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

 - Class of 1964

Page 1 of 200

 

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



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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1964 volume:

THE 1964 EL TIGRE OF GUYMON HIGH SCHOOL INVITES YOU TO TAKE A JUMBO RIDE THROUGH TJGERLAND TABLE OF CONTENTS 1964 EL TIGRE ADMINISTRATION CLASSES ACTIVITIES ADVERTISING 4 8 114 164 FROM OUR ADMINISTRATORS Each school year is a new challenge to make the year better than the last. I con- sider it a privilege to be associated with the finest young people to be found any- where. May this be your best year. George W. Spenner, Superintendent 4 Education is a continual process. I hope the academic and social education which you have received this year is richly rewarding and highly profitable for each of you. I am happy to have had a part in preparing you for the future. Coy Gibson, High School Principal 5 The thinking machine of man is the greatest engine on earth. Power is the result of thought. Every person possesses many powers within himself. Nature's stern law is, 'use them or lose them.' E. AA. Alden, Junior High Principal CENTRAL'S PRINCIPAL ALDEN 6 CLASSES GENE ADAMS, president of his class and of NHS, is an all-sports star and sports editor of El Tigre. A four year GHS student. Gene will attend PAMC where he will major in Mathematica. ROLAND ADCOCK lists Choir and Speech as his activities and instru- mental music as his hobby. With four and one half years here, Roland plans to become a minister after training at Southwestern Assembly of God. MARCUS ALEXANDER has gone to Guymon schools for ten and one half years. A Tiger football player this year, Marcus will attend Colorado State with a career as a coach or psychologist as his ultimate goal. CLASS OF 1964 IS OUT TO CATCH THE BIG ONES DARRELL ANDREWS, a Diversified Oc- cupations student, is employed at Cal's Laundry. Darrell came to Guymon to school three years ago and names history as his best liked subject. He plans to attend Southwestern State. BETTY JO BARBEE, who excels in gym, has been a Tigerlander for four years. The sit-up champion of GHS, Betty delights in new exercises. With an interest in commercial subjects, Betty will enter the business world. BILLY BATTERMAN, president of Or- chestra this year, is also on the track team. Exhibiter of a Grand Champion calf his Junior year, he will attend OSU where he will major in Mechani- cal Engineering. CHS' BIGGEST SENIOR CLASS Naturally you could expect the biggest class ever to graduate from Guymon High School to do everything in the best possible way, beginning with the election of this sterling slate of officers here fishing for porpoises, tuna, or sardines in Lake Sunset. Secretary Betsy Glendinning is catching bait for Treasur- er Harvey Carter. Class of '64 President Gene Adams is a bit squeamish, so kindly Vice- President Kenneth Hutchison impales the worms and basks in the September sun. 11 JERRY BEHNE, a Tigerlander for twelve years, is a 1964 football captain and Class Favorite. Jerry likes his Mechani- cal Drawing Class and plans a career as a Draftsman or Architect after graduation from OSU. STEVE BELANGER, often on honor roll, is active in Math and Science Club. A Rotary Boy of-the-Month, Steve is a member of the Norfolk Trio. He likes Zoology and plans a career as a Zoolo- gist after college. JIMMY BOLAND, whose activities range from athletics, science, and speech to playing the piano, is a fine Physics student and has won many awards at Science Fairs. Jim aspires to become a Medical Doctor. THERE TO MEET WITH MACBETH A fondness for murder mysteries and Shakespeare meet in Mrs. Mary Martin, who annually dusts off the twenty year old records to bring Macbeth to her English IV classes. You'll recognize the winsome witches on the next pages as Double, Double Dana and Tana Byers with Hecate Bunch masterminding the brew. SANDRA BONDRA, another twelve year Tigerlander, names Spanish and Art as her preferred subjects. Her hobby is sketching. Sandra says, I dislike smart alecks. For her profes- sion, she picks Nursing. JERALD BOOKLESS, a student of Guy- mon schools for nine years, enjoys his activity in the High School Choir. Jerald names Math as his favorite subject, working on cars as his hobby, and plans to be an engineer. VICKI BOSTON lists Choir and danc- ing as her activities. But cheerleading for four years was an important past assignment for Vicki. She is going to OSU where she will major in Physical Education or Business. BRUCE BREITHAUPT, another twelve year Guymon student, is in Choir and Science Club. Hobbies of Bruce's are cars and art work. With a fondness for Physics and Chemistry, he plans to be a Medical Technician. 13 KAREN BUNCH, an honor roll regular, is in Pep Club, Choir, GRA, and FHA. Karen names Biology as her best liked subject and reading as a hobby. After obtaining a degree at PAMC, she plans to teach school. HERMAN BUNGER has been a Tiger- lander for eight years. In Math and Science Club, Herman also enjoys his work in Choir where he is president. He likes golf and finds Drafting his best class. He will attend PAMC. Mr. Football is Kenneth Hutchison, Vice-President of the Class of '64 and a winning Favorite this year. A record of four years on Cub and Tiger football teams is one of his fine distinctions. Kenneth was honored by the students of GHS last year when he was selected to represent our school at Boys' State at OU. Being on time is one of the many reasons for Ken's popularity and one that will smooth his years at OSU. A PAIR OF 1964 WINNERS KENNETH AND JANE DANA BYERS, one of Tigerland's very poplar identical twins, likes Typing and Shorthand and plans to enter a business career after attending PAMC and Oklahoma State University. Chic Dana dislikes poor grooming. Gracious Jane Hitch is no stranger to the ranks of royalty, having been named Football Queen in her Sophomore year and in 1963 ' Miss Guymon. Jane has twice been honored as a Class Favorite, in her Freshmen year and now as a Senior. She was named to All-State Choir this year and to All-State Orchestra as a Freshman. Her inter- ests in stage arts will probably lead her to major in Drama next year at Oklahoma State University. HARVEY CARTER, Vice-President of NHS and Treasurer of his class, was a Boys' Stater last year. President of his D.O. Club, Harvey wants to go to OSU where he will prepare to be a coach and teacher of English. TANA BYERS, like her twin Dana, has been active in Pep Club, GRA, and Girls' Choir. Typing and English are favorite subjects; her hobbies dancing and record collecting. After college Tana wants to be a Secretary. MELISSA CAMP, in OHS and NHS, is always on honor rolls. President of Band, she has won numerous Band awards and was named Masonic Stu- dent of Today. Athletic Melissa plans to major in Physical Education at OCU. SUE ANN CARTER, for the six years she has attended Guymon schools, has been a Cheerleader. She belongs to Math and Science Club, Pep Club, and National Cheerleaders Association. Sue, who loves Science, will be a Nurse. MARC CAUDLE is very active in De Molay, a group he serves this year as Master Councilor. Marc is a Physics enthusiast who hopes to continue in his favorite subject or take a degree in Law at Oklahoma State. LONNIE CHILDRESS who has been a Tigerlander for six years is in Choir. English is Lonnie's preferred subject, and his hobbies are sports and music. He plans a Business career after at- tending PAMC or OBU. NAH, HE CAN'T REALLY, CAN HE? Ronnie Bauer, new member of the Class of '64 from Ulysses, Kansas, is having trouble believing that Coun- selor James Roach can help him make a quite accurate decision about a vocational choice. That file at the right of Susan Hendrix from Okinawa is full of test results to help Mr. Roach guide Tigerlanders into early occupational selections. Other newcomers to the class getting acquainted with guidance office aids are Terry Thomas from Liberal, Kansas; Patsy Howard from Tecumseh; and Carolyn Knutson from Blue Jacket. MR. ROACH'S ROOM LOU CLUCK is in NHS, FHA, OHS, Math and Science Clubs, Band, Orches- tra and Pep Club, all of which she has served as an officer. Her favorite sub- ject is Math and her hobby sports. She will major in Math at PAMC. 16 VERNON COSTNER, a Guymon student for nine and one half years, is on the basketball and track teams. Govern- ment is Vernon's best liked subject, and he loves to play his guitar. He wants to be a musician. ANNIE COTTON, a Diversified Occupa- tions student, is employed at TG Y. Annie, whose favorite subject is Span- ish, collects rocks and dislikes un- friendly people. After high school, she would like to study Nursing. Guidance Counselor James Roach may be found in his office early and late helping Tigerlanders with their personal and career problems. GHS is fortunate in having the full time assistance of a man trained in this essential capacity. WHERE BRUCE CRAWFORD, Vice President of the D.O. Club, works for Guymon Drug Co. He has served De Molay as a Master Councilor. Bruce likes work- ing on cars and is annoyed at critical oeoole. He will study Law. GO TO HELP OUR SELVES HE'S OUR ITSY-BITSY BABY BOY Daddy Dusenbury and Mama Caudle just knew their little Behne would win in the nursing bottle division, and you should have seen that Jerry gulp down a King-size coke! MEN AT WORK BOOGIE BOY BOLAND beats out some bar room barrelhouse to tally three more needed points for the Class of '64. DON CRUZAN, for seven years a Tigerlander, is a member of the GHS Golf Team and in Math and Science Club. Coin collecting is Don's hobby and Mathematics is his favorite subject. Don wants a Navy Electronics post. CONNIE CULLOP, in her fifth year in Guymon schools, is active in Drama, Publications, and Pep Club. Connie names English as her preferred subject, dancing her hobby, and snakes her peeve. She will be a Beautician. HAROLD DARTER is a twelve year Senior who was named Most Popular Boy as an Eighth Grader. His liking for Bookkeeping makes him want to follow a career in Accounting after completing his B.S. at Panhandle. TERRY DAVIS has been with the Class of '64 for two and one-half years. A Diversified Occupa- tions student, Terry works at the Arrowhead. She is planning to go to San Francisco where she will become a Cosmetologist. GRAND CHAMPION PIE EATER Donnie Mallard repeats his glorious gooey triumph of last year by triumphing as GHS' mightiest pastry gulper. That's Cindy Hohweiler shoving in the meringue tid-bits. MARCUS IS A MUSCULAR MAIDEN WE FOUGHT AND FIZZLED AT FUN FESTIVAL BILLIE DEAKIN, another Class of '64 member for twelve years, served as FHA Reporter as a Sophomore. Billie names Homemaking as her favorite subject. Show-offs are her pet peeve and music her best loved pastime. A career as a homemaker is Billie's choice after graduation. JOHN DEERE is also one of the large group of twelve year Guymon Seniors. John names World History as his favorite subject with water skiing, girls, and cars as his hobbies. John says studying is his abomi- nation, but he wants to be a Lawyer with a degree from OU. PHIL DE WOLFE is a comparative newcomer to Guymon, entering here last year. He likes Mechanical Drawing and Math when he is not working on cars. Phil plans to go to a trade school in California where he will prepare for a career in Automotive Mechanics. CHERRYAL DIXON, who has attended Guymon schools for four years, likes her Physical Education classes and dancing. She dislikes smart alecks. Cherryal spends her afternoons at her Diversified Occupations job at the hospital and plans on a career in Nursing after training in Wichita. BOBBY DUNKERSON. a three year GHS Senior, lists Homemaking as her activi- ty class. Bookkeeping is a favorite subject and floral arranging her hobby. Bobby plans to major in Elementary Education at PAMC. NELSON DUSENBURY served the Class of '64 as President for three years. On the football and track team this year, he enjoys playing baseball too. Nel- son likes Mechanical Drawing and will major ‘in that field. SANDRA EATON, with six years in our schools, takes Diversified Occupa- tions and works at McDonald's. Sandra names Typing as her favorite subject and coyote hunting on horseback as her rather unusual hobby. SENIORS ARE UP THE CUPf A PAIR OF PEPPERS AT THEIR PEAK OF PERFORMANCE are Class of '64 Cheerleaders Barbara Massey and Sue Carter. Full of clever ideas to keep that coveted Class Pep Trophy Cup labeled Seniors, these girls never forget that, first of all, their job is to keep all GHS solidly behind the team. At the right, a confused under- classman kowtows to the Pep Club Sacred Circle, with the help of Burl Potter, Marcus Alexander, and Mike Reeder, Tiger Pep Club muscles. JUDY EDENBOROUGH is another twelve year Guymon Senior. Judy has been a member of Choir, Orchestra, FHA and GRA. She names Bookkeep- ing as the subject she likes best, and plans to work in an office or keep house. PETE FARRIS has gone to school here nine years. An assembly Co-Chairman this year, Pete enjoys stage activities. English is his preferred subject, and he has no pet peeves. Pete wants to become a Naval Aviator. BETSY GLENDINf Tigerlander, is a i Science Clubs, Se Class, and Vice-Pr She names Teachii choice of careers. BHH RICH FORD, often on honor rolls, rated Second in last year's State Drivers' Contest. He is a member of the Golf Team, Math Club, and Choir. He plans to major in Aeronautical Engineering at O.C.C. LYLE FORTH has been Secretary of FFA for two years and on their Farm Shop Team. Lyle likes history class and loves driving a tractor. He wants to be an Elementary teacher after gradua- tion at PAMC. RALPH GRAY, with twelve years as a Tigerlander, is often on honor rolls. A golf enthusiast, Ralph is a member of the Tiger Golf team. English is Ralph's favorite subject, but he will major in Medicine at Oklahoma University. TERRELL GRAY has attended Guymon schools for eight years. In T l, he is employed at the S H Tractor Com- pany. Terrell's pet peeves are teach- ers and goats. He wants to be a rancher and will attend PAMC after graduation. ALL A DREAM GIRLS THIS IS NOT THE A WAY Everything is wrong here. Phones, radios, and record players are not the ingredients from which high grades are made. Marilyn Pierce, Jeannie Stewart, Pat Mallard, and Tara Peppers, Class of '64 top grade getters, may seldom be seen in such a frivolous pose as this. TINA GRAY has always gone to school here. With music as her greatest tal- ent, she always makes honor rolls and is Secretary of N.H.S. Tina loves out- door sports but plans to major in Mu- sic at Oklahoma State. LINDA HAIGOOD is often on honor rolls. She lists history and math as preferred subjects and working cross- word puzzles as her hobby. She wants to be a secretary after business col- lege. JERRE ANN HARMAN is GHS Miss Library Lady. She has served the Ok- lahoma Library Association as both President and Secretary. She will major in library Science at Oklahoma U. e DAN HAYS, a newcomer from Hoising- ton, Kansas, played Tiger football and made Boys' Quartet and All-State Choir. Dan's choice subject is History, his hobby playing the guitar. He plans to be an Optometrist. SUE HENDRIX came to GHS from Ku- basaki, Okinawa. Often on honor rolls. Sue has been active in Pep Club and Student Council. With a fondness for math and business subjects, Sue wants to become a Bookkeeper or Account- ant. JANE HITCH, 1963 Miss Guymon, is a member of both NHS and OHS. She is President of Drama Club and Debate Club and was Football Queen as o Sophomore. Jane enjoys singing and dancing and plans to maior in Drama at Oklahoma State University. Quite as fine as they look are Harvey Carter, ace Tiger basketball star, and Barbara Massey, D.A.R. Citizenship Award winner and veteran cheerleader. Always pleasant and sparkling with good health, and happiness are this so popular pair. Good scholars, in spite of heavy activity programs, Harvey is Vice-President of NHS; Barbara is often on honor roll. nice; h A R v E y AND B A R B A R AS PRECISE AS ROCKET ENGINEERS, young physicists from Mr. Dennis's class set up a pulley system to determine its mechanical advantages. Charles Rigby and Don Cruzan are at Mr. Dennis's right, Jim Boland and Romie Mason to his left. IN PHYSICS' EXCITING WORLD RONNIE HINTERGARDT, a five year Guymon student, is in Band and Pep Band and possesses an Excellent music rating. Ronnie likes English and Psychology, so he is planning on a career as a Psychologist after his college days. JACK HOBSON, with twelve years as a Tigerlander to his credit, names Government as his favorite subject. Jack enjoys boxing and tennis and says he dislikes wise guys. He wants to major in Business at PAMC. CINDY HOHWEILER, another twelve year Senior, is most active in Choir, which she serves as Secretary this year. She was chosen a Choir Sweetheart Candidate. Cindy wants to attend PA C first, then go on to O.B.U. RONNY HOLTZCLAW has only attend- ed Guymon schools for two years. In Distributive Occupations classes, Ronny is employed at Muzny Sheet Metal Co. He is undecided now about a career, but he hopes to enroll at U.C.L.A. PATRICIA HOWARD is a newcomer to the Class of '64 from Enid. Pat, who is often on honor rolls, prefers Short- hand and Typing classes, so she will probably select a career in Business after her graduation from PAMC. WALTER HULL has been a Tigerlander for nine years. With a mechanical turn of mind, Walter names Drafting as his favorite subject and automotive me- chanics as his hobby. Walter plans a career in Mechanics. KENNETH HUTCHISON, a four year Guymon student, is Vice President of the Class of '64. Kenneth has played football for four years with the Cubs and Tigers. Physics is his preferred subject, and he will attend O.S.U. WITH MR. DENNIS James Eldon Dennis, GHS' new Chemistry teacher, is a native of Blair, Oklahoma. A Sophomore co-sponsor and Science Club sponsor, he did his practice teaching here under Earl Sargent. Mr. Dennis is a graduate of PAMC. A sports fan, he enjoys active participation in hunting and fishing. WYNELDA INGELS has gone to school here for nine years. In Band md Science Club, her favorite subject is Zoology. Wynelda enjoys collecting records, and after graduation from college at PAMC, she will be an ele- mentary teacher. 