Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK)

 - Class of 1963

Page 1 of 176

 

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1963 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1963 volume:

1963EL THitlE COLItT OF llOXOIt THEIR ROYAL HIGHNESSES Queen Lou Princesses Barbara Massey, Linda Bridwell, Behne, eighteenth Guymon High El Tigre and Tamra Hooper. Queen, with Junior, Freshman, and Sophomore 3 A final tour of inspection completed, Central Junior High Principal E. M. Alden, Superin- tendent George W. Spenner, and Senior High Principal Coy Gibson stand ready to the Board of Education that the new Physical Education Building is ready for its business—a stepped-up health and fitness program for the entire school. Mr. Spenner and Mr. Alden have envi- able records of seventeen and fifteen years here respectively, a period of phenomenal growth and expansion of both the student body and school plant. Mr. Gibson, who took over his principalship last spring after ten very success- ful years of coaching the Tigers, now is finish- ing his first full year at the very big job of guiding Guymon High School affairs. ANOTHER GOAL REACHE10 4 GMJ MON HO AM OF EDUCATION MS ALEUT TO TIGERLAND9S NEEDS On Commencement Night, Thursday, May 23, Superintendent George W. Spenner will present the Class of ’63 to this sterling group of gentle- men—the Guymon School Board. Seated with Clerk Howard Singleton, elected to the Board in 1959, is President Charles Remmel, a member since 1960. On Mr. Spenner’s right is Sammie L. Quesenbury, named in 1962; at Mr. Spenner’s left is Edward J. Slater, a member since 1961. Behind Mr. Spenner are Treasurer Bill Houser and Vice-President Alonzo Philippe, elected a member in 1958. 2ADL SCW MRS. MARGIE LANE assumed her post as school secretary in 1955. A graduate of Panhandle A and M, she has made herself indispensable through her efficiency and graciousness. MRS. ANN BENDER began her work as finance custodian of Guymon Schools in the spring semester of 1960. Since that time she has endeared herself to both faculty and students in her business office and at lunch-line desk. iLOOK TO THE LAMES MRS. JUANITA DAVIS came to Guymon as vocal director last year. A graduate of Panhandle A and M, she had previously taught at Good- well. Mrs. Davis divides her day be- tween high school and junior vocal groups and is general chairman of assembles. MRS. KEITH HENDER- SON has served as a director of music in Guymon schools since 1944, first in both band and vocal music, more recently as orchestra director in Senior High and in Junior High where she also directs Girls Choir. JAMES H. ROACH, for the past two years GHS Counseling and Guidance director, spent eight years here as a Debate, Drama, and Speech instructor. FOR COLLEGE EARL SARGENT, Senior co-sponsor, has been in charge of our Physics and Chemistry Department since 1959. MRS. MARY MARTIN and MRS. ALICE HERBEL declare that they can’t have been teaching English IV and American History for twenty years or more and sponsoring Senior classes every year to. The Seniors’ fourth sponsor, Diversified Occupations Co-ordinator R. P. DUKE is another veteran teacher with fourteen years to his credit in Guymon High. MRS. BRENDA WINTERS, com- pleting her third year as Typing I and II teacher here, displays a new electric typewriter to her co- worker, Bookkeeping and short hand instructor, MRS. LOUISE GRAMM ER, teaching her lucky thirteenth year in Guymon High. OR CAREERS MRS. CHARLENE WHITE, a GHS alumna her- self, has taught homemaking here since the spring semester of 1958. A graduate of OSU, she spon- sors Future Homemakers of America and co- sponsors the Junior Class. DEAN KEAR, an- other Guymon High and PAMC alumnus, has been vocational carpentry, drafting, and shop in- structor here for eight years. Mr. Rear sponsors Woodworkers Club and co-sponsors the Juniors. MRS. GEORGIA LAMAR is rounding out an even ten years at GHS. Along with her English III she has inaugurated mythology and reading classes. Mrs. Lamar is very active in English Council at the state level. MRS. DORIS STEELE, new school librar- ian this year, is a graduate for the Uni- versity of Tulsa. Moving here with her husband and family, she has four chil- dren in the grades and junior high and a pre-schooler. Mrs. Steele’s long school day starts at eight and ends at four fif- teen, her hours being divided between Junior and Senior High. THISIS THE WAY GLEN PHILLIPS, a GHS and Panhandle alumnus, has been teach- ing here for two years. His woodworking classes are comprised of boys from the Seventh to the Twelfeth Grades. Mr. Phillips also sponsors an Industrial Arts Club. MRS. Rl'TH SHACKELFORD has spent seventeen years in Guymon teaching varied subjects—English, drama, speech, geography — but she now devotes her full time to high school Spanish. TO VARY THE DAY LORENZ BOYD, a graduate of South- western at Weatherford, began his work as speech, drama, and debate director at mid-year, on the resignation of Shelton Garner. Mr. Boyd taught at Clinton be- fore taking up free-lance photo-journal- ism in the Denver area where he and his family have spent the past four years. GILBERT SMITH, a PAMC alumnus, has completed four years in GHS as a biology, physiology, and zoology teacher. He is a co-sponsor of this year’s very large Sophomore Class. MISS MARGARET WRIGHT, who returned to GHS as a teacher after graduating here and completing her degree at PAMC, teaches driver education and co-sponsors the Snnhnmnres MRS. MAYME SHAFFER. GHS Sopho- more English teacher, has spent seven years on our high school faculty and from 1943-1946 teaching elementary students here. She too helps to sponsor the bumper Sophomore Class. BOB WYETT who came to GHS in the spring of 1959, teaches three different math classes this year—math analysis, Algebra II, and plane geometry. He also co-sponsors M.tL PI..L n A fko QrtnhnmAPPC HARRY WARD. Senior and Junior High Band director for three years likes this area, and the Panhandle certainly approves of Director Ward’s skilled musical organizations. A grad- uate of OSU, he has previously taught in Oklahoma, Nevada, and Montana schools. MRS. CAROLYN BLACKWELL, taking over the Art De- partment this year, is another Northeastern State alumna from Tahlequah. An Eighth Grade co-sponsor, she instructs classes at all levels from Eighth Graders to Seniors. MRS. EDNA BRECHEEN, on Central Junior High facultv for seven years, is a co-sponsor and English teacher of Eighth Graders. MISS HELEN HOFFERBER, a four year Central facu- lty member, likes sponsoring her Eighth Graders and teaching them science and English. MRS. PATRICIA LEE, teaching her lucky thirteenth year in Central, divides her time between Eighth and Ninth Grade math classes, but sponsors Eighth Graders. LOTS TO OO ROBERT RICHARDS has spent his five years in the teaching profession in the Guymon System where he teaches general science and sponsors Ninth Graders. MRS. BESSIE ADAMS is proud of her twenty-nine happy years on the Junior and Senior High School faculties as a speech and English teacher. A Ninth Grade sponsor this year, she is also their English teacher. U. P. LINDLEY, an- other veteran Guymon teacher, has fifteen busy years to his credit as a Ninth Grade math teacher and sponsor at Central Junior High School. FOR US TOO HAROLD YOAKUM, Vocational Agriculture director for five years here, is a graduate of OSU. His FFA boys swear by their advisor who wants every job well done but likes hunt- ing, bowling, and the outdoor life. WALLACE LYNN has taught many subjects in his six years in Guymon, including industrial arts, social studies, and coaching. A co-sponsor this year, he teaches his Seventh Graders literature and science. GAYLON MENDENHALL, Senior High’s new basket- ball coach, is no new Tigerland teacher, having come here in 1956. He divides his day between high school where he teaches geometry and higher arithmetic, and i’unior high, where he coaches football. LARKY JOE CYGER, a graduate of Northeastern State at Tahle- quah with a Master's from OSU, is a Tiger football coach and social studies teacher. Because his pet peeve is a team that loafs, Mr. Kyger like the Tiger spirit. CHARLES O’DONNELL, with two years com- pleted as a Tiger football coach and social studies teacher, names hunting and fishing as his leisure inter- ests. Coach O’Donnell is an East Central alumnus. JAMES O. TUTTLE, Tigerland’s athletic director and Senior High football coach, is rounding out his fifth year in Guymon. Mr. Tuttle is hard at work on an All School Physical Fitness program in response to the President’s accent on national health. MRS. MYRTLE WILT, Seventh Grade sponsor and English teacher, comes to Guymon with ten years experience in Blackwell schools. A graduate of Edmond’s Central, she believes in keeping fit and names bowling as a hobby. CHESTER BENTLEY, a golf enthusiast, is completing his tenth year here. Mr. Bentley co-sponsors the Seventh Graders and teaches them math. WILLARD LEE, Seventh Grade co-sponsor and geography teacher, came to Guymon schools in 1949. As Secretary of the Athletic Fund, his attendance at all school sporting events makes him Tigerland’s No. 1 fan. WE A HE ALE EOH EMTAESS ROBERT JAMES from Bartlesville, newcomer this year as Cub basketball coach, is a graduate of Cen- tral at Edmond. Social studies and P.E. classes leave him little time for his favorite hobbies, hunting and fishing. Mrs. James is the former Shirley Mouser, GHS alumni. MRS. ARDIS GIBSON is completing her eleventh year as Girls’ P.E. director and class- room instructor in various iunior high subjects. The fine Pep Clubs in Tigerland are among her achieve- ments. CURTIS WEST, Central Junior High foot- ball coach and social studies teacher, came to Tiger- land in I960, having taught at Goodwell for four years. He enjoys politics and outdoor sports. RALPH ADCOCK came to Tiger- land four years ago. A Diversified Occupations student, he still has time to serve a daily hour in the high school office. Ralph will major in Business at Central Bible Institute. RING IN VIEW 16 No other rings in their experience will bring quite that happy look of attainment to the faces of Class of 1963 executive officers. President Larry Doke gets Treasurer Robin Clements’ approval of the painstakingly selected circulet. KATHIE BEER has spent four years in Guymon schools. A Fresh- man cheerleader, she is active in Choir and likes mythology better than other subjects. Kathie is planning a career in the secretar- ial field. LOU BEHNE is in Pep Club, Choir, FHA, GRA, and is a Band twirler. She was Football Queen this year and a Class Favorite. Psychology is Lou’s most interest- ing subject; she plans to take Nursing at OU. Kathie Waldrop, Class of ’63 Secretary, agrees with Fred Land- ess, Vice-President, that no other class in Tigerland will ever have so outstandingly designed a school ring, or, for that matter, any attributes so great as the mighty Class of 1963. GAIL BERG, whose interests are primarily agricultural, has exhibit- ed Grand Champion stock at the Great Plains Show and served as FFA reporter. Gail plans to work on a degree in Animal Husbandry at PAMC. HOLDEN GRADUATE YEAR SENIORS ‘67 DAVID BLACK, a member of Woodworkers Club, names drafting as his best liked subject. With cars as his hobby, he plans a career in Electrical Engineering with the preliminary work on his degree done at PAMC. ERVIN BRUNE, who plans to make farming his life work, is a member of FFA. Ervin enjoys his shop classes most and is presi- dent of IA Shop Club. A quiet boy, Ervin dislikes very noisy, talkative associates. 17 GARY BUTLER, a newcomer to GHS last year, is vice-president of Math Club and a member of Scien- ce Club. Naming math analysis as his favorite subject, Gary plans a career in Medicine or Psychiatry after college. CAROLYN JO BYERLEY has spent six years as a Cub and Tiger cheerleader. Active in Thespians Drama Club and Choir, her enter- taining talents are always in de- mand at civic clubs. Dancing is her hobby. BETTE RAE BYERS, El Tigre Co- editor, has been a cheerleader, Class Favorite, and this year was first runner-up for Football Queen Candidate. Bette would like to be a medical technician or secretary after OSU. 18 TARS ARE STARS liV 963 KAY CAVIN in her Sophomore year served as FHA reporter and B team cheerleader. Although me- chanical drawing is her favorite subject, she plans to be either a beautician or nurse after college at Texas U. ROBIN CLEMENTS, for three years a class officer, is also a repeater as Class Favorite. Robin, who loves Spanish and dancing, wants to be a teacher of dancing or elementary grades on finshing at OSU. MARY LYNN COUCH, a student of Guymon schools for eight years, names English as the subject she Drefers. Mary Lynn plans to at- tend business or beauty school and to become either a secretary or a beautician. TEEN AGE REPUBLICANS who won’t have to wait a lifetime to celebrate their first Oklahoma victory for the Big Gray Elephant are Class of ’63 GOP enthusiasts Helene Leath, TAR President George Herb- streit, Allen Petty, Mike Lindsay, Carolyn Jo Byerley, Jeannie Mattheyer, Teddie Jef- fers, Butch Wilson, and Jack “All-I-Want- for-Christmas” Trotter. LINDA CRUZAN, who has attend ed our schools for nine and one- half years, has been in Oklahoma and National Honor Societies for three years. Her favorite subject, typing, will be basic when she be- comes a secretary. As pretty and personable as her picture promises, Lou Behne, Class of ’63 Very Nice Girl and Favorite for three years, has almost more activi- ties than El Tigre can list. A recent Pioneer Day Queen, 1963 FHA reporter, and a band twirler for three years, she is also in Choir and GRA. Lou is almost always on honor roll and never says “No” when asked to serve for a good cause. She doesn’t approve of dreary, slovenly people but likes every- body. Lou should certainly be a delight to her patients when she begins her career as a nurse. Her greatest thrill came this year when she was crowned Football Queen for 1962. OLETA DARNELL, a Tigerlander for eight years, says that she en- joys her bookkeeping classes best of all. Painting in oils is her most absorbing hobby, but her career plans are centered in secretarial in- terests. VJV6 LOU BRENDA DENNEY, with special talents in the drama field, was named to All-State Acting Team as a Freshman. For the past two years she has served as Class Assembly Chairman. Brenda will attend PAMC next fall. 20 LARRY DOKE, El Tigre co-editor and for two years Class of ’63 president, also heads Math Club. A member of Science Club, NHS and OHS, and a 1962 Boys’ State Rep- resentative, Larry plans to attend Oklahoma University. VAR FREDDIE JANE ELLIS, who spent all but one of her twelve school years in Guymon, is a student of Diversi- fied Occupations. Jane’s tastes run toward the Arts—drawing, paint- ing, singing. She would like to take up Nursing. Five times vice-president of the Class of ’63, handsome Freddie Landess, this year’s Very Nice Boy, has been a perennial Class Favorite too. Foot- ball and outdoor sports keep him lithe and alert, so he is no stranger to grade honor roll lists either. Named to National Honor Society last year, Freddie chooses two very different subjects as his special pets—Algebra II and mythology. When he says, “I hate people who part their hair in the middle,” that’s Freddie’s way of saying, “I find very few people whom I don’t like.” As for college and career, Freddie, like many members of the Class of ’63, will have a lot more to tell us when September rolls around. ANDREA ENGERAN, in her four- th year as a Tigerlander, is active in Vocal Ensembles, Choir, and Drama Club, which she served as treasurer in 1960. Andrea special- izes in Stage Arts and plans to attend Oklahoma State. STUDENTS OF TOD A Y PAULA ENGLISH, though not a Canadian, attended Calgary schools before coming to GHS. Vice-presi- dent of Pep Club, she likes all winter sports. She will major in Business at OSU, or she will make English her major. LONNIE FOSTER, another twelve year Guymon student, is a Tiger football and basketball regular. President of his Freshman Class, Lonnie still prefers physical edu- cation classes. He plans to attend college at PAMC. VELINDA GABERDIEL, who is often on honor rolls, is a member of Thespians and president of the Pep Club. Since chemistry is her best liked subject, she wants to continue her interests at PAMC as a Laboratory Technician. 