Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL)

 - Class of 1958

Page 1 of 128

 

Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1958 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1958 volume:

A, O ffZ 1 xA- ■ f' t °n ‘ 1958 LITTLE GIANT ‘All The World’s A Stage HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL . . . HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS AH the world's a stage A nd all the men and nonien merely players. Ttxy hare their exits and their entrances; A nd one man in his time plays many parts . . . —Shakespeare The stage is set; this is our school 3 “I am not a teacher of physics; I am a teacher of students. ” We, the 68th graduating class of Highland Park High School dedicate our LITTLE GIANT to a man whose influence will long he felt by all of us. This is our way of expressing gratitude for his patience; guidance; and sincere devotion to his students. His example will sen e us forever as a guide in our quest for wisdom and truth. MR. WILLIAM EINBECKER The Playbill Highlights................................6 Curricular...............................11 Activities...............................23 Organizations............................33 The Class of 1958....................... 51 Underclassmen............................81 Athletics................................99 Indexes and Acknowledgments.............117 5 As the curtain goes up on the drama of HPHS the the spotlight falls upon . . . Some of the freshmen ns they make their debut at the Girls' Club Big-Little Sister Tea . . . The football team as the fans applaud them for their long desired victory. . . 6 Our prima donna and her lead- ing man as they play their roles as Queen and King of the 1957 Junior Prom . . . Our musical thespians as they pre- sent ‘Domi in the Valley” for the choral department’s assembly . . . The Little Giants of the gridiron when they give their star performance of the year. .. The drama and tense expectation of a crucial moment on the basketball court... The spectaculars staged by swimming team . . . College Days, which help us to choose the port we shall play in later life . . . 1 hose nix) non LI be the technical directors of tomorrow . . . 10 And our apprentices practicing for their roles in the future. Curricular Just us the stars of the theatrical nor hi one much of their success to the directors by whom they are taught; so also are we indebted to the teachers; faculty; and administra- tion who direct our careers in high school 11 A. E. Wolters Principal Presenting Our Directors Excellence is the criterion for everything con- nected with the faculty and administration of High- land Park High School. The teachers themselves are among the best in the country: many hold advanced degrees and arc experts in their chosen fields. The administrative officials have been carefully trained to handle the problems of guiding the students and running the school. In the classroom these teachers work to give the students a comprehensive and in tensive course of study. The consequence of all this is the fact that our school has been named one of the thirty-eight top schools in the country, and that its students leave fully prepared for their chosen vocation or college. Miss Elyse Rinkenberger Dean of Girls Mark Panther Dean of Boys Leslie Libakken Administrative Assistant 12 Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds— Mr. Zacskc. Nurse’s Office staff— Miss Laswcll, school nurse, and her assistant. Mrs. Ryall. Board of Education Office staff STANDING: Miss Ubl. Miss Tucker. Mrs. Morrison. SEATED: Miss Evert. Mrs. Krcst. Main Office staff STANDING: Mrs. Stevenson. Miss Werhane. Mrs. Kehr- wald. SEATED: Mrs. Ledlie. 13 Guidance Department— Mr. Philippi, director of guidance; Miss Jchle, Miss Watts. Mrs. Cummings. The Representatives of Our Community The Board of Education STANDING: Mr. Francis Weeks, Mr. Emilio Cadamagnani, Mr. Robert J. Korctz. SEATED: Mr. Samuel R. Rosenthal. Mrs. James M. Tibbetts. Mrs. J. Sigurd Johnson, Mr. Frank Conley. 14 “A Teacher affects eternity. He can never tell where his influence lies.”—Henry Brookes Adams Sorting periodicals are Miss Teare. head librarian; and Mrs. M. Swanson, assist ant librarian. Reviewing grammar points are these members of the Eng- lish department. LEFT: Mr. Cianchetti. freshman, junior. Miss Morgan, junior, sen- oir; Mr. Kraft, freshman; Miss Bcckmire, freshman. CENTER —STANDING : Mr. Munski. journalism; Miss Guncll, speech; Mrs. Logefeil. freshman, sophomore, junior; Miss Hartman, sophomore, junior; Mr. Perry department head, freshman, junior. SEATED: Mrs. Peers, freshman, sophomore, senior; Miss Shine, modern literature. RIGHT — STANDING : Mrs. Kluge, developmental reading; Mr. O’Neal, freshman, senior; Mr. Stewart, freshman. SEATED: Miss Hubbs. speech; Mr. Covert, developmental read- ing: Miss Sherrod, drama, public speaking. 15 16 Members of the mathematics department review those complex formulas. STANDING: Mr. Leake, algebra, geometry; Mr. Wildermuth, algebra, geometry, consumer math; Mr. Winkley, advanced algebra, algebra, geometry; Mr. Hall, consumer math, algebra, geometry. SEATED: Miss MacMartin, department head, trigonometry, solid geometry, advanced algebra; Mrs. Christofferson, geometry, algebra, consumer math. Can these mathematicians be lost in numbers? STANDING: Miss Oleson. consumer math, al- gebra. geometry; Mr. Stunkel, advanced algebra, algebra, geometry. SEATED: Miss Greenwald, algebra, geometry, consumer math; Miss Wood, geometry, consumer math, algebra. Members of the science department dream up new experiments. BACK ROW: Mr. Einbecker, physics; Mr. Floyd, chemistry; Mr. Hanson, chemistry. FRONT ROW: Mrs. W. Swanson, general science; Miss Cardinal, general science. The biology teachers seem pleased with their latest batch of frogs. Mr. Broming, Mr. Heck. Miss Oleson, Mr. Braun. Proving the world flat are these members of the social studies department. Mr. Libakken, department head: Mr. Philippi, so- ciology: Mrs. M. Swanson, American history; Miss Prahl. American and ancient history; Mr. Rohling, American government and modern European history. Found surveying current events are the rest of the social studies department. STANDING: Mr. Benson, American government and ancient history. SEATED: Mr. Vyn, American history; Miss Hartz, American government; Miss Spencer, modern Euro- pean history; Mr. Schrader, sociology. These teachers find that troublesome sub- junctive in all four languages. STANDING: Miss Bogs, Spanish; Miss McKichan, French; Mr. Stewart, Latin. SEATED: Mr. Kraft, Spanish; Miss Joiner, Latin; Mrs. Sandahl, Latin; Miss Rodenbeck, Spanish, German; Miss A. Anderson, Latin; Miss Maltas, Spanish. The members of the music department keep a date with Mozart. Miss N. Anderson, choral; Mr. Finch, instrumental; Mr. Kyle, choral. 17 18 The art department creates a masterpiece. Mr. Kolbe, freshman, sophomore, senior; Mrs. Esserman, freshman; Mr. Palmgrcn, freshman, general art, sophomore, junior. Discussing new patterns are the home eco- nomics teachers. Miss Neff, nursery school, home economics; Miss Cairncross, home economics; Miss Bean, home economics. The core department seems to be lost in the tropics. Miss Tarry, freshman; Miss Boghascn, junior; Mrs. Handbcrg. sophomore, creative writing; Mr. McMullen, sophomore; Mr. Repsholdt, great books and junior. The commerce department contemplates breaking the world's typing speed record. SEATED: Miss Wall, vocational counselor, typing, office practice: STANDING: Mrs. Maxey. sten- ography, typing, commercial arithmetic; Mr. Rhodes, typing, salesmanship, commercial ge- ography; Mrs. Mount, typing; Mr. Van Hulzen, department head, bookkeeping, commercial law, commercial arithmetic. The lineup members of the boys’ gym department. Mr. Davis, posture, sophomore swimming: Mr. Carlson, intramural director, sophomore, junior, senior sports; Mr. Ault, health, freshman, junior, senior swimming; Mr. Burson, junior, senior sports, sophomore swimming; Mr. Ostrander, health, fresh- man swimming; Mr. Kane, junior, senior sports, sophomore swimming; Mr. Christensen, health, freshman swimming; Mr. Kendig, department head, junior, senior, swimming: Mr. Baldrini, sophomore swimming. Consulting the blueprints are the building trades teachers. Mr. Carpenter, related science, mathematics, draft- ing; Mr. Kehrbcrg, building trades. Observe rest gym with the girls’ physical education department. STANDING: Mrs. Changnon, department head, freshman, sophomore swimming, junior, senior life saving: Mrs. Philipson, health. SEATED: Miss Lill, freshman; senior sports, Miss Haddy, freshman, sophomore swimming, junior sports; Miss Bablcr, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior swimming; Miss Falk, freshman, sophomore, junior, senior swimming; Miss Romano, senior swimming, freshman, sophomore, junior sports. Here are the live wires of the industrial arts department. FRONT ROW: Mr. McLaughlin, industrial arts, woodshop; Mr. Devereaux, driver education; Mr. Bolle, auto mechanics, industrial arts; Mr. Ham- merberg, mechanical drawing, industrial arts, wood- shop. BACK ROW: Mr. Carpenter, industrial arts; Mr. Baldrini, industrial arts, auto mechanics. 19 The equipment being used by these boys in the industrial arts department is only a part of the excellent facili- ties available to HPHS students. Every period of the day students come to the library to take advantage of its varied resources. 20 Behind the Scenes These workers are the stage crew in the drama of HPHS. Besides keeping our beautiful school clean and in good repair, they also drive the buses, set the stage for all dances, meetings, and banquets, run the cafeterias, and look after the grounds. Without them the school could not go on. Cafeteria Staff FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: Catherine Tillotson, Hilda Isscl, Mercedes Berube, Charles Faye, Helen Hamm. Caroline Pehan, Annie Vandcr Bloomen. Cafeteria Staff Margaret Schriver, Lilas Lencioni, Dcliso Vincenzo, Emily Sandberg, Marge Hamp- ton. Johanna Lenzcni, Jessie Norrlen, Ida Harden. 21 These are the men who make up the power house crew. STANDING: Mr. Sikorski. Mr. Coughcnour, Mr. Peterson. KNEELING: Mr. Palmer, Mr. Godwin. Keeping the snow off the ground are the grounds keepers. Mr. Larsen, Mr. Thompson, Mr. R. Winkler. What are these mainte- nence men building? Mr. Amidci, Mr. Thompson, Mr. C. Winkler. Recognize the friendly smiles of the bus drivers? STANDING: Mr. Ladurini, Mr. Zaccari, Mr. McClory, Mr. Pantlc, Mr. Baillie, Mr. Bock. KNEELING: Mr. McLeran, Mr. C. Winkler, Mr. Palmicri, Mr. Loland. The custodians are always working to keep the buildings clean. STANDING: Mr. Rizzolo, Mr. Chioni, Mr. Pianccnza, Mr. Crippen, Mr. Gilbertson, Mr. Lcdlie. KNEELING: Mr. Sordyl, Mr. Scornavacco, Mr. Glader, Mr. Rossi, Mr. Kolasa. 22 Activities The students need activities in which to work to discover their capabilities and talents in much the same way that an actor must hare a day in which to perform before be can learn anything about his dramatic ability. 23 Carol Johnson and Grady Ellis, the reign- ing monarchs of the 1957 Junior Prom, “La Mer Enchantee. “La Mer Enchantee” “Pure enchantment” are the words to describe the Junior Prom of 1957. “La Mer Enchantee” was held at the high school on the night of June 8. Upon their arrival, the guests entered into a world of turquoise and coral, successfully suggestive of an underwater world. A giant pink octopus presided over this deep sea kingdom, attended by a myriad of colorful fish. Grady Ellis and Carol Johnson were crowned King and Queen of our Enchanted Sea with Jackie Orner, Steve Eisen, Ann Feuchtwanger, Ronnie Foreman, Mary Ann Sheahen, and Mike Julian in their court. Almost five hundred people danced to the music of Johnny Lewis and his orchestra and acclaimed this as the most enchanting prom ever. 24 Dave Rudolph and Barbie Kurtzon, rulers of the 1956 Prom, attend Queen Carol and King Grady. The royal court consists of Ann Feuchtwanger. Mary Ann Shcahcn, Jackie Orner, Steve Eisen, Mike Julian, and Ronnie Foreman. The officers of our junior class headed committees to plan and work on the Prom. Standing are Soran Leahy, vice-president; Mr. Hall and Miss Bogs, the class spon- sors; and Dave Echt, president. Seated are Sue Davidson, secretary; Carol Harris, social chairman; and Nancy Carlson, treasurer. The Juniors were there to enjoy the fruits of their labor and to make Lar Mer Enchantee” a night to remember. 25 Double trouble is pre- sented when Lucia Mur- phy, Nancy Carlson, Carole Barcn, Jeanne Dicrking, Lois Brown, and Barb Henderson get their arms and legs con- fused. Happy Birthday! Birthday Banquet was the theme of the Mother Daughter dinner, commemorating the thirtieth birth- day of Girls’ Club. Traditionally, it was the early girl who got the ticket, for some hardy souls came to school at four o’clock in the morning to wait in line. The banquet was held on October 17. The waiters supplied by Boys’ Club served the ladies without mis hap. After the dinner the girls, their mothers, and the general public enjoyed the show Calendar Cut-Ups, put on by an all-girl cast. This benefit performance raised money for the Girls’ Club scholarship fund. The juniors help the show to go on. The show was supplied with acts from all four classes. Lm 25 ‘Blue; White, Fight, Fight ” Homecoming, October 26, 1957, began with the traditional snake dance through the business district of Highland Park. An exhuberant pep rally led by the cheerleaders followed and roused the spirits of the fans in preparation for the game against Oak Park the next day. The game was one of the most ex- citing of the whole season, with the Little Giants holding Oak Park scoreless in the first half and yielding only one score in the second. Pep Club initiated its card section with enthusiastic accept- ance. The Homecoming dance was sponsored by Var- sity Club. Fletcher Butler provided the music for the hoarse, but happy. Highland Parkers who had had a Homecoming of which to be proud. Wc Three: Josie Bye. Diane Teeter, and Susie Sinclair serenade the team at the Homecoming Dance. Some senior men” sport thsir en- thusiasm at the Homecoming pep rally. Swingin' it arc Wally Stein. Toby Aaron. Harry Vignocchi, Billy Meyerhoff, Grady Ellis, and Mike Julian. 27 . Liz Lexington and Smith (really Sue Whitehead and Billy Mcycrhoff) get romantically side tracked in their race to the moon. Stunts Wins “The Human Race ’ The chief project of the senior class was the pro- duction of Student Stunts. This year’s theme was a timely one. concerning a rocket race to the moon to settle the battle between the sexes. The script com- mittee. consisting of Sue Davidson. Louise De Costa. Davee Faust. Pleasant Thiele, Rick Rosin, Dave Seltzer, Roger Pascal, and student director Tina Scheele tackled the job of creating a real musical comedy complete with original music, lyrics, plot, choreography, and costumes. A souvenir program and a two night stand were other innovations which helped to make “The Human Race” the most pro- fessional and successful Stunts ever given. The $2600 netted from Stunts was used to help finance the LITTLE GIANT and the senior gift. Josie Bye, Diane Teeter, and Sue Sinclair sing of green cheese on a blue moon. Sue Sachs and Bud Herzog steal the show as Millie presents HERMANjesty, the Cleaning Lady, to the Girls in the rocket ship. In line for inspection are: Gail Kelly, Marg Embich, Betty Ann Smith, Jo Ann Jefferson, Martha Rotter. Shirley Walton, Josic Bye, Sue Sinclair, Ellie Levinson, and Jill Henner. Mb X- 28 Hard work, fun, and a rewarding experience will always be remembered by the cast of “The Human Race.” Lunar society is inhabited by Janet Collins, Daryl Lazarus, Keren Jacobson, and John Rappaport. These stowaways are Susie Heyman, Nancy Ullman, Doris Klein, Marlyn Lawrentz, Eleanor Walton. Kay Cushman, Judy Miller, Linda Taft, Jeanie Bartelman, and Mary Stouffer. The race is discussed on the boys' ship by Gary Carter, Ed Gibbs. Alan March, George O’Connell, Grady Ellis. Billy Mcyer- hoff, Arnold Listek, Bob Carnahan, Mike Julian, Dave Palmer, Mike Clement. Dick Zelens. Toby Aaron, and Sam Zell. “Jingle-Belle-A bout” Jinglc-Bcllc-About was the original title given to the annual turnabout dance. It was held on De cember 7 and sponsored by the Student Council. The members of the Council Executive Board provided one of the acts for the floor show. Oh, those crazy, somehow familiar midgets! Del Rene and his band supplied the music for the girls and their dates. The girls have caught their men. STAND- ING: Sue Whitehead. Eddie Laing. Margot Brill, Don Riskind, Lin Simon, Toni Smith, Louise Schram. KNEELING: Howie Soloman, Peggy Gluck. Bruce Holderbaum, John Roths- child. Christmas Concert Brings Holiday Cheer The annual Christmas Concert was presented on December 15. The traditional candlelight procession opened the program. A modern dance interpretation of “ ’Twas the Night Before Christmas” was given by the dance group of the girls’ gym department, while the drama class enacted The Song of Christmas. The Hallelujah Chorus” featured both the orchestra and combined choruses. 30 These three angels Madeline Bohn, Col- leen Kelly, and Marvin White, helped to usher in the Christmas season. Marlyn Lawrcntz, Marshall Strauss. Alfy Alschulcr, and Jeanne Dierking keep old acquaintances from being forgotten. The Curtain Rises on a New Year Eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow will come too soon! Dancing the old year out and the new year in was the most popular way of saying “Happy New Year for most of teen-age Highland Park. A supper dance from 10 ’til 2 was sponsored by the Student Activities Committee which was assisted by the P. T. A. It had a Parisian street theme created by a professional decorator. We could have danced all night, but . . . 31 A Galaxy of Fun-D Stars A Jazz Jamboree, spotlighting Count Basie. Sarah Vaughn, and Joe Williams, was the feature attraction at the annual PTA Fun-D event on March 9. Basie and his band played a concert during the first part of the afternoon, and then provided music for all those who wished to stay and dance. During the intermission, parents from the PTA held a carnival of food. This program, requested by the Student Activities Committee, was to raise money for the school scholarship fund. Jean Bartelman, Louise Schram, and Pat Witten have a jazzy conversation with Count Basie. Memories in Moods 32 The sophomore class took over the mid-winter dance usually presented by the seniors. Calling it “Memories in Moods,” they dedicated it to the grad- uates. The decoration theme revolved around recreating little pieces of the senior class’ past ac- complishments such as Prom and Stunts. The sopho- mores did a fine job in managing the dance, and the seniors will long appreciate this tribute paid to them. The natives arc restless tonight. Organizations After being more or less superficially exposed to several facets of human knowledge and activity during school hours, students choose clubs which pursue their own particular interests; just as an actor singles out a certain form of drama to develop more thoroughly after experimenting with several of them. 33 The Marshal Supervisory Board includes Tim Cohlcr, co-head; Steve Eisen, co-head from Student Council; Steve Rose, vice-president; and Marcia Dicus, secretary. Service and Service Marshals Last spring the Marshal Supervisory Board selected about one hundred seniors and juniors who had been nominated by their classmates and session teachers for outstanding leadership abilities. This group then chose from its number a co-head to work with the head marshal from the Student Council. The accent in marshal govern- ment was put on providing more opportunities for more students to assume positions of leadership. This new system was innovated because of the increasingly important role which the marshals have come to play in school affairs. Some of their duties include supervising the halls, acting as ushers and guides for many school functions. Col- lege Day assistants, and being exemplary repre- sentatives of our school. Eduardo Rebello de Andrade, our foreign exchange student from Lis- bon, Portugal. 