25 RUBY IVERSON, President of Future Homemakers of America, served the Oklahoma Student Librarians Association as Secretary last year. Ruby, whose best loved pastime is reading, wants to be a teacher-librarian after PAMC. JIM JEFFRIES, a Tigerlander for the last four years, has been on Tiger football and track teams. Jimmy likes water skiing and cars and Mechanical Drawing. He hopes to major in Business at Oklahoma State. LARRY JEFFUS, who is a twelve year Senior, is most interested in Vocational Agriculture, which he has served as President for the past two years. Larry is planning a career in Veterinary Medicine after graduation from OSU. BILL JOHNSON has gone to Guymon schools for five years. Mathe- matics and its allied subjects appeal most to Bill. He has not yet selected his life's profession, but says he hope to work out a major at Oklahoma State University. CURTIS JONES is President of Math Club, Vice-President of Choir, and Secretary-Reporter of Science Club. A member of the famous Norfolk Trio, Curtis will major in Electronic Engineer- ing at Texas Tech in Lubbock. PAT IS QUEEN! CHS WON 22-8 LIKE KNIGHTS OF OLD fighting for their Queen, the Tigers rolled up a mightly 22-8 victory score over the Invading Ulysses Tigers to honor Homecoming Football Queen Pat Mallard and her Court. Escort- ing Queen Pat is Captain Jerry Behne. Her attendants are Jane Hitch with Kenneth Hutchison, and Sue Carter with Gary Win- ters. Jesters are Melinda Powell and Candy DeWolfe, seated before the panoply. CECIL KUYKENDALL, another of the Class of '64 twelve year regulars, is very fond of his Mythology class. Cecil names tennis as his favorite pastime. Cecil plans to attend a school of Cosme- tology in Denver, Colo. BOBBY LEWIS has ten yeaw in Tigerland to his credit, seven of those years with perfect attendance. Bobby has a mechanical turn, likes Mechanical Drawing, and will probably go into Automotive Mechanics next year. CAROLYN KNUTSON, from Blue Jacket, is a member of FHA. Carolyn prefers commercial subjects and grammar. You will find her reading or sewing in her leisure time. She may choose Nursing or Decorating as a career. DALE LEWIS, with five years in Guymon schools, is sometimes on honor rolls and enjoys his hobby, geology. He likes Mechanical Drawing best and wants to major in Electrical Engineering at Oklahoma State University. CAROL LONG has been in Central and GHS three and one-half years. English and World History are her preferred subjects. She enjoys horseback riding and reading. She will enter business as a typist or telephone operator. MARY LONGBOTHAM, Co-Editor of El Tigre, is serving Science Club as Vice- President for the second time. Mary, whose hobbies are reading and skiing, plans to teach English after graduation from OU or OCU. SHARON LOWE is active in musical groups including All-State Choir. She has science interests too, with Physiol- ogy her preferred subject. Sharon, often on honor rolls, is going to be a Laboratory Technician. CAROLYN L'ROY, an eleven year Tigerlander, is in Choir and Speech. Carolyn's hobbies are outdoor sports. With a distaste for poorly groomed people, chic Carolyn will become a Beautician after graduation. DONNY MALLARD, a Tiger football player this year, is active in Band and DeMolay. Mythology is his favorite subject, hunting his hobby. Donnie wants a career in Electrical Engineer- ing after attending OU. JUS TONE LITTLE TEST. PLEASE! PAT MALLARD, always on honor rolls, is a member of NHS and OHS. She was Football Queen this year and also FFA Sweetheart. A Class Favorite, Pat has always gone to school here. She will attend PAMC next September. ROMIE MASON, who has gone to Guy- mon schools for eight years, is usually on honor rolls. He is most interested in Chemistry, winning an award for his Chemistry Project. Romie wants a career a a Pharmacist. GILBERT MUSSMAN, a twelve year Guymon student, is President of FFA, which he has also served twice as Sentinel. An outdoor man, Gilbert likes to hunt and fish. He will major in Animal Husbandry at PAMC. BARBARA MASSEY, for three and one- half years a Tiger Cheerleader, was last year's El Tigre Princess and winner of the DAR Award this year. Barbara, who likes sincerity in people, will attend Oklahoma State. KRISTI MATZEK, whose hobby is play- ing the piano, is always on honor rolls. She prefers commercial subjects and says she hates dishonesty. Kristi will enter the Business field after her graduation from PAMC. Mrs. Margie Lane, Mr. Spenner's secretary, is very obliging about helping teachers to mimeograph their semester tests, but she doesn't seem to want Ruby Reust and Mike Smith to have a pre-view of these mid-year marvels. No hard feel- ings! We all love her anyway. CHARLSYE NICHOLES, with four years as a Tigerlander, is a member of Pep Club. Her best liked subjects are English and shorthand. Charlsye will attend college at PAAAC and is un- decided about a career. TARA PEPPERS is in Band, Pep Club and Orchestra. Recipient of the Spanish Award last year, Tara is very fond of Spanish and would like to be a trans- lator after graduating from Cottey College, Nevada, Mo. MARILYN PIERCE, always on honor rolls, names Girls' P.E. as her activity and riding horses as her hobby. Mari- lyn prefers her business courses and plans to train as a beautician after high school. MASONS HONOR STUDENTS OF TODAY PAT PIERCE has been a Guymon stu- dent all her life. In Diversified Occupa- tions this year, she is employed at Cal's Laundry. Pat likes English and plans on a career in Nursing after her graduation from P.A.M.C. BARBARA POTTER is another twelve year Guymon student. In Choir, FHA, and Drama Club, she is also Treasurer of Pep Club and FHA Historian this year. Barbara likes her Choir and English classes and dislikes conceit. BURL POTTER, whose hobby is foot- ball, played for the Cub and Tiger teams for five years. Burl has always gone to school at Guymon and hopes to attend college in New York or Denver where he will major in Drafting. AND CITIZENS OF TOMORROW AT ANNUAL EDUCATION WEEK BANQUET CITIZENS OF TOMORROW Ninth Grad- ers Steve Reeder and Cindy Riffel, along with Seniors Melissa Camp and Gene Adams, are shown here at the proud moment of receiving high recog- nition from the Grand Lodge of Okla- homa and the Guymon Masonic Lodge, represented here by A. R. Erhart. The annual Masonic Banquet for teachers was held this year in the new Academy Lunchroom. 31 MAX REED has always attended Guymon schools. A member of the Tiger football and track teams. Max is also in Woodworkers Club. Mechani- cal Drawing is Max's best liked subject, and he will major in Drafting. MIKE REEDER, another twelve year Guymon Senior, lists Weight Lifting as his activity for three years. Chem- istry is his preferred subject. Mike plans to attend PAMC where he will major in Business Administration. ELAINE REUST, a twelve year Guymon Senior, names English as her best- liked subject and poetry reading as her hobby. Elaine will not attend college for a few years but will devote her time to her home. WE'LL TAKE TINA AND Two of the more than one hun- dred reasons why the Class of '64 Is so special are Tina Gray and Gene Adams. Both fill their days with school activities, make a I I honor rolls, and are in National Honor Society. Tina is Choir Ac- companist, and Gene is Class of '64 President. Everybody's nomi- nation t o Nicest People-of-the- Year are this very pleasant pair. RUBY REUST has gone here to school except for her Junior year, which she spent in New Mexico. Ruby likes English and is a record collector. She is undecided about a major but wants to attend O. B. U. GENE ENTRE NOUS CLUB NAMES THESE HONOREES FROM THE CLASS OF '64. Sue Carter plays hostess to her fellow Girls-of-the-Month in her beautiful new home. Selected by Guymon Entre Nous Women's Club as outstanding members cf their class are Tina Gray for Septem- ber, Pat Mallard for May, Melissa Camp for December, Barbara Massey for November, Jean Stewart for April, Lou Cluck for January, Jerre Harman for March, Jane Hitch for October, and Sue Carter for February. CHARLES RHOADES has gone to school in Guymon for twelve years. Charles lists FFA for his activity of the year and serves the group as Sentinel. History is the subject Charles likes best. He will attend PAMC next fall. ENTRE NOUS' GIRLS OF THE MONTH CHARLES RIGBY came to GHS as a Junior. He is a member of Math and Science Club and lists Physics as his favorite subject. Charles plans to at- tend PAMC and OSU where he will major in Aeronautical Engineering. GAIL SHEETS is another twelve year Senior. Always on honor roll, she is a member of FHA which she has served as President and Secretary - Treasurer. She will major in Marketing at Okla- homa State University. CLARK SHULER, with twelve years in Guymon schools, is a member of Math and Science Clubs. Bookkeeping is Clark's favorite subject. He is going to major in Business Administration next year at PAMC. CAROLYN SIMPSON, with three years in GHS, is in Trades and Industries Club, and employed at Zellers. English and Shorthand are Carolyn's preferred subjects. She would like to major in Elementary Education. JENNY SMART came here as an Eighth Grader. Always on honor rolls, she was a class officer in her Sophomore and Junior years. English is Jenny's favorite subject. She will attend either Northwestern or Oklahoma State. ANN SMITH, Co-Editor of the '64 El Tigre, is in Pep Club, Choir, and FHA, which she served as Parliamentarian last year. Ann is fond of English and choral singing. She will teach after graduation from PAMC. WHICH WITCH IS WHICH? DAVID SMITH is a twelve year Guy- mon Senior. He is a member of Math and Science Clubs and serves Wood- workers Club as President this year. He prefers Zoology and Chemistry and will study Medicine at Oklahoma University. GLENDA SMITH, another 12 year Sen- ior, is Pep Club President and FHA Secretary. Another of her activities is Drama Club. Glenda likes Choir and outdoor sports. She is planning a career as a Beautician. WITCHY WAITRESSES AT OUR ALL-HIGH HALLOWE'EN SNACK BAR get last minute orders from Hecate, the Witch Queen, about to ride off on her broom before the guests—Faculty, Sophies, and Junies—rush in at the three o'clock bell. We think these -weird spirits occupy the bodies of Elaine Hughey, Glenda Smith, Pat Mallard, Dana Byers, Barbara Potter, Mary Longbotham, Ann Smith, Sandra Bondra, and Sharon Lowe. JIMMY SULLIVAN has also always at- tended Guymon schools. Jimmy was in the Junior play and names Spanish as his preferred subject. Cars are his hobby and he likes building models. Jimmy has yet to choose a career. JUDY TAYLOR has gone to school in Guymon for two and one half years. World History is Judy's best liked subject with bowling and horseback riding her hobbies. Judy plans to enter the Commercial field very soon. MIKE SMITH has always attended Guymon schools. Often on honor rolls, Mike was a member of the basketball and track teams this year. He repre- sented GHS at the State Track Meet. Mike wants to be a Commercial Pilot. JEAN STEWART, a member of NHS and OHS, is in Band and Orchestra, Drama Club, and Girls' Choir. Jean is Business manager of El Tigre and Drum Majorette of Band. Elementary Education is her choice of college major. JERRY STINGLEY, another twelve year Guymon Senior, had a leading roll in the Junior Play. He is in Band and Orchestra. Jerry likes Psychology and wants to major in this field, probably at Oklahoma State University. ROTARY BOYS OF THE MONTH HONORED BY GUYMON ROTARIANS, these nine members of the Class of '64 were selected to join the civic club at their weekly luncheons, each boy attending for a desig- nated month. On the stairway at the Hotel Dale, from bottom to top, are Richard Ford, Jerry Behne, Curtis Jones, Steve Belanger, Bruce Breithaupht, Harvey Carter, Gene Adams, Kenneth Hutchison, and Larry Jeffus. TERRY THOMAS came to GHS this year from Liberal, Kansas. Terry likes her Shorthand class and names bowling and golf as her hobbies. She intends to go to a business college and enter the secretarial field. EDDY THOMPSON is working on his twelfth year of perfect attendance in Guymon schools. Listing Physical Edu- cation and Track as his activities, Eddy plans to go to Northwestern State College, Alva. DON TORREY has gone t o school here for seven years. History is Don's preferred subject, and he likes to hunt and work on cars. Don will attend PAMC and then go to Kansas City to get a degree in Dentistry. 0 Rather unusual, Isn't it, to find this outdoor sports-minded pair sipping tea. But ClasstFavoritestPat Mallard and Jerry Behne don't think about football all the time. In fact, Pat, 1963 Football Queen and this year's FfA Sweetheart, is in both NHS and OHS. Tiger Football Captain Jerry is just as good at the Mechanical Drawing board as he had to be in football to make the All-District Team. WE PICK PAT AND JERRY FREDA TRUITT has been in Guymon schools for six years. Often on honor rolls, she belongs to Science and Drama Clubs, FHA, and Publications. Freda will attend St. Francis School of Nursing in Wichita. LARRY WATSON, a twelve year Guy- mon Senior, names Drama Club and Weight Lifting as his activities. Larry enjoys Mythology, coin collecting, and water skiing. He plans to go to PAMC, then to major in Law. LYNNE WEBB came to GHS as a Junior. She is Vice-President of FHA and a member of Girls' Choir. Singing is Lynne's hobby and Choir her best-liked subject. Lynne plans to teach Vocal Music after attending O. C. C. m «'ii Mp DWIGHT WEEKS, who has attended Guymon schools for four years, is active in DeMolays. Of his classes Spanish is his favorite, with coin collect- ing and hunting as his hobbies. Farm- ing is Dwight's choice of career. VERNON WILSON has gone to school here from the first grade. Very active in Band, Vernon is an Amateur Radio Operator and employed at Curt's. He likes Physics and Math and plans a career in Electronic Mechanics. DAVE WINTERS, with five years in our schools, played football and was in Drama Club and Choir. Dave pre- fers World History and plans to major in Social Studies or Drama at PAMC or West Texas State University. THE LARGEST NUMBER OF TWELVE YEAR GUYMON SENIORS ever to graduate from GHS are shivering here in December's iciest breezes. From first Graders to Seniors, through elementary, junior high, and secondary classes, always together, these are the original Class of '64. FRONT ROW Mike Reeder, Cecil Kuykendall, Jack Hobson, Burl Potter, Steve Belanger, David Smith, Vernon Wilson, Bruce Breithaupt, Ralph Gray. ROW TWO Jerre Harman, Barbara Potter, Glenda Smith, Tana Walters, Dana Byers, Vicki Boston, Cindy Hohweiler, Lou Ella Yancey, Tina Gray, Kristi Matzek, Jane Hitch, Judy Edenborough, Elaine Hughey, Pat Pierce, Pat Mallard, Sandra Bondra, Annie Cotton, Mary Longbotham, Gail Sheets. ROW THREE Jim Sullivan, Harold Darter, Max Reed, Larry Watson, Marc Caudle, Eddie Thompson, Jean Stewart, Billie Deakin, Lou Cluck. ROW FOUR Gary Win- ters, John Deere, Jimmy Boland, Jerre Behne, Clark Shuler, Mike Smith, Charles Rhoades, Gilbert Mussman, Larry Jeffus. DOWN THAT LONG, LONG ROAD GARY WINTERS, a Guymon twelve year man, played football and was in Woodworking Club this year. One of the Tiger grid captains, Gary names football as his hobby along with hunt- ing. He expects to take up Ranching soon. LOU ELLA YANCEY, another twelve year Senior, is in Choir, where she was a Sweetheart Candidate. She was in Mechanical Drawing and names draw- ing and music as her hobbies. She plans to attend PAMC and Baylor University. SHARON YARD came to GHS two years ago. She is Secretary of her D.O. class. Sharon loves basketball and has made All Star here and All-District her Sophomore year. She plans to major in Commerce at Oklahoma State. these alert Junior officers. President Billy Kasselman acts as a squire for Treasurer Melinda Powell. Vice-President Terry Lane performs the same function for Junior Secretary Kathryn Papay. JAUNTING JUNIORS ROW ONE (read down) Janice Alberty, Sandy Andrews, Wayne Applegate, Phil Barbaree, Norma Barnett. ROW TWO Jan Bistline, Bonnie Blackburn, Linda Bostic THE CLASS OF '65 RIDES HIGH ROW ONE Ruth Bounds, Sharon Bragg, Bobbie Brown. ROW TWO (read down) Chesley Bryan, Nick Byerley, Carole Caddell, Linda Carter, Bruce Chill. 