22 Climaxing National Education Week activities in Guymon Schools, awards recognizing exceptional Leadership, Scholarship, and Citizenship are dis- played by “Students of Today” Gary Moen, Priscilla Bryan, Margaret Vaughan, and Larry Doke. The four junior and senior high students were honored by Worshipful Master Roy Bailey of the local Lodge. Supt. George Spenner was presented an A- ward of Merit for the Teachers and Student Body at the annual Masonic Banquet for the Faculty, this year an event of November 12. OUR REST LEADERS CITIZENS SCHOLARS RONNIE GARDNER, a student here for eight years, is in Diversi- fied Occupations. With five years in Band and two in Choir, he is a drama student this year. Drums are Ronnie’s hobby—professional music his goal. DARRELL GARRISON, in GHS only a year and a half, is in Or- chestra, Stage Band, and Band, of which he is president. A 1962 Boys’ Stater, Darrell made All-State Band too. He plans to be a pro- fessional musician. DEIDRA GOFF, holding offices in both 4-H and FHA, is also in Dance Band and GHS Orchestra. With music as her hobby, she plans to attend OSU or PAMC to pre- pare for a career in either Music or Home Economics. JOYCE GREGORY, a GHS student for two years, is in Band, Art, Choir, and Girls’ Glee Club. She is Choir reporter, but her greatest interest is art. She plans to be an art teacher after graduation from Oklahoma City U. KENNETH GURWELL is vice president of Trades and Industries Club this year. His interests are agricultural.however, and he hopes to make farming and ranching his career after college at PAMC or Oklahoma State University. HARRI HALFORD has attended Guymon schools for four years. A Football Queen Candidate this year, she is fond of active sports. She is considering a career as a Hair Stylist after training at Denver. ENTKE NO VS HIKES OF THE MONTH STEVE HEFLIN, a long time Tigerlander, attended school in Portales, New Mexico last year. In Band, Steve is also fond of his chemistry class and will probably major in Chemistry while attend- ing college at PAMC. ROSETT IVIE is a member of GHS Pep Club. With sewing as her best liked pastime, and social service as her interest, Rosett would like to enter the Foreign Mission field. NINE OF OUR NICEST, most gracious Class of '63 girls were named by Guymon's Entre Nous ladies as Girls-of-the-Month. Posing at morning coffee in the lovely off-campus home of Mrs. Henry Herber are Diedra Goff, Lou Behne, Bette Byers, Betty Wilson, Carolyn Jo Byerley, Robin Clements, Margaret Vaughan, Kathie Waldrop and Paula English. WOMEN’S CLUB HOX0PBEES GEORGE HERBSTREIT, a nine year student of Guymon schools, is active in DeMolay, Teen Age Re- publicans and Publications. George likes his English and wants to be a Pediatrist. VIRGINIA HILL, often on honor roll, is one of many twelve year Guymon students. Virginia espec- ially likes English and Diversified Occupations and plans a career as a bookkeeper. JOANNA IVERSON, in Tigerland for seven years, is another Senior who is often on honor roll. Joanna, whose hobby is cooking, likes Eng- lish and wants to be a secretary. TEDDIE JEFFERS, Senior section El Tigre editor, was in Band for five years, in Oklahoma Honor Society, and the Junior Play. Liking chemistry and algebra, she hopes to major in Biochemistry at Panhandle. FRANK KOCH a twelve year Guy- mon student, likes history, particu- larly Oklahoma History. His hob- bies are hunting and working on cars. Frank plans to enlist in the Navy. JERRY JENSEN, in Guymon schools during his high school years only, is a member of Wood- workers Club. He says he likes shop best and hunting better. His career is Mechanics. PATTY KEEZER, who would like to be a teacher, says her favored subject is English. Patty likes to keep fit hy swimming and danc- ing. Her pet peeve is inattention to grooming. LOU MS FOOTBALL 41UEEJS ROBERT LAMAR, a member of Thespians and El Tigre staff, says hunting and horseback riding are his best loved recreations. After college at PAMC Robert wants to be a veterinarian. SHERRY JOHNSON, who wants to teach in the grades after grad- uation from Central at Edmond, is FHA president and a Pep Club member. Sherry likes Homemaking and dislikes complainers. MM inn I MAW MM STY AM AII) Mud and ruffles, masculine determination and feminine appeal, combine to make this picture of Captain Joe Lane and his lovely 1962 Football Queen Lou Behne the El Tigre Photography Winner of the year. Grief and glories were mixed as the muddy Tigers bowed to the Woodward Boomers in a 12-20 loss; however, Queen Lou and her equally radiant Queen Candidate attendants, Bette Rae Byers and Harri Halford, backed by an enthusiastic Home- coming crowd at Memorial Stadium, October 5, emerged with their spirits, at least, undampened. FREDDIE LANDESS has served as Class of ’63 vice-president for five years. An NHS member and Rotary Boy of the Month, he likes Algebra II and says that he will MIKE LANDRETH, with five years in Guymon schools before moving to El Segundo, Calif., re- turned to GHS to graduate. Sports editor of El Tigre, Mike likes science courses and collects coins. OSU is his college choice. JOE LANE, captain of the Tiger football team, is a member of both OHS and NHS. Since math and science are his best liked subjects, he plans to major in Electrical En- gineering at Oklahoma State University. LIKE THE BRICKS IN OUR TIGERLAND WALL this sturdy octet of Bengal stalwarts, Class of ’63 football and basketball lettermen, will be hard to replace, as will the duo of ’63 cheer- leaders who did so much to inspire both teams and fans. Playing their last games, or leading their last mighty yells, are Fred Landess. Doug McVev, Andy Spencer, David LeG range, Mike Landreth, Johnny Stevens, Lonnie Foster, Joe Lane, Glenda Spin- den, and Carolyn Jo Byerley. BERTON LARY, always on honor roll, is a member of Mu Alpha Theta and Science Club. Berton likes psychology and names boxing as his hobby. He will attend PAMC or OU, majoring in literature or science. HELENE LEATH has attended Guymon schools for four years. Helene selects mythology as her favorite subject and dancing as the recreation she most enjoys. She will go to San Diego Beauty College. DAVID LEGRANGE, a basketball and football regular while in GHS, likes anything just so it is ath- lets. His best loved subject is physical education, his hobby is basketball, and he hopes to make Wayland College team. WE9LL MISS THIS TIGER WALL DOUG McVEY is a three year two- letter man. His varied talents also include piano and drama; he is president of Drama Club. Doug names Oklahoma State as his col- lege choice. RAYMOND MARTIN is another Senior who plans to go directly into the Army. T I Club is on his activity list, and he is employed as a sheet metal worker from Diversi- fied Occupations. MIKE LINDSAY, an eight year student of Guymon schools, is a Band enthusiast with six years membership. Other interests of Mike are science and cars. He plans to be an Engineer. JIM LOCKETT, whose pet peeve is English, likes all things mechanical. Active in Woodworkers’ Club, he will pursue his favorite hobby, Auto Mechanics, at Okmulgee Tech School. JEANNE MATTHEYER, a student here for four years, is an enthusias- tic Pep Club member. Jeanne likes English and dancing and dislikes smarties. She plans to attend Okla- homa State. STARK MORGAN, for three years a Cub and Tiger sports manager, is often on honor roll. Stan is fond of his carpentry classes and prefers outdoor sports like hunt- ing and fishing. CATHY MUSSMAN, an All-Star basketball player from her Fresh- man year on, is a member of FHA and Girls’ Chorus. Cathy is going to be a missionary after attending Bethel. ACES OF THE AIRWAYS are Class of ’63’s intrepid birdmen, Mike “Charles Limburger” Woods and Doug “Eddie Ricketyback’’ McVey, not about to board the plane they aren’t going to fly non-stop over the Beaver. MARY MYERS, who plans a ca- reer in Art or Writing, is a mem- ber of Drama Club for which she designs sets. Singing is her hobby, and she wants to attend college or art school in New York. JOE PAT NEAL is a two year newcomer to GHS. Joe hasn’t made up his mind about a career, but with a liking for math and good jazz, he thinks he will try out the classes of Colorado U. LEONARD MUSSMAN, active in FFA Club, has served both as its secretary and treasurer. A com- petent dairy judge, Leonard’s favorite career is Vocational Ag- riculture or Ranching. BRENDA NICHOLES, a member of OHS belongs to Math and Science Clubs and to Pep Club which she has twice served as an officer. Brenda wants to be a Chemist or Physicist. BILL OXLEY, a nine year student here, is a member of Mu Alpha Theta and is on the track team. He prefers physics classes and plans to go to OU to work on a degree in Medicine. THANKS TO THE ONE FIFTY CLUB Teddie Jeff- ers, El Tigre Senior editor, herds her flock of class- mates, about to try their wings on a flight to Liberal, into camera range. Guests of Guymon businessmen’s “150 Club” here are Berton Lary, Doug McVey, Lou Behne, Mike Woods, Jack Staples, Gary Butler, Johnny Stevens, Allen Petty, and Dennis Porter—with tickets in hand. WE ARE F L Y B I R D DWAIN PETERSON, who is often on honor roll, names World his- tory as his best liked subject. Dwain is a baseball fan, and he says that he needs some time for career planning. ALLEN PETTY has been in GHS for two years. He belongs to Drama and Wood Workers’ Club and prefers drafting classes. Allen, a champion Limbo dancer, wants to be an Electrician. KAY PIERATT, a Diversified Oc- cupations student, has been FHA vice-president. She has a liking for English and music and is consider- ing a career as a Cosmetologist or Beautician. DENNIS POUTER with two and one half years in GHS, is most active in Band, Dance Band, and Orchestra. Dennis plans to attend OU where he will major in Psy- chology or Music. ROGER PRITCHARD, another twelve year Tigerlander, is a mem- ber of T and I Club. His favorite subject is English, his hobby, cars. Roger will attend PAMC as a Busi- ness major. LARRY QUINN, a member of both NHS and OHS, is Northwest District 4-H president. Debate Club president, and in Band, Choir, and Debate. Larry will major in agronomy at PAMC. GUYMON ROTARIANS HONOR A SENIOR BOY each month by selecting him to sit on their weekly Club luncheons to participate in their discussions and programs, to be, in fact, a Junior Rotarian. Seated in the Hoel Dale Dining Room are Rotary-Boys-of-the-Month Larry Doke, Joe Lane, Larry Quinn, Freddie Landess, Darrell Garrison, Joe Tyson, Joe Walker, and Robert Sargent. CLASS OF ’63 FUTURE C JERRY REED, active in three Tiger major sports and a member of Woodworkers Club, is going to be a history teacher and coacn after he graduates from Oklahoma State. DON REID, a member of the Di- versified Occupations classes, is sometimes on honor rolls. Don, whose pet peeve is smart alecks, is employed as a printer, and he will go to college. GUYMON ROTARMANS GUESTS OF THE MONTH ROBERT SARGENT, with four years here, is Choir president and a member of Mixed Quartet and Ensemble. Math is Robert’s choice subject, and he will major in Elec- tronic courses. LESTER SCHEUERMAN, a mem- ber of Woodworkers’ Club, has Kone to school here for four years. Lester likes carpentry and working on cars, so he will be an Auto or Diesel Mechanic. SHARON RICE, sec ret ary-treas- urer of Choir and a past treasurer of Pep Club, whose favorite sub- ject is English, is always on honor roll. Sharon will major in Business Education. JACK RUBOTTOM, JR., a twelve year Guymon student, likes his Physical Education classes, and math. His hobbies are outdoor sports. Jack is planning to enter the Navy. TERRY SCHOONOVER, a vice- president of Woodworkers’ Club, also likes to tinker with cars. Terry will attend PAMC and work on a decree in Industrial Arts if his plans materialize. 33 Larry Doke, Class of ’63 Very Nice Boy, is a second termer as president of his class as well as Favorite. If all his activities were evaluated in points, as they are in many schools, Larry would come up with a stun- ning total. He is co-editor of the 1963 El Tigre and last vear was its advertising manager. He is president of Mu Alpha Theta Math Club and a member of Science Club. His fine scholarship and leadership have made him a member of National and Oklahoma Honor Societies. The Masons of Guymon named him as a recipient of their Student of Today Award this year. Last year he was one of GHS’ delegates to Oklahoma Boys’ State. Also last year he won an outstanding achievement award in the Physical Sciences. He is going to let the University of Oklahoma help him make up his mind about a career . ANDY SPENCER, a football and track regular, was named Out- standing Athlete of ’62 and to All- District in football. Boxing in his hobby, and he will study Engineer- ing: at Abilene. GLENDA SPINDEN, for four years a Cub and Tiger Cheerlead- er, is also a member of Choir and its Ensembles. A Football Queen Candidate in ’60, she will major in Business at PAMC. SONJA SMITH, who came to GHS from Woodward High, is a mem- ber of the Diversified Occupations class. Employed in town in the af- ternoons, she hopes to be a Beautician. 34 JACK STAPLES, treasurer of De- bate Club, is also in the GHS Choir. Jack’s favorite subject is math which he plans to teach after he earns a degree from Pan- handle A and M. JOHNNY STEVENS played Tiger football this year. His main activi- ties are Dance and Pep Band and Orchestra. He made All-State Band last year, and may make a career of Veterinary Medicine. BENNY STINGLEY is in Drama Club, Band and Orchestra. He is Band and 4-H vice-president. Benny, who likes history and theology, plans to be a minister or teacher of history. VXG nomx Class of ’63 Very Nice Girl Robin Cle- ments is a repeater as an El Tigre favor- ite and a girl whom everyone in Tiger- land knows and admires. Beautifully groomed, trim and slim, Robin’s devo- tion to her hobby, dancing, is reflected in her energy and enthusiasm for her many activities. She is often on honor roll, treasurer of the Senior Class, and in Choir and Rainbow. Her pastimes, teaching, dancing and singing in the local sextet, round out her busy day. Robin, who has selected OSU as her college, will probably major in Elemen- tary Education. VONALENE STRATE, a four year Tigerlander, Vonalene has been active in Pep Club, and this year is in Girls’ Chorus. Commerce is her favorite subject; she plans to be a secretary. MARILYN BALLARD STUMP, an eleven year Guymon student, has been in Diversified Occupations this year. She prefers psychology as a subject and plans to devote her time to her home. WILLIAM TALCOTT, a twelve year Tigerlander, prefers science courses. His liking for outdoor liv- ing resulted in his choosing Fores- try as his career. Bill names PAMC as his college choice. NOT EXACTLY “THE SPIRAL STAIRCASE” Doesn’t this look like a load of Hollywood starlets? Actually it’s a stair and balcony load of Class of 63-ers who are going to get some kind of an assignment for their Class Play “The Spiral Staircase.” Here we see villains, heroes, leading ladies, stage hands, property managers, student coaches, and possibly a stagedoor Johnny or two. On the descending stair are Don Reid, Kenneth Gurwell, Butch Wilson, Raymond Martin, Joe Tyson, Pauline Williams. Kay Pieratt, Kay Stump, Sherry Johnson, and Son.ia Smith. The Romeos and Juliets on the balcony are Andrea Engeran, Kathie Beer, Patty Keezer, Don Pitman, Doug McVey, Carolyn Byerley. Billy Talcott. Brenda Denney, Roger Prit- chard, Ralph Adcock, and Velinda Gaberdiel. Good luck, Director Lorenz Boyd, on your first major dramatic assignment in GHS! JACK TROTTER, a newcomer from Cleveland, Okla., lists his activities as boxing and working at a downtown nursery and floral shop. Jack’s favorite subject is typing. JOE TYSON, for two years an Assembly Committee member, is president of Drama Club. Joe’s speech interests will be used at Oklahoma Baptist University in his ministerial study. MARGARET VAUGHAN, in both OHS and NHS, is Band Drum Major, Math Club secretary. She was named Masonic Student of To- day. Margaret will be a medical technician after OSU. EVERY RORY WANTS TO GET KATHIE WALDROP, Class of ’63 treasurer for five years, is a mem- ber of NHS. Kathie plans to be an elementary teacher after complet- ing her degree work at PAMC or OBU. JOE WALKER, a member of Drama, Math, and Science Club, of which he is president, is also in NHS and OflS. A Junior Boys’ Stater, he plans a math major at Panhandle. INTO THE ACT 37 T MM A T TOV TEA A GAMA7 WILBUR WELLS has been in Guymon schools for five years. He is in Diversified Occupations and has been in Drama Club. Wilbur wants to go to Okmulgee to study Electronics. DENNIS WEST, a Diversified Oc- cupations student, prefers his classes in that field. He plans to attend Panhandle A and M where he will work out a Business major. PAULINE WILLIAMS is FHA secretary-treasurer. A member of GHS vocal groups and orchestra, she has made State contests in both. Pauline wants to teach Music after PAMC. LARRY WILLIS, a Tigerlander for four years, is a history enthusiast. Larry declares that history study is his recreation, so, of course he plans to be a teacher of history. You are looking at the Class of ’63 Valedic- torian and Salutatorian! Which ones, you say ? A good Question, and one that won’t be answered until their last day in GHS. The scholarship of this group is so nearly even that averaging and evaluating of merits will be going on in the administrative offices until the very last minute. You may be sure that these All-A-or-Almost Averagers aren’t going to get too far from those books until the final grades are in. Will the first and second ranking Senior be Larry Doke. Larry Quinn. Margaret Vaughan. Kathie Waldrop, Betty Wilson. Linda Cruzan, Teddie Jeffers, Brenda Nicholes, Joe Walker, or Bette Byers. You will know Commencement Night. OUR RANKING 963 SCHOLARS BETTY WILSON, always on honor roll, is a member of Tiger and Dance Band, Pep Club, Math Club, and is secretary - treasurer of Science Club. A State Driving Road-e-o Runner-Up, she wants to be a research chemist. RODNEY WILSON, or “Butch” as he likes to be called, came to GHS this year from Louisiana. In both football and choir, he plans to go to Houston to study drama or en- gineering. MIKE WOODS, always on honor rolls, is a two year GHS student from Ft. Worth, Texas. Mike will attend Oklahoma State where he plans to major in Business Admin- istration. 39 Almost at the top after an eleven year climb are Tigerland’s Junior Class officers, posing here on the steps of our newest building. Glancing up the stairs, you see the Class of 1964’s Vice-President Gene Adams, their Presi- dent Nelson Dusenbury, their Secretary Betsy Glendinning, and their Treasurer Jenny Smart. JUNIORS 67 40 ROW ONE (read down) Gene Adams, Roland Adcock, Bette Barbee, Billy Batterman, Jerry Behne. ROW TWO (read down) Steve Belan- ger, Jimmy Boland, Sandra Bondra, Jerald Bookless, Vicki Boston. WE POLISH UP FOR THE PRINCIPAL OH, RATS! Locker litter is one of Principal Gibson’s pet peeves, so Wynelda Ingels, Marc Caudle, and Sharon Lowe prepare to resign from the rat race and join the new elite. ROW ONE Bruce Breithaupt, Karen Bunch, Herman Bunger, Dana Byers. ROW TWO Tana Byers, Melissa Camp, Harvey Carter, Sue Carter. ROSES ARE RED, VIOLETS ARE BLUE—that is, they used to be. No telling what kind of hybrid horti- culture monstrosity Mrs. LaMar’s eager but confused THREE HOTSHOTS IN ENGLISH III Junior helpers will produce—a lovely spray of blooming “A s” they sincerely hope. WITH A SNAP AND A CLAP Class of ’64 Cheer- magic of their pep, and the famous Junior Clap yell leaders Sue Carter and Barbara Massey turn on the rocks Tigerland's rafters with a resounding roar. j: v: n: i: o: it: s:clap: clap: ROW ONE Marc Caudle, Lonnie Childress, Vernon Costner, Annie Cotton. ROW TWO Bruce Crawford, Don Cruzan, Connie Cullop, Sandra Curtis. 