREK FT £? £• X CYNTHIA LEAHY When experiencing happiness, we have difficulty seeing it. Only when the happiness is passed do we suddenly realize, sometimes with astonishment, how happy we had been. ANGELO LEO It matters not what price you ' ve paid, you can ' t get gladness ready made. To get the real and lasting kind, you have to grow it in your mind. BONNIE LETOURNEAU Only you and I can help the sun to rise each coming morning. If we don ' t, it may drench itself out in sorrow. -Joan Baez- FRANCIS LEVER Earth ' s the right place for love. I don ' t know where it ' s likely to go better. Robert Frost- JOYCE LEWIS Life is a pursuit; The pursuer choosing the pursued; And when the pursuit is over, Another pursuit is pursued. WILLIAM LETDEN If you have one true friend You have more than your share. Thomas Fuller- MARY ELLEN LISTON Love is free, free is love Love is living, living is love Love is needing to be loved. -John Lennon Q B K PATRICIA LONG The comfort of having a friend maybe taken away, But not that of having had one. RICHARD LOZZI Don ' t set there thinking of the good times we had There ' s a world right next to us, And it ' s just waiting for us to do something. DEBRA LUCCI A bell isn ' t a bell till you ring it. A song isn ' t a song till you sing it. The love in your heart wasn ' t meant there to stay, love isn ' t love till you give it away. RONALD LUONGO It ' s better to have tried and failed, Then to never have tried at all. Winners never quit, and quitters never win. GPA JAMES LYONS Educations is that which re¬ mains when one has forgot¬ ten everything he ' s learned in school. PAULA LUONGO What a thing friendship is- World without end! -Robert Browning 81 MICHAEL MATARAZZO You might say I ' m a dreamer, But I ' m not the only one, I hope someday you ' ll join HENRY MATTUCHIO Imagine there ' s no heaven Jesus you try. . . No hell below us. . . Above us only skies. .. Imagine all the people liv¬ ing in a dream. . . MARY ROSE McCORMACK The best thing I can do for my friend, is to be his friend - Georgie- JOSEPH MASSAUA If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. And the world will be one ELIZABETH McCABE Love is our law, Conscience is our guide, Perfection is our life, And peace is our shelter. diane McCarthy Time ' s printed pages Words you won ' t forget Go out and try to live them You ' ll be an angel yet! -Carly Simon JAMES McCRANEY There ' s too many of you- don ' t push me. There ' s too little of me- don ' t crowd me. - Superstar- THERESA McGEE I want to change the world but I don ' t know how to So I ' ll leave it up to you. JOHN MCGRATH To be an accountant is John ' s desire. May he reach the heights to which he aspires. KEVIN MCLAUGHLIN You, who are on the road, must have a code that you can live by. And so become yourself, because the past is just a good-bye. VERONICA MCMAHON To understand is not only to pardon, but in the end to love. -Walter Iippmann ARTHUR MCNALLY life was meant to be lived and curiosity must never, for whatever reason, turn his back on life. SUSAN MCNAMMARA We are here to add what we can to life Not to get what we can from it. -Cancer JANICE MCPHEE Youth is happy because it has the ability to see beauty. Anyone who keeps the abil¬ ity to see the beauty never grows old. -Franz Kafka PATRICK MOGAURO In the begining man created God. And in the image of man created he, Him. JOHN MONTALBANO STEPHEN MITTON You Got to tell the children the truth, They don ' t need a whole lot of lies, Cause one of these days baby, They ' ll be running things. LINDA MOCCIA Friendship is an arrangement by which we undertake to exchange a small favor for a big one DEBORAH MEADE Smile and the world smiles with you, Cry and you cry alone. DEBORAH MIDDLETON There are two things to aim at in life: first, to get what you want; and, after that, to enjoy it. Only the wisest of mankind achieve the second. -Logan Smith THERESA MERCHANT We ' re tired of being pushed around and told just what to do. We ' ll fight the world until we ' ve won, and peace comes shining through. PAUL MIELE If we command our wealth we should be rich and free, If our wealth commands us we are poor indeed. MICHAEL MERENDA Be yourself and you ' ll be more than you ever thought of being. CHARLE MIRANDA STEVEN MILLEY God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference. JOANNE MIRA GLIA Friends may come and friends may go, But memories live on forever. BK KENNETH MILLEY It takes all kinds of people to make a world; and it ' s about time we got started! STEVEN MENINGER Though a fifth will go into three with non left over, there may be one to carry. PATRICIA MOLLE We are stardust. . .we are golden. . . And we got to get ourselves Back to the garden. KAREN MOORE Dying all the time, Loose your dreams, And you can loose you mind, Ain ' t life unkind. Rolling Stones MARGARET MOORE When your down and con¬ fused and you don ' t remember who your talking to. Concentration slips away because your future seems so far away. -Stephen Stills- ROBERT MOORE There is only one way that war would be abolished for¬ ever, and that would be if we had W. W. III. MARILYN MONTEROSE When the sky is cloudy, there is still a light that shines on me, Shine until tomorrow, let it be. Beatles STEPHEN MORGANTO I was tired of people telling me things and then asking me how much I remember. What I wanted was to look around and find things out for myself. PAUL MURPHY Who loves not women, wine, and song, remains a fool his whole life long. TINA NANNI Our world is beautiful, but there are too many people who only hate. If I can help just one find love, then I ' ve reached my goal in life. FRANK NAZZARO Frank ' s ambition is to be a cobbler. Many a fine shoe he will alter. With his per¬ sonality and wonderful ways, he ' s bound to be a great success someday. G.P.A. VINCENT NAZZARO WILLIAM NEE RONALD NELSON What is our praise to pride, but to imagine excellence and try to make it. 87 STEVEN NUNEZ To attain success and be a student. RALPH NOE When the sun is, Bright and glowy, When the day is white and snowy, Be not lulled, Be aware! For Mayor, Ralph Noe. DOROTHY O ' BRIEN Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it. . . every, every minute? PATRICK O ' GRADY How can I place you above me? Am I lieing when I say I believe in you? Wake up man, it ' time to go home! ' MARYELLEN O ' REILLY Happiness isn ' t something you experience; It ' s some¬ thing you remember. jaivies pace And in the end the love you take, Is equal to the love you make. LINDA PACE What I feel I can ' t say, but my love is there for you any¬ time of day. But it ' s not love that you need though I ' ll try my best to make everything succeed. MARIA PACE Next to to love, is to help are the most beautiful words in the world. ENRICO PARADISO Life is what you make it. BARBARA PALANGI Time is. . .Eternity, Hours fly. . .Flowers die. . . New days. . .New ways. . . Pass by. . .Love stays. . . JAMES PALUMBO If. . .sympathy with all sorts and conditions of men and tolerence of human diver¬ sity be an attribution of civilized life, then he is a great prophet of civilization. RIGHT ON CRIMSON VALERIE PANARESE Life is to be fortified by many friends. To love and to be loved is the greatest hap¬ piness of existence. LEO STEPHEN PA RAD ISO Education is what is left over after you have forgotten the facts. ROBERT PARKER What happens to the country, to the world, depends on what we do with what others have left us. DOMENIC PASQUALONE Nothing Ventured and Nothing gained. D.P. GAIL PELLERIN I find as I grow older, that I love Those most whom I loved first. THERESA PELOSI God grant me the serenity to accept the thing I cannot change, The courage to change the things I can, And the wisdom to know the dif¬ ference. LYNNE PENNEY To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist, that is all. ROBERT PERRY The world may be rotten place to live but I can ' t think of anyplace better. GAIL PERRY To live a life of complete tranquility is something know one will ever see because of a work called free. CATHERINE PETERS As the day draw near to graduate, It taught me how to love not hate. MARYANN PICCOLO Everyone has two kinds of friends: those who are around when you and those need them who are around when they need you. . . JOSEPH PIERONE I think that I shall never hear a poem as lovely as a beer. Poems are made for fools I fear. But only Schlitz can make a beer! THOMAS PIAZZA If you can ' t be with the one you love, Love the one your with. LORRAINE PINI We do not remember days, we remember moment ' s. Cesare Pavese JAMES POOLER Most textbooks tell you more about the subject than you are interested in knowing. DOUGLAS PIPPY As a tree, People grow; Like a frog, People croak: FREDERICK PISAPIA You grow up the day you have your first real laugh at your¬ self. DEBRA PIZZANO I ' ll be there to cheer you, Till the sun comes shinning through. MARY POTHIER How tall we are We ' ve learn¬ ed so much, Everything, it seems, but how to stay in touch. ROLAND POTHIER Better a bad excuse-than no excuse. KENNETH POWERS As I grew to understand life less and less, I learn to love it more and more. . DEBRA PRATT What is beautiful is a joy for all seasons and a possession for all eternity. . . DEBBI -Oscar Wild RONALD QUARTARONE To make memories of the quiet life, and to have them near your mind, the camera proves that the memories look better the second time. ROBERT RABIN ... War does not prove who won, only Who is left. . . RABINOV GPA CARMELA RAGUCCI Why should man ever be bom if he ' s only to die? But may¬ be if he learns to love he ' ll find the reason why. DIANA RAGUCCI The only way to a friend. . . is to be one. LINDA RAGUCCI Here I am, Sitting high on a round stone wall, Looking down at the people cold, Wishing to be back with you. JEANNE RAO The best things in life are free-Friends, Love, and Happiness. _ Jeanne MARYANNE REARDON Consitancy is the last refuge of the unimaginative. -Oscar Wilde - EDWARD RICCI I prey the education we have received; Will still the violence within ourselves. ALVARO REZENDES Better it is to single live, than to the wife the Butcher give. MARIE RILEY The greatest friend of truth is time, her greatest enemy is prejudice, And her constant companion is humility... DEBRA RINGDAHL If you give in life and in live make it last eternally. Donny ROBERT ROGERS .... Procrastination is the thief of time. . . . STEPHEN ROY There are two ways to get ahead in this country; one is to sell liquor, and the other is to drink it- JOHN REDMOND As man ' s technology increases man ' s dreams become true, there is nothing to fear, ex¬ cept fear itself. RICHARD ROD A . All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place fro m whence the rivers come, thither they return again. JOHN ROMBOLI At the end of life you can ' t take it with you, but during life everyone tries to take it from you. -G.P.A.- JOHN RUGGIERO I came into this world, not chiefly to make this a good place to live in, but to live in it, be it good or bad. -G.P.A.