34 The Unity Board consists of the presidents and vice-presidents of the major clubs. STANDING: Burt Kaplan, Penny Allderdice, Anne Scyfarth, Miss Spencer, faculty sponsor; A1 Weil, Grady Ellis. Mike Shaw, Dick Zartlcr, Judy Hcxtcr, Bro Abrahmson, Marlyn Lawrentz, Dave Slovic, Sue Wolff. SEATED: Heather Axelrod, Lin Simon, Ann Feuchtwanger, Dave Echt, Carol Sue Feldman, Joan Richards. Leadership Student Council The major undertaking of the Student Council this year was “Operation Pride, a project de- signed to instill in the student body a sense of pride and respect for their school, thus curing many of the major problems before they could be- come serious. The Council also directed the School Chest drive which raised money for local, national, and international charities; the revising of the Honor System, and the management of honor study halls. Council took responsibility for remedying the lunchroom situation and the traffic problems. This year HPHS had its first foreign exchange student, Eduardo Rebello de Andrade, from Portugal. Besides participating in almost all other school activities. Eduardo became an honorary member of Council. In a lighter vein. Council sponsored two dances, the Christmas turnabout and a spring dance. The officers of the Executive Board in- clude (standing) Mary Ann Sheahen, sec- retary; Dave Echt, vice-president; (seated) Judy Hexter, president; Cathy Maxwell, treasurer. The members of the Executive Board include (top row) John Ncwmann, co-head of traffic and elections and eligibility; Steve Eisen, head of marshals; Eduardo dc Andrade, honorary member; John Knoll, co-head of social committee and participation list; Chris Binncr, co-head of elections and eligibility and lunchroom committee; Gene Altman, fire drills and orientation; (center row) John Scornavacco, Suburban League, and co-head of traffic; Nancy Carlson, school chest and elections and eligibility; Jeanne Dierking, social chairman and public relations; Barbara Henderson, head of honor committee: Nancy Wolff, school chest and elections and eligibility; (bottom row) Larry Alschuler, honor committee, representative to major- minor committee; Mary Ann Sheahen, secretary; Dave Echt, vice-president; Judy Hexter, president; Cathy Maxwell, treas- urer; Susie Maxwell, honor committee, secretary of Suburban League and representative to student relations committee. 35 The officers of Girls’ Club are (standing) Ellen Hussong, secretary; Carol Sue Feld- man, vice-president; (seated) Karen Cheli, publicity chairman; Sue Haugan, social chairman; Miss Morgan, faculty sponsor; Joan Richards, president; Carol Sue Vech- ioni, treasurer. Girls’ Club From her first day as a freshman to her last as a senior, every girl in school is a member and a part of Girls’ Club. At the Big-Little Sister Tea on the first day of school the junior girls help the freshmen get acquainted with and acclimated to HPHS. One of the big events of the Girls’ Club year is the Mother-Daughter Banquet followed by the benefit show, which, this year, celebrated the 30th birthday of Girls’ Club. The girls also sell I Have Voted” tags at election time and, in con- junction with Boys’ Club, sponsor the National Honor Society initiation. The culmination of Girls’ Club activity comes with the magazine drive, the profits from which help send several deserving senior girls to college. Theres a Club for Everyone Members of the Girls' Club Supervisory Board include (standing) Rosalie Ward, Ann Houghtling; (seated) Nancy Carey, Daryl Jones. Pat Heinsimer, Linda Har- rison. Tina Scheele. Not pictured: Sue Whitehead. I.ouisc DcCosta. Every boy in school automatically belongs to Boys’ Club. The project which keeps the boys the busiest is selling cokes during basketball games and dances. Since theirs is a non-profit organiza- tion, the proceeds go toward providing assemblies for all the boys and giving a Father-Son Banquet in the spring. They also sponsor movies during lunch periods for everyone’s enjoyment. The pur- pose of Boys’ Club is to bring unity among all the boys and give them interesting activities in which to participate. The officers of Boys’ Club are (standing) Mr. Braun, faculty sponsor; Eddie Laing, social chairman; Burt Kaplan, president; (sitting) Ronnie Maestri, treasurer; Rick Albin, secretary; Mike Shaw, vice-presi- dent. 36 The officers of HGA are Gayle Kalseim, treasurer; Anne Scyfarth, vice-president; Marlyn Lawrentz. president; Kirie Wcr- renrath, social chairman; Betsy Wadt, secretary. Femmes Fatales in the Field of Sports HGA, Highland Park Girls’ Athletic Association, represents all girls who are interested in sports. Under its auspices girls may enjoy almost any sport from pingpong to hockey. Inter-session competi- tion is a special attraction of basketball, volleyball, and marathon swim. Those who show particular excellence in sports are honored by membership on traditional Army-Navy teams. Within the club there are several specialized groups: Swim Club, Tumbling Club, and the Dance Group. HGA sponsors playdays, apple sales, and also gives scholarships to several deserving senior girls. The social event of the year is the Father-Daughter Banquet which was based on a King of Hearts theme. The senior girls, dressed in black and white, won the traditional song contest. The HGA Board includes (top row) Sue Wolff, Ann Feuchtwanger, Sue Mordini Marcia Dicus, Margucrita DalPontc, Kay Herzog, Cathy Mcicrhoff, Judy Doner, Ruth Klotz, Judy Miller. Ann Davidson, Pat Heinsimcr, Jeanne Goldberg; (second row) Sue Hcyman, Barbara Kushen, Gayle Kalseim, Annie Seyfarth, Marlyn Lawrentz, Kirie Werrcnrath, Betsy Wadt. Donna Gherardini, Jeanette Tondi, Sue Parker; (third row) Betsy Gidwitz, Jennie Dubach, Ann Houghtaling, Nancy Bilow, Toni Smith, Ginny Decker, Lois Brown; (bottom row) Sandy Gilden, Heather Axelrod, Bobby Gray, Barb Gans, Carole Barcn. A Cheerful Eyeful Cheerleaders Led by their captain, Carol Johnson, a new spirit of responsibility was manifest in the organization of the cheerleaders. Besides their obvious duties of cheering at all football and basketball games, they helped organize the pep assemblies, worked with Pep Club, and improved their techniques. Several of the cheerleaders have gone to cheer camp and have brought back new cheers for HPHS to use. Cheering on the football field are the familiar smiles of (back row) Judy Hexter, Mary Ann Shcahen, Jackie Orner; (front row) Nancy Carlson, Mary Isador, Susan Parker. The sophomore cheer squad includes (standing) Carol Katzman. Mary Loevenhart, Toni Vanoni, Karen Kloos, Ellen Server; (kneeling) Barbara Gaudrcau, Colleen Kelly. Sue Wolff. The varsity cheerleaders include (standing) Jackie Orncr, representative to Pep Club; Mary Ann Shea- hen, Judy Hexter, Carol Johnson, captain; Jeanne Kurtzon, Mary Isador; (kneeling) Susan Parker, manager; Nancy Carlson. 38 Vanity Club In recent years Varsity Club has been striving to take its place as one of the important clubs in school. Their major achievement this year was an amendment to the club’s constitution which forbids members to drink or smoke. This commendable action was lauded by both local people and the Chicago newspapers. Varsity Club sells programs and helps manage the crowd at all home games. It uses some of its funds to provide needed equipment for the boys’ physical edu- cation department. Once a month the club sponsors a Fun Night at which time the superb facilities of the boys' gyms and swimming pool are opened to mem- bers and their dates for recreational purposes. Sportsmanship The officers of Varsity Club are (standing) Dave Peachin, treas- urer; Marty Gmciner, social chairman; (seated) Alan Weil, vice- president; Grady Ellis, president; Mike Julian, secretary. School Spirit The officers of Pep Club arc (standing) Susie Graham, freshman representative; Sandy Williams, junior representative; Pleasant Thiele, senior representative; Sue Hixon, sophomore representative; (seated) Lois Gamson, secretary; Ann Feuchtwanger, president; Penny Allerdice, vice-president; Rona Silverman, treasurer. Pep Club Pep Club, now two years old, is one of the most dynamic organizations in school. Its purpose is to promote school unity, spirit, and good sportsmanship. To help get more people out to the games. Pep Club members make posters, hand out pennants and par- ticipate in the pep assemblies. Always on the look- out for new ideas, the club this year innovated a colorful card section at football games and a glove section at basketball games. 39 Annually Busy Work on this edition of LITTLE GIANT actually began last April when a course of instruc- tion was offered to all 1958 seniors who were inter- ested in producing the LITTLE GIANT. The staff was selected by the end of school and attended sev- eral planning meetings during the summer. In Au- gust several members of the staff attended the NSPA convention in Chicago to exchange ideas with other schools and learn new methods. When school began again, the staff started working in earnest. As soon as pictures and copy were completed, sections of the book were sent to press. The result of the staff’s worry and planning, their literary accomplishment, is now in your hands to read and enjoy. Looking over the senior section are (standing) Carole Barcn, Alan Sager, Annette Ruder; (seated) Joni Sturman, Louise Schram. Margo Brill, the hardwork- ing editor of LITTLE GIANT. The yearbook staff includes (top row) Richard Fiedler, Mary Watkins. Bonnie Becker, Eleanor Walton, Mary Stouffer. DeDe Shcrwin, Ellen Schncll; (middle row) Mr. Munski. advisor; Barbara Buchman, Diana Buchman, Judy Epstein, Susie Heyman, Keren Jacobson, Betsy Gidwitz, Louise De Costa; (bottom row) Bruce Cohen, Phyllis Levin, Daryl Lazarus, Elaine Goldberg, Barry Smoler, Byron Klorfine, Jay Feinberg. Absent: Laurie Herman. Anne Lerner, Robin Bogeaus, Maxine Schlossbcrg, Pleasant Theile, Nancy Brchmcr. Shoreline Deadline Quality, coupled with quantity, has been the goal toward which this year’s Shoreline staff worked. The latter came with the changeover from bi-weekly to weekly publication. The former, more difficult to achieve, was attained, nevertheless, by emphasising the fact that a student newspaper has a duty to per- form for the student body. Several hard hitting regular columns and the keen editorial analyses worked to shed a penetrating light upon school prob- lems and to effect solutions of them. Even though the staff felt that student satisfaction with the paper was more important than high national ratings, they have laid the foundations for receiving both local and national commendation in the future. Rick Rosin, the hard work- Working on Shoreline are Wally Stein, Ronnie Waldman, and Anne Lerncr. ing editor of Shoreline. The Shoreline staff includes (standing) Steve Bezark, boys’ sports editor; Wally Stein, advertising manager; Jim Illes, news bureau editor; Ronnie Waldman, business manager; Mr. Munski, faculty adviser; (seated) Barb Pincus, make-up editor; Daryl Lazarus, feature editor; Carolyn Conn, news editor; Diana Buchman, club editor; Betsy Gidwitz, girls' sports editor. The Girls’ Ensemble includes (top row) Jeanne Thomas, Darlene Hart, Bobbie Pollock, Alice Juul; (middle row) Billie Rosenhouse, Judy Hutchinson, Martha Rotter, Sally Cassady; (bottom row) Sue Sinclair, Judy Keen, Linda Thompson, Jean Bischoff. The Mixed Ensemble includes (top row) Dave Palmer, Mr. Kyle, Bob Partlow; (middle row) Judson Marshall, Gail Kelly, Jill Henner, Carol Seclig, Alan March; (bottom row) Ginny Decker, JoAnn Jefferson. Music Masters The officers of Band include (standing) Roger Levin, quartermaster; Bud Herzog, vice-president; Peter Gorncr, Kate Frchncr; (seated) Mike Clement, president. Absent: Kay Herzog, secretary. 42 The members of Senior Choir include (top row) Julie Barracani, secretary; Jean Altman, Judy Hutchinson, Margaretta Winters Betty Smith, Gail Kelly, Bo Schumacher. A1 Sleeman, Dave Palmer, Dave Bye, Julie Thomas. Cathy Harris, Mardi Jones; (second row) Roberta Gouglcr, Sue Hirsh, secretary; Barb Bcrnardi, Billie Rosenhouse. Martha Rotter. John Hyink, Judson Marshall, vice-president; Rick Pullin, Troyce Wheeler. Gavle Kalseim, Nancy Burgctt, Jean Bischoff, Sue Davidson: fthird row) Maddy Weber, Mary Rose, Vera Alsbrow, Sharon Jaeger, Sally Cassady, Ed Gibbs, Jack Richards. Tom Armstrong, Mike Clement, Nancy White, Mary Loevenhart, Barb Pincus, Bonnie Godow, Ellen Hussong; (fourth row) Jeanne Kurtzon, Darlene Hart. Gail Haugland, Connie Linari, Doug Brown, A1 March, Alan Weil. Bill Issel, Bill Haney, David Seltzer, Sue Wolff. Bobbie Pollock, Flora Schrivcr; (bottom row) Jill Henncr, Carol Seelig, Mary Watkins, Mary Gay Blair, Linda Stark, Peter Reich, Jud Henkle, Bob Carnahan, Don Dresler, Barb Rubenstein, Alice Juul, Sue Bass. Mr. Kyle, director; Jo Ann Jefferson, pianist, and president. The vocal section of the music department spon- sors several groups which are especially interested in singing. The twelve girls in the Girls’ Ensemble lent their talents to both school and community events. There are four boys and four girls in the Mixed Ensemble, all either juniors or seniors. They went caroling at Christmas and participated in both the Christmas and spring concerts. Treble Clef mem- bership is given to about thirty-five girls who have shown special interest and ability during at least one semester of chorus work. The Junior Choir took part in the concerts as well as giving other outside performances. Membership in Senior Choir repre- sents the highest achievement in the vocal music de- partment. This group is comprised of mostly juniors and seniors. One of the major projects undertaken by Treble Clef, Junior Choir and Senior Choir was the presentation for a fall assembly of the folk opera “Down in the Valley.” HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL BAND 1957-58 The Junior Choir includes (top row) Clara Kemp. Nita Himcl, Judy Keen, Barb Isley. Gail Anderson. Jerry Bertucci. Dave Kleiman, Rick Pullin. Jim Castle. Laura Bollcnbachcr, Ellen Schncll, Joy Rcsnick, Joan Lapine, Jeanne Condon; (second row) Karen Larson. Mary Anderson, Judie Mandel, Ginnie Waltzk, Sue Wilson. Tom Armstrong. Howard Wax, Arnold Listek. Don Natta, Carol Beck. Nina Curcll. JoAnn White. Joan Robinson; (third row) Nancy Stewart, Dorothy Morris. Sharon O’Shea. Mimi Saverslak, John Umbach, Bob Inbau, Jack Freeh, Joe Magnani, president; Gayle Blount. Sharon Maneck. Carol Berman, Jane Stallman, Caryl Weintraub, Miss Anderson, director; (bottom row) Sharon Walters, Lynn Porter. Maxine Koenigsberg, Geri Kinzle, Lana Borin, secretary; Ralph Freund, Dave Slepyan, Robert Joseph, Amcriga Bianchi, Mcrrcl Keyes, Jackie Koss, secretary, Karin Franklin, Jane Thomas, Linda Beutel. The band has about eighty members playing al- most every kind of instrument. They put on a half time show for several home football games and marched in the Memorial Day parade. The band played for an all-school assembly and the Spring Concert. The orchestra is composed of a large string sec- tion and selected woodwind, brass, and percusion players from band. This group took part in the Christmas Concert and the Spring Play. Both orchestra and band participated in a combination grade and high school music festival. Triad Music Club Master musicianship is the aim of every Triad member. It represents excellence in musical perform- ance. Besides improving in chosen fields of music, whether vocal or instrumental, these music minded students put on programs for club meetings, attend professional concerts and operas, and want to present a workshop opera of their own. Every member of Triad has been in the music department for at least one semester. In March they gave a club concert which was open to the public. The officers of orchestra include (standing) Cynthia Listek, secretary; Fred Dris- coll, boys’ social chairman; Barbara Patterson, girls’ social chairman; (seated) Pam Lenzi, president; Phoebe Fabricant, vice-president. 44 The Treble Clef includes (top row) Judy Fick, Liz Grant, Lynn Danus, Linda Littenberg, Jeanne Gourguechon, Carol Herman, Sue Lynch, June Spivey, Joy Marcus, president; Lucy Robinson, Linda Heintz, secretary; (middle row) Doris Dransfeldt. Lois Shlopack, Naomi Johnson. Cathy Cosgrove. Nancy Cumberland, Kay Katz, Sandy Wells, Martha Jahn, Dorothy Cohen, Leslie Marshall; (bottom row) Mr. Kyle, director; Judy Fish, Sandy Morelli, Mary Lou Barth, Mickey Certik, secretary; Beverly Fabbri, Ann Fortran, Betty Powers, Pearl Bloom, Janet Collins, Joyce Gilruth, Priscilla White. The Triad officers include Bowen Schumacher, president; Miss Nancy Anderson, sponsor; A1 March, vice-president; (seated) Judy Hutchinson, corresponding secretary; Gail Kelly, treasurer; Jo Ann Jefferson, historian; Phoebe Fabricant, recording secretary. HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA 1957-58 Show Biz On Stage and Off Garrick Club Garrick Club, for all those endowed with dramatic talent, combines creativity with the satisfaction of entertaining others. Members are concerned with de- veloping their acting ability by experience with varied forms of dramatic expression. During the year Garrick presented a hilarious comedy. ‘‘Send Me Kelly.” for a school assembly and other plays for the Family Service and lunchtime entertainment. The club had speakers to talk about different phases of the theater and held voice improvement sessions. Whether or not any Garrick members become pro- fessionals. they have found fun and gratification from their Thespian activities. Stage Crew The members of stage crew are probably some of the busiest people around school. They are respon- sible for the lighting, sound, and stage effects for not only school shows but also any performances ?iven in the school auditorium. They provide lighting or dances and the water ballet show. The unusual electronic instruments” on the Student Stunts rocket ship were tributes to their ability and ingenuity. Looking over a script are (standing) Barb York, social chairman; Roz Banish, secretary; (kneeling) Barb Gans, vice-president; Debbie Bolton, president. The Stage Crew includes (top row) Michael Goodkind, Dan Davenport, Mike Cole, Ted Strombcrg, (second row) Rucbcn Goldberg. Jeff Dcmbo, Howard Wax, Mike Frccdenberg; (third row) Jack Darby. Vice-president; Jon Stemples, secretary; Dave Moon, Jay Paset, presi- dent; (bottom row) George Millen, Mr. McLaughlin, faculty sponsor, Dick Aaron. 46 Meeting the Challenge of Sputnik Math Club Math can be fun is the slogan of the Math Club. Its members sharpen their wits on mathematical puzzles and brain-teasers as well as looking into un- usual fields of math application. The club has an upper and a lower classman division. The former in- vestigates advanced subjects such as calculus, while the latter works in interesting facets of geometry. Science Club The purpose of Science Club is to present all kinds of science in a way interesting to and edifying for students with both casual and serious bents to- ward science. Members are encouraged to work on projects of their own particular interest and tell others in the club of their experiences and dis- coveries. Some of these future scientists have entered state and national science competitions. Working out a difficult equation are John Gidwitz and Ronnie Sackheim, co-presidents; Cyrus Mead, Peter Reich. Performing an experiment are Cyrus Mead. Noel BiKau, program chairman; Jon Stemples, Peter Reich, president; Tom Brown, Bonnie Becker. 47 The members of the Girls' Rifle Club are (back row) Penny Metz, Cathy Schlitt, president; Judy Portman, Mr. Wildermuth. faculty sponsor; (middle row) Chris- tine Leuer, Margaret Schwalbach. Mary Schwalbach, Janet Jobe, Gail Blount. Sue Overman; (front row) Gail Anderson, Nancy Brehmer. Connie Smith. Carol Peterson. Betzie Glathart. The Boys’ Rifle Club and the Girls’ Rifle Club offer to students interested in guns opportunity to improve their marksmanship under proper leader- ship and supervision. Both boys and girls learn and practice safety as well as skill with firearms. A few meets are held between the two clubs and members of either group may compete for national awards. These male marksmen are (standing) Mr. Wildermuth, faculty sponsor; Lee Lovcnthal, Bob Finney. Jim John- son, Art Schlitt, Bob Hansen; (sitting) Geoff Kroll, Dave Hanson, John Jensen. Larry Norgaard. Guns and Games With a membership of some sixty students. Bridge Club is one of the most thriving of this year’s new clubs. Its membership is divided into two groups, beginning and advanced, according to individual skill at bridge. The beginners were taught the fundamentals of how to play, while the advanced group concentrated on improving their game by practice. Engrossed in a bridge game are Sam Zell, president; Richard Bernstein, vice-president; and John Gidwitz. -------------------------------------- 48 The Debate Club is one of the several new clubs which came into existence this year. Since it was the first organization of its kind at HPHS in many years, its first objective was to acquaint its members with the technics of debating procedure. They held several intra-club debates during this first year and hope to par- ticipate in debates with other schools in the near future. The Debate Club includes (standing) Roger Levin, John Salasin; (seated) Bill Cas- selman, president; Lynn Carey, corresponding secretary; John Gidwitz, George Craig. Debate About Books The Library Board is an or- ganization of students who are interested in working in and for the library. They check out books, arrange the library show case, help enforce library rules, and take charge of the college- career room. Once a year they submit a list of books which they feel the students themselves would like to add to the library. They are also the representatives from the student body to the ad- ministrative staff of the library. The Library Board includes (standing) Melinda McMullen. Carol Michaelson, Betsy Glathart, Phyllis Levin, Sam Zell, Sue Rittenbcrg; (seated) Linda Taft, secretary; Ronnie Waldman, president; A1 Marcus, vice-president. 