Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA)

 - Class of 1966

Page 1 of 186

 

Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1966 volume:

7 ry 8 i  ery ‘ : 4 ay ‘ % 7 bt y as eine awe “i eee) oe . aie A, YS we 7 if, WN Ti 3 1619 00506 8 ay Msi es , Huis i : ; ee Ly aE ee: oy, , Gy LASHLEY Pyar Ape eat aay Meas feaeheg ae pie Hees, As Gals hes psy His) e, ie ay ce i ep Ly feet oe Hie Uae He iis ; See sf} : s, CARY MEMORIAL LIBRARY LEXINGTON, MASS. 02173 einil OF 66 LEXINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Lexington, Massachusetts . « PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS Flip Nissel Ann Miley Su Collier Alice Wang, Secretary Tim Bryson, Business Manager Bill Bornstein, Assistant Business Manager SPECIAL THANKS TO Miss Virginia Hayward, Advisor Mr. Michael Cornog, Copy Consultant Mr. Richard Buck, Photography Advisor Mr. Gordon Kershaw, Financial Advisor Mr. Roswell Farnham PHOTOGRAPHY Alex Jamison Doug Clarke Graham Colbourne Dan Bogen Joe Upham Harron Appleton. Mark Pfeil Mary Tropeano Stefan Filipowski Spirit of 66 KELLY FRICK, Editor-in-chief ANN LEVIS, Copy Director =. u | THALIA DOUKAS, Staff Writer i observations 4 y JoĂ©lle Murat, Features re after the 2:20 bell 28 ee st Caroline Stevens, David Woodberry, Activities ae where the action is 50 Karla Pfeil, Martha Semonian, Dana Basney, Bob Lyng, Sports the grind 78 Betsey Newton, Roberta Kovitz, Academics we 100 Debby Quincy, Underclass Jane Church, Martha Chapman, Seniors the big difference Lexington High School is a public high school with the ordinary features of any other. We have a gym, teams, and lockers; we have study halls and assemblies. But our school is not just any other. Not every school’s basketball team is invited to play at Boston Garden; not every town’s teenagers are filmed for nationwide television. And not every high school cares enough about the shy and unworldly student to offer fashion shows or a vigorous Social Dance Programme, complete with pre- chosen partners and easy instructions for little tycoons. say ning aie Tinlnes ee a ee ie Pe h,. Wis RR ee rad 4 7:28 A.M. playgrounds Not only are the quad and parking lot the areas most regularly frequented; they are the sole areas at school rarely guarded by a teacher. We may assume it safe, then, to eat, loiter, throw snow, climb the fl agpole, sit on someone else’s car(or lap), and place bets for next week’s game; to indulge in all the insubordinate, subversive activities indigenous to these hallowed spots. SURWEL EEUREUE EER NEETU EET TOES EEGEE FORSEESEE “4h a AL OTE RE ERATE EAE RE TET Eas Concord, Thanksgiving, 1965: with the combined spirits of ’65—’75, the holiday and the homecoming, the traditional clash was re-enacted. It was a perfect football day, but not quite perfect enough. . . For the ball-U-man crowd, it could’ve been tense. The build-up, as usual, was fantastic and the turning-point, as usual, Wakefield. The epitome of Greatness and Cool: Our Team at the Garden. competition at Concord: Our team to the Tech 10 Mr. Adzigian and Mr. Thurlow shut themselves away from the nervous babble of the corridors, with coffee, cribbage, and relaxed conversation. They've been through it all before ‘and will live it again, four times a year, not counting National Merit tests, for years and years. They sympathize, with restraint. People mill in the halls, comparing notes on the blizzard outside, carefully avoiding test-centered conversations or predictions. Doors marked “writing sample only: Maher, M. through Potter, M.” The proctors read through a test, chuckling: “That ought to stump them!” A stumped victim enviously watches a strange intellectual writing furiously; fingers cramped and sweating, the intellectual beats the clock; the victim still stares. . . Two or three hours later, dazed and incredulous, people wander into the hall murmuring apologies to themselves, making mental corrections. Home now to forget, until