- VENCENT RUMASUGLIA No man is an island entire of itself, Every man is a piece of the continent, A part of the main. LAURA RUSSELL We have no right to ask when sorrow comes why me un¬ less we ask the same question for every joy that comes our way. ANTHONY RUSSO If people could feel what the could see in life, Then at least they would know which way to look. -Tony- LOUIS RUVIDO You can ' t always get what you want, But if you try sometime, You just might find, You get what you need. I PHIL SABBAGH Looking at the ocean; pre¬ sents memories, The count¬ less towering waves; master¬ ing movements, The memor¬ ies? Our generation JD ALFRED SALA One feels like crawling on all fours after reading your work. MARIE SALA Each dawn is a new beginning - Marie- MARIAN SACHETTA Life is to be fortified by many friendships. To love and to be loved is the greatest happiness of existence. mmm FRANK SANFILIPPO Then come the wild weather, come sleet or come snow, We will stand by each other, however it blows. -Simon Dach- ANTHONY SAPOCHETTI Horse sense is what a horse has that keeps him from bet¬ ting on people. DEBBIE SAVAGE Man must learn to look for¬ ward to the reality of today. And not the make believe of yesterday. FRANK T. SANFILIPPO . STEPHEN SAVAGE Life in the twentieth century is like a parachut jump: You have to get it right the first time. BENNIE SCHIAVO There are only three plea¬ sures in life pure and lasting and all derived from inanim¬ ate things--books, pictures, and the force of nature. -William Haylift NANCY SCOTT It is well that t here is no one without a fault, for he would not have a friend in the world. -William Hazli ROBERT SCHMIDT DINA SCLAFANI Love is a beautiful dream. So, therefore, love is only one of many passions. . . and has no great influence on life. MARYANN SCLAFANI We ' re captives on a carousal of time, We can ' t turn but can only look behind from where we came. .. -Joan Baez MARIO SCENNA Laughing, joking, and fool¬ ing around, that ' s Mario wherever he ' s found. His ambition in life tells us is clear, We know he ' ll sue- Sign it Mrs. R. DiNapoli, He ' ll ceed in a automotive never know the difference. career. MARGARET SCOPPA You who are on the road, Must have a code that you can live by. And so become yourself, Because the past is just a good-by. Crosby, Stills, Nash Young GEORGE SHARIS Find the cost of freedom, Bur¬ ied in the ground, Mother earth will swollow you, Lay your body down. -Stephen Stills- i ' $ S P M PAMELA SHEPPARD Kind words are like dripping honey; Sweetness on the tongue and health for the body. KAREN SHEPPARD If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter: For always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself. MARYHELEN SHUMAN Friendship needs no words-it is, A lonliness relieved of the anguish of lonliness. DEBORAH SIGNORIELLA You give little when you give of your possessions; it is when you give of yourself that you truly give. JEANNE SIMMIONE And in the end, the love you take. . . Is equal to the love you make. . . DEBRA SIMONELLI No man can be happy without a friend nor be sure of his friend till he ' s unhappy. -Debbie- Sagittarius JOHN SIMONELLI When one sees with his ears but not with his eyes, he ' s not a person, but a freak in disquise. MICHAEL SIRACUSE Life is kind of a far out ad¬ venture where people get high just being together. You can make it if you try. G.P.A DEBORA SMITH Nothing has been done by war for the good of mankind that could not have been ROBERT SLATTER better accomplished by peace. CHRISTINE SMITH It ' s really a wonder, I haven ' t lost all hope. But I will keep on hoping, because I believe people are really good at heart. -Tina- DELLA SMITH LOVE-1 wonder why it ' s used so often when there seem to be so very little of it left. JUDITH SMITH Forwisdom shall enter thy heart, and knowledge all be pleasant unto they soul. JACQUELINE SO BO LEWS KI Tty to relize it ' s all within yourself-no one else can make you change-and to see you ' re really only very small, and life flows on within you and without you. -George Harrison- MICHAEL SORRENTINO It ' s only words and words are all I have to take your heart away ssp . Sorry JOSEPH SOUSA I can ' t say just what is real all I know is what I feel -Joe- FRANK SPA DA FORA The best things in life are free and so are the worst men. SALVATORE SORRIENTO There is no greater sorrow than to recall a time of misery in happiness. % ANNE STOWELL PATRICIA SULLIVAN JANET STAPLES I am not afraid of tomorrow, Love, you never know when Live each day as if death for I have seen yesterday and you have it, until you lose were coming tomorrow. CHARLES STEED I love today. it. SYLVIA SULLIVAN What is beautiful is good, and who is good will soon be beautiful. JANET TADDEO Tty to realize it ' s all within yourself no one else can make you change. And to see you ' re really only very small, and life flows on within you and without you. -George Harrison- LIZA THISTLE If you cry because of losing the sun, your tears will not allow you to see. -Tagore- JOHN THOLEN If you want to have what you do not have, you must do what you do not do. -ByG.C. Lichteriberg. THERESA THOLEN Some men see things and ask why. Why can ' t we see things and ask why not? DAVID TIERNEY Here with my beer I sit, While golden moments fly; Alas! They pass unneeded by and as they fly, I, being dry, sit by sipping MY BEER. CELESTE TINO Life begins with a thought which matures into a dream; As you stand on the threshold of that dream-enter with an open mind and a sincere heart. -Ernie- PETER TOTO Friends may come, friends may go Friends may peter out you know, But we ' ll be friends thorugh thick and thin Peter out peter in. HUGUETTE TOCE We have done away with the devil these days because man can now be trusted to cary on the work himself. ' MARIAN TODINO The beauty of love is known only to those who share and understand it. PAUL TODISCO Do, it, Don ' t doub it -Justin Hayward- MICHAEL TROY . . .with a little help from my friends... -Joe Cocker- JOAN TRUFANT Winter, Spring, Summer or Fall, All you gotta do is call, And I ' ll be there, ya You ' ve got a friend -James Taylor- MAUREEN TROIANO The first time many of us realize that a little learning is a dangerous thing is when we bring home a report card -Evan Esar- BETTY TRIANTOS If you can find a path with no obstacles it probably doesn ' t lead anywhere. NANCY TUREV1CH Friendship is only to be purchased by friendship. JOHN TURNER DENNIS VAUTOR You better live your life before you pass it away. G.P.A. MARIA TENAGLLA It doesn ' t matter who you love . Or how you love. . .but that you love. CAROL TRUNGIO It ' s life ' s illusions I recall, I really don ' t know love at all. ■ Hi SALVATORE VENTOLINE In peace sons bury their fathers, In war fathers bury their sons. FRANK VENUTO A football game is where the spectators have four quarters to finish a fifth. , DIANE VERTULLO The most I can do for my friend is simply be his friend. DEBRA VETRANO Where your pleasure is, there is your treasure; where your treasure, there is your heart, where your heart, there is your happiness. -St. Augustine- MARGARET WELSH Yesterday is experience, tomorrow is hope, and today is getting from one to the other as best we can. DONNA WETMORE DEBRA WHITE RICHARD WHITE No work of love will flourish if ii ve is our sunlight, then out of we are its seeds, guilt, fear of hollowness of heart, just no valid plans for the future can be made by those who have no capa¬ city for living now -Alan Watts- CLUDIA VIOLETTE Do not let yourself be conqu¬ ered by the evil, But keep conquering the evil with the good. -Romans 12:21- CHARLES WALKER He who liked to clown around is now airward bound, He hopes to enter the air force in transportation. .. MARYLOU WALSH We are together, what ' s in store store? We have traveled together this far, but what now? C ur paths will separate soon, to face what they ' ve talked about these past twelve years. SHARON WATSON Life, is very simple: It merely consists in learning how to accept the impossible, how to do without the indi¬ spensable, how to endure the insupportable. JOSEPH WILICHOSKI He rose without a friend, and sat down without a enemy. NANCY YACOBIAN How happy ' s he who hath due place assigned To his beasts and disafforested his mind; -Thoreau- NANCY WORTMAN The pleasure found in friend- LINDA WILLIAMS ship as in love Happiness adds and multiplies Comes more from the things as we divide it we don ' t know about others with others. MICHAEL WISNIEWKI Than from the things we know DONALD YOUNG Happiness is being with the chick you love. JEANETTE YOUNG Acting funny, but I don ' t know why. . . scuse me while I kiss the sky. -Jimi Hendrix- VIRGINIA YOUNG Loves does not consist in gazing at each other But in looking outward to¬ gether in the same direction. JOEL ZIDE To know when one ' s self is interested Is the first condition of inter¬ esting Other people. 107 (ABOVE) This year ' s Yearbook Queen, Jean Caiazzo, is surrounded by her court which is comprised of (LEFT TO RIGHT) Joyce Lewis, Patty D ' Amelio, Diane Auger, and Debra Ringdahl. (LEFT) Jean Caiazzo was chosen the Year book Queen for 1972 at the Yearbook Dance held in the high school gym by the Student Council. 110 ■ ’ . --• ■ .. (ABOVE LEFT) Sylvia Sullivan was cho¬ sen 1972 Football Queen at the Football Queen dance in the high School gym, which was sponsored by the Student Council on Friday, December 10, 1971. (ABOVE RIGHT) At the Winter Sports dance, also held by the Student Council, on March 3, 1972, Karen Capone was picked to be the Winter Sports Queen, representing the Hockey and Basketball teams. •v i H 112 G.B.A.R.C. In association with the Greater Boston Association for Retarded Children, a group of concerned Everett High School students, donated time each week to attend special work sessins with the Retarded children in the Everett area. Dismissed from school, the students would attend these sessions at the Glendale Congregational Church, to talk, work, and many times just to be a friend to someone in need of friendship. Merely to let these children know that people care about them, these students participated in the program: James Dris¬ coll, George Sharis, Steve Anzalone, Steve Finos, Peter Smith, and John Capra. DEVENS SCHOOL PROJECT Under the guidance of Mr. Victor De- Rubis, head of the Foreign Language De¬ partment at Everett High School, a group of high school students participated in an organization entitled Devens School Project . Emphasizing on Italian, the students engaged in this project are helping to al¬ leviate the problem of the language bar¬ rier that exists with the increase of non- english speaking children entering the Everett school system. Involved in the project are: Valerie Panarese, Debbie Pizzano, Claudia Violette, Debbie Capua, Christine Markevich, Ronald Quarterone, Robert Moore, Margaret Welsh, Angela Iamelli, Salvatore Sorriento, Robert Baker, Tinna Nanni, Diane Auger, Margaret Jeddrey, Linda Goodine, Anne Dolan, Linda Bellofatto, and Sharon Bookman. 