42 ROW ONE (read down) Linda Claycomb, Teresa Cobb, Gerald Costner, Vera Crawford, Robinelle Curtis. ROW TWO (read down) Rose Darter, Mary Dawson, Rae Jean Dixon, Gary Doke, Gene Du Bois. WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? Everything! You Junior newcomers are going to have to learn some Tigerland taboos. Nobody, but nobody, can brawl on the Patio lawn, as John Hendrix from Kubasaki, Okinawa and Duane Shaw from Quinton are doing. We don't even sit on that grass, Joan Ramstad from Borger, Texas, Joy Starks from Oklahoma City, and Karen Keenan from Texhoma. And how about that shirt tail, Kenneth Jenkins from Pauls Valley? And those Bermuda shorts, Joan Singleton from Minto Hawaick, Scotland? Oh horrors! Where does Allen Lindsey of Midland, Texas, think he is with his arms around Vicki Funderburg from Duncan and Carolyn Grove of Liberal, Kansas. Need we remind you, Allen, that you are not in a drive-in theater. ROW ONE (read down) William Ellis, Duane Ermey, Charlene Ford, Grant Forth, Georgeanna Foster. ROW TWO (read down) Marybelle Foster, Vicki Funderburg, Norma Gately, Lonnie Gieselmann, Gary Gloden. SAY IT ISN'T SO. YOU JUNIESI 43 ROW ONE Betty Grice, Carolyn Grove, Ralph Gum, Barbara Hager, Kathryn Heard. ROW TWO Phil Heflin, Larry Heimsoth, Judy Helmke, Frank Hensley, Carolyn Hicks. Ml CHACHOS, MEET US VAYA CON MIGO, AMIGO, and we'll all try out our GHS Spanish, bargaining for colorful Mexican souvenirs like these displayed by Connie Howell, Rae Jean Dixon, and Kathy King in Mrs. Shackel- ford's Spanish class. Serapes, ponchos, pinatas, and posters are only a few of the mementos of the Shackelford's last summer tour south of the Border. ROW ONE (read down) Gwen Hicks, Jerry Hill. ROW TWO Bill Hoffman, Sandra Hollis, Don Holtzclaw, Tamra Hooper, Dannie Hoover. ROW THREE Connie Howell, Millie Huckabey, Janie Imboden, Shirley Ivie, Donald Johnson. MUCH ABOUT MEXICO and our Latin American neighbors can be learned very pleasantly and profitably this year in Mrs. Ruth Shackel- ford's six Spanish classes for Cub and Tiger would-be linguists. Veteran foreign language teacher Mrs. Shackelford has enriched her always interesting classes with her summer Greyhound tour experi- ences in Mexico. IN MEXICO Definitely in the very-good-citizen category are Class of '65 favorites Billy Kasselman and Tamra Hooper. Four years as a Cub and Tiger cheerleader have made tamra one of Tiger- land's best known girls. Billy is president of the Junior Class, and El Tigre class editor, a member of NHS, and a football letterman. WE CHOOSE BILLY AND TAMRA ROW ONE Billy Kasselman, Karen Keenan, Dari Keifer, Cheryl King, Kathy King. ROW TWO (read down) Leon King, Kay Kleffman, Vicki Kirk. ROW THREE (read down) Terry Lane, Sherman Lantz, Larry Lee. ROW ONE Dannie LeGrange, Larry leisure, Karen Leise, Pascal Lindley, Allen Lindsey. ROW TWO (read down) Cheryl lohmann, Dar- lene lohmann, Kenneth longbrake. Two for tea and two for the Tigers are Junior favorites, Sharon Strickler and Frank Hensley. Sharon specializes in cheering Bengal sports stars like Frank to victory. She enjoys her work in Debate and Publications. Jovial Frank agrees with Sharon about a prefer- ence for Psychology, but right now he is emphasizing his liking for sports. WHAT A BIG NIGHT HURLY BURLY! HUSSLE TUSSLE! If you have never worked in the Football Concession Stand, we'll show you how to make a mint of money at only four home games. Junior Sponsors Kear, White, and La Mar help to man the battle stations along with Marybelle Foster, Vic Stewart, Nick Byerley, Art Tuxhorn, Judy Helmke, Robinelle Curtis, Kendall White, and Jack Robinson. AS JUNIORS MAN THE STAND ROW ONE Joey Manduano, Mary Beth Mans, Linda Martin, Bob Martin, Colleen McCubbin. ROW TWO Kelly McMurry, Marshall Miller, Pat Moore, Maurine Mott, Susan Neas. 48 FOR PROM FUNDS ROW ONE Prudence Norton, John O'Leary. ROW TWO Marilyn Oxley, Fern Pafford. ROW THREE Kathryn Papay, Eugene Pellette, Jim Perry. ROW FOUR Bill Pierce, Charlene Place, Melinda Powell. An energetic worker wherever she is placed, Mrs. Georgia La Mar, along with her co-sponsors, keeps the Junior Stand crew on their toes. Late in the first semester Mrs. La Mar transferred from English III classes to the library as Head Librarian. Good Citizenship first and then American History facts is Mrs. Alice Herbel's very happy approach to the teaching of her Junior history classes. In addition to her five teaching sections, Mrs. Herbel is a co- sponsor of the Class of 1964. YOUR CHALLENGE ROW ONE Jim Price, Darrell Quesenbury. ROW TWO Jimmy Quesenbury, Mary Quesenbury. ROW THREE Joan Ramstad, Sarah Reust. ROW FOUR Wardell Reust, Cheryl Rhodes. ROW ONE Linda Rhodes, Jack Robinson, Karen Root, Danny Rountree, L'mda Rowden. ROW TWO Waldo Schroeder, Gayle Scott, Duane Shaw, Christine Sheets, Winnell Sheets. AMERICAN HISTORY CLASSES ARE ALWAYS MEMORABLE when taught by Mrs. Herbel, as Gerald Strate, Chesley Bryan, and Bill Hoffman can attest. WHAT you CAN DO FOR YOUR COUNTRY? J.F.K. BOOKS ARE DEAD THAT ARE NOT READ SAY JUNIOR ALL-A'S ROW ONE Joan Singleton, Tom Sloan, Joe Smelser, Bette Smith, Lenny Smith. ROW TWO Vay Smith, Joy Starks, Harvi Steinkuehler. ROW THREE Sherrel Stephens, Vic Stewart, Gerald Strate. ROW FOUR Sharon Strickler, John Thomson, Sharon Truitt. EMPTY LOCKERS MAKE ALL AS for Junior Class honor students. Watch Phyllis Weeks, Joy Starks, Carol eCadell, Karen Liese, Kendall White, and Dari Kiefer load up those books at three o'clock. Home work helps, and don't think it doesn't. JUMP! LOOK ALIVE! LIVE WIRES SPARKING THE JUNIOR SPIRIT are Class Cheerleaders Sharon Stricter and Tamra Hooper, two of the Tigers greatest boosters, whatever the score. HERE'S THE CLASS OF '65 ROW ONE Phil Tuttle, Arthur Tuxhorn, Paul Tyson. ROW TWO Ginger Wacker, Jerry Wadley, Billy Walker. 53 FORGET I REMEMBER MAMA WE WILL NOT ROW ONE David Walker, Bill Wall, Linda Watson, Phyllis Weeks, Kendall White. ROW TWO Doris Williams, Wayne Williams, Gregory Willis, Terry Winters, Nancy Yelton. WE PRESENT OUR CAST AND CREW With our Junior Play Director Lorenz Boyd, you will recognize variously across the pages Sherrel Stephens as Katrin, Sharon Strickler as Mama, Pascal Lindley as Papa, Lisbeth Boyd as Dagmar, Christine Sheets as Christine, David Walker as Mr. Hyde, Gary Doke as Nels, Marilyn Oxley as Aunt Trina, Norma Barnett as Sigrid, Melinda Powell as Aunt Jenny, Johnny Anderson as Uncle Chris, Maurine Mott as Yessie, Nick Byerley as Mr. Thorkelson, Wardell Reust as Dr. Johnson, Bette Smith and Shirley Ivie as Nurses, Jim Perry as a Soda Clerk, Connie Howell as Madeline, Tamra Hooper as Dorothy, Vay Smith as Florence, Allen Foster as Arne, and Linda Bost.c as the Scrub Woman. CREW MEMBERS variously, Marybelle Foster, Sandra Hollis, Janice Alberty, Vic Stewart, Judy Helmke, Linda Kleffman, Sharon Bragg, Ginger Wacker, Linda Carter, Dari Keifer, Kay Kleffman, Chester Krone, Roger Stanfield, Kieth Bunch, James Imboden, Dan Huddleston, Randy Dusenbury, and Brad Chill. OUR TENDER UNIOR CLASS PLAY HOME, SWEET HOME A lovely nostalgic moment from the Junior Play! Mama and Papa with their attentive children listen to wonderful pages from Dickens, read by their roomer, Mr. Hyde. You will know these actors as Christine Sheets, Lizbeth Boyd, Sharon Strickler, Sherrell Stephens, Pascal Lindley, Gary Doke, and David Walker. 55 ROW ONE (read down) Cheryl Adams, Betty Alberty, Aleta Baker, Mary Ann Baker, Ernest Barnett. ROW TWO (read down) Ike Barrett, Wayne Bartels, Robert Bauer, Kathie Behne, Joe Bennett. CLASS OF '66 ALL SET FOR SERVICE on the clay courts or class con- ferences are Sophomore officers with plenty of rackets to spare. Vice-President Jimmy Foster and President Terry Pierce are ten year charter members of the Class of '66. Secretary-Treasurer Shirley Fenton has only attended Guymon schools for two years, but she's a Tigerlander. ROW ONE (read down) Shirley Black, Jim Blackburn, Pamela Blankenship, Peggy Bratton, Linda Bridwell. ’ .fe. sfc. WE'RE OUT TO WIN ALL SETS ROW ONE Velva Bromlow, Priscilla Bryan, Bobby Burgess, Amy Cadell. ROW TWO Dennis Calsing, Murry Camp, Charles Chandler, Frank Chandler. 58 NEW LOOKERS IN THE GHS LENS EVERYBODY'S NEW HERE, even Photographer R. O. Meador of Davis, Oklahoma, who snapped the superlative individual camera shots you have been admiring all through the 1964 El Tigre. Waiting their turns before the shutter are eleven new Tigerland Sophies from a four state area: Kay Thomas from Liberal, Kansas; Mary Ann Baker, Oklahoma City; Patricia Glassey, Sayre; Donna Murray, Wichita, Kansas; Chris Pyle, Plainville, Kansas; Paulette Maupin, Gruver, Texas; Larry Switser, Trinidad, Colo- rado; Susan Wood, Palco, Kansas; Jackie Cole, Pawhuska; Reita Hunter, Goodwell; Linda Knut- son, Bluejacket; and Photographer Meador. ROW ONE Jackie Cole, Billy Cotton, Steve Couch, Donna Countryman, Jim Cross. ROW TWO Dixie Dain, Barbara Danner, Rex Danner, Donald Darnell, Jerry Davis. 59 ROW ONE Carol Ann Dawson, Linda Dennis, Candy De- Wolfe, RaJeanna Dow, Denise Engeran. ROW TWO Shirlry Fenton, Gerald Ferguson, Jim Foster. '66 PINS YOU NEED A PIN TO BE IN! The official badge of the Class of '66 is the little gold emblem worn proudly this year and for many years to come. Kelly Glendinning and Murry Camp like those whirly ones with the doo-dads, but Kathy Behne and Lyndell Furnish want that cute collegiate style with the '66 guard. DON'T WORRY, SOPHOMORES! Your co-sponsor, Mrs. Mayme Shaffer isn't going to let the guillotine get you. In spite of large sophie sections throughout the day, Mrs. Shaffer has a wonderful record of successful teaching during her eight years in Tigerland. ROW ONE Larry Foster, Lyndell Furnish, John Garrison. ROW TWO (read down) Patricia Glassey, Kelly Glen- dinning, Joyce Goodloe. ROW THREE Michael Gribble, Chuck Griffin, J. D. Harris. AND GRINS TO THE RESCUE comes Mrs. Faye Costner, who every morning helps overloaded English II and III teachers by taking charge of some of the sections of both classes. A Panhandle A and M graduate, Mrs. Costner is a busy wife and mother of three school-age girls. AREN'T BACTERIA JUST TOO DREAMY. At least Candy DeWolfe and Vonda Morgan appear well pleased with their microscopic study of cultures supplied by Jim Cross and Jim Foster in Mr. Smith's Sophomore biology class. «BIOLOGY DOESN'T BUG US ROW ONE (read down) Jerry Haynes, Pauline Herbel. ROW TWO Bobby Hinds, Linda Hohweiler, Judy Hollingsworth, Deborah Howard, Inez Huckabey. ROW THREE Loletah Hull, Reita Hunter, Leona Iverson, Charlotte Jones, Keith Jones. SAY SOPHS ROW ONE Linda Kauffman, Janice Keezer. ROW TWO Susie Kilpatrick, Bill Kirk. ROW THREE Kathy Kittle, Gene Kleffman. SOPHOMORE CO-SPONSOR J. Gilbert Smith, a Tiger- land teacher for five years, has plenty of opportunity to get acquainted with the Class of '66 in five whopper biology classes. Mr. Smith rounds out six hours of daily instruction with a zoology or physiol- ogy class after lunch. 63 FUN AT THE FAIR WHEN IS A SHOT NOT A SHOT? The answer to this ques- tion is found at the Texas County Fair when Paulette Maupin proves that a Schott like Bill can't even compete with her in bringing down the fuzzy fur-bearing bruins. ROW ONE Linda Knutson, Bill Krug, Edna LaDue, Bill Land- reth, Jerry Leisure. ROW TWO (read down) Douglas Liese, Jay Lile, Dale Lively. ROW THREE (read down) Jay Lobit, Cindy McClaflin, Roger McKinnon. A SOPHIE SPECIALTY ROW ONE Karen Martin, Ronnie Martin, Marilyn Mathew- son, Pam Matzek, Paulette Maupin. ROW TWO (read down) Janice Miller, Gary Mitchell, Gary Moen. ROW THREE (read down) Jerry Moore, David Moorhead, Vonda Morgan. 65 Sophomore Favorites Terry Pierce and Cheri Schoonover share the same motivation — they both want to win ball games. Cheri is a Sophie cheerleader, Terry a football and basketball player. They don't agree when school subjects are concerned — Terri loves math, Cheri hates it. But the Class of '66 and all Tigerland vote their approval of these popular people. ROW ONE Barbara Mueller, Donna Nix. ROW TWO (read down) Steve WE'LL TAKE TERRY AND CHERI Murray, Judy Murray, Pamela Newman, Carol Noyes, Zack Olney, Larry Palmitier. ROW ONE Edwin Parker, Jerry Pierce, Doug Pritchard, Chris Pyle, Ricky Ralstin. ROW TWO (read down) Nick Ramey, Vernon Ramsey, Max Reeder. ALONG WITH SUSIE AND JIM No newcomers to the Favorites' list are Susie Slater and Jim Cross; Susie has thrice been named and Jim twice. Susie is in every sort of activity; Jim is an all-sports man. They both are planning business careers. Susie is fond of Publications, while Jim leans toward Engineering. Leisure time finds them both enjoying the out-of-doors. WHAT A DISH IS OUR DAVID MOORHEAD! MESS GUYMON OF 1963 ROW ONE (read down) Joyce Reedy, Carol Reust, Wayne Rhodes, Jolinda Roach, Ronnie Robinson. ROW TWO Joyce Sargent,Cheri Schoonover, Connie Schoonover, Bill Schott, Janna Shackelford. ROW THREE Jane Shaffer, Susie Shaffer, Sherry Shores, Jacque Shuler, Terry Shults. FUN FESTIVAL FIRST FOUR BIG POINTS represented the Class of 1966's lead over the second place Seniors in the Fun Festival, November 7 at Central Gym. The Sophies won the Pantomime, the Extemporaneous Speech, the Instrumental Solo, the Dish-Stacking, the Balloon Contest, the Mess Guymon Parade, and the Ticket Sale. They scored six seconds and five thirds for a total of 59 points with the second place Seniors having 55 points and the third place Juniors with 48. At the left Linda Hohweiler and Gene Weeks pick up three points in the Pie Eating entry. In the picture below Judy Murray and Mike Gribble account for another three points in the Log Sawing contest. ROW ONE Virgilene Singleton, Susie Slater, Rebecca Sloan, Benny Smith, Janice Smith. ROW TWO Donna Stelzer, Tom Stevens. SOPHIES MARK UP A FIRST ROW ONE Lynn Sturdivan, Larry Switser, Rose Talcott, Judy Taylor, Kay Thomas. ROW TWO Larry Thompson, Glennis Tuxhorn, Kathryn Weaver, Karen Webb, David Weeden. ROW THREE Paula Weeden, Gene Weeks. THERE'S NO MAGIC HERE High School Honor lists contain more Sophomore names than those of any other class. The reason is explained in this picture. Textbooks, typewriters, encyclopediae used daily LOTS OF A STUFF make All-A getters like Barbara Mueller, Douglas Liese, Joyce Goodloe, Pamela Newman, and Terry Shults. 