the - scores return. college boards: ‘that ll 11 4 pe x iS sy ot one a I i t aay, the new breed Never before in the history of LHS has a game of eighth grade tag interrupted a senior touch football session. Isolated in their own unit, the eighth graders should be harmless enough. But how much of a wallop is packed by a four foot tall eighth grader moving down the hall at 276 MPH with a three pound load of books? How good are the chances of survival for an unsuspecting six foot senior m oving down the hall at the N.W.R. (normal walking rate) directly in the path of the eighth grader? Who but an eighth grader by sheer tone of voice can make a seventeen-year old wither? (“What are you doing in our lav?”’) Pity the poor upperclassmen. Waiting all those years to become the big men on campus; victimized by Lilliputians. 12 14 The stifling dark, the blaring music, the crazy dances with crazier names like the Jump-rope, the Jerk, the Eighty-one, or no names at all. And ina bright empty corridor or a dark steamy corner, cokes for the parched and exhausted. . . these are our dances and parties, the ones they did a documentary about. iu ite 4 4 F tit 4H ret] fi 16 How do we feel now about that “real-life documentary.” “The Stan Harlow Hour,” “The World of the Teenager?” We had fears during the filming and questioned the value of some of those supposedly real-life shots. The tide of letters and angry outbursts has ebbed (would you let your daughter go out with a Lexington boy?), but we won't forget the excitement of being on TV, the Worlds they left out, the stunts we pulled for the cameramen, or the people who tried to help us in the World We Never Made. wr = 2 $ xX = 19 Some came after the filming; some came only very recently; some have been here three or four whole quick-drag years. But for each of us there is a distinct LHS: a brilliantly lit field house with a ceiling full of little bubble windows and a track full of state record breakers or the faculty mile-a-day program; a dry car on the far side of a deluged parking-lot; an auditorium once filled with laughing, stamping, breathing LHSers, parents, and kid brothers, but for the moment deserted, dark, oppressively silent; a ticket sale for admittance to the pool under the fieldhouse. another World A world where you can become a well-paid secretary, a Ph.D. biochemist, a computer, a foreign diplomat; a world of doors waiting to be opened: storage rooms filled with strange and wonderful (or useless) gadgets, and paraphernalia, typewriters and adding machines, lockers lined with Peanuts or Beatle posters or, if you can find them, books. 20 wef EOSIN a x ae elec EOE Si a if Eth 22 Surely you jest. . . rehearsal at 7:15 AM? Devotion must be a real and sacrificing spirit, a martyr to sleep, food, and other necessities of life: dates, quiet afternoons at the Pewter Pot, a shopping spree. There are, of course, compensations and consolation prizes . 23 Ee | B: =e A i J Think how different it would be, were we not allowed to converse, to argue, to flirt, to socialize in school. Think how boring the pursuit of knowledge without the p ursuit of happiness; how shallow, how wasted our youth-full of learning without bull sessions in the quad, leaning against lockers, or in the parking lot each morning above the roar of a motor to keep warm 25 “And when Bullets misses the last hope shot at the Tech. there just wont 22 a be a next year... Post Tech Tourney, °65 Geta We i s ; u. ba E e x 5 ie ÂŁ me bs gz i ee 26 pi OH essa Ee ee ie when ie year is over, well have a little more knowledge, some new friends (the diversity of a big high school: insurance that there will always be someone who shares your interests); a series of disjointed impressions and a summer long to remember remember them. 27 D | ml re ” a t me ao . pee OT at A an ee ter ae tone ary 28 Extracurricular activities: finding a way to fit outside hobbies and diversions into school life. A chance to let off steam: disorganized organization. We join for different reasons: for kicks, or for friends, or for status on college records. But, once in, we share the unavoidable rites (holding a dance to make money, getting yearbook pictures taken—and muffing them) and the frustrations (that How-did-I-ever-get-into-this feeling). 