113 E. H. S. 1971-72 CHESS TEAM This year ' s chess team had one of its better seasons, finishing up with a 12-8 rec¬ ord for the year. A key factor in their excellent record was the superb play of Captain Bob Slater, and that of Co-captain Peter Moran. Moran was also voted Most Valuable player for the 71-72 season by his teammates. Advisor for this year ' s chess team was Mr. Foley, a member of the E. H. S. faculty. Last year ' s members, coached by Mr. Steve Daisy, showed what they learned, and have proven to be a credit to the Class of 72 . ABOVE are this year ' s chess team members: (LEFT TO RIGHT) A1 Nadeau, Peter Mo¬ ran, Jim Licata, Bob Slater (Captain), and John Washburn. Spanish club SEATED (LEFT TO RIGHT) Sandra Krane, Marie Gautreau, Patricia Owens, Karen Heywood, STANDING FIRST ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT) John Lyons, Ann Marie Troy, Patricia Thompson, Richard DiNapoli, Rosalyn Gray, Robin Gray, Janice Gilman, Cynthia Webb, Stephen Liston. BACK ROW STANDING (LEFT TO RIGHT) Frank DiMaria, Robert Moore, John Marino, Donald Heavey, Anne McGee, Robert Baker, Michael Palma. SEATED (L TO R) Spanish Club Advisor Miss Dorn, Secretary ' Sandra Krane. STANDING (L TO R) President Robert Baker, Treasurer Richard DiNapoli. This year ' s Spanish Club had one of the widest varieties of activities ever. Not only did they sell can¬ dy to raise money for the Globe and Hereald Santas, but they held a special Christmas party for the elderly women at the Appleton Nursing Home. This year for the first time, due mainly to the ef¬ forts of Mr. James Marino and Miss Mary Dorn, along with the other 58 who participated in this event, a group from Everett made a trip to Spain during the April vacation. To close out the year, the Spanish Club will hold its annual banquet on June 2, at which all members will recieve praise and recognition for the fine work they had done during their membership to the Spanish Club. 114 french club SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT - Advisor James Marino, Donna LaVita, Mike Marchese, Larry Tokson, Jim Merenghi, Jeffery Snow, Mark Guenard, Garry Gould, Frank Di- Masse. STANDING MIDDLE - Mary Ellen Fregosi, Nancy Ellard. SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT - Denise Lanciani, Janet Staples, Nancy Contilli, Candy Johnson, Paula Len- tini, Sandra Forgioni, Jane Caiazzo. OFFICERS: LEFT TO RIGHT - Donna LaVita, Sec¬ retary-Treasurer, Michael Marchese, President, Mary Ellen Fregosi, Vice-President. our band and our majorettes This Everett High School Band was excel¬ lently conducted was Mr. Sullivan. Seniors featured in the band are: Anthony Grossi, Eileen Fournier, Tim King, Joel Zide, Carol Crokett, Mark Kornhauser. The band accompanied this year ' s GBL Championship football team throughout the season, and also entertained at the major assemblies throughout the year. FRONT ROW L TO R- Patty D ' Amelio, Linda Ragucci, Lydia Bash - Co-Captain, Joyce Lewis - Co-Captain, Adeline Izzicupo, Andrea Acquaviva. SECOND ROW L TO R- Regina Lyons, Diane Vertulo, Joan Conley. THIRD ROW L TO R- Nancy Church¬ ill, Maureen Dumas, Jo-Ann Wholey, Janet D ' Angelo, Donna Palermo, Sharon White, Deborah Sully. cheerleaders Pretty Everett Cheerleaders make the noise for the boys as they meet Revere High School at Paul Revere Memorial Stadium. The girls gave the Crimson Tide the spirit all the way as they continued on their way to the Greater Boston League Championship. ' ' • ■ nq W. ' : - — ' •wa M - L • - V M ' . ¥ ' 1 1 t miffl IB 119 900 99 ‘ NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY The Everett High School Chapter of the National Honor Society was formed on 1969. Students may become candi¬ dates for membership at the end of the second quarter of their junior year if they have main¬ tained a scholastic average of 3. 5 for their first year and a half of high school. If they are not eligible for membership at this time, they may be consid¬ ered for membership at the mid¬ dle if their senior year if they meet this academic requirement. During the early part of the third quarter of each year the so¬ ciety advisor submits to all teachers, administrators, guid¬ ance counselors, club advisors and athletic coaches, the names of those students who qualify academically for membership in the society. At this time these educators are asked to comment on those students they have worked with as to their eligabil- ity on the basis of character, leadership, and service. A sum¬ mary of these evaluations is then submitted to a faculty council consisting of the principal and four members of the faculty who have the responsibility of the election of members to the Society Society Any member who falls below the standards which were the ba¬ sis of his election is promptly re¬ moved or warned. If during the next regular marking period of the school the member fails to meet the required standards used to qualify him for election to the society ' , his status is reviewed by the faculty council. A National Honor Society member must maintain the required standards in order to retain his member¬ ship. A member is allowed only one warning period. Once a member has been dismissed, he is never again eligible for mem¬ bership in the National Honor Society. The students who were elected to the National Honor Society for this year are: JUNIORS: Dennis Aylward, Donna Bailey, Anthony Bello- fatto, Charles Bognanni, Georginna Brioso, Bruce Canter, Dianne Cardillo, Donna Cirino, Patricia Connors, Patricia Coo- gan, Susan DiSabatino, Darlene Dragan, Maureen Dumas, Janis Giannantonio, Marlene Grace, Mary Grassi, Andrea Grout, William Loring, Regina Lyons, Francine Marcus, Debra Mav- ilio, Maryann Moreschi, Diane Mucciarone, Patricia Mulcahy, Karen Ragucci, Nancy Riehn, Pamela Sneed, Claudia Sordillo, Michael Supino. SENIORS: Edward Arsenault, Ronald Calo, Patricia Ells, Paula Luongo, John Simonelli, Bruno Wroblewski. The following seniors were elected to the society during their junior year: Robert Baker, Jean Bettencourt, Robert Bilotta, Carla Birarelli, Delores Capua, Michael Catanzano, Nancy Churchill, Richard Coogan, Donna Cubetus, Valerie DiCec- ca, Frank DiMaria, Darlene Ditter, Constance Gallant, Robin Gray, Rosalyn Gray, Barbara Haddad, Susan Hannefant, Jacalyn King, James Lyons, Christine Markevich, Mary Po- thier, Jeanne Rao, Marie Saia, Karen Sheppare, Mary Shuman, Anne Stowell, Celeste, Tino, Donna Wetmore. THE OFFICERS OF THE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY (FROM LEFT TO RIGHT) are: Delores Capua, Sec¬ retary; Mary Helen Shuman, Treasur¬ er; Anne Stowell, President; Frank DiMaria, Vice-President. 120 ITALIAN CLUB Who would have thought that Women ' s Lib would go all the way to Italy? Well, it has in a play put on by this year ' s Italian Club, entitled La Rivolta Delle Donne . This was only one of the many activities car¬ ried out by this year ' s Italian Club members who include: (SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT) Ronnie Quaterone, Marie Saia, Tina Nanni, Peggy Welsh, and Linda Bellofatto. (FIRST ROW STANDING) Ronald Calo, Valerie Paneresse, Linda Goodine, Debbie Pizzano, Angela Iamelli, Michael DeSimone. (BACK ROW LEFT TO RIGHT) Billy Briggs, Joseph Sousa, Payla Louongo, Debbie Capua, and Tony Grossi. (LEFT TO RIGHT) Ronnie Quarterone, Vice-President, Marie Saia, Treasurer, Mr. DeRubis, Advisor, Tina Nanni, President, Margaret Welsh, Secretary. 121 (SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT) Mrs. Margaret Mitton, Mrs. Lillian Raymond. (STANDING LEFT TO RIGHT) Vice-Chairman Joseph Carr, Chairman Richard Vendola, Francis O ' Hara, Dennis Kelley, William Doyle, William Pippy, Arthur Covelle. 122 Mr. Alfred C. Dowd Mr. Alfred Dowd was elected as a teacher in the Everett Public School System on September 1, 1934. As a student of Boston College, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree. He also attended Boston University, and Calvin Coolidge College, where he received his Master of Education degree. A highly respected member of the faculty by both the students as well as his fellow teachers, Mr. Dowd was elected Head of the Social Studies Department in the Everett High School on Septem¬ ber 18, 1958. We, the students of Everett High School know that a great teacher and a great man will be leaving the Everett School System with the retire¬ ment of Alfred C. Dowd, on June 30, 1972. 123 dramatics DRAMATIC CLUB Every year at the Everett High School the dramatic club stages one main pro¬ duction. This year the students staged the GRAMERCY GHOST. Although there were only twelve characters, there were over fifty people who helped to put the play on. It takes a lot of hard work to put on a production. The easiest part, needless to say is that of the performers. They study their lines and rehearse quite frequently. The technical crew has the hardest job, for they work on the cues given by the actors, and if one actor forgets one cue line, it could ruin the ' whole play. If the cue is missed, the crew will not be able to do its job. The lights, the music, the sound affects, the props, and the curtain all work by the cues. In past years the Everett High School dramatic clubs have put on such produc¬ tions as UTBU, THURBER CARNIVAL, HARVEY, ARSENIC AND OLD LACE, and DOBIE GILLIS. The student Thespian Society was the society that put on small skits, and gave special help to the main productions. Thespian members are voted upon by the senior members of the club. At the end of each year the entire Dramatic Club meets to plan a large dinner party for all members to attend and to finish off the year as a success. 124 CLASS OF 1972 STUDENT CLASS OFFICERS AND STUDENT COUN¬ CIL: (SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT) Janet D ' Angelo, Nancy Churchill. (BACK ROW LEFT TO RIGHT) Dennis Vautout, John Kelleher, John Simonelli, Lennie Gardino, Michael Martarazzo, Charles Giacobbe, and Thomas Allston. ' Wiomm CLASS OFFICERS: (LEFT TO RIGHT) Dennis Vautour, Presi dent; Janet D ' Angelo, Secre¬ tary; Nancy Churchill, Treas¬ urer; John Kelleher, Vice- Mm w ■ y lisisr V 1 | . . |fi 7 1 W STUDENT COUNCIL MEMBERS: President. (LEFT TO RIGHT) Lennie Gardino, John Simonelli, Michael Marto- razzo, Charles Giacobbe, and Thomas Allston. 