70 KEEPERS OF THE SACRED CIRCLE are the Soph's super Cheerleaders Susie Kilpatrick and Cheri Schoonover, a pair of Tigerland's prettiest and peppiest. YELL IT '661 ROW ONE Dorothy Weissinger, Jody Wells. ROW TWO Delvin Wiles, Jim Williamson, Stephen Wilt. ROW THREE Sheryl Winters, Steve Winters, Susan Wood. ROW FOUR Caro- line Wyche, Barbara Wysong, Judy Zabel. ROW ONE Cheryl Ashpaugh, Sammy Backus. CLASS OF '67 ARE SPORTS-MINDED CHEERS FOR THE CUBS count uppermost in the lives of this trim trio of Freshmen cheerleaders, Joleen Carter, Cindy Riffel, and Marlene Chenault. This is Cindy's third term as a Cub pepper-upper; Joleen and Marlene are enjoying their first year with the pompoms. READY FOR THE STARTING WHISTLE are Freshmen officers Everett Mahaney, secretary-trea- surer; Dan Huddleston, vice-president; and Neil Craig, president. They have much to occupy their minds; in addition to their very active participation in sports, they must move the large and energetic Class of '67 toward the goal of graduation into GHS. ROW ONE Jimmy Barnett, Sharon Bennett, Paul Black, Ronny Bohannan, Mike Bostic. ROW TWO Milton Brune, Elizabeth Buford, Keith Bunch, Sherril Calsing, Paul Campbell. ALMOST INSIDE THE GHS CAMPUS are Freshmen Homeroom officers (across both pages) AGRICULTURE: Chaplain Milton Brune, Sergeant Jerry Smart, Treasurer Leslie Coldiron, Secre- tary Mark Noyes, Vice-President Charles Hill, President Sammy Backus. SHOP: Chaplain Danny Hall, Treasurer Dennis Hobson, Sergeant Myron Peterson, Secretary Carroll Kuykendall. Vice- President Wayne Fenner, President Charles Lantz. ENGLISH: Chaplain Garland Strate, Sergeant Waymon Dees, Secretary Gary Ralstin, Vice-President Peggy Papay, President Karen Sharkey, Treasurer Tommy Hutchison. OKLAHOMA HISTORY: Sergeant Ronnie Lewis, Chaplain Terri DuBois, Vice-President Eddie Smith. HOME ECONOMICS: Secretary Pam Ogden. ALGEBRA: Chaplain Elizabeth Buford, Sergeant Riffel, Treasurer Neil Craig, Secretary James Rodman, Vice-President Joleen Carter, President Steve Reeder. SCIENCE: Chaplain Cindy Lowe, Sergeant Fred Logsdon, Treasurer Del Enders, Secretary Grady Grice, Vice-President Dan Huddleston, President Garvin Quinn. A WHOLE FENCE FULL ROW ONE (read down) Joleen Carter, Marlene Chenault, Brad Chill, Leslie Coldiron, Marie Combs. OF FROSH OFFICERS ROW ONE (read down) Dallas Cooley, Steve Couch, Neil Craig, Don Curtis, Elaine Darter. ROW TWO (read down) Robert Dawson, Waymon Dees, Alice Delano, Larry Donovan, Terri DuBois. A MUSICAL MIXTURE pleasing to the ear is Ninth Grade Choir, who put together some very smooth songs with the help of Mrs. Juanita Davis, their director. Just puckering up to Whistle Your Blues Away are ROW ONE Esther Moody, Claudia Smith, Sharon Bennett, Betty Wood, Jerry Gose, Harlan Hinds, Richard Kane, Garland Strate, Tommy Hutchison, Alan Foster. ROW TWO Linda Friesen, Patsy Kleffman, Cindy Norton, Sherry Trujillo, Annette Manduano, Jean Meyer, Carol Lock hart, Gay Ford, Janice Goodloe. ROW THREE Susan Nash, Sandy Trujillo, Carlene Stewart, Patty Quesenbury, Linda Parker, Terri DuBois, Vicki Forman, Wayne Fenner, Charles Lantz, Keith Bunch. Alice Delano is the organization's very obliging accompanist. WHY WE SING WITH PRIDE ROW ONE Randy Dusenbury, Del Enders, Wayne Fenner, Gay Ford, Vicki Forman. ROW TWO Alan Foster, Phyllis Frazier, Linda Friesen, Bing Furnish, Pat Gilliam. ROW ONE Janice Goodloe, Jerry Gose. ROW TWO Jerry Gotcher, Gary Grammer. SUSAN is NINTH GRADE CHOIR QUEEN OUR NINTH GRADE CHOIR QUEEN Susan Nash was crowned by Choir President Harland Hinds at the Spring Sweetheart Concert. Susan, an accom- plished pianist and vocalist, was chosen by secret ballot. Her two runners-up were Marlene Chenault and Annette Manduano. vi WE LIKE NEIL AND SUSAN ROW ONE (read down) Grady Grice, Pamela Griffith, Margaret Gum. ROW TWO Charles Hager, Danny Hall, Ted Helm. Three times a Class Favorite of the Ninth Graders, Susan Nash is popular with the entire Central student body and faculty. With music as a special love, she does not neglect sports or grades. Neil Craig, a newcomer to the favorite list, is a foot- ball star, president of the Freshmen, and hopes to be a dentist after college. NOT STRAIGHT FROM STRAIGHT as this bus picture would indi- cate, but from some of the surrounding states are Freshmen new- comers to Tigerland. Standing are Pat Scott from Optima, Claudia Smith from Tulsa, Milton Brune from Optima, Milene Starks from Carlsbad, New Mexico, Peggy Papay from Optima, and Pam Griffith from Borger, Texas. The Straight Cubs in the bus are Patsy Kleffman, Janice Goodloe, Garland Strate, Tommy Hutchison, Linda Thompson, and Linda Friesen. THAT'S STRAIGHT ROW ONE Stan Helmke, Dennis Hicks, Charles Hill, Wayne Hill, Harlan Hinds. ROW TWO Teddy Hininger, Dennis Hobson, Nancee Hoffman, Kathy Howell, Dan Huddleston. BOYS LOVE NOISE, but maybe this gaseous experi- Bunch, Stan Helmke, and Randy Tea seem relaxed, ment in Mr. Tomlinson's Ninth Grade Science labora- but Alan Foster wants to get the thing finished, tory isn't going to be the big boom kind. Keith ISN'T SCIENCE SOOTHING? ROW ONE Tommy Hutchison, James Imboden, Dicky Jackson, Bill Jeffers, Bonnie Johnson. ROW TWO Betty Jones, Richard Kane, Patsy Kleffman, Chester Krone, Carroll Kuykendall. ROW ONE Charles lantz, Ronnie Lewis, David Lively, Lynn Lockhart, Fred Logsdon. ROW TWO Nancy Long, Marilyn Lovinggood, Cindy Lowe, Nancy Lynn, Linda Mahan. MEET OUR OWN MR. TOMLINSON CHECKING OVER AUDIO VISUAL equipment is veteran Ninth Grade Math Instructor U. P. Lind- ley with Tigerland's own alumnus Max Tomlinson, a PAMC gradu- ate, who is teaching his first year in Ninth Grade Science classes. 81 ROW ONE Everett Mahaney, Deloris Mallard, Annette Manduano. ROW TWO Dale McVey, Jean Meyer, Charles Mingle. ROW THREE Esther Moody, Christy Moore, Harold Mussman. ROW FOUR Monty Nelson. Bob Nickey. PRETTY GUYMON CUBS MAUL ULYSSES LITTLE TIGERS 32-0 to make a perfect night for Junior High's Queen Peggy Papay and her wildly cheering subjects and supporters. With Her Majesty, Queen Peggy and escort, Cub Cap- tain Neil Craig, are her attendants and escorts, Susan Nash with Del Enders and Joleen Carter with Randy Dusenbury. CUBS WIN 32-0 ROW ONE Cindy Norton, Mark Noyes, Margaret O'Dell, Pam Ogden, Peggy Papay, ROW TWO Linda Parker, Myron Peterson, Bobby Philippe, Clairece Quesenbury, Pattie Quesenbury. ROW THREE (read down) Gary Ralstin, Deanna Ramsey, Steve Ratlief. Always intent on giving her Ninth Grade English classes a final brush up and polish before they enter GHS is Mrs. Bessie Adams, veteran Language Arts teacher at Central Junior High School. A SESSION WITH SANDBURG ROW ONE Steve Reeder, Danny Rhoades, Cindy Riffel. ROW TWO Jacque Roach, Jim Rodman, Don Scheuerman. ROW THREE Patricia Scott, R. D. Scott, Karen Sharkey. ROW FOUR Jerry Smart, Barbara Smith, Claudia Smith. ROW FIVE Eddie Smith, Roger Stanfield, Mildred Starkey. ROW ONE Milene Starks, Carlene Stewart, Garland Strate, Ann Strother, Randall Tea. ROW TWO Sandi Trujillo, Sherry Trujillo, Bonita Weeden, Larry Wiggins, Susan Nash. TO GAIN GOOD GRADES ANOTHER WAY TO MAKE AN A, according to these Ninth Grade All-A students, is attention to vocabulary building. Dictionaries and thesauri are always at hand when studying confronts Stan Helmke, Paul Black, Harlan Hinds, Phyllis Frazier, Steve Reeder, Christy Moore, and Garvin Quinn. WE WEIGH OUR WORDS 85 ROW ONE Charles Backus, Haroll Backus, Randy Barnett, Mary Baxter, Rusty Behne. ROW TWO Judy Briles, Jonette Bryan, Carroll Buxton, Jill Byerley, Linda Cole. EIGHTH OFFICERS BOOKS BELONG IN FIRST PLACE with leaders like these Eighth Grade Homeroom officers. Variously across the two pages, you will find the following: MATHEMATICS President Doug McKinnon, Vice-President Cheryl Moyer, Secretary Glenda Pierce, Treasurer Nancy Redding, Sergeant Jimmy Walden, Chaplain Randy King. LITERATURE AND SCIENCE President Randy Barnett, Vice-President Joe Longbotham, Secretary Mary Iverson, Treasurer Galen Davis. Sergeant Brenda Howell, Chaplain David Sheets. ART President Steve Simpson, Vice-President Dwight Rice, Secretary Rita Fitz- gerald, Treasurer Kenny Hamilton, Sergeant Carroll Buxton, Chap- lain Carol Parker. 86 IN HOMEROOMS ROW ONE Wesley Cooley, Terry Couch, Ruth Countryman, Douglas Dale, Jerry Darnell. ROW TWO Galen Davis, Mike Davis, Sharon Davis, Monty Dees, Mark DuBois. HOMEROOM OFFICERS cont. ENGLISH President Pat Long, Vice-President Jerry January, Secretary Douglas Dale, Treasurer Mack Hinchey, Sergeant Cheryl Furnish, Chaplain Charles Claycomb. HISTORY President Russell Behne, Vice-President Gayle Hill, Secretary MonteeSue Long. Treasurer Harroll Backus, Sergeant Monty Dees, Chaplain Terry Moore. CLASS OF '68 87 ALL'S SMOOTH SAILING in pleasant Miss Hoffer- ber's Eighth Grade Science and Literature classes. Miss Helen keeps very busy sponsoring, teaching, and looking after affairs in the Central Junior High office and library. WE CAN PROVE THE FACT ROW ONE Chuck Ellis, Kenneth Ellis, Susan Ellison. ROW TWO Michael Enns, Sherry Ermey, Cecyle Fanning. ROW THREE Sheryl Fergeson, Leon Ferguson. ROW FOUR Ronald Ferguson, Rita Jo Fitzgerald. 88 NOT ALL A'S ARE GRADES Randy Shields, Andrew Thomson and Jean Williams are impressed by the three big A words on Miss Hofferber's display board — Attitude, Ability, and Achievement. LITERATURE AND SCIENCE ROW ONE (read down) Carl Ford, Cheryl Furnish. ROW TWO J. R. Gann, Billy Garrison, James Gately, Marsha Glisson, Mary Golden. ROW THREE Alecia Goff, Judy Grimes, Donna Gunsaullus, Kenny Hamilton, Allen Haun. DO MIX GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TIGER are new members of the Class pf '68. Meet Jimmy Jenkins from Pauls Valley, Monty Dees from Stratford, Texas; Jane Ralstin from Corpus Christi, Texas; Bill Sargent from Pine River, Minnesota; and Jerry La Salle from Lubbock, Texas. NEW TIGER FANS ROW ONE Karen Headricks, Steve Hedrick. ROW TWO (read down) Ina Helm, Gayle Hill, Richard Hill, Mack Hinchey, Monte Hollingsworth. ROW THREE Jo Ann Holmes, Brenda Howell, Richard Imboden, Mary Iverson, Jerry January. ROW ONE Debra Jeffers, Hal Jeffus, Randy King, Steve Kleffman, Jerry La Salle. ROW TWO Monte Latshaw, Ricky Lewis, Harold Lloyd, Montee Long, Pat Long. Starting a victory string themselves, along with the although a knee injury has benched Randy for the great 1963 Eighth Grade Football team, Randy season. Both are excellent students with Math as the Barnett and Dianna Wing have twice been named as subject they enjoy most. Dianna still prefers model- Class Favorites. Both are in every possible activity ing as a career; Randy names Aeronautic Drafting. ROW ONE (read down) Joe longbotham, Sandra Macormic, Charles Madden, Pat McCarrell, Roger McClaflin. ROW TWO (read down) Lola McClanahan, Ellis McCurdy, Billy McIntyre, Douglas McKinnon, Carolyn Martin. ROW THREE Marsha Mingle, Terry Moore. ROW FOUR Cheryl Moyer, Don Murray. OUR PART IN ART 92 ROW ONE Lee Roy Mussman, Robert Newton. ROW TWO (read down) Jim Oakes, Billy Ogan. THE VERY SPECIAL WONDER OF ART holds even Eighth Graders in thrall. Completely captivated by the lovely bright desgins they ere creating are Mrs. Blackwell's artists, Ruth Countryman, James Gately, Ann Reusf, Juanita Williams, and Jeanne Yelton . SOMETHING TO BEHOLD A VERY ORIGINAL TEACHER is Tigerland's Mrs. Blackwell. New art forms and media are always appearing in her classes. Her students are always originating ideas, not copying other artists. Mrs. Blackwell is completing her second year here. GETTING DOWN TO FUNDAMENTALS in grammar are Karen Headricks and Palmer, who, along with Jo Ann Holmes, know that Mrs. Brecheen will settle for nothing less than mastery of basic essentials in her Eighth Grade English. WE LEARNED THAT FROM MRS. BRECHEEN is a remark often heard by English teachers in GHS. The Eighth Grade's fine English teacher, Mrs. Edna Brecheen, has a way of making her instruction last for a long time. ROW ONE (read down) Darlene O'Leary, Karen Palmer, Carol Parker. ROW TWO Debra Parker, Dwain Patton. ROW THREE Angie Peppers, Ann Phillips. P.N. OR P. A. ROW ONE Connie Pierce, Glenda Pierce. ROW TWO Leslie Prater, Linda Quesenbury. ROW THREE (read down) Nancy Redding, Dennis Reed, Ann Reust, Dwight Rice, Ronnie Riffel. ROW FOUR Richard Ritter, Carolyn Robertson, Dennis Rodman, Georgia Royval, Iva Ruby. 95 OUR BOYS STILL SAY TWO WHEELED CUB CADILLACS still make very good campus Mike Wall, Galen Davis, Harold Backus, and vehicles for Eighth Grade young-men-about-the- backseat driver Mary Iverson. BIKES AREN'T SO BAD ROW ONE Ronald Sanford, Bill Sargent, Diana Schott, Carlson Scheuerman, Cheryl Schuerman. ROW TWO Peggy Scott, David Sheets, Luann Sheets, Randy Shields, Vicki Shuler. YEAH. 68! ROW ONE Steve Simpson, Ronnie Sledge, W. D. Smith, Sandra Snodgrass. ROW TWO John Strother, Frank Taylor, Andrew Thomson, David Torrey. ALL THREE AGAIN You've seen the Class of '68 cheerleaders Now as Eighth Graders, yell along with Montee Sue Long, Dianna before. Yes, you're right! They are the same attractive little ladies Wing, and Cheryl Moyer! who cheered their Seventh Grade warriors to victory last year. ROW ONE Sue Tuxhorn, Patti Twining, Jim Walden, Mike Wall. ROW TWO Glovena Wallis, Janet Walston, George Webster. ROW THREE Calvin Weissinger, Lucy White, Jean Williams. ROW FOUR Juanita Williams, Voletta Williams, Dianna Wing. BRUSHING UP THE CORNERS is, symbolically at least, another way of making A's. Eighth Grade honor roll All-A's Mary Iverson, Patti Twining, Joe Longbotham, Randy Barnett, and Nancy Redding know that you must keep the cobwebs and waste paper out of your minds and lockers. 98 ROW ONE Charlotte Winters, Owen Wood, Sharon Wood, Carol Worth. ROW TWO (read down) Barbara Wyche, Joe Yell, Jeanne Yelton. WE HAVE MADE IT TO JUNIOR HIGH ROW ONE Jalonda Adams, Aria Anderson, Mary Anne Atkins, Mary Aycock, James Baber. ROW TWO Janie Ball, Brice Ballard, Larry Ballou, David Batterman, Vicki Batterman. THE CLASS OF '69 NOW WE'RE IN JUNIOR HIGH Squinting and blinking in the bright September sun are the Seventh Grade's Homeroom officers for the first semester. Variously across both pages are ENGLISH President Diane Dietrich, Vice-President Ricky Hooper, Secretary Connie Worley, Sergeant Joan Mathewson, Chaplain Tom Heflin, Treasurer Nancy Northrup. GEO- GRAPHY President Lynn Richard, Vice-President Robert Cherry, Secretary Connie Tuttle, Treasurer Terry Carlton, Sergeant ToddRalstin, Chaplain Raymond Buxton. MATHE- MATICS President Christine Mason, Vice-President Daryl Lewis, Secretary Jenna McCutchen, Treasurer Sandra New- man, Sergeant Robert Strickler Chaplain Gayle Wooldridge. SPEECH President Jerry Bunch, Vice-President Jill McMurry, Secretary Melvin Earl, Treasurer Marilyn Holtzclaw, Chaplain Orin Piepho. SCIENCE President Margaret Truitt, Vice-Presi- dent Una Jo Mahaney, Secretary David Rhodes, Treasurer Steve Thomas, Sergeant Leiloni Stamper, Chaplain Karen Hill. 101 • ' ROW ONE (read down) Raymond Buxton, Phil Byerley, Ronald Carden, Terry Carlton, Robert Cherry. ROW TWO (read down) Diana Cole, Steve Cullop, George Dawson, Cheryle Denight, Diane Dietrich. NEW AT CENTRAL NEW HOMES, NEW SCHOOL Obviously pleased with their first week in Central Junior High are Seventh Grade newcomers to Guymon. Kneeling are Bobby Ginssey from Sayre, Bradley Walston and Orin Piepho from Straight. Standing are Ginger Bauer from Ulysses, Iva Smith from Tulsa, Mary Donovan from Terre Haute, Indiana. Sitting on the pillar top are Allen Magenheimer from Amarillo, Texas, and Steve Thomas from Liberal. LIKE A BOUQUET OF ORANGE AND BLACK MUMS the Class on Central's porch are Sherry Sturdivan and Jill McMurry, with of '69's vivacious cheerleaders display th ir pompoms. Kneeling Christine Mason between. 69ERS ROW ONE Jerry Dixon, Cynthia Dollins, Mary Donovan, Terry Dunkerson, Melvin Earl. ROW TWO Lynne Earnst, Regenia Evins, David Fagan, Kathy Faris, Linda Foster. ROW ONE Randy Foots, Don Frantz, Jo Frazier. ROW TWO Mike Frittz, Janice Gidden, Bobby Glassey. MR. LYNN'S CLASSES ENJOY OUR WORLD STORIES IN STONES Wallace Lynn, Seventh Grade Literature and Science teacher, is fond of geology. His classes have a rare opportunity in sharing his knowledge of two such opposite subjects as science and literature. 104 TO MINGLE WITH THE UNIVERSE Mr. Lynn's colorful and graphic Map of Outer Space has two of his Seventh Grade Literature and Science students ready to take off for jaunt through the galaxies. Mary Ann Lines and Peggy Reed are the space travelers. AND KEEP APACE WITH SPACE ROW ONE Judy Gooch, Gloria Gotcher. ROW TWO Helen Hager, Linda Hamilton. ROW THREE Linda Harlan, Willard Harris, Tommy Heflin, Janet Henson, Gwen Hill. ROW FOUR Geraldine Hicks, Karen Hill, Barry Hininger, Marilyn Holtzclaw, Deborah Hooper. ROW ONE Ricky Hooper, Linda Horner, Sandra Huddleston. ROW TWO Ray Jackson, Dennis Johnson. Just because they are such pleasant people, the Class of '69 chose Jill McMurry and Jerry Bunch as 1963-64 Class Favorites. Cheerleader Jill likes Geography; athletic Jerry likes sports and carpentry. Both are already planning college attend- ance after Guymon High School. WE NAME JILL AND JERRY VERY IMPRESSIVE is Randy Fouts, using every ounce of persuasiveness in his power to convince his captive Speech colleagues Cathy Jones, David Fagan, and Gloria Gotcher in Mr. Boyd's class. IN MR. BOYD'S SPEECH CLASS ROW ONE Gary Johnson, Karen Johnson, Catherine Jones, Laura Kane, Leslie Kasselman. ROW TWO Linda Keezer, J. B. Ketcherside, David Kidwell, Doug King, William King. 107 ADDED UP ROW ONE Linda Latshaw, Tommy Lee, Daryl Lewis. ROW TWO Mary Lines, Pamela Lloyd, Randy Lobit. ROW THREE Sharon Long, Kay Mc- Curdy, Jenna McCutchen. ROW FOUR Dickey McIntyre, Allen Magenheimer. ROW FIVE Denney Mallard, Una Jo Mahaney. MASSES OF MATH STUDENTS meet every hour with Chester Bentley, for many years a teacher in Guymon Schools. You may be sure that his many Seventh Graders are given every opportunity to get a firm foundation in basic arithmetic so necessary to any future courses required at the high school or college level. Here Paul Yell, Kris Truitt, Diane Cole, and Linda Horner of the Class of '69 display their arithmetic agility. WE'RE BIG IN NUMBERS ROW ONE Robert Martinez, Christine Mason, Joan Mathewson, Jill Mc- Murry, Mary Mott. ROW TWO Edward Mueller, Gerald Mussman, Sandra Newman, Nancy Northrup, Viola Norton. 