29 after the Pe) bell The Student Council spent 1965-1966 in tr ansi- tion, adapting itself to the new unit system. Un- der the very able leadership of Dave Norcross, aided by Mr. Rocci and Mr. Fruscione, the ad- visors of the council determined to the satisfac- tion of most of the school the role the units would play in school government and social life. Though these deliberations went on sporadically all year, a final decision was made (despite the efforts of some filibusterers) encompassing some of the precepts of last year’s “unit constitution” and some new ideas. The “social” high point of this year in the Stu- dent Council’s mind was the Spring Convention of the Eastern Massachusetts Regional District of Student Councils. On one fine April day Lexing- ton entertained close to five hundred representa- tives of high schools in the Eastern Mass. area in 30 gentlemer discussions of student council procedures, poli- cies, and programs. Other accomplishments included forming of a job opportunities center, continued support of AFS, and the forming of a new policy towards money making. From now on the Student Council will concern itself with governing and coordinating school activities rather than competing with the clubs and the classes for the students’ nickels and dimes. Having representatives from the classes at large, class presidents, and unit chairmen as its mem- bers, the Student Council presented a wide forum for the expression of school opinion. Next year, led by the Machiavelli's and the LBJ’s of the Class of °67, and with its transitional problems solved, the Council is sure to be a significant moving force in the school community. NATIONAL HONOR _ SOCIETY—Dana Cobb, President; Robert Lyng, Vice President; Mary Madden, Secretary; Carolyn Frick, Treasurer; Kevin Gaynor, Jayne Gillespie, Madelyn McCauley, John McDonald, Phillipa Nissel, Karla Pfeil, Gail VanWingerden, Alice Wang, Charles Black, Prudence Brown, Thomas Bryson, Susan Eaton, Janet Fox, Eric Gordon, Betty Handrick, James Schantz, Caro- line Stevens, Deborah Thurman, John Ackroff, David Bevan, Elizabeth Cazden, John Cole, Catherine Crone, Douglas Curran, Carlton Davis, Linda Head, James Hudson, Paula Jenson, Ro- berta Kovitz, Susan Martin, Charles McCor- mack, Catherine Myrick, Donna Sebell, Alan VanEgmond, Pearl Wang, Susan Yakutis, Doris Zaleznik. and scholars “.. . and I think that’s about the end of the Old Business; if there isn’t any new business, we'll have Bob’s usual motion for adjournment,” said Dana. “And, Mary, it’s exactly 9:13.” The NHS meeting broke into small groups of laughing, talking kids who quickly changed their serious attitude for a normal, hungry teenage one. Being a member of NHS isn’t just getting in, they had just decided; it’s striving every day for scholarship, leadership, service, and character, both in and out of school. But it’s not all serious: Donkey Basketball, bookstores, trips to colleges and other schools, and having the ability to help others at LHS makes all their work worthwhile. The infamous floor show scene from Auntie Mame (“Bright bleeds the blood of the broken rose”) . . . piles of costumes—all over the stor- age room floor (alone, with the assorted vestiges of former productions) . . . a pale blue set and rehearsals that last all afternoon and all day one Saturday ... doughnuts and cider and “Show Me The Way To Go Home”—all the way home . . . confused curtain calls, corsages and a huge bouquet for the lead . . . The Glass Me- nagerie: to win or not to win the Drama Festival a mad search to find odd props (Where would you look to find a unicorn with a remov- able