125 YEARBOOK STAFF Advisor - Mr. John Hudson Editor - Robert Rabin Assistant Editor Robin Gray Art Editor - Tina Nanni Copy Editor - Debbie Lucci Sports Editors - Rick Roda, and Mike Sorrentino Photographic Editor - Charles Giacobbe Features Editor - Robert Baggs Secretarial Staff Head - Adeline Izzicuppo PHOTOGRAPHERS: Charles Giacobbe Ronnie Quarterone James Palombo Richard Guenard ART STAFF: Tina Nanni Barbara Palangi SECRETARIAL STAFF: Adeline Izzicuppo Margit Byron Mary Lou Walsh Nancy Bruce Eileen Elibero Jean Bartolo Celeste Tino Patricia Caul Andrea Acquaviva Mary Ellen Liston ADVERTISEMENT COMMITTEE Paula Louongo, Chairwoman James Hogan Debbie Lucci Jeanne Rao Robert Baker John Marino Darlene Ditter John Gordon Joanne Gochis Rosalyn Gray Patricia Ells Anne Dolan Debbie Capua Delores Capua Anne Stowell WRITERS: Paul Todesco Donna Wetmore Christine Markevich Debbie Pizzano 126 prom committees JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE (SEATED L TO R) Joyce Lewis, John Simonelli, Jeanne Rao. (SECOND ROW, STAND¬ ING, L TO R) Lydia Bash, Nancy Churchill, Celeste Tino, Anne Stowell, Andrea Acquaviva, Janet D ' Angelo. (BACK ROW, L TO R) Michael Mata- razzo, Robert Rabin, Michael Deange- lis, Thomas Allston, John Capra, Dennis Vautour. ■Hr A w ■ k yf • j k V,it I J SENIOR PROM COMMITTEE (SEATED, L TO R) Karen Evangelista, Lennie Gardino, Lydia Bash. (SECOND ROW, L TO R) Jeanne Rao, Nancy Churchill, John Simonelli, Andrea Acquaviva, Janet D ' Angelo. (BACK ROW, L TO R) Michael Matarazzo, John Kelleher, Thomas Allston, Robert Rabin, Dennis Vautour, Charles Giacobbe. 127 anti-environmental pollution committee ANTI ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION COMMITTEE The Anti-Environmental Pollution Committee is made up of a group of concerned students. Mr. James Mi- carelli is the advisor to the group which began about four years ago. The group is now divided into sub-committees, each of which deals with a different aspect of pollution. This year the most noticed of these sub-committees was the Recycling Committee. The reason that this committee is so well known is be¬ cause they organized a metal recy¬ cling drive involving the whole city. Mayor George McCarthy and Mr. Frank Riley helped to get the city trucks that the group needed. To date, the campaign has been a fan¬ tastic success, with the total amount collected exceeding five tons. The chairman of the Recycling Commit¬ tee is Robert Gallant. The other members of the committee are: Jeffrey Snow, Susan Juretti, David Segal, Dennis Snook, Robert Mas- iello, Mark Meninger, Vincent Va- sallo, Donna Ricci, Joseph Ferraro, Frank Cavignano, Susan Wetmore, Maureen Badolato, Charlene Cove, Lillian Catanzano, Janice Gilman, and Donna Wetmore. Another active sub-committee is the Pollution Complaint Board. This group distributes complaint forms throughout the city. Citizens can fill out the forms to report any form of pollution in the city. When the mem bers receive these complaints, they check to see if it is a valid report. Then they follow the proper channels to warn the offender. Janet Yates is the chairwoman of this committee. The other members are: Victor De- Rubis, Debbie Signoriello, Steven DelOrfano, Dinise Barbineau. 128 iSMUO ffRaaMUTf EVHLumirm we also had a science fair. At this year ' s annual Science Fair, many people were on hand to see a wide display of scientific creativity exhibited by the students of Everett High School who participated in the Fair. (LEFT) First prize winners Richard Coogan and Peter Smith are congratulated by Superintendant Arigo LaTianzi and Mayor George R. Mc¬ Carthy. They were awarded $100 for their Chemical Analysis of the Malden River . Second prize went to Steve Lombardi, who was awarded $50 for his Bacterial Analysis of the Mal¬ den River . The third prize winner was Robert Baker, who also received $50 for his Surface Tension and Bub¬ bles . All prize money was given by the Everett Lodge of Elks. First prize winners Richard Coogan and Steve Smith went on to enter the State Science Fair, where they won third prize. 130 amorometer ' SINGING TUBES ' THL SOUND OF HOTAIR IS THIS perpetual mow AH INSTHUMEHT DEVISED BY V . FARDREIT KW U6NER TO TEST YfcuR ANXETto PERSONALITY EVACUATION RATE OP A Pill rm, WEN WfLEl DETERMINES the ABOVE FACTO . HE ALSODEVELORED THE RuoriNS STANDARD SCALE TIME 60 SEC SO SEC ‘IS SEC NO SEC 35 SEC 30 SEC h ' O W Vo ms nut Yatte mvr, tut jiitr qbzut vet tin such cur or cotrtc Jusr Auwtt. Another important sub-committee is our art group. These students are some of the most tal¬ ented of the Everett High School. The beautiful posters and bulliten board displays around the school illustrate their creative talents. Through their hard work, many of our campaigns were successfully advertised. One of the most impor¬ tant functions of this group is to inform people of the dangers of pollution, and this year they have done a fantastic job. Janis Giannantonio is the chairwoman and the members of her committee are: Janet Yates, Josephine Bottari, Lorraine Pini, Lorraine Parisi, Christine Hall, Deborah Griffen, and Charlene Follett. RE 5 P)R£ 7 £) R y System nfl v ta Inheritc , [(U Genetic ]nj) Ili fltt jXXSltb to prei J trof A 0 rr ,(ii yq xi$ r tct ,u (v« V «4 •rr.nt,, { i nltjr 1 u4w it , f ,i -crsjlr.cttrt I 1 fttt rc IU ■ fflloi happens (ht ujt tr k(f (. I ft DU SSI__ au S£sn ,« ar ounc: Evsrctt ' ■ 5 «« . !« at feror-fc.v The Research Committee, headed by Richard Coogan, has members working on several pro¬ jects. A chemical analysis was done on the Malden River, and bacterial research was done on various other nearby waterways. These two projects came in first and second in this year ' s Science Fair. Various other projects are being conducted by these students. The members of the committee include: Peter Smith, Steve Lom¬ bardi, Robert Gallant, Gene Gia- cobbe, and David Segal. The editorial staff is involved in letting the public know, through the newspapers, what the AEPC is doing and also how the citizens can help. A newsletter is being printed, entitled YAFEE or Young Adults for Environment and Ecology. This paper is entirely concerned with projects and stories about pollution. The editor is Donna Wetmore, her assistant editor is Karen Sheppard, and also working with the paper is Diane Mucciarone. The whole AEPC contributes the articles for this paper. Judy Fonzi handles the Public Relations for the AEPC. She also organizes field trips for the group. The officers of the Committee are Larry Seely, President, Peter Smith, Vice-President; and Andrea Grout, Secretary Treasurer. Although the AEPC is divided into sub-committees, the entire group cooperates in group projects. These projects are often for the good of the community such as the clean-up campaign and the Earth Day show which was written and performed entirely by the AEPC members. All members also aided in the Recycling Project. By working together these students have accomplished much to be talked about for years to come. 131 football crimson wins g.b.l. 6 - 2-1 134 Steve Anzalone, this year ' s Crimson Tide captain, was also the receiver of the annual Manganaro award which is awarded each year to the outstanding lineman in the Everett-Medford game. 136 FRONT ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Frank Russo, Frank Venuto, John Romboli, John Kelleher, Frank Nazzaro, Michael Deangelis, Joseph DiGeorge, Steve Anzalone, James DiNuccio, Richard Roda, Dennis Vautor, Mark Jagiello, Frank Nuzzo, John Capra, Kevin Green. SECOND ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Coach Frank Ciampi, Coach Tony Sarno, John DiBiaso, Michael Marchese, Bruce Allesio, Steve Alteri, Nick Fiandaca, Joe Conti, Angelo Leo, Vincent Sabella, Frank Spadafora, Arthur McNally, Kevin Washington, Willian Dodge, Carl Supino, John McCormack, Allan Panarese, Richard Magno, Equpt. Mgr. Mike Mat- tuchio, Coach Robert Marques, and Head Coach Dr. Amarino Sarno. THIRD ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Equip. Mgr. Peter Dol¬ an, Randy Hall, Lou Forte, Paul Musmucci, Michael Palmer, Glen Forward, Michael Nigro, Don DiFelice, James Merenghi, Louis Maiani, Michael Gordon, John Peters, Steve Maiorano, Salvatore Catanzano, Bob Smith, Anthony Lattorelli. FOURTH ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT) John Doe, William Loring, Victor Bruno, Rick Shuman, Thomas Messina, Mario Marscinelli, Joseph Cacciola, John Jamerson, Joseph Richardson, George Strahan. % • . .. s «« x S ' ISlIigL ■ -i mii.- ' ! MQl Steve Anzalone (L TO R) John Kelleher, Mike Deangelis. 137 Mark Jagiello Joe DiGeorge Jim DiNuccio. John Romboli CRIMSON TIDE WINS 1971-72 GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP In the non-league opener against Newton, Everett ended up on the bot¬ tom of a 6-0 contest. The loss was a tough one because it was the first game of the season, but the Everett nine came back harder and harder each game to finally end up in the top spot of the G.B.L. This years EHS team, after three years of developing into a hardnosed squad, proved to everybody that the city of Everett is still the The City of Champions . Against Somerville, senior quar¬ terback Frank Venuto rifled two touchdown passes and Frank Nuzzo ran for a pair of scores as Everett swamp¬ ed Somerville 42-14. This brought Everett ' s record 1-1, after the loss to Newton. Ventuo ' s first TD pass was to sen¬ ior halfback John Romboli, who then ran 35 yards for the score. John Capra and Frank Russo also had scores, rushing from six and nine yards respectively. Half back Frank Nuzzo scored two TD ' s in the fourth quarter to spark Everett ' s 20-8 victory over Quincy. Quincy took the lead 8-6 in the third quarter on a 50 yard pass play by the Quincy quarterback and his receiver Dave Coull. John Romboli, who ran for 66 yards in 13 carries, and John Capra, who carried 10 times for 40 yards, also carried Everett to victory over Quincy. The E.H.S. team had a 6-0 lead at halftime after a six yard scamper by Romboli. In a 26-12 defeat over Medford, Everett demolished Kevin Cunniff and the Medford Mustangs. The tough Everett defense held the mustangs to only three second quarter first downs, two on penalities. Cunniff was allow¬ ed to just four yards in six carries. The Crimson Tide took over the top spot in the GBL behind the power running of senior John Romboli and speedster Frank Nuzzo. Romboli chewed up 87 yards up the middle on 18 carries and one touchdown, while Nuzzo busted for 101 yards and three touchdowns in 21 tries. The eleventh annual Manganaro Trophy was awarded during the Med¬ ford game to the outstanding EHS lineman. The trophy was awarded to Captain Steve Anzalone, who led the Tide to victory and GBL crown. Against North Quincy, senior full¬ back John Romboli finished up as top rusher and also put on a stupendous exhibition of punting, as the Everett team posted a 14-8 victory at North Quincy ' s Veteran Stadium. Romboli averaged 47.5 yards per punt on 5 punts, enabling Everett to maintain excellent field position throughout the game. Everett, 4-0-1 since losing the opener to Newton, did not play its best game, according to Coach Sarno. Aided by a few costly Everett penalities, Beverly made a third quar¬ ter touchdown and a two point con¬ version for a 16-14 non-league upset over Everett. Nick Fiandaca threw two TD passes to Frank Nuzzo to lead 14-8 in the second half, but a major pen¬ alty against Everett put them in a punt¬ ing situation. Despie a jarring tackle by Everett ' s John Capra, Beverly ' s Bob Connolly caught a TD pass in the end zone for the winning points. In another outstanding punting exhibition by John Romboli, Everett beat Malden 14-12. Romboli ' s punts of 47, 59, 57, 37, and 50 yards kept Malden fighting for position all the way. Nick Fiandaca ' s conversion pass to senior end Kevin Green provided the winning points. Malden went ahead midway in the third quarter, taking over on the Everett 39 and going the distance in six plays with Byrne throwing 29 yards to Bob Harrison for the score. Three plays into the final quar¬ ter, Romboli bulled his way into the end zone from three yards out for the tying touchdown. Fiandaca then hit Kevin Green in the end zone for the winning points. Everett finished up the year with a defeat over Chelsea 43-0 in the an¬ nual Thanksgiving Turkey game. The Crimson Tide showed the spirit that truly is Everett High School and wound up GBL Champs for the 1971-72 season. 