49 FOR HIGHEST ACHIEVEMENT The Pat Floyd Memorial Award, in honor of Pat Floyd who would have graduated in 1951, is pre- sented every year to the most outstanding junior girl. Candidates were nominated by the junior ses- sions on the basis of their qualities of leadership, character and service. The principal, the deans, and the junior session advisors narrowed the ballot to three upon which the entire junior class voted. Judy Hexter was selected to receive this award in 1957. The Harvard Book Club offers a comparable award to the outstanding junior boy. This boy is selected by faculty members, including the principal, the dean of boys, and the junior boys homeroom teachers. Dave Echt received the Harvard Book Award for 1957. The National Merit Scholarship Corporation is the largest independent scholarship program for high school seniors in the country. On the basis of their scores on the SQT and the SAT thirteen seniors were warded coveted Certificates of Merit. They were Bonnie Becker, Tom Brown, Tim Cohler, David Hemmingway, Barbara Henderson, Jim Illes, Byron Klorfine. Elinor Levinson, Cyrus Mead. Dan Radner, Peter Reich, Barry Smoler, and John Weinberg. Membership in the National Honor Society, the highest award accorded to high school students, was bestowed upon fifty-six seniors at the initiation as- sembly on October 11, 1957. The initiates were se- lected on the basis of six semesters’ records in schol- arship, leadership, character, and service. The Na- tional Honor Society is sponsored in this school by Girls’ Club and Boys’ Club who presented the pins and, this year, innovated the electric torches. The members of the National Honor Society are (top row) Chris Binncr, Ronnie Waldman, Burt Kaplan, Burton Stcck, Steve Rose, Rick Rosin, Dick Zartler, John Knoll, Tim Cohler, John Weinberg, Roger Pascal, Barry Smoler, Byron Klorfine, Alan Sager; (second row) Sue Davidson. Jeanne Dierking, Sue Haugan, Margo Brill, Louise DeCosta, Carol Harris, Phyllis Levin, Ann Stupple, Judy Hexter, Nancy Weeks. Barbara Henderson, Lois Brown, Bonnie Becker, Sue Knobeloch; (third row) Jackie Orner, Diane Teeter. Mary Ann Shcahen, Judy Glandt, Joan Richards. Kay Cushman, Carolyn Conn. Dorinda Bolton, Ann Feuchtwangcr, Nancy Carlson. Tina Scheele, Ellie Bierfield, Carole Sue Feldman; (fourth row) Bill Leckie. Bob Cimbalo. Dave Hemmingway. Steve Eisen, Alan Greenberg, Lin Simon, Bill Rogers, Dan Radner. Peter Reich. NATIO IAL The Class of 1958 Just us young apprentices with their eyes upon a theatri- cal career work and practice for several years before land- ing the role which finally catapults them into stardom, the seniors hare struggled through three years of underclass study to become at last the stars of the school drama. 51 7 These arc the senior session represent- atives to the Executive Board. BACK ROW: Laurie Herman, Steve Hamel, Byron Klorfine, Paddy Inman. MIDDLE ROW: Louise DeCosta, Shirley Walton, Kay Cushman, Ginny Decker, Roger Pascal. FRONT ROW: Susie Hcyman, Jim Kidd. Jackie Orncr, Mike Pehan. Seniors Set Dramatic Pace in ’58. Our Senior Class, headed by the executive board and officers, had an exciting and activity-filled year. The first and major undertaking was, of course, the production of “The Human Race. With an entirely original plot and music, and as the first Student Stunts presented for two nights, it proved to be the greatest success in years. Throughout the whole year the sessions collected money for a class Memorial Fund in honor of our three deceased classmates. This money provided scholarships for two college-bound seniors. April 1 saw about 150 Seniors riding their bikes to school. The feeling of spirit and unity that we felt on that day will never be forgotten. The graduation ceremonies of 1958 were unique because ours was the last class small enough to graduate in the solemn dignity of the auditorium. This was our class, these were our moments of joy, these will be our memories of Highland Park. The senior class officers arc (standing) Dave Seltzer, social chairman; Dick Zarlcr, president; Lin Simon, vice-pres- ident; (seated) Sue Davidson, secretary; Sorney Leahy, treasurer. 52 WILLIAM AARON . . . everything handsome about him. — Shakespeare AMY ABERCROMBIE A great soul prefers moderation to excess. — Seneca EUGENE ADLER Tis what I love determines how I love. — Eliot KAREN AGAZIM Her heart runs away with her head. — Dickens VERA ALLSBROW Her hair is her crowning glory. — Unknown MARY LOUISE AMIDEI Patience ornaments the woman. — Tcrtullian PETER ANDERSON I would be brave, for there is much to dare. — Walter RICHARD ANDERSON Not what we have, but what we enjoy constitutes our abundance. — Scrm BARBARA ANDREWS You must make a lover angry if you wish him to love. — Cyrus lOHN AREND You have to stay awake to make your dreams come true. — Unknown BERYL BAIZER Flirtation, attention without intention. — O’Rell STANTON BANK Doing easily what others find difficult is talent. — Amici JULIE BARACANI With her eyes in flood with laughter. — Cymbeline CYNTHIA BARBEE Better a bad excuse than none at all. — Camden CAROLE BAREN The heart to conceive, the understanding to direct, or the hand to execute. — Junius JEAN BARTELMAN Enthusiasm is a very good lubrication for the mind. — Schiller JUNE BARTH Speech is great but silence is greater. — Carlyle JOHN BAUM The force of his own merit makes his way. — Quarles 53 BONNIE BECKER If a thing is possible and proper to man. deem it attainable by thee. — Aurelius ROGER BECKER Good health and good sense arc two of life’s greatest blessings. — Syrus RONALD BELLEI Men of few words arc the best men. — Shakespeare DOLORES BENEVENTI Joy is the fire that keeps our purpose warm and our intelligence aglow. — Keller BARBARA BERNARDI A merry heart goes all the day. — Shakespeare GERALD BERTUCCI Friendly to all but faithful to one. — Unknown STEPHEN BEZARK When a man is his own friend you may know him to be a friend to all men. — Seneca ELEANOR BIERFELD Modest expression is a beautiful setting to the diamond of talent and genius. — Chapin NOEL BIKAU Friends, if we be honest with ourselves, we shall be honest with each other. — MacDonald CHRISTIAN BINNER Nothing succeeds like success. — Dumas ROBIN BOGEAUS He who binds his soul to knowledge steals the key to heaven. — Unknown DORINDA BOLTON Gay as the guilded sky. — Burns JOHN BORCHARDT A man he seems of cheerful yesterdays and confident tomorrows. — Wordsworth LINDA BOSSELLI Happiness is a perfume you cannot pour on others without getting a few drops on yourself. — Phelps STEPHEN BOYLE Life's greatest adventure is in doing one’s level best. — Morgan SUSAN BRAVER In all things what we most prize is novelty. — Ovid NANCY BREHMER How the wit brightens. — Pope MARGO BRILL To succeed in the world one should appear like a fool but be wise. — Montesquieu 54 LOIS BROWN Happiness seems made to be shared. — Corneille TOM BROWN The man who radiates good cheer, who makes life happier whenever he meets it, is always a man of vision and faith. — Wilcox BARBARA BUCHMAN There is no substitute for talent. — Huxley DIANA BUCHMAN The only way to have a friend is to be one. — Emerson FRED BURG Where he succeeds, the merit’s all his own. — Churchill KEITH BURGE The wrong way always seems the more reasonable. — Moore NANCY BURGETT I sprang to the stirrup. — Browning JOSEPHINE BYE That which is not worth speaking, she sings. — Beaumarchais CESARE CALDARELLI Every inch a king. — Shakespeare VICTORIA CARANI A friend is worth all hazards we can run. — Young NANCY CARLSON Enthusiasm is that kindling spark which marks the difference between the leaders—and the laggards. — Schiller SALLY CASSADY The keenist joy in life is the effort toward a goal. — Unknown LOUISE CASSERMAN Deep in her heart the passion glows; she loves and loves forever. — Pecock FRED CHECCHIN Man of the world. — Young STEPHEN CHESLER To love and win is the best thing. — Thackeray PETER CIMBALO The glory of a firm capacious mind. — Homer ROBERT CIMBALO Be sure you're right; then go ahead. — Crockett KAREN CLAUSON A woman’s face is her fortune—and some- times it runs into a nice little figure. — Wilde 55 ROBERT CLYNE He that can have patience can have what he will. — Franklin BRUCE COHEN In the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love. — Tennyson CHARLES COHLER Persuasion tips his tongue whene'er he talks. — Gibbon DONALD COLE All the world loves a lover. — Emerson CAROLYN CONN Whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well. — Chesterfield NANCY CUMBERLAND To be doing good is a man's most glorious task. — Sophocles ENID CURELL Be she fairer than the day, or the flow’ry meads in May. — Wither KAY CUSHMAN A generous action is its own reward. — Unknown DALE CUTHBERTSON Gayly the troubadour touched his guitar. — Bayly HELENE DAEMICKE The thing that goes the farthest toward making life worthwhile ... is just a pleasant smile. — Ncsbit MARGUERITA DALPONTE A day for toil, an hour for sport, but for a friend is life too short. — Emerson JOHN DARBY Jack of all trades. — Minshcll ROBERT DAVENPORT A joke’s a very serious thing. — Churchill ANTHONY DAVIDSON Never an idle moment, but thrifty and thoughtful of others. — Longfellow SUSAN DAVIDSON Women are meant to be loved and not understood. — Wilde GEOFF DAVIES The only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it. — Wilde VIRGINIA DECKER Burdens are light when cheerfully borne. — Ovid LOUISE DE COSTA The secret of success is constancy of purpose. — Disraeli 56 i AMES DEVER [e knew the precise psychological moment when to say nothing. — Wilde JAMES DIER Ah. my life is lost in laboriously doing nothing. — Woodward CAROLYN DIERKING Character must be kept bright, as well as clean. — Chesterfield GAIL DIRECTOR An ounce of wit is worth a pound of sorrow. — Baxter CHARLES DIXON Every man to his trade. — English Proverb JUDITH DONER I stand by my friends. — Unknown PATRICK DUFFY Easy come, lightly go. — Unknown DAVID ECHT A great man is made up of qualities that meet or make the great occasions. — Lowell BRYNA EDELMAN There is no such thing as a dangerous woman; there arc only susceptible men. — Krutch STEPHEN EISEN He preferred to be good, rather than to seem so. — Sallust GRAYDON ELLIS Fame is the echo of actions, resounding them to the world. — Fuller MARGARET EMBICH The mirth and fun grew fast and furious. — Burns JUDITH EPSTEIN A little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men. — Unknown THOMAS ERRICO Mind moves matter. — Virgil PETER FECHHEIMER I can swim like a fish. — Fletcher JAY FEINBERG The mind is master of the man. and so. they can who think they can. — Waterman CAROL SUE FELDMAN Wisdom is knowing what to do next. Skill is knowing how to do it and Virtue is doing it. — Swift ANN FEUCHTWANGER It is good to lengthen to the last a sunny mood. — Lowell 57 RICHARD FIEDLER I told you so. — Unknown JUDITH FISH Both short and sweet some say is best. — Middleton JUDITH FRANZEN A friend in need is a friend indeed. — Gravs ROSEANN FRAULINI To cultivate kindness is a valuable part of the business of life. — Johnson FRED FRIEDMAN A'l his dealings are square and above the board. — Hall SIDNEY FRISCH One good turn deserves another. — Beaumont and Fletcher MICHAEL GAGEN A good man is kinder to his enemies than bad men to their friends. — Hall ILA GARFINKEL Being a woman is terribly difficult, since it consists principally of dealing with men. — Unknown DELIA GARRITY The little sweet doth kill much bitterness.— Keats ROBERT GEORGE A man after his own heart. — Old Testament GILBERT GIAMBI O. it is excellent to have a giant's strength. — Shakespeare BETSY GIDWITZ I myself must mix with action. — Tennyson JUDITH GLANDT Stubborn labor conquers everything. — Virgil RICHARD GLEICK Books think for me. — Lamb MARGERY GLUCK I shall laugh myself to death. — Shakespeare BONNIE GODOW The pursuit of the perfect, then, is the pursuit of sweetness and light. — Arnold ELAINE GOLDBERG We only gain as we give. — Simms BARBARA GORDON We expected much—and got much more. — Reynolds 58 DANIEL GOTTLIEB The wildest colts make the best horses. — Plutarch FRANCES GREEN Laugh a little now and then; it brightens life a lot. — Unknown ALLEN GREENBERG With malice toward none; with charity for all. — Lincoln NANCY GREENWALD Life has not pleasure nobler than that of friendship. — Johnson JOANN GRONLUND Honest men esteem and value nothing so much in this world as a real friend. — Pilpay CHARLES GROSS Vice itself lost half its evil by losing all its grossness. — Burke FRED HAHN Men may come and men may go but I go on forever. — Tennyson PATSY HALL The rule of my life is to make business a pleasure, and pleasure my business. — Burr STEVEN HAMEL The lad was ever a rover, loving and laughing free. — Widdcmer GEORGE HANEY He the sweetest of all singers. — Longfellow DAVID HANSON It takes a truly good man to have confidence in the goodness of others. — Sterne GLENN HARNDEN Humor has justly been regarded as the finest perfection of poetic genius. — Carlyle CAROL HARRIS The first Adam-splitting gave us Eve, a force which man in all the ages since has never got under control. — Unknown LINDA HARRISON If the heart of a man is depressed with cares, the mist is dispell’d when a woman appears. — Gay SUZANNE HAUGAN Her angel's face, as the great eye of heaven, shined bright, and made a sunshine in the shady place. — Spencer GAIL HAUGLAND Merrily, merrily, shall I live now ... — Shakespeare PATRICIA HEINSIMER I’m very fond of water. — Lord Neaves DAVID HEMMINGWAY Talent is that which is in a man’s power. Genius is that in whose power a man is. — Lowell 59 BARBARA HENDERSON Now happiness consists of activity; such is the constitution of our nature. — Good LAURENCE HERMAN I feel like a bull moose. — Roosevelt DONNA HERRIGES The most completely lost of all days is that on which one has not laughed. — Chamfort MYRON HERZOG We are growing serious, and. let me tell you, that’s the very next step to being dull. — Addison JUDITH HEXTER Born for success, with grace to win. with heart to hold. — Emerson SUSAN HEYMAN It is not true that woman was made from man's rib; she was really made from his funny bone. — Barrie JAMES HICKEY A quiet manner conceals a kind heart. — Unknown BRUCE HOLDERBAUM As funny as I can. — Holmes KENNETH HORNUNG You hear that boy laughing; you think he’s all fun. — Holmes JUDITH HUTCHINSON Always leave them laughing when you say good-bye. — Cohan JOHN HYINK Nothing is impossible to a willing heart. — Heywood JAMES ILLES Through zeal, knowledge is gotten. — Buddha JOAN INMAN I expect that woman will be the last thing civilized by man. — Unknown PAT INMAN Love in all capacities. — Cowley WILLIAM ISSEL They who strive, with fortune. win. — Byron KAREN JACOBSON Wit is that which has been often thought, but never before was well-expressed. — Johnson JOANN JAFFE Hold the fort. I’m coming! — Sherman JOANN JEFFERSON The soul of music slumbers in the shell, till waked and kindled by the Master’s skill. — Rogers 60 JOHN JENSEN This is the true joy of life, the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one. — Shaw CAROL JOHNSON The weaker sex is the stronger sex because of the weakness of the stronger sex for the weaker sex. — L’Humeur SUSAN JOHNSON How rare, how precious is frivolity. — Forster DARYL JONES Happiness consists in the multiplicity of agreeable consciousness. — Johnson GAIL JONES There’s nothing half so sweet as love’s young dream. — Unknown MICHAEL JULIAN He writes not that you won or lost—but how you played the game. — Unknown ALICE IUUL Good things arc twice as good when they are short. — Kelly BURTON KAPLAN Whoever is foremost leads the herd. — Schiller HAZEL KELLER Smiling always with a never fading serenity of countenance. — Barrow GAIL KELLY So just, so small, yet in so sweet a note, it seemed the music melted in the throat. — Dryden HIRAM KENNICOTT Nothing is impossible to industry. — Pcriandes JAMES KIDD The world looks brighter from behind a smile. — Unknown LLOYD KILLIAN He who thinks for himself and rarely imitates is a free man. — Klopstock DORIS KLEIN As merry as the day is long. — Shakespeare PATRICIA KLEINHANS Courteous though coy, and gentle, though retired. — Crabb BYRON KLORFINE When nature has work to do, she creates a genius to do it. — Emerson CLAIRE KNOBELOCH Cheerfulness, sir, is the principal ingredient in the composition of health. — Murphy RUTH KLOTZ Nothing is achieved before it is attempted. — Sidney 61 JOHN KNOLL Whatever he did was done with so much ease. — Dryden GEOFFREY KROLL A light heart lives long. — Shakespeare EDWARD LAING The reward of a thing well done is to have done it. — Emerson MARLYN LAWRENTZ The world belongs to the energetic. — Emerson THOMAS LAWTON What should a man do but be merry? — Shakespeare DARYL LAZARUS Laugh and the world laughs with you. — Wilcox SCREN LEAHY How different from the present man was the youth of earlier days. — Ovid WILLIAM LECKIE The man that loves and laughs must sure do well. — Pope GARY LENCIONI I've taken my fun where I've found it. — Kipling GORDON LEONARD O boys, the times I’ve seen! The things I’ve done and known! — Gogarty SUSAN LEONARD Friendship’s the wine of life. — Young ANNE LERNER There arc a few things that never go out of style and a feminine woman is one of them. — Raslton JAMES LEVERICK By different methods different men excel. — Churchill PHYLLIS LEVIN Invite them all; my cook and I’ll provide. — Shakespeare ELINOR LEVINSON A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. — Pope THEODORE LIAUTAUD Life isn’t all beer and skittles. — Unknown ROGER LUNARDI Youth calls for pleasure; pleasure calls for youth. — Aden RONALD MAESTRI A clear fire, a clean heart, and the rigour of the game. — Lamb 62 CATHERINE MAXWELL The world belongs to the enthusiast who keeps cool. — McFee PATRICK McCLORY He’ll find a way. — Barrie RAYMOND McCRAREN When I speak of men, I speak of them as embracing women. — Unknown JUDY MCLAIN Happiness is like a kiss—in order to get any good out of it you have to give it to somebody else. — Buckrose CYRUS MEAD Give me a lever long enough and I can single handed move the world. — Archimedes MARILYN MERTES It's love that makes the world go round. — Wikn PENCIE METZ And learned the luxury of doing good. — Goldsmith WILLIAM MEYERHOFF None but himself can be his parallel. — Theobald CAROLE MICHAELSON The pleasantest things in the world are pleasant thoughts, and the great art in life is to have as many of them as possible. — Bovee JUDITH MILLER The great end of life is not knowledge, but action. — Huxley DAVID MOON Every man has his gift and the tools go to him that can use them. — Kingsley MICHAEL MORRIS To a good man, nothing that happens is evil. — Plato LAWRENCE MUELLER I find that the best virtue I have has in it some tincture of vice. — Montaigne BONNIE MURPHY Joy rises in me like a summer’s morn. — Coleridge LUCIA MURPHY And they are not only happy in themselves; they arc the cause of happiness in others. — Phelps MARIO NARDINI I only know I'm mighty glad I’m living; that is all. — Cohan ADRIENNE NIZZI I have a heart with room for every joy. — Bailey RONALD NORMAN A smoothly running engine makes little noise, and yet produces great power. — Unknown 63 NANCY O’CONNELL One ounce of joy surmounts of grief a span, Because laughter is proper to the man. — Rabelais JACQUELINE ORNER Grace is but glory begun, and glory is but grace perfected. — Edwards ROBERT OSBORNE To others lenient, to himself sincere. — Harvey RONALD PADDACK Going! Building? That’s fun, that’s living. — Unknown LOUISE PAGLIAI T’was her kindness to others makes you think of her. — Browning ROBERT PARTLOW Come, sing now, sing; for I know you sing well. — Beaumont and Fletcher ROGER PASCAL His bark is worse than his bite. — Herbert JAY PASET The rule of the road is a paradox quite in riding, or driving about. — Erskine DAVID PEACHIN One thing is forever good, that one thing is success. — Emerson ROBERT PEARSON To thine ownself be true, and thou canst not then be false to any man. — Shakespeare iOHN PEDDERSON lost of us know how to say nothing; few of us know when. — Unknown MICHAEL PEHAN I wish Adam had died with all the ribs in his body. — Boucicault ALLEN PERIN Let the man who does not wish to be idle, fall in love. — Ovid JAMES PERRY There’s a time for all things. — Unknown LEROY PESCE I am an acme of things accomplished, and I am an encloser of things to be. — Whitman JOHN PETT Begin at once to live, and count each day as a seperate life. — Seneca THOMAS PEYTON The smile that won’t come off. — Standish JANET PHILLIPS It is when you give of yourself that you you truly give. — Gibran 64 DANIEL PIERANTONI Knowledge enables a man to work more ef- fectively and intelligently. — Unknown JOSEPH PIERSON Goodness consists not in the outward things we do but in the inward things we are. — Chapin BARBARA PINCUS Sing again . . . revealing a tone of some world far from ours, where music and moonlight and feeling are one. — Shelley JOANN