horn?) . .. and gulping aspirins by the pound so you Won’t Get Sick. “T didn’t know you bit your nails.” frenzied rehearsals, Donald Gillespie’s Tijuana: banned! _ « . . but I was only giving her artificial resuscitation.” Rest. . . rest. . . rest, and fantastic results Band rehearsals in the parking lot. Learning to march and play music at the same time complaints over uniforms and lugging saxophones to school each morning. . . scalding coffee (nec- essary for survival during the April 19th parade) and compensations. A successful concert and an exchange with Maine. The dissonance of an orchestra tuning up. . . G block in the auditorium and seperate string re- hearsals each Monday afternoon .. . twenty- nine bows all going in the right direction, and one in the back row who got lost . . . Brahms to inspire and a Pops concert for fun . . . and the scraping and banging of chairs when its time to clear the stage. 33 k . : Wednesdays and Thursdays after school: strains of Glocca Morra from behind closed auditorium doors. . . and an unmatched sacrifice: two days of rehearsals (from 9 to 5) over February vacation. . . an obscure Broadway play replaced Gilbert and Sullivan: Og is a leprechaun whose pants disappear and Susan says only “I love you” . a throng of dancers, and a big brassy chorus and an understated stage set. . . qualms and temper tantrums and opening night: (girl leads are double cast)—an experience as gratifying as finding the pot of gold at the Rainbow’s end. CONCERT CHOIR IS. . . fresh doughnuts and orange juice (still frozen) at 6:45 A.M.; mad chaos ended at once by a single ‘Ready?!’; ‘Mussel Chowder’ punctuated by the office chimes . voices, high and low and in between, voices that crack, shout, whisper, whimper, cajole, carol, blend, melt, thrill, and r-r-r-roll their r-r-r-r’s . rehearsals till hoarseness, numbness, ecstasy . the enjoyment of being a part of a group in which each member must contribute, must live up to his potential—and does. And. . . Concert Choir is Mr. Vasil. Brahms and te J “aaa | 4% ee tn we An innovation: Mr. Vasil’s solution to an uninspired Boys’ Chorus (now nonexistent): Eight voices (dedicated and much rehearsed) and the well- received performances at the AFS dance and the Winter Choral concert. Burton Lane Lullabies and love songs and singing in : rounds. . . Thursday afternoons in M2 | with Miss Kinyon . . . a lopsided membership: only a few upperclassmen . and two performances: the Winter Choral Concert and the New England Music Festival with lapses in rehearsing time between them. 35 The yearbook staff, finishing layouts at 6:30 p.m. the day of a deadline . . . conferences of High Spot editors in G23... . plans for the next edi- tion—all over the green blackboard . . . Focus people sifting through their copy, trying to dig up “something inspired” to print in the next issue . . A bedraggled “Echo” person looking for a meeting, and looking lost in the middle of the chaos . . . Two deadlines and a paste-up on the same Friday afternoon . . . The mystery and the wonder and the headache of working on Publica- tions. What the overseer overlooked: this caption? coping “Well, if I cropped out the middle. . .” UNIVERS Cheryl Astourian types Focus copy. 4 Jim edits avidly. with copy = The most candid posed candid ever posed. aT John Ackroff, Alan Van Egmond, “Watch your finger, John Ackroff, Bill Woodhull, Mike Larkin, Alan Van Egmond, and we don’t want another one of you.” Jim Hudson. echoechoechoechoechoecho. . . . . 979 copies printed. . . 