139 Frank Venuto -rvrr—r nfvi- ' - x e awatv-. ' v JEFFREY JEWELER ' S AWARD JOHN ROMBOLI - A W J n •m W m p V 4 EVERETT HIGH SCHOOL 1971 - 72 BASKETBALL TEAM (FRONT ROW - SEATED, LEFT TO RIGHT) Paul Cheslovska, Tom Allston, Kevin McGlaughlin, Jim Driscoll, Steve Anzalone, Jim Penta, John Gordon, Keith Stallbaum. (BACK ROW - STANDING) Coach Bill Profena, Manager Peter Hudson, Kevin Giannino, John O ' Gra¬ dy, Arnie Heavey, Michael Marchese, John Ronan, Frank Russo, Head Coach Victor Pisacreta. KEVIN McGLAUGHLIN MVP ALL-STAR Kevin McGlaughlin, high scoring guard for the Crimson hoopsters, was voted MVP by the GBL coaches at a dinner¬ meeting. He was also named to play on the state all-star team, and also to the first team of the Record American All star team. He also received many of¬ fers from colleges around the country, including a full schol¬ arship to Harvard, where he will attend in September. Vc r M 31 m f m- (TOP LEFT) Kevin McGlaughlin at the line for one. (TOP RIGHT) Steve Anzalone jumps and hits from outside. (ABOVE LEFT) Jim Driscoll brings the ball down the court to set up the Everett offen¬ sive play. (ABOVE) Coaches Pisacreta and Profenna in conference with the Crimson five during a time out in a game with Revere. (LEFT) Everett huddles on the sideline dur¬ ing time out in the Tech Tourney game at the Boston Garden. yj % j E. H. S. 1971 - 72 BASKETBALL Head Coach Victor Pisacreta Assistant Coach Bill Profenna Co-Captains Steve Anzalone and Jim Driscoll Trainer Ralph Noe Student Managers Peter Hudson, Howie Rutstein, Arnie Roberts. and Under the superb guidance of Coach Pisacreta, and the fabulous talents of guard Kevin McGlaughlin, the Everett High School Basketball team marched to the Tech Tourney with a successful 13 and 7 season ' s record. Although they had a great season, two games standout as the highpoints. The first was the 63 - 58 upset of Som¬ erville. McGlaughlin led the way hitting 11 for 18 from the floor, plus 5 of 6 free throws for 27 points. Co-captain Steve Anzalone ended up with 14 points and Keith Stall- baum with 12. Co-captain Jim Driscoll led the team in assists with 8. Center John Gordon, forward Jim Penta, and guard Arnie Heavey were also instrumental in that upset. (ABOVE) John Gordon about to show his effectiveness un¬ der the basket against Revere. (RIGHT) Head Coach Victor Pisacreta and Junior Varsity Coach Bill Profena led a strong Crimson team all the way to Boston Garden and the Tech Tourney. At the end of the season, Coach Pisacreta was voted President of the G.B.L. Coaches. 146 Senior John Gordon was Everett ' s most under¬ rated player, in the opin¬ ion of coach Pisacreta. He filled in for both cen¬ ter and forward when in¬ juries were a problem. He was tied for shooting with McGlaughlin and Penta with a total of 58 of 118 shots for 50%. Center Tom Allston, who was plagued with in¬ juries, was out most of the season; otherwise he might have increased the scoring power of Everett. Coach Pisacreta is looking forward to another fine season, and hopefully a first place trophy for the Everett hoop stars. mm- Senior Jim Driscoll was Everett ' s leading playmaker. He led the team in assists with 138 for an average of 6 per game. Senior Steve Anzalone was Everett ' s second leading scorer with an 11 point average. He had an average of 7 rebounds per game. Junior forward Jim Penta led the team in free throws with a total of 45 of 54 for an outstanding average of 83%. Senior Kevin McGlaughlin was Everett ' s leading scorer with a 24 point average. He hit on 197 out of 397 shots for 50% plus 91 out of 121 free throws for 75%. McGlaughlin al¬ so led in rebounds with an average of 4 per game. Kevin was named the Most Valuable Player by the Greater Boston League Coaches, and also to the State All-Star Team. lll „lf«— ' f- i m i niitfiaMBMf , v 4 If., - ” W m W jf ' ■ W 1 - 1 1 :4 ; % 1 •« Hr SP w « k, % - H jv 1 1 • The other game was the last of the season against Arlington. It was to determine whether or not the Everett team would enter the Tech Tourney. The Tide came through with a vic¬ tory, 62-51. Unfortunately, however, Everett was eliminated by Concord Carlisle 67-54 in the first game of the Tech Tourney at the Boston Garden. . J % mm wr uu ' (LEFT TO RIGHT) Ronnie Luongo, Edward Giantonio, Steve Busby, Co-captain Dennis Vautour, Co¬ captain Steve Morganto. (LEFT TO RIGHT) Joe LaBella, Rick Nee, Kevin Barry, Steve Roy, Barry Doyle, Larry Kelliher (LEFT TO RIGHT) Coach Tom Gibson, Head Coach Larry Tuck, Coach Bill Berglumb, Manager Dave Amoroso, Manager Tom Doherty. E.H.S. 1971-72 HOCKEY HEAD COACH: ASSISTANT: CO-CAPTAINS: STUDENT MANAGERS: Larry Tuck Bill Berglumb and Tom Gibson Steve Morganto and Dennis Vautour Dave Amoroso and Tom Doherty The season began with a 3-2 win over Somer¬ ville. This ignited the spark, and the Crimson Tide rolled on to win it ' s next four games. The momen¬ tum was snapped briefly, however, with a loss to Revere; but Everett returned with two more victories. The tide won six of their remaining twelve games, giving them a record of 13 wins and 7 losses. The leading Crimson scorer was forward Kevin Barry. He racked up 10 goals and 12 assists for 22 points. The top goalgetter was senior forward Joe La- bella. He lit the lamp 13 times, and has 8 assists for 21 points. First on the assist list was co-captain Dermis Vautour with 13. The Everett Goaltender, senior Ron Luongo, had a fantastic season. He shut¬ out his opponents 7 times during the season, and let up a total of 33 goals for a 1.5 goals against average. Because of graduation, the team will lost the services of that great checking line of co-captain Steve Morganto, Steve Roy, and Larry Kelliher. Other graduating players will be Co-Captain Dennis Vautour, goalies Ron Luongo and Steve Busby, for¬ ward Joe LaBella, defenseman Gary D ' Avollio, and Bob Hanson. Coach Tuck is depending upon the returning players and the freshmen to aid him in another suc¬ cessful season. We are all confident that he will succeed and take the Tide to a GBL championship. (ABOVE - LEFT TO RIGHT) Mike Abba- tinozzi, Garry Grafeo, Paul DiMitruk. (BELOW - LEFT TO RIGHT) Gary D ' Avolio, Rick Shuman, Peter Cittadini, Steve Smith. 155 156 (ABOVE LEFT) Larry Kelleher flips one in from the circle. (ABOVE RIGHT) Steve Roy digs in the comer. (ABOVE) Everett defenseman Dennis Vautour con¬ trols the puck off the face-off. (RIGHT) Ricky Nee firws through the Malden defense. ■■■■■■■■■■■ ! rf 3 (ABOVE) Crimson skaters huddle in cele¬ bration after victory over Medford. (LEFT) Co-captain Steve Morganto feeds the puck out of the comer to set up scoring play against Chelsea. 158 ' r A 1972 Baseball Team (SEATED) LEFT TO RIGHT - Vincent Doucette, Ronald Louongo, Brunon Wroblewski, Co-Captain John Rombloli, Co-captain John Capra, Michael Deangelis, Douglas Clark, Mark Jagiello. (STAND¬ ING) LEFT TO RIGHT - Head Coach Ralph Cecere, Frank Nuzzo, Frank Russo, Jim Penta, Dennis Ayl- ward, John Pasella, Frank Malinowski, John Leo, John McCormack, Equip. Mgr. Peter Dolan. Everett High School 160 Head coach Ralph Cecere stands with five of Everett ' s graduating seniors. (KNEELING LEFT TO RIGHT) John Capra, Mike Deangelis. STAND LEFT TOP RIGHT) Douglas Clark, Mark Ja- giello, Vincent Doucette, and Coach Cecere. Mark Jagiello, another of Everett ' s hurlers, is one more of Coach Cecere ' s hopefuls for the 1972 season. Pitcher and shortstop Ronnie Louongo has proven to be the spark for this year ' s Crimson team; showing strength at bat, as well as on the field and on the mound. E.H.S. NINE SPLITS FOUR GAMES The defending GBL Crimson Nine Cham¬ pions got off to a slow start this season. The first two games resulted in losses. Medford de¬ feated the local game nine 11 to 7 in the open¬ ing game. In a 16 inning, 6 hour marathon at Quincy, the Crimson Tide bowed 9 to 8. Against Revere in game three, the local high schoolers had their hitting shoes on. There were a total of four home runs, by Frank Russo, John Capra, John Romboli, and Ron Luongo hitting for the circuit. Junior John Pessela was the winning hurler with a 3 hit per¬ formance. The final score was 8 to 3. In these three games the Crimson hurlers issued a total of 31 walks and the fielders com¬ mitted a total of 15 errors. These performances cannot produce championship teams. Co-cap¬ tains Romboli and Capra promise a change in this type of play. The second victory came at the expense of Malden. In an excellent pitching duel, Ron Luongo with 17 strikeouts bested Malden ' s Dave Caizzo who struck out 20. The score was 2 to 0 in favor if Everett, with Luongo allowing 2 hits and Caiazzo 7. 