POETZINGER Friendship improves happiness and abates misery by doubling our joy and dividing our grief. — Addison DANIEL RADNER Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers. — Tennyson JOHN RAPPAPORT The little foolery that wise men have makes a great show. — Shakespeare EDUARDO REBELLO DE ANDRADE If a man be gracious and courteous to strangers it shows he is a citizen of the world. — Bacon iOYCE REEDER [er talents arc more of the silent. — Byron PETER REICH Men show their character in nothing more clearly than what they think laughable. — Goethe SUSAN REICH Pack up your troubles in the old kit-bag and smile, smile, smile. — Asaf TYLER RENSCH Good nature is more agreeable in nature than wit. — Addison JOAN RICHARDS The path of duty was the way to glory. — Tennyson DONALD RISKIND He doth, indeed, show some sparks that are like wit. — Shakespeare SUSAN RITTENBERG The victory of success is half won when one gains the habit of work. — Unknown RANDOLPH RIZZO To be strong is to be happy. — Longfellow JOAN ROBINSON Friends are born, not made. — Adams ROSEMARY RODENHOFER A witty woman is a treasure. — Meredith WILLIAM ROGERS The best portion of a good man’s life is his little nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and love. — Wordsworth 65 CHARLES ROOT Two heads are better than one. — Heywood DENIS ROSE He hath a heart as a bell. — Shakespeare STEVEN ROSE Life is too serious to take too seriously. — Unknown LOUISE ROSENTHAL No tasks too steep for human wit. — Horace RICHARD ROSIN What is talent? Reason manifested gloriously. — DcChenier CAROLE ROTHSCHILD Dilligence is the mother of good luck. — Franklin JOHN ROTHSCHILD The true spirit of conversation consists in build- ing on another man's observation, not overturning it. — Bulwer-Lytton MARTHA ROTTER Brightly smile and sweetly sing. — Wolfe ANNETTE RUDER A smile is not only woman's best cosmetic, but it likewise serves as a non-verbal compliment to her companion. — Crane SUSAN SACHS All the world loves a clown. — Shakespeare ALAN SAGER Never say die. — Barham WILLIAM SAIELLI I have been in such a pickle since I saw you last. — Shakespeare AUDREY SCHAUBERT Moderation is the silken string running through the pearl chain of all virtues. — Unknown CHRISTINA SCHEELE Talent is power; tact is skill. — Seargill CATHERINE SCHLITT Friendship consists in forgetting what one gives and remembering what one receives. — Dumas, the Younger MAXINE SCHLOSSBERG Her reasoning is full of tricks and butterfly suggestions. — Cochrane ELLEN SCHNELL A docile disposition will, with application, surmount every difficulty. — Manilius DIANE SCHRAM Gentlemen always seem to remember blondes. — Loos 66 LOUISE SCHRAM Who loves me will love my dog also. — St. Bernard BOWEN SCHUMACHER Sing it with a spirit that will start the world along. — Work JEFFREY SCHWARTZ When you call me that, smile. — Wister CAROL SEELIG He who sings frightens away his ills. — Cervantes DAVID SELTZER Go straight ahead; you can’t dodge destiny. — Unknown MARY ANN SHEAHEN Dignity does not consist in possessing honors, but in deserving them. — Aristotle SUSAN SHELTON Health is the thing that makes you feel that now is the best time of the year. — Unknown DEANNE SHERWIN Nothing substitutes wit and talent. — Unknown CAROLYN SHIRLEY Her smile was like the glitter of the sun in tropic lands. — Riley LOUIS SIMON Trust follows his words. — Ovid BONNIE SIMONS Woman is always fickle—foolish is he who trusts her. — Camdon SUSAN SINCLAIR Though I am always in haste, I am never in a hurry. — Wesley CARL SLISHER Modesty becomes a young man. — Plautus RICHARD SMITH There is no man that speaketh more honestly than he can do or think. — Bacon TONI SMITH There is no happiness without action. — Disraeli BARRY SMOLER Genius is 10% inspiration and 90 prespiration — Camden HOWARD SOLOMON If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is a man who has so much as to be out of danger? — Huxley PATRICIA SPARKS What great blessing is a friend with a heart so trusty you may safely bury all your secrets in it. — Seneca 67 ROBERT SPEEDIE Opportunity, sooner or later, comes to all who work and wish. — Stanley FRANCES STANO Softly speak and sweetly smile. — Aden LINDA STARK The city of happiness is in the state of mind. — Unknown BURTON STECK Man is not the creature of circumstance— circumstances are the creatures of man. — Disraeli DAVID STEFANI To become a great man it is necessary to be a great rascal. — Guillaume WALTER STEIN A king in every way. — Unknown JON STEMPLES Boy of a hundred tricks. — Horace LINDA STOERMER A violet by a mossy stone half-hidden from the eye. — Wordsworth MARY STOUFFER We are not sent into this world to do any- thing into which we cannot put our hearts. — Ruskin DONALD STRAND Man I am and man would be. — Browning ANN STUPPLE Beauty and wisdom are seldom found together. — Pctronius-Arbiter JOAN STURMAN The laughter of girls is, and ever was. among the delightful sounds of earth. — DeQuincey LINDA TAFT A merry heart makes, oh, a cheerful countenance. — Proverb DIANE TEETER Let men say what e’er they will; woman, woman rules them still. — Bickenstaff PLEASANT THIELE A little nonsense now and then is pleasant. — Horace WAYNE THOMAS The superior man is slow in his words and earnest in his conduct. — Confucius JAMES THOMPSON Either I will find a way or I will make one. — Sidney RALPH THORNTON Good humor is the health of the soul. — Stanislaus 68 DORA TIBBETTS Good to be metric and wise. — Hcywood JAMES TODD Men of few words are the best men. — Shakespeare JEANETTE TONDI Things don’t turn up in this world until somebody turns them up. — Garfield RICHARD UHLEMANN First say to yourself what you would be; and then do what you have to do. — Epicctus NANCY ULLMAN Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. — Emerson JUDITH VARNER Early marriage, long love. — German Proverb CAROLE VECHIONI The all of things is an infinite conjugation of the verb “to do. — Carlyle HARRY VIGNOCCHI Tall, dark, and handsome. — Unknown JEANETTE WACHOLDER The happiest people are they who believe themselves to be so. — Hume SIDNEY WALDMAN The more we study, the more we discover our ignorance. — Shelley CHARLES WALKER It is hardly respectable to be good nowadays. — Sitwell SHARON WALTERS A simple ring with a simple stone. — Browning ELEANOR WALTON When duty whispers low, Thou must; The youth replies, I can. — Emerson SHIRLEY WALTON It is by vivacity and wit that she shines in company. — Chester KENNETH WALTZEK Breathes there a man with hide so tough, who says two sexes aren’t enough? — Hoffcnstein MARY WATKINS Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound together. — Goethe WILLIAM WATROUS Will is character in action. — McDougall DONALD WATT I can promise to be candid, though I may not be impartial. — Goethe STUART WAYNE My idea of an agreeable person is a person who agrees with me. — Disraeli MADELEINE WEBER The better part of one’s life consists of her friendships. — Lincoln NANCY WEEKS Always behave like a duck—keep calm and unruffled on the surface but paddle like devil underneath. — Unknown ALAN WEIL Energy will do anything that can be done in the world. — Goethe JOHN WEINBERG The knowledge of words is the gate of scholarship. — Wilson BARBARA WEINER Each heart holds the secret—kindness is the word. — O’Reilly STEPHEN WESSLING He was ever precise in promise keeping. — Shakespeare IO ANN WHITE Men have sight; women insight. — Hugo NANCY WHITE Always active in thought, always ready to adopt new ideas. — Shakespeare SUSAN WHITEHEAD Everyday you look lovelier and today you look like tomorrow. — Matthews WAYNE WHITLOCK He who has a firm will molds the world to himself. — Goethe CAROL WILLIAMS Earnestness is enthusiasm tempered by reason. — Pascal JOAN WINTERS Doing little things well is a step toward doing big things better. — Proverb CAROLYN WISHNICK Good, better, best; never let it rest. Till your good is better and your better best. — Reader’s Digest PATRICIA WITTEN A woman’s heart, like the moon, is always changing; but there is always a man in it. — Punch BARRY WOLF Work fascinates me. I can sit and look at it for hours. — Jerome MICHAEL WOLL It is honorable conduct and a noble disposition that make men great. — Ovid CAROL ZAHNLE A good disposition is more valuable than gold. — Addison 70 DANIEL ZAHNLE Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep. — Shakespeare JERROLD ZAR Thought is the seed of action. — Emerson RICHARD ZARTLER My greatest challenge is to attempt the impossible. — Michelson RICHARD ZELENS Dance, dance, caper and shake a leg. — Marquis RICHARD ZICCARELLI Last but not the least. — Tilcy Seniors not pictured are DON GALE, LARRY STIRSMAN. and TROYCE WHEELER Do these faces look familiar? 71 In Sincere Remembrance of Our Classmates, Charles Bingham, Peter Certik, Virginia Cronkhite . . . 73 And It Renuiins for Us To Build a Better Future. From left to right: “I wonder where the yellow went.” “We wear short shorts.” “The better to see you with, grandma.' Cafeteria’s best. Did somebody say something funny? Femmes Fatales. We haven’t seen it either. Fascination. 7 1 The First National? Idiot’s delight! From left to right: Revenge Swing King. It a boy! Happy Talk” One of those. For your scrap book? We’re going to win this game another time . . . . ” When you're down and out . . . . What are you doing here? Big Brother is watching you. Ignorance was bliss. From left to right: Nauseous! Winter Wonderland. How times have changed! The circus needs you. Memories are made of this. “As if I’ll ever sleep again. Hey, let go! Don the Beachcomcr “Veni, Vidi, Vici.” You can walk, we'll ride! Don't let the bed bugs bite. Docked again One man team. 76 Senior Ballot Most Popular Prettiest Eyes Class Clown Most School Spirit Class Genius Best Looking Most Inert Best Athlete Best Vocabulary Best Dressed Ear Beater Wittiest Biggest Flirt-Wolf Best Knitter Most Sophisticated Best Figure- Physique Best Personality Biggest Eater Biggest Drag Man-Woman Hater Most Talented Most Ivy League Most Congenial Best Couple Most Likely to Succeed BOYS’ CHOICE Grady Ellis Judy Hexter Steve Eiscn Jackie Orner ohn Rappaport usic Sachs Dick Zartler Judy Hexter Fred Hahn Bonnie Becker Toby Aaron Carol Johnson Roger Lunardi Daryl Lazarus Grady Ellis Marlyn Lawrentz David Hemmingway Sue Rittcnberg Steve Eisen Carol Johnson Wally Stein Daryl Lazarus Roger Pascal Pleasant Thiele Chucky Dixon Beryl Baizer Glenn Harnden Carol Harris Dave Seltzer Jackie Orner Bill Meyerhoff I la Garfinkel Dave Echt Judy Hexter Laurie Herman Lucia Murphy Steve Eisen Judy Hexter Mike Pehan I la Garfinkel Dave Seltzer Susie Sachs Bill Leckic Pleasant Thiele Sorny Leahy Judy Hexter Grady Ellis Ann Feuchtwanger Tim Cohler Judy Hexter GIRLS’ CHOICE Grady Ellis Judy Hexter Steve Eisen Jackie Orner Buddy Herzog Susie Sachs Dick Zartler Barb Henderson Cyrus Mead Eleanor Levinson Steve Eisen Carol Johnson Burt Kaplan Lucia Murphy Grady Ellis Marlyn Lawrentz David Hemmingway Sue Rittenberg Steve Eisen Phyllis Levin Wally Stein Jo Ann Jaffe Dave Echt Daryl Lazarus Chucky Dixon Bonnie Simons Steve Rose Carol Harris Rick Rosin Phyllis Levin Bill Meyerhoff Ila Garfinkel Steve Rose Judy Hexter Laurie Herman Carol Baren Dave Echt Ann Feuchtwanger Mike Pehan Doris Klein Dave Seltzer Judy Hexter Bill Leckie Margie Embich Dave Echt Judy Hexter Grady Ellis Ann Feuchtwanger Dave Echt Judy Hexter Senior Class Nicknames ELLEN SCHNELL. Schnickerboom JANET PHILLIPS .......Flips BOB CLYNE............Speedy DORA TIBBETTS.........Dodic VERA ALLSBROW...........Red HARRY VIGNOCCHI Harry the Horse PAT McCLORY.............Mac CHRISTINA SCHEELE......Tina LOUISE ROSENTHAL......Louie PETER ANDERSON....Andy Babes BARBARA WEINER.......Barbie JOAN ROBINSON......Sunshine CLAIRE KNOBELOCH Knobs ANN FEUCHTWANGER......Fcuchy DIANA BUCHMAN......Dedeanna SUE JOHNSON .............J. J. JOHN KNOLL............Coach CAROL JOHNSON ...........C. J. SHARON WALTERS.......Shorty JOANN WHITE..........Cookie JUDY EPSTEIN...........Eppy JUDEE FRANZEN.........Franz MARY ANN SHEAHEN.......Nurd JEANETTE WACHHOLDER Nettie BARBARA BUCHMAN ......Bucky VICTORIA CARANI.......Vicki PETE FECHHEIMER.....Peter Pan WAYNE THOMAS............Bud JUDY HUTCHINSON.......Hutch CARL SLISHER..........Curly CHRIS BINNER......Schroeder DAN RADNER.............Rais BOWEN SCHUMACHER.......Zorro GAIL DIRECTOR...........Gay PAT SPARKS..........Sparkie BOB PARTLOW............Buck Rogers VIRGINIA DECKER...... Ginny JUDY GLANDT...........Bucky Beaver JAY FEINBERG Finigan NANCY WEEKS..........Norren CAROLYN WISHNICK.......Alex RICHARD FIEDLER.....Mr. Robin KEN KNACKSTADT.........Dick BOB SPEEDIE....... Speedie” RALPH THORNTON........Fuzzy PAT WITTEN.............Pete KEITH BURGE...........Tiger RONNIE MAESTRI Mouse STEVE WESSLING..........Wes CATHY SCHLITT.......Schlitz DENIS ROSE.............Den-Den WALLY STEIN Kingfish! BURT KAPLAN..............Purpy TYLER RENSCH........... Monkey DICK SMITH.................Ace GARY LENCIONI The Lence! GRADY ELLIS...........••Tough LAURIE HERMAN Moose PAT INMAN................Eines STEVE BEZARK...............Bez BILL SAIELLI...........Cyclone KEN WALTZEK Hurricane MARY STOUFFER............ Mame ALLEN PERIN..............Totto SUSIE SACHS Vodka BARBARA HENDERSON Hender BONNIE SIMONS Tiger CHARLES ROOT............Rastis FRANCES GREEN Cookie NANCY CUMBERLAND Gasper AUDRY SCHAUBERT Gwcndaline BERYL BAIZER Boogie MIKE WOLL.................Fish What They Always Say JO ANN GRONLUND If you can’t convince ’em - confuse ’em. MIKE MORRIS Oh. I get it. a joke. RICK ROSIN Yes . . . Well . . . JEANNIE DIERKING I promise you. JAMES THOMPSON Ridiculous! BARB ANDREWS Oh. Schwcrdt! AMY ABERCROMBE No. I’m not a freshman. RONNIE WALDMAN I know the LOlfiSE SCHRAM Analyze it! MARGO BRILL Let’s get organized. KEREN JACOBSON Crunk which equals junk and? DIANE SCHRAM Oh. for John’s sake. MARTHA ROTTER Are you kidding? MARLYN LAWRENTZ Shape up or ship out. NANCY ULLMAN Oh, how nauseous. SUE HAUGAN Help! JOHN BORCHARDT Gotta breeze out of here. PEGGY GLUCK Help me. quick! HAZEL KELLER I just don’t know how I’m ever going to get it all done. STEVE ROSE Are you swinging? LINDA TAFT Only 196 more days— till Mike comes home. BONNIE GODOW I think I’m lost. RICHARD ANDERSON That’s the way the ball bounces. JUDY DONER At the ranch in Colorado ... LINDA STARK What’s new? TONI SMITH I can’t talk now. my phone is supposed to be unplugged. LINDA SOERMER Tsk! Tsk! DARYL LAZARUS What a pizmeyer! NANCY WHITE Oh. no! GAIL JONES I’m so mad at Totto, I could just die. MARGUERITA DALPONTE Hi. Hon! DEBBIE BOLTON Oh, you’re nothing but a wart. SUE RITTENBERG Make that succinct, please! CAROL SEELIG All rightec roe. GEOFF DAVIES Hey. Bartender! MARG EMBICH Gad!! SUE LEONARD What’s it worth? JOHN BAUM Ja, aber mein lieber mann! BOB DAVENPORT There’s no future in it. JIM KIDD Smile and swear. LINDA HARRISON E-------Gad! JULIE BARACANI I’m going on a diet. STEVE BOYLE I hate girls! PETER CIMBALO Give me a break! JIM HICKEY Get cocky, kid! BRYNA EDELMAN I’ll be dipped. PETER REICH Aragaah! STEVE HAMEL Leave me alone, Rappaport! MAXINE SCHLOSSBERG Okie, dokie. JOHN ROTHSCHILD What is on Mr. Einbeckcr’s test?? JOHN DARBY Ain’t got the slightest! LIN SIMON Life’s tough all over! JOSIE BYE He’s real nice, but I can’t remember his name. EDDIE LAING Knock it off. you guys. DIANE TEETER Well, if it’s muscle, it just won’t come off! RON BELLEI Fly boy! PAT HALL Thcms the breaks! SALLY CASSADY I can’t stand him. but ......! LOIS BROWN Y’know. Oh I don’t know. Y’know. SENIOR CLASS Be careful, it'll hurt our ratings! MR. VYN Politics is life. MISS MacMARTIN It doesn’t make a Karticle of difference. IR. REPSHOLDT In terms of .... MISS JOINER Why arc fast classes always so noisy? 78 Where They're Seen MARILYN MERTES with Chuck. LUCIA MURPHY late. JOAN INMAN in Miss Lasswell’s office. MADDY WEBER at Larson’s Station- ary Store. JAY PASET uptown during school. JOAN WINTERS with Al. LINDA BOSSELLI anywhere, trying to figure out a physics problem. PLEASANT THEILE racing around. FRANCES STANO at Fort Sheridan. JERRY BERTUCCI with Posey. ROGER BECKER at a gas station. JUDY MILLER riding a bike. FRED BURG at home studying for one of Miss Morgan's quizzes. CATHY MAXWELL in front of a TV. eating. DAVE PEACHIN at Chesler’s house. RICHARD ZICCARELLI at Chesler’s house. BURT STECK at Chesler’s house. TIM COIILER at Chesler's house. ROGER PASCAL at Chesler's house. STEVE CHESLER at Chesler’s house. BILL ISSEL at weddings and recep- tions. CAROLE SUE VECHIONI in the bookstore. ELINOR LEVINSON at home (sick?) ENID CURREL at the Deerpath. STANTON BANK in the music department. BRUCE COHEN behind Phyllis. DON WATT in his Ford. DAVE STEFANI riding around. LEROY PESCE in the locker room shower. JERRY ZAR in the band room. TOM PEYTON at Col. Metzc’s quarters. FRED HAHN winning at cards. NOEL BIKAU at English make-up. JUNE BARTH at a sewing machine. JIM PERRY in Deerfield, fighting tho Indians. RONNIE PADDACK in the Jewel. DAN PIERANTONI at Al’s and Jane’s. JOHN HYINK at Ravinia Park. SKIP KILLIAN in his taxicab. CHUCK DIXON in Cal City. GEOFF KROLL watching Mickey Mouse Club. GIL GIAMBI at the Highwood Center. SUE SINCLAIR stalled in her car. BARRY WOLF at Greasy Gus’s. BUD HERZOG playing the piano at a mass open house. FRED CHECCHIN at the Mary Jane Lanes. JOHN RAPPAPORT any place he can cause trouble. ALAN SAGER taking a picture of the Student Council. JOANN JAFFE working behind the counter at Woolworth’s. SUE WHITEHEAD cramming for Mr. Vyn’s test at 3:00 A.M. CYNTHIA BARBEE cramming for Mr. Vyn’s test at 3:00 A.M. BARBARA GORDON cramming for Mr. Vyn’s test at 3:00 A.M. CAROL SUE FELDMAN cramming for Mr. Vyn’s test at 3:00 A.M. JIM TODD watching can-can girls. DOLORES BENEVENTI up to her cars in dishes. DON RISKIND talking on his marshal post. DONNA HERRIGES down state. AL GREENBERG in lane 5 of the swimming pool. WAYNE WHITLOCK in Panthers office. HIRAM KENNICOTT at the Parkside. TOBY AARON at Lakeside Place. BRUCE HOLDERBAUM in his old yellow bomb. JOHN PETT in Peg’s” pool room. PAT HEINSIMER in the pool. JON STEMPLES stretched out on the couch in Miss Sherrod’s office. NANCY GREENWALD in Chicago. RUTH KLOTZ at Zesto’s. TOM ERRICO everywhere he appears. RAY McCRAREN with. by. looking for, or alone with Gail Haugland. PHYLLIS LEVIN in Mr. Munski’s room. EDUARDO REBELLO DE ANDRADE all over school and at all games. BOB CIMBALO on the golf course. SENIOR CLASS checking on the latest ratings. Class Will and Testament DEDE SHERWIN her mascotship of Mr. Covert’s session to some poor soul. SUE LEONARD a couple of inches to ill Hcnncr. USAN HEYMAN her loquaciousness to Sam Zell. JUDY HEXTER next year’s foreign exchange student to some fortunate student. BILL ROGERS his cribbagc board to Don Drcscher. DAVE HOMEYER his muscles to Dave Klein. FRED FRIEDMAN his case in getting along with teachers to Pete Levy. JIM DIER his bongo drums to Johnny Newmann. DAVE MOON projectionist Ed Young to Mr. McLaughlin. NAN BREHMER her rifle to Miss Joiner. SUSAN REICH the soph boys to the soph girls. KAY CUSHMAN her New Jersey accent to Betsy Watt. ALAN WEIL the Varsity Club to the athletes. ELEANOR WALTON Kleenex to Miss Joiner’s new session. SUE BRAVER her shaggy haircut to Mr. McMullen and his friend Mr. Cro- Magnon. BONNIE BECKER Mr. Stewart’s freshmen Latin classes back to Mr. Stewart. CAROL HARRIS her wild eyebrows to Geri Schinder. JEANETTE TONDI her baseball ability to John Scornavacco. BARB PINCUS rest gym to Annie Seyfarth. PAT DUFFY his levis to the Junior girls. BILL MEYERHOFF his swimming medals to Billy Koretz. SIDNEY FRISCH a dictionary with con-gru'ent in it to Miss MacMartin. ANNE LERNER her eyelashcurler to Sue Vcrkerk. JEFFREY SCHWARTZ his broken saxophone reeds to Mike Clement. BOB OSBORNE his ’34 Buick to Billy McComb. BILL WATROUS the diving boards to Wally Davies. STEVE EISEN his cute looks to Mr. Davis. KEN HORNUNG an inch or two to anyone who wants them. MIKE PEHAN his loving ability to any one who needs it. JOHN JENSEN an old shoe with hole to Bruce Kroll. EUGENE ADLER his drums to John Newmann. DAVID ECHT his magic shows to Barry Block, Harry Oppcnheim, and Ed Young. DAVE HANSON his love to all the junior girls. TOM BROWN his ”800’’ score to Allan Wolf. MIKE JULIAN Jcanie to the juniors. PENCIE METZ her shooting ability to Mr. Wildermuth. CYRUS MEAD his views on the honor system to any courageous expounder. BILL LECKIE his tweedy look to Charlie Cretors. ELAINE GOLDBERG her dad’s jokes to Miss Spencer, in case she runs out. SORNEY LEAHY his baby face to Sam Bernardi. NANCY O’CONNELL her tennis titles to Mr. Devereaux. CAROLE MICHELSON animal cookies to the famished sixth period lunch. TONY DAVIDSON his hot Old’s to a cool cat. ILA GARFINKEL her sex appeal to Nancy Jo Michaels. DON COLE his line to be divided evenly among the junior boys. SUE DAVIDSON her stability to Mr. Kyle. BONNIE MURPHY Our American Heritage” (SS 11 and 12 Text) to Mr. Vyn. ALICE JUUL her pony tail to “Raff.” MARY WATKINS her old ballet slippers to Miss Falk. DON STRAND his car to Sue Joseph. TIM AREND his personnel forms to Mr. Rhodes. LOUISE PAGLIAI her curly hair to Karen Kaplan. UDY McLAIN her knccsocks to Mrs. ossdorf. JO ANN JEFFERSON her piano bench to Linda Bcutcl. DORIS KLEIN her nonexistent car to a nonexistent freshman. GLENN HARNDEN a foggy fund- amental concept to Mr. Einbecker. LOUISE CASSERMAN Mrs. Maxey to Nancy Senzini. ROBIN BOGEAUS her Betty Crocker Award to some good homemaker. JEANIE BARTELMAN her haircut to a sheep dog. DON GALE his correspondence courses to needy juniors. CESARE CALDERELLI his old nose to the collection of old noses. 