987 copies sold. . . that leaves-8 copies left?” Echo: Nomadic staff, always searching for a corner to work in . . . Inevitable typing errors and spelling mistakes . . . despair at the eleventh hour. . . the te- dium of counting copies for each home- room . . . back to Parker Street for food and communal head-patting 500 hardbound, 600 paper ... a bill for $7000 at the end of the year ., . who extended the due date for the second (of three easy payments) until a week from Friday? These are the kinds of problems that perpetually unnerve the business staff. Being a p hotographer is hours alone in the pitch black of the dark room with a mug of coffee and a stack of negatives . it’s bottles of chemicals (all sizes and sorts) . . . being asked to develop a picture of the lunch ladies two hours be- fore the yearbook deadline . . . and ly- ing flat on your stomach in the quadran- gle in the middle of a blizzard for the sake of “this interesting shot.” Picture of a picture in the making. clickclickclickclickclick Alex Jamison, Dan Bogen, Pat Kerber, Graham Colbourne, Mark Pfeil. 39 Library aides When I joined A.V., I expected to get wrapped up in my work, but this is ridiculous! OF Tene ae seer e es. yeehte: |: i re | btrre, S ARATE. Larry Rich shelves books in the library. Peeking at you from the authority side of the desk. . . peering through the shelves . pinched fingers wedged between pages of the Britannica. . . ink pad tattoos on hands and clothes . answering questions . . . Devoted to the Dewey Decimals. “If you ever knock out the PA system .’ “But Mr. Wilson, we can explain”. . . deliver the film projector . Toll the film. . . find an extension cord. . . have you a record player? how about an overhead projector? . shine the spotlight. . . fix the sound on the movie. . . Turn up the amplifier and dim the lights so that everyone can see what the AV Club does for the school. helping the hundreds Typing classes prepare one for business service. if | o What does it mean when sixteen girls hire themselves out to type papers and mimeo masters for the various departments of the school twice weekly (during H block)? It means they belong to Business Service Club. “Assembly Committee members, cut the whistling, you’re supposed to be good examples remember?”. . . I miss F and G block on Friday. . . “You are dismissed, but please remain seated until a member of the Assembly Committee dismisses you”. . . row three, you may follow row two. . . I have to sit through the safe driving film during both assemblies . . . Let’s plan an assembly every Monday A block. . . “Please stand and join me in the salute to the flag” Ann McArdle keeps an assembly under control. 41 Confetti and a bundle of twirl in the center of the football field at the downbeat of the drum. . . thundering feet at the top of the bleachers during a pep rally . . . choosing and sewing brand new uniforms at the beginning of a new season. . . Memorial Day and the April 19th parade: majorettes in blue and gold and white strutting to the blaring sound of the LHS Band . . Mr. White and The Freddy. Varsity Club: A blond seven letterman and his sweater. . . selling candy bars (chocolate and nuts) to earn money during a game. . . hopes for a carnival . . a lonely six foot half-back guarding “paper waste” in the cafeteria. “V” for Varsity, “W” for Win. L.H.S. MAJORETTES are—Ann Vasseur, Chris Rosa, Denise LaBella, Julie Long, Linda Dankese, Maureen Trani. Kneeling: Linda Duval and Sharon Faye. flexibility ORGANT Zt By SKI CLUB OFFICERS AND ADVISORS—Mr. Landers, Charles Jad TCAV By Arbeene, Dave Brennan, Mr. De me Sertivied Richards, Marilyn Walsh, Miss Smith, ; Joelle Murat. Depot Square under a pink and gold sky: 5:30 a.m. and ski club embarks on another outing. . . somebody on crutches stuffing Head skis, boots, and poles into the luggage compartment. . . anda couple of miscellaneous girls in paisley parkas and stretch pants, screaming the bus to a halt. . . Remembrances: those glorious ski movies and then snowplowing for the first time . . . the towline and frostbitten thumbs. . . falling on the glare ice. . . and happiness: coe getting out of your ski boots at the end of the day. and finesse Modern Dance: “Backside to” A pile of rumpled black leotards and tights . . . the patter of bare feet on the cold gym floor... the primitive pounding of drums while girls extend, contract and