162 i wmmm V mjA m? jM I • . ■• the king and queen 165 reflections” class of .1 r. 1__i. 1972 senior prom - - -JW 2 • ‘ i ■ ' 85 f Jtfc. i Js? iJHL A jl X i K’ f -3s A, IV; J ' ' ‘14 1 5 BP • ri P : i] fc j Hr ;Jj 1 2 i MUR • X. rk r ▼ fHjjf |s« %ll 1 mmM Wf 1 P k B|| 5 m i ™ ! wmL b_I f.Su ipptygi k 172 Marie Abbatinozzi C. 67 Morris St. 389-6781 Activities: Girl Basketball 2, 3 Pep Club 2,3,4 | French Club 3 Girls Field Hockey 4 ■ School Newspaper 4 Andrea Acquaviva E. 406 Ferry Street 389—1262 Activities: Pep Club 2 Cheerleader 3,4 Junior Prom Comm. 3 Yearbook Staff 4 Homeroom Officer 4 Senior Prom Comm.4 Mary Adams L. 50 Veterans Avenue 387-9211 Activities: ' Dramatics 2,3,4 Luceum 2,3,4 Anti Environmental Pollution Club 2, 3 Rose Addonizio M. 14 Plumer St. 387-9805 Activities: Italian Club 3 Jack Albertian 6 Roseadale Ave. 389-0525 Activities: Hockey 2, 3 Thomas Allston G 147 Union St. 387-2561 Activities: . I. Basketball 3,4 Tra ck 2,3,4 Student Council 3,4 Luceum 2, 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2, 3 Oratorical 2, 3 Robert Almon W. 85 GledMll Ave 387-0089 David Amoroso 12 Raymond Street 387-5926 Activities: Hockey 2,3,4 Italian Club 2, 3 Valerie Anderson S. 180 Russell. St. 387-8794 Activities: ' Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Steve Anzalone P. 19 Harvey St. 387-2358 Activities: Football 2,3,4 Basketball 2,3,4 Baseball 2,3 Track 4 Homeroom Officer 2,4 vs Edward Arsenault R. 1.8 Moody Ave. 387-2775 John Arsenault L, 208 Vine St. 389-0358 Diane Auger C. Lydia Bash A. 147 Belmont St. 387-3033 Activities; Cheeleader 3,4 Spanish Club 2,3 Junior Prom Comm. Class Officer 3 Homeroom Officer 3,4 Senior Prom Comm. Linda Bellofatto Iv. 31 Shirley St. 387-7991 Activities: Italian Club 2,3,4 Paul Bello fa tto A. 31 Shirley St. 387-7991 a Nancy Berte A. 84 Baldwin Ave. 387-712S Activities: Pep Sqhad 4 Jean Bettencourt M. 138 Elm St. 389-1865 Activities: Homeroom Officer 3 Pollution Club 3,4 Pep Squad 2 National Honor Society ' ' 3,4 Eileen Biggi fl4 Tappan St. 387-8043 Activities:! .. PepCiub S l Robert Bilotta M. 4. Summit Ave. N 389-9149 : Act vities: National Honor Society Carla Birarelli M. 44 Cleveland Ave 387-9508 Activities: School Newspaper 4 , Chess Team 3§L Homeroom Officer 3,4 Linda Blank I. V 13 Hoyt St. 387-1675 Activities: ’ep Club 2, 3,4 .... anIBlaquiere 164 Chestnut St. 389-0014 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Cecelia Bocchino 7 Clarence, Street 387-2451 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Spanish Club 2 HomeroonnOfficer 2 J y Barbara Bontempo J. 14 Haskell Ave. 387-6148 Activities: ' Spanish Club 2, 3,4 Pep Squad 2,3,4 H. R. Officer 3 Sharon Bookman H. 75 Francis Street 387-5062 Activities: Spanish Club 2,3,4 Newspaper 4 ' Photography Club 4 John Borella 18 Edith Ave. 387-6407 tivities: icia Bourque A. averly Street 389-8S66 Activities: Junior Achievement 3 French Club 2, 3 P£p Club 2,3 Barbara Bowden 1, 39 Chatham Road 387-7304 y Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Sharon Bradley L. 96 Rich St. 387-3916 Yvonne Brennan M. I 30 Baldwin Ave. 387-9220 Activities: Pep Club 2, 3,4 ¥ William Briggs J., 22 Elm Street 387-3985 Activities: t Italian Club 2,3,4 Marilyn Briley ' ' 31 Francis St. ' 387-2778 Activities: I Homeroom Officer 4 Ralph Brogna E. 28 Shute St. 387-0335 Nancy Bruce A. 223 Russell St. 387-4345 Activities: Yearbook Staff 4 Barbara Burgess M. 35 Warren St. 377-6059 Activities; Junior Achievement 3 French Club 2, 3 Stephen Busby G. 360 Main St. 387-8223 Activities: Hockey Team 2. 3,4 Margit Byron 27 Woodward St. 387-6088 Activities: Homeroom Officer 4 Yearbook Staff 4 Pep C lub 2,3,4 Anna Cacchioti M. 24 Road B. 389-2581 | Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Class Officer 2 French Club 2 smeroom Officer 3.4 LucieHA.CaccioIa B. 108 l inden St. 389-2915 Activities: ' : , Homeroom Officer 4 Pep Club 2,3,4 Diane Calare.il M. 124 Bow St. 387-6133 Activities: Trench Club 2,3 Helene Cahill J, 13 Prescott Street 387-4536 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 Jean Caiazzo A. 45 Myrtle St. 389-869S Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2, 3 Jean Caiazzo A. 45 Myrtle St. 389-8698 Activities: Pep .Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 Joan Caiazzo A. 45 Myrtle St. 389-8698 Activities: . Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Susan Caiazzo C. 28 Valley Street 387-1793 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Patripia,,CalJ, A. 38 School Sttee Pep Squad Class Day JjgP Activities: ' f Pep Squad 2,3,4 Yearbook Staff 4 Deborah Callahan A. 63 Wilbur St. 387-0635 Activities: Dramatics 2,3,4 Junior-Achievement 2 , , Spanish Club 3 ,5 | Ronald Calo J. 30 Winthrop St. 3S7-5388 Activities! W (|| M Italian Club 2, 3,4 Karen Capone 8 Forest Aye. 387-4579 Activities: Karen Cappuccio A 8 Cartel St. 389-18I7|- llplr g k John Capra 4 3g5 44 Winthrop Rd. 387-5882 Activities: Football 2, 3,4 Baseball 2, 3, 4 ' Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Jr. Prom Committee 3 Debbie Capua 110 Clarence St. 387-8616 i Activities; • | Italian Club 2, 3,4 Pep Club 2,3,4 Yearbook Staff 4 Delores Capua 110 Clarence St. 387-8616 Activities: Yearbook Staff 4 Italian Club 3,4 ; ; ; National Honor Society 3,4 Junior Achievement 2 Homeroom Officer 4 Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Ellen Capuano 129 Buclmam St. Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Jo-Ellen Capuano 29 Swan Str 387-7450 Activities ' : 121 Main St. 387-7219 Pep Squad 2,3,4 William Bollibee 1837 Revere Beach Pky. Activities: Track 2,3,4 Stephen Concannon 36 Glendale Ave. 387-2848 Barbara Conley 137 Vine S]t. 387-2757 Activities: Jujjior Achievement 2, 3,4 Dramatics 2 Oirjs Glee Club 2 Pep Club 2,3,4 mish Club 2,3 2 illy idhill Ave. 387-9683 cities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 r Lilbrv Staff 4 )ouglas Connors Gledhill Ave. 389-8745 ?rs 389-8335 387-6461 c. 387-3861 Russe Carol Co 54 C allso v § Activities: ' Staff I Linda Contil 24 Myrtle St. 389-1 Activities: ; Club 2, 3, 4 jol Newspaper Ma 75 .n Conti nt Ave. 389-2040 juld 2,3,4 omOfficer 4 ... A | Newspaper 4 tn 57-2791 littee cement 2, m Dramatics 2, 3,4 Pollution Committee 2,3,4 School Newspaper 4 IBIff I m leaser 138 Ri «?•- tctivit w, Club Crd Emily 15 Thur M( Activities .-■mM k!77 Carol Crockett 42 Henry St. 389-0881 Activities: Band 2,3,4 Donna A. Cubetus 20 Linden St. 387-0344 Activities: Girls ' Softball 3 Tennis Club 4 Junior Achievement 2, 3 John E. Culwell jB 41 Bolster St. 387-3882 Nicolo ;D ' Alieva 8 Dyer Ave. 387-8850 Joseph M. Daly 40 Winslow St. 387-9848 Patricia D ' Amelio 148 Cottage St. 387-5458 Activities: Cheerleader 3,4 Pep Squad 2 Homeroom Officer 2 Italian Club 2,3 Class Day Usherette P Deborah D ' Angelo 9 Brown St. 389-2624 Janet M. D ' Angelo 92 School St. 387-0067 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2 Class Officer 4 Student Council 2,3 Jr. Prom Committee 2 Senior Prom Committee 4 Cheerleader 4 C- Pep Squad 2,3 Italian Club 2 Ricardo D ' Angelo 334 Main St. 389-1899 Stephen Danieli 32 Maplewood Aye. 387-6974 Activities: Hoclkey 3 Patricia Darragh 193 Russell St, 387-3451 Joseph Davidan 77 Woodville St. 389-188 J f x Gary M. D ' Avolio 103 Mt. Washington Ave. 389-2209 Activities: Hockey 2,3,4 Mildred E. Dean , 280 Ferry SD. 389-288 . • Michael DeAngelis J 31 Englewood Ave J 389-9356 Activities: Football 2,3,4 Baseball 2,3,4 Class Officer 2,3 Homeroom Officer 2, 3,4 Junior Prom Committee m I ’ • ¥ 1 K-i, •- N. Kevin L. DeChicco 63 Chestnut St. 387-4189 Activities: Homeroom Officer 4 Michael DeFeo 10 Orange Crt. 389-1421 ActfVmesfiML, 3tball 2,3 Deborah DeFlumfri 37 Forest Ave. 387-3528 Joseph A. DeFlumeri 385 Main St. 389-1156 Activities: Football smi W ' WyFM. Dsljf’ ' Cheryl DeGregorio 94 Reed Ave. 389-8587 1 Activities: Homeroom Officer 3 t. 389-9124 ■• ' T? r 1 1 m Donald J. Dell Piana 108 Francis St. 387-4844 Mary E. Dellasat 762 Broadway 387-8119 Activities: Italian Clut Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Patricia DelVicchio 84 Reed Ave. 387-6110 Richard A. DeMambro 64 Shute St. 387-8285 4, 59 Fremont Ave. 389-898 ' Activities: French Club 2,3 Pep Squad 2, 3 Joseph DiGeorge 16 Dartmouth St. 387-5283; Activities: Football 2, 3,4 Italian Club 3 Track 4 Anthony DiGiorlamo 126 Grover St. 389-6937 Maria DiLiberto 140 Ferry St. 387-0064 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 George Dillon 91 Francis St. 387-5? jKi Daniel Dilorenzo 23 Garland St. 387-9747 Activities: Italian Club 2, 3 Newspar r 4 Frank DiMa_ ._ 11 Birch St. 387-6758 Activities: 3,% ’ , National Honor Society 3,4 Homeroom Officer 3 Oratorical 3,4 Newspaper Elizabeth Dlmitruk mm m 112 Hancock St. 387-534 T Francis H. DeMartino 963 Broadway 389-2775 John DeMato 25 Herbert©:. 389-2242 Margaret Denish f 87 Cleveland Ave, Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Girls 1 Basketball William DeTore 16 Walnut St. 387-5574 Ella DeVito 32 Warren St. 387-6895 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2 Italian Club 2 -John ' ’ 19 Cannel! Nunzio Defier 70 Cottage St. . Valerie DeCecca 498 Springvale Ave, 387-82 Activities-, v V National ftonor Society “ Homeroom Officer 4 Valerie Dickson ■ 3 3S DiNuccio Bow St. 387-1263 vities: Football 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Diane DiPietro 42 Sea St. 387-72 8 7 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Richard DiPlatzi 214 Vine St. 387-8194 Joseph DiStefano 181 Vine St. 387-0325 Darlene Ditter 42 Mffrie Ave. 387- r Mvities: Tf National Honor Societ Girls Field Hockey 4 Yearbook Staff 4 wKF - M i A Elaine Diver 6A Wilbur St. 387-1260 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 William Dodge 32 Malden St. 387-3228 Activities: Football 2,4 Thomas Doherty 225 Russell St. 389-9298 Activities: Cross Country 2,3,4 Track 2, 3, 4 Hockey 3,4 Ann Dolan 28 Wolcott St. 389-0535 Activities: Yearbook Staff Spanish Club 2, 3 Pep Squad 2 Devens School Special Project Edward Dondero 33 Woodville St. 389-1038 Patricia Ells J. 130 Cottage St. 389-2793 Activities: Yearbook Staff 4 French Club 3 Lab Assistant 4 Pep Squad 2 Girls Basketball 2 Caryn Evangelista A. 79 Central‘AVe. 389-3034 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 3 Rita Fantasia S, 101 Summer St. 389-8042 Activities: Anti-Envirnment Pollution Comm. 2 Yearbook Staff 4 David Finer P. 173 Springvale Ave. 387-2696 Activities: Cross Country 2 Homeroom Officer 2 -• Football 3 ■A UMpi Stephen Finos 22 Avon St. 387-6352 Activities: Big Brother Program GBARC ' ■ . bps Stephen Fiorillo M. 10 Yarmouth St. 389-3667 Activities: Track 2 Cross Country 3 Joseph Fitzgerald 961 Broadway 389-7744 Kathleen Fitzgerald F. 47 Prescott St. 387-2218 Activities: Pep Club 2, 3,4 dy Fitzpatrick 05 Dartmouth St. 389-1197 tivities: French Club 2 enry Flessas C. f A Prescott St. 389-3597 harlene Follett 04 High St. 389-2199 ctivities: French Club 2,3 ■ A.E.P.C. 3,4 IDramatics 4 seph Foti Glendale St. 389-1546 ■M Eileen Fournier M. 157 Hancock St. 387-9433 Activities: Band 3,4 Joan Frackleton M. 35 Rock Valley Ave. 389-9181 Thomas Franca J. 151 Union St. 387-9382 179 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2, 3 Linda Fratus V. 555 Broadway 389-2931 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2 Paul Fregosi G. 27 Glendale Ave. 389-2275 Activities: Baseball 2 David Gaffey P. 27 Floyd St. 389-2270 Activities: Homeroom Officer 4 Hockey 2, 3,4 Track 2 Valerie Gaglione A. 40 Lewis St. 387-9609 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Constance Gallant A. 70 Highland Ave. 387-7883 Activities: • V . National Honor Society 3,4 Angela Gailucci 18 Avon St. 389-0879 Leonard Gardino 68 Newton St. 387-8434 Activities: , Class Officer 3,4 Student Council 4 Italian Club 2 Senior Prom Committee 4 Robert Gargan 57 Chatham Rd. 389-2612 Carol Garrett 108 Ferry St. 389-8634 Deborah Gateas 803 Broadway 387-8783 Marie Gautre au 160 Bow St. 387-0172 Acti ities: Pep Squad 4 Spanish Club 4 Afternoon Sports 2,3,4 Lawrence Gay nor 93 Shute St. 387-1814 Activities: Spanish Club 2,3,4 Anne Generazzp 99 Jefferson Ave, 389-1974 Charles Giacobbe 56 Bryant St. 387-4962 Activities: Student Council Yearbook Staff Photography Club 4 Senior Prom Committee Eugene Giacobbe 48 Cedar St. 389-8372 Activities: AECP 2,3,4 :1 Arthur Giarrantana H 186 Bell Rock St. 387- Rn. Camille Gilardi 51 Winthrop Rd. Activities: ■ Janice Gilman 13 Summit Ave. 389-3026 Activities: Dramatic Club 2, 3 French Club 2 Tennis Club 4 Priscilla Gindy 751 Broadway 389-3166 Photography Club 4 . Tennis Club 4 . • i _ John Glencross 27 Andrew St. 387-2401 Joanne Gochis 56 Everett St. 387-3422 Activities: Pep Squad 2 Dramatic Club 2,3 , Science Club 2 M Anti Environmental Po‘ Yearbook Staff Linda Goodine 22 Valley St. 387-7431 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Italian Club 2,3,4 Keith Goodwin 85 Waverly St. 389-1557 John Gordan 10 Malden St. 387-6171 Activities: | Junior Achievement 2, 3,4 Spanish Club 2 Yearbook Staff Basketball 2, 3,4 Robin Gray 34 Summit Ave. 387-9155 Activities: Yearbook Staff National Honor Society 3,4 Dramatics 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Pep Squad 2, 3 Spanish Club 3,4 Junior Achievement 3 Tennis Club 4 Rosalyn Gray 34 Summit Ave. 387-9155 Activities: Dramatics 2,3,4 Spanish Club 3,4 Junior Achievement 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,4 National Honor Society 3,4 Yearbook Staff 4 Anthony Graziano 143 Linden St. 389-9055 Michael Greely 4 Kinsman St. 389-0452 . 