79 From the Premiere Performance of i(The Human Run ’ . . . And now, ladies and gentlemen, we turn you to Tom Lawton, your favorite disc jockey, who will pre- sent you with the first televised broadcast of “The Human Run.” This is Tom Lawton bringing an on-the-spot report of this magnificent event. The applause is now re- sounding as Dave Hemmingway, the director of the Philharmonic, makes his way to the orchestra pit. The theatre is quiet as Dave Seltzer, world-reknown, pro- ducer mounts the speaker’s platform to open his pres- entation of “The Human Run. He explains that this will be heard the world over. In South America, Amazons such as Joan Richards will hear it. In Moscow our diplomat, Louise DeCosta, will hear it. From the re- motest corners of the universe people will be witnessing this event. Even John Pedderson, the first earthman to reach Alpha Centauri, will listen to it from his distant station. The theatre is quiet in anticipation of this pre- miere. The curtain rises and we are enchanted by the notes of Gail Kelly from the Metropolitan, accompanied by that old guitarist. Dale Cuthbertson. Among those with leading roles are Karen Agazim, the noted Holly- wood star, and that dancer of dancers, Dick Zelens. As the show progresses, we find that we have a few late arrivals. Adrienne Nizzi was just ticketed for speeding down the wrong side of the street by that infallible Fosdick, Barb Bernardi. Bob George was snowbound and had to call Jim Dever’s auto repair shop to get him out. Another late-comer was Jackie Orner who ex- plained that she was unavoidably detained because she was reading several late applications for Cornell. . . . Ladies and gentlemen, we now interrupt this pre- sentation to bring you a commercial.” You folks with adipose where it shows, go to Rose- ann Fraulini’s Thinnerella. Many celebrities have at- tended this establishment, including the lovely Miss Universe. Karen Clauson, and our favorite lady wrestler, Carole Baren. When you roll on a mat you can’t have fat. . . . Does your dog seem apathetic and sullen to you? Is he listless and droopy? Perhaps he’s maladjusted. Take him to Joni Sturman, canine psychi- atrist, and he’ll be normal in a flash. Also, for a quick recovery, buy Fido’s bones at Robert Pearson’s meat market. This is the only place in town where it’s 100% horse meat, compliments of Nancy Burgett’s stables.” Now as we get back to our program we find that it is intermission, so with my candid camera we will scan the audience and seek out some warped personalities. On my right is a most frustrated lawyer, John Wein- berg, who has just witnessed a dreadful prosecution. It seemed that some unhappy, disturbed intellectual named Byron Klorfine has just shot Mike Gagen, the commissioner of Indian affairs in Deerfield, with a bow and arrow, when he tried to sell oil rights in Dick Zartler’s back yard. Give Byron my advice and tell him to see that psychiatrist, Ann Stupple. Maybe she can find a cure for his Freudian fancies. On the other side, filling at least half the seats in this theatre, is Annette Ruder, first woman D.I. with her squadron of marines. They’ve just arrived in one of Skip Uhlemann’s newest lifeboats. I’ve been told that she and Carol Williams, the dean at West Point, have been fighting it out as to whether President Howie Solomon will permit the quartering of troops in Miami this winter. I’m afraid, however, that that’s out of the President’s jurisprudence. This is a matter for Bill Haney and Stuart Wayne, joint proprietors of the Florida Beachcombing Society to decide. As we walk through the lobby, who should we bump into, but Carole Rothschild with her all day popcorn balls. We don’t mean to be facetious, Carole, but Jim Illes has just an- nounced that he intends to use one of them in his forth- coming nuclear fission experiment. “A small group is now clustering around Carolyn Conn, Pulitzer Prize winning editor of the Snortline. Who is she interviewing? Why it’s none other than that Olympic champion bridge player himself, Barry Smoler, who has just beaten that notorious card shark from Monte Carlo. Ron Norman. You sure are trump today, old chap. There’s the suave photographer from Playboy.” Larry Mueller, slyly snapping a candid shot of figure skating champ, Gail Haugland. Doesn’t she look glamourous in one of Eleanor Bierfield’s provoca- tive creations, a sackless where there’s less sack and more back. Before we return to our seats we must give a cursory glance around this ultra-modern theatre. It is hardly possible to believe that it was designed by that same architect who built that old bridge on the River Kwai, Charles Schultz. The walls are filled with the beautiful murals of livers which Daryl Jones has so colorfully painted. For special effect, Shirley Walton, that famed anthropologist, has formed a mobile from her dinosaur bones which is suspended from the ceiling. The lights adroitly operated by Dan Zahnle begin to fade as the curtain goes up. “By this time we are well into the plot. The villain, a ruthless playboy portrayed by Daniel Gottlieb, has mercilessly chased a pretty little stewardess, JoAnn Poetzinger up into the clouds in a streamlined rocket. Little do they know, however, that they are merely puppets in the bands of that mad scientist, Joe Pierson, and that their destination is a Siberian salt mine. When they arrive there, they are just about to be used by Richard Gleick and his accomplice. Helene Daemicke, in their quest for the missing link, when a timely rescue is made by . . . Our program has been temporarily interrupted while we bring you a news bulletin of spe- cial importance. Come in Betsy Gidwitz.” “This is Betsy Gidwitz from atop Mt. Olympus. Roger Lunardi of the St. Louis Cardinals has hit a grandslam homer and has beaten the Tokyo Typhoons to win the first World Series in twenty years. Be sure to see the Globetrotters with their star center Judy Varner when they arrive in your neighborhood. Now back to ‘The Human Run.’ ” “Ladies and gentlemen I regret to say that our pro- gram is indefinitely delayed due to technical disturb- ances. With the help of our acclaimed physicist, known for her exploits into the fifth dimension, Joyce Reeder, we will return as soon as possible. In the meanwhile we will dispence with another commercial. Here’s that all-round TV personality herself, the one time dis- coverer of the moon. Carolyn Shirley.” Folks, do you have tired blood, do you feel bogged down, tied to earth? If you do, do as Judy Fish has done. Take Nancy Carlson’s miraculous vitamin Z pills. You’ll feel higher in no time. Right, Judy? All those who have tired teeth get your extractions from Chuck Gross at a nominal fee. Remember they’re absolutely painless, and you get to keep your teeth.” “And now back to our premiere. I’m sorry to in- form you that this is the last curtain call. Ostensibly, the play was a success. The applause is deafening. How- ever. if you wish to know for yourself read the ratings in Snortline. These are written by noted authors such as that famed philosopher. Patricia Kleinhans, who is best known for her translation of Plato’s Republic into the original Pig Latin, and that critical individualist Troyce Wheeler. Remember the ratings are the deciding factor.” Margot Brill Underclassmen The freshman is an unknown quantity who grows and matures through the sophomore am junior years until he is ready to become a senior; just as an apprentice must learn and improve before playing a starring role. 81 Class Directors The class executive boards are the leaders of the various class activities. The officers of each board are elected in the all-school election. In addition, there is a representative from each session on the executive board. The major freshman projects this year were a picnic to unify the entire class and the Freshman Assembly, while the sophomores sponsored a winter dance, a spring picnic, and the Sophomore Assembly. The junior class found time amidst their preparations for Prom to form SLAC, the Student Lunchroom Activities Committee, and to achieve 100% voter registration for the second year in a row. Junior Executive Board BACK ROW: Miss Anderson, sponsor; Fred Baker, Jim Johnson, Steve Cohen, Julie Thomas. Sam Bernardi. CENTER ROW: Miss Prahl, sponsor; Lois Gamson, Mary Beth Cohen, Marianne Fell, Judy Horwitz, Jeanne Bischoff, Roslyn Banish. FRONT ROW: Mike Helding, treasurer; Bobbie Gray, secretary; Heather Axlcrod, vice-president; Dave SI o vie, president; Jeanne Kurtzon, social chairman; Linda Vanoni. Sophomore Executive Board BACK ROW: Miss Tarry, sponsor; Jack Peterson, Steve Oggcl, Mike Walton. SECOND ROW: Babs Guthman, Linda Hcintz, Betsy Wadt, Sandy Schreyer, Allen Schwartz. THIRD ROW: Judy Tondi. Sis Gross- man, Tom Stone, treasurer; Susan Merrill, secretary; Bro Abrahamson. president; Greta Fell. FRONT ROW: Bruce Dierking. Dave Slepyan, Dennis Cliff, Gary Auerbach, and Jerry Weinberger. Freshman Executive Board BACK ROW: Mr. Palmgren, sponsor: Bill Price, Ben Stackler, Richard Ulrich, Pat Bussey, Miss Maltas, sponsor. CENTER ROW: Paula Eisen, Lynn Sager, secretary; Faith Farranzini, vice- president; Audrey Fiocchi. FRONT ROW: Chuck Adler, president; Bill Cohler, Larry Bloom. 82 MISS A. ANDERSON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Cynthia Jacob, Liselotte Klein, Ann Holland. Karen Bcnvcnuti, Bar- bara Heinz, Jean Altman, Phoebe Fabricant, Margaret Struve. CENTER ROW: Rebecca Kahn. Kay Kraft, Marty Koeber, Sharon Terrill, Jeanne Kurt- zon. Ann Bock, Judith Reeb. FRONT ROW: Linda Vanoni, Mary Gustaf- son, Karen Ferrell, Lynne Carey, Gail Walsh, Susan Ronon. ABSENT: Mary Gay Blair, Joy Marcus, Gertrude Martincau. Juniors MISS N. ANDERSON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Hermia Saverslak, Susan Wilson, Mardith Jones, Sandralee Pedrucci, Jeanne Johnson, Carol Beck, Mary Beth Cohen, Susan Firestone. CENTER ROW: Susan Banfield. Pat Meyer, Cynthia Listek, Carol Root, Barbara Rady, Geraldine Kinzlc, Amcriga Bianchi. FRONT ROW: Carol Carswell. Janet Hitch- cock, Pamela Lenzi, Ellen Hussong, Sue Schnadig, Sharon Conn. ABSENT: Lana Borin, Martha Lansman, Tommie Manahan, Rose Onesti. MISS BABLER’S SESSION BACK ROW: Norma Brugioni, Nancy Chris- tensen, RoscAnn Albert, Julie Thomas, Bar- bara Hammerman, Nancy Lenzini, Nancy Carey. CENTER ROW: Assunta Bertucci, Sandy Gilden, Nancy Bilow, Penny Michaels, Ann Reinach, Janet Bruce, Sue Joseph. FRONT ROW: Judy Zahnle, Mary Schrocdcr, Flora Shriver, Jo Ann Levin, Jackie Koss, Anita Chizewer, Karin Franklin. ABSENT: Linda Benjamin, Glenda Lock- wood, Juliet Murphy, Melinda Saverslak. Class of '59 MR. DAVIS’ SESSION BACK ROW: Vernon Meier, Beach Aten, John Richards, John Visoky, John Carter, Bill Casselman, Mike Anderson. Bruce Aber- nathy, Stanley Lind, James Wcitzcnfeld, Dennis Larson, Adrian Painter. CENTER ROW: Samcul Parisck, Mike Garrity, Ronald Sackhcim, John Robbins, Mike Addison, John Reid, Gordon Cummings, Enzo Castelli, Jack Penninga, William Kohl- berg. FRONT ROW: Allan Marcus, Walter Roscher, Allen Wolf, Dennis Hampton, Arnold Bartlett, William Bruce, William Fleming, Leroy Drew. ABSENT: Howard Bernstein, James Clyne, Jon Weichelt. 83 MISS FALK’S SESSION BACK ROW: Marcia Dicus, Virginia Cook, Judith Winthrop, Faith Johnson, Margretta Winters, Billie Rosenhouse, Linda Litten- berg, Marcella Lencioni, Sheila Cummings. CENTER ROW: Elizabeth Eylcs, Lois Gamson, Janis Hokin, Judith Browar, Eliza- beth Spcrtus, Susan Hadden, Diane Phillips. FRONT ROW: Mary Isador, Charmaine Daniels, Patrica Peterson, Barbara Kushen, Janet Jobe, Geraldine Berube. ABSENT: Karen Korol. Juniors MR. HAMMERBERG’S SESSION BACK ROW: David Klein, Eugene Altman, George Kramer, Donald Gale, Henry Bernard, Charles Balkin. Robert Attcridge, James Me- Garvic, Gerald Smith, James Frederick, Terry Walker. CENTER ROW: James Lipman, Lester Marshall, David Meyer, Stuart Unger, James Rubenstein, Martin Gmeiner, Frank Bcrtogli, Michael Peck. FRONT ROW: Douglas Henkle, Fred Driscoll, John Azzone, Samuel Benjamin, Michael Berk, Valentine Moczulewski, Donald Drescher. ABSENT: John Wood Gibson, Louis Len- zini, Frederick Mann, Richard Pavlak, Ed- ward Perry, Frederick Phillips, Richard Rogers, Frederick Weinert. Class of 59 MR. KENDIG’S SESSION BACK ROW: Peter Elias, Roger Kritz, William Bresnehan, Richard Roach, David Beck, Charles Ogrcn, Robert Bittner, Jeffery Ferguson, Tony Gualandri, Larry Lucenti. CENTER ROW: James Duffy. Norman Macht. Jeffrey Zcllmcr, Larry Altman, Pat Rafferty. Donald Grant, Douglas Patterson. Steve Rosenbaum. FRONT ROW: Radovan Milosevic, Richard Souders. Richard Aaron, Peter Bcrtogli. Thomas Pulver. Michael Shaw, Edward Young. ABSENT: David Lewis, Michael Lewis, Judson Marshall, Robert Sheahcn, Richard Yerxa. MISS HARTZ’S SESSION BACK ROW: Sue Hirsh, Marianne Fell, Judy Pettingell. Catherine Harris, Kirsten Werrenrath, Jeanine Becker, Mary Liz Stearns. CENTER ROW: Carol Cook. Roberta Gouglcr, Leslie Marshall, Ann Seyfarth, Donna Gherardini, Sandra Looney, Giselle Chesrow, Rosalie Ward. FRONT ROW: Betty Powers, Carol Lipman, Jo Ann Lang, Rosemary Cholcwa, Nancy Jo Michaels. ABSENT Roberta Gray, Carol Larson. Janice O’Connor, Linda Weil. Nancy Wolff, Bonnie Zaror. MR. McMULLEN’S SESSION BACK ROW: Donald Price. Ken Miller. Charles Thomson. Robert Piacenza. John Kassner. Pete Levy. Thomas Murphy. Alfred Moser, Michael Clement, Michael Helding, Allan March. CENTER ROW: Larry Ballantini, Samuel Bcrnardi. Walter London, Jeff Hanson. John Salasin, Michael Rcsnick. Robert Neiman, John Farr. James Phelan. FRONT ROW: Donald Klos. Edward Loeb, William Sangerman, Steve Steinberg. Steve Ware. Thomas Wilson. Roy Stiller. ABSENT: Theodore Eaton. Richard Harris, Tony Merrick. Eugene Sandler. Juniors MISS MORGAN S SESSION BACK ROW: Patricia Rau, Jeanne Gour- gucchon, Karen Weis, Marcia Peterson, Bon- nie Glazier, Greta Goldt, Karen Larson, Linda Beutcl. CENTER ROW: Sandra Ncwbrough. Judith Horwitz, Carol Gould, Mary Anderson. Mary Marko, Sheila Gomgerg, Kathreen Weiscl, Jennifer Dubach. FRONT ROW : Dolores Casorio, Karen Cheli, Martha Jahn, Darlene Hart, Lynn Ewing, Valorie Rossman. Geri Schindcr. MR. OSTRANDER’S SESSION BACK ROW: John Tazioli, Robert Newton, John Ncwmann. Leigh Lawrence, Steve Co- hen, Norman Pattarozzi, David Palmer, Dale Snavely, Alan Joyce, Steve Tatar. CENTER ROW: Barry Golden, Lawrence Amidei. Richard Goldwach, Robert Sasso- rossi, Richard Weiss, William Holland, Fred Silberman, Richard Wyatt, Richard Haras. FRONT ROW: James Mayer. Richard Fitz- gerald. Arthur Venturi, Richard Albin, Lionel Watson, Richard Zanarini, Nello Babbini. ABSENT: Thomas Clarkson, James Fields, Joel Hirsch, Dean Lauschc. George Millen, Richard Stirsman, Gordon Vines. Class of 59 MISS PRAHL’S SESSION BACK ROW: Barbara York. Karen Zuikcr, Sue Severson. Rita Schorr, Gail Anderson, Star Hanck, Elizabeth Grant. Jeri Schwab. Sandra Williams, Judy Portman. CENTER ROW: Marcia Ohlwein. Jackie Migdal, Marla Ettington, Sue Parker, Sue Maxwell, Barbara Haynes, Betty Quinn. FRONT ROW: Jean Bischoff, Carole Brown, Gail Fox, Maxine Koenigsberg, Bcrna Goren- stein. ABSENT: Jo Lynne Murray, June Spivey. MR. REPSHOLDT’S SESSION BACK ROW: Gary Sternberg, Ronald Wei- land, John Peradotti. Allan Sleeman. Robert Gillispie. Richard Pullin, James Johnson, John Peterson, Wendell Moran, Robert E. Smith. CENTER ROW: Lawrence Caldarclli. Don Natta. John Scornavacco, William Dever, David Connolly, Charles Crctors, Eric Eng- berg, Larry Alschuler, Walter Bartlett. FRONT ROW: William Wachholdcr. Wil- liam Massover. Ronald Meyers. Ralph Frend, Samuel Zell, Mario Piacenza, Robert Bern- stein, Jeffery Levingcr. ABSENT: Mace Fink, Albert Fontanini, John Gidwitz. Joseph Magnini, David Ritter, Steve Seiler, Ronald Varney. Juniors MR. RHODES’ SESSION BACK ROW: Roger Levin, Henry Wollf, Rick Asher, Ken Lclli, James Beckman. David Baker, Dale Schmidt, Harry Oppenheimcr, Thomas Ekelman. CENTER ROW: Elliott Siegel. Thomas Armstrong. Howard Greenberg. John Wolens, David Slovic, Joe Falzone, Richard Carr, Joseph Esdale. FRONT ROW: David Conley. William Mc- Comb, James Paslcy, George Craig, Thomas Kilfoyle, Robert Hansen, Robert Smith, Ed- ward Imhoff. ABSENT: Peter Arne, Frederick Baker, David Bye, Joel Hochberger, Robert Rubin, Don Wurm. MISS SHERROD’S SESSION BACK ROW: Lynda Thompson, Nancy Wertheimer, Nancy Stryker, Penny Alldcr- dice, Margaret Schwalbach, Gail Oppcnhcim, Barbara Peterson, Mary Rose. Barbara Klevs. CENTER ROW: Marsha Haberer. Connie Linari, Sally Stillson, Margot Frank, Chris- tine Lcuer, Rosemary Rodenhofer, Frances Roof, Sharon Benson. FRONT ROW: Julie Harris, Jill Henncr, Pearl Bloom, Caryl Wcintraub, Anne O’Neal, Judith Kraft. Class of ’59 MISS SPENCERS SESSION BACK ROW: Miss Spencer, Ann Hougtaling. Sandra Wells, Penny Johnson, Janann South- erton, Roberta Ronzani, Sharon Jaeger, Julie Rubel. CENTER ROW: Carolyn Zuppann, Emily Winter, Jeanne Condon. Marla Tarrson, Ros- lyn Banish. Barbara Ledlie, Barbara Gans. FRONT ROW: Nancy Fortunato, Heather Axelrod, Suzanne Schcchtcr, Jo Ann Kinzcl- berg, Doris Dransfcldt, Sandra Grabell. ABSENT: Leslie Ingham, Melinda Mc- Mullen, Barbara Phillips. Susan VcrKcrk. MR. BALDRINI'S SESSION BACK ROW: George Burt. Mike Ugolini. Neil Zaborowski. Jim Coston. Jack Gour- gucchon, Bruce Anderson, Bob Luckman, Terry Tanner, John Fox. Bob Ohlwein. CENTER ROW: Bruce Hyman, Avram Root, Steve Kramer, Don Bittner, Don Mc- Avoy, Joe Screnock, Paul Peachin, Peter Gorncr. FRONT ROW: Bob Marks. David Bene- venti, Bruce Dierking. Bernard Collins. Eric Goodman, James Baruffi, John Libutti, John Chiappe. Sophomores MR. BENSON S SESSION BACK ROW: Dennis Varney, James Nathan. Phil Hall. Bruce Texley. Bob Hollman. Wil- liam Rigby, Arnold Listek, Rich Dahl, Ned Currie. CENTER ROW: James Bernard, Ken Ven- zon, Howard Wax. Marshall Hollis, Lee Hesler, Gerry Paddock. Larry Cable. Dennis Costclli, James Hollenbeck. FRONT ROW: Erwin Freund. Edwin Sjo- berg, Ronald Provus, Dennis Cliff. Paul Attard, James Gibbs. Charles Cowan, William Holmes, Philip Wicdcrecht, Larry Morani. ABSENT: Alan Frost. MR. BOLLE’S SESSION BACK ROW: George Coit, Jim Goodman, iim Knoll. Dave Baltimore, Mike Walton, [arris Goldstein, Tim Cioni, Ralph Stocker, John Lips. CENTER ROW: Jack Freeh. Ken Mack, John Marchi, Jack Jashelski, Bob Taft, Larry Yellen, Harvey Ring, George Howe, John Cahill. FRONT ROW: Don Goodman, Micky Para- dise. John Levinson, Alan Dcspres. Richard Root, Greg Nusinow, Phil Bettikcr, Lee Tabin, Max Zenko. Class of W MR. BRAUN S SESSION BACK ROW: Howard Sanders. Edmund Morris, Carey Cole. Donald Fielding, Ken Smith, William Heck, John Vollcrston, Joseph Bernardi, John McKee. CENTER ROW: Richard Azzi, Stephen Fletcher, Scott Herrmann, Ronald Sheldon. John Poser, Robert Giangiorgi, John Frcl- inger. Vernon Trabert. James Poliak, Francis Phillips. FRONT ROW: Stephen Corman, James Johnson, Harry Olson, Forest Harrison, Grant Abrahamson, Taylor White. John Lindquist, Steven Greenfield, Robert Carey. 