s-t-r-e-t-c-h those muscles the prancing and pirouettes of an experiment in choreography . the “cool” sound of Dave Bru- beck and Leon Anderson knowing the difference between sustained, percussive, and loco- motor movements ... and a round of applause from an ap- preciative audience. David Grayson, Mike Raisbeck, and Harry Terkanian ponder another math problem. Wires, models, transmitters, knobs, headsets, dials, and smiles ... new friends ... Christmas greetings across the country . . . Hello? Hello? . . . Interna- tional Morse Code ... FCC Radio Licenses Who are you? Where is this? Are you speaking Eng- lish? This is the LHS Radio Club. A closed set of hard workers and master minds reach- ing to infinity . . . concentric ellipses, cosines of 0 worn down erasers . . . the square root of 19 . confusing calculus, yawns. . . slide rules actually being slided . . . cartesian coordinates, conics. . . the base is one half the hypotenuse . . . nibbled pencil tips . 800’s on the college boards . . . and X equals? Lloyd Buttrick consults Mr. DuFour in Radio Club. contemplation and constructive play Jeff Garret at work on a masterpiece. 45 The Chess Club concentrates. Concentration . .. roving pawns and conquering queens, squares before your eyes ... “Hurry up, it’s your move” Bishops, castles, horses, milling crowds of pawns . . . checkmate chess club. . . the best five players are the team. “Watch out your cuffs are in the blue paint” .. . spilled paint . . . charcoal smudged hands ... clay stuck under fingernails . . . pencils, crayons, water, turpentine . . . “Don’t look at that one! It’s awful” . . . “I can’t draw humans” . . . Rockport in the Spring . . . candy, ceramics and a scholarship. o = re 5) 5) 3 on i) f= i= ob o jaa) shall return, school 46 ing the future form Cc n wu o 4 9 ° a4 oO a vo i 3s vo _ vo s Future Nurses of America The A.M.A. may not know about them yet, but the Future Nurses and the Junior Red Crossers are on their way. . . bind- ing bandages, revitalizing veterans every Monday at the V.A. Hospital in Bedford, stuffing animals for children—a smiling, cheery, crew. “There will be a meeting of the Future Teachers in room E28 at 2:20 today” . Agenda: a guest lecture, a panel, a discussion of plans to visit Salem State Teachers. “How do you pour tea when you’re sit- ting down?” and “Isn’t silver beauti- ful!” . . . lectures on diamonds or hair- styles . . . How short is too short, what color lipstick for a blonde? Young Mod- erns know all the answers. School nurse Mrs. Alice Mogan, the advisor of the Future Nurses of America. 47 The French have a funny way of talking and a special way of doing things (avec chic). . . Le Cercle Francais: cafĂ© au lait, French bread. . . s’instruire en s’amusant. . . existentialism, Sartre and Camus . receptions in Boston. . . The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, dinner at Le Petit Auberge. . . the annual LHS Flea Market . camaraderie and joie de vivre. bossa nova and The celebrated cafĂ© au lait. SPANISH CLUB OFFICERS—Peter Wathen-Dunn, Donna Sebell, Gail Van Wingerden, Mike Gordon. El Circulo Espagnol: a pinata at Christmas. . . promoting Flamenco dancers in Humanities. . . plans for a trip to Madrid over February vacation . a discussion of bullfighting technique and building castles in Spain. Greek Academy: dipping their fingers into antiquity . . . an empathetic appreciation of lofty Greek thought . understanding their ideas by knowing the words that expressed them. . . being one up when it’s time to join frats. brioche Ken Jones—AFSer from Wales, with apologies for no senior picture. AFS OFFICERS AND EXCHANGE STUDENTS— Ken, Monika, Joyce, Mike, Jackie, and Margo. American Field Service: International friendship, understanding, and parties (lots of them). . . Global 4 Go Go . . Americans Abroad: applications, interviews, semi- finalists, two names to New York, a chance at amateur diplomacy . . . an opportunity to immortalize your art work on Christmas cards or to sell them in the main lobby. . . earning your way over is half the fun. Oh, no, another crisis! Public Affairs Public Affairs Club: Bradford Morse in E28 . . . a forum for political ideas and viewpoints . . fighting factionalism among the Young Republicans. . . civil rights and debates. 