43 VERY HANDY TO HAVE AROUND are Junior TV in- stallers Terrell Gray, Freda Truitt, Melissa Camp, and Cindy Hohweiler. Winners of last years Queen Con- test, the Juniors bowled over the upperclassmen by ROW ONE Harold Darter, Terry Davis, John Deere, Phil DeWolfe, ROW TWO Cherryal Dixon, Nelson Dusenbury, Pete Farris, Richard Ford. spending their Sophomore winnings on three beautiful portable TV’s for use in Tigerland’s area-way, classes and gym. WE GAVE THE TIGERS THREE TV9S ROW ONE Lyle Forth, Betsy Glendinning. Ralph Gray, Terrell Gray, Tina Gray. ROW’ TWO Linda Haigood, Jerre Harman, Ronnie Hintergardt, Jane Hitch, Jack Hobson. CUE A T MOMENTS IN AMERICAN IIISTOR JUNIOR MINUTE MAIDS Jean Stewart, Karen the converted Study Hall extension to American Bunch, and Lou Cluck help in the momentous move History’s new room, of Mrs. Herbel’s extensive classroom equipment from 46 ROW ONE (read down) Cindy Hohweiler, Ronny Holtzclaw, Bobbie Huber, Walter Hull, Kenneth Hutchison. ROW TWO Wynelda Ingels, Ruby Iverson, Jimmy Jefferies, Larrv Jeffus, Bill Johnson. ROW THREE Curtis Jones, Cecil Kuykendall. GEISHA GIRLS Betty Barbee and Charlsye Nicholes demon- strate the fine Japanese art of tea preparation with Roland Adcock as their guest in the Floral Display at the Fair. DON’T SA Y S YON ADA ” ROW ONE Floyd Latshaw, Judy Lee, Bobby Lewis, Dale Lewis, Carol Long ROW TWO Mary Longbotham, Sharon Lowe, Carolyn L’Roy, Dewey McCarney, Don Mallard. ROW THREE Pat Mallard, Linda Mantooth. ROW’ FOUR- Romie Mason, Barbara Massey. 47 WKasm There’s just no stopping the Juniors’ Very Nice Boy for 1963. “Full steam ahead!” seems to be Nelson Dusenbury’s motto what- ever the job at hand. Often on honor roll, he is a football Tiger, a real swinger at golf, and has all the time in the world left for the Tiger lassies and lady faculty members. He is the Class of ’64 President, Sentinel in DeMolay, and, as you can see, quite a stamp collector. He has his career plans all mapped out—two years at PAMC, four at OSU. then for the life of a mechanical engineer! VNB NELSON ROW ONE (read down) Kristi Matzek, Ann Miller, Gilbert Mussman. ROW TWO (read down) Charlsye Nicholes, Tara Peppers, Judy Philippe. ROW THREE Johnny Pickett, Marilyn Pierce, Barbara Potter, Burl Potter, Mike Ramsey. THESE TWO we: like: AND WE COULDN9T ROW ONE Linda Rowden, Waldo Schroeder, Gayle Scott, Christine Sheets, Winnell Sheets. ROW TWO Tom Sloan, Bette Smith, Lenny Smith, Vay Smith, Harvie Steinkuehler. ROW THREE Sherrel Stephens, Vic Stewart. ROW FOUR Gerald Strate, Sharon Strickler. CARE IMPERVIOUS TO FEMALE WILES Sophomore men roosting on their favorite perch are Kenneth Longbrake, Bill Hoffman, Jim Perry, Danny Rountree, Robert Davis, Danny Turner, Duane Ermey, David Walker, William Reust, Wayne Applegate, Lenny Smith. The Old Fishing Hole is a constant temptation in his spare time to Terry Lane, Class of ’65 Very Nice Boy. But he doesn’t succumb to its lure until his All-A grades are assured, his football practice is over, and his duties as President of Explorer Scouts are accomplished. Last year’s Student-of- Today Award Winner at the Masonic Banquet for Teachers, Terry hopes to attend OSU where he will major in Engineering. ROW ONE (read down) Barbara Thomie, Sharon Truitt, Danny Turner, Phil Tuttle, Arthur Tux- hom. ROW TWO (read down) Paul Tyson, Cheryl Vaughn, Ginger Waeker, Jerry Wadley, Billy Walker. 66 YND AND YNG ROW ONE David Walker, Bill Wall, Linda Wat- son, Phyllis Weeks, Kendall White. ROW TWO Doris Williams, Wayne Williams, Gregory Willis, Terry Winters, Nancy Yelton. TEMUt Y AND DECK Y “Nice” means something extra special when as- sociated with the name of Becky Cooper, the Sophomore 1963 Very Nice Girl. Quiet, intro- spective Becky, although a Class Cheerleader, likes best to curl up with an apple and a book or to dream of the day when she will have com- pleted her training as a nurse. Meanwhile she develops her urge-to-service in her church work. As dependable as this vintage vehicle and as promising as the motor cars of their graduation year, 1966. are the Ninth Grade officers, full of plans for their wonderful Freshman year. Over- seeing the motor tune-up here is Class of ’66 President Roger McKinnon. Vice-President Jim Cross and Secretary Lynn Sturdivan share the now extinct runningboard, while Treasurer Susie Slater admires the modish wire wheels. XIXTil GKAI0EHS 9G6 68 ROW ONE Cheryl Adams, Betty Alberty, Aleta Baker, Wally Ballard, Ernest Barnett. ROW TWO Ike Barrett, Wayne Bartels, Kathie Behne, Joe Bennett, Shirley Black. LAST TIME «V THE ME It It Y-GO-ROl V« ALMOST TOO BIG FOR CAROUSELS are Fresh- their favorite fillies at the Texas County Exposition men Karen Webb, Sherry Shores, Gene Kleffman, carnival this fall, and Bobby Burgess taking a final childhood fling on EVERYTHING GROWS GREAT IN OKLAHOMA ROW ONE Jim Blackburn, Pam Blankenship, Peggy Bratton, Linda Bridwell, Velva Brom- low. ROW TWO Priscilla Bryan, Bobby Bur- gess, Amy Caddell, Dennis Calsing, Murry Camp. ROW THREE Linda Cave, Karen Cavin. ROW FOUR Charles Chandler, Frank Chandler. 70 v fJELfiS i , EVEN H-vrs ROW ONE Russel Clarke, Billy Cotton, Steve Couch, Peggy Countryman, Jim Cross. ROW TWO Dixie Dain, Barbara Danner, Rex Danner, Donald Darnell, Jerry Davis. ROW THREE (read down) Carol Dawson, Linda Kay Dennis. LIKE A PAN FULL OF PLENTY, Oklahoma offers her multiple resources to all her citizens like Freshmen Jim Williamson, Paula Weeden, Jane Shaffer, and Larry Thomp- son. Their teacher, Curtis West, helps to make the Panhandle share in the state’s proud history. ROW ONE Candy DeWolfe, Ra Jeanna Dow, Denise Engeran. ROW TWO Shirley Fenton, Gerald Ferguson, Jim Foster. UNDER THE RAINBOW sits enthroned radiant Cub Football Queen Cheri Schoonover with her charming attend- ants Lynn Sturdivan and Susie Slater, flanked by two self-appointed elementary school court jesters. CROWNING EVENT OF THE CUB YEAR was the October 16 Coronation Ceremony at the half-time of the Tiger Cub-Texhoma Red Devil football game. Honoring eager fans and their royal ladies with an 8-8 tie, the Cubs named Jim Cross to escort Queen Cheri Schoonover, Tony Ward to escort Attendant Susie Slater, and Roger McKinnon to escort Lynn Sturdivan. 11 Its TIE FO CHERI ROW ONE Larry Foster, Lyndell Furnish, John- ny Garrison, Kefley Glendinning, Joyce Goodloe. ROW TWO Ernie Graham, Michael Gribble, Chuck Griffin, Dennis Grounds, Gary Grounds. COUNT THE CUBS! Quantities of Freshmen newcomers have crowded Ninth Grade classrooms to the walls. Here on the balcony of Tigerland’s Physical Education Building are the new boys and girls, all from Straight except those otherwise desig- nated. FRONT ROW Stephen Wilt, Emporia, Kans.; Terry Shults, Goodwell; Dennis Grounds. Optima; Larry Foster, Gru- ver; Larry Thompson; Mike Gribble; Zack Olney; Gary Grounds, Manitou Springs, Colo.; Bill Krug: Kelley Glendinning; Bobby Hinds; Benny Smith, Unity; Marc Petrowsky Bill Land- reth, El Segundo, California; Terry Bookout, Waynoka. ROW ONE J. D. Harris, Jerry Haynes, Pauline Herbel, Bobby Hinds, Linda Hohweiler. ROW TWO Deborah Howard, Ricky Howerter. ROW THREE Inez Huckabey, Loletah Hull. ROW FOUR Chris Hunter, Leona Iverson. 74 BACK ROW Paula Weeden; Kathy Kittle: Amy Caddell; Dixie Dain; Joyce Sargent, Unity: Linda Dennis, Graver; Carol Woods; Barbara Mueller; Candy DeWolfe, Liberal, Kans.; Shirley Fenton, Donna Stelzer, Joyce Goodloe. NEW FACES9 NE WPLACES ROW ONE Butch Jamison, Charlotte Jones. ROW TWO Saundra Jones, Linda Kauffman. ROW THREE (read down) Janice Keezer, Susie Kilpatrick. Sid King, Kathy Kittle, Bill Kirk. ROW FOUR David Kleffman, Gene KJeffman, Bill Krug, Bill Landreth, Douglas Liese. 75 EVERY POSTURE PERFECT, every cheer loud and lusty — that’s the goal of the Cubs’ pert pompom wielding Pep Leaders — Linda Bridwell, Priscilla Bryan, and Cheri Schoonover. ROW ONE (read down) Jay Lile, Dale Lively. ROW TWO Jay Lobit, Cindy McClaflin, Roger McKinnon, Deloris Mallard, Karen Martin. ROW THREE Ronnie Martin, Marilyn Mathewson, Pam Matzek, Janice Miller, Gary Mitchell. WHY CUBS WIN! 76 VNG CHEill! ROW ONE Gary Moen, Terry Moore, David Moorhead, Vonda Morgan, Barbara Mueller. ROW TWO Pamela Newman, Carol Nix, Steve Noyes, Frank Ogden, Zack Olney. ROW THREE Edwin Parker, James Patton. ROW FOUR Marc Petrowsky, Terry Pierce. Popular Cheri Schoonover, the Cubs’ Very Nice Girl for 1963, hates to lose ball games, likes stuffed animals and making new friends, and wouldn’t trade her three years as a Central cheerleader for anything. Secretary- treasurer of the Freshman Choir, Cheri was last year’s El Tigre Princess and this year’s Cub Football Queen. MRS. DAVIS’ NINTH GRADE CHOIR IS A BIG ONE. FRONT ROW Director Juanita Davis, Librarian S. Kil- patrick, Sec.Treas. C. Schoonover, M.' Wilburn, C. Woods J. Goodloe, P. Bratton V Ramsey, D. Lively, C. Chandler, S. Winters C DeWolfe, V. Morgan. ROW TWO Librarian t oV, V woue, v. Morgan. ROW TWO Librarian J Schuler, L. Sturdivan, R. Talcott, P. Weeden, J. Wells, J. Sargent, S. Couch, D. Liese, D. Engeran, President S. Winter, C. Adams, Sweetheart J. Zabel, C. McClaflin, K. Webb. ROW ONE Doug Pritchard, Rickv Ralstin. ROW TWO Nick Ramey, Vernon Ramsey. ROW THREE Max Reeder, Joyce Reedy, Carrol Reust. ROW FOUR Wayne Rhodes, Jolinda Roach, Harold Roberts. ROW FIVE Ronnie Robinson, Joyce Sargent, Cheri Schoonover. CHOIR ROSTER cont. ROW THREE A. Baker, J. Shaffer, L. Kauffman, S. Shaffer, F. Chandler, W. Bartels, Reporter S. Slater, L. Bridwell, Vice- President K. Cavin, P. Bryan, D. Dain. FOURTH ROW C. Schoonover, R. Sloan, J. Shackelford, M. Petrowsky, S. Wilt, J. Roach, B. Mueller, K. Behne, P. Countryman. Not Pictured: Terry Pierce, Jerry Moore, Bill Landreth, David Moorhead. JUST ASK US TO SI JAG ROW ONE Connie Schoonover. ROW TWO Bill Schott, Janna Shackelford, Jane Shaffer, Susan Shaffer, Sherry Shores. ROW THREE Jacque Shuler, Terry Shultz, Virgilene Singleton, Susie Slater, Rebecca Sloan. ROW THREE Benny Smith, Eddie Smith, Donna Stelzer, Tommy Stevens, Lynn Sturdivan. 79 Handsome, reliable, and inventive is Class of ’66 Vice- President Jim Cross. True to the best traditions of the Central Cubs, Jim is often on honor roll, a top three- sports contender, and already is shaping his life the way he wants it to be. Jim plans to turn his hobby of tinkering with things mechanical into a career in en- gineering. He is the Freshmen’s Very Nice Boy. VJYM1 JIM ROW ONE Rose Talcott, Judy Taylor, Larry Thompson, James Turner, Glennis Tuxhom. ROW TWO Lavonna Wallis, Tony Ward, Kath- ryn Weaver, Karen Webb, David Weeden. ROW THREE Paula Weeden, Gene Weeks. ROW FOUR Dorothy Weissinger, Jody Wells. 80 WHO WILL SHINE ON GRADUATION NIGHT? Two of these six stellar Ninth Graders, specialists in “A” making, will be honored for topping their classmates when all the grades are in this May. Will the Class of '66 star be Marilyn Mathewson, Barbara Mueller, Roger McKinnon, Joyce Goodloe, Priscilla Bryan, or Doug Liese? Mr. Alden says, “Work and see!” MR. A LOLA'S STAR SCHOLARS ROW ONE Mary Wilburn, Delvin Wiles, Jim Williamson, Stephen Wilt, Sheryl Winters. ROW TWO Steve Winters, Carol Woods, Caro- line Wyche, Barbara Wysong, Judy Zabel. 81 EIGHTH GHAHERS G7 Few Tigerland classes will have finer leadership in 1962-1963 than these live- wire Class of 1967 officers will provide. Peering through Central’s big front door are the Eighth Graders’ President Billy Massey, their Vice-President Har- lan Hinds, and their lovely Secretary- Treasurer Vicki Forman. 82 FROGGY DID A HINTING GO! Look what Movie Star Smiley Burnett found at the Pan- handle Exposition! His three happy buddies are Sharon Bennett, Elizabeth Buford, and Paul Black. The B’s have it! FROGGY A NR THREE It's AT THE FAIR ROW ONE Cheryl Ashpaugh, Sammy Backus, Jimmy Barnett, Sharon Bennett, Jimmy Berry. ROW TWO Paul Black, Ronny Bohannan, John Boiler, Mike Bostic, Elizabeth Buford. 83 ROW ONE Keith Bunch, Sherril Calsing, Larry Campbell, Paul Campbell, Joleen Carter. ROW TWO Steven Cave, Marlene Chenault, Brad Chill, Bonnie Clifford, Charles Clifford. A HOST OF FACES 84 NEW FOLK IN A NEW FOCUS are these dozen Eighth Graders readying their feet for a tour of Tigerland’s Physical Education Building. Here are Del Enders from Fremont, Ohio; William McNeal, Dumas, Texas; Fred Logsdon. Gruver, Texas; Dannie Price, La verne; Ronala Dotson, Ontario, California; Gene Phillips, Odessa, Texas; and Russ Steele, Oklahoma City. Feminine new- comers on the next page, escorted by Kathie Howell, are Sherli Dotson from Adams; Ann Strother, Gruver, Texas; Linda Weatherly, Ama- rillo, Texas; and Jean Jones, Fort Worth, Texas. NEW TO YOU “CLIMB ME,’’ says a campus tree, and Dennis Hicks who loves hunting, joins Charles Hager, a forest ranger aspirant, in accepting the challenge. ROW ONE Leslie Coldiron, Dallas Cooley. ROW TWO Steven Couch, Neil Craig. ROW THREE Don Curtis, Elaine Darter. 85 MAKING MODEL CARS is the leading pastime for Eighth Grade boys, Dale McVey, Jimmy Barnett, and Myron Peterson. Then there are stamp collectors such as Jimmy Berry, and even more boys who agree with Randy Duesenbury that hands were made to handle balls. HOW ABOUT A HOBBY? ROW ONE (read down) Robert Dawson, Alice Delano, Ronald Dotson, Shirl Dotson, Terri Du- Bois. ROW TWO Randy Dusenbury, Del Enders, Wayne Fenner, Gay Ford. 86 ROW ONE Vicki Forman, Alan Foster, Phyllis Frazier, Bing Furnish. ROW TWO (read down) Pat Gilliam, Jerry Gose, Elizabeth Gotcher, Gary Grammer, Grady Grice. IF WISHES WERE HORSES THEY WOULD GLADLY TRADE this tot’s tricycle for something four wheeled, swift, and motorized, but most Eighth Graders like Margaret O’Dell, Marilyn Lovinggood, Linda Parker, Monte Latshaw, and Chester Krone have a few years to wait for driving privileges. 87 ROW ONE Dannie Hall, Margaret Gum, Charles Hager, Ted Helm, Stan Helmke. ROW TWO Dennis Hicks, Charles Hill, Wayne Hill, Harlan Hinds, Dennis Hobson. THIS IS THE WAY HOW TO MAKE A's Rule One: Look the word up. Their teachers don’t have to tell this sizeable group of All A Eighth Graders to use the dictionary. Constant and successful top grade raters and users of the “Big Book’’ are Christy Moore, Kathy Howell, Gay Ford, Bill Massey, Charles Lantz. Jean Myers, Jacquelyn Roach. Nancy Long, Charles Mingle, Marlene Chenault, Paul Black, Elaine Darter, Richard Kane, Harlan Hinds, Steve Reeder, and Garvin Quinn. ROW ONE Teddy Hininger, Nancee Hoffman. ROW TWO Kathy Howell, Dan Huddleston. ROW THREE (read down) James Imboden, Bill Jeffers, Bonita Johnson, Betty Jean Jones, Richard Kane. ROW FOUR (read down) Helen Keith, Linda Kneeland, Chester Krone, Carroll Kuykendall, Charles Lantz. TO MAKE I V “A 89 ROW ONE Monte Latshaw, Raelene Lawrence. ROW TWO Ronnie Lewis, David Lively, Carol Lockhart, Fred Logsdon, Nancy Long. ROW THREE Marilyn Lovingood, Cindy Lowe, Nancy Lynn, William McNeal, Dale McVey. VNB Mi ILLY Eighth Grade Class President Billy Massey is an All-A honor student, a multi-sports athlete, and a confirmed coin collector, to mention only a few of his varied interests. Billy, who com- mutes from Goodwell, has only been in Tigerland for two years. With science as his favorite subject, the Class of 1967’s Very Nice Boy says he hopes to become an archeologist. 90 Susie Nash is just as nice as she was last year when she was named Class Favorite. Now as VNG SUSIE ROW ONE Linda Mahan, Everett Mahaney, Annette Manduano, Billy Massey, Jean Meyers. ROW TWO (read down) Charles Mingle, Est- her Moody, Christy Moore. ROW THREE (read down) Ronnie Morey, Harold Mussman, Susie Nash. Eighth Grade’s Very Nice Girl, she is a class cheerleader, a friendly, outdoor-loving person who enjoys horseback riding and waterskiing. Susie hasn’t picked a career yet, but she has chosen her “dream” college, Oklahoma State University. MINUS THE MUSTACHE, hut unmistakably the hard-to-get hombre of the “Wanted” bill is Garvin Quinn, lurking in the bushes. Has he stolen your hearts or made you lose your heads, Nancy Lynn, Annette Manduano, and Esther Moody? ROW ONE (read down) Monty Nelson, Bobby Nickey, Cindy Norton. ROW TWO (read down) Mark Noyes, Margaret O’dell, Pamela Ogden. ROW THREE Linda Parker, Myron Peterson, Ronnie Peyton, Gene Phillips, Bobby Philippe. HE WENT 66THAT AW AY59 92 PMONEE01 10A Y PRANKSTERS ROW ONE (read down) Danny Price, Clairece Quesenbury, Patty Quesenbury. ROW TWO (read down) Garvin Quinn, Gary Ralstin, Deanna Ramsey. ROW THREE Steve Ratliff, Steve Reeder, Cindy Riffel, Jacque Roach, Betty Roberts. 93 RS£ ROW ONE James Rodman, Don Scheuerman. ROW TWO Coyle Schwab, R. D. Scott. ROW THREE Karen Sharkey, Jerry Smart, Barbara Smith, Roger Stanfield, Mildred Starkey. SITTING PRETTY EIGHTH GRADERS ARE INSPIRED to do some very fancy yelling for their teams when this lithe and lovelv trio of cheerleaders — Raelene Lawrence, Cindy Riffel, and Susie Nash — bound out on the field or gym floor, filled with that “We Can Do It” spirit. ROW ONE Russ Steele, Charlene Stewart, Anna Strother, Jeanie Taylor, Randy Tea. ROW TWO Sandy Trujillo, Sherry Trujillo, Billy Wacker, Linda Weatherly, Bonita Weeden. ROW THREE Larry Wiggins. LOST LESSON WHERE DID I RUT IT? Oh, come on, Danny Rhoades, Jerry Smart, and Gary Ralstin! Give Billy Wacker back his home work or you’ll all be late to class. Seventh Grade class officers in the newly ar- ranged Central High library stacks are typical of Tigerland’s most persistent readers, the Class of ’68. Peering through the shelf is Presi- dent Doug McKinnon, with Vice-President Pat Long and Secretary-Treasurer Douglas Dale looking for some weekend reading materials. SEVENTH GRADERS 96S 96 WORLD SERIES FANS, stealing some wonderful mo- ments from their precious noon hour, are Roger MeClaflin, Rita Jo Fitzgerald, Charles Ellis, and Charlotte Winters, enjoying Central High’s new television set. ROW ONE Charles Backus, Harrol Backus, Ran- dy Barnett, Mary Baxter. ROW TWO Judy Briles, Donnia Bromlow, Jonette Bryan, Janice Burke. ROW THREE Carrol Buxton, Jill Byer- ley, Rodney Campbell, Greg Cavin. 