387-3796 15 Ac Football 2,3,4 Track 4 Homeroom Officer 2, 3,4 Susan Greene , 26 Winthrop Rd. 389-7629 Homeroom Officer 2 22 Vh?e St! ' 389-1561 Junior Achievement French Club 2, 3 A.E.P.C. 3,4 Tennis C ub 4 Pep Squad 2 Girls ' Basketball 2 Dramatics 3,4 Field Hockey 2 Student Council 2 Anthony Gross! 100 Walnut St. 387-3571 Activities; Band 2,3,4 Italian Club 3,4 Hr m WSrn a! J Gerard Guarmo 38 Veterans Aye. 389-7231 Activities: Italian Club 2, 3 lard Guenard Bradford St. 387-5741 Activities: Junior Achievement 2, 3,4 Pollution Committee 3 Yearbook Staff 4 Photography Club 3,4 -.■ Barbara Haddad 10 Tileston St. 389-8316 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 National Honor Society 3,4 Patricia Haggerty E. 9 Woodlawn St. 389-7419 Janet Hall A. 179 Broadway 389-1637 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Norman Hammond M. 24 Paris St. 387-6841 Kathleen Higgins 124 Bellrock St. 387-0645 Paul Hoenig D. 25 Autumn St. 387-0119 James Hogan M. 147 Elm St. 387-4524 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3 Yearbook Staff 4 Oratorical Contest 3 Jr. Achievements Frank Howard L. 135 High St. 387-9229 David Hudson B. 30 Malden St. 387-9291 Peter Hudson 49 Hosmer St. 387-1657 Activities: Pollutions Club 2, 3 Basketball Mgr. 3 Paul Hussey 39 Elsie St. 387-8232 Angela lamelli 19 Mt. Washington St. 387-3039 Activities: Italian Club 2,3,4 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Newspaper 4 Dominic Iandolo R. 28 Carter St. 389-8892 Elaine Imperato 96 Vernal St. 387-4553 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Albert Indelicato J. 10 Marie Ave. 387-6967 Gordan Ivey R. 669 Broadway 387-9534 Adeline Izzicupo 124 Shuet St. 387-0256 Activities: Pep Squad 2 Cheerleader 3,4 Homeroom Officer 3,4 French Club 2 Yearbook Staff 4 Robert Jacobsen M. 18 Ellsworth St. 387-9374 sfy - ' i Mark Jagiello E. 70 Darthmouth Sr. 387-8498 Activities: Baseball 2, 3,4 Football 2, 3,4 Susan Heneffant M. 144 Walnut St. 389-2091 Activities: National Honor Society 3,4 Thomas Jancsy P. 41 Duncan Rd, 387-8339 Activities: Hockey 2, 3,4 Robert Hanson. J. 37 Edith Avenue 387-1019 Activities: Hockey 2, 3,4 Margaret Jeddry E. 11 Hancock St. 387-8980 Activities: French Club 2,3,4 ia rJ SfJSfc , 4 X Pep Squad 2,3,4 Devans School Pro ject 4 51 Myrtle l St. 387-0612 ; tm Lawrence Joseph S. rifn ' P jf ■RS8 37 Union St. 387-5632 mm ¥ HI 7 I m jam WtS wslsi ■fW ' WifetjfS $9p£ IBjF • 9u£ . Thomas Julian W. 11 Green St. 389-3559 Activities: Basketball 2 Track 2, 3,4 , John Kelleher H. 76 Gledhill Ave. 387-9866 Activities: Football 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,4 Class Officer 4 Ml 5 sfi ■ p - « § -.fj Homeroom Of ft ma J. Laidley : Jefferson Ave 38,7-7024 3 ties: 1 I I Squad 3,4 Senior Prom Committee 4 : -wy ®s Track 4 Lawrence Kelleher R. 224 Springvalle Ave. 389-0215 Activities: “ , ■ 1 Hockoy 2,3,4 ' I Iferi H ■ iste: Lynne Kelleher A, 224 Springvalle Ave. 389-0215 • Sheila Kelly A. 64 Shute St. 387-8285 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Junior Achievement 2 Thomas Kelly 12 Harvard St. 387-7229 Activities: ' Oratorical Conte Gary P. Kibby 123 Bucknam St. 387-9176 ActivitiesfV V Rasketballfk % . Track 2,4 1 1 Cross Country 3 im-i J a c alijuM -King 213 Springvale Ave. 387-4647 Activities: National Honor Soci ety 3,4 Timothy M. King 7 Rich St. 389-2933 Activities: Band 2,3,4 Mark Komhauser 86 Francis St. 387-7118. Activities: Band 2,3,4 Orchestra 2,3,4 Steeen M. Kostegan 10 Floyd St. 389-0041 Arthur E. Kyllonen m wm. ym ri Ann Lase Ills Ave. 385 s V) ’ fj p 18 Luke Road 389-0472 HH l UMi P flM| JA iHWiMnHi Ml hi mmMim Sebastiano F. Latir 59 Lewis St. 387- ana • 30.-1555 Susan C. Lawler § 59 Lynn St. 387-6679 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 mj. Cynthia A. Leahy 65 Cottage St. 389-3456 Activities: Pep Squad 2 ’■j Robert Lee 27 Revere St. 387-9125 Activities: Hockey 2, 3 Activities: « Football 3,4 I WTrack 2 f? is Bonnie D. Letourneau 63 Paris St. 389-8033 Frances M. Lever 68 Dean St. 389-3564 A ctivities: Junior Achievement 2, 3,4 Pep Squad 4 Girls ' Softball Team 2, 3 1 Girls ' Hockey 3 W ivn Joyce M. Lewis 102 Vine St. 3S9-23( Activities: Cheerleader 3,4 Pep Squad 2 Homeroom Officer 2, Junior Prom Corqi French Club 2 $ William P. Leyden 62 Freeman Ave. 389-2274 MaryEllen Liston 91 Russell St. 387-6448 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Yearbook Staff Patricia A. Long 35 Chelsea St. 387-4932 Richard Lozzi 197 Ferry St. 387- mm 182 m 4 - Debra Lucci 3 Heath St. 389-9277 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Spanish Club 3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 ook Staff 4 Paula Luongo 180 Bradford St. , 389-1683 Activities: Italian Club 2, 3,4 4 Spanish Club 3,4 1 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Yearbook Staff 4 Homeroom Officer 4 .a WB Ronald Luongo 62 Liberty St. 387-8101 Activities: Hockey 2,3,4 Baseball 2, 3,4 Football 2, 3 Homeroom Officer 2,4 James Lyons 147 Estes St. Activities: 387-2 Track 3,4 Honor Society 3,4 Spanish Club 2,3,4 Yearbook Staff 4 John MacDonald 23 Devens St. 387-6252 Veronica A. MacDonald 23 Devens St. 387-6525 Maureen MacNeill 8 Langdon St. 389-8574 Joseph Maliawco 11 Fuller St ( 389-207.1 Frank. 73A Francis Activities: Spanish Club Photography Football 3 Cheryl Mandracchia 91 Chestnut Stre Activities: Pep Squad 2,3, Homeroom Officer Peter Mangino 3 Irving St. 387-6821 Karen Mannetta 29 Wintrop St. 397-0394 Activities: ' | Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,4 . Diane Marek 39 Henry St. 389-6714 Activities: Band 2, 3 Tennis Club 4 in |K John Marino 9 Shirley St. 387-3956 Activities 5 Jr. Achievement 2,3,4 Spanish Club 3,4 Debating Club 3 Photography 2, 4 Yearbook Staff 4 Tennis Club 4 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Spanish Club 2 Homeroom Officer 2, 3 AECP Committee 2 Girls Basketball 2 Christine Markevich 47A Pearl St. 387-8767 Activities: Girls Glee; Club 2 Dramatic Club 2,3,4 Spanish Club 2,3,4 Honor Society 3,4 Thespian Society 3,4 Yearbook Staff Joanne Magee 84 Gledhill Ave. 387-5209 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Diane Martorana 69 Harvard St. 387-0458 Activities , Pep Squad 2,3,4 Italian Club 2 Class Officer 2, 3,4 Richard Magno 72 Winslow St. 389-9198 Activities: Football 2, 3,4 Cathy Magnotta UliWindsor St. 389- Vctivities: Yearbook , ■ l ’aula Magro e St. 389 iom O .60 Bucknam St. 389- N e il Malatzky 3 Malden St. 389-7519 ■ Activities: Spanish Club 2, 3 r Homeroom Officer 3 Linda Masi 483 Ferry St. 389-8059 Joseph Massua 82 Jefferson Ave. 389-3496 Activities: Spanish Club 4 Photography Club 4 Michael Matarazzo 2 Baldwin Terrace 389-0695 Activities: Student Council 3, 4 Homeroom Officer 4 Public Speaking 2 Jr. Prom Committee 3 Sr. Prom Committee 4 High School Newspaper 4 Henry Mattuchio 33 Montrose St. ,387-6556 Michael 23 Estes 113 Grov. ent 2, 4 J ,ckey 3 ■ Squat or Aq ,e 389-0824 ) rAc higye me nt ; Basketball 3,4 , ; Softball 3,4 ns Club 4 , Squad 3,4 •eroom. Officer 2 icGrath -nal St. 389-8981 .oad 3: lent 2, tfficer ■ hen Mitton M. ummitt Aye. 38” fities; cmeroom Officer v A:ctiyitiesr : -ii ' - ' A Pep Squad 2,3,4 Debating Club 2 , Arthur McNally . 40 Robin St. 389-7627 Activities: Football 2, 3,4 i ' ?;• ’ Y ;v ' , ; ; ■; f Susan McNamara 38 Pleasantview Ave. 387-1698 Activities: , ' «$ ■. Majorette 2,3,4 School Newsmhq ’ 4 Girls Basketball : 2 -v-.. , ■ Janice McPhee ANYA; ,, 21 Foster St. 387-0519 - , Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 . r.mr Deborah Meade J. 59 Luke Road 289-3 41 Activities: Jr. Achievement ' 1 ■ Patrick Mogauro 16 Fuller, St. 387-8 i i Ift Pa trivia Mo lie A. 185 Bow St. 387-36 Activities: | Pep Squad 2,3,4 John Montalbano 51 Winthrop Rd.‘ 38 tivitieS: ' ep Club 2, 3 Karen Moore A 168 Hancock St, Activities: Steven Meninger T 39 Pleasant St. 38S A ctivities: Basketball 2 ' 34 Jackson Ave. 389-2068 ' ■ Activities: Spanish Club 2, 3, 4 Science Club 2 Photography Club 2 i Stephen Morganto 130 Estes St. 387-8879 Activities: Hockey 2,3,4 Captain Hockey 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Paul Murphy F. 96 Cleveland Ave. 389-1675 j Activities’ : i wtir Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3 .French Club 2 Dramatics 4 Library Staff 2 Junior Achievement 2 Barbara Palangi 7 Avon-St. 387-1789 Activities: Yearbook Staff James Palumbo 67 Everett St.’ 387-0654 „ mNm m : I JBSi k . ®r : r; Valerie Panorese 131 Chelsea Si. 389-3834 Acti yjp Italian Club 2,3,4 5 ap Squad 2,3,4 Tieroo m OFf ic er 3,4 lazzaro V e Street 389 -1 . V Enrico Paradiso 12 Park Terr. 387-1473 Activities: j| Track 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Stephen Paradiso 133 Vine St, 387-8433 Activities: m m M ' Italian Club 2,3,4 i sw-h ' Rob ert Pa rker f jrf ■ Ronald Nel 24 Car A ctivitic Ralpl 17-7276 taP- 1 31 Reynolds Ave, 387-4990 ■•Mg ; Activities: Track 2,3,4 51 Bo’s Activities. —- - , ieroO,m fficer 2,! Sports Vrnter - Football 3,4 Steven Nunez M. 6 Appleton St. 389-2139 - fi m Dorothy O’Brien M. lSfcofltty Road 387-4992 | Ac vi ' fgiL Girl ' s;Sports 2,3,4 Patrick O ' Gra 27 Vetrans Activities: Track‘2, 3, Homeroom Officer 3 If—lary ElWn O ' Reillv B3 Reed.Ave. 387-3692 ...Y ' 2pnPl ■ D ( ies Pace Harley Ave. 389-3250 Activities: Track 3,4 Cross Cor itry 3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 tfej 5 V 1 V ffe 4H£v mg t- 4 .y ' HE ’’f , ' Domenic Pasqualone , 55 liberty St. 387-0283 -pip Tjr Jp Gail Pellerin 57 Fremopt Ave. 387-5965 vs. • • ; ;-o; Y kt:- yv.., . 