49 ACTIVITIES DIRECTORY FUTURE TEACHERS OF AMERICA: Lynne Cohen, Presi- dent; Amy Lind, Vice-President; Cindy Hartford, Secretary; Nanette DelVecchio, Treasurer; Sue Clemow, Program Chair- man; Janet Buttlar, Peggy Casey, Martha Chapman, Jane Church, Lynne Davidson, Judy Desmond, Paula Garagolo, June Greene, Pam Hurley, Denise LaBella, Marie Linnell, Carol Lundberg, Nancy Place, Christina Rosa, Sally Trask, Cherie Trenholm, Pearl Wang. FUTURE NURSES OF AMERICA: Cathy Morse, President; Kathy Quincy, Vice-President; Carol Obear, Secretary; Bobbi Puolter, Treasurer; Chris Sinkivich, Elizabeth Good, Program Chairmen. Donna Andrews, Pat Andrews, Janet Batchelder, Rita Cunha, Diane Eleftherakis, Judy Elkins, Marion Finon- chetti, Patti Forrester, Carol Goddard, Priscilla Hallet, Janice Hourihan, Jean Joseph, Florence Keljikian, Wendy Larson, Anne Lind, Julin Long, Linda MacDogal, Joyce May, Newla McGrath, Virginia Morse, Marilyn Prasinos, Jeanne Ryder, Pat Todurce, Cheryl Van Voorhis, Ruth Wideroe, Kathy Youngerman. FRENCH CLUB: Elaine Peterson, President; Janet Buttlar, Janet Collier, Janet Fox, Ann Nagel, Vice-Presidents; Marilyn Prasinos, Secretary; Marilyn Molloy, Treasurer; John Ackroff, David Billinger, Virginia Black, Debby Bouras, Elizabeth Cazden, Douglas Clark, Jane Cochran, Cathy Crone, Marie Cupp, Lynne Davidson, Julie Elkins, Charles Edmundson, Kathy Enright, Philip Faflick, Senter Fouraker, Sonia Fried- man, Ruth Goldstein, Judy Grant, Cherie Hamilton, Laura Holland, James Hudson, Pam Hurley, Linda Johansson, Margo Jones, Barbara Joseph, William Johnston, Roberta Kovitz, Judy Lafley, Cathy Lingane, Marie Linnell, Jacqueline Mack, Susan Martin, Lorna Matheson, Anne McCurdy, Ellen Mc- Grath, Virginia Morse, Cheryl Mortensen, Ritamay Mortensen, Marcia Munroe, Betsey Newton, Anne Obertuffer, Claudia Ogilvie, Jacqueline Piret, John Piret, Mike Raisbeck, Larry Rich, Ann Ronchetti, Sue Rosenblum, Jeanne Ryder, Jean San- ford, Martha Steeves, Caroline Stevens, Pearl Wang, Nancy Wilkins, Carolyn Wright, Susan Yakutis. ECHO: Mike Larkin, Editor Emeritus; Bill Woodhull, Al Van Egmond, Editors; John Ackroff, Jim Hudson, Assistant Editors; Charles Kitchin, Publicity; Cathy Myrick, Treasurer; Sharon Dyer, John Foley, Janet Fox, Ann Hayner, Sandy Houghton, Michael Mendoza, Betsey Newton, Joyce Nowlin, Michelle Poplawski, Terri Priest, Christina Rosa, Laura Semonian, Linda Senter, Maureen Trani, Alice Wang, Pearl Wang, Nancy Wilkins, Reporters. CONCERT CHOIR: Sopranos: Jane Barthelemy, Mercer Bonney, Joanna Cazden, Liz Clarke, Tania Coletta, Joy Curtis, Cindy Fox, Janet Frost, Jayne Gillespie, Erica Glassman, Cheri Hamilton, Kris Holmes, Marilyn Jackson, Cindy Jordan, Donna Peterson, Marsha Rich, Susan Rosenblum, Laura Semonian, Linda Senter, Pat Walsh, Virginia Wood, Carolyn Wright. Altos: Prudy Brown, Elizabeth Cazden, Pogo Clarke, Susan Doran, Susan Eaton, Janet Fisher, Amy Gordon, June Greene, Sandy Houghton, Karen Hruby, Cathy Lingane, Mary Madden, Lyn McCauley, Flip Nissell, Jackie Reezes, Carolyn Shaner, Anne St. George, Karen Thomas, Monika Vichytil. Tenors: Steve Ballou, Ted Ballou, Steven Cantor, Larry Guil- martin, Donald McElman, Michael Mendoza, Benjamin Soule, Nick Van Wingerden, Jon Warren. Basses: Lano Baluvalescu, Steve Bolster, Richard Bruno, Stephen Dasho, Dimitri Eleftherakis, James Kelley, Jonathan Lewis, Paul Norcross, Jack Powell, Larry Rich, James Rosenblum, Alan Savenor, Mark Sebell, Richard Sherman, Alan Van Egmond, David Woodberry. Susan Eaton, Karen Thomas, Accompanists. 