87 MR. BURSON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Steve Dexter, Clarence Red- man, Allan Williams, Bob Johnson, Peter Hesse, Dennis Carter, Bill Behanna, Matt Cushncr. CENTER ROW: Dean Belmonte, William Merrick, Arthur Schlitt. Mike Weisbard, Richard Fleming, Bob Zimmerman, Ray Nord, Jim Juul. FRONT ROW: Alex Scornovacco, Lee Locvcnthal. Wesley Saferite, Ronald Palmer, David Gerstel, Randall Hartmann. Sophomores MRS. CARDINAL’S SESSION BACK ROW: June McGhie, Debbie Herman. Barbara Gaudreau, Yvonne DuVall, Betty Swigert. Carol Petersen, Audrey Layer, Con- nie Schroiderus. CENTER ROW: Julie Clampitt, Patty Wood, Peg Stevenson, Ann Davidson, Carol Benvenuti, Marcie Scott, Hope Brown. Ellen Benton, Lynn Wilson-Porteous. FRONT ROW: Aline Baskcs, Lois Buchman. Gale Lasman, Carol Katzman, Wendy Stein, Sharon Chioni, Sue Medway. MR. CARPENTERS SESSION BACK ROW: Stan Miller, Bruce Wilson, Dan Halvcrsen, Chuck Mau, Bruce Johnson, Warren Harman. Bill Beins, Gary Carter. CENTER ROW: A1 Gottlieb. Ronnie Con- stable. Donald Baumann, Bill Gilliland, Wil- liam Piersen. Larry Norgaard, Jay Shapiro, Jack Peterson, Marvin White. FRONT ROW: Edward Harms. Richard Brehmer, Creg Tribolet, Clifton Herricks, Bruce Giangiorgi, Steven Pollack, Stephen Spriggs. ABSENT: Robert Carahan, Michael Fredcn- berg, Wayne Harmon. Class of ’60 MRS. CHAGNON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Michele Schover, Gail Mort- imer. Karen Kinney, Priscilla White, Jill Nathanson, Marie Schilling, Louise Landrcth, Karen Jorgensen, Louise Bradt. CENTER Row: Susan Merrill, Linda Mino- rini, Marlene Duman, Carleen Griffin, Karen Kaplan, Dorothy Cohen, Carol Berman, Mary Lou Barth, Michael Certik. FRONT ROW: Saramae Grossman, Florey Sabordo, Susan Bass, Janice Lapinc, Susan Mann, Lila Smith, Sandra Morclli, Susan Wellman. ABSENT: Concetta Brugioni, Barbara Wish- nick. 88 MR. HANSON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Arnold Littaken. Andrew Lynch. Michael Davis, Tim Russell, Steven Oggcl, George O'Connell. Michael Zuckcrt, Roger Larson, George Price. CENTER ROW: William Koretz, James Hedstrom. Robert Finney. Dennis Kasper, Ken Wyman, Edward Rehman, Peter Good- man, Thomas Stone. FRONT Row: Dale Hall, Donald Keare. Peter Gerstel, Barry Wexler. Peter Williams, Robert Rcinish, Allan Luskin, Ronald Dono- hue. ABSENT: Douglas Brown. Kcnnith Kcn- niston, James Snow. Sophomores MR. KOLBE’S SESSION BACK ROW: Raymond MicheeU. Bob Engelman, Dan Demichelis, Bill Churchill, Tom Camp, Roger Hanig, Ron Mcntzcr, Rick Emmert, Stu Terry. CENTER ROW: James Bottello, Bruno Stiller, Arthur Brown. Jim Hanig, Stan Gore, Jim Ippilctto, Bill Phillips. FRONT ROW: Gary Auerbach. Jim Gleason. Brad Anderson, John Umbach, Bob Palmeri. Chuck Gordon, Dick Nathan. Mike Summers, Jim Bclmonti. MR. LEAKE’S SESSION BACK ROW: Steve Schcff. Steve Manhart, John Wallenstein. Mike Cole, Dan Pollack, Bill Davidson, Richard Patrick. David Pera- dotti. CENTER ROW: Bill Irvin, Allen Harder, Arthur Sayre. John Gibbs, Robert Gagen, Tony Javorkuti, Paul Holmbcrg, Bob Hansen. FRONT ROW: Mike Gordon. Heywood Becker, Steve Feinberg, Bill Hagbloom, John Leon, Richard Meyers. ABSENT: Bruce Miller, John Mesch, Bob Whitman, Leslie Bowns. Edward Grant, Robert Beckman. Class of 60 MISS LILL’S SESSION BACK ROW: Linda Wagner, Joan Lapinc, Diane Gravenhorst. Pat Phillips. Kathy Meicrhoff, Roberta Inman. Barbara Green- field, Madeline Bohn, Gayle Blount. CENTER ROW: Babs Guthmann, Susan Baldrcy, Halaine Maccabee, Naomi Johnson. Dorothy Morris, Carol Seiler. Gloria Broege, Sharon Mancck. FRONT ROW: Sherry Aver, Lynnea Baum, Linda Lang, Lynn Kenny. Penny Stanish, Barbara Weiglc. Sandra Slisher, Judy Schloss- berg, Susan Blair. ABSENT: Janet Berkman, Judy Walker. 89 MRS. LOGEFEIL’S SESSION BACK ROW: Lynn Chazin. Suzy Grais, Shcrroll Anderson. Sharon Husenetter. Betty Ann Smith. Sue Forrest. Peggy Kchrwald. Barbara Thiele, Lynn Rcinhard, Sidra Dc- Koven. CENTER ROW: Pat Hoelsner. Laura Bcrn- ardi. Joanne Venturini. Ellen Landy, Diane Rubin. Betsy Glathart. Marilyn McClory, Melinda Oswald. Kris Mauri. FRONT ROW: Greta Fell. Nancy Carlson. Kathy Loewe. Carol Urist, Penny Berning, Judy Rogan. Debbie Berry. ABSENT: Ellen Kieft. Sophomores MISS OLSON'S SESSION BACK ROW: Pat Looby, Melody Rcich- man. Sue Mordini, Pat Monaghan. Sharon Schaefer, Bonnie Inman. Anita Eisenschiml, Ellen Dimsdale. Beverly Fabbri, Helene Feis. CENTER ROW: Carol Egbert. Ronnie Silverman. Betsy Wadt. Moya Watson. Nida Himcl, Cathy Bertucci. Lynn Porter, Barbara Gordon. Mary Loevenhart, Barbara Rubcn- stein. FRONT ROW: Karen Thomas. Karen John- son. Joan Hess, Arna Silvers. Nancy Stewart. Diane Muller. Lillian Vanoni. Joy Gilruth. ABSENT Jill Krueger. MISS ROEDENBECK'S SESSION BACK ROW: Toy Resnick. Mildred Visoky. Judy Mandel. Sue Price. Judy Fick. Louise Perry, Elizabeth Hickman. Louise Ugolini. CENTER ROW: Barbara Sturm, Margot Gale. Louise Vick. Linda Heintz, Bobette Cohen. Elizabeth Wormser, Audrey Loland, Peggy Cortcsi. FRONT ROW: Jeanine Zuppann. Pat Hayes. Karen Kloos, Barbara Lerner, Kathleen Mul- len. Patricia Olson. Maggie Danncnbaum, Nancy Silverman, Audry Rivi. ABSENT: Roberta Schwartz. Class of ’60 MR. ROHLING'S SESSION BACK ROW: Bill Goldsrsith. Fred Rickies. Paul Anderson. Corey Robin. Bill Bachle, Alan Lcnzini, Gerhard Jankcl, Jim Holbrook, Hal Brown. CENTER ROW: Fred Wright. King Cush- man. Jeff Dembo. Bob French. Bob Inbau, Paul Wilson. Bob Lucas. Bill Keogh, Harry Roof. FRONT ROW: Jerry Orlowsky. Scott Haley, Don Stewart, Bruce Bennett, Martin Jacobs. Don Lee, Ted Stromberg, Richard Kubalck. ABSENT: Nicholas McQuire, Bill Riter. 90 MRS. SANDAHL’S SESSION BACK ROW: Wanda Manfredini, Nina Curell, Sue Overman. Diane Ocstrcich. Mary Henderson. Jan Logan. Sherri Kromer. Donna Zeff, Sharon Margclli. CENTER ROW: Jane Stallman. Aviva Hol- land. Katee Frehner. Rita Ronzani, Virginia Waltzek. Sherri O'Shea. Donna Hugh. Lucy Robinson. Lydia Arroyo. FRONT ROW: Karen Goodman, Delores Gumbincr. Cindy Martin, Patti Ugolini. Kathy Winter. Helane Levin. Barb Carlson. Sharon Rafferty. Diane Dienner. ABSENT: Sue Hixon, Susie Sloan. Sophomores MRS. SWANSON'S SESSION BACK ROW: Arlene Sundbcrg. Janet Len- nox, Ellen Blankstein, Judith Keen. Carol Herman, Nancy Leach, Carolyn Crouse, Sue Feldstein. Marlene Gaggioli. CENTER ROW: Sue Ori, Janet Nelson. Anne Fordtran, Mary Phillips, Ellen Swartz, Elana Hershman, Marlys Mlejnek, Jan Lou Poetzinger. Marie Nerini. FRONT ROW: Sue Shefflin. Illene Winstin. Carol Frost, Gail Fisher, Mary Hagblom, Linda Carlson, Gail Sicilia, Nancy Cooper. Jean Goldberg. MISS TARRY’S SESSION BACK ROW: Gayle Kalseim, Jan Thompson, Jane Rademacher. Martha Graham, Marsha Rcnsch, Kay Herzog, Lynne Danus, Beverly Hanson, Adrienne Pcdrucci. CENTER ROW: Gloria Hangren, Jim Chut- kow, Anne Lev, Patty Friedman, Bea Lcnzini, Betty Rivctt, Bobbie Pollock, Susan Wolff, Pam Sidari. FRONT ROW: Judy Tondi. Carolyn Schladt, Pam BiKau. Sandra Seymour, June Stupey, Cindy Tucker, Joyce Burrus, Mary Jane Thomas. ABSENT: Colleen Kelly, Lois Shlopak. Class of 60 MR. WILDERMUTH’S SESSION BACK ROW: Lance Jensen, Howard Lcshtz, Alan Roufa, Charles Glascock, David Berk- son. Marc Shindcrman. Frank Palandri. Michael Powers, Carl Benson, Jules Hough- taling. CENTER ROW: Scott Ingham. Peter Nathan, John Ross. Terry Somenzi. Maurice DeWulf, Robert Welch. Gershon Ratner. Norman Parker. FRONT ROW: Robert Joseph. David Cohen, Gerald Weinberger, Kenneth Pedersen. Rich- ard Sklar, Larry Gcrshun, Major Wagner. ABSENT: Rodney Bertrang, Kenneth Jones, Ned Schechter. 91 MISS WOOD’S SESSION BACK ROW: Joyce Omans, Sandra Schreyer. Nancy Onderdonk. Carol Dibbern. Sue Epstein, Barbara Isley, Kay Katz, Bar- bara Betterman. CENTER ROW: Margo Jacobson. Barbara Painter, Carol Lappen. Barbara Patterson. Joan Nychay, Phyllis Kramer. Pat McKitrick, Clara Kemp, Anita Clair. FRONT ROW: Vera Morandi. Madeline Starcevich. Barbara Busse. Sandra Bernardi. Joanna Hall, Deanna Brown, Emily Wilson. Geri Kohn. ABSENT: Carol Carlson, Pam Frye, Ellen Server. Some Freshmen Girls Eagerly Receive Their Schedules 92 MISS BOGHASEN S SESSION BACK ROW: Melinda Mitnick, Frances Kahn, Jo Ann Lee. Norma Piacenza. Melodcc Frcmling, Shelley Albin, Sharon Hanson, Sherrie Krase, Beth Wing. CENTER ROW: Lois Steel. Joanne Bel- monte, Gay Marcus, Delores Carni, Barbara Sanford, Sallie Dent, Tari Weisert, Claudia Harris. FRONT ROW: Lynne Finder. Marilyn Scgil, Bonnie Rooker, Jan Klingeman, Linda Reach, Barbara Cohen, Nancy Christman. Sandy Baer. Freshmen MR. CHRISTENSEN S SESSION BACK ROW: David Hesse, John Julchcr, Jim Gray, Dale Zech, Stuart Rodman. Nils Hagbcrg, George Werness, Peter Shugar, Bill Cargill. Bill Hutchinson, Joe Herbert. CENTER ROW: Frank Ferraro. John Schladt, Bob Lawrence. William Davis, Bill Uhlcmann, Austin Tuthill, Rich Bartoli, Bill Schneider. FRONT ROW: Charles Capitani, Ken Hirsch, Peter Sande, Bill Cohler. Mike Thompson, Ken Gaines, Michael Spottswood. Steve Mora. MR. CIANCHETTI’S SESSION BACK ROW: Dick Platt. Dale Smith. Dennis Conley. David Ricker, Marty Fisher. Gordon Cumberland, Dick Parkinson. John Biondi. Mike Carney. CENTER ROW: Bill Lolli, Bob Lind, Ronny Bernardi, Bob Kaplan, Larry Curley, Bill Bcogter, Arthur Friedman, Larry Fish. FRONT ROW: Lester Williams. Terry Klavohn. Bruce Winograd. Danny Hickey. Ricky Aschcr, Gig Gluck. Steve Gumbiner. Class of 61 MR. FINCH’S SESSION BACK ROW: Paul Williams. Mark Panther, Pat William Hayward, George Bollcnbacher. Ronald Holsman, Craig Meldahl, Albert Bing- ham, Carl Johanson, Maxime Parienti. CENTER ROW: James Ugolini, Jerry Robert Liebling, Robert B. Kaplan. Victor Pighctti, Jack Altman, Jeffrey Leckie, Barry Grossman, Donald Shankman. FRONT ROW: James Bierfeld, Barry Cum- mings, Donald Platt. Barry Gilbert, Roland Kraatz, Charles Adler, David Bellamy. ABSENT: Richard Crowell, Ronald Holsman, James Ramsey, James Mowers. 93 MISS GUNELL’S SESSION BACK ROW: Kate Wing, Carol Drake. Lynne Shelton, Sally Picrantoni, Merry Hcxter, Nancy Stolkin. Andy Murray. Phyllis Jacobson, Nancy Jandeisck. CENTER ROW: Deirde Reilly, Lynette Maestro. Jeri Giss, Pam Mass. Lynn Moore, Dorric Gilden, Kathi Binard, Ronny Shapiro. FRONT ROW: Mary Coleman. Bonnie Rose, Mary Noble. Karen Meier, Patty DeFord. ABSENT: Linda Hcnnessy, Joanne Austin, Judy Lencioni. Freshmen MISS HADDY’S SESSION BACK ROW: Daryl Maclntire, Judith Peter- son, Karen Hanson, Anna Tatar, Nancy Leonard, Dianne Graw, Frances Miller, Karen Reynolds. CENTER ROW: Judy Cavalier. Randy Rosncr, JoAnn Spark, Sharon Imbcr, Patricia Schloss, Virginia Mordini, Nancy Haynes. FRONT ROW: Lana Bolotin, Judith Ham- merman. Patricia Price. Janet Kmicciak, Gail Golden. Carrol Kopp. MISS HARTMAN’S SESSION BACK ROW: Judy Cohen, Karen Morris, Carol Rizzolo, Susan McClure, Suzanne Hemsworth, Ann Picracci, Frances Santi, Carole Praet. CENTER ROW: Linda Wood. Stephanie Brent, Mary Ann Credi, Gayle Goldbogcn, Marlyn Gastfield, Betty Bacik, Mary Frank. FRONT ROW: Cynthia Duskin, Susan Steinberg, Carole Jacobson, Lucy Lewis, Connie Crabb, Boninc Shapiro, Jamie Adler. ABSENT: Karen Arne. Doris Zahhlc. Class of 161 MR. HECK’S SESSION BACK ROW: Don Dick, Gregory Belmont. Joseph Ney, Allen Erdhcim, Craig Stevens, John Napier, Kenny Ori, Dwight Coleman. John Dalla Valle. CENTER ROW: Michael Goodkind, Douglas Gegner, Thomas Phelan. Tom LaBuda, David Klorfine, Frank Lennox, James Eller, David Cioni. FRONT ROW: Larry Buchman, Richard Steinberg, Tom Dickinson, Kirkby Robinson, Roscoc Berringcr, Leo Pizzato, Charles Bierfeld. 94 MISS HUBBS’ SESSION BACK ROW: Barbara Baldrey. Paulette Rubin, Diane Lencioni, Lucy Rogers. Bertha Bradt, Katie Thomas. Alice Jacobson. Mary- lea Constable, Dale Murphy. Sandra Silver. CENTER ROW: Faith Farcnzcna, Sue Hirschfelder, Sandra Orsi, Lynn Kulieke, Karen Ruge. Kathy Baum. Joyce Moeller. Mary Ellen Brown. Pam Allderdice. FRONT ROW: Linda Sjoberg. Sharon Barker, Marcia Malchioni, Donna Pigati, Jean Dreiske, Mary Beth Winter. Freshmen MR. KANE’S SESSION BACK ROW: Edward Seifert. William Bodlc, Carl Klingeman, Henry Cretors, Chuck Cohen. Alan Jacobson. Donald Gualandri, Ernie Castelli, Ronald Mamone. Donald Geman. CENTER ROW: Joseph Dictzgcn. Donald Roach. John Lazaretti. John Mathc. Ray Wicklander, George Amidei. Bart Gross. Dave Lewitz, Richard Zwirner. FRONT ROW: Jim Wells. Everett Schau- bert, Tom Wachholder. Gene Paddack, Harry Henderson, Bob Jolls, Mike Pacin. ABSENT: Harry Anderson. MR. KRAFT’S SESSION BACK ROW: Stan Boose, Bob Etzler, Bruce Petesch, Chuck Linhoff, Jack Gelperin, Bill Price. Ted Zagnoli, Larry McGhie, Dan Davenport. CENTER ROW: Danny Brown. Ray Had- rick, Alan Rodney, Tim Bresnehan, Ed Sordyl, Gary Molendy. Bob Magnani. Paul Perry. FRONT ROW: Elliot Bairn, Tom Berube, Joe Lazzaretto, Reubin Goldberg, John Bos- selli, Ken Splett. Ken Klos, Dennis Clement. ABSENT: Barney Brienza. Class of ’61 MISS MALTAS’ SESSION BACK ROW: Kitty Martin, Carla Rossi. Carol Bronson, Sue Johns. Louise Shulz, Sandra Julian, Lillian Ruclli, Karen Poclman, Linda Linari, Sucllen Koss. CENTER ROW: Ann Winkley. Judi Baron. Frances Nelson, Connie Smith, Merry Sosnay, Malinda Hunting, Elaine Koss, Adeline Fos- dick. FRONT ROW: Diane Dray, Nancy Fech- heimer. Pat Kulp, Barbara Albert, Rosalie Goldware, Helen Parker, Lynne Sager. 95 MRS. MAXEY’S SESSION BACK ROW: Lynn Linari, Valerie Sedgwick, Pat Busse. Patricia Mandcl, Judith Schwa!- bach, Janet Petersen, Linda Beauchamp, Sandra Johnson, Jill Bergquist. CENTER ROW: Nancy Zacharias, Barbara Kux, Julienne Paquette. Arlyne Katz. Ellen Felman, Nancy Fredrickson, Fern Silver, Susan Graham. FRONT ROW: Jane Smith, Isabelle Gibson. Erica Illes. Marsha Duberchin, Karen Sal- yards. Trudy Sammct. Mary Ann Linehan. Freshmen MISS OLESON’S SESSION BACK ROW: Kathy Berry, Lesley Jones, Barbara Horwitz, Karen Skinner, Margaret Vance, Diane Stano. Jan Slater, Karen Brady, Michacle Hicks. CENTER ROW: Wendy Faltion, Rickey Barcn, Barbara Perlman. Nancy Sackheim. Kathy Haugh, Linda Hirschner, Linda Kahn. FRONT ROW: Jill Myers, Sandy Sandberg. Dottie Diver, Adrian Pighctti, Diane Moore, Judy Coleman, Carol Goldman. ABSENT: Pamela Books. MR. PALMGREN’S SESSION BACK ROW: Charles Frccdcnbcrg. Lloyd Kuehn, John Fisher. Philip Lindgrcn, Richard Maiman. Roger Henninger. Dan Smith. Tom Weiand, Jim Mitchell, Andrew Schnur. CENTER ROW: Barry Block. Bob Gould. David Perry, Eric Ross, Leonard Fabbri, Kenneth Couscns, Lawrence Bloom, Gene Harris, Jerry Biaggi. FRONT ROW: Russell Turco, Larry Las- man, Richard Missncr, James Rainwater, David Temkin. Medio Guerrieri. Paul Robin- son. ABSENT: John Henderson. Class of 161 MR. PERRY S SESSION BACK ROW: Carole Miller. Penny Kcn- niston, Rita Freberg, Roberta Solie, Sherry Miller. Heidi Rupp, Beverly Allsbrow, Lolly Harmon, Shirley Folger. CENTER ROW: Eva Schwab. Co-Co Witten. Patty Nannini, Louise Carlin. Jeanne Albert, Micki Gamm, Judy Rauch, Sandy Vines. FRONT ROW: Barbara Wagner. Marilyn Schwartz, Cathy Spertus, Sally Jewett, Carol Yerxa, Carol Lcucr, Monica Jacobs, Sharon Vcchioni. ABSENT: Paula Eisen, Linda Laurance. 96 MISS ROMANO’S SESSION BACK ROW: Susan Gillen, Pat Shea, Stephanie Souby, Judy Treffry, Judy Jacobs, Betsy Burrows. Marlene Spivy, Helen Cox, Leila Schcr. CENTER ROW: Betsy Powell. Annabet Hall, Cathy Pepping. Jaynic Rosenthal, Caro- lyn Jordan, Leslie Rogers. Diane Belmonte, Lynne LaBuda. FRONT ROW: Ester Tomci, Denise Block- han, Audrec Fiocchi, Gail Platt, Jeanne Duffy, Carolyn Stemples, Ann Blair. ABSENT: Betty Stipe. Freshmen MR. SCHRADERS SESSION BACK ROW: Terry Wolff, Robert Sandy, William Palladini. John Coleman. Dan Levy, Walter Peters, Richard Henningcr, Michael DePinto, James Sebben. CENTER ROW: Anthony Dato, Bob Rosen. Richard Rodde, David Kreitling, Daniel Har- ris, Alan Exelrod, Richard Campagni, George Patterson. FRONT ROW: Gerald Mindell. Gerry Rizzo, William Summers, John Nyman, Sparky Buening, William Stoermer. Steve Washburn, Jim Gottlieb. MR. VAN HULZEN’S SESSION BACK ROW: Joseph Innoccnzi, Edward Gamson, Steve Vaitonis, Jeff Green, Dennis Castcllari, Tim Fiocchi, Mike Marder, Bob Saiclli. CENTER ROW: Dennis Anderson, Bill Keeler, Pat Simmons. Fred Day, Tom Inman, John Secrcst, Bill Olson, John Portman. FRONT ROW: Neal Blacker, Carl Lantz, Gerald Cole, Steve Levy, Bruce Stocker, Richard Vcndig, Rick Ulrich. ABSENT: John Osborn, Gerald Irwin, Steve Filipetti, Bruce Lobdcll. Class of J61 MR. WINKLEY’S SESSION BACK ROW: Jim Roberts. Jim King, Nick Phelps, George Muzzarelli. Roger Marks. Mike Goldstein, Joe Pasqucsi, Bill Glickauf, Jim Witten, Ben Stacker. CENTER ROW: Kenneth Lehman, James McPherson, Marvin Fiocchi, George Cimbalo. Dennis Balkc, Ernest Carani, Harold Samuel- son, Kenneth Epstein. FRONT ROW: Arthur Mini. Dan Braver, Robert Brocgc, David Little, Glen Erickson. Craig Jones. Bruce Kroll, Robert Ray. Wally Davies. 97 From left to right: My this is tasty! TCARTSBA We 11 be glamorous yet. The more the merrier. Clean through and through. Don’t change the station. Dracula’s daughters. A dog in the hand’s worth two in the bush. Say “cheese.” Binner, only a little thinner. Before or after? Aren’t we neat? The bubble queen. 98 S-e- Athletics 99 A team and a theatrical company are essentially similar; as each must practice long and diligently in order that their f inal performance will be a success. Grulders Stage Comeback This year’s varsity gridders, although hard hit by illness and injuries, recovered late in the season to win their first league victory in three years. Even though Coach Burson’s squad had lost their first two quarterbacks, the Parkers’ determination paid off in their last two games. Mike Pehan, Ronnie Maestri, and Dick Zartler were standouts in the backfield, while Howard Solmon, Steve Rose, Burt Kaplan, Laurie Herman, and Tim Cohler led the improved Parker line. At the beginning of the year, it was believed that the sophomore squad would be one of the strongest in the league. On only two Saturdays did they live up to this forecast. Among the finer sophs were Bro Abrahamson, Dan Demichelis, and Jim Juul. If the sophomores live up to their potential their future will be very bright. Coach Schrader’s defensively minded frosh eleven compiled a creditable record this last season. Mickey Panther. Ken Cousins, and Jeff Leckie are considered good prospects for next year’s sophomore squad. FOOTBALL SCORES Varsity Scores HP 6 Fenger 19 HP 0 Evanston 49 HP 0 Niles 27 HP 0 New Trier 46 HP 6 Proviso 39 HP 0 Waukegan 46 HP 0 Oak Park 7 HP 7 Morton 6 Sophomore Scores HP 13 Fenger 15 HP 0 Evanston 13 HP 6 Niles 13 HP 34 New Trier 6 HP 0 Proviso 52 HP 12 Waukegan 8 HP 0 Oak Park 19 HP 7 Morton 13 Freshman Scores HP 12 Evanston 0 HP 20 Niles 6 HP 0 New Trier 34 HP 0 Proviso 2 HP 0 Waukegan 0 HP 18 Oak Park 0 HP 13 Morton 0 VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Mr. Burson, coach; Mr. Philippi, coach; Pete Fcchheimer, Rick Pullin, Mike Helding, Jeff Davies. Tom Peyton, Chuck Ogrcn. Jay Feinberg, John Roths- child, L. T. Herman. Burt Kaplan, Jim Hickey. SECOND ROW: Mr. Kolbc. coach; Mr. Christensen, coach. Mike Pehan. Steve Eisen, Henry Wolff, Tim Cohler, Steve Rose, Dick Zartler, Ed Laing, Chuck Dixon, Dick Souders, Bob George. THIRD ROW: Mr. McMullen, trainer; Mr. Baldrini, coach; John Knoll, manager; 4im Wcitzenfeld, Chris Binner, Bill Dcvcr, Leroy Pesce, Bill Leckie, Stu Unger, like Addison. Bruce Holderbaum, Sam Bernardi, Roger Pascal, Charlie Crctors. BOTTOM ROW: Lin Simon, manager; Jeff Zclmcr, Denis Rose, Rich Rogers, A1 Sager, Ron Maestri, Howard Solomon, John Scornavacco, Gordon McKinzic, Keith Burge. MISSING: Byron Klorfinc, Dr. Reich, team physician. SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Dan Dcmichclis, Bob Luckman, Tim Russell, Steve Oggcl, Chuck Mau, Mike Walton, Jack Gourguechon, Tim Cioni, Mike Zukcrt, Dan Pollack. SECOND ROW: Jim Pollack, manager; John Marchi, Bro Abrahm- son, Rick Emmert. Denis Castelli, Jack Jashelski, Stu Terry, Ron Mcntzer, Steve Dexter, Bill Bcins. THIRD ROW: Tom Stone, manager; Jim Knoll, manager; Frank Palandri. Bill Holmes. Bob Engleman, Bill Keogh. Jim Castle, Bob Giangiorgi, Jim Juul, Bruce Bennett, Ken Wyman. BOTTOM ROW: Jack Freeh, Steve Greenfield, Dennis Kasper, Don Stewart, Steve Pollack, Bruce Dierking, Bill Piersen, George Burt. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM TOP ROW: John Bosselli, Barney Bricnza, A1 Jacobson, Ron Holsman, Jack Gelpcrin, Jeff Green, Chuck Lindgren, Nils Hagberg, Stu Rodman, Dale Zech. SECOND ROW: Mr. Devcrcaux, coach; Roger Hcnninger, Bob Kaplan. Bill Glickauf, Tim Bresnehan, Dan Levy, Bart Grossman, Marty Fischer. Greg Belmont. Jeff Lcckic, Bill Palladini, Dave Ricker, Mr. Schrader, coach. BOTTOM ROW: Chuck Adler. Jim Grey. Will Bodle. Ron Bern- ardi, John Osborn, George Wcrncss, Dennis Balke, Ken Cousens, Mike Panther, John LaBuda. Jim Ramsey, Dave Cioni. Dave Klor- fine, Mr. Repsholdt, coach. FRONT ROW: Managers John Santi, Steve Gaines, Steve Gumbiner. ■ 101 1. Half time. 3. Murder’s row. 2. Stop. 5. When those Little Giants fall in line. 7. An opening. 6. We won! ! ! 8. Gotcha! 