97 SMOOTH AS TIGER KITTENS in their silky black velveteen jumpers are Seventh Grade Cheerleaders Cheryl Moyer, Diana Wing, and Montee Sue Long, almost as professional with their huge Orange and Black pompoms as Senior High leaders. RIG PEP FROM LITTLE PEPPERS ROW ONE Shannon Clarke, Charles Claycomb, Sally Clifford, Linda Cole, Wesley Cooley. ROW TWO Terry Couch, Ruth Countryman, Douglas Dale, Jerry Darnell, Galen Davis. NEW MEETS OLD ROW ONE Mike Davis, Sharon Davis, Renae Diedrich, Mark DuBois, Charles Ellis. ROW TWO Kenneth Ellis, Mike Enns, Sherry Ermey, Cecyle Fanning, Leon Ferguson. TIGERLAND TROPHIES AND TRADITIONS are appreciated and eagerly learned by Cen- tral Junior High Seventh Grade Newcomers. FRONT ROW' Jean Williams, Gruver; Carolyn Robertson, Dalhart. MIDDLE ROW Janice Burke. Straight; Sandra Macormic, Elkhart; and Sandra Snodgrass. Gruver. BACK ROW Leslie Prater, Gruver; Rodney Campbell, Okla- homa City; and Gayle Hill, Gruver. Ill) ROW ONE Ronald (Ferguson, Sheryl Ferguson, Rita Fitzgerald. Carl Ford. Kay Foutch. ROW TWO Cheryl Furnish, Billy Garrison, James Gately, Alecia Goff, Mary Golden. OUR ALL 100 ROW ONE Teresa Green, Judy Grimes. ROW TWO Donna Gunsaullus, Kenny Hamilton. ROW THREE (read down) Allen Haun, Karen Headrick, Steve Hedrick, Ina Helm. ROW FOUR (read down) Gayle Hill, Mack Hinchey, Brenda Howell, Richard Imboden. Best in books and many varied activities as well are Class of 1967 Absolutely-All-A stduents. Seated across the front row are Diana Wing, Billie Marshall, Linda Quesen- bury, Renae Diedrich, Linda Cole, and Lucy White. On either side of Joe Long- botham in the back row are Mary Iverson and Sharon Wetmore. 101 “Pretty, smart, and popular,” according to her Seventh Grade admirers, is their 1963 VNG, Diana Wing. With this her seventh year in Tigerland, Diana is a cheerleader and band twirler. Graceful Diana, who now plans to be a model, says that geography is her best loved subject, and, as you can see from this picture, water skiing is her favorite outdoor sport. oun VNG DIANA ROW ONE Mary Iverson, Alton Jackson, Deb- ra Jeffers, Hal Jeffus. ROW TWO (read down) Lewis Jones, Steven Kleffman, Ricky Lewis. ROW THREE (read down) Harold Lloyd, Montee Sue Long, Pat Long. ROW ONE (read down) Joe Longbotham, Bonnie McCarney, Pat McCarrell. ROW TWO (read down) Roger McClaflin, Lola McClana- han, Ellis McCurdy. ROW THREE Billy Mc- Intyre, Doug McKinnon, Sandra Macormic, Denny Mallard, Billie Marshall. OUR VNG RANDY Randy Barnett, the Seventh Grade’s Very Nice Boy for 1963, must have seen some stars when he got that black eye. But that’s all right with agree- able Randy, who wants to be an astronomer any- way, not a boxer. However, Randy is an Ail- Sports man and the recipient of this wonderfully thoughtful compliment from a classmate of his: “Why did I pick Randy for VNB? Because he is a good example of how we all ought to act!” 103 ROW ONE Marsh Mingle, Terry Moore, Stephen Morehead. Cheryl Moyer, Lee Roy Mussman. ROW TWO Robert Newton, Jim Oakes, Billy Ogan, Darlene O’Leary, Karen Palmer. SEVENTH 00HA HE AHT Papier-mache, patience, and plenty of planning went into the construction of this zoo-ful of ani- mals, shaped and painted by Mrs. Blackwell’s Seventh Grade Art pupils. The creatures, in fan- tastic form and color, were displayed to delighted critics at both the Guymon High School and Public Libraries. Members of this Second Hour Art Class are Mary Baxter. Judy Briles, Sally Clifford, Ruth Countryman, Jerry Darnell, Mark DuBois,Billy Garrison. Allen Haun, Karen Head- rick, Linda Horner, Mary Iverson. Harold Lloyd, Billie Marshall Lola McClanahan. Robert Newton, Darlene O’Leary, Linda Quesenbury, Ronny Rent- frow, Peggy Scott, Michael Steele, John Strother, Mike Wall, George Webster, Calvin Weissinger, Juanita Williams, Sharon Wood, Barbara Wyche, Sheryl Fergeson, Andy Thompson. ROW ONE Debra Parker, Dwain Patton. ROW TWO Angie Peppers, Irene Perez. ROW THREE (read down) Ann Phillips, Connie Pierce, Glenda Pierce, Leslie Prater, Linda Quesenbury. ROW' FOUR (read down) Nan- cy Redding, Dennis Reed, Ronny Rentfrow, Ann Reust, Leon Rhodes. CLASS MAKE A MEMtY MENAGERIE ROW ONE Dwight Rice, Ronnie Riffel, Richard Ritter, Carolyn Roberson, Dennis Rodman. ROW TWO Iva Ruby, Ronald Sanford, Sharon Schard- WW 7W? HT M MZ M7 'V'WMMWC' rr«7 ein, Diana Schott, Carlson Scheuerman. ft jfc M .IfifS « { M1 £7iV ALL ABOARD FOR A JAUNT THROUGH SPACE are Seventh Graders Randy King, Marsha Mingle, and Angie Peppers, enjoying a sunny Friday afternoon at the Texas County Exposition. OUTSIDE OR IXSMDE ROW ONE Cheryl Schuerman, Peggy Scott, Glen Seymour, David Sheets, Luann Sheets. ROW TWO Randy Shields, Vicki Shuler, Steven Simp- son, Ronnie Sledge, W. D. Smith. TWIXT TWELVE ANI) TEEN TWISTERS like Ellis McCurdy, Sheryl Fergeson, Steve Simpson and Carol Worth enjoy Dick Clark’s American Bandstand TV Teen Party right after school. Here they are showing Dick that they know a few of the latest twists and turns themselves. ROW ONE Sandra Snodgrass, Michael Steele, Laddie Stingley, Johnny Strother, Frank Tay- lor. ROW' TWO David Torrey, George Turner, Sue Tuxhorn. ROW THREE Jimmy Walden, Autie Wall, Glovena Wallis, Bruce Warner, George Webster. TRY-HARD DAY 108 PREP TEST DAY finds El Tigre’s Photographer Roy Qualls snapping this candid shot of Seventh Graders digging into their first big high school type achievement test. “PREP” stands for “Pupils Record of Educational Progress,” the results of which will be available to all parents. Mr. Garner, Mr. Lynn, and Mr. Bentley are Counselor James Roach’s aides this morning. ROW ONE Calvin Weissinger, Belinda West, Sharon Wetmore, Lucy White. Jean Williams. ROW TWO Juanita Williams, Voletta Williams. ROW THREE Diana Wing, Charlotte Winters. ROW FOUR Owen Wood, Sharon Wood, Carol Worth, Barbara Wyche, Jean Yelton. FIRST STEF TO COLLEGE 109 ACTIVITIES TiGERM. A A 10 9S STUDY CM.URS STRESS SERVICE Tigerland’s newest society, composed of young Space Age scientists, held its first organizational meeting on the evening of October 2, 1962, to elect officers and draft a constitution for the GHS Science Club. With their aim the study of and participation in our Nation’s New Frontier of Science program, the members plan to prepare papers, hear talks by area scientists, view films, and construct projects worthy of this selective group. Sponsoring the Club’s bi-monthly meetings are high school science instructors Earl Sargent and Gilbert Smith. The Science Club elected Joe Walker, president; Mary Long- botham, vice-president; and Betty Wilson, secretary-treasurer. On the front row, club members are Larry Doke, John Halli- burton, Richard Ford, Freda Truitt, Wynelda Ingels, Sharon Lowe, Sue Carter, Mary Longbotham, Betty Wilson, and Sponsor Earl Sargent. In the back row are Sponsor Gilbert Smith, Lou Cluck, Brenda Nicholes, Kenny White, Joe Walker, Berton Lary, John Pickett, Curtis Jones, and Steve Belanger. 112 Mu Alpha Theta, GHS Math Club is Tiger- land’s oldest nationally affiliated study group. Sponsored by Earl Sargent and Bobby Wyett, Mu Alpha Theta meets monthly to study new methods in advanced mathematics, to hear reports of alumni on college require- ments, and generally to further the progress of this important science today. Math Club members in the front row are President Larry Doke, Richard Ford, Margaret Vaughan, Betsy Glendinning, Sponsor Earl Sargent, Betty Wilson, John Halliburton, Steve Belanger, Curtis Jones, John Pickett, and Sponsor Bobby Wyett. In the back row are Burton Lary, Brenda Nicholes, Secretary- Treasurer Lou Cluck. Vice-President Gary Butler, Joe Walker and Kenny White. THESPiANS ENTERTAIN RUNAWAY MANOR A NIGHT TO REMEMBER for both GHS Thespians and Dunaway Manor residents was the November evening when the Drama Club, en masse with Sponsor Shelton Garner, made a surprise apearance at Guy- mon’s deluxe home for senior citizens. The group brought a big box of apples and an interesting program of readings to entertain the Dunaway Manor group. Mrs. W. H. Schnaufer, Mrs. Anna Purcell, Mrs. O. M. Nix, Mrs. George Ellison, Mr. E. C. Nix, Mrs. Neva Compton, Mrs. Ida Wray, Mrs. B. E. Wright, Mr. Charles Rhodes, and Mrs. Eunice Beckwith. In row one Thespians in their club pull-overs are Benny Stingley, Gary Doke, Sandra Curtis, Jerre Harmon, Mary Myers, Brenda Denney, Velinda Gaberdiel, Tamra Hoper, Sherrel Stephens, and Vay Smith. On the sec- ona row are Sponsor Shelton Gamer, Dave Winters, Freda Truitt, Jerry Stingley, Ginger Wacker, and Linda Haigood. Standing on the back row are Connie Cullop, Joe Walker, Joe Tyson, Jane Hitch, Diedra Goff, Pete Faris, Doug McVey, David Walker, Robert LaMar, Marvin Wellman. WE RE NO STAY-AT-HOMES Sextet and Trio girls have made appearances at all of Guymon’s Civic organizations at halftime at a PAMC basketball game, and have boosted the county fair with a KGNC TV appearance. Girls whose names are starred are members of both Sextet and Trio: Carolyn Jo Byerley, Christine Sheets , Cindy Hohweiler , Sherrel Stephens, Robinelle Curtis , Jane Hitch. GHS CHOIR ROSTER: (Starred names are also Girls Glee Club members) ROW ONE Director Juanita Davis, Sharon Bragg , Karen Bunch , Cindy Hohweiler, Curtis Jones, Ger- ald Bookless, Gary Doke, Carol Breithaupt , Carolyn Jo Byerley , Christine Sheets , Robin Clements . ROW TWO Kay Kleffman, Vay Smith , Cheryl King , Vic Stewart. Bruce Breithaupt, Sherrel Stephens, Ginger Wacker, Vicki Kirk, Melinda Powell , Kathie Beer . ROW THREE Dari Keifer . Linda Carter , Norma Barnett, Charlene Place , Lou Ella Yancy, Helene Leath, Harold Darter, Terry Lane, Glenda Spinden , Judy Helmke , Bette Rae Byers , Harri Halford, Andrea Enger- an . ROW FOUR Linda Claycomb , Paula English , Pauline Williams , Jane Hitch , Herman Bunger, President Robert Sargent, Vice-President Larry Quinn, Pascal Lindley, Gerald Costner. David Walker, Nick Byerley, Lynne Webb , Glenda Smith , Reporter Joyce Gregory , Sec.-Treas. Sharon Rice , Kathie Waldrop , Accompanist Tina Gray . LETS HAVE MORE OF THEM Tigerlanders and area music lovers never pet enough choral music. The two large singing groups above, the Girls' Glee Club and the GHS Choir, are always top attractions on any urogram. The latter group particularly has made numerous appearances in 1962-63. To list only those of the second semester the annual Spring Sweetheart Concert February 8. the PAMC District Contest, a Negro Ministrel scheduled April 15, and a KGNC TV appearance to boost Guymon s Annual Pioneer Day, an annual event during the first week in May. A GREAT EIGHT were the popular Double Mixed Quartet com- posed of Andrea Angeran, Glenda Spinden, Pauline Williams, Lou- ella Yancey, Curtis Jones, Larry Quinn, Robert Sargent, and Herman Bunger, the boys also members of Boys' Quartet. QUEEN OF A NIGHT was Robin Clements, who with Carolyn Jo Byerley and Sharon Rice, runners- up, presided over the an nual Sweetheart Concert on February 8. WE9RE BOUND FOB ALLSTATE ALL-STATE INSTRUMENTALISTS load up for their trip to Norman. They are Darrell Garrison, Diedra Goff, Arthur Tuxhom, Kendall White, and Melissa Camp. ORCHESTRA ROSTER ROW ONE Diedra Goff, Gwen dolyn Hicks. Peggy Countryman, Eugene Pellette, Fern Pafford, Shirley Ivie, Glennis Tuxhom. Marybell Foster. ROW TWO Priscilla Bryan, Mary Beth Mans, Bill Batterman, Sharon Bragg, Christy Moore, Cynthia Lowe, Nancy Lynn, Terry Schultz, Debra Jeffers. Jim- my Walden, Jonette Bryan, Cecyle Fanning, Hal Jeffus, Sue Tuxhorn, Paul Campbell. ROW THREE Glenda Pierce, Angi Peppers, Lucy White, Pat Long, Sharon Wetmore, Nancy Redding, Marsha Glisson, Leon Fer- guson, Richard Ritter. John Haliburton, Lou Cluck, Janie Imboden, Darrell Garrison. ROW FOUR Tara Peppers, Kathy King, Maurine Mott, Ruth Bounds, Jan- ice Alberty, Jerry Gotcher, Randy Tea, Benny Stineley. Mike Lindsay. Jan Bistline, John Stevens. ROW FIVE Montee Sue Long, Director Keith Henderson, Arthur Tuxhom, Kendall White, Paul Black, James Patton, W. D. Smith. 116 TEAS ADD TONE TO ORCHESTRA Orchestra’s an- nual semester teas give GHS musicians a gracious change of pace and delight parents, patrons, and faculty members. Hostesses here are Diedra Goff, Shirley Ivie, Marybell Foster, Linda Martin, Gwen- dolyn Hicks, and Guest Hostess Mrs. Roy Rice. OHS DMSTMNOUISHER ORCHESTRA LILTING STRINGS Like the Tigerland Orches- tra, Mrs. Henderson’s Strings are always as- sured of Superior ratings and enthusiastic re- ceptions wherever they perform. Members are Diedra Goff, Gwendolyn Hicks, Peggq Country- man, Eugene Pellette, Fern Paford, Shirley Ivie, Marybell Foster, Priscilla Bryan Bill Batter- man, Christy Moore, Nancy Lynn Cynthia Lowe, Terry Schultz, Paul Campbell, Glennis Tuxhorn, Arthur Tuxhorn, Kendall White, Paul Black, and James Patton. 117 Tiger Twirlers whose precision performances helped to capture the five 1962-63 trophies displayed here are Kathy King, Charlene Simmons, Lou Behne, and Margaret Vaughan. Director Harry Ward and his most enthusiastic and talented 1963 Tiger Band have added this splendid array to our trophy case: the Regional Parade and Marching Trophies from Northwestern at Alva, the District Concert Trophy from PAMC’s Spring Music Festival, and the State Sight Reading Trophy. GHSHAND IS GRAND IN 963 SENIOR HIGH BAND ROSTER ROW ONE Melissa Camp, Margaret Vaughan, Tara Peppers, Betty Wilson, David Moorhead, Linda Hohweiler. ROW TWO Kathy King, Maurine Mott, Amy Caddell, Pam Matzek, Pam Ogden, Phyllis Frazier, Janice Alberty, Teddy Hininger, Ronnie Hintergardt, Wynelda Ingels, Lou Behne, Mike Lindsay, Dennis Porter. ROW THREE Darrell Garri- son, Janie Imboden, Lou Cluck, Robert Dawson, John Haliburton, Charlotte Jones, Charlene Simmons, Donna Steltzer, Karen Sharkey, Steve Ratlief, Elizabeth Gotcher, Larry Foster, Joleen Carter. Bonnie Johnson, Coyle Schwab, Gary Gloden, Marilyn McKay, Bob Bounds, Elizabeth Buford. ROW FOUR Deirda Goff, Ruth Bounds, Carole Caddell, Garvin Quinn, Phyllis Weeks, Jacque Roach, Larry Quinn, Monty Nelson, Brad Chill, Ernie Graham, Randy Tea, Wayne Hill, Jay Lobit, Murray Camp, Charles Mingle, Larry Wiggins, Robert Bauer, Gary Grammer, Jan Bistline, Marshall Miller, Steve Heflin, Johnny Stevens. ROW FIVE Don Holtzclaw, James Imboden, Gary Moen, Tom Sloan, ROW STANDING Jean Stewart, Joyce Gregory, Tommy Stevens, Jerry Hill, Steve Noyes, Donnie Mallard, Jerry Stingley, Director Harry Ward. TIGER AAR CUB MUSIC MAKERS JUNIOR HIGH BAND ROSTER ROW ONE Linda Cole, Janis Burke, Cheryl Moyer, Donna Gunsaullus. ROW TWO Shanon Clarke, Sharon Dawis, Sandra Macormic, Bruce Warner, Carolyn Roberson, Marsha Mingle, Sandra Snodgress, Cheryl Ashpaugh. ROW THREE Esther Moody, Mary Golden, Charlotte Win- ters, Judy Grimes, Russel Steele, Billy McIntyre. Rod- ney Campbell, Alecia Goff, Dianna Wing, Cindy Riffel, Nancee Hoffman. ROW FOUR Pat McCarrel, Gene Phillips, Mark Noyes, Ron Bohanon, Dennis Rodman, Steve Morehead, Billy Massey, Dwain Patton, Danny Hall, Doug McKinnon, Randy King, Richard Imboden. ROW FIVE Director Harry Ward, Ellis McCurdy, Gayle Hill, Ronnie Riffel, Harold Backus, and Stan Helmke (not in picture). ti— COMEDY OR DRAMA? Surveying the contents of their costume reserves for new teacher Lorenz Boyd are mem- bers of the Drama Class in a “heady” moment. Melinda Powell, Christine Sheets, and Sherrel Stephens share the lime light with fellow Thespians Joe Tyson and Nick Byerley. miAMA AJ D mat ate TOPS FOR DEBATE Tiger debaters were hard at work, shaping new teams in 1962-63. Faced with the formidable State Question—Resolved: That the United States should adopt a policy of reciprocal free trade with non-Communistic nations, inexperienced Sophomores and Juniors showed great promise for next year. In their new Debate pull-overs are Arthur Tuxhom, Larry Watson, Sharon Strickler, Larry Quinn, Pascal Lindley, and Jack Staples. GHS teams entered Alva, PAMC, Southwestern and State meets. 120 A FART OF ART TILE STYLING ASSEMBLY LINE All sorts of excited and unu- sual projects are going forward in this year’s high school Art classes. Here are tiles being shaped and pieced together in mosaic pat- terns. Annie Cotton and Rosett Ivie are cementing pieces to boards; Frank Koch, with his mouth held just so, is fitting a particularly finicky bit, as is his neighbor Danny Roundtree. Tile Cutter- uppers are Gary Butler and Mar- cus Alexander. An aloof Mary Myers turns her back to sculp a life-sized head in a popular Art class medium, papier mache. AN ARCHEOLOGIST’S TREASURE TROVE strange artifacts, resembling aboriginal relics, draw the view- er’s attention here. Darlene Lohmann glazes a beauti- fully shaped primitive urn; Mrs. Caroyln Blackwell, who delights in teaching her Art students creative expression, looks up at El Tigre’s camera; Judy Helmke smooths a tiny Egyptian-type food receptacle; dreamy eyed Gerald Strate contemplates the art form of his kiln-melted bottle; and Jane Ellis’ slender fingers caress her tiny formed-from-the sea ceramic piece. WHAT! NO BOOKS? NO SLIDE RULES? GHS Na- tional Honor Society is definitely not made up of stereotyped book worms. These 1963 NHS members are happy Positive Rebels from the Grind Group. They play for dance bands, spark Tiger sports, work down- town. lead church activities, are cheerleaders, queens, and favorites, go skiing: like to eat, and want to have the best our wonderful world has to offer. On and around the piano are Jean Stewart, Jane Hitch, Melissa Camp, Pat Mallard, Lou Cluck, Sue Carter, Paula English, and Brenda Nicholes. Roasting marshmallows are Margaret Vaughan, Betty Wilson, Larry Doke, Tina Gray, and Kathie Waldrop. At the ping-pong table are Joe Lane, Linda Cruzan, Lou Behne, Freddie Landess and Joe Walker. Standing are Gene Adams, Harvey Carter, Larry Quinn, Robert Sargent, and Dar- rell Garrison. Velinda Gaberdiel was not present when this picture was made. THE V i W LOOK LX OHS REAL REACTIVATORS are NHS offi- cers for 1963. President Fred Landess has spearheaded a drive to strengthen local and national affiliation. The Society has revised their original constitution, adopted in 1947, to meet the suggestions of the National Chapter. Secretary Mar- garet Vaughan prepared activity records for all NHS eligibles to assist the Facu- lty Selection Board in choosing new members. Treasurer Kathie Waldrop col- lected dues to build up a reserve fund. Vice-President Larry Quinn managed the annual NHS Straw Balloting for politi- cal offices. LIBRARY SPREADS ITS WINGS Flying away from Tigerland, out of the County, and across Oklahoma, District President Jerre Harmon, Librarian Doris Steele, and the forty-two junior and senior high student library assistants joined the Oklahoma Student Library Assocation this year. Jerre was elected Tigerland’s first district president at the December 8 meeting in the Senior High Reference Room. Sea tel at the refresh- ment table are LuAnn Sheets, Jean Williams, Jean Myers, Gaye Ford, Carol Worth, Elizabeth Buford, Cheryl Furnish. Standing are Stan Helmke, Linda Kleffman, Georgiaija Foster, Nancy Hoffman, Vicki Foreman, Nancy Long, Brenda Howell, Esther Moody Ann Strother and Jerre Harmon. LOOK TO LIHRARY ON THE RIGHT TRACK with Mrs. Steele, new Tigerland librarian, are her high school assistants, Ruby Iverson, Linda Kleffman, and Jerre Harmon, who design and display the book-enticing bulletin boards in the Reading Room. Like all student library helpers, these girls donate many hours to help make your library resources available. 