109 Presenting our little world to his very interested Seventh Grade classes is Geography Instructor W. B. Lee. Having traveled a great deal himself, Mr. Lee is a competent pilot to fly his boys and girls on word wings across the breadth of the globe. IN GEOGRAPHY ROW ONE Robert O'Dell, George Pafford, Pattie Patterson. ROW TWO Denise Philippe, Lynn Pickard, Orin Piepho. ROW THREE Donna Price, Todd Ralstin. ROW FOUR Joe Ramirez, Evelyn Reust. GEOGRAPHY HOUR GOES LIKE A RACER with time whiz- are Kathy Faris, Jo Frazier, Ricky Wale, Bobby Glassey, zing along in Mr. Lee's classroom. Learning that America Debra Wood, and Allen Breithaupt. is part of the democratic world so close now to its shores WE GALLOP OVER THE GLOBE ROW ONE David Rhodes, Janet Rigby, Marilyn Ritter, Billy Robinson, Sam Samuels. ROW TWO Donnie Sanford, Janis Schuermann, Judy Scott, Phil Scott, Jim Smith. SEVENTH ALL-A MAKERS ARE GREAT HELPERS ROW ONE (read down) Iva Smith, Leonard Smith, Leiloni Stamper, Laddie Stingley, Robert Strickler. ROW TWO (read down) Bill Strother, Donitfa Stromquist, Sherry Sturdivan, Jim Taylor, Robin Tea. ROW THREE R. E. Thomas, Steve Thomas. ROW ONE (read down) Boyd Thomison, Kris Truitt, Margaret Truitt, Connie Tuttle, Mike Voyles. ROW TWO (read down) Ricky Wale, Bradley Walston, Tommy Will- iams, Brenda Winters, Stanley Winters. ROW THREE (read down) Deborah Wood, Gayle Wooldridge, Connie Worley, Paul Yell, Noreen Zapp. AT OFFICIAL BUSINESS GRADEMAKERS ARE GRIME CHASERS as these All-A Class of '69 girls are proving. Mr. Alden's office has never had such a thorough polishing as it is receiving at the hands of Connie Worley, Diane Dietrich, Joan Mathewson, Sandra Newman, Laura Kane, Diana Cole, and Christine Mason. ACTIVITIES GENE ADAMS 160 lb. Back One letterman TIGERS WIN THREE. TIE ONE. DROP FIVE IN '63 GHS GRIDMEN LAND THREE BERTHS ON ALL- DISTRICT Tiger football Coaches Joe Kiger, Orville Tuttle, and Curtis West pose proudly with their All- District 1-A Seniors — End Gary Winters, Guard Kenneth Hutchison, and Halfback Jerry Behne. MARCUS ALEXANDER 152 lb. Back One Letterman Midway in the 1963 football season the hard-hitting Tigers turned the victory corner and punched out three wins and a tie. They shut out St. Mary's 61-0, played a scoreless tie with Alva's Goldbugs, downed the Ulysses Tigers 22-8, and trounced the Liberal Redskins soundly 14-6. Losses had come earlier in the season and in the final game. Dame Fortune turned her back on the young Tigers as they had dropped the opener to Dalhart 42-14, lost to Trinidad 7-0, took another loss at the hands of Perryton 38-8, bowed to Woodward's Bombers 46-14, closing out the season with a heart-breaking defeat by Tucumcari 7-0. TIGERS 14 - DALHART WOLVES 42 High excitement in Guy- mon High's football opener in Memorial Stadium as Senior Max Reed races for that all important yardage against the mighty Wolves from Dalhart, Texas, September 13. FRANK HENSLEY 190 lb. Back Two Letterman GERALD COSTNER GARY GLODEN 170 lb. Tackle 150 lb. Guard One Letterman JERRY HILL 195 lb. Tackle Two Letterman TERRY LANE 140 lb. End Two Letterman BILLY KASSELMAN KENNY LONGBRAKE 140 lb. Fullback 146 lb. End One Letterman KELLY McMURRY 145 lb. End GUYMON 8—PERRYTON 33 Big Frank Hensley, Junior fullback, grinds out some of the more than 500 yards he gained for the Tigers this season. This gain was made in the Tigers' third home game in Memorial Stadium, September 27. TIGERS ROUTED BY TEXAS RANGERS 33-8 DANNY ROUNTREE 124 lb. Quarterback One Letterman UNIOR DUANE SHAW 125 lb. Halfback GRIDDERS LOOK AHEAD TO 1964 TYPICAL TIGER MANAGERS, with the clean cut, properly attired look GHS coaches appreciate in team members and staff are Bruce Chill and Bill Hoffman displaying some of the Bengals' equipment which they always keep in tip-top shape. PHIL TUTTLE 178 lb. Guard Two Letterman PAUL TYSON 155 lb. Tackle One Letterman TERRY WINTERS 155 lb. Guard One Letterman MURRY CAMP 170 lb. Center One Letterman JIM CROSS 155 lb. Halfback One Letterman JERRY DAVIS 128 lb. Center JIM FOSTER 130 lb. Halfback TIGERS TIE ALVA 0-0 TIGERS 0—ALVA 0 Senior All-District Back Jerry Behne races for that unattainable touchdown territory, only to be stopped by equally eager Alva Goldbugs in the Tiger-Goldbug scoreless struggle October 25 in Guymon's Memorial Stadium. JOHNNY GARRISON 124 lb. Guard BILL LANDRETH 140 lb. End One Letterman JAY LILE 155 lb. Tackle roger McKinnon 143 lb. Quarterback One Letterman TIGERS TROUNCE ULYSSES 22-8 AT HOMECOMING TIGERS 22—ULYSSES 8 Sophomore Halfback Jim Cross grinds out some golden yardage to help make the GHS Homecoming game the highlight of the 1963 football season. To honor their Queen Pat Mallard and a frenzied crowd of Alumni fans, the Tigers pounded their Kansas rivals down 22-8. RONNIE MARTIN 120 lb. Halfback v r Congratulations, Coaches Jim Morgan and James West, on your 1964 Cub basketball record of eight wins to five defeats and Conference Championship. In his first year at Central, Mr. Morgan, as well as Mr. James, teaches History to Eighth Graders and Boys' P.E. CUB CAGERS ARE 3 1 CONFERENCE CHAMPS 1964 SCOREBOARD CUBS OPPONENTS L 30 Dumas 34 W 61 Dalhart 31 L 35 Perryton 38 W 50 Ulysses 43 W 35 Elkhart 21 L 32 Dumas 43 W 29 Spearman 20 W 43 Hugoton 34 W 48 Texhoma 30 L 48 Perryton 50 W 38 Spearman 28 W 37 Texhoma 27 L 38 Liberal 43 524 Total Points 442 124 EIGHTH GRADE SCOREBOARD GUYMON OPPONENTS W 12 Liberal 8 W 30 Gruver 0 W 28 Hugoton 0 W 32 Elkhart 0 W 30 Ulysses 0 W 48 Clayton 0 190 Total Points 8 NINTH GRADE FOOTBALL RECORD EIGHTH GRADE RECORD 6-0 4-2 NINTH GRADE SCOREBOARD GUYMON OPPONENTS L 12 Liberal 22 L 6 Gruver 8 W 22 Hugoton 0 W 25 Elkhart 0 W 32 Ulysses 0 W 54 Clayton 0 151 Total Points 30 FOOTBALL EIGHTH AND NINTH GRADE ROSTER ROW ONE Ronnie Bohannan, Steve Simpson, Mack Hinchey, Calvin Weissinger, Billy Garrison, Gayle Hill, Steve Hedrick, Dwight Rice, Steve Couch, Bob Nickey, Russel Behne. ROW TWO Mgr. Jimmy Rodman, Randy Dusenbury, Mike Enns, Chuck Ellis, Leslie Prater, Jerry January, Charles Backus, Jerry Smart, Dan Huddleston, Del Enders, Bing Furnish. ROW THREE Steve Reeder, Ga'y Ralstin, Doug McKinnon, Jerry Gose, Neil Craig, Grady Grice, Everett Mahaney, Fred Logsdon, Don Curtis, Coach Duane Hunt, Coach James Morgan. ROW FOUR Ellis McCurdy, Kenny Hamilton, Pat Gilliam, Bob Philippe, Sammy Backus, Carroll Buxton, Wayne Hill, Dale McVey, Dicky Jackson. 1964 CUB BASKETBALL TEAM ROW ONE Harlan Hinds, Wayne Hill, Steve Ratlief, Ronny Bohannan, Del Enders, Dan Huddleston. ROW TWO Don Curtis, Fred Logsdon, Grady Grice, Neil Craig, Everett Mahaney, Gary Ralstin, Mgr. James Rodman. 1964 TIGERS' BASKETBALL RECORD 9 WINS - IO LOSSES Guymon High School's 1964 Tiger A Basketball Team turned in a fine record of nine wins and ten losses for their new coach, Duane Hunt, in his first season here. The Tigers with 916 points for the regular season trailed their opponents by only twenty-nine points. Winning their single encounter with Caprock, Texas, and two matches with Liberal, Kansas and Woodward, the Bengals split bills with Elk City, Ulysses, Kansas,and Clayton, New Mexico. The Tigers met Alva's Goldbugs three times, scoring one victory to two defeats. Dumas thrice stopped the Tigers, with Perryton, Texas, and Hugoton, Kansas, each taking one victory from the Bengals. Kenneth Hutchison and Donald Johnson served the Tiger Basketball Teams as managers this year. Lined up in Central Gym are the members of the 1964 Tiger A Team: Rick Ralstin, Chesley Bryan, Paul Tyson, Jerry Hill, Vernon Cost- ner, Gerald Strate, Roger McKinnon, Gene Adams, Jimmy Foster, and Harvey Carter. 1964 SCOREBOARD TIGERS OPPONENTS L 43 Dumas 44 W 57 Caprock 34 L 54 Perryton 59 W 52 Liberal 42 L 47 Dumas 48 L 44 Dumas 55 L 43 Hugoton 62 L 32 Elk City 51 W 34 Liberal 33 W 51 Alva 49 W 50 Woodward 48 W 42 Ulysses 39 L 48 Alva 49 L 55 Ulysses 64 W 46 Elk City 43 L 57 Clayton 62 W 48 Clayton 44 W 64 Woodward 49 L 49 Alva 60 916 Total Points 945 WITH NEW COACH GHS' new Tiger A Basketball Coach Duane Hunt is a graduate of Okla- homa City University and will complete his Masters at Tulsa Uni- versity this summer. Originally from Cheyenne, Okla., Mr. Hunt has previously taught in Tulsa, Mr. and Mrs. Hunt have one small daugh- ter, Sherri Lynn. Tiger Bee Basketball Coach Curtis West has a full day with his coach- ing duties and several sections of Freshman Oklahoma History. Mr. West came to Central in the fall of 1960, having obtained his AB at PAMC and his Masters' Degree at Northeastern State. GENE ADAMS 6'0 Senior Guard 91 Points—4.8 Av. DUMAS 48—GUYMON 47 Gene Adams hits his mark in the December 17 loss to the Dumas Demons, one of three the Texans took from the Tigers, scores on the others being Dumas 44 — Guymon 43 and Dumas 55 — Guymon 44. PERRYTON 59 - GUYMON 54 Jerry Behne connects with a good jump shot in the opener here with the Rangers, the Tigers' only contest with Perryton. JERRY BEHNE 5'9 Senior Guard 22 Points—3.1 Av. HARVEY CARTER 5'9 Senior Guard 309 Points—16.3 Av. VERNON COSTNER 6'4 Senior Center 232 Points—12.2 Av. TIGERS DROP HOME GAMES TO RANGERS, DEMONS AND EAGLES HUGOTON 62 — GUYMON 43 Junior Jerry Hill gets a taste of the mighty Kansas Eagles' brand of ball in the Tigers' worst trouncing of the season, the 19 point loss to Hugoton on January 10 here. CHESLEY BRYAN 5'10 Junior Guard 65 Points—3.4 Av. 129 GHS WINS THREE BIG ONES HERE GERALD STRATE 6'2 Junior Forward 19 Points—1.1 Av. GUYMON 51 — ALVA 49 Junior Chesley Bryan cuts a slice of the Tigers' 51-49 victory over Alva here January 17. The Goldbugs won a revenge victory in Alva, squeaking by with a 49-48 score. JERRY HILL 6'1 Junior Forward 135 Points—7.2 Av. GUYMON 34 — LIBERAL 33 Sophomore Roger McKinnon drives in for two more points in one of the Tigers' two routs of the rival Redskins this season. The Bengals had won an earlier game at Liberal 52-42. TIGERS SPLIT WITH ULYSSES AND ELK CITY GUYMON 55—ULYSSES 64 Seasonal high pointer Harvey Carter reaches for the ceiling to score two points in the Tigers' loss to Ulysses February 14. The Bengals took the road game with Ulysses 42-39. PAUL TYSON 5'10 Junior Center 2 Points—1.0 Av. GUYMON 46—ELK CITY 43 Senior Vernon Costner helps to set up two of the three points to beat out the Elks here February 15. The Tigers lost the game at Elk City 32-51. TIGER B SCOREBOARD TIGERS OPPONENTS W 48 38 Perryton L 34 37 Liberal L 34 41 Dumas L 49 59 Dumas W 48 34 Hugoton L 32 38 Liberal L 39 50 Alva W 50 35 Woodward W 54 53 Ulysses L 36 51 Ulysses W 52 23 Clayton W 65 41 Clayton W 51 39 Woodward L 39 51 Alva 631 Total Points 590 7-7 BEE RECORD COACH CURTIS WEST S BUSY B TEAM out-pointed their oppon- ents 631-590, a lead of 41 points, while evening up their season's basketball record at seven wins to seven defeats. The Bees won single matches with Perryton and Hugoton, won two each from Alva and Clayton, and split wins and losses with Ulysses. Double defeats were with Liberal and Alva. GUYMON 57 — CLAYTON 62 Vernon Costner tips in a field goal in the home game Febru- ary 18. The Tigers stung the Yellowjackets in New Mexico 48-44. JIMMY FOSTER ROGER McKINNON 5'10 Sophomore Forward 6'0 Sophomore Guard 2 Points—.5 Av. 34 Points—2.0 Av. KYJM Xi 3 BEES BUZZ IN '64 TIGER B TEAM ROSTER ROW ONE Rick Ralstin, Dannie LeGrange, Danny Rountree, Dannie Hoover, Nick Ramey, Jim Cross. ROW TWO Jim Foster, Roger McKinnon, Larry Thompson, Gerald Strate, Don Johnson, Paul Tyson. RICKY RALSTIN 5'9 Sophomore Forward GUYMON 64 — WOODWARD 49 Winding up the home games in a blaze of glory, the Tigers bombed the Boomers with field goals like this one Harvey Carter is getting away on February 28. GUYMON TRACKSTERS TAKE THIRD IN THE GRUVER GREYHOUND MEET Senior Jerry Behne took a First in High Jump and Pole Vault and Mike Smith a Second in Pole Vault; Don Craig, Max Reed, and Bruce Chill took Third, Fourth, and Fifth Place in the 100 Yard Dash; Max Reed was Second and Jerry Behne Fourth in Broad Jump; and the Tiger 440 Relay Team of Max Reed, Don Craig, Jim Jeffries, and Jim Cross were Fourth. Dalhart won the Meet with 97 points; Booker was next with 91 points; and Guy- mon was third at 62 points. With Track Coach Joe Kiger and PAMC Practice Coaches Richard lamberson, Eddie Gipson, and P. D. Fletcher are the 1964 Tiger Track Team: FRONT ROW Kelly McMurry, Mgr. Harvey Carter, Jerry Behne, Mike Smith, Phil Tuttle. MIDDLE ROW Don Craig, Jim Cross, Jim Jeffries, Danny Rountree, Larry Switser, Ken Longbrake. BACK ROW Bruce Chill, Kenneth Hutchison, Max Reed, Bill Landreth, Vernon Costner, Terry Lane, Gene Adams. 134 ROOM TO SPARE PAMC'S P. D. Fletcher ob- serves the form which enabled Mike Smith and Jerry Behne to set a new record of 11 feet in Pole Vault at Gruver's Meet. HIGH ON THE HURDLES Jimmy Jeffries, Bill Landreth, and Kenny Longbrake brave wintry March winds to lengthen their hurdling muscles for the Perryton Track Meet March 27. Other track events entered by GHS boys were at Syracuse April 10 and PAMC April 17. SPOTLIGHT ON SPRING SPORTS FIVE FOR THE FAIRWAYS Coach Orville Tuttle and his Golfers are planning a busy spring work-out on the links. Pascal Lindley, Ralph Gray, Rich Ford, Roger McKinnon, and Don Cruzan will enter the Amarillo Relays, Dual Meets with Beaver, Hooker, and Liberal, as well as the Liberal Invitational Golf Tournament. The boys will take two long state trips—to Alva and finally to the State Play-Offs in Lincoln Park, Oklahoma City. ALLEY-OOP! High Jumper Terry Lane flies over the striped wand with pinions spread like an eagle. Panhandle trackmen started training in the snow this year. 135 HOW DO THEY DO IT! Every year Tigerlond Pep Clubs and leaders seem to get better and better. This year's Senior High Club was superlative — such hall decorations, such yelling, such stunts in assemblies! Arms linked across the front row on this page are Junior Cheerleaders Sharon Strickler and Tamra Hooper and Senior Cheerleader Barbara Massey. Behind them kneeling are Barbara Potter, Freda Truitt and Club President Glenda Smith. Standing in the next row are Kathie Behne, Candy DeWolfe, Linda Knutson, Sharon Bragg, Norma Gately, and Linda Bostic. Behind them are Dorothy Weissinger, Sandra Hollis, Rose Talcott, Ruby Iverson, Christine Sheets, and Melinda Powell. On the next row are Glennis Tuxhorn, Shirley Fenton, Aleta Baker, Janice Alberty, Charlsye Nicholes, and Karen Bunch. On the last row are Janna Shackelford, Mary Ann Baker, Judy Helmke, Linda Claycomb, Charlene Place, and Maurine Mott. MORE PEPPERS! Wearing the big G's are three more A Team Cheerleaders - Senior Sue Carter and Sopho- mores Susan Kilpatrick and Cheri Schoonover. Kneeling are Betsy Glendinning, Connie Howell, and Lou Cluck. Behind them are Mary Beth Mans, Linda Rowden, RaJeanna Dow, Susan Wood, Betty Alberty, and Judy Hollingsworth. In the next row are Mary Longbotham, Georgeanna Foster, Susie Slater, Denise Engeran, and Judy Taylor. Behind them are Jerre Harman, Bette Smith, Dixie Dain, Linda Bridwell, Judy Zabel. On the last row are Tara Peppers, Sharon Truitt, Connie Cullop, Karen Martin, Peggy Countryman, and Priscilla Bryan. PEP GALORE IN SIXTY-FOUR! THIS TIGER IS FOR REAL Honoring the famous GHS mascot are our wonderful A Team Cheerleaders Sue Carter, Tamra Hooper, Susan Kilpatrick, Cheri Schoon- over, Sharon Strickler and Barbara Massey. GHS' GREAT PEP CLUB Pep Club Sponsor and Girls' Phy- sical Education Director Mrs. Coy Gibson is seen in her newest role here, honoree at a Pep Club Shower for the Gibson's new little daughter, Julie Ann. CHAMPION SHORT HORN STEER, owned by Lyle Forth. RESERVE GRAND CHAMPION LAMB, owned by FFA's Danny Rhoades. EUROPEAN TRAVELERS FFA's President Larry Jeffus (upper left) and Vice-President Jimmy Foster (lower left) have been entertaining civic clubs with film talks about their last summer's European tour. With the Guymon Club Sweetheart Pat Mallard are other FFA officers for 1963-64 — Secretary Lyle Forth, Treasurer Gilbert Mussman, Reporter Nick Ramey, and Sentinel Charles Rhoades. AT THE SPRING JUNIOR LIVESTOCK SHOW 1963-64 FFA Sweet- heart Pat Mallard sees that Lyle Forth, Jerry Smart, and Harold Mussman have their steers set up properly for judging. DON'T OVERLOOK AGRI-BUSINESS FFA's Jerry Wadley is pointing out to Jerre Harman that there are gobs of jobs in agriculturally related businesses for those who don't care for direct farm production. Note that lists on the Chapter's Display Board at the County Fair. HER ROYAL HIGHNESS Fairy Queen Marilyn, beautiful red milking Short- CHAMPION HAMPSHIRE BARROW at the Fair was shown horn, belonging to a very proud owner, Harvie Steinkuehler, was named by Chapter President Larry Jeffus. Champion over all cows in the Milk Production Class at the Texas County Fair this fall. WE'RE ON OUR WAV IN FFA FFA Advisor Harold Yoakum took over his Vocational Agriculture classes here in the fall of 1958. A Senior co-sponsor this year, Mr. Yoakum has directed Con- cession Stand activities and taught Vocational Agricul- ture I, II and IV. TIRED OF OUTER SPACE, GHS' Carpentry boys are building their own self-contained quarters, a Shop Addition, just east of the present Industrial Arts Building. Instructor Dean Kear's Carpentry boys on the front row are Bill Kirk, Bill