102 Cross Country VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY TEAM TOP ROW: Mr. Ault, coach; Grady Ellis, Wally Stein, Pete Levy, Bob Spccdie, Harry Vignocchi. SECOND ROW: Toby Aaron. Tony Gulandri. Tony Lamanna, Dave Slovic, John Reid. BOTTOM ROW: Marty Gmeiner. Tom Armstrong, John Farr. A1 March, Bill Haney. Varsity Scores 36 HP 19 Evanston 23 HP 32 Niles 50 HP 15 New Trier 46 HP 17 Proviso 23 HP 35 Waukegan 33 HP 24 Oak Park 240 HP Ninth in District Meet 36 HP 23 Morton In the second year of this sport at Highland Park, Dick Ault’s harriers racked up two wins to finish sixth in league competition. John Farr was the standout varsity runner, while Jerry Weinberger and Jim Hanig give hopes for a bright future. FROSH SOPH CROSS COUNTRY TEAM TOP ROW: Don Keare. manager; Greg Nusinow, Clarence Redman, Bruce Johnson, Bruce Hyman, Jay Shapiro. Steve Corman, manager. SECOND ROW: Bob Zimmerman, John Fox, Jim Holbrook. Jim Hanig, Gcrshon Ratncr, Jerry Weinberger. BOTTOM ROW: Randy Hartman. Bruce Giangiorgi. Rick Ascher. Doug Brown, Dick Nathan. Bob Reinish. ABSENT: Mr. Lowell Leake, assistant coach. Frosh-Soph. Scores 30 HP 26 Evanston 30 HP 26 Niles 35 HP 25 New Trier 18 HP 45 Proviso 17 HP 29 Waukegan 30 HP 25 Oak Park 23 HP 26 Morton Cagers Hit and Miss Varsity Scores 51 HP 41 Glenbrook 47 HP 46 North Chicago 52 HP 44 Niles 50 HP 62 Waukegan 48 HP 61 Evanston 47 HP 48 Oregon 34 HP 36 Proviso 47 HP 51 New Trier 38 HP 45 Oak Park 34 HP 43 Morton 47 HP 53 Niles 42 HP 54 Waukegan 33 HP 40 Evanston 42 HP 51 Proviso 38 HP 47 New Trier 36 HP 39 Oak Park 50 HP 52 Morton 56 HP 63 North Chicago VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Tom Peyton, Wally Stein, Steve Cohen, Harry Vignocchi. SECOND ROW: Mr. Schrader, coach; Marty Gmeiner, Dave Slovic, Tony Lamanna, John Scornavacco, Ronny Handicapped by sporadic shooting and a lack of height. Coach Bob Schrader’s varsity team started strong, but cooled slightly, as the season progressed. With a few good breaks the Little Giants' record could have been entirely different. Highland Park’s all-league candidate Grady Ellis paced the Little Giants. Ellis was ably assisted by Harry Vignocchi. Toby Aaron, and Ronnie Maestri. Coach Wally Hammerberg, taking full advantage of his fine material, skillfully guided his soph cagers to the top of the league. The height of Steve Oggel. Chuck Mau, and Bob Hollmann augmented by the backcourt play of Jim Juul and John Poser provided Coach Hammerberg with a winning combination. Maestri, Mr. Baldrini, coach. BOTTOM ROW: Tony Gulandri, Toby Aaron, Tim Rus- sell, Jim Hickey, Grady Ellis. SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Mr. Hammerberg, coach; Bob Hollman, Mike Walton, Terry Somenzi. Bruce Miller, John Poser. Tom Camp, manager. BOTTOM ROW: Bro Abrahamson. Chuck Mau, Bob Palmieri, Jim Juul, Steve Oggcl, John Fox, Jack Peterson. Sophomore Scores 34 HP 40 Glenbrook 42 HP 32 North Chicago 40 HP 34 Niles 44 HP 41 Waukegan 44 HP 30 Evanston 46 HP 34 Proviso 37 HP 41 New Trier 57 HP 45 Oak Park 41 HP 39 Morton 50 HP 35 Niles 34 HP 33 Waukegan 39 HP 26 Evanston 42 HP 45 Proviso 61 HP 42 New Trier 43 HP 38 Oak Park 46 HP 42 Morton Freshman A Scores TOP ROW: Ed Sordyl, Art Frcidman, manager: Chuck Bicrficld, manager; SECOND ROW: Pat Hayward. Dan Levy, Marty Fischer, Dave Ricker. BOTTOM ROW: Jim Grey. John La Buda, Jake Gelperin, Will Bodlc, Mr. Hall, coach. FRESHMAN A” TEAM 33 HP 31 North Chicago 27 HP 28 Niles 39 HP 51 Waukegan 28 HP 30 Evanston 20 HP 59 Proviso 32 HP 46 New Trier 31 HP 41 Oak Park 49 HP 53 Niles 58 HP 34 Evanston 47 HP 56 Proviso 28 HP 41 Oak Park 53 HP 52 Morton FRESHMAN B TEAM TOP ROW: Dale Zech. Bill Palladini. A1 Bingham. Dick Maiman, Mr. Rohling, coach. SECOND ROW: Chuck Buening, Tom Inman. Mary Fiocchi, Bob Saielli. BOTTOM ROW: Joe Herbert. Ken Lehman, Dick Aschcr, John Napier. Freshman B Scores 30 HP 37 Lake Forest 34 HP 23 Waukegan 36 HP 25 Evanston 33 HP 27 Proviso 25 HP 38 New Trier 55 HP 37 Oak Park 29 HP 33 Niles 36 HP 25 Evanston 38 HP 36 Proviso 46 HP 38 Oak Park 40 HP 55 Morton 105 1. Who’s got the ball? 4. Getting up in the world. 3. Harry shoots. 2. Jump 5. You take it. 7. Grady shoots. 6. It’s mine. 8. From the corner. 106 Wrestling Scores, 1958 Varsity 29 HP 25 Lake Forest 43 HP 13 Evanston JV 8 HP 42 Waukegan 20 HP 27 North Chicago 19 HP 25 Evanston 12 HP 21 Glcnbrook 5 HP 39 Proviso 11 HP 29 New Trier 12 HP 36 Oak Park 13 HP 33 Niles 5 HP 38 Morton 33 HP fifth in district meet 15 HP seventh in sectional meet Frosh-Soph 45 HP 15 Lake Forest 26 HP 17 Evanston Frosh 0 HP 56 Waukegan 15 HP 37 North Chicago 15 HP 33 Evanston 19 HP 24 Glcnbrook 11 HP 37 Proviso 5 HP 39 New Trier 18 HP 22 Oak Park 13 HP 35 Niles 15 HP 30 Morton Wrestling’s League Debut VARSITY WRESTLING TEAM TOP ROW: Fred Rickies, manager; Mr. Ostrander, coach; Steve Scheff, manager. SECOND ROW: Jim Johnson, L. T. Herman, Bob Pia- cenza. Bob Neiman, Henry Wolff, Bill Leckie, Mike Addison. BOTTOM ROW: Dick Berstein, Keith Burge, Cesare Cald- relli. Norm Parker, Dick Steinberg, Jeff Levingcr. MISSING: Mike Gagen, Dick Ycrxa, Dan Gottlieb. FROSH SOPH WRESTLING TEAM TOP ROW: Jack Freeh, Jack Jashclski, Marc Shinderman, Ken Wyman, Bill Beins. Ken Pedersen. John Lazaretti, John Lips, manager; Fred Rickets, manager; Mr. Kane, coach. BOTTOM ROW: A1 Gottlieb, Ron Sheldon. Don Platt. Don Stewart. Bruce Giangiorgi, Don Goodman, Bob Marks. MISSING: John Marchi, Bob Giangiorgi. This year the grapplers completed their first year of Suburban League competition in last place. Dick Yerxa qualified for the state finals, and Keith Burge. Cesare Caldrelli, Norm Parker, and Yerxa were con- stant winners for Coach Ostrander. Don Kane’s frosh-soph squad won few meets, but have bright prospects in John Marchi and Jack Jashelski. RIGHT: These guys are better than TV. jq7 Mermen Really in the Sjvim VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM TOP ROW: John Ncwmann. Roger Kritz, Pete Fechheimcr. Bill Meyerhoff, Fred Burg, Bruce Cohen, Stan Lind. SECOND ROW: Larry Alschulcr. A1 Greenberg, Howie Greenberg. Bob Englcman, Steve Seiler, Rich Goldwach, Tom Clarkson. Mr. Kcndig. coach. BOTTOM ROW: Bill Casselman, manager; A1 Marcus. Rick Albin, Dave Pechin. King Cushman. Mace Fink. MISSING: Chris Binncr, Don Strand, Chuck Thompson. The varsity swimmers had a very successful season. They won the Riverside-Brookfield Invitational and placed third in both the Suburban League and state meets. The mermen fell only to Evanston New Trier in league meets, and had a perfect record in non-league meets. Bill Meyerhoff. the team’s high scorer, was tops in the state in both the 50 and 100 yard free style. Pete Fechheimer, Mike Julian. Meyerhoff, and the medley relay team took firsts in the league meet. The sophomores also compiled a fine record, finish- ing second in the League meet. The top sophs were Bill Koretz, Bob Engleman, Bill Bachle, and Dan Pollack. The frosh took third in the league; Harry Anderson and Mickey Panther placed well in most meets. DIVING TEAM TOP ROW: Mike Julian, John Robins, Mr. Broming, coach; Bill Watrous. BOTTOM ROW: Rick Ross, Kirk Robinson, John Ross. Tom Weiand. 1C8 SOPHOMORE SWIMMING TEAM TOP ROW: Larry Yellen, manager; Bruce Anderson, Bill Bachlc, Bill Koretz, Jim Goodman, Harris Goldstein. SECOND ROW: Bill Behanna. man- ager, Chuck Linhoff, Ed Rchmann, Bob Taft, Jim Snow, Larry Cable, Bill Price. Mr. Davis, coach. FRONT ROW: John Frelinger, Ray Michcals, Ray Nord. VARSITY SWIMMING SCORES HP 48 Maine 38 HP 73 Elmwood Pk. 13 HP 62 Rockford 24 HP 53 Morton 33 HP 67 Niles 18 HP 76 Waukegan 10 HP 1st Riverside Inv. HP 38 Evanston 48 HP 67 Proviso 19 HP 3rd Indian Relays HP 40 New Trier 46 HP 61 Oak Park 25 HP 3rd Suburban HP 66 Riverside- Brookfield 20 HP 3rd State FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM TOP ROW: Bill Cargill, Don Geman. Roger Hcnninger, Craig Mendel, Dick Henningcr, Mickey Panther. SECOND ROW: Bill Uhlemann, manager; Bob Lawrence, Andy Schnur, Bob Etzler, Jeff Leckie, Dan Harris, Frank Lennox, Mr. Davis, coach. FRONT ROW: Bart Gross. Larry Lasman, Bob Rosen, Harry Anderson, Dennis Balkc. SOPHOMORE SWIMMING HP 63 SCORES Maine 23 HP 54 Elmwood Pk. 32 HP 64 Rockford 22 HP 72 Morton 14 HP 66 Niles 20 HP 68 Waukegan 18 HP 1st Riverside Inv. HP 49 Evanston 37 HP 60 Proviso 26 HP 33 New Trier 53 HP 55 Oak Park 33 HP 2nd Suburban FRESHMAN SWIMMING HP 48 Vi SCORES Maine 37' 2 HP 72 N.les 15 HP 70 Waukegan 17 HP 28 Evanston 60 HP 56 Proviso 31 HP 12 New Trier 73 HP 67 Waukegan 19 HP 51 Riverside- HP 3rd Brookfield Suburban 35 109 a:! ® .K VD, AJiV , On Court and Course VARSITY TENNIS BACK ROW: Mr. Devereaux, coach; Bruce Cohen. Harry Oppcnheimer, George O’Connell. Peter Feccheimer. CENTER ROW: Dave Peachin, John Gidwitz, Jim Illes, Allen Greenberg. FRONT ROW: Lin Simon, Bob Engleman, Larry Alchuler, Jeff Lcvingcr. FROSH-SOPH TENNIS BACK ROW: Fred Rickies, Jack Gelperin, Harvey Ring, Bob Rosen, Mr. Devereaux, coach. CENTER ROW: Jim Gray, Ron Sheldon, Ken Cousens, Buddy Friedman, Chuck Adler. FRONT ROW: Steve Levy, Jim Bierfield, Ken Lehmann, Gig Gluck, Dick Missner. Pete Fechheimer, Lin Simon, and George O’Con- nell carried the hopes of the 1958 Highland Park netmen. The team gave evidence of being a power by downing Niles, Morton, and Waukegan in early meets. Ken Lehmann and Jim Grey are fine frosh pros- pects for Coach Devereaux. VARSITY GOLF TOP ROW: Ted Rcpsholdt, coach; Jim Hickey, Steve Tatar, Don Riskind, Beach Aten, Jerry Smith. BOTTOM ROW: Peter Cimbalo, Marty Gmcincr, Tony Lamana, Joel Hirsch, Mike Peck. The golf team finished in second place in the state meet. Joel Hirsch, who placed third in the state last year, Marty Gmeiner, and Pete Cimbalo returned from last year’s squad. For the first time the frosh-soph had an extensive schedule. Steve Oggel turned in an excellent early season performance for the frosh-soph linksmen. FROSH-SOPH GOLF BACK ROW: Mr. Cianchetti, coach; Joe Hurst, Jim Nathan, Steve Oggel, Dan Dcmichelis, George Howe. FRONT ROW: John Lindquist, Don Roach, Pat Hayward, Ron Provis, Steve Mora, Larry Fish, manager. ABSENT: Charles Buening, Rick Aschcr, Ken Gaines, Barry Grossman. VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Mr. Burson, coach; Ed Laing, Mike Julian, Tim Cohler, Toby Aaron, Tony Gualandri, Mike Morris, Roger Kritz, Don Wurm. CENTER ROW: Arnold Bartlett, manager; Hiram Kcnnicott, manager; Jeff Hanson, Bill Dcvcr. Alan Wolff, Grady Ellis. Chris Binner, Soren Leahy, Dick Bernstein, manager. BOTTOM ROW: Jim Duffy. Mace Pink. John Wolens. Bill Holland. Bill Bruce, Ron Maestri, Jim Juul. VARSITY BASEBALL SCORES HP S Glcnbrook 5 HP 2 New Trier 4 HP 3 No. Chicago 9 HP 9 Niles 3 HP 4 Waukegan 12 HP 11-4 Morton 15-5 HP 2 Evanston 10 HP 6-5 Oak Park 5-6 HP 1 New Trier 6 HP 3-0 Proviso 16-8 HP District Tourney HP Waukegan HP Regional Tourney HP Glcnbrook HP No. Chicago HP Evanston HP Glcnbrook SOPHOMORE BASEBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Mr. Ostrander, coach: Bro Abrahamson, Ken Smith, Bob Hollmann, Ralph Stocker, Chuck Mau, Bill Heck, Harris Goldstein, Jack Peterson. CENTER ROW: Alex Scornavacco. Howard Leshtz, George Price. Ed Morris, Ray Nord, Bob Gagen, Terry Somenzi, Tom Stone. BOTTOM ROW: Dick Root. A1 Har- der, Don Goodman, Bob Palmcri, Francis Phillips, Marshall Hollis, Bill Keogh. SOPHOMORE BASEBALL HP 4 SCORES Glcnbrook 5 HP 5 N. Chicago 5 HP 10 Niles 0 HP 6 Morton 4 HP 1 Oak Park 13 HP 2 New Trier 1 HP 1 Proviso 3 HP HP HP HP Glcnbrook Waukegan N. Chicago Evanston On the Diamond This year Coach Don Burson’s Little Giant nine was a great im- provement over his previous squad. The team had improved depth which allowed Coach “Burs to alternate several members in var- ious positions. The hitting, very improved, was carried by Ed Laing. Ron Maestri, Tony Gulandri, and Soren Leahy. Fielding was the only weak spot, but several improve- ments became manifest as tourna- ment time approached. The pitch- ing staff was comparatively thin in relief but had strong starters in Mike Morris, Toby Aaron, and sophomore Bob Hollmann. Com- pleting the batteries were catchers Tim Cohler and Jim Juul. The sophomore squad had strong potential and came through well. The freshman team showed themselves to be well rounded and Coach Don Davis expects them to improve steadily throughout the next three years. FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM TOP ROW: Ted Zagnoli, Tom Inman, Bill Bodle, Ed Sordyl, Ken Klos, Joe Lazzaretto. CENTER ROW: Jerry Mindel, Dick Campagni, Jack Secrest, Rick Ulrich, Harry Henderson, Dave Ricker, Paul Parry. BOTTOM ROW: Mike Seyl, Joe Herbert, Barry Cummings, Marvin Fiocchi, Mike Panther, Tom La Buda, Jeff Leckie, Mr. Davis, coach. FRESHMAN BASEBALL SCORES HP 3 Glenbrook 5 HP Forfeit New Trier HP 9 N. Chicago 7 HP 9 Proviso HP 2 Niles 9 HP Glenbrook HP 3 Morton 8 HP Waukegan HP 1 Arlington Hts. 3 HP N. Chicago HP 3 Oak Park 1 HP Evanston VARSITY TRACK TOP ROW: Steve Cohn, Bill Haney, Howard Bernstein, Bruce Miller, Stu Unger. Steve Wcsscling, Mike Addison. Mr. Ault, coach. CENTER ROW: Jim Weitzenfeld, Steve Bezark, Mike Clement, Mike Walton, Charlie Creators, Dave Bittner, Ken Wyman. BOTTOM ROW: Jim Phelan. Alan March, John Farr, Mike Anderson, Eric Goodman, Roger Levin. VARSITY SCORES 36 Vi HP 9 % 52% HP 50 2 HP 53 HP 47 0 HP 38 HP 52 0 HP 42 HP 76 29% HP 88 % 8 HP 33 HP 27% HP 27% 28 HP 23 HP 1 HP 0 HP HP Glenbrook 80 Bloom Proviso 23Vi Leyden Indoor Suburban Meet, 6th Waukegan Evanston Relays Morton Oak Park Relays Waukegan Morton Lake Shore Relays, 6th Waukegan Relays, 6th Glenbrook 91% No. Chicago Hinsdale Relays, 6th Lake County Relays, 4th in Class A District Meet, 12th Sttac Meet Outdoor Suburban SOPHOMORE TRACK TOP ROW: Mr. Christensen, coach; Frank Polandri, John Fox, Charles Glascock, Jim Knoll, Jim Holbrook, Bruce Johnson, Jim Hanig, Bob Whitman. Antol Javorkuti, Jack Jashelski, Ron Constable, Mr. Leake, coach. CENTER ROW: Bill Gilliland. Don Lee. Frank Ribach, Arnold Littckin, Bob Zimmer- man, Jones, Craig Tribolet, Bill Churchill, Steve Corman. BOTTOM ROW: Lee Lovcnthal, Bernie Collins, Jay Shapiro, Ken Pederson. Barry Wexler, Major Wagner, Randy Hartman. FROSH TRACK TOP ROW: Mr. Christensen, coach; David Klorfine, Dale Zcch, Craig Stevens, Nils Hag- berg, Chuck Linhoff, Bill Walker. Marty Fischer, Stewart Rodman. Mr. Leake, coach. CENTER ROW: Barry Gilbert. Butch Bing- ham, Dale Smith, Dennis Balke, Ed Gamson, Ben Stackler, Phil Lindgren. BOTTOM ROW: Bavey Brienza, Bill Hutch- inson. Bob Magnani, Larry Buchman, Everett Shawbert, Kenny Epstein. Dick Umbach. FROSH SOPH SCORES 34% HP Frosh Only 60% New Trier 35 HP 74 Bloom 17 Glenbrook 47 HP 62 Proviso 17 Leyden 9 5 6 HP Indoor Suburban, 6th 63 HP 33 Waukegan 36% HP Frosh Only 58% Evanston 51 HP 49 Morton 61 HP 57 Waukegan 56 HP 62 Morton 69% HP Lake Shore Relays, 1st 47% HP 39 Waukegan 61% New Trier 88 1 4 HP 26 Glenbrook No. Chicago 26% 29 1 5 HP Freshman Suburban Invitational, 3rd HP Frosh-Soph Invitational, 5th HP Outdoor Suburban Go, Man, Go! The 1958 thinclads had their ups and downs. They started the season with a team of fine potential but injuries severely reduced the number of men on the team. The leaders of the varsity were John Farr, Gene Altman, Bill Haney, Alan March, and Jim Phelan. The frosh-soph had about the same experiences as did the varsity, but have some great potential in Frank Palandri, Mike Walton, Bruce Miller, and Bill Whitman. 112 1. As good as Perry O’Brien? 4. Service! 3. Up and over. 6. John and George. 2. The pick off. 5. My head! 113 7. Burs” in action. 9. Whack! 8. Trackmen. iV Vl x t . [U J l j «r k1 HGA Stars in a With several new activities added to the intramural program, HGA enjoyed a most satisfying year. Besides all the regular events, the club sponsored a very successful invitational play day for six area schools. HGA got off to a good start this fall after the introductory open club meeting was held. Open swimming, a year-round activity, and field hockey topped the list of school activi- ties. Many advanced hockey players also par- ticipated in the North Shore Hockey As- sociation. Another fall activity was selling refreshments at home football games. With heated session and class competi- tion, volleyball took the early winter season spotlight. In the annual game between the winners of the all school session tournament and the faculty, the teachers won by a large margin. In the early winter season, new activity, the advanced dance group, was formed. Mem- bers of the group participated in several school assemblies and other events. After the holidays, basketball was the main item on the agenda for the girl athletes. A N FIELD HOCKEY Climaxing a very successful field hockey season this fall, were the traditional Army-Navy games played by the top hockey athletes in the school. BACK ROW: J. Goldberg. B. Wadt, S. Medway. J. Miller. B. Gidwitz, L. Stearns, E. Hussong, S. Parker, D. Gherardini. M. Dicus, K. Kraft, B. Henderson, J. Doner. CENTER ROW: A. Scy- farth, M. Dal Ponte, J. Rademacher, J. Dubach, S. Newbrough, C. Baren. T. Smith, R. Klotz. BOTTOM ROW: S. Mordini, G. Decker. M. Hen- derson, S. Maneck, G. Kalseim, A. Davidson. INVITATIONAL PLAYDAY During the fall season, HGA sponsored an invi- tational play which members of six different area schools attended. Activities at the play day in- cluded swimming, recreational games, and volley- ball. MRS. SOSSDORF Pictured here is Mrs. Sossdorf, our guardian of the locker room, whose trademarks are a warm smile, nimble wit and an infinite number of buttons, needles, and pins. HGA INITIATION New members of HGA arc initiated in January and May. January initiates arc received into the Club in an impressive candlelight ceremony. HGA TUMBLING CLUB Starting its second year, Tumbling Club expanded into two groups with sections for intermediate and advanced tumblers. Membership was deter- mined by try-outs after the open tumbling season was over. Variety of Sports The class tournament, which the sophomores won, and the Army-Navy all-star tournament provided many exciting moments. Late winter brought such sports as bad- minton, the all-school table tennis tourna- ment, the new activity of instructional diving, and tumbling. This year the tumbling group was divided into junior and senior sections, both of which performed in a spring demon- stration. This was the first year that such a demonstration had ever been held. Spring activities featured marathon swim, golf, and softball. HGA Swim Club, an or- ganization which had been practicing all year long, presented its annual program on two different nights. Members of HGA also enjoyed such social events as the annual initiation and father- daughter banquet. Some HGA members at- tended interscholastic play days at other schools. The traditional spring play day fea- tured the announcement of next year’s board and all club awards and scholarships. A-N BASKETBALL Members of the Army-Navy basketball teams pose proudly before the annual three-game series which Army won. BACK ROW: Student chairmen K. Herzog, J. Miller, and D. Gherardini, A. Davidson, M. Lawrcntz. MIDDLE ROW: T. Smith. T. Sche- ele, B. Henderson. J. Bartclman, G. Kalseim, C. Vechioni. BOTTOM ROW: E. Hussong. A. Sey- farth, K. Ferrei, N. Carlson, S. Ncwbrough. Army players missing: S. Medway, S. Wolff. HGA BADMINTON Marguerita Dal Ponte and Judy Doner, HGA Bad- minton chairmen, arc seen here demonstrating their sport. Badminton, always a popular activity, was offered for juniors and seniors. HGA SWIM CLUB Members of the HGA Swim Club arc seen here practicing for their annual show which was pre- sented on two nights during May. This year the water ballet centered around a French theme. HGA BANQUET One of the HGA activities is the annual Father- Daughter Banquet held in February. With a song based on the King of Hearts” theme, the seniors won the traditional song contest. ADV. DANCE The HGA advanced dance group was a new activity this year and performed at various school events. BACK ROW: N. Curcll, L. Harmon. B. Smith, B. Gaudrcau, J. Hcxtcr. R. Ward, J. Reznick. MIDDLE ROW: B. Kahn. J. Schinder. G. Lasman. C. Miller. M. Spivey. B. Rubenstein, H. Levin. B. Rose. FRONT ROW: J. Hammerman, L. Kahn. M. Frank. M. Watkins. B. Shapiro. ABSENT: C. Bronson. K. Cheli, P. Hayes. C. Jorgenson. Boys’ Intramurals Mr. Broming’s session won the plaque for their freshman and sophomore years. Mr. Stewart's session won the plaque their junior year. Mr. Covert’s session is the trophy winner for all four years. Mr. Carlson, intramural director, congratulates Pat Me- Clory, from Mr. Stewart's session, and Ron Norman, from Mr. Covert’s session, who were the runner-up and winner, respectively, in individual point competition. Boys’ intramurals, which provide a chance for boys not out for interscholastic sports to participate in some form of competitive athletic activity, are based on session as well as individual competition. Points arc awarded to individuals and sessions for winning and participation. At the end of the year, the session in each class with the most points get a plaque; the senior session with the most accumulated points for four years gets a trophy. Also the senior boy with the most points for four years receives an award. The sports included in the intramural program arc basketball, football, volleyball, softball, swimming and track. There is also an all-school free throw tournament. Top teams in each division for this year were: freshman, Schrader and Christensen; sopho- mores. Kolbe, Bolle. and Braun; juniors. Hammer- berg, Ostrander, and Rhodes; seniors. Covert and Stewart. 116 Faculty Index ANDERSON, MISS ALICE E.—Junior Class Sponsor; B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin. ANDERSON, MISS NANCY E.—Triad Music Club Spon- sor, Director of Girls’ Ensemble; B.A., Lake Forest College. AULT. MR. RICHARD FRANCIS—Track Coach. Guid- ance; Hobbies: Sports, Photography, Reading; B.S.. Un- iversity of Missouri; M.S., Washington University St. Louis. BABLER, MISS JEAN E.—Swim Club Sponsor. HGA. Commencement; Hobbies: Music, Golf, Tennis, Boating, Sewing; B.S., University of Wisconsin. BALDRINI. MR. RICHARD J.—Varsity Backfield Coach. Varsity Basketball Assistant. Faculty Social Affairs Com- mittee; Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing. Gardening, Collecting Guns and Fishing Lures; B.A., M.S., Illinois State Normal. BEAN. MISS DORA E.