123 V MEET THE COOKS AND CUSTODIANS WHO CAKE FOK OUR COMFORT HERE’S TO A TIDY TIGERLAND, and the coffee cups clink as Custod- ians Harry Burgess, Taylor Childress, and Floral Darnell pledge themselves to the task of keeping clean and com- fortable their respective buildings— Shop, Central Junior High, and Administration. 124 I MOKE THAN SEVEN THOUSAND MEALS A MONTH “GIVE ’EM ENOUGH ROPE.” says an old English proverb, “and they’ll hang them- selves.” But Roy Beer, Crawford Carruth, and G. 0. Cannon, Tigerland custodians, aren’t getting ready for a hanging. Mr. Car- ruth, new custodian of Senior High, and Mr. Cannon of the Cafeteria, are taking time out from their spic-and-span buildings to help Mr. Beer install a climbing cable in his beautifuly newly completed P.E. Gym. You just can’t beat it now, can you? Where else are lunches so tastefully prepared, so attractively served, so dependably, so prompt- ly and, best of all, so inexpensively as in our school lunchrooms? May El Tigre present, at their leisure for a moment, the culinary queens whom you see only at their busiest every noon: the Mesdames Ruby Prater, Ber- tie Countryman, Peggy Costner, Elsie Beer, Supervisor Dessie Baker, and Carrie Byers. SOMETHING NEW HAS BEEN ADDED IN DRAFT- those equally beautiful new drafting cabinets? Look ING Namely, DAMES! And don’t Susie Neas, Bobbie again and you’ll notice male drafters Bob Davis, Allen Brown, and Kay Cavin look beautiful bending over Petty, and David Black. DRAFTING AND WOODWORKERS A GIFT TO BE REMEMBERED is this pair of benches fashioned with loving hands by Woodworker’s Club for Dunaway Manor’s Prayer Room. The Club President Ervin Brune, Treasurer Gary Winters, and Vice-Presi- dent Terry Schoonover deliver the gift to Manor at- tendant Alvin McDaniel. SPELLBOUND by Mr. Rear’s fascinating drawings, Tom Sloan and Kay Cavin tempted El Tigre’s editors to caption this pic “Two Nuts and a Bolt. We didn t. 126 LOOK WHAT A TINY SAW CAN 1)0! And a tiny girl, too! That's Seventh Grader LuAnn Sheets engrossed in a curvey cut in Shop. NIMBI.E FINGERS FLY as Joe Bennett. Ronnie Martin, and Kelly Glendinning never fumble or drop the screws they are putting in an electrical assembly. LOOK FORWARD TO SHOD STILL A MAN'S WORLD Although this year girls are never be underdogs when it comes to the operating of beginning to take Shop and Drafting, boys like Max power tools and the turning out of fine furniture and Reed, Phil Tuttle, and Gale Berg feel that men will wood work. CAHPENTIIY BUILDS A NEW EDISON COLD WEATHER. WE WERE READY FOR YOU Snug and warm, alothough the mercury is below zero outside, Carpenters Terry Schoonover, Lester Scheuerman, Jim Lockett, Wayne Williams, Starr Morgan, Lonnie Gieselmann, and Wayne Applegate cut and fit wood panels to the walls of the New Edison, readying it for early occupancy. A BREAK IN THE ARCTIC TEMPERATURES finds Don Pitman, Denver Russell, and Robert Barrett, with paint brushes in full swing, putting on the final finish- ing touches to the 1962-63 project, the new Edison School for Special Students in Northeast Guy mon. The hoys have an unbroken record of a finished building or residence every year since Carpentery classes were started in GHS. This is their fifth major project, the others being a row of three homes in West Guy mon, the Vocational Homemaking Cottage, and now Edison School. Vocational Carpentry is directed by Dean Rear, himself a GHS alumnus. • ” DA 1 MPMVEBIS9 EiPUCA TUPX EYES RIGHT? First step toward the driver’s license required of every GHS graduate is the eye check-up. Sophomore Driver Edu- cation students administering the test to Judy Helmke are Janice Al- berty, Rae Jean Dixon, and Me- linda Powell. A TENSE MOMENT IN THE TOWN HALL. Miss Margaret Wright, GHS Driver Education teacher, has lived through this little drama many times with the hundreds of students she has prepared for licensing. An anxious Bonnie Blackburn awaits the verdict of Oklahoma Highway Patrol’s Examining Officer Vernon Bell who is checking her written test. She has yet to drive for him. Watch out for those stop signs, Bonnie, and drive slow! FARMERS WITH A STAKE IN AMERICA’S FU- TURE are Advisor Harold Yoakum’s blue coated FFA boys, proudly wearing the Gold Vocational Agriculture Emblem. FRONT ROW: Dale Lively, Vernon Ramsey, Johnny Garrison, Bill Pierce, Steve Noyes, Benny Bob Smith, Douglas Liese. ROW TWO: Advisor Harold FHOFO TO SA Y Yoakum, Leonard Mussman, Nick Ramey, Bill Batter- man, Griffith John, Gary Mitchel, Charles Rhoades, Wayne Bartels, Wally Ballard. BACK ROW: Terrell Gray, Harvie Steinkuehler, Gilbert Mussman, Larry Jeffus, Jay Lile, Frank Hensley, Grant Forth, Lyle Forth Jerry Wadley. WE TIE MN FFA ON OUR CALENDAR you will find the names of sixteen Guymon firms who helped the FFA Chapter treasury by buying advertising space. Care- fully proof-reading the handsome finished product are FFA Sentinel Gilbert Mussman, President Larry Jeffus. Secretary Lyle Forth, Treasurer Leonard Mussman, and Reporter Harvie Steinkuehler. out itEcoitn is FIXE LET’S KEEP IT THAT WAY SPARKS HAVE BEEN FLYING El Tigre's reporter thought Fourth of July had arrived one very cold night late in January when he was driving by the Vocational Agriculture Building. Wierd lights and hooded figures could be spied through the partially open door. Safety guards removed, the workers turned out to be Llye Forth and his helper Jerry Wadley rushing to complete Lyle’s new stock racks. There was a Fat Stock Show on the calendar for February 4-6, and Lyle wanted to haul his very outstanding Shorthorn Steer in Tigerland FHA tradi- tional style. Every successful farmer knows he has to keep careful financial and progress records. FFA boys are no exception. Their beautifully arranged record books, filled with profit showing columns of figures make all those pre-dawn and after-dark milking, feeding, and clean- up jobs seem very worth while to Fu- ture Farmers Wayne Bartels, Benny Bob Smith, Gary Mitchell and Nick Ramey. f in no oits EPIPHANY Guymon FIIA revived the old English Twelfth Night Tree Burning ceremony when on Saturday, Jan. 5, the girls and their sponsor, Mrs. Ralph White, burned Guvmon’s old Christmas trees in the Caliche Pit southwest of town. The love- ly Epiphany scene has as its principals Lynne Webb, Jane Ann Saffer, Glennis Tuxhorn, Inez Huckabey, and Wilma Jo Wells. With Mrs. White, in the small upper left picture, are also Gail Sheets, Pauline Williams, Sherry Johnson, Ann Smith, Ruby Iverson, Wilma Wells, Nancy Yelton, and Winnell Sheets. “THE MAGI OFFERED HIM GIFTS—GOLD. AND FRANKINCENSE, AND MYRRH” JOHNNY-COME-EARLIES with R. P. Duke, Diversified Occupations co-ordinator, are Jack Trotter, nurseryman- florist; Ronnv Holtzclaw. sheet metal worker; Ronnie Gardner, welder; Lonnie Foster, nurseryman; Cecil Kuy- kendall, auto mechanic; Jerry Jensen, pine machine opera- tor; Kay Stump, shoe repairman; Kenneth Gurwell. maintenance mechanic; Raymond Martirt, sheet metal worker; Lorraine Williams, cook; Jane Ellis, laundry- man—all of whom punch the GHS time clock an hour early since they have afternoon jobs. ATTENTION GETTER Roper Pritchard proudly displays his eye-catchinp service station products assembly to Vernon Wilson, TV repairman; Don Reid, print- er; Linda Cruzan, secretary, and Kay Pieratt, displayman. STACKS OF INFORMATION on the job of their choice interest Dennis West, maintenance mechanic; Lennie Smith, printer; Virginia Hill, bookkeeper, Ralph Adcock, displayman in the pleasant D. O. classrooms. OIYEKSIFIEO OCCUPATION FUN FESTIVAL FOItMS VEV CLUB SENIOR HIGH PEP CLUB ROSTER. FRONT ROW: Barbara Massey, Sue Carter, Glenda Spinden, Carolyn Jo Byerley, Tamra Hooper, Becky Cooper. ROW TWO: Ann Smith, Jerre Harmon, Bette Smith, Charlsye Nicholes, Tara Pepers, Linda Claycomb, Linda Carter, Robinelle Curtis, Lou Behne, Lou Cluck, Margaret Vaughan, Paula English, Barbara Potter, Glenda Smith. Freda Truitt, Charlene Place, Brenda Nicholes. ROW THREE: Charlene Ford. Norma Barnett. Lynn Webb. Gail Sheets, Cheryl Rhodes, Winnell Sheets, Carol Breithaupt. Christine Sheets, Linda Rhodes, Ruby Iverson, Maurine Mott, Kathy King, Sharon Truitt, Connie Cullop, Kathie Waldrop, Fern Pafford. Sharon Rice, Velinda Gaberdiel. President. ROW FOUR: Sherry Johnson, Sharon Bragg, Norma Gately, Linda Rowden, Sandra Bondra, Karen Bunch, Connie Howell, Mary Beth Mans. Janice Alberty, Linda Bostic, Sandra Cur- tis, Betty W’ilson. Rae Jean Dixon, Mary Longbotham, Betty Barbee, Betsy Glendinning, Vonalene Strate. Georgianna Foster. FOR THE % ” EX 67 1963 Cheerleaders and Pep Club, through thick or thin, were among the greatest cheering groups GHS has ever boasted. The precision, poise, and personality of the Senior High “A” leaders is typified in the perfect pyra- mid formed by Seniors Caro- lyn Jo Byerley and Glenda Spinden, juniors Sue Carter and Barbara Massey, and Sophomores Tamra Hooper and Becky Cooper. Busy little “B” Cheerleaders, at the right, with that “make the Big G” spirit, are Mary Beth Mans, Janice Alberty, and Linda Bostic. 137 FIFTEEN YEARS OF TIGER FOOTBALL Honored for their outstanding play and sportsmanship, five GHS Seniors were named to the All-District foot- ball team this year. With their coaches. Orville Tuttle, Charles O’Donnell, and Joe Kiger, are the quintet, each member of which has earned three bjg football G’s: Doug McVey, Andy Spencer, Fred- die Landess, Lonnie Foster, and Joe Lane. FIVE THiFKS ON AEE-IHSTItIFT TEAM I.ONNIE FOSTER 155 lb. Back Tri-Letterman All-District FREDDIE LANDESS 160 lb. Back Tri-Letterman All-District '02 TU.lilts MAKE IT 4-0 Football in 1962 was a down-and-up affair for the GHS Tigers. Guymon sports fans came away from the opener at Dalhart with their hopes for a great season somewhat dashed by the Wolves’ 46-0 shutout of an inexperienced Bengal eleven. Then to the delight of everyone, Coach Tuttle, O’Donnell, and Kiger’s boys bounced back to down the doughty Beaver Dusters 19-8 before a frenzied Memorial Stadium crowd. But the Guymon gridsters were heading for a long dry spell, dropping four hardfought battles to the Perryton Rangers 42-8, the Homecoming Game with Wood- ward 20-12, the Parents’ Night game with Stillwater 20-6, and the Lamar, Colorado game, 12-7. Then the long drouth was broken by a decisive 29-14 win from a surprised Alva Goldbug team. The Tigers were to taste defeat only once more when they were shut out 0-12 by the rival Tiger team from Ulysses, Kansas. Guymon spectators’ hopes soared high for next year as the pre- dominantly Junior and Sophomore Tigers now powered in a pair of big wins over St. Mary’s Crusaders 48-6 and over Liberal, Kansas, Redskins 14-7. Although the win-loss record for the 1962 season stood at 4-6, there was very little difference in points—187 for the opponents to 143 for the Tigers. Outpointed only 44 points in the ten game season, the 1962 touchdown-hungry Tigers gave the fans some of the most heart-stopping foot- ball ever played by a GHS team. JOE LANE 191 lb. Tackle Tri-Letterman All-District GUYMON 14 —LIBERAL 7 Freddie Landess, Senior Back, the Tigers’ greatest ground gainer in ’62, outlasts a Redskin tackier, to go in standing up for one of his two touchdowns and a GHS victory. MIKE LANDRETH 180 lb. Guard One Letterman DOUG McVEY 161 lb. Center Tri-Letterman All-District TII.EItS TROUNCE CRUSADERS tll-U 140 ANDY SPENCER 161 lb. Back Tri-Letterman All-District JOHNNY STEVENS 147 lb. Back One Letterman TIGERS 48 —ST. MARY’S CRUSADERS 6 Everybody, including the officials and excluding the ball, seems to be in on this play in the Tigers’ game with St. Mary’s-of-the-Plains here in November. The GHS gridmen put on their mightiest offensive in a TD drive that saw Junior Jerry’ Behne score twice, with Andy Spencer, Freddie Landess, Lonnie Foster. Jimmy Jefferies, and Paul Tyson each accounting for one. m ONE FOll THE HENOAES 141 KENNETH HUTCHISON 170 lb. Guard Two Letterman JIMMY JEFFRIES 147 lb. Back Two Letterman MARC CAUDLE 154 lb. Center Two Letterman TIGERS lose: A HEART BREAKER TO WOOD WARD 9S ROOMERS ON HOMECOMING NIGHT NELSON DUSENBURY 146 lb. Back One Letterman DON MALLARD BURL POTTER 216 lb. Tackle 131 lb. Center TIGERS 12 — WOODWARD 20 Senior Back Andy Spencer gets great blocking from teammates like Jerry Behne and Freddie Landess to dash for a touchdown from the Boomer thirty yard line in the Tigers first play from scrimmage at the Homecoming game October 5, here. DAVID WINTERS 174 lb. Guard GARY WINTERS 143 lb. End One Letterman JOHNNY ANDERSON 143 lb. Guard FRANK HENSLEY 182 lb. End One Letterman PHIL BARBAREE GERALD COSTNER 196 lb. End 145 lb. Tackle One Letterman TIGERS 6 — STILLWATER 20 Senior Back Lonnie Fosters, Dali firmly clasped, grinds out some of'Guymon’s 134 yards rushing in a game that saw the GHS boys hurt by repeated fumbles and penalties October 12. WILLIAM REUST 160 lb. Tackle BILLY KASSELMAN- 138 lb. Back TERRY LANE 130 lb. End One Letterman 144 KENNY LONGBRAKE RAY MOOREHEAD JERRY HILL 134 lb. End 141 lb. End 200 lb. Tackle On£ Letterman One Letterman CHEERS FOR THE TIGER MANAGERS! Properly suited up for road trip with their team are 1962 football managers, Pascal Lindley and Bill Hoffman, but Pete Farris, serving his second year as a manager, just had to let vou see his newest letter jacket. PHIL TUTTLE 150 lb. Guard One Letterman PAUL TYSON 145 lb. Tackle BILL WALL 144 lb. Guard COACH ROBERT JAMES SEVENTH GRADERS WIN TWO, LOSE NONE; SEVENTH GRADE ROSTER ROW ONE Wall, Cavin, Taylor, Hill, Backus. ROW TWO Simpson, Hedrick, Oakes, Turner, Sheets Barnett Hinchey McClaflin. Warner, Long. ROW THREE Coach Robert James, Enns, Hamilton, Ellis, McKinnon, Mallard, January, Dale, Davis,, Morehead. CENTRAL CUBS OUTPOINT OPPONENTS Coaches Curtis West and Gaylon Mendenhall can be justly proud of their 1962 Central Junior High football team who outpointed their foes 219 to 75 while overbalancing their season's record at six wins, one loss, and one tie. Opening the season here with a 14-6 victory over Hooker’s Little Bulldogs, the Cubs followed up with a shut-out of Liberal’s Little Redskins, 19-0. The four remaining wins of the year were one over Texhoma, 26-0; one over Hooker, 56-8; one over Elkhart, 48-8; and one over Lamar, 26-13. Losses and ties for 1962 were one loss to Dalhart, 32-22, and one tie with Texhoma 8 8. CUB ROSTER ROW ONE Smart, Imboden, Reeder, Ratliff, Hinds, Glendinning, Schott. Garrison, Foster, Lewis, Jeffus, Hill, Manager Rodman. ROW TWO Bohannon, Nickey, Turner, Moore, Davis, Ralston, Ramey, Curtis, Logston, Williamson, Mahaney, Gilliam, Massey Manager Haynes. ROW THREE Camp, Huddleston, Pierce, Phillipee, Cross, Foster, Patton, Reeder, Winters, Backus, Coach Curtis West, Manager Ralstin. ROW FOUR Coach Gaylon Mendenhall, McKinnon, Landreth, Grice, Dawson, Weeks, Lile, Petrowsky, Ward, Martin. CUBS WIN ELEVEN LOSE FIVE With a game point average of 40.6, Coach Robert James Ninth Grade Cubs totaled 650 points to 500 for their opponents. They scored a pair of wins each over Perryton and Dalhart, won singles from Dumas, Liberal, Elkhart, Ulysses, Woodward, Ft. Supply, and Laveme, and dropped games to Dumas, Liberal, Hugoton, Elkhart, and Ulysses. Coach James Eighth Graders won twelve games and lost three. They scored 458 points to 347 for their foes, averaging 30.5 points per game. Their record shows double wins over Perryton, Straight, and Dalhart, with single wins over Liberal, Hugoton, Texhoma, Goodwell, Hardesty, and Keyes. Their losses were to Gruver, Liberal, and Dumas. EIGHTH AND NINTH GRADE ROSTER (white suits—Eighth Grade; black suits—Ninth Grade) ROW ONE Hinds, Bohanan, Stone, Ratliff, Massey, Reeder, Pierce, Davis, Martin. ROW TWO Reeder, Enders, Logston, Curtis, Ralstin, Camp, Ralstin, Ram- ey, Cross. ROW THREE Craig, Mahaney, Clifford, Dawson, McKinnon, Foster, Rob- erts, Thompson. CENTRAL CAGE RECORD FOR ’671 2:t-n 147 TttiEK i:Atoms TAKE EUiHT A’ 67 Coach Gaylon Mendenhall’s Tiger A Basketball Team closed out a hard fought and spirited season with eight victories and twelve deefats. The Bengals, spreading their wins and losses well throughout the season, won two games from Perryton’s Rangers, and one each from Lamar, Liberal, Hugoton, Woodward. Clavton. and Cherokee. The Tigers bowed three times to the Elk City Elks, and twice to Dumas, Alva, and Ulysses. Clayton, Woodward, and Liberal took single games from the Tigers. Only sixty-seven points separated the Tigers from their opponents over the season; the Tigers stood at 949 to 1016 for the Bengal’s foes. With Coach Mendenhall and Team Manager Donald Johnson are kneeling Tigers Chesley Bryan, Doug McVey, Mike Smith, Harvey Carter, and Gene Adams. Standing are Jerry Hill. Phil Barbaree, Vernon Costner, Lonnie Foster, and David LeGrange. 