Pierce, Jim Williamson, Dennis Calsing, Jerry Leisure, with PAMC Practice Teacher James Lewis. On the second row are Gary Winters, John O'Leary, Jackie Robinson, Wayne Williams and Wayne Applegate. On the back row are Billy Walker, Jim Blackburn, Larry Lee, Joe Bennett, and Sherman Lantz. WE ARE BUILDING A SHOP ADDITION IN CARPENTRY CLASS In their own busy world of hammers and saws, drafting boards, and power tools, Shop Instructor Glen Phillips and Carpentry and Drafting Instructor Dean Kear get won- derful work from their boys and girls, who dare to be different. Both men are GHS alumni; Mr. Kear has been on the faculty for nine years, Mr. Phillips for three years. GREAT BIG DOOR AND LOTS MORE Carpentry's Billy Walker, Wayne Williams, John O'Leary, and Gary Winters are rigging a big overhead door for the new quarters they started in September and will have ready for occupancy by Spring. Measuring thirty by fifty-six feet, the new Shop Addition is built of blocks and bricks for permanancy. WE SQUARE AWAY IN SHOP BRIGHT EYED AND BUSY FINGERED Mr. Phillips' Cub Shop boys-Tommy Hutchison, Monty Nelson, Larry Wiggins, Garland Strate, Randy Dees, and Gary Ralstin-are playing it straight; that is, they are learning the fundamentals of squaring up stock. BULGING WITH BRAINS We drafters Have to be pretty and Billie Deakin will be winding up the year doing archi- smart just to be able to put labels on what we are doing— tectural drafting in Mr. Kear's class. In the little picture stuff like orthographic projections, isometric and perspective below, Melissa Camp and Kelly Glendinning are examining pictorial drawing, and geometric constructions. Lou Cluck, drawings of various types of threads and fasteners. Rick Ralstin, Kenneth Jenkins, Bobby Lewis, Edwin Parker, AN HEIRLOOM CHEST OF DRAWERS gets David Smith's full attention, while on the other side of the work bench Ronnie Martin works on his shop project for Mr. Phillips. In the bottom picture Mr. Kear's Carpentry boys — Jackie Robinson, Bill Kirk, Bill Pierce, and Jim Williamson—are learning to frame members on their Barby-and-Ken size model house. GIRLS IN SHOP? STRICTLY FOR THE BIRDS Two members of the exchange groups between first year Homemaking and first year Shop are these delighted girls. Susie Kilpatrick and Aleta Baker are going to make a hit with the birds. Future Homemakers of America, under the gui- dance of Mrs. Charline White, Vocational Home- making instructor, found a busy and heart- warming year of pleasure and public service in the 1963-64 school term. They operated a Concession Stand at the County Fair. An un- usual assembly program presented by the Club was Backward Glance , concerned with the pitfalls of teen age marriage. Oklahoma's Share in the New York World's Fair inspired the FHA girls to campaign actively for contributions in Texas County. Another public service was the girls' gathering of old Christmas trees to burn in their beautiful annual Epiphany Ceremony in January. Ask the dwellers of Dunaway Manor if they have heard of Tigerland's FHA girls. Our Golden Age citizens will tell you that FHA girls help one day a week in the Rest Home for a very gratifying community project. FHA INITIATES Kneeling are Margaret O'Dell, Clarece Quesenbury, Linda Thompson, Loleta Hull, Caroline Wyche, Linda Knutson, Sherril Calsing. Seated are Terri DuBois, Cheryl Ashpaugh, Esther Moody, Sharon Bennett, Bonita Weeden, Ann Strother, Alice Delano, Sandi Trujillo. Standing are Lynn Sturdivan, Judy Zabel, Priscilla Bryan, Betty Jean Jones, Marilyn Lovinggood, Freda Truitt, Carlene Stewart, Glenda Smith, and Carolyn Knutson. OFFICERS (in the lower picture) are Reporter Shirley Fenton, Song Leader Sandi Trujillo, Vice-President Lynn Webb, Treasurer Gail Sheets, President Ruby Iverson, Parliamen- tarian Glennis Tuxhorn, Historian Barbara Potter, and Secretary Glenda Smith. KIND HANDS. WARM HEARTS IN FHA JERRE HARMAN IS HOSTESS TO MASK AND WIG CLUB. Tiger- land's unique organization for those students interested in stage arts. Their sponsor, Lorenz Boyd, could not be with the group at this meeting in the Hugh Harman home when new members were initiated and plans for an All-School play were discussed. Kneeling are Vonda Morgan, Denise Engeran, Linda Bridwell, Candy DeWolfe, Cheri Schoonover, Glenda Smith, and Susie Slater. Seated are Joyce Reedy, Club President Jane Hitch, Sharon Bragg, Norma Gately, Judy Hollingsworth, Susan Wood, Betty Alberty, Shirley Fenton, Linda Bostic, Aleta Jo Baker, Freda Truitt, and Secretary Connie Cullop. Standing are Jean Stewart, Kathie Behne, Chris Pyle, David Winters, Vice-President David Walker, Johnny Anderson, Nick Byerley, Vic Stewart, Treasurer Jerre Harman, and Janice Alberty. CLUBS ARC A GHS CUSTOM Mrs. Myrtle Lois Bowers, wife of Dr. Royal H. Bowers, Dean of P. A. M. C, came to GHS to teach Algebra II and Higher Arithmetic. Mrs. Bowers has a Masters Degree from Oklahoma State University and taught in the Stillwater schools for three years. A co-sponsor of the Sophomore Class, she has a son, Joe Wayne, who is an OSU Freshman. SHALL WE LAUNCH HIM, OR SHALL WE STUFF HIM? Obviously GHS' Science Club is going to have to take some drastic step to bring Member Jim Boland back to realities like the genetics of fruit flies and the spelling of oscilloscope . Under the expert guidance of Gilbert Smith and Eldon Dennis, Club sponsors, the group meets twice monthly to give further study to science topics in which the members are especially interested. Science Club President Steve Belanger and Steve Wilt are seated in the foreground. Standing in the first row are Wynelda Ingels, Vice-President Mary Longbotham, Betsy Glendinning, Sharon Lowe, Jean Stewart, Sue Carter, David Smith, Clark Shuler, Becky Sloan, Connie Schoonover, Barbara Wysong, and Mr. Dennis. In the back row are Karen Liese, Treasurer Freda Truitt, Lou Cluck, Jim Boland, Don Cruzan, Secretary Curtis Jones, and Chuck Rigby. 145 SO MATH IS FOR MEN ONLY? Look twice and you will see that girls outnumber boys in GHS Chapter of Mu Alpha Theta, National Math Club. Even the club's sponsors are women this year—Mrs. Patricia Lee and Mrs. Myrtle Bowers. This year the club began studying the slide rule, progressing to Russian tests, and then matrices. High point in the activities was a trip to Stillwater in November for the Regional Mu Alpha Theta Convocation. Seated in the newly furnished Math Room are Joy Starks, Janie Imboden, Roger McKinnon, Don Cruzan, Richard Ford, and Clark Shuler. Standing are Karen Liese, Betsy Glendinning, Chuck Rigby, David Smith, Vice-President Steve Belanger, President Curtis Jones, Steve Wilt, Secretary Lou Cluck, Glennis Tuxhorn, Marilyn Mathewson, Jacque Roach, Joyce Reedy, Mrs. Lee, Pamela Newman, and Mary Longbotham. WEATHER OR NO, WE DRIVERS GO Actually, as Miss Margaret Wright's Driver Education classes all know, there are days when road conditions prohibit even the best drivers from getting out on the Panhandle roads. Pamela Newman, Cheri Schoonover, David Walker, and Gary Moen have waited for the Highway Department's All clear! and Miss Wright's approval too before getting the Driver Education car out of the school garage. Snow driving is the order of the day, and slow and easy does it. DRIVER EDUCATION IS A MUST Miss Margaret Wright, Junior co-sponsor, has been instructing GHS students in Driver Education for fifteen years. Each year her classes grow larger, until in 1963-64 she has six full classes a day with other students anxious to be enrolled. Fine records in state and local driving contests and safe driving records of teen age drivers in this area attest to her success in this difficult subject. MOLDS, MEN, MACHE, AND MENANGERIES All sorts of wonderful and curious art objects are shaping up in Mrs. Caroline Blackwell's GHS Art class. Most of the work around this table is with cera- mics; Danny Rountree, Dannie LeGrange, and David Winters are displaying their ceramic figurines. Ready to pour slip into a mold is Gerald Strate. Bobby Lewis shows a figure ready to take from the mold, while Connie Schoonover admires the graceful lines of her vase. One of the delightful papier-mache animals created by the junior high students occupies Mrs. Blackwell's lap. WE GET A START IN ART LOTS OF KNIVES IN OUR LIVES Art students Darlene Lohmann, Rex Danner, and Sandra Bondra are shaping clay and scraping greenware with a vengeance. 147 GHS' CHAPTER OF NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY inducted 1963-64 members at a beautiful candlelight Initiation Assembly on February 21. Gene Adams, NHS President, acted as Master of Ceremonies after Harvey Carter, Vice-President, led the assembly in the Flag Salute. Pat Mallard, Treasurer, represented Scholarship, one of four NHS requisites. Tina Gray, Secretary, presented the Sophomore Probationers, the Senior Initiates, and the Junior Initiates. Jean Stewart, Jane Hitch, and Sue Carter explained the other three NHS standards of Character, Leadership, and Service. Lou Cluck and Melissa Camp conducted new NHS members to the stage as their names were revealed. WE MAKE NHS Mrs. Bryan Lee, teacher of Mathematics Analysis and Geometry, as the new sponsor of National Honor Soci- ety, supervised the impressive Initiation Assembly. Mrs. Lee assists the Society with regular meetings, projects, and plans for the future. A GOAL WE GAINED 1964 SENIOR INITIATES Barbara Massey, Gail Sheets, Jere Harman, Mary Longbotham, Curtis Jones, Steve Belanger, Ruby Iverson, Richard Ford. 1963-1964 JUNIOR MEMBERS AND INITIATES Kendall White. Billy Kas- selman, Janice Alberty, Joy Starks, Phyllis Weeks, Robinelle Curtis, Judy Helmke, Melinda Powell, Karen Liese, Tamra Hooper, Arthur Tuxhorn, Christine Sheets, Jan Bistline, Terry Lane, Joan Ramstad. SOPHOMORE PROBATIONERS Dav- id Moorhead, Terry Shulfs, Priscilla Bryan, Gary Moen, Cheri Schoon- over, Roger McKinnon. 148 NEW LOOK IN THE LIBRARY THE WEATHER OUTSIDE IS FRIGHTFUL, BUT A BOOK INSIDE'S DELIGHTFUL. Snow covered trees remind Tigerlanders that winter is the best time of the year for reading. Mrs. Georgia La Mar and her Oklahoma School Librarians Association members are sorting magazines to go in the new racks along the north wall. Seated with Mrs. La Mar is Vicki Forman. Standing are Cheryl Furnish, Mary Iverson, Lu Ann Sheets, Brenda Howell, Kathy Howell, Nancy Long, Norma Barnett, and Ruby Iverson. In the back row are Jerre Harman, Connie Howell, Judy Helmke, Mary Baker, Janice Miller, Linda Kleffman, and Esther Moody. LOVELY AND LIVEABLE IS OUR LIBRARY All sorts of excit- ing changes have been taking place in the GHS Library since Mrs. La Mar has become librarian. Bare wall spaces are covered with colorful displays, hundreds of books are rebound, and more than a hundred new volumes added. among them the beautiful Britannica Great Books. Library hours are from eight in the morning until four in the afternoon. Senior High Librarians Ruby Iverson, Connie Howell, and Jerre Harman say, Let us help you find the book you've been wanting to read. WE FEED ALMOST EIGHT THOUSAND CUBS AND TIGERS A MONTH Imagine four hundred hungry and particular mouth to feed at every lunch time. The seven superlative cooks at our Senior High Cafeteria manage to come up with wonderful meals much to everyone's liking day after day, with special menus for those pre-holidays like Christmas and Easter. You know their faces. Do all of you have the proper names attached to Mrs. Peggy Costner, Mrs. Norvella Williams, Supervisor Dessie Baker, Mrs. Mary Ellen Landess, Mrs. Ethel Ruth Baker, Mrs. Elsie Beer, and Mrs. Carey Byers? PURVEYORS OF PLEASANT THINGS A PLENTY CUSTODIAL COFFEE CONFERENCE Head Custodian G. O. Cannon meets over a cup of coffee with Floral Darnell of the Administration Building and Perry Gore, Tigerland's new Utility custodian. PIPE ALL HANDS! Many Tigerland problems never fall into the hands of the administra- tion. No, they are for the immediate solution of our Roy E. Beer at the P.E. Building, our Taylor Childress at Junior High, or the most recent addition to the custodians' list, Glen Ritter of GHS. Even tricky heating plants know they have met their masters when these specialists take over. Everything's shipshape! TIGERLAND'S COOKS AND CUSTODIANS With Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Grade Speech Class and one section of Senior High Speech, besides his Debate and Drama classes, Lorenz Boyd is in touch with a very large sector of Tigerland. In his second year at Guymon, Mr. Boyd also directed the Junior Play, I Remember Mama and the Senior Play, Sir James Matthew Barrie's immortal fantasy Peter Pan. 152 DEBATE AND DRAMA WIN WITH WORDS FLUSHED WITH SUCCESS When a Guymon High Debate Team won a trophy at Alva, Jane Hitch, Sherrel Stephens, John Thomson, Sharon Strickler, Terry Shults, Jacque and Jolinda Roach, Garvin Quinn, and Joyce Reedy all dug in to get another winning team ready for next year. TROPHY FOR WINGED WORDS Sharon Strickler with Terry Shults and Pascal Lindley with Steve Winters made up the Debate Team who won this grace- ful trophy at Alva's Northwestern In- tact Speech Tournament. Jane Hitch placed third in Speech at the same meet. AND TAKE A TROPHT WHERE WERE YOU ON THE NIGHT OF JANU- ARY 16TH? Objection! shouts Connie Cullop, as Sharon Bragg, Freda Truitt, and Barbara Potter, in masculine roles, tear into a tense courtroom scene from the famous American murder trial drama, The Night of January 16th. 153 ALWAYS IN DEMAND FOR OCCASIONS OF NOTE Tigerlander's White, Nancy Redding. ROW THREE Jim Walden, Bill Batterman, magnificent full orchestra appears in concert for Teachers' Convoca Glenda Pierce, Eugene Pellette, Jean Stewart, Marsha Glissen, tions, at special assemblies, in District and state contests, and at Jonette Bryan, Cecyle Fanning, Melissa Camp, Kathy King, Maurine Commencement programs. On this page ROW ONE Gwen Hicks, Mott. ROW FOUR Tommy Stevens, Stan Helmke, Arthur Tuxhorn, Christy Moore, Cindy Lowe, Nancy Lynn. ROW TWO Priscilla Kendall White. Bryan, Peggy Countryman, Terry Shults, Angie Peppers, Lucy Orchestra Director Keith Henderson trains peak per- formance instrumentalists in both junior and senior high. Her full orchestra is unique in this area both in size and excellence. Junior and senior high string ensembles and junior high girls' choruses help to fill Mrs. Hender- son's busy school day. ORCHESTRA OCCUPIES TOP RANK SENIOR ORCHESTRA ROSTER cont. On this page ROW ONE Debra Jeffers, Shirley Ivie, Marybelle Foster, Linda Martin. ROW TWO Sharon Wetmore, Linda Hohweiler, Donna Gunsaullus, David Moorhead, Janice Alberty, Paul Campbell, Glennis Tuxhorn. ROW THREE Ruth Bounds, Jan Bistline, Marshall Miller, Gary Grammer, Phyllis Frazier, Linda Cole, Sue Tuxhorn, Hal Jeffus. ROW FOUR Paul Black, Jerry Stingley, Janie Imboden, Lou Cluck, John Hali- burton, Charlotte Jones, Randy King, Wayne Hill, Randy Tea, Murry Camp. OUR INCOMPARABLE ORCHESTRAS READY TO REPLACE SENIOR GRADUATES Soon members of the Junior High String Orchestra will be moving into the empty chairs left by graduates. Members of this talented Cub group are Jenna McCutchen, Mary Atkins, Karen Headrick, David Batterman, Cheryl Furnish, Kris Truitt, Dianne Cole, Gayle Wooldridge, Jannis Gidden, Christine Mason, Carlene Stewart, Richard Ritter, Vicky Batterman, Regina Evins, Willard Harris, Leon Fergeson, W. D. Smith. FLUTE AND STRINGS TRAVEL TO ALL-STATE Instrumentalists Kendall White, Marybelle Foster, Linda Martin, and Melissa Camp were honored by being chosen to participate in All-State Musical activities at Norman this year. SENIOR HIGH BAND ROSTER Janice Alberty, Cheryl Ashpaugh, Robert Bauer, Jan Bistline, Ron Bohannan, Ruth Bounds, Elizabeth Buford, Janice Burke, Amy Caddell, Carole Caddell, Melissa Camp, Murry Camp, Joleen Carter, Brad Chill, Shannon Clark, Lou Cluck, Linda Cole, Sharon Davis, Sherry Ermey, Phyllis Frazier, Jerry Gotcher, Gary Grammer, Donna Gunsaullus, Barbara Hager, John Haliburton, Stan Helmke, Wayne Hill, Teddie Hininger, Ron Hintergardt, Nancee Hoffman, Linda Hohweiler, Janie Imboden, James Imboden, Richard Imboden, Wynelda Ingels, Bonnie Johnson, Charlotte Jones, Kathy King, Randy King, Edna La Due, Jay Lobit, Doug McKinnon, Marshall Miller, Gary Moen, Charles Mingle, David Moorhead, Maurine Mott, Cheryl Moyer, Judy Murray. OUR TIGER BANDS BAND EXECUTIVES here are Librarians Clarice Quesenbury and Janie Imboden; Eighth Grade Representative Doug McKinnon, Drum Major Jean Stewart, President Melissa Camp, Vice-President Lou Cluck, Secretary Wynelda Ingels, and Treas- urer David Moorhead. TWIRLERS HELP WIN TROPHIES Above at the left are the Tiger Band's Twirlers Charlotte Jones and Kathie King, rated Superior at the Alva Marching Contest. Wynelda Ingels is holding the trophy won at Alva's Regional Marching Contest. Melissa Camp displays the Outstanding Band Trophy from the Shattuck Festival. Jean Stewart shows the First Concert Band Trophy from Shattuck. At the PAMC Spring Festival the Band won the Sight Reading trophy David Moorhead is holding. Lou Cluck holds a trophy from the Alva Homecoming Parade. 