—Calendar Committee; B.S., Co- lumbia University Teachers College. BECKMIRE. MISS REGENA—Chairman of the P. T. A. Visiting Nights, Junior Advisor Chairman for Girls. Mem- ber of the Research Committee for North Lakes Division of I.E.A., Ph.B., M.A., University of Chicago. BENSON. MR. ROBERT WILLIAM—Sophomore Class Sponsor; B.A., Iowa University. BOGHASEN, MISS ROSE—Faculty Social Affairs Com- mittee; B.A.. M.A., Northwestern University. BOGS. MISS SHIRLEY—Sponsor of the Student Group to Mexico, Calendar Committee; Hobbies: Travel, Photo- graphy. Reading, Studying Russian, Gardening, Cooking (Mexican Foods especially). Listening to FM ; B.A., Uni- versity of Wisconsin. M.M.L., Middlcbury College. BOLLE, MR. HARRY E.—Chairman of the Faculty Meet- ing Committee; Hobbies: Fishing. Hunting, Golf; B.S.. M.S., Northwestern University. BRAUN. MR. GARWOOD A.—Boys’ Club Sponsor; Hobbies: Athletics; B.S., Eureka College; M.S.. University of Illinois. BROMING, MR. JOHN E.—Diving Coach; Hobbies: Gardening. Sports; B.Ed., White Water State Teachers; M.S.Ed., University of Idaho. BURSON. MR. DONALD MACLEAN—Varsity Football Coach, Varsity Baseball Coach; Hobbies: Carpentry, Rec- reational Sports, Bridge, Poker; B.S., M.A., Northwestern University. CAIRNCROSS, MISS GLADYS P.—Guidance, Faculty Meeting Committee: Hobbies: Antiques, Bridge. Travel; B.S.. University of Minnesota; M.A., Columbia University. CARDINAL. MRS. LORAINE S.—Faculty Social Affairs Committee; Hobbies: Sports, Knitting. Sewing; B.S., Cen- tral College. CARLSON. MR. C. A.—Director of the Boys’ Intramural Program, Calendar Committee; Hobbies: Skiing. Bowling; B.S., M.S., University of Wisconsin. CARPENTER. MR. HAROLD—Fire Drills. Public Re- lations Committee; Hobbies: Outdoor Activities; B.E., Northern Illinois University; M.A.. Northwestern Uni- versity. CHANGNON. MRS. SHIRLEE—Cheer Squad Sponsor; Hobbies: Skiing, Ocean Fishing, Boating, Aquatic Sports; B.S., Illinois State Normal University. CHRISTENSEN. MR. CARL S.—Assistant Track Coach. Assistant Football Coach; Hobbies: Skiing; B.S., Spring- field College (Mass.); M.A., University of Illinois. CHR1STOFFERSON, MRS. JOY—Children’s and Young People’s Club Work at Church; B.S., M.A., Northwestern University. CIANCHETTI. MR. RALPH—Golf Coach. Faculty Meet- ing Committee: Hobbies: Golf. Reading, Music, Writing; B.A.. Knox College. COVERT. MR. MARSHALL M.—Faculty Meeting Com- mittee. Tutoring. Teaching Seminar: Hobbies: Reading, Hot Coronet’’; M.A., University of Chicago. DAVIS, MR. DON A.—Freshman Baseball Coach. Frosh- Soph Swimming Coach; B.S., University of Illinois. DEVEREAUX. MR. LLOYD KENNETH—Freshman Football Coach, Tennis Coach. Faculty Social Affairs Com- mittee; Hobbies: Woodworking, Sports Cars. Golf, Hunt- ing, Fishing; B.E., Northern Illinois University. EINBECKER. MR. WILLIAM F.—Hobbies: Gardening; B.S., University of Illinois, M.A., University of Chicago. ESSERMAN. MRS. RUTH—Teaches Children’s Classes at the Recreation Center; Hobbies: Painting, Sculpturing; B.A., M.A., University of Illinois. FALK. MISS MARILYN JANE—HGA Sponsor; Hobbies: Music, Reading. Sports; B.S., State University of Iowa. FINCH. MR. HAROLD—Small Ensembles, Triad. Assem- blies Committee, Dad’s Smokers; Hobbies: Fishing, Golf, Photography; B.S.M., Oberlin College, M.M., Northwestern. FLOYD, MR. J. D.—Co-sponsor of the Senior Class, Senior Advisor Chairman; B.S.. North Carolina State. GREENWALD, MISS RUTH D.—Math Club Sponsor. College Boards; B.A., Grinnell College, M.S., State Uni- versity of Iowa. GUNELL. MISS DIANNE KAY—Debate; Hobbies: Read- ing. Swimming, Tennis: B.S.. University of Wisconsin. HADDY. MISS GLORIA MAE—HGA. Girls Intramurals; Hobbies: Bridge, Collecting Records; B.A., State University of Iowa. HALL. MR. MONROE W.—Boys’ Vocational Advisor. Freshman Basketball Coach; Hobbies: Sports. Home Re- pairs; B.Ed., Eastern Illinois State University; M.A., Northwestern University. HAMMERBERG. MR. WALLACE F.—Sophomore Bas- ketball Coach; B.S., M.S., Stout State College. HANDBERG, MRS. JEAN—Student Stunts Sponsor; Hob- bies: Writing, Painting, Reading, Music, Dancing; B.A., Rockford College, M.A., Northwestern. HANSON. MR. H. EVERETT—Science Club Sponsor: Hobbies: Electronics. Audio. Hi-Fi Experimenting; B.Ed., Northern Illinois, University; M.S., State University of Iowa. HARTMAN. MISS JEAN—Hobbies: Bridge, Writing, Reading, Golf. Tennis, Skiing, Talking; B.A., M.A., Uni- versity of Wisconsin. HARTZ, MISS SHIRLEY—Faculty Meeting Committee; Hobbies: Oil Painting; B.A.. University of Iowa. HECK. MR. WILLIAM JOSEPH—Hobbies: Solving Chess Problems. Taxonomy of the Tragulidac. Playing the Re- corder; A.B., B.S., Kansas University. HUBBS. MISS ELIZABETH ANNE—Garrick Club Spon- sor, Assemblies. Plays, Commencement Committees; Hob- bies: Drama, Photography; B.S., University of Wisconsin. JOINER. MISS ELIZABETH—Chairman of the Calendar Committee; Hobbies: Reading; B.A., M.A., University of Illinois. KANE, MR. DON—Wrestling Coach, Boys’ Intramurals; Hobbies: Fishing, Music; B.S., M.S., University of Mich- igan. KEHRBERG. MR. ROLAND E.—Hobbies: Raising French Poodles, Photography; B.S.. Stout State College. KENDIG, MR. ROBERT S.—Swimming Coach, Athletic Director, Varsity Club Sponsor: Hobbies: Sailing, Wood Carving. Tinkering with Cars: B.S., M.A., Columbia Uni- versity; M.P.Ed., American College of Physical Education. KLUGE. MRS. RUTH LARUE—Faculty Social Affairs Committee; Hobbies: Gardening, Knitting. Cooking; B.O., Sherwood Music School; B.A., Roosevelt University; M.A., University of Chicago. KOLBE, MR. WILLIAM D.—Varsity Football End Coach; Hobbies: Golf, Painting; B.S., Wisconsin State College. KRAFT. MR. RICHARD PAUL. IR—Calendar Commit- tee: Hobbies: Hi-Fi Construction, Hiking; B.A., University of Connecticut; M.A., Yale University. KYLE. MR. CHESTER—Music Ensemble Coach, Assem- blies, Operettas, Triad Co-Sponsor; Hobbies: Work; A.B., Geneva College; B.Mus.Ed., Oberlin College; M.M., North- western University. LASSWELL, MISS LULU—Graduate, Registered Certified Public Health Nurse; Hobbies: Art, Travel. LEAKE, MR. LOWELL, JR.—Assistant Track Coach, Faculty Social Affairs Committee: Hobbies: Astronomy, Fishing; B.A., Tufts University; M.S.. University of Wis- consin. LIBAKKEN, MR. LESLIE E.—Student Council Sponsor, Ushers, Public Relations. Guidance, Commencement Chair- man. Calendar, Assemblies Committee Chairman; Hobbies: Fishing. Gardening. Traveling, Reading; B.E.. River Falls State Teachers College; M.A.. University of Iowa. 117 LILL. MISS EVANNE—Assistant Sponsor of HGA, Girls’ Tumbling Club Sponsor; Hobbies: Folk Music, Sports, Camping; B.S., University of Wisconsin. LOGEFEIL. MRS. VONICE—Hobbies: Piano, Swim- ming. Water Skiing. Reading; B.A., St. Olaf College. MACMARTIN. MISS CHRISTINE H.—College Boards. Guidance. Hobbies: Reading, Hiking, Camping; B.A., M.A., Northwestern. MALTAS, MISS DIANE SUE:—Freshman Class Sponsor; Hobbies: Traveling. Collecting Records, Reading, Horse- back Riding; A.B., University of Illinois. MAXEY, MRS. EVA MAY—P. T. A.. Hobbies: Bowling. Swimming, Sewing, Reading, Gardening; B.Ed., Wisconsin State Teachers’ College. MCKICHAN, MISS GRACE—Chairman of the Faculty Social Committee. Member of the Teachers’ Council Wel- fare Committee; Hobbies: Music. Reading, Wood Carving, Knitting, Sports, Travel; B.S., M.A., University of Min- nesota. MCLAUGHLIN, MR. PAUL—Stage Crew Sponsor, Plays. Stage Craft Activities; Hobbies: Hunting, Fishing, Gar- den:ng. Carpentry; B.S.. Iowa State Teachers’ College. MCMULLEN. MR. HAROLD G.—Football Trainer. Bridge Club Sponsor, Faculty Social Affairs Committee; Hobbies: Carpentry; B.S.. M.S., University of Michigan. MORGAN. MISS EDITH—Girls’ Club Sponsor; Hobbies: Travel. Reading; B.A.. M.A., Northwestern University. MOUNT. MRS. GRETA C.—Hobbies: Gardening. Music. Painting. Decoratine. Reading, Photography; B.S. in Ed., M.S. in Ed.. Drake University. MUNSKI. MR. IOHN A.—Little Giant Advisor. Shoreline Advisor. Buzz Book Advisor. Chairman of the Student Handbook Committee, Public Relations Committee, Plays. Activity Ticket Committee; helps oroduce High School W:ghlig t ; Hobbies: Photography. Gardening; B.J., B.S. in F- .. M.F.d.. Ed.D.. University of Missouri. NEFF. MISS FRANCES ANN—B.S.. Dona State College. OLESON. MISS DELORES—Faculty Social Affairs Committee; Hobh:es: Reading, Television, Sewing: B.S., Wisconsin State College; M.S., University of Wisconsin. OLSEN. MISS MARY LEE—Junior Red Cross Soonsor; Hobbies: Hi-Fi. Photography; B.S., Iowa State College, M.Ed.. University of Colorado. O’NEAL. MR. J. O.—Adviser Chairman Sophomore Bovs. I. E. A. Representative. Welfare Committee of the Teachers' Council; A.B., Illinois College. OSTRANDER. MR. ELIJAH, JR. (Joseph)—Golf Coach; Hobbies: Photography; B.S., Carroll College; M.S., Uni- versity of Wisconsin. PALMGREN. MR. ROBERT A.—Art Club Sponsor. Fresh- man Class Sponsor; Hobbies: Sketching, Sculpture, Sports; B.F.A., University of Illinois. PANTHER. MR. MARK A.—Dean of Boys. Boys’ Club Sponsor, Family and Child Care Committee, American Legion. V 5 Association-Naval Aviation, Summer Swim- ming Pro at Lake Shore Country Club: Hobbies: Golf. Hunting, Outdoor Activities, Sports; B.S., University of Iowa. PEERS. MRS. MILDRED WILEY—Brotherhood Week. Advisory Committee for the North Shore Human Re- lations Committee, Hobbies: Gardening, Poetry Anthologies, Painting, Flower Arranging, Copper Enameling. Leather Tooling, Writing: A.B., Millikin University, A.M., Uni- versity of Chicago. PERRY, MR. HAROLD J.—Plays, Faculty Social Affairs Committees; Hobbies: Crafts, Ceramics, Woodwork, Read- ing: M.A.. University of Chicago. PHILIPPI. MR. HARLAN A—Guidance. Faculty Meeting Committee; Hobbies: Athletics; B.S., M.S., University of Wisconsin. PHILIPSON, MRS. HELEN—Activity Ticket. Teachers’ Council President. Guidance; Hobbies: Golf, Bridge, Gar- dening, Painting; B.S., Beloit. PRAHL, MISS MARGUERITE—Junior Class Sponsor; Hobbies: Needlework, Knitting. Photography. Hiking; B.A., Mount Mary College, M.A., University of Wisconsin. REPSHOLDT. MR. THEODOR P.—Varsity Golf Coach, Assistant Freshman Football Coach, Junior Class Soonsor; Hobbies: Golf, Bridge, Gardening; B.A., Baldwin-Wallace College. RHODES. MR. STANLEY H.—Hobbies: Travel. Square Dancing, Organization Work, Outdoor Activities. Reading, Music; B.S., M.A.. Northwestern University. RINKENBERGER, MISS ELYSE—North Suburban Fam- ily and Child Care Committee Chairman, Family Service Board, District College Entrance Examination Board Pro- gram Planning Committee, Association of College Ad- mission Counselors Committee work. National and Illinois Association of Women Deans and Counselors Committee Work Illinois Congress of P. T. A. Scholarship Committee, Girls’ Club Sponsor; Hobbies: Travel, Reading; B.S., M.S., Northwestern University. RODENBECK. MISS LINDA D.—Ph.B.. University of Chicago. ROHLING. MR. RALPH K.—Freshman Football Coach; Hobbies: Basketball, Tennis, Music, Writing; B.A., Iowa State Teachers College. ROMANO. MISS SHIRLEY MAE—Pep Club Sponsor. HGA Hockey; Hobbies: Swimming, Tennis, Music; B.S., Illinois State Normal University. SANDAHL. MRS. HILDEGARDE—Faculty Meeting Com- mittee; Hobbies: Knitting. Fishing. Swimming. Classical Records; B.A.. State University of Iowa, M.A., North- western University. SCHRADER. MR. ROBERT—Freshman Football Coach. Varsity Basketball Coach; Hobbies: Sports; B.S., Oshkosh State. SHERROD. MISS ROSEMARY KATHRYN—Deerfield Stagers. Garrick Club Sponsor, Plays. Assemblies Com- mittees; Hobbies: Dancing, Sports; B.A., University of Ten- nessee. SHINE. MISS ROBERTA B.—Senior Class Sponsor, Student-Faculty Lunchroom Committee, Senior Girls’ Ad- visor Chairman. Commencement; Hobbies: Bridge, Sewing. Swimming; B.S., University of Minnesota; M.A., Toledo University. SPENCER. MISS HILDRETH—Unity Board Sponsor; Hobbies: Taking Movies and Colored Slides, Listening to Hi-Fi, Travel: B.A., Ohio Wesleyan University; M.A.. Uni- versity of Michigan. STEWART. MR. GEORGE CRAIG. JR—Chess Club, Hobbies: Music, Grammar; A.B., M.A., Northwestern Uni- versity. STUNKEL. MR. C. S.—Suburban League Board of Con- trols. Guidance. Calendar Committee; Hobbies: Bridge, Reading; A.B., DePauw University of Michigan. SWANSON. MRS. MAE—Library Board Sponsor; Hob- bies: Knitting. Golf, Reading, Bridge; B.S., Wisconsin State College. TARRY, MISS HAZEL—Sophomore Class Sponsor; Hobbies: Travel, Reading, Attending the Theater, Tailor- ing; A.B., Murray State College; M.A., University of Ken- tucky. TEARE, MISS DOROTHY—Library Board Sponsor; Hobbies: Gardening, Hiking; B.A., University of Wisconsin, University of Illinois. VAN HULZEN. MR. WILLIAM E.—Activity Ticket; Hobbies: Reading, Golf, Music; B.A., Iowa State Teachers’ College; M.A., State University of Iowa. VYN, MR. JOHN CAMERON—Director of Audio-Visual Aids. Director of Adult Education; Hobbies: Sailing, Model Building, Gardening, Science; B.A., M.A., University of Michigan. WALL. MISS MARIE L.—Vocational Counselor. Di- recting Office Practice work for P. T. A. and Shoreline Mailings, Faculty Meeting Secretary; Hobbies: Music, Golf, Seasonal Sports; B.A., DePaul University; M.A., Loyola University. WILDERMUTH. MR. KARL PAUL—Boys’ Rifle Club Sponsor, Girls’ Rifle Club Sponsor; Hobbies: Photography, Tennis. Gun Collecting, Stamp Collecting; B.S., Denison University; M.A., Ohio State University. WINKLEY. MR. CLAIRE J.—Bookstore Sponsor. Ticket Sales; Hobbies: Raising Horses, Ponies, and Sheep; B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin. WOLTERS, MR. A. E.—Senior Class Sponsor, Public Re- lations Committee Chairman; Hobbies: Athletics, Stamos, Coins, Gardening. Kids; B.S., Iowa State College. M.S., Northwestern University. WOOD. MISS FLORENCE—Math Club Sponsor; Hob- bies: Sewing; B.S., Ball State Teachers’ College; M.S., University of Michigan. ZAESKE, MR. EARLING W.—Grade School Board Mem- ber, Halls and Exhibits, Parking Lot; Hobbies: Gardening, Fishing, Football; H.P.H.S. Graduate; B.S., Iowa State College. 118 Index A Acknowledgments .. Activities......... Anderson A., session Anderson N., session Art Department ----- . .120 23-32 .. .83 ...83 .. .18 B Babler. session ........... Baldrini. session.......... Band....................... Benson, session............ Board of Education......... Boghasen, session.......... Bolle. session............. Boys' Club ................ Boy’s Rifle Club .......... Braun, session............. Bridge Club................ Building Trades Department Burson, session............. 83 87 43 87 14 93 87 36 48 87 48 19 .88 C Candid pictures...... Cardinal, session.... Carpenter, session -- Changnon. session ... Cheerleaders......... Christensen, session . Cianchetti, session ... Class of 1958 ....... Commerce Department Core Department .... Curricular ........... 74-76, 98. 102, 106, 113 .....................88 .....................88 .....................88 .....................38 ......................93 .....................93 ..................51-80 .....................18 .....................18 ..................11-22 D Davis, session ................................83 Deans .........................................12 Debate Club....................................49 Dedication .....................................2 E English Department ........................15 F Faculty Index ............................117-119 Falk, session .................................84 Finch, session ................................93 Foreign Exchange Student.......................34 Freshman Executive Board.....................82 Hanson, session................................84 Hartman, session...............................94 Hartz, session ................................84 Harvard Book Award.............................50 Heck, session..................................94 H.G.A..........................................37 Highlights...................................6-10 Home Economics Department .....................18 Hubbs, session.................................95 I Industrial Arts Department ....................19 Intramurals, Boys'............................116 Intramurals, Girls’ ......................114-115 J Junior Choir...................................44 Junior Executive Board.........................82 K Kane, session..................................95 Kendig, session................................84 Kolbe, session ................................89 Kraft, session.................................95 L Language Department............................17 Leake, session ................................89 Librarians.....................................15 Library Board..................................49 Lill, session .................................89 Little Giant Staff ............................40 Logefeil, session..............................90 M Maintenance Workers.........................21-22 Maltas, session ...............................95 Marshal Board .................................34 Math Club .....................................47 Math Department................................16 Maxey, session.................................96 McMullen, session..............................85 Memorial.......................................72 Mixed Ensemble.................................42 Morgan, session ...............................85 Music Department...............................17 N National Honor Society.........................50 Nurse .........................................13 G Garrick Club....................................46 Girls’ Club.....................................36 Girls’ Ensemble.................................42 Girls’ Rifle Club...............................48 Grounds Supervisor..............................13 Guidance Staff .................................14 Gunell, session.................................94 H Haddy. session..................................94 Hammerberg, session.............................84 O Office Staffs...................................13 Olesen, session.................................96 Olsen, session .................................90 Orchestra ......................................45 Organizations................................33-50 Ostrander, session .............................85 P Palmgren, session...............................96 Pat Floyd Award.................................50 Pep Club........................................39 Perry, session .................................9 II? Physical Education Department....................19 Prahl, session...................................85 Principal .......................................12 R Repsholdt, session ...........................86 Rhodes, session...............................86 Rodenbeck, session............................90 Rohling, session .............................90 Romano, session ..............................97 S Sandahl, session ...............................91 Schrader, session ..............................97 Science Club ...................................47 Science Department .............................16 Senior Ballott ................................ 77 Senior Executive Board..........................52 Sherrod, session ...............................86 Shoreline Staff.................................41 Social Studies Department ......................17 Sophomore Executive Board ......................82 Spencer, session ...............................86 Sports....................................99-116 Stage Crew....................................46 Student Council ..............................35 Swanson, session..............................91 T Tarry, session ...............................91 Treble Clef ..................................45 Triad Music Club..............................45 U Underclassmen..............................81-98 Unity Board...................................34 V Van Hulzen. session...........................97 Varsity Club..................................39 W Wildermuth, session...........................91 Winkley, session..............................97 Wood, session.................................92 Acknowledgments Faculty Adviser John Munski Photography Richard Fiedler Dave Lewis Alan Sager Wilbur Page Portraits Walinger Studio 37 South Wabash Avenue Chicago 3, Illinois Art Work Barbara Buchman DeDe Sherwin Consultant Bill O’Connor Jahn Ollier Engraving Co. Cover The S. K. Smith Company 2857 North Western Avenue Chicago 18, Illinois Engraving Jahn Ollier Engraving Company 817 W. Washington Blvd. Ch:cago 7, Illinois Printing The Graessle-Mercer Company Seymour, Indiana Qxaufi. vrv SUsdi K C v- o i M -o '''-0) l',rv £tC$ v CXA. CjCX nr - O c o-iSL- t 'i • w . I . 11 -f. ' . i‘ ; i ) ' ( ! !:i' . ‘ i ' !f. : ' V i • • i,r • r I ■’ ! ■[ . . t' ■; i . • J ' t : 4 1 •! i ■4 4 f ;r Vi • i i ■ I ; t ■ , f • «r 4' i I : r ■ ?T


Suggestions in the Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) collection:

Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955

Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

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Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

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Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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Highland Park High School - Little Giant Yearbook (Highland Park, IL) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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