1963 SCOREBOARD TIGERS OPPONENTS L 30 Dumas 37 W 36 Perryton 35 L 38 Alva 58 W 60 Liberal 54 L 47 Elk City 48 W 48 Perryton 41 w 67 Lamar 44 L 39 Dumas 62 W 59 Huffoton 54 L 36 Liberal 53 W 58 Woodward 38 L 33 Alva 63 L 65 Ulysses 74 L 45 Elk City 47 W 49 Cherokee 39 L 43 Elk City 48 L 47 Ulysses 58 W 53 Clayton 51 L 52 Clayton 60 L 44 Woodward 52 949 Total Points 1016 LONNIE FOSTER 6T” Senior Forward 246 Points 12.3 Av. DAVID LEGRANGE 5’11” Senior Forward 231 Points 11.6 Av. ELK CITY 48 — GUYMON 47 Harvey Carter pops in a jump shot in the Timers’ one point loss to Elk City here December 15. The Elks took another speaker from Guy- mon 47-45 there on January 26. GUYMON48 — PERRYTON 41 Mike Smith leaps high in a hookshot at the Tigers’ tangle with Perryton’s Rangers here December 21. DOUG McVEY 5’10” Senior Guard 116 Points 5.6 Av. GENE ADAMS 5’11” Junior Guard 58 Points 2.9 Av. HARVEY CARTER 5’8” Junior Guard 132 Points 6.6 Av. VERNON COSTNER 6’2” Junior Center 115 Points 5.8 Av. LIBERAL 58 — GUYMON 36 Vernon Costner gets off a successful jumpshot in the Tigers’ loss to Liberal’s Redskins here January 12. On December 14 the Bengals had taken a 60-54 win from Liberal’s cagers. TRIERS SPLIT A PAIR WITH LIBERALS REDSKINS ALVA 63 — GUYMON 33 Lonnie Foster, Tiger high point eager for ’63, connects with a jumpshot in the Tigers’ loss to the Alva Goldbugs here January 19. hOEHHIJhS HITE T11,EHS TWICE MIKE SMITH 5’10” Junior Forward 22 Points 1.2 Av. PHIL BARBAREE 6’2” Sophomore Center 4 Points .6 Av. ULYSSES 74 — GUYMON 65 Junior Gene Adams sinks a jumpshot for a pair of much needed points in the Guymon loss to Ulysses January 25. KANSAS TIfiEBS TWO CHESLEY BRYAN 5’9” Sophomore Guard JERRY HILL 6’0” Sophomore Forward 15 Points 1.3 Av. GUYMON 62 — ULYSSES 48 Jerry Hill leaps high and lands his jump shot in the Tiger B win over Ulysses January 25. TiiiKR REE RECORD 0-7 US IHO. t TIGER B TEAM WIN SIX . LOSE SEVEN The Bees won a pair of games from Clayton 51-50 and 48-41. They took singles from Woodward 43-27, from Ulysses 65-48, and from Liberal 41-32. They dropped double losses to Dumas 37-50 and 45-56 and to Perryton 43-48 and 45-50. Single losses were to Liberal 31-45 Lamar 45-47, Hugoton 47-58, and Ulysses 45-57. Tiger B opponents only outpointed them twenty-one points— 586-609. Kneeling Bees are Danny Rountree, Chesley Bryan, and Dannie LeGrange. Standing are Jerry Hill, Phil Barbaree, Gerald Strate, Larry Lee, and Paul Tyson. TIREiSUPPLY 524 N. Main NASH BROTHERS 338-3301 LOOKING AT PONTIACS IS A NICE HOBBY. don’t you agree, Seniors Jack Staples and Robert Sargent? The ladies, like Mrs. J. W. Doke of the NASH staff, like the lush carpeting, the ease of handling. Men like the greater stability, of the wider Wide-Track and the Delcotron a.c. generator, to cut battery-charging fretting. If you yearn for the elegance of a great golden Pontiac Grand Prix or the economy-plus of the trig Tempest, see NASH. TRIANGLE LANES Highway 54 338-7123 WOULD YOU LIKE A STRIKE! There’s something about the prime condition of L. E. Mahaney’s TRI ANGLE LANES which pleases both veteran bowl- ers or relative newcomers to the “Sport of Kings” like Tiger Joe Lane and his comrade of the evening and classmate Bill Oxley. CITY NATIONAL BANK 5th and Main 338-3346 BEGINNING A BANK ACCOUNT? Seniors Mike Woods and Mike Landreth, you have picked “The Bank With The Friendly Service” — CITY NA- TIONAL BANK. Complete customer convenience includes their Auto Bank at 4th and Ellison and their new South Main Free Park lot. 158 GUYMON TELEVISION, INC. 215 W. 5th 338-6730 WHATEVER THE WEATHER Sophomores Georgiana Foster and Harvie Steinkuehler join the thousands of Guymon area TV viewers and listeners who have enjoyed GUYMON TELEVISION’S superlative serv- ice of news, weather and music around the clock, during this most frigid winter. ESTHER’S ROYAL GLASS 4th and Ellison 338-6010 FROM PICTURE FRAMES TO STORE FRONTS none of your glass needs are too small or too large for ROYAL GLASS. Juniors Terry Davis and Jerald Bok- less are introduced to the firm’s complete stocks of shower doors, mirrors, furniture tops, windshields, and Luminal! Paints. 501 N. Main 338-7141 TOPS FOR TIGERETTES are beautiful blouses blossoming with tropical blooms to brighten those drab winter classrooms or to ensemble with ESTHER’S trim skirts in easy-to-care-for fabrics as worn here by Sherrel Stephens and Cherryal Dixon. And what GHS girl needs to be reminded of ESTHER’S just-right hair styles and cosmetic supplies ? HOTEL DALE AND COFFEE SHOP 118 W. 6th Hotel 338-2386 Coffe Shop 338-6838 GOING UP WITH DICK MOORE. Yes, every- thing is going up at the DALE except prices. Customer comfort, courtesy, the warm feeling of being among friends, and the quality of the superlative COFFEE SHOP cuisine are all reach- ing new highs this year. Newcomers Phil De- Wolfe and Sharon Yard are enjoying their DALE tour. 159 LUCAS 5 10 CENTS STORE 409 N. Main 338-3771 SOMEBODY’S GOING TO GET A SWEATER Mrs. Martha Breithaupt is having no trouble convincing Lonnie Child- ress that his classmate Roberta Huber should knit him a beautiful pullover of LUCAS yarn. HOWELL’S PANHANDLE FURNITURE COMPANY 515 N. Main 338-3114 LEES FOR THE LOOK OF LUXURY Sophomores Vay Smith and Viola Jamison headed straight for HOWELL’S carpeting department. They know that no home takes on the lovely-to-live- in look until its floors are carpeted by Lees, the “Bright Dream.’’ Let Panhandle Furniture custom-carpet your home. OKLAHOMA TIRE AND SUPPLY 505 N. Main 338-6424 ARE YOU A FENDER BENDER? Tiger men, like Wilbur Wells and Gail Berg, know how to save big car repair bills. They smooth out minor dents with OTASCO’S Metal Mender. Jack Lewis has everything for car or home, and toys galore. Fifth Main FIRST NATIONAL BANK 338-3346 THE HAND OF FRIENDSHIP IS ALWAYS OUT bank, the FIRST NATIONAL, gains another young Vice-President Julian Schaub, a GHS alumnus, meets customer who wants a ‘Good Bank to lie to. a new ’63 Senior, Joe Pat Neal. Result: A fine Guymon DAIRY KREEM Hwy. 54 E. 338-3839 WHERE ARE YOU HEADING GIRLS? Why ask’ Everybody from Tigerland manages to drop by the DAIRY KREEM for a snack or a sandwich meal as often as possible. El Tigre’s Carol Breithaupt and Cheerleader Tamra Hooper are no exceptions. MARTIN AND JOHNSTON SKELLY OIL COMPANY E. 12th Hwy. 54 E. WITH TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU Kester Martin and Johnny Johnson, SKELLY' Jobbers, are letting Seniors Lonnie Foster and Terry Schoonover get a first hand look at their two SKELLY stations on East 12th and Highway 54 E. Gas up with those friendly SKELLY men, Kester and Johnny. 161 112 W. 5th WESTERN CHEVROLET COMPANY 338-6622 FROM THE LADIES POINT OF VIEW Susie Neas and CHEVROLET FOR ’63. Exciting interiors and satiny Mary Longbotham, with a touch of Scotch thrift in both sleek exteriors say, “See WESTERN CHEVROLET of them, like the extra values built in the slim-pillar for the great new ’63 Chevrolet.’’ design and unhampered viewing scope of the CROWDER PLUMBING Highway 54 W. 338-7040 A PLUMB DANDY BUSINESS Mrs. J. A. Crowder enjoys a career chat with a pair of hand- some GHS men, Sophomore William Reust and Junior Mike Smith. CROWDER’S are proud of their complete plumbing service from public buildings to private homes. Guymon schools are among their satisfied customers. K G Y N N. E. -Guymon 338-6533 FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE K G Y N ’ S Bud Schuh shows a couple of GHS communications experts Teddie Jeffers and Mike Landreth of El Tigre staff how the Panhandle’s radio station spices news, weather, and public information programs with the kind of music GHS likes for studying, relaxing, or toe tapping. GUYMON DRUG CO. 412 N. Main 338-6262 SO MANY SENIORS SAY, “AT GUYMON DRUG! You can be sure of personalized service with so many members of the Class of '63 to serve you Tigerlanders. There’s Patty Keezer, Harri Halford, El Tigre’s editor, Larry Doke, and Joe Walker. And for prescription service day or night, see or call Raymond Morey and Jim Williams. GUYMON APPLIANCE 801 N. Main 338-6420 A VERY SMART CUSTOMER Sophie All-A student Phyllis Weeks is smart in many ways. She’s not ready to buy home appliances yet, but when she is, she will know that a great place to go would be to GUYMON APPLIANCE and a great brand to buy would be Norges as sold by Luther Reed. 115 W. 10th IDEAL FOOD STORE 338-3020 FOR CHRISTMAS COURTESY THE YEAR ROUND Senior Darrell Garrison extends IDEAL’S seasonal greeting to you, but his GHS fellow clerks, Clark Shuler, Ronnie Hintergardt, and Jimmy Jefferies, re- mind you that IDEAL specializes in the year-round gift of super service and genuine satisfaction with the finest foods available.Manager Harold Colgin and all the IDEAL staff invite you to shop at the Big Store on the Big Parklot. 163 TOM JOHNSON PLUMBING 609 E. 4th 338-3660 WE’RE EASY TO FIND No trouble locating JOHNSON’S hand some new building on Fourth Street in East Guymon. And no trouble availing yourself of JOHNSON’S PLUMBING service— it’s as near as your phone. Mrs. Tom Johnson and son Don invite you to stop by to see their modern shop. Joe Pat Neal and Billy Walker certainly enjoyed their tour of inspection. KNUTSON ELEVATORS, INC. Highway 54 338-3381 KNUTSON’S STANDS THE TEST Guy F. Bennett of KNUTSON’S, the Panhandle’s larg- est grain elevator, enjoys conducting Jim Jef- fries and David Smith on a tour of this great enterprise. Here the boys are learning how to take grain samples and test for moisture and protein content. HENSON FUNERAL HOME 524 N. Quinn 338-3321 ALWAYS READY FOR SERVICE Juniors Wynelda Ingles and Carol Long display the oxygen tank which is always a part of HEN- SON’S prompt and safe ambulance service. The girls call your attention to HENSON’S fine new ambulance parked at the convenient corner of 6th at Quinn. Remember HENSON’S for “The Perfect Tribute.” MRS. D’S Hutchison Village 338-7343 WHEN DO D’S RATE A’S? The two Lindas, Bostic and Rowden, can untangle that riddle for you. When the D stands for MRS. D’S in Hutchison Village! Look at the treasure trove of coats, blouses, and dresses the girls have found, every- one a “must have” for a Tigerette’s triumphs. For A’s in clothes see MRS. D. THE OKLAHOMAN MOTOR HOTEL Highway 54 E. 338-9962 THE OKLAHOMAN SAYS ‘“HOWDY”. Guymon’s newest motor hotel invites you to inspect their deluxe acccomodations at a down-to-earth price. El Tigre’s Carol Breithuapt and Billy Kasselman have just put their stamp of approval on the OKLAHOMAN, with a special em- phasis on their beautiful heated pool and up-to-date restaurant. MAC’S KEEPS THE TIGERS SPIC AND SPAN Tana Byers and Charles Rigby invite you to make MAC’S WASH- ATERIA your weekly wash headuarters. For a quick and easy, no muss, no fuss washing job, why not try either MAC’S coin operated Self Service, or easier yet their Finish Laundry. LONG BELL Division of International Paper Co. 1411 N. Main 338-3344 TO MAKE A HOUSE A HOME Mrs. Ray Byers of LONG BELL knows what future homeowners like Linda Grounds and Bette Rae Byers will think of first when they start to decorate their new homes. Floor covering, of course! LONG BELL specializes in vinyls and linoleums for modern living. laundry TOMMY’S CAFE 320 N. Main 338-3933 ALWAYS TOPS WITH TOWNERS AND TIGERLANDERS Many Tiger lad and lassies like Gerald Costner and Marilyn Oxley, as well as Guymon teachers, enjoy dropping into TOM- MY’S for one of their fine breakfasts. Service is prompt, the food is just the way you want it, and you’ll be back! INDEPENDENT HARDWARE 508 N. Main 338-7234 BIG DRIVE AT THE INDEPENDENT Guymon’s conveniently located INDEP- ENDENT HARDWARE has a “New Look” LANDESS ELECTRIC 1624 N. Main 338-3822 IS THERE A PHILCO IN YOUR FUTURE? For tele-viewing at its best, Freddie Landess, Tiger All-District football star, advises Vernon Wilson, a connoisseur of good music and drama, to buy this beautiful wide-screen Philco. LANDESS ELECTRIC is the firm to call for Commercial or Residential Wiring. which says, Come in and browse or buy. From the tinest tack to the hugest hammer Romie Mason and Lynn Sturdivan could find, STURDIVAN’S have everything to make a home snug and beautiful and to keep it that way. j. m. McDonald co. 405 N. Main 338-6412 SLIT A TIGERLANDER PERFECTLY Manager right feel at a party or. at church, and will still be dr ij U 8 sophomore son Bruce shows a classmate, perfect for next year’s prom. McDONALDS should be Waldo Shroeder, the kind of suit J. M. McDONALD’S your first stop for clothing, accessories, and home specializes in—a suit that will give a fellow a just- supplies. • V ; 'V' NS 0 “ J ♦ ' V ' 1 • If ■o. - • ‘ tit y ' FAGAN’S FOOD STORE 1205 N. Main 338-3622 FOR MAN-SIZE APPETITES Busy Clerks Pat Moore, Lonnie Childress, and Nelson Dusenbury of FAGAN'S FOODS know what the public wants, so they help Don Mallard load up with their tooth- some Dold’s meats to serve at his restaurant. Be- sides catering to all of your needs in extra good groceries, FAGAN’S gives Buccaneer Stamps. Plenty of parking space at the corner of Twelfth and Main. NO CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS HfiRE C. O. Wilson and his daughter Betty, a ’63 Senior herself, are having no difficulty helping Margaret Vaughan select the ring she might like to wear as a graduation gift from her family. WILSON'S feature a wealth of lovely gifts for graduates, showers, and weddings. And, of course, WILSON’S watch repair and cleaning service is outstanding in this area. GLEN KEC K DRUG CO. 416 N. Main 338-6822 ALWAYS A FAVORITE TIGERLAND STORE Gary Doke and Kay Pieratt en- joy their after-school jobs at RECK’S. This fine Guymon drug store is a spot where town meets school, and where the drugs, pharmaceuticals, and sundries are always of the highest quality. Drop by RECKS and see! 109 E. 12th QUALLS’ STUDIO 338-6002 EVERYTHING TO MAKE A BEAUTIFUL GIRL EVEN MORE BEAUTIFUL Steve Belanger seems to be enjoying his kibitzing role as he watches Mrs. Joan Davis prepare Junior Kristi Matzek for a school camera study. QUALLS specialize in all types of photography and finishing. El Tigre is proud of the photography of Roy Qualls, who has done Publications pictures for over a decade. BONNER’S FLOWER SHOP Highway 54 N.E. 338-6236 LIKE STEPPING INTO A NEW WORLD If you are down in the dumps, get Harold Bonner to show you through his greenhouse. There among budding plants, your troubles seem to melt away. Or join Tiger cage star Jerry Hill and Vera Crawford, both Sophomores, in BONNER’S attractive display room. You will find it filled with the magic of floral arrangements, ceramics, wall pieces, and garden decor. Call BONNER’S about your lawn or land- scaping needs. HARRISON’S FASHION SHOP 404 N. Main 338-7220 FOR THE CALIFORNIA LOOK For casuals and dress-ups Mrs. Frances Harrison knows what to show our Senior girls, Velinda Gaberdiel and Helene Leath. Those deceptively simple Koret of California knits can make any high school girl look like a college co-ed and at a price that fits into your budget. 168 SOUTHWESTERN PUBLIC SERVICE CO. 116 W. 5th 338-6511 A GUYMON BEAUTY SPOT The new Guymon Office of SOUTHWESTERN PUBLIC SERVICE CO. has visitors and townsmen alike craning theiF necks for a second look. From the perfection of their flowerbeds to the cozy friendliness of re- ception rooms and their public “Reddy’' room, this is one of the Panhandle’s most beautiful buildings. And SOUTHWESTERN says, “Please Call Us If We Can Help.” Reddy is always ready. He can save you hours, Velinda Gaberdiel and Helen Leath. GLADYS’ TOT TO TEEN 417 N. Main 338-6160 LOOK-ALIKE TIGERETTE TEENS Two very pretty sisters, Cheryl and Linda Rhodes, have always made GLADYS’ TOT TO TEEN Shop their headquarters for clever clothes. Growing taller every day, they will have to bring small cousins and little sisters in for those adorable skirts and blouses Gladys Hull sells. 112 E. 5th LONG’S AGENCY, INC. 338-3341 TIGERLANDERS ALWAYS WELCOME! Homer W. Long, veteran Guymon insurance man and long time president of the Guymon School Board, puts Juniors Louella Yancey and Tiger Jerry Behne very much at their ease. LONG’S AGENCY in the Masonic Build- ing invite you to see them for General Insurance and Bonds. «St CITY shop: shop ALLEN’S MOBIL SERVICE Hwy. 54 and S. Main 338-3533 WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS Allen Duckworth wants you to stop at the MOBIL sign and let the Flying Red Horse put wings on your car. You’ll seem to soar with power when Mobil products are your choice. Senior Jack Trotter. Remember ALLEN’S MOBIL for washing, lubricating, road service, and wheel balancing. They are Official AAA Emergency Services. 6131 0 N. Main 338-7432 WITH THAT WESTERN FLAVOR Just step into Herman McCutchen's CITY SHOE SHOP, and you feel like yelling “Whoopee!”, especially if it’s cow- boy boots like his Bailey Authentics you want. You’ll be just as happy at the wonderful way he has with tired shoes. They come up smiling! 122 E. 5th ALLEN’S, INC. 338-3101 DON'T FENCE US IN! Junior Jimmie Boland seems to be up to his waist in ALLEN INC'S wonderful Goodyear Tires and very happy about it. But not that Nelson Dusenbury! No! He’s ready to go, man, go on one of the most powerful steeds in the world. Minnea- polis-Moline s great G 706. What a tractor! What boy wouldn t like to mount it and watch it melt away those acres of unpbwed wheatland. COWBOY CLEANERS Nall-Tucker Village 338-3298 LET’S TAKE OUR CLOTHES TO COWBOY CLEANERS More and more Guymon-ites are find- ing that Bill Beaman can give the kind of cleaning service they appreciate. His convenient COWBOY CLEANERS in Nall-Tucker Village specializes in speedy super-service at prices you can afford. Sopho- more Wayne Williams says “You’ll be glad you brought your clothes to COWBOY’S.’’ ROUNTREE DISTRIBUTING Nall-Tucker Village 338-7401 REALLY ON THE BALL ROUNTREE DISTRI- BUTORS in their ultra-modern Nall-Tucker Village headquarters is a most exciting place for boys like Darrell Garrison and Steve Belanger to browse. The world of books is far behind. You will be amazed at their stock of hardware, auto supplies, tools, small appliances, stock tanks, grain bins, paint, and best of all—“Wholesale Prices to Everyone.” GRAY’S FINE CLOTHES 406 N. Main 338-7027 RALPH AND SKIPPER CAN SUIT YOU There is an air of distinction about wearing apparel from GRAY'S. Ralph and Vonciele Gray know clothes and they know your needs. Stop by their store in the heart of Main Street for that new’ suit or dress or a pair of their beautiful shoes. Their Junior son, Skipper, issues a special invitation to you. COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 1307 N. Main 338-6448 THE INSIDE STORY Seniors Mike Woods and Mike Lindsay like what thev see in the Guvmon COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Dean Huckins and his staff pride themselves in the quality of Amer- ica’s best-selling soft drink and spare no efforts to keep that quality supreme. Tiger fans appreciate COCA-COLA’S boost at all ball games. FLOWER CART 514 N. Main 338-3435 GLAMOR WITH A CAPITAL “G” Lovely things around you can make you feel like a queen. That’s the feeling Cindy Hoh- weiler and Lou Ella Yancey have as they examine FLOWER CART’S exotic and homey treasures. Mrs. Carl Hunt’s flower and gift shop would do credit to any large city. The Panhandle points to it with pride. GUYMON OFFICE SUPPLY 511 N. Main 338-3253 GRADES SOAR LIKE A ROCKET Teresa Cobb and Duane Ermey are about to take a first step toward making the Dean’s Honor Roll in college. True, they are still GHS Sophomores, hut Mrs. L. O. Hamilton of GUYMON OFFICE SUPPLY is showing them the ROYAL way to good grades. And don’t forget to buy a Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. You’ll be glad you did! OLIVER’S SHOES 520 N. Main 338-3212 TIME FOR A CHANGE Linda Claycomb and Becky Cooper, Sophomores, are about to make a move up—up on heels, that is. Mrs. Martha Reese is showing them some of OLIVER’S dressiest flats, but to no avail. Those tennies and loafers just won’t do for the special something the girls are planning. GUYMON DAILY HERALD 419 N. Main 338-3355 THE SMELL OF INK There’s a special brand of thrill in getting to read today’s paper before it hits the streets. Look at Waldo Shroeder and Gre- gory Willis if you have never felt it. THE GUY- MON DAILY HERALD serves the Panhandle area with the latest city, county, state, and national news. Through the magic of UP International News Service they bring the world to your door by carrier or subscription. FARMER’S IMPLEMENT COMPANY 103 N. Main 338-3226 O’CONNOR PHARMACY 1309 N.E. Street 338-6694 ANOTHER NORTHEAST GUYMON DRAWING CARD Located in the Guymon Professional Building, O’CON- NOR’S is another fine firm in the rapidly expanding northeast part of Greater Guymon. Bill O’Connor has been displaying his stock to a pair of interested Tiger- landers, Berton Lary and Freda Truitt, who wants to be a nurse. FAIRYLAND CAFE 507 N. Main 338-6724 A FAVORITE TIGERLAND RENDEZVOUS Senior Jack Rubottom, a FAIRYLAND employee, joins Mrs. Virgie Hunter and Mrs. Helen Goss in making Gail Berg and all Bengal boosters welcome at their fine FAIRYLAND CAFE. Breakfast, luncheons, and after-school snacks are events when you eat in centrally located FAIRYLAND. WAITING FOR A LOOK AT THE NEW MASSEYS Charles Rhodes and Dale Lewis know how to make hay while the sun shines. The best team for that job would be a new Massey Ferguson tractor or a self-propelled combine. But WT. N. Huddleston is giving the boys a FARMER’S IMPLEMENT COM- PANY motor inspection before showing them the new Massey Ferguson farm impliments for 1963. COLONIAL INN Hwys. 3, 54, and 136 338-6586 NEW ENGLAND CHARM PLUS WESTERN HOS- PITALITY Quaint American Revolutionary wall cov- ering forms a background for two very modem Guymon young ladies. Juniors Barbara Massey and Christina Gray. Tina is the daughter of COLONIAL INN’S owner, John B. Gray, who is also proprietor of KLIB, the fine Liberal Radio Station, so much enjoyed by High Plains residents. SERVICE SUPPLY, INC. Drilling, Hardware, Pumps and Steel Buildings 606 E. 4th 338-3630 or 338-6631 THIS BEATS THE OI.I) TIME SHOVEL How about this baby “cat” for a speedy garden or grove job. No back- ache, no blisters, and this is just a sample of Arnold Winter’s SERVICE SUPPLY, INC. equipment. Charles Alexander and Chesley Bryan, hang on to Gerald Costner. He’s going to be long gone on that purring little snub- nose kitty. A W ROOT BEER WALDROP CLEANERS KLEVER KATHIE Smart girl, Kathie Waldrop, to have parents who run such an outstanding shop as WALDROP CLEANERS. No wonder she is one of the best groomed girls in the Class of ’63. That’s junior Lile Forth who is having his suit cleaned and pressed for the Junior Prom. BUNCH FUNERAL HOME WHEN PERFECT SERVICE IS YOUR NEED Popular Tigerland Lady of dis- tinction, Karen Bunch, and her father Funeral Director Arlie Bunch, pause for a chat with Mike Reeder. BUNCH’S twenty-four hour ambulance service is always available, and they stand ready at all times to assist you in providing a loving tribute. NEWISH AND VERY NICE Lorraine Will iams, Class of ’63, peers through the service window at A W ROOT BEER'S shining new stand in South Guymon. He is happy to serve Classmates Margaret Vaughan and Paula Eng- hsh with those King size Root Beer pepper- uppers, a favorite GHS drink. 174 FIT FOR A QUEEN Marshal Miller of the MILLER MOTOR family shows Sophomore classmate Vay Smith what is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful cars made this year, the luxurious Imperial, a gem of American cars, in black, as sleek as a panther. This is the car with the five year warranty. It’s simply gorgeous! KEY-SINGLETON IMPLEMENT CO. 106 S. Quinn 338-3033 THE CASE OF THE H A PIM FARMER This is no unsolved mystery. J. D. Key of KEY-SINGLETON says that the happy ending of all your farm problems is to buv CASE implements like this All-Weather 930 tractor. Bill Talcott and Starr Morgan will find plowing a pleasure in that cab. CENTRAL STATES FINANCE INC. 921 N. Main 338-3318 THIS IS YOUR PERSONAL INVITATION CENTRAL STA- TES FINANCE CO. INC. in their brand new building at 921 North Main has a complete money service whenever you need extra cash. Mrs. Leo Koszarek is telling Senior Virginia Hill how CENTRAL FINANCE can make loans promtply and easily. TRI-STATE SUPERMARKET 206 S. Quinn 338-6218 TRy TO BEAT THESE Don’t these crisp looking vegetables make you hungry for a spring salad? Darrell Qusenbury and all of TRI-STATES staff do everything in their power to give you food at its finest and freshest. 175 MELODY MART 417i N. Ellison 338-3613 FROM COMEDY TO KOSTELANETZ You don’t have to be a twister or teener to appreciate the Davis’ MELODY MART. They have a wonderful selection of albums, Newhart and Berman monologues, folk sing- ers, musical comedy, concerts, operas, any thing a music lover wishes. In fact, Bob Davis and Gary Gloden are sold! WINIFRED’S 617 N. Main 338-3116 WINSOME WARES AT WINIFRED’S What fun to spend a birthday or graduation check at WINIFRED’S Winifred McAnamey stocks her shop with style-conscious casuals and go-everywhere attire for girls like Senior Cheer- leader Glenda Spinden. Career women like Winni’s chic suits. LOBIT STUDIO , , For the Finest in Photography 114 N. Oklahoma 338-6072 ONE PICTURE WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS This is a wall of the Lobit Studio dis- playing the top quality photography Ed and Mar- jie Lobit specialize in. Lovely Barbara Massey, Junior favorite, stands beside one of the glamour studies which LOBIT’S do so well. Priceless old family photographs can be restored to their ori- ginal beauty. Call LOBIT’S STUDIO in their residence for a day or night appointment. CLAYCOMB BATTERY ELECTRIC CO. 102 N. Main 338-7110 TUNE-UP AND IGNITION SPECIALISTS The name ‘Claycomb means something in Guymon; CLAYCOMB'S pioneered electrical service in this area. Joe Walker and Joe Tyson know just where to go with auto electric problems. CLAYCOMB gets 'em going! LAIN GARRISON IMPLEMENT CO. International Sales and Service Box 551 338-6434 INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR No stranger to LAIN GARRISON'S Miss Mary Ellen Newton is El Tigre Editor Larry Doke, who spends his summers doing farm work. He knows where to head for equip- ment parts and that GARRISON’S Internationals seldom need service. Your best farm buy is IHS machinery. ADAMS HARD FACING CO. 510 N. Maple 338-3326 VERY, VERY SHARP Here is Tigerland cool cat Ron Gardner, that hot-lick drummer, in a different role. ADAMS HARD FACING CO. uses those skill- ed hands to help hard face and heat treat tillage tools in the Panhandle's largest industrial plant. GUYMON SHOE STORE 407 N. Main 338-3472 UP AND COMING SHOE CENTER Dean Abla of GUYMON SHOE STORE is pleased to have Tiger- lander's like Norma Gately and Rodnev “Butch Wilson as customers. From tennies and gummies to the most sophisticated prom and dress shoes for all ages, GUYMON SHOE STORE has your foot- wear. 177 BOSTON FURNITURE AND APPLIANCE 302 N. Main 338-7025 SOLD ANOTHER ONE! BOSTON’S beautiful Per- malux upholstered furniture has just captured another happy buyer in the person of Raymond Buxton. Sopho- more John O’Leary finds BOSTON’S merchandise easy to sell, and Charley Boston will put that money right back into more fine appliances to please BOSTON FURNITURE customers. CARROLL’S CAFE Highway 54 E. 338-6100 PROUD AS PEACOCKS And why shouldn’t Nickey and Carolyn Jo Byerley be proud? Thev are seated in one of Guymon’s newest and most beautiful restaurants —CARROLL’S—and Carroll Byerley is the equally proud father of this handsome pair of Tigerlanders. You can’t beat CARROLL’S! ZELLERS JEWELERS 415 Main 338-7017 CHARMS FOR THE CHARMING Tigerland’s pretty girls always manage to look their loveliest after a purchase at ZELLERS’ who have a store filled with watches, rings, dishes, silverware, and crystal. Here Student Clerk Carolyn Simpson helps Terry Davis add a gleaming gold charm to her bracelet. ZEL- LER’S Stands for Quality. Let Thelma Zellers and her staff help you with your gift problems. THE KITCHEN MART FRIGIDAIRE SALES AN DSERVICE 414 N. Main 338-6113 WHAT’S COOKING? Frank Hensley and Lou Behne, wait until your mothers pet these star stud- ded Tappan ranges in their kitchens and vou will food preparation at its best. Fagin’s KITCHEN MART is always brewing up great values in Frigi- daire appliances and Zenith radios and TVs. Trade and Save at KITCHEN MART. GUYMON TILE CO. 114 E. 12th 338-6402 TIME TO TILE If your kitchen or bathroom looks out of date, consider ceramic tile counter tops or floor and wall covering to five your home new elegance. Tommy Chamblis in his new Twelfth Street location just off North Main is the man to call. He’ll have that GUYMON TILE CO. truck at your door befre you can say, “Come out and talk tile with me.” TOWNSMAN MOTEL Highway 54 E. 338-6556 AAA Approved ALWAYS JUNE IN JANUARY How’s this for a winter’s swim scene. Kav Cavin, Mary Lynn Couch, Harri Halford, and Robin Clements aren’t crazy. All they have to do is dive into the TOWNSMAN MOTEL’S heated pool, and winter worries are far away. In any season, travelers can relax in the TOWNSMAN’S Western comfort. GERALD DIXON - REAL ESTATE First National Motor Bank Bldg. 338-6612 WE’RE MOVING TO A NEW ADDRESS! Sonho- mores Rae Jean Dixon and Marilyn Oxley of El Tigre advertising staff had no trouble selling Tiger- land alumnus Gerald Dixon a year book ad. but he hoped to be in his new DIXON REAL ESTATE office in the First National Motor Bank before we took his picture. Now you can find him moved and ready for your real estate needs. 338-9959 66 SUPER SERVICE Hw.v. 54 Quinn LET 66 SUPER SERVICE PUT MORE MILES IN YOUR TANK Senior Roger Pritchard is readying one of Guymon Schools vehicles to take those Tigers where they need to go. SIXTY SIX snecializes in complete service 24 hours around the clock—wash- ing. lubrication, polishing, waxing, tires, and Butane and Diesel fuel. Bob Goldsberrv says, “Don’t forget our muffler and brake service.” KING WELDING WORKS 802 E. Stonebraker 338-6750 FOR PERFECTION IN WELDING Kathy King, Sophomore Tigerlander, is showing her classmate, Gerald Costner, how her father. Joe King, bevels a pipe to make a true line for fine welding. KING’S is equipped to handle all types of electric and acteylene welding, both in the shop or field. They are also ditching contractors. HENRY C HITCH FEEDLOT, INC. Hitch Ranch. Guvmon 338-3294 A SIGHT TO BEHOLD Jane Hitch and her Junior classmate, Cheerleader Sue Carter, wish they could take you for a tour of the HENRY C HITCH FEEDLOT south of Guymon. You will never have seen so many beefsteaks on the hoof. Visitors from all over the Nation and from foreign countries are impressed by this great Panhandle industry, a land- mark in the raising of fine cattle. IDEAL CLEANERS 305 N. Main 338-6441 LET MIKE DO A JOB YOU’LL LIKE Mike Holland of Holland’s IDF4L CLEANERS is telling Virginia Hill, Class of ’63, about their complete cleaning service—out of season storage, fur storage, hats blocked, clothes insured and retexturized. Try IDEAL. “You Will See the Difference.” 180 CURT’S, INC. 711 N. Main 338-3238 CURT’S HAS A CORNER WITH A GREAT BRAND A great name in the music world is Victor RCA and a great name in appliances is Whirlpool. Just ready to drop into CURT’S to see and hear RCA's Color TV are Billy Walker and Phyllis Weeks, Tigerland Sophomores. Any week is Big Color Week at CURTrS, INC. QUALITY CABINET TILE 103 E. 10th 338-3265 LIKE THE LOOK OF THIS KITCHEN? Nothing endears a kitchen to a housewife so much as fine cabinets. Would you like to have these beautifully grained wooden cabinets in the room where you must spend so many hours daily. Carol Breithaupt of El Tigre staff says, “My father, Ernest Breithaupt, can make your dream kitchen a reality.” DENNEY’S DINE-A-TERIA N.E. Hwy. 54 338-6737 A NEW CONCEPT IN EATING PLEASURES L. D. Denney of DENNEY’S DINE-A-TERIA is a pioneer of unusual accomodations for dining out. He now has three types of service under one roof. First his very popular cafeteria type DINE-A- TERIA, next the RESTAURANT where you see Cook David Bailey and GHS Senior Brenda Denney, and last his original Drive-In for snacks. WESTERN AUTO STORE 102 N. Main 338-3902 THE HANDIEST LOCATION IN TOWN In down- town Guymon if you are looking for auto parts, appliances, cookery, toys, bicycles, hunting equip- ment, in fact just about any accessory you naturally turn in to WESTERN AUTO STORE first and you look no farther. Bill Bryan is showing Phil Tuttle and Kenny Longbrake what a pair of hungry Tigers need after practice. J ACKSON PRESCRIPTION SHOP 421 E. 13th Medical Arts Bldg. 338-3339 BEAUTY INSIDE AND OUT JACKSON’S PRE- SCRIPTION SHOP of course is just that, a place to have your prescriptions carefully and correctly filled. But more and more girls, like Koleta Cawl- field and Nancy Yelton. OHS Sophomores, are discovering JACKSON’S vitamins, fine mouth washes, dentifrices, and beauty needs. Wallace and Bob Jackson, GHS alumni, are Tiger boosters. NALL-TUCKER VILLAGE Highway 54 338-7458 GUYMON IS GROWING UP! First of Guvmon’s out-lving shopping centers is NALL-TUCKER VILLAGE east of the city. And how the Village is catching on! There is always plenty of shopping room and parking space whatever your needs. For one stop shopping try NALL- TUCKER VILLAGE. B. C. Nall and James Tucker speak for all the Village shop owners: “We Appreciate your Busi- ness.” .VbalU iit MUZNY SHEET METAL PARKVIEW PHARMACY 115 E. 13th 338-7565 USE OUR CONVENIENT DRIVE-IN WINDOW’ Glen Reck, Forrest Grider, and Jimmy Pieratt, all Tigerland boosters, invite you, as well as Robbie LaMar and Carolyn Simpson, to drive in or walk in to inspect PARKVIEW PHARMACY’S drags and cosmetics. Remember also their free city- wide prescription delivery. MUNZY SHEET METAL WORKS 517 E. 12th 338-3404 STOP AT THE SIGN OF THE METAL MAN He looks real enough to climb down from his metal pole and shake your hand, that Metal Mascot of MUNZY SHEET METAL WORKS. As you see, they can make metal almost talk. See them, as George Herbstreit and Steve Heflin are do- ing, for your heating, cooling, ventilating, and guttering needs. BOARD. FACULTY end STAFF Adams, Bessie 11 Alden, E. M 4. tfl Baker, Dessie 125 Beer. Elsie 124 Beer. Roy 125 Bender, Ann 6 Bentley, Chester H. 13, 108 Blackwell, Carolyn 10 Boyd, Lorenz 9, 120 Brecheen, Edna 10 Burgess, Harry 124 Byers, Carey 125 Cannon, G. O. 125 Carruth, Crawford 125 Childress, Taylor f24 Costner, Peggy 124 Countryman, Bertie 144 Darnell, Floral 124 Davis, Juanita 6. 78, 114 Duke. R. P 9, 133 Garner, Shelton H. 106, 112 Gibson, Ardis 13 Gibson, Coy 4 Grammer, Louise 9 Henderson, Keith 6, 117 Her be I, Alice 9 Hofferber, Helen 10 Houser, Billy 5 James, Robert 13 Kear, Dean 8 Kiger, Joe 12 Lane, Margie 6 LaMar, Georgia 8 Lee, Patricia 10 ’ Lee, W. B. 13 Lindley, U. P. 11 Lynn, Wallace E. 11, 108 Martin, Mary 9 Mendenhall, Gaylon 12 O'Donnell, Charles 12 Philippe, Alonzo T. 5 Phillips, Glen 8 Prater. Ruby 124 Quesenbury, Sammie 5 Remmel, Charles 5 Richards, Robert 11 Roach, James 9 Sargent, Earl 9 Shackelford, Ruth 9 Shaffer, Mayme 9 Singleton, Howard W. 5 Slater, Edward J. 5 Smith, Gilbert 9, 12 Spenner, George W. 4 Steele, Doris 8, 123 Tuttle, James 12, 138 Ward, Harry 10, 119 West, Curtis D. 13, 71 White, Charline 8, 132 Wilt. Myrtle 13 Winters, Brenda 9 Wright, Margaret 9 Wyett, Bobby 9 Yoakum, Harold 11 SENIORS Adcock, Ralph 16, 37. 133 Beer, Kathie 16, 36. 115 Behne, Lou 4, 16, 20, 24, 26. 27, 31, 118 119 122 134, 136, 179 Berg, Gail 17, 127. 160, 73 Black David 7 26 Brune Ervin 7 26 Butler, Gary 8. 31, 112, 121 Byerley, Carolyn Jo 18, 25, 29, 36, 114, 115, 136 .137. 178 Byers, Bette Rae 1, 18, 24, 27, Cavin, Kay 19, 126, 179 Clements, Robin 16, 19, 25, 35, 114, 115, 179 Couch Mery Lynn 19, 179 Cruzen, Linda 19, 38, 122 Darnell, Hary Oleta 20 Denney, Brenda 20. 36, 181 Doke. Larry 1, 16, 21, 23, 32. 34 38 112 122, 177 Ellis, Jane 21, 121, 133 Engeran, Andrea 22, 36. 115 English. Paula 22, 25, 114. 115, 122, 137, 174 Foster, Lonnie 22. 29. 133, 134. Gaberdiel Velinda 22. 37, 137, 138, 144, 156, 148, 151 168, 169 Gardner, Ronnie 23, 133. 177 INDEX Garrison, Darrell 23, 33. 116, 117, 18, 122 171 Goff, Deidra 23. 24. 116, 117, 118 Gregory, Joyce 24, 115, 118 Gurwell, Kenneth 24, 36, 133 Halford, Harrietta 24, 27, 115, 179 Heflin, Steve 24, 119, 182 Herbstreit, George 18, 25, 182 Hill, Virginia 25, 133, 175, 180 Iverson, Joanna 25 Ivie, Rosett 25, 121 Jeffers, Teddie 2. 19, 26, 30, 38 Jensen, Jerry 26, 133 Johnson, Sherry 26. 37, 132, 136 Keezer, Patty 26, 36 Koch, Frank 26. 121 LaMar. Robert 2. 26 Landess, Fred 17, 21, 27, 32. 122. 138, 139, 142, 166 Landreth Mike 2, 28, 140, 158 Lane, Joe 27. 28. 32, 122, 138, 139, 158 Lery, Berton 28, 30, 112, 173 Leath, Helene 18, 28, 114, 168, 169 Le Grange, David 28, 147, 146 Lindsay, Mike 18, 29, 117, 119, 171 Lockett, Jim 29, 128 McVey. Doug 28, 29 30, 31. 