157 HONORED IN 1964 SENIOR HIGH BAND ROSTER Pam Ogden, Clarice Quesenbury, Joan Ramstad, Garvin Quinn, Cindy Riffel, Jacque Roach, Dennis Rodman, Karen Root, Karen Sharkey, Donna Stelzer, Jean Stewart, Tom Stevens, Randy Tea, Linda Thompson, Phyllis Weeks, Larry Wiggins, Vernon Wilson, Dianna Wing, Donnie Mallard, Steve Noyes, Jerry Stingley, Ellis McCurdy. Band Director Harry Ward came to GHS in the fall of 1960 and has enjoyed great success with the Tigerland band groups from elementary, junior high and senior high levels. More than three hundred Kittens, Cubs, and Tiger instrumentalists come daily under his skilled baton. This year his Senior High Band was invited to participate in the Convocation of Bands at Three Flags Over Texas, the whole group working to raise funds needed for the trip to Texas. The Bands made numerous ap- pearances at school and pubilc gatherings and sponsored some fine musical groups in concert here. Among the latter was the West Texas State Teachers Band from Canyon with Fred Carter and Darrell Garrison, GHS alumni, as a part of the membership. JUNIOR HIGH BAND ROSTER J. Adams, H. Backus, J. Ball, L. J. Ball, L. Ballou, J. Beavers, R. Behne, P. Byerley, R. Campbell, $. Cullop, M. Dees, D. Dietrich, J. Dixon, C. Dollins, L. Earnst, K. Faris, D. Frantz, M. Frittz, A. Goff, M. Golden, J. Grimes, T. Heflin, J. Henson, G. Hill, M. Hollingsworth, R. Hooper, R. Jackson, L. Kane, D. King, W. King, J. LaSalle, T. Lee, D. Lewis, R. Lobit, M. Long, S. Macormic, J. Mathewson, P. McCarrell, K. McCurdy, B. McIntyre, D. McIntyre, M. Mingle, T. Moore, M. Mott, N. Northrup, J. Norton, D. Patton, J. Ramirez, E. Reust, R. Riffel, C. Roberson, D. Sanford, J. Scott, J. Smith, R. Strickler, S. Sturdivan, C. Winters, C. Worley. MARCH 5—A GALA NIGHT FOR MUSICAL COMEDY FANS Directed by Mrs. Juanita Davis with Choreo- grapher Mrs. H. C. Hitch, Jr. and Accompanist Peggy Davis, the Choir's Bye Bye Birdie was a smash hit. Appearing variously on these pages are the cast and crew: Albert Peterson, Dan Hays', Rose Alvarez, Jane Hitch; Teen Agers—Betty Alberty, Janice Alberty, NOrma Barnett, Barbara Mueller, Charlene Place, Cindy Hohweiler, Glenda Smith, Sherrel Stephens, Lynn Sturdivan, Judy Zabel, Linda Carter, Robinelle Curtis, Dixie Dain, Linda Hohweiler, Linda Claycomb, Deborah Howard, Dari Keifer, Vicki Kirk, Terry Shults, Kay Kleffman, Richard Ford, Carolyn L'Roy, Mary Beth Mans, Barbara Potter, Janna Shackelford, Lonnie Childress, Ursula Merkle. Denise Engeran; Kim Macafee. Christine Sheets; Mrs. Macafee, Tina Gray; Mr. Macafee, Dave Winters; Two Sad Girls, Sharon Bragg and Linda Bostic; Dancers, Vonda Morgan and Vicki Boston; Mae Peterson, Ginger Wacker; Reporters, Harold Darter and Wardell Reust; Conrad Birdie, Herman Bunger; Guitar Man, Curtis Jones; Conductor, Terry Lane; Policeman, Larry Palmitier; Mr. Johnson, Gary Doke; the Mayor and Wife, Pascal Lindley and Ann Smith; Hugo Peabody, David Moorhead; Randolph Macafee, Jerry Haynes; Mrs. Merkle, Kathryn Heard; Gloria Rasputin, Lou Ella Yancey; Ed Sullivan's Voice, Terry Shults; TV Stage Manager, Vic Stewart; Charles Maude, Gerald Costner; Shriners, Terry Lane, Jim Perry, Bill Krug; Stage Manager, David Walker; Drummer, Stan Helmke; Lighting, Betty Smith and Russell Behne; Stage Hands, Eighth Grade Boys. WE PRESENT BYE BYE BIRDIE Cheers for Mrs. Juanita Davis for a bang-up job of directing the Choir in its '64 Musical, 'Bye Bye Birdie. 159 TINA IS 1963-64 CHOIR SWEETHEART Wearing the diamante tiara which marks her as the GHS Choir favorite girl is Tina Gray with her attendants Loo Ella Yancey and Cindy Hohweiler at the Sweetheart Concert February 21. AND GET A KICK OUT OF CHOIR Mrs. Earle Winters is no novice in the field of Business. She brings to her typing classes a back- log of experience in secretarial assignments with CBS, Piper Aircraft, and the United States Gov- ernment. She seeks to develop salable skills in her Typing I and II work, asking only that each student can truthfully say, This is the best that I can do. IB THE BEST THAT I CAN DO DIFFICULTIES ARE SMOOTHING OUT! That incomprehensible Scott, and Betty Jo Barbee's pencils go flying over the muddle of squiggles and hooks is beginning to look like shorthand pad as Judy Taylor plays a dictation record on words to Mrs. Grammer's Shorthand girls who were so the Department's new machine, puzzled in September. Now in December Karen Liese, Gayle BUSINESS CLASSES ARE BOOMING ONE HUNDRED SIXTY-THREE TIGERLANDERS strive to build basic skills, to control errors, and to establish speed in Mrs. Winters' Typing I and II classes. Of this number, ninety-seven are Sophomores, a record group for the Department. Typing II is limited to Seniors who specialize in Business Typing and who may go directly into office work from high school. Here taking one of their regular timed writing drills are J. D. Harris, Carrol Reust, Inez Huckabey, Linda Knutson, and Donald Darnell. IN TYPING. SHORTHAND AND BOOKKEEPING Teaching the largest Bookkeeping and Shorthand classes she has ever had in her fourteen years at GHS, Mrs. John Grammer also finds time to assist Principal Coy Gibson with his office busi- ness. Mrs. Grammer is pleased to have an un- usual number of boys in her classes since job op- portunities are many for male secretaries. 162 Diversified Occupations Co-Ordinator R. P. Duke is the first Tigerland teacher to check in every morning with his first class at 7:45 A.AA. Mr. Duke, active in political and civic organizations, came to GHS in the fall of 1949. TERRELL GRAY TRACTOR MECHANIC EVERYBODY DOES A DISPLAY Terrell Gray, who works for S H Tractor, is flanked, by Jim Quesenbury of Quesenbury Building Con- tractors, Robert Barrett of Hinds Trucking Co., Vernon Costner of Carter Painting, Bill Johnson of Ideal, and Lennie Smith of Fowler Oil Co. OCCUPATIONS T l CLUB OFFICERS for 1963-64 are Sergeant-at-Arms Terry Davis, Vice-President Bruce Craw- ford, President Harvey Carter, and Secretary-Treasurer Sharon Yard. Terry is employed at Arrow Head, Bruce at Guymon Drug, Harvey at Village Sixty-Six, and Sharon at Guymon Schools. DIVERSIFIED WE WORK IN TWO WORLDS IN THE COOL-COOL-COOL MORNING, rolling in right on the minute, are John Deere of Stanfield's; Mary Lynn Couch of Guymon Memorial Hospital; Terry Davis, Bruce Crawford, and Carolyn Simpson of Zellers Jewelers. DIVmiFIED( OCCUPATIONS IS GROWING EVERY YEAR Dividing their time between school and a job ar® ®ob_ Dav's °f Dav,'s M k dy Mart, John Taylor of Adams Hard Facing Co., Cleo Hoover of the Yucca Motel, Darrell Quesenbury of Bob's Market, Lonnie Gieselmann of the Only Aluminum Co., and Charlene NOT MUCH TIME FOR MAGAZINES Working and studying don't leave much leisure time for Cherryal Dixon of Guymon Municipal Hospital, Darrell Andrews of Cal's Laundry, and Sandra Eaton cf McDonald's Department Store. TRADE PUBLICATIONS KEEP US POSTED Enjoying Diversified Occupations' ever changing magazine rack are Annie Cotton of TG Y, Grant Forth of Hill's Texaco Station, Doris Williams of Cal's Laundry, Johnny Anderson of Air-Comfort Co., Betty Harris of Guymon Municipal Hospital, and Terry Winters of Thomas Food Store. 163 ADVERTISERS HARRISON'S FASHION S HOP 404 N. Main 338-7220 WISE LITTLE WOMEN are Judy Zabel and Kathy Behne. They are stocking up on lovely suiis, dresses and sweaters from Mrs. Frances Harrison's Spring line of Bobby Brooks and Koret of California. FASHION SHOP clothes can make Sophies look like Fifth Avenue models, Judy and Kathy! BILL'S CHAMPLIN S Highway 54 Main St. GUYMON DAIRY KREEM Highway 54 E. 338-3839 TAMRA IS BACK AGAIN Juniors Tamra Hooper and Sharon Strickler, take time off from their El Tigre advertising jaunt to refresh with a wonderful DAIRY KREEM snack and cold drink. Just drive up, call in your order, and quick as a wink you are enjoying that DAIRY KREEM brand of food flavor. T A T I O N 338-9953 OPEN 24 HOURS Bill Eden s CHAMPLIN STATION appeals especially to Tiger stalwarts like Nelson Dusenbury and Marcus Alexander who want their Wheels to Go, Man, go! For washing and greasing, those fine Firestone Tires and Batteries, or Road Service, dial 338-9953, and big Bill or his boys will come running. GUYMON DRUG CO. 412 N. Main 338-6262 CUPID HAS A HELPER Bruce Crawford maintains GUYMON DRUG'S repu- tation for quick and courteous service as he helps Butch Wilson and Jerry Behne choose Valentine chocolates for their girls-of-the month. Tigerlanders like GUYMON DRUG'S fountain service, camera supplies, cosmetics, Hallmark cards and fine prescription department with free delivery. CAMPBELL AGENCY GERALD DIXON REAL ESTATE First National Motor Bank Bldg. 338-6612 SMITH'S FAMILY SHOES 316 N. Main 338-7216 ALWAYS FIRST WITH THE LATEST Glenda Smith, part time helper at SMITH'S FAMILY SHOES, shown Wynelda Ingels the new arrivals in footwear. When looking for something different, head for SMITH'S FAMILY SHOES first. Albert and Sandra Smith always have a big welcome for all El Tigre boosters. WELCOME, TIGERLANDERS The friendly folk at CAMPBELL'S AGENCY and in GERALD DIXON REAL ESTATE and OIL LEASE office extend warm greetings to Guymon students and invite them to visit their bright new location in the First Naitonal Motor Bank. DAVIS MELODY MART 705 N. Main 338-3613 ENJOY LIFE MORE WITH MUSIC Jean Stewart, Band Drum Majorette and Orchestra member, knows what she is talking about when she recommends DAVIS MELODY MART'S beautiful Baldwin and Wurlitzer organs. Listen to that sparkling reso- nant tone, Aleta Jo Baker! MELODY MART stocks all the latest hit tunes, sheet music, and fine record players. WADLEY CHEVROLET CO. 122 W. Fifth 338-6622 CORVETTE COULD BE THE CAR IN YOUR LIFE. Terry Lane and Chen Schoonover have no doubts about this sleek, low, and lovely red Corvette convertible. But just in case you aren't the sports car type, let GHS alumnus Gary Wadley and his staff show you those other great highway performers—Chevrolet, Chevelle, Chevy II, and Corvair at WADLEY CHEVROLET. ESTHER'S 501 N. Main 338-7141 TO TRAP THOSE TIGERS Exotic prints, exciting solid colors bloom in ESTHER'S new spring sports line. Maurine Mott and Jan Bistline will be shedding their winter woolens and blossoming forth in Mrs. Houser's comfortable school, sports, and party clothes. 168 GUYMON FLORAL SHOP 116 4 E. Fourth 338-6375 LIKE A FAIRY GARDEN Mrs. Charles Simmons and Mrs. Alfred Mouser are showing Judy Edenborough the charms of their expanding quarters at their new location on East Fourth. They are ready to take those Tiger orders for perfect prom corsages. GUYMON FLORAL SHOP can fill any floral need. WESTERN AU TO STORE 502 N. Main 338-3902 A POPULAR PLACE WITH TIGERLANDERS Girls like Barbara Wysong and Linda Kauffman gravitate toward WESTERN AUTO'S record players; boys like to shop for auto accessories and hunting equipment. Paul Clark and the staff at A. J. Trent's are always ready to serve you at the convenient corner store. 415 N. Main ZELLERS D J STORE 422 N. Main 338-6212 CONVENIENT FOR COUPLES OR SINGLES Going steady? You must see D J'S His and Her matchmate sweaters. Mrs. R. L. Jeffries is showing her son Jim and his senior classmate Pat Mallard some beautiful look-alikes. Boys, let Carl Hunt and Jerry Reeder fit you up for the Junior-Senior Prom or college clothes for next year. JEWELERS 338-7 017 MORE VALENTINE IDEAS THAN CUPID Carolyn Simpson of the silver and gold charms to their bracelets too. And for those bridal ZELLERS sales staff is a member of the Class of '64. That is Junior showers, pick a piece or a place setting in exquisite sterling silver. Class President Billy Kasselman choosing a necklace for a special The Gift of a Lifetime. February friend. Tigerland girls are delighted to add ZELLERS FIRST NATIONAL BANK Fifth Main 338-3346 THINK FIRST OF THE FIRST Guymon's FIRST NATIONAL BANK at Fifth and Main is a land mark of service and integrity for the Panhandle area. Cashier Bob J. Hays, a GHS alumnus, shows Charlene Place and Linda Claycomb what a vault looks like. Remember that the FIRST is A Good Bank to Tie to. GRAY'S FINE CLOTHES 406 N. Main 338-7027 A SPECIAL INTEREST IN THE CLASS OF '64 Sue Certer, Senior cheerleader, and all of GHS enjoy shopping for attractive ward- robes at GRAY'S FINE CLOTHES. Ralph Gray, whose son, Ralph, Junior, is a classmate of Sue's, always stocks young apparel for Tigerlanders and the young-at-heart. K G Y N N.E. Guymon 338-6533 TIME TO SPIN DISKS Bob Wise of KGYN is enjoying a chat with Tigre Co-Editor Mary Longbotham. Tigerlanders appreciate the many hours of fine recordings aired by the Panhandle's most powerful station. The schools of the area are grateful for the fine publicity given their many activities by KGYN the Voice of the Panhandle. OCONNOR PHARMACY 1309 N. East 338-6694 PACKING FOR A TRIP? Girls like Kristi Matzek and Barbara Massey, packing for their first year at college, will include non-allergenic cosmetics, aspirins, and first aid equipment from O'CONNOR PHARMACY. Bill O'Connor invites all Tigerlanders, their parents, and friends to visit his up-to-date new pharmacy conveniently located in the hospital area of east Guymon. GLEN RECK DRUG 416 N. Main 338-6822 FOUNTAIN FAVORITES AT RECK'S You can depend on meeting anyone you want to see at GLEN RECK'S. Sometime during the busy day they are sure to drop in for one of Cindy Hohweiler, Jerry Moore, or Jo Ann Behne's fountain specialties. Perfect prescriptions, drug sundries and pharmaceuticals, you can rely on service at RECK'S. THE OKLAHOMA MOTOR HOTEL Highway 54 E. 338-9962 THE LOOK OF LUXURY, THE CHARM OF HOME Sharon Wetmore and Jim Cross, Tigerlanders with good taste, suggest that you house your Pioneer Day guests at Guymon's elegant OKLAHOMAN where they may enjoy the facilities of an attached Cafe and heated swimming pool in the sunny patio. WALDROP CLEANERS 116 W. Fifth 338-7126 FOR THAT CRISP, CLEAN LOOK Just walking into WAL- DROP'S makes you feel that you're going to emerge ready for your Big Moment. Popular Pepper Sharon Strickler com- pliments Mrs. Ernest Waldrop on that just-like-new look a WALDROP cleaned garment always has. PARKVIEW PHARMACY 115 E. 13th 338-7565 COME AS YOU ARE Use PARKVIEW PHARMACY'S convenient drive-in window, or if you prefer, do as Doug Pritchard and Jerry Moore are doing — browse around for your drug needs. PARKVIEW'S Forrest Grider will even sell you some of the famous Pangburn chocolates or non-allergenic cosmetics. PARKVIEW features city-wide prescription delivery. TEXAS COUNTY MOTOR CO. Hwy. 54 East 338-6946 TWENTY-SIX YEARS OF FINE FORD SERVICE Rich and Gay Lynn Ford are grandchildren of R. M. Ford and children of J. D. Ford, GHS '40. The Fords are co-owners with Ralph Brown, GHS '28, of TEXAS COUNTY MOTOR. The Wimbledon white Galaxy 500 shown here helped FORD win the Motor Trends Car of the Year Award for 1964. HENSON FUNERAL HOME 6th at Quinn 338-3321 A TIME TO CONSIDER The beautiful new clock at HENSON'S provides a good reason for a friendly exchange of after school greetings between Terry Pierce, Jerry Davis and Marlin R. Henson. Remember HENSON'S for Ambulance Service at their convenient corner location, 6th at Quinn. LUMBER MART Home of Famous Brands 1411 N. Main 338-3344 JOIN THE ARMSTRONG CEILING WATCHERS Barbara Mueller and Joyce Reedy meet Danny Kaye at the LUMBER MART. We invite you and your friends to come in to shop for your build- ing needs with us. 172 NASH BROTHERS 524 N. Main 338-3301 PLENTY OF PONTIACS TO CHOOSE FROM This is the beautiful But there are at least two dozen other models — Tempests, LeMans. wide-track '64 Bonneville Vista that Mrs. J. W. Doke is displaying GTOs, Pontiac Sixes and V-8s, all with Wide-Track — so why would to a very much interested Lou Ella Yancey and Kenneth Hutchison. anyone go looking anywhere else for a car? KIDDIE KASTLE WINIFRED'S 417 N. Main 338-6160 DATE DRESS IN MIND? Denise Engeran and Linda Bridwell have something very special in the Best Dress line on their shopping list, and Mrs. Winifred McAnarney has the very one. New coowner, Mrs. Joe Dunham, has a fresh stock of tiny tot apparel, wonderful for shower gifts of distinction. WILSON'S JEWELRY 409' 2 N. Main 338-3846 BEST FOR BACHELORS Although Cecil O. Wilson could show these Tigers some of the most beautiful diamonds in town, Phil Tuttle, Frank Hensley, and Kenny Longbrake are interested only in rings with a masculine appeal. WILSON'S invite you to inspect their watches and jewelry at the convenient mid-Main Street shop. MRS. D'S AND JJARD 617 N. Main 338-7343 D-LIGHTFUL! D-LICIOUS! D-tECTABlE! Those spring suits from Mrs. D's! Sherrel Stephens and Vicki Kirk will find just the accent for their lovely brunette and blonde hair. MRS. D is a specialist in finding unusual and style-packed clothes for Tigerettes and their mothers too. Don't buy dresses until you see MRS. D'S. QUAL GUYMON OFFICE SUPPLY 511 N. Main 338-3253 SUGGESTION FOR THE GRADUATE'S GIFT Why not a beautiful Bible or book of spiritual meditations from GUYMON OFFICE SUPPLY? Just looking at the lovely bindings and attractive make-up of the literary treasurers displayed by Mrs. Dale Bridwell inspires Bruce Chill and Dixie Dain. The L. O. Hamiltons stock every con- ceivable study aid. L S' STUDIO 109 E. 12th 338-6002 LOOKING AHEAD TO '65 Photogenic Kathy King and Rae Jean Dixon are already planning their Senior pictures for next year. Roy Qualls, El Tigre's photographer, is equipped to do all types of photography — groups, weddings, advertising, portraiture — with prompt, efficient service. QUALLS' appreciates your patronage, and you'll be pleased with QUALLS'. R. G. MORGAN SON DIRT CONTRACTORS 338-959 or 985 Guymon BR 3-6015 Borger, Texas ANYWHfcRE THAT DIRT GOES IN THE HIGH PLAINS No earth beside one of her father Jack Morgan's truck and trailers, with moving job is too large for R. G. MORGAN'S equipment. Talented Senior Nelson Dusenbury, who wouldn't mind trying his skill at Vonda Morgan, Tigerland songstress and dancer, stands proudly handling this particular automotive assembly. SIXTY-SIX SUPER SERVICE Hwy. 54 Quinn 338-9959 FOR PEOPLE WHO CARE FOR THEIR CAR Roger Pritchard, GHS '63, gives the full SIXTY-SIX SUPER SERVICE treatment to the car of David Walker, GHS '65. Bob Goldsberry and his station attend- ants are ready for your automobile and farm implement needs around the clock. Call 338-9959 for Road Service. ROUNTREE DISTRIBUTING, INC. 647 Hwy. 54 338-7401 WELCOME TO OUR NEW LOCATION Burl Potter, GHS Senior, had no trouble finding the new ROUNTREE DISTRIBUTING, INC. store, and you won't either if you are looking for farm, home, or auto supplies at fair prices. Wally Rountree and Mrs. Rountree are anxious to see all you Tigers and Tiger followers at their bright new Highway 54 store. 