387- Brh ' j. wp IP -V, , ' k 1£ .Theresa Pelosi : 1 4 Winslow St. A ' ctivities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 junior Achievement 2,3,4 LynneT Penney 163 Russell St. 387-2631 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Gail Perry 210 Russell St. 389-1624 Robert Perry 63 Preston St. 387-5316 Activities; Football 2 Catherine Peters 372 Main St. 387-8662 Activities: Homeroom Officer 3 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Thomas Piazza ' alhoun Ave. 387-8220 V ' yann Piccolo ver St. 389-1976 as® KB} V’ LV Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 Joseph Pieroni 23 Albion St. 387-5729 Activities: Spanish Club 2 Lorraine Pini 43 Sycamore St. 389-1255 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Newspaper Staff 4 Douglas Pippy 76 Gledhill Ave. 387-5326 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3 Frederick Pisapia 14 Cleveland Ave. 389-7123 Activities: Football 2 Pollution Committee 2 Photography Club 2 Debra Pizzano 364 Main St. 389-8925 Activities: Italian Club 2,3,4 Junior Achievement 2, 3 James Pooler 53 Grover St. 389-8370 Mary Pothier 44 Gledhill Ave. 387-2671 Activities: National Honor Society 3,4 I Roland Pothier 34 Pierce Ave. 3S7-3447V Kenneth Powers 12 Otis Ave. 387-8080 Activities: ML Junior Prom Committee Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 . Debra Pratt 227 Russell St. 389-7135 Activities: Pep Squad 4 Yearbook Staff 4 Ronald Quartarone 47 Floyd St. 387-0848 Activities: Photography Club 4 Anti Environmental Pollution ' Club 2,3 Jr ' . I Yearbook Staff 4 Italian Club 3,4 Robert Rabin 0|||| ' 37 Fuller St. 387-1211 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Junior Pro in Committee Senior Prom Committee Baseball 2, 3 Yearbook Staff Carmeia Ragucci 38 Plymouth St. 387-0617 Diana Ragucci 13 Winter St. 387-9484 •w:i . V Linda Ragucci 130 Vine St. 387-0676 Activities: Cheerleader 3,4 Junior Achievement 2, 3,4 Dramatics 2, 3 French Club 2 Spanish Club 3,4 Pep Club 2 Homeroom OFficer 2,4 Girls ' Glee Club 2 Girls Basketball 2 . f? ' 5 . Jeanne Rao 68 Estes St. 387-1251 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2 Pep Squad 2, 3,4 French Club 2 Spanish Club 4 National Honor Society 3,4 Junior Prom Committee Senior Prom Committee Yearbook Staff Mary Anne Reardon 108 Vernal St. 387-7831 Activities: Tennis Club 4 Spanish Club 2 Newspaper 4 ; John Redmond 222 Main St. 389-2157 Activities: Football 2 II 387-0! Alvaro Rezendes. 25 Wedgewood § Edward Ricci ■ 5 Mason St, jfPI Marie Riley 3 Manning Terr. 387-4214 Debra Ringdal 135 Irving St. Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Richard Roda 12 Hefner St. 387- Activities: Football 2,3,4 Track 4 Homeroom Offic Yearbook Staff ! . Robert 31 Gledhill Ave; 387-2581 Thomas Roger 58 Madison At John Romboli 35 Cabot St. 389-1281 Activities: Football 2,3,4 Baseball 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2, 3, . Stephen Roy 122 Russell St. Activities: Hockey ies: ey 2,3,4 f ' WwKew.vJ • ift-wi’vt2 -.v John Ruggiero 198 Ferry St. 389-1190 Activities: Junior Achievement 2 Spanish Club 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 Vincent Rumasuglia 172 Jefferson Aye. 389-8778 Laura Russell 38 Summit Ave. 389-2079 Anthony Russo 63 Newton St. 389-1014 Louis Ruvido 78 Reed Ave 287-3847 Phil Sabbagh 39 Valley St. 387-4726 Marian Sachetta 47 Walnut St. 387-6866 Activities: Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2 Alfred Saia 32 Highland Ave. 387-2665 Marie Saia 65 Clarence St. 387-0096 Activities: Italian Club 2, 3,4 National Honor Society 3,4 Frank J. SanFilippo 19 Arlington St. 387-1755 Frank T, SanFilippo 357 Vine St. 389-0688 Anthony Sapochetti 117 Main St. 387-1817 Debbie Savage 32 Westover St. 389-0210 Activities: Pep Squad 2,4 Stephen Savage 5 Elmwood St. 387-9599 Margaret Scoppa 130 Francis St. 389-0713 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 4 George Sharis 247 Belmont St. 387-3643 Activities: Homeroom Officer 3,4 Richard Semerjian 10 Locust St. 387-6087 Pamela Shepphard 50 Central Ave. 387-6618 Activities: Junior Achievement 2 Dramatics 2, 3,4 A.E.P.C. 2,3 National Honor Society 3,4 National Thespian Society Pamela Shepphard 72 Pierce Ave. 389-2055 Activities: French Club 2 Maryhelen Shuman 116 Estes St. 387-8133 Activities: Photography Club 4 National Honor Society 3,4 Newspaper 4 Eileen Sigerist 36 Chatham Rd. 389-7838 Deborah Signoriello 224 Main St. 389-7816 Activities: Pollution Committee 4 Spanish Club 4 Dramatics 4 Newspaper 4 Debra Simone Hi 24 Kenwood Rd. 387-6822 Activities: School Newspaper 4 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 3 Jeanne Simmione 42 Veterans Ave. 389-0297 Mario Scenna 39 Wolcott St. 387-1982 ' £SB3i|js 4 r r ... ; . « ' $£ • . ■ ' s0e . Bennie Schiavo 14 Hazel Pk. 389-7258 Robert Schmidt 28 Franklin St. Activities: Track 2 Homeroom Officer 4 L. ' . Dian Sclafani 15 Locust St. 389-1531 John Simonelli 54 Ferry St. 387-2071 Activities: Band 2, 3 National Honor Society 4 Dramatics 2,3 Chess Club 2, 3 Track 2, 3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Student Council 3,4 Junior Prom Committe Senior Prom Cornmitte School Newspaper 4 Spanish Club 4 Junior Achievement 2, 3 Michael Siracuse 15 Luke Rd. 3S7-5475 Activities. Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Football 2, 3 187 ' : ' ' g ' SmlmU vw .m lobert Slater Luke Rd. 389-3738 fss Club 2 , 3 ,yfll Stine Smith m rard St. 38 ' i«SH? Activities: Homeroom Deborah Smit I Forest St. L-J. mm jf gt v : 4 sfekfe ixfclf® Ddlla Smith 17| Russell Activities: Homeroo: Judith Smith 4 Wyllis Ave. 387-9711 jAqtivities: , ' French Club 2 Tennis Club 4 Richard Snook, 53 Freeman Ave. 389-1150 Jacqueline Sobolewski 46 Paris St. 389-2935 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Michael Sorrentino 61 Cleveland Ave. 387-5717 Activities: Football 3 Hockey 2, 3 Yearbook 4 Track 4 Salvatore Sorriento 1 Jacobs PI. 389-9002 Activities: Italian Club 2,3,4 French Club 4 Joseph Sofsa §ilr 164 RussJl St. 387-6761 Tub 3, 4 idafora St. 387-0926 rayb ' tl ullivan St. 387-7612 m jm Carl Si 118 A ctiv! Footbal Tac Ave. 389-7968 M,4 inet Braird St. 387-51 fctivjpes; latic Club 3,4 lotography 4 f-i Fep Squad 3,4 Maria Tenaglia 11 Shirley St. 387-7597 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Liza Thistle 4 dftokson Ave. 389-2264 Activities: Spanish Club 3 John Tholen 16 Fairmont St. 389-J0927 ■ n W Theresa Tholen 16 Fairmont St. 389-0927 Activities; Pep Squad 2,3,4 David Tierney 973 Broadway 389-2453 Activities: Football 2, 3 Celeste Tino 31 Garland St. 389-0372 Activities: Student Council 2 Junior Prom Committed Italian Club 3 Yearbook Staff Homeroom Officer 2 National Honor Society 3,4 Huguette Toce 81 Jefferson Ave. 389-1088 can Rd. 387-5341 Charles Steed 108 Swan St. 387-9336 c; v es: Junior Achievement 2, 3,4 ■ « {£; A ; n;ae Stowe 11 l u Simte Activities: ' ' u lor Prom Committee sqtography Club 4 HH | ‘ ' Ational Honor Society 3,4 ute St. 387-2350 French Club 2, 3 V: • ■ WW PLotogru .. • Yearbook Staff , u. 1 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Patricia Sullivan 229 Chelsea Street 389-317 ‘.ctiv «tivities: ; Pep Squad 2, 3 nbhW,. Paul Todisco 75 Woodville Ave 389-174 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2 Yearbook Staff Marian Todino 148 Garland St. 389-9320 Patty Tolley 28 Vernal Street. 387-7023 Peter Toto 183 Chelsea St. 389-0367 Betty Triantos 52A Chelsea St. 389-3093 Maureen Troiano 31 County Rd. 389-0162 Activities: Girls ■:-H , v ' ■ ® ' -■ ’ ' X. •• HnC ft r-uyv rJ • ■ 188 Diane 234 Vh irtullo St. 3{ 2789 mfio ister Ct. 3873 John Tut 46 Pearl StTT87-2958 Nancy Turevich 21 Pearl St. 387-9898 Dennis Vautor 23 Andrews St. 387-6838 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Class Officer 2,3,4 Football 2, 3,4 Hockey 2,3,4 Junior Prom Committee Senior Prom Committee Salvatore Ventolino 19 Rich St. 387-6076 Activities: Football 2 Frank Venuto 50 Bryant St. 387-3575 Activities: Football 2, 3,4 Baseball 2, 3 Track 4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Spanish Club 3 ggr;«. 4 ■ 4 -, 3 Officer 3,4 ub 3 Usherette 3 mo St. 387-8055 Officer 4 2,3,4 llette idAve. 387-3721 4 Jub 2,3,4 :hool Project ilker t. 387-2849 I Walsh St. 389-6952 tad 2, 3,4 1 atson Waters Ave. 387-3449 m mm LJL A Activities: J Girls ' Basketball 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2, 3 Library Staff 4 Pep Squad 2, 3,4 Margaret Welsh 18 Richdale Ave. 387-9837 Activities:, L t- P e p Squad 2 3,4 Italian Club 2, 3,4 Devens .School Project f, :,h. Donna 1 ? 10 Garland St. 389-2294 Activities: National Honor Society 3 A j0 A £ P• C ♦ 2, 3,4 Dramatic Club 2,3,4 Debating 3 National Thespian Society Homeroom Officer 4 Debra White 5 Tileston sf 387-5945 Activities: Field Hockey 2,4 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Richard WMte 55 Chatham Rd 389-0 61 f Joseph Wilichoski WM § 28 Thurman St. 389-0795 Linda Willia.ms tyy 39 Wilbur St. Activities: lm Dramatics Club 2, 3 Pep Squad 2 Michael Wisniewski 86 Malden St. 38J-9029 w - • Nancy Wortman f 928 Broadway 387-9002 Activities: Pep Squad 2,3,4 Brunon Wroblewski 1 Burditt St. 389-8243 Activities: Baseball 2,3,4 Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 National Honor Society 3,4 Nancy Yacobian 34 Henry St. 387-8099 Donald Young 11 112 Shute St. 387-6855 Activities: Air Pollution Club 2 Jeanette Young 215 Hancock St. 389-1908 Activities: Homeroom Officer 2,3,4 Pep Squad 2,3,4 Virginia Young 43 Floyd St. 387-0707 Activities: Italian Club 3 Joel Zide 33 Hamilton St. 387-2567 Activities; Band 2, 3,4 189 Qti ' t Theuiki JEFFEY JEWELERS B ioadu ay SEUoitist 432 Broadway, Everett Sq. “Home of fine Jewelry and Gifts” Headquarters for Everett High School rings. 1 “Say It With Flowers” 531 Broadway Phone 387-2093 EVERETT, MASS. 02149 Congratulations and Best Wishes For Your Future. EVERETT SQUARE SPORTING GOODS BURNETTE’S FURNITURE 492 Broadway, Everett, Mass. COMPLETE TEAM OUTFITTERS Ferry St., Everett, Mass. Tony Ventura 190 Congratulations to the Class of 1972 Everett School Committee Richard C. Vendola, Chairman Arthur J. Covelle William P. Doyle, Jr. Dennis J. Kelley Joseph A. Carr, Vice-Chairman Margaret A. Mitton Francis O’Hara William J. Pippy Lillian E. Faymond 191 Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1972 I Mayor George R. McCarthy The City Council And the People of Everett 192 Our most rewarding experience is serving you irasrTm our business is all about. Middlesex Bank 193 Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1972 from GRADUATES — Build for your future “Student Savings Plans” designed especially for you! RICHARD C. VENDOLA Life Insurance Mutual Funds 75 Federal St., Boston 542-6110 387-5788 Congratulations Graduates: Get off on the right foot T with a savings account At the bank with the Personal Touch! EVERETT SAVINGS BANK 1 } 466 Broadway, Everett j; Hummels 389-2032 BOUVIER BROS. INC. Certified Watchmaker 451 Broadway Everett, Massachusetts Fine Watches Hallmark Cards Monsanto Company Congratulates jj The Members Of This Years Everett High | School Graduating Class And Wishes Them j Success In Their Future Endeavors ;j CARLI INSURANCE AGENCY 425 A Broadway Everett, Mass. Vfc 4 195 EVERETT POLICE BETTERMENT ASS’N EVERETT, MASS. Best Wishes to the Everett High School Class of 1972 From the Patrolmen, Sergeants, and Lieutenants of the Everett Police Department 196 Congratulations to the Everett High School Class of 1972 EVERETT TEACHERS ASSOCIATION 197
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