36. 138, 140, 146, 149, 150, 151 Martin, Raymond 29, 36 Mattheyer, Jeanne 19, 29 Morgan, Starr 30, 128, 175 Muss man, Catherine 30, 134 Mussman, Leonard 30, 130 Myers. Mary Ellen 30, 121 Neal, Joe Pat 30, 135. 161, 164 Nicholes, Brenda 31. 39, 112. 122, 137 Oxley, Bill 31, 158 Peterson, Dwain 31 Petty, Allen 18, 31, 126 Pieratt, Kay 31, 37, 167 Pitman, Don 36, 128 Porter, Dennis 31, 32, 119 Pritchard, Roger 32, 37, 133, 180 Quinn, Larry 32, 38. 114, 115, 118, 120, 122 Reed, Jery Ray 32 Reid, Don 32, 36 Rice, Sharon 33. 115, 137 Rubottom, Jack 33, 173 Sargent, Robert 33, 114, 115, 122, 158 Scheuerman, Lester 33, 128 Schoonover, Terry 33, 126, 128, 161 Smith, Sonja 34, 37, 133 Spencer,Andy28. 34, 138,. 140, 143 Spinden, Glenda 28, 34, 115, 136, 176 Staples, Back 31, 35, 120, J 58 Stevens, Johnny 29, 31, 35. 117, 119 140 Stingley, Benny 35, 112, 117 Strafe, Vonalene 36, 137 Stump, Marilyn Kay 36, 37, 133 Talcott, Bill 36, 175 Trotter, Jack 19, 37, 170 Tyson, Joe 33, 36. 37, 120, 127 Vaughan, Margaret 23, 25, 37, 38 112, 137, 167, 174 Waldrop, Katie 17, 25, 37, 38, 115, 122, 137, 174 Walker, Joe 33, 37, 39. 112, 122, 177 Wells, Wilbur 38, 160 West, Dennis 38, 133 Williams, Pauline 36, 38. 114, 115, 132 Willis, Larry 39 Wilson, Betty 24, 38, 39. 112, 119, 122, 137, 167 Wilson, Rodney 19, 36. 39, 177 Woods, Mike 30, 31, 39. 158. 171 JUNIORS Adams. Gene 40, 41, 122, 147, 149, 152 Adcock, Roland 41, 50, 135 Alexander, Marcus 53, 121 Barbee, Betty 41, 46, 137 Batterman. Bill 41. 116, 117, 130 Behne, Jerry 41, 142, 143, 169 Belanger, Steve 41, 112, 168. 171 Boland, Jimmy 41, 50, 170 Bondra, Sandra 41, 136 Bookless, Jerald 41, 114, 159 Boston, Vicki 41 Breithaupf, Bruce 42, 114 Bunch, Karen 42, 45, 51, 114, 115, 136, 174 Bunger, Herman 42, 114. 115, 135 Byers, Dana 42 Byers, Tana 42, 165 Camp, Melissa 42, 44, 116. 118, 122 Carter, Harvey 42, 146, 148, 150 Carter, Sue Ann 42, 43, 112, 122, 136 180 Caudle Marc 41, 43, 142 Childress, Lonnie 42, 43, 160, 167 Cluck, Lou 45, 112, 117, 118, 122, 137 Costner, Vernon 43, 50, 146, 150, 152 Cotton, Annie 43, 121 Crawford, Bruce 43 Cruzan, Don 43, 51 Cullop, Connie 43, 50, 137 Curtis, Sandra 43. 112, 136 Darter, Harold 44, 114 Davis, Terry 44, 159, 178 Deere, John 44 DeWolfe, Phi Hop 44, 53. 159 Dixon, Cherryal 44, 159 Dusenbury, Nelson 40, 44, 48. 51. 142, 167, 170 Farris, Dennis 44, 50. 145 Ford, Richard 44, 112 Forth, Lyle 45, 131, 174 Glendinning, Betsy 40, 45, 112, 137 Gray, Ralph 45. 171, 173 Gray, Terrell 44, 45, 130 Gray. Tina 45, 115. 122, 173 Haigood, Linda 45 Harman, Jerre 45, 123, 136 Hintergardt, Ronnie 45, 119 Hitch. Jane 45. 50, 114, 115, 122, 180 Hobson, Jack 45 Howeiler, Cindy 44, 46. 114, 119 Holtzclaw, Ronny 46 Huber. Bobbye 46, 160 Hull, Walter 46 Hutchison, Kenneth 46, 142, 170 Ingels. Wynelda 41, 46, 112, 119, 164 Iverson, Ruby 46, 123, 132. 136 Jeffries, Jimmy 42. 46, 134, 142. 164 Jeffus. Larry 46, 130 Johnson, William 46 Jones, Curtis 46, 112, 114, 115 Kuykendall, Cecil 46, 133 Latshaw, Floyd 47 Lee, Judy 47 Lewis, Bobby 47 Lewis, Dale 47, 173 Long, Carol 47, 164 Longbotham, Mary 2, 47, 134, 137 Lowe, Sharon 41, 47, 112 L'Roy, Carolyn 47 Mallard, Don 47, 119, 124, 167 Mallard, Pat 47, 122. 134, 143 Mantoofh, Linda 47 Mason, Romie 47, 166 Massey, Barbara 3. 43, 47, 49, 136, 173, 176 Matzek, Kristi 47, 168 Miller, Ann 47 McCarnney. Dewey 47 Mussman, Gilbert 48. 130 Nicholes, Charlsye 46, 48, 136, 170 Peppers, Tara 48, 116, 188. 136 Philippe, Judy 48 Pickett, John 48, 112 Pierce, Marilyn 48 Potter, Barbara 48, 137 Potter, Burl 48, 50. 143 Reed, Max 49, 127, 143 Reeder, Mike 49 174 Reust, Elaine 49, 130 Rhoades, Charles 49, 130 Rigby, Charles 49, 52, 59, 165 Sheets, Gail 49, 132, 136 Shuler, Clark 49 Simmons, Charlene 118 Simpson, Carolyn 178 Smart, Jenny 40, 49 Smith, Ann 49, 132, 136 Smith, David 51,164 Smith, Glenda 51, 115, 137 Smith, Mike 51, 146, 149, 151 Stewart, Jean 45. 51, 118, 122, 135 Stingley, Jerry 50, 51, 119 Sullivan, Jimmy 50, 51 Taylor, Judy 52 Thompson, Eddy 42, 52 Torrey, Don 52 Truitt, Freda 44, 52, 112, 137, 173 Watson, Larry 51, 52 120 Webb, Lynne 52, 115, 132, 136 Weeks, Dwight 52 Wellman, Marvin 53 Wilson, Vernon 53, 133, 166 Winters, Dave 51, 53, 112, 143 Winters, Gary 53, 126, 143 Wood, Sandra 53 Yancey, Lou Ella 53, 114, 115, 134, 135, 169, 172 Yard, Sharon 53, 159 SOPHOMORES Alberty, Janice 54, 55, 57, 63, 116, 119, 129 134 136, 137 Anderson, Johnny 55, 58, 134, 144 Andrews, Sandra 55, 60 Applegate, Wayne 55, 65, 128 Barbaree, Phil 55, 144, 146, 151, 153 Barnett, Norma 55, 114, 136 Barrett, Robert 55, 59, 128 Bistline. Jan 55, 117, 119 Blackburn, Bonnie 55, 129 Bostic. Linda 55, 135, 137, 164 Bounds, Ruth 55, 56, 116, 118 Bragg, Sharon 56, 114. 115, 116, 117, 136 Breithaupf, Carol 2. 56. 114, 115, 134, 36. 161, 165. 181 Brown, Bobbie 56, 126 Bryan, Chesley 56, 146, 152, 174 Byerley, Nick, 56, 65, 115, 120, 178 Caddell, Carole 56, 62, 118 Carter, Linda 56, 114, 115, 136 Cawlfield, Koleta 182 Chill, Bruce 54, 56, 65, 166 Claycomb, Linda 56, 114, 115, 136. 172 Cobb, Teresa 172 Conrade, Romona 56 Cooper, Becky 57, 61, 63, 67, 135, 136, 137, 172 Costner, Gerald 57, 114, 144, 165, 174, 180 Crawford, Vera 57, 168 Curtis, Robinelle 55, 57, 60, 114, 136 Darter, Rose 57, 60 Davis, Robert 57, 126, 176 Davidson, Gaye 57, 60 Davidson, Mayilyn 57, 60 Dawson, Mary 57 Dixon, Rae Jean 57, 129, 179 Doke, Gary 58, 112, 114, 167 Dubois, Jene 58 Ellis, William 58 Ermey, Duane 58, 65, 172 Ford, Charlene 136 Forth, Grant 57, 58, 131 Foster, Georgiana 58. 123. 137. 159 Foster. Marybelle 58. 116, 117 Gateley, Norma 58. 136, 177 Gieselmann, Lonnie 58, 128 Gloden, Gary 58, 119, 176 Grice, Betty 58 Gun, Ralph 58 Hager, Barbara 59 Haliburton, John 59, 112, 117, 118 Haun, James 59 Heard, Kathryn 59 Heflin, Philip 59 Heimsoth, Larry 59 Helmke. Judith 59, 60. 62, 115, 121, 129 Hensley, Frank 59, 130, 135, 144, 179 Hicks, Gwendolyn 59, 116, 117 Hill. Jerry 56, 59. 118, 134, 144, 146 152, 153, 168 Hoffman, Bill 59, 65. 145 Holtzclaw, Don 59, 119, 182 Hooper, Tamra 2, 3, 60, 134, 136, 137 161 Hoover, Dannie 60 Howell, Connie 57, 60, 136 Huckabey, Millie 60 Imboden, Janie 60, 117, 118, 134 Ivie, Shirley 60, 116, 117 Jamison, Viola 60, 160 John, Griffith 60, 130 Johnson, Donald 60, 146 Kasselman, Billy 2, 60, 144, 165 Keifer, Dari 61, 114 Kincade, Charlene 61 King, Cheryl 61, 114, 115 King, Kathy 61, 116, 118, 137, 180 King, Leon 61 Kirk. Vicki 54, 61. 115 Kleffmen, Kay 61, 114 Kleffman, Linda 61, 123 Lane, Terry 57, 61, 66, 114, 144 Lantz, Sherman 61 Lee. Larry 61, 153 LeGrange, Dannie 61, 153 Liese, Karen 61, 62 Lindley, Pascal 61, 114, 120. 135, 145 Lohmann, Cheryl 61 Lohmann, Darlene 61, 121 Longbrake, Kenneth 62, 65, 145, 181 Manduano, Joey 62 Mans, Mery 62, 116, 117, 136, 137 Martin, Linda 62, 116 McClaflin, Carolyn 62 McCubbin, Colleen 62 McKay, Marilyn 2, 62, 119, 135 McMurry, Kelly 54, 62, 134 McNeel, James 62 Miller, Marshall 62. 119, 175 Moore, Pat 62, 167 Morehead, Ray 63, 145 Mott, Maurine 56, 63. 116, 118, 137 Neas, Susan 2, 63, 126 Norton, Prudance 63 O'Leary, John 63, 178 Oxley, Marilyn 2, 63. 165, 179 Pafford, Fern 63, 117, 137 Pa pay, Kathryn 63 Pellette, Eugene 63. 116, 117 Perry, Jim 63. 65 Pierce, William 63, 130 Place, Charlene 56, 64, 114, 115, 137 Powell, Melinda 64, 115 120, 129, 135 Quesenbury, Darrell Quesenbury, Jimmy 64 Quesenbury, Mary 64 Rehard Karen 64 Reust, Sarah 64 Reust, Wardell 64 Reust, William 64 , 65. 134, 145 Rhodes, Cheryl 64, 136, 169 Rhodes. Linda 64. 136, 169 Robinson. Jack 64 Rountree, Danny 64, 65, 121, 145, 153 Rowden, Linda 65, 136. 164 Russell, Denver 128 Schroeder. Waldo 65, 166, 172 Scott, Gayle 60, 65 Sheets, Christine 65, 114. 115, 120, 136 Sheets, Winnell 65, 132, 136 Sloan, Tom 65. 119 ,126 Smith, Bette Lou 65, 136 INDEX Smith, Lenny 65, 133, 175 Smith. Vay 65. 114, 115, 160 Steinkuehler, Harvie 65, 130, 159 Stephen . Sherrel 65, 114, 120, 159 Stewart, Vic 65 ,114 Strate. Gerald 65, 121, 153 Strickler, Sharon 2. 65, 120 Thomie, Barbara 66 Thomson, John 59 Truitt, Sharon 66, 137 Turner, Danny 65, 66 Tuttle, Phil 66, 127, 145, 181 Tuxhorn, Arthur 66, 116, 117, 120 Ty on, Paul 66, 145, 153 Vaughn, Cheryl 58. 66 Wacker, Ginger 66, 115, 135 Wadley, Jerry 66. 131 Walker, Billy 66. 164, 181 Walker, David 65, 67, 115 Wall, Bill 67, 145 Watson, Linda 67 Weeks, Phyllis 62, 67, 118, 181 White. Kendall 67, 112, 116, 117 Williams, Doris 67 Williams, Wayne 67, 128, 171 Willis, Gregory 67, 172 Winters, Terry 67 Yelton, Nancy 67, 132, 182 FRESHMAN Adams, Cheryl 69, 79 Alberty, Betty 69, 79 Baker, Aleta 69. 78 Ballard, Wally 69, 131 Barnett, Ernest 69 Barnett, Ike 69 Bartels. Wayne 69, 79, 130, 131 Bauer Robert 119 Behne, Kathie 69, 79 Bennett, Joe 69, 127 Black, Shirley 69 Blacldiurn, Jim 70 Blamenship, Pam 70 Bookout, Tejry Lee 75 Bratton, Peggy 70, 79 Bridwell, Linda 3, 70, 76. 79 Bromlow, Velva 70 Bryan, Priscilla 22, 70, 76, 79, 81, 116, 117 Burgess, Bobby 69, 70 Caddell, Amy 70, 74, 118 Calsing, Dennis 70 Camp, Murry 70, 119 Cave, Linda 70 Cavin, Karen 70, 79 Chandler. Charles 70, 79 Chandler. Frank 70, 78 Clarke, Russel 71 Cotton, Billy 71 Couch, Steve 71, 79 Countryman, Peggy 71, 79, 116, 117 Cross, Jim 68, 71, 73, 80 Dain, Dixie 71, 74, 79 Danner, Barbara 71 Danner, Rex 71 Darnell, Donald 71 Davis, Jerry 71 Dawson, Carol 71 Dennis, Linda Kay 71, 74 DeWolfe. Candy 72, 75, 79 Dow, RaJeanna 72 Engeran, Denise 72, 79 Fenton, Shirley 72, 75 Ferguson, Gerald 72 Foster, Jim 72 Foster, Larry 73, 74, 119 Furnish, Lyndell 73 Garrison, Johnny 73, 130 Glendinning, Kelley 73, 74, 127 Goodloe, Joyce 73, 75, 78, 81 Graham, Ernie 73, 118 Gribble, Michael E. 73, 74 Griffin, Chuck 73 Grounds, Dennis E. 73, 74 Grounds, Gary 73, 74 Harris, J. D. 74 Haynes, Jerry 74 Herbel, Pauline 74 Hinds, Bobby 74, 75, 119 Hohweiler, Linda 74, 119 Howard, Deborah 74 Howerter, Ricky 74 Huckabey, Inez 74, 132 Hull, Loletah 74 Hunter, Chris 74 Iverson, Leona 74 Jamison, Butch 75 Jones, Charlotte 75, 118 Jones, Saundra 74 Kauffman, Linda 75, 78 Keezer, Janice 75 Kilpatrick, Susie 75, 78 King, Sid 75 Kirk, Bill 75 Kittle, Kathy 74, 75 Kleffman, David 75 Kleffman, Gene Allen 69, 75 Krug, Bill 74, 75 Landreth, Bill 75 Liese, Douglas 75, 79, 81. 131 Lile, Jay 76, 130 Lively, Dale 76, 79. 130 Lobit, Jay 76, 119 McClafin, Cindy 76. 79 McKinnon, Roger 68, 73, 76, 82 Mallard, Deloris 76 Martin, Karen 76 Martin, Ronie 76, 127 Mathewson, Marilyn 76, 81 Matzek, Pam 76, 118 Miller, Janice 76 Mitchell, Gary 76, 130, 131 Moen, Gary 22, 77, 119 Moore, Jerry 77 Moorhead, David 77, 119 Morgan, Vonda 77, 79 Mueller, Barbara 74, 77, 79, 81 Neyman, Pamela 77 Nix, Carol 77 Noyes, Steve 70 18. 130 Ogden, Frank 77 Onley, Zack 74, 77 Parker, Edwin 77 Patton, James 77, 117 Petrowsky, Marc 75, 77, 79 Pierce, Terry 77 Pritchard. Doug 78 Ralstin, Ricky 78 Ramey, Nick 78 Ramsey, Vernon 78, 79, 130 Reeder, Max 78 Reedy, Joyce 78 Reust, Carrol 78 Rhodes, Wayne 5% Roach, Jolinda 78, 79 Roberts, Harold E. 78 Robinson, Ronnie Lee 78 Sargent, Joyce 74, 78 Schoonover, Cheri 72, 73, 76, 77, 78 Schoonover, Connie 78, 79 Schott, Bill 79 Shackelford, Janna 78, 79 Shaffer. Jane 70. 78, 79, 132 Shaffer, Susane 78, 79 Shores, Sherry 69, 79 Shuler, Jacque 78, 79 Shultz, Terry 74, 79, 116, 117 Singleton, Virgilene 79 Slater, Susie 68, 72, 79 Sloan, Rebecca 78, 79 Smith, Benny Bob 75, 79, 131 Smith, Eddie 79 Stelzer, Donna 75, 79, 118 Stevens, Tommy 79, 118 Sturdivan, Lynn 68, 72, 73, 78, 79 166 Talcott, Rose 78, 80 Taylor, Judy 80 Thompson, Larry 71, 74, 80 Turner, James 80 Tuxhorn, Glennis 80, 117, 132 Wallis, LaVonna 80 Ward, Tony 72, 80 Weaver, Kathryn 80 Webb. Karen 69, 79, 80 Weeden, David 80 Weeden, Paula 70, 74, 78. 80 Weeks, Gene 80 Weissinger, Dorothy 80 Wells. Jody 78, 79, 80, 132 Wilburn, Mary 78, 80 Wiles, Delvin 80 Williamson, Jim 70, 80 Wilt, Stephen 74, 79, 80 Winters, Sheryl 79, 80 Wintres, Steve 79, 80 Woods, Carol 74, 78, 80 Wyche, Caroline 80 Wysong, Barbara 80 Zabel, Judy 78, 79, 80 EIGHTH GRADE Ashpaugh, Chery 82, 119 Backus, Sammy 82, 83 Barnett, Jimmy 82, 83, 86 Bennett, Sharon 82, 83 Berry, Jimmy 82, 83, 86 Black. Paul 82, 83. 88. 117 Bohannan, Ronny 82, 83. 119 Boiler, John 82, 83 Bostic, Mike 82, 83 Buford, Elizabeth 82, 83, 119, 123 Bunch, Keith 84 Calsing, Sherril 84 Campbell, Larry 84 Campbell, Paul 84, 117 Carter, Joleen 84, 118 Cave, Steven 84 Chenault, Marlene 84, 88 Chill, Brad 84, 119 Clifford, Bonnie 84 Clifford, Charles 84 Coldiron, Leslie 85 Cooley, Dallas 85 Couch, Steven 85 Craig, Neil 85 Curtis, Don 85 Darter, Elaine 85, 88 Dawson, Robert 86, 118 Delano. Alice 86 Dotson. Ronald 84 Dotson, Shirl 85. 86 DuBois, Terri 86 Dusenbury, Randy 86 Enders, Del 84, 86 Fenner, Wayne 86 Ford, Gay 87, 123 Forman, Vicki 82, 87, 123 Foster, Alan 87 Frazier, Phyllis 87, 118 Furnish, Bing 87 Gilliam, Pat 87 Gose, Jerry 87 Gotcher, Elizabeth 87, 119 Grammar, Gary 87, 119 Grice, Grady 87 Gum, Margaret 88 Hall, Dannie 88, 119 Hager, Charles 85, 88 Helm, Ted 88 Helmk, Stan 88, 123 Hicks, Dennis 85. 88 Hill, Charles 88 Hill, Wayne 88, 119 Hinds, Harlan 82, 88 Hiniger, Teddy 89, 119 Hobson, Dennis 88 Hoffmann, Nancee 89, 119, 123 Howell, Kathy 85, 88, 89, 123 Huddleston, Dan 89 Imboden, James 69, 119 Jeffers, Bill 89 Johnson, Bonita 89, 119 Jones, Betty Jean 85, 89 Kane, Richard 88. 89 Keith, Helen 89 Kneeland, Linda 89 Krone, Chester 87, 89 Kuykendall, Carroll 89 Lantz, Charles 88, 89 Latshaw, Monte 87. 89, 90 Lawrence, Raelene 90, 94 Lewis, Ronnie 90 Lively, David 90 Lockhart, Carol 90 Logsdon, Fred 84, 90 Long, Nancy 88, 90, 123 Lovinggood, Marilyn 87, 90 Lowe, Cindy 90. 116, 117 Lynn, Nancy Kay 90, 92, 116, 117 McNeal, William 84, 90 McVey, Dale 86, 90 Mahan, Linda Sue 91 Mahaney, Everett 91 Manduano, Annette 91 Massey, Billy 82, 88, 90, 91. 119 Meyer, Jean 88, 91. 123 Mingle, Charles 91, 118 Moody, Esther 91, 93, 119, 123 Moore, Christy 88. 91, 116, 117 Morey, Ronnie 91 Mussman, Harold 91 Nash, Susi 91, 94 Nelson, Monty 92, 118 Nickey, Bobby 92 Norton, Cindy 92 Noyes, Mark 92. 119 ODell, Margaret 87, 92 Ogden, Pamela 92, 118 Parker, Linda 87, 92 Peterson, Myron 86, 92 Peyton, Ronnie 92 Phillips, Gene 84, 92, 119 Philippe, Bobby 92 Price, Danny 84, 93 Quesenbury, Clairice 93 Quesenbury, Patty 93 Quinn, Garvin 92, 93, 118 Ralstin, Gary 93, 95 Ramsey, Deanna 93 Ratlief, Steve 93, 119 Reeder, Steve 93 Rhodes, Danny 95 Riffel, Cindy 93, 94, 119 Roach, Jacque 88, 93, 118 Roberts, Betty 93 Rodman, James 94 Scheuerman, Don 94 Schwab, Coyle 94, 119 Scott, R. D. 94 Sharkey, Kare 94, 118 Smart, Jerry 94, 95 Smith, Barbara 94 Stanfield, Roger 94 Starkey, Mildred 94 Steele, Russ 84, 95, 119 Stewart, Carlene 95 Strother, Ann Marie 85, 95, 123 Taylor, Jeanie 95 Tea, Randall 116, 118 Trujillo, Sandy 95 Wacker, Bill 95 Weatherly, Linda 85, 95 Wiggins, Larry 119 SEVENTH GRADE Backus, Charles 97 Backus, Harroll 97 Barnett, Randy 97, 103 Baxter, Mary 97 Briles, Judy 97 Bromlow, Donnia 97 Bryan, Jonette 97, 117 Burke, Janice 97, 99 Buxton, Carroll 97 Byerley, Jill 97 Campbell, Rodney 97, 99, 119 Cavin, Greg 97 Clarke, Shannon 98, 119 Claycomb, Charles 98 Clifford, Sally 98 Cole, Linda 98. 101. 119 Cooley, Wesley 98 Couch, Terry 98 Countryman, Ruth 98 Dale, Douglas 96, 98 Darnell Jerry 98 Davis, Galen 98 Davis, Mike 99 Davis, Sharon 99, 119 Diedrich, Renae 99, 100 DuBois, Mark 99 Ellis, Charles 97, 99 Ellis, Henneta 99 Enns, Mike 99 Ermey, Sherry 99 Fanning, Cecyle 99, 117 Fergeson Sheryl 100, 107 Ferguson, Leon 99, 117 Ferguson, Ronald 100 Fitzgerald, Rita Jo 97, 100 Ford, Carl 100 Foutch, Kay 100 Furnish, Cheryl 100, 123 Garrison, Billy 100 Gateley, James 10 0 Glisson, Marsha 116 Goff, Alecia 100, 119 Golden, Mary Jane 100, 119 Green, Teresa 101 Grimes, Judy 101, 119 Gunsaullus, Donna 101, 119 Hamilton, Kenny 101 Haun, Allen 101 Headrick, Karen 101 Hedrick, Steve 101 Helm. Ina 101 Hill, Gayle 99, 101 Hinchey, Mack 101 Howell, Brenda 101, 123 Imboden, Richard 101, 119 Iverson, Mary 100, 102 Jackson, Alton 102 Jeffers, Debra 102, 117 Jeffus, Hal 102, 117 Jones, Lewis 102 King, Randy 106, 119 Kleffman, Steven 102 Lewis, Ricky 102 Lloyd, Harold 102 Long, Montee Sue 98, 102, 116 Long, Pat 102, 116 Longbotham, Joe 100, 103 McCarney, Bonnie 103 McCarrell, Pat 103, 119 McClafin, Roger 97, 103 McClanahan, Lola 103, 105 McCurdy, Ellis 103, 107, 119 McIntyre, Billy 103, 119 McKinnon, Doug 103, 119 Macormic, Sandra 99, 103, 119 Mallard, Denny 103 Marshall, Billie 100, 103 Mingle, Marsha 104, 106, 119 Moore, Terry 104 Morehead, Stephen 104, 119 Moyer, Cheryl 98, 104, 119 Mussman, LeeRoy 104 Newton, Robert 104 Oakes, Jim 104 Ogan, Billy 104 O'Leary, Darlene 104 Palmer, Karen 104 Parker, Debra 105 Patton, Dwain 105, 119 Peppers, Angie 105, 106, 116 Perez, Irene 105 Phillips, Ann 105 Pierce, Connie 105 Pierce, Glenda 105, 116 Prater, Leslie 99, 105 Quesenbury, Linda 100, 105 Rodding, Nancy 105, 116 Reed, Dennis 105 Rentfrow, Ronny 105 Reust, Ann 105 Rhodes, Leon 105 Rice, Dwight 106 Riffel, Ronnie 106, 119 Ritter, Richard 106, 117 Roberson, Caroyln 99, 106, 119 Rodman, Dennis 106, 119 Ruby, Iva 106 Sanford, Ronald 106 Schardein, Sharon 106 Scheuerman, Carlson 106 Schott, Diana 106 Schuermann, Cheryl 107 Scott, Peggy 107 Seymour, Glen 107 Sheets, David 107 Sheets, Luann 107, 123, 127 Shields, Randy 107 Shuler, Vicki 107 Simpson, Steven 107 Sledge, Ronnie 107 Smith, W. D. 107, 117 Snodgrass, Sandra 99, 108, 119 Steele, Micheal 108 Sfingley, Laddie 108 Strouther, Johnny 108 Tayloa, Frank 108 Torrey, David 108 Turner, George 108 Tuxhorn, Sue 108, 117 Welden, Jimmy 108, 117 Wall, Autie 108 Wallis, Glovena 108 Warner, Bruce 108, 119 Webster, George 108 Weissinger, Calvin 109 West, Belinda 109 Wetmore, Sharon 101, 109, 116 White, Lucy Mae 101, 109, 116 Williams. Jean 99, 109, 123 Williams, Juanita 109 Williams, Voletta 109 Wing, Diana 98, 100, 102, 109, 119 Winters, Charolette 97, 109, 119 Wood, Owen 109 Wood, Sharon 109 Worth, Carol 107, 109, 123 Wyche, Barbara 109 Yelton, Jeanne 109 ' i 0 ,o- ••• • ••- • • ?- v '7. ' A '; ' ..■-■ ... ; • • v . - i o. f., A:'-ar r -fJiJS At! £■,■%. ?r ' % £ r-- A -Z . ''' _ ■ 'mmm?


Suggestions in the Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) collection:

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967


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