175 OKLAHOMA TIRE SUPPLY CO. 505 N. Main 338-6424 STRICTLY ON THE RECORD OKLAHOMA TIRE AND SUPPLY CO. Has a wonderful record of pleasing their customers with quality merchandise at sensible prices. Jack Lewis and his son Dale invite Tigerlanders like Janice Keezer to visit their record player department. 176 LUCAS 5 10c STORE 408 N. Main 338-3771 SOMETHING FOR THE BOYS Mrs. Julia Lucas and her grandson, Allen Breithaupt, are enjoying this group of Tigerland shoppers. GHS' famous Norfolk Trio — Steve Belanger, Herman Bunger, and Curtis Jones — with their managers David Smith and Clark Shuler, have come to LUCAS 5 10 for neckties, bow ties, and neckerchieves to please their audiences. Mrs. Lucas carries a complete line of school supplies, beauty sundries, seasonal cards, and sundries. CITY SHOE SHOP 613V2N. Main 338-7432 LEATHER TOGS MAKE TIGERS PURR Where is the highschool boy or girl who desn't feel on-top-the world when garbed in the velvety luxuriance of suede? Proprietor Herman McCutchen and his daughter Jenna have found eager buyers in Murry Camp and Bill Landreth, Tiger athletes. CITY SHOE SHOP specializes in curing those ailing shoes and boots. BOUNDS INDUSTRIAL MACHINE SHOP Box 607 Guymon 338-7012 WHAT A BEAUTY! As polished and perfect as the fine work it turns out is the vertical Turret Lathe John Bounds and Billie Dawes are displaying to Tom Stevens and Ruth Bounds. For precision machining operations, BOUNDS INDUSTRIAL MACHINE SHOP is your best choice in the Tri-State area. TRI-STATE SUPER MARKET 206 N. Quinn 338-6218 TRI-STATE'S ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIP CONTEST APPEALS TO TIGERLANDERS Every year Seniors from all over the area vie for votes in TRI-STATES' $500 Scholarship Contest. Courteous student clerks like Steve Noyes and Steve Couch make shopping for fine foods a pleasure. Name brands like Shurfine and Hunt's assure you of quality. BOSTON FURNITURE CO. 302 N. Main 338-7025 HOUSEHOLD MAGICIANS Senior Vicki Boston and her father Charlie Boston show Carolyn L'Roy, another member of the Class of '64 how to make dirt disappear like magic with the GE washday twins and HOOVER S light weight portable vacuum. BOSTON FURNITURE can furnish your home from living room to kitchen. LONG'S AGENCY 112 E. Fifth 338-3341 PART AND PARCEL OF THE TIGER PEP Tiger Pep Club members, Connie Cullop and Freda Truitt, think first of LONG'S AGENCY when they need to insure their school cars. Every Tigerlander knows Carl McKinnon of the LONG'S AGENCY family. GHS and Slippery Rock owe Carl a debt of gratitude for his sports broad- casts in Memorial Stadium. You can rely on LONG'S, an Indepen- dent Agency, for your General Insurance. MILLER MOTORS, 102 S. Main INC. 338-3535 BIG, BLACK, AND BEAUTIFUL Steve Belanger is thinking, Wouldn't the Norfolk Trio travel in style in this one? Francis Miller of MILLER MOTORS points out that this Chrysler New Yorker with its luxurious black and white interior appointments is as stylish as the Imperial but priced to please the average American family. BIG S SUPER Nall Tucker Village MARKET 338-3585 COME IN AND MEET THE SHILLINGS Tigerlanders Jerry Stingley and Chuck Griffin invite you to meet their new employers Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Shilling and their son Harold. The Shillings feature Shurfine Foods and quality meats and vegetables. BIG S SUPER MARKET is open week days from 7 A.M. - 8 P.M., Sundays 9 A.M. - 8 P.M. They give Buccaneer Stamps. 178 OLIVER'S 520 N. Main S HO E STORE 338-3212 IT'S IN THE BAG! OLIVER'S Senior Class shoe clerk, Roland Adcock, doesn't get half an opportunity to use his sales talk here. Donna Roseberry and Bette Smith are already sold on OLIVER'S big floral purses. As for Terry Roseberry, he's getting ready for Pioneer Days with the best looking boots a cowboy ever swung over a horse. THE KITCHEN MART 414 N. Main 338-6113 BEAUTY PLUS DEPENDABILITY Maytag and Frigidaire appliances from Guymon's centrally located KITCHEN MART can save the homemaker untold hours of household drudgery. See Al or Don Fajen and let them help you select the right, bright new range, washer, dryer, or electrical appliance for your home. CENTRAL STATES FINANCE COMPANY, INC. 921 N. Main 338-3318 SERVING THE PANHANDLE AREA Mrs. Ruby Ermey of CENTRAL STATES enjoys a visit with two of Tigerland's leading vocalists, Robinelle Curtis and Christine Sheets. CENTRAL specializes in helping you meet your money needs at reasonable rates. Talk to Manager M. D. Mike Svoboda or his staff at CENTRAL. STEAK HOUSE 320 N. Main 338-3933 WHERE TIGERS MEET TOWNERS Head for Tommy Fergeson's STEAK HOUSE for your after-school pie or sandwich. Better yet wait until dinner time and enjoy their specialty — big juicy steaks, served just as you like. Like John Thomson and Betty Alberty, you will see why downtowners make the STEAK HOUSE a daily habit. Waitress Prudence Norton invites you to drop in for one of Tommy's breakfasts. SOUTHWESTERN PUBLIC SERVICE CO. 501 N. Ellison 338-6511 UTILITIES ARE YOUR CHEAPEST COMMODITY SOUTHWESTERN PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY'S handsome and practical yard and entry lamps are a safety appliance you can't afford to be without. Harold Darter, Judy Hollingsworth, and Greg Willis, these lamps operate for pennies a night with a Magic-Eye cut-off of electricity by day. MARY LA-RUE KNIT AND NOVELTY SHOP 203 E. Fifth 338-3082 SOMETHING FOR THE BOYS! Mary Ellen Newton and La Rue Dickson can claim a First. What other Knit Shop has the school's top athletes relaxing their sore muscles over the knit-one, purl-two, drop-some. Frank Hensley, Jim Perry, Phil Tuttle, and Bill Landreth bought their yarn and received the free instruction MARY-LA RUE SHOP offers with all yarn purchased. INDEPENDENT HARDWARE 508 N. Main 338-7234 FOR THE JUST RIGHT HOUSEHOLD ACCESSORY Sophomore Lynn Sturdivan of Sturdivan's INDE- PENDENT or Senior Romie Mason invite you to inspect the wonderful variety of home and farm needs always in stock for your pleasure and service. 338-3020 modern supermarket, are IDEAL! Enjoy the daily surprises — fresh and potted seasonal plants, new records, tasty pastries and breads, gay rugs, beauty needs. That's IDEAL! MEAT MAKES MUSCLES Tigerlanders, and everyone else, need meat for radiant health and energy. IDEAL clerks Senior Bill Johnson, Junior Ralph Gum, and Sophomore Kenneth Jenkins can assure you that conditions in the Meat Department, as elsewhere in this DUCKY'S CAFE Hwy. 54 E. 338-3522 HE CAN NOT ONLY EAT 'EM BUT BAKE 'EM! Donny Mallard, pro- their Family Style meals. Shirley Fenton and Billy Kasselman. will prietor of DUCKY'S, has for two years held the pie eating champ- you want one or both of these mouth watering meringue topped ionship of GHS, and no wonder! He trains on the tastiest home- beauties ? made pies in the Panhandle — one of DUCKY'S specialties with BUNCH FUNERAL HOME FOR DIGNIFIED SERVICE Arle Bunch is proud of his daughter Karen and her friend Glenda Smith, both leaders of the Class of '64. BUNCH FUNERAL HOME too is a leader in outstanding work in the community, providing thoughtful consolation and dignified service at time of need. LANGSTON BUICK 223 W. Fifth 338-6626 ABOVE ALL, IT'S A BUICK Senior Gary Winters wants to see what's under the hood of Buick's wonderful Wildcat for 1964. With the lithe feel of a sports car, the Wildcat has the go-power men like. Peggy Hendrix votes for Wildcat's traditional chic interior and Forest Green hue. Let LANGSTON'S show you the incomparable 1964 Buick line of fine cars. GUYMON DINING ROOM Hwy. 54 W. 338-9986 FOR TOWNSFOLK, TIGERLANDERS, AND TOURISTS Specializing in a Smorgasbord and every variety of delicious food, prepared just the way you like it, the GUYMON DINING ROOM is a mecca for travelers as well as Guymonites. Jerry Haynes, Ronnie Bauer, and Connie Howell have stopped by the con- veniently located south-end restaurant for an afternoon snack of sandwiches and pie. CITY NATIONAL BANK 401 N. Main 338-6561 FROM THE INSIDE OUT Cashier R. D. Bennett shows Tigerlander Dixie Dain one of the multiple steps in CITY NATIONAL'S metic- ulous handling of your accounts. With their customers' free parking lot in the Three Hundred Block on Main and their Auto Bank at 4th and Ellison, CITY NATIONAL BANK offers complete Banking Service. DEE'S BEAUTY SAL ON 401 S. Main 338-3434 HOME OF HIGH FASHION HAIR STYLES Tigerland's loveliest lassies look that way because, like Mary Dawson and Cathie Mussman, they have their hair cut and styled at DEE'S BEAUTY SALON. Owner-Operator Dee Adams and Operators Jo Tryon and Donna Bradt invite you to call for an appointment. You'll like those air conditioned dryers. ALLEN'S, INC. 122 E. 5th 338-6538 THREE BIG G'S AT ALLEN'S Paulette Maupin and Max Reed can road and farm service, re-capping, repairing, and vulcanizing, tell you what those big G's stand for — G for Guymon High, G Always ask ALLEN for an estimate when you need tractor or for Goodrich Tires, and G for Minneapolis-Moline's grand farm tire service, tractor the G 706. ALLEN'S name in the Panhandle stands for fast CLAYCOMB BATTERY AND ELECTRIC CO. 102 N. Main 338-7110 FOR FARM, HOME, AND INDUSTRY CLAYCOMB BATTERY AND ELECTRIC CO. can supply any type of gasoline engine, large or small, with Factory Approved Sales-Service. Kay Kelffman and Linda Claycomb advise you to call CLAYCOMB for all your battery and electric problems. KING WELDING WORKS 802 E. Stonebraker 338-6750 BRING IT TO KING'S If you can't bring your welding job to KING'S, let them bring their portable equipment to your farm or business. Janice Alberty and Kathy King aren't prejudiced; they just know that Joe King is the man to contact for electric and acetylene welding, industrial or oil field, and for ditching. 183 IT rv KATHLEEN'S BEAUTY SALON 1717 N. May 338-6811 BOUFFANT, BUBBLE, SLEEK, OR HIGH STYLE Kathleen Conrade and her trainee daughter Ramona know what GHS and Cub girls and their mothers like in hair styling and cutting. Ramona is just placing a smiling Terry DuBois under the dryer. Wait til those rollers come out! She'll be lovelyl J . M . M c D 405 North Main GUYMON COCA-COLA CO. 1307 N. Main 338-6448 SMALL SIZE, KING SIZE, COKE'S THE REFRESHINGESTI Jennie Smart drops by GUYMON COCA-COLA CO. to thank Dean Huckins for his efficient, friendly service to the Senior Stand this year. That's the youngest member of the Huckins' family. Dean's grandson Kenney, ready to haul a tricycle load of the Panhandle's best beverage, Coca-Cola. O N A LD CO. 338-3861 LADY IN A MAN'S WORLD Fabric-wise Ann Smith, El Tigre co- editor, finds much to please her in the men's wear department at MCDONALD'S. After a chat with Manager Al Chill and his Tiger son Bruce, Ann will be checking on the newest arrivals in spring formats and summer travel clothes in the adjoining ladies' ready- to-wear section. ADAMS HARD FACING CO. 510 N. Maple 338-3326 FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION OF FARM TILLAGE TOOLS IN THE U.S. El Tigre's Cheryl Adams, her uncle, Halsey Wetmore, and his Eighth -Grade daughter, Sharon, invite all Tigerlanders to visti the ADAMS HARD FACING CO., a thriving Guymon industry. THE PIZZA CELLAR 402Vi N. Main 338-3733 THAT CANDLELIGHT ATMOSPHERE IS MOST APPEALING Add unusual decor, interesting location, perfect pizzas, and a pair of Tigerland alumni — Max Baker and Jim Reese — as proprietors, and you have Guymon's most continental cafe. Meet Kenneth Jenkins, Bob Davis, and Johnny Garrison at the PIZZA CELLAR tonight. 407 N. Main 338-3472 FROM SHOES TO SHINES Every type of shoe from sturdy work footwear to the daintest formal slippers can be seen on GUYMON SHOE STORE'S well-stocked shelves. Mrs. Fred Jordan is displaying a compact shine kit to Lynn Webb and Kelly Glendinning, for good shoes are even better with care. KNUTSON ELEVATOR, INC. Highway 54 N.E. 338-3381 WEIGHING THE PANHANDLE'S GOLD The trees outside the window are bare now, but, come July, the rich ripe wheat will be pouring into the Panhandle's largest grain elevator, and Guy F. Bennett of KNUTSON'S could really show Linda Haigood and Bonnie Blackburn how to weigh and grade wheat. LANDESS ELECTRIC 1624 N. Main 338-3822 FILL YOUR LIFE WITH PHILCO There is satisfaction for every member of the family if your appliances come from LANDESS ELECTRIC. Mother will love her stove and refrigerator. Dad will relax in air conditioned comfort. Everybody, like Lou Cluck and Eddie Thompson, will thrill to Philco's matchless 1964 televisions and radios. LOBIT STUDIO For the Finest in Photography 114 N. Oklahoma 338-6072 FUTURE PHOTOGRAPHERS AND MODEL FOR THE LOBIT STUDIO Jay Is the cameraman, Randy is adjusting the lights, and Betty is their model. Lobit Studio does top quality portraits, wedding candids and commercial work to the satisfaction of their customers. Call Ed and Marjie Lobit for the finest in photography. Member of Professional Photographers of America, Professional Photograph- ers of Oklahoma (Board of Directors), and the Panhandle Pro- fessional Photographers Association. PATRONIZE OUR 1964 EL TIGRE ADVERTISERS Admas Hard-Facing Co. Allen's, Inc. Big S Super Market Bill's Champlin Station Boston's Furniture Bounds Industrial Machine Shop Bunch Funeral Home Campbell Agency The Cellar Central States Finance Co. City National Bank City Shoe Shop Claycomb Battery and Electric Dairy Kreem Davis Melody Mart Dee's Beauty Shop D J Store Ducky's Cafe Esther's First National Bank Glen Reck Drug Gray's Guymon Coca-Cola Co. Guymon Dining Room Guymon Drug Guymon Floral Shop Guymon Office Supply Guymon Shoe Store Harrison's Fashion Shop Henry C. Hitch Feedlot, Inc. Henson Funeral Home Ideal Food Independent Hardware J. M. McDonald Company Kathleen's Beauty Salon K. G.Y.N. Kiddie Kastle King Welding Works The Kitchen Mart Knutson Elevators Landess Electric Langston Buick, Inc. Lobit Studio Long's Agency, Inc. Lucas 5 10 Lumber Mart Mary-LaRue Knit and Novelty Miller Motors, Inc. Mrs. D's and Jjard Nash Bros. Implement Co. O'Connor Pharmacy Oklahoman Motel Oliver's Shoe Store Oklahoma Tire and Supply Parkview Pharmacy Qualls Studio R. G. Morgan and Son Rountree Distributing, Inc. Smith's Family Shoes Southwestern Public Service Sixty-Six Super Service Steak House Texas Co. Motor Co. Tri-State Super Market Wadley Chevrolet Co. Waldrop Cleaners Western Auto Wilson's Jewelry Zellers Jewelers 187 FOR SIGNATURE SEEKERS


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

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

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

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Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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

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

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Guymon High School - El Tigre Yearbook (Guymon, OK) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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