50 CHESS CLUB: Board Members: Karl Dussik, Peter Halfman, Jim Hudson, John McLeod, Don Miller, Miles Dudley, Jim Potter, Mike Raisbeck, Mark Selikson, Scott Thyng, Paul Valihura, Ken Weiner. BUSINESS SERVICE CLUB: Karla Bjorkgren, President; Patricia Rolashevich, Vice-President. Cheryl Astourian, Debbie Cammarata, Gail Connor, Cathy Curro, Mary Ellen Franey, Jane Johnson, Louise Johnson, Linda Langille, Maureen Mc- Donald, Judi Mantineo, Janet Natale, Patricia Rodgers. BAND: David Carlson, Arlan Doughty, Sharon Fay, Jayne Gillespie, Eric Gordon, Betty Handrick, Marilyn Jackson, Mary Madden, Richard Oban, Frances Pfaff, Alan Savenor, Richard Shaner, John Ackroff, Bill Bellows, Curt Bowersock, Judy Cooper, Tom Dempsey, James Hudson, Kendall Juthe, Fred Lund, Paul Natanson, Norman Phillips, Bill Pihl, Steve Shaw, Mark Soule, Nick Waldron, John Wetmore, Nancy But- ters, Pat MacDonald, Roberta Rosenthal, Paul Sampson, Ellen Schatz, Robert Simeone, Nick Van Wingerden, Keith Winnard, Tony Fisher, Richard McCormack, John McNicholas, James Adams, Jerry Bellows, Don Bettencourt, Anne Brown, Vernon Catron, James Colli, Paul Devlin, Bill Hines, Russ Jones, John Langille, Larry Lipschutz, John Marcus, John McLeod, Erik Mollo-Christensen, Ken Pihl, Kris Swanson, Paul Taenzer, David Terry, Diane Trask, Wayne Van Alstine, Val Wester- lund, Charles Abraham, Lynne Alberts, Steve Bolster, Dexter Branch, Donna Burke, Ellen Carter, Paul Colpitts, Roger Conant, James Dolham, Anne Cronin, David Dempsey, Rich- ard Gillespie, Nat Guild, Richard Hall, Marjorie Horowitz, Leland Hutchinson, Richard Jones, Deborah Kelly, Kathy Ken, Dan Larkin, James Lund, Steve Morrall, Leo Najarian, David Olsson, Brenda Overly, Lucy Raisbeck. AUDIO-VISUAL CLUB: William Pihl, Quartermaster; Paul Ferrarese, Treasurer. Harron Appleman, Tom Battin, Tom Blackwell, Curt Bowersock, Chris Cardillo, Dimitri Elefthera- kis, Peter Franks, Bob Hutchins, Dave Luca, Ken Pihl, Dave Stewart, Joe Upham, Jim Woodberry. ART CLUB: Judi Cooper, President; Arlan Doughty, Vice- President; Ellen McGrath, Secretary; Daphne Slocombe, Treasurer. ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE: William Modoono, President; Joseph Basile, Vice-President; Joyce Wischusen, Secretary. Merriel Balazy, Jane Carine, Jane Church, Susan Clemow, Catherine Crone, Doreen Fox, Nancy Friedman, Kathleen Gibbons, Elizabeth Good, Marjorie Hanrahan, Wayne Haugh, Peter Kelley, Linda Lindell, Carol Lundberg, Jane Mackechnie, Barbara Mann, Ann McArdle, Richard McCar- thy, Sharon Morrill, Linda Payne, Katherine Quincy, Christina Rosa, Janice Sousa, Ruth Spinelli, David Stuart. AMERICAN FIELD SERVICE CLUB: Alice Wang, Presi- dent; Chuck Hudson, Vice-President; Thalia Doukas, Secre- tary; Joyce Nowlin, Mark Sebell, Hospitality Chairmen; Margot Wright, Publicity Chairman. Students from abroad: Ken Jones, Wales; Michael Mendoza, Philippines; Monika Vichytil, Austria: Joyce Nowlin, AFS student to Turkey. Can- didates for next summer: Jackie Anthony and Margo Jones. YOUNG MODERNS CLUB: Valerie Kroll, President; Joyce Wischhusen, Vice-President; Sheila Busa, Treasurer; Denise Looney, Secretary; Carol Lundberg, Program Chairman; Julie Elkins, Assistant Vice-President. Sheila Busa, Ruth Spinelli, Jean Trovato, Ginny Oldakowski, Rosalie Ricci, Jackie Cavanaugh, Denise Cahill, Linda Potka, Diana Costello, Jane Church, Ann Belliveau, Carol Lundberg, Linda Lindell, Debby Hopkins, Cheryl Burns, Irene Gould, Laurel Dutcher, Antoi- nette George, Kathy Quincy, Debby Bouras, Louise Johnson, Pat McDonald, Estelle Quinlan, Susan Sunby, Joyce Wisch- husen, Kathy Watson, Mary Hourihan, Ann MacNamara, Betsey Hawkins, Joanne Glover, Elizabeth Good, Charlene Hyde, Denise Del Vecchio, Ann Sliski, Diana Dardin, Dawn Anderson, Faith Harrison, Diana Trask, Gloria Wilcox, Julie Elkins, Nancy Freedman, Diane Eletherakis, Ellen Shatz, Chris Cunha, Jane Barton, Sheila Hoffsted, Virginia Lovett, Denise Looney, Valerie Kroll. VARSITY CLUB: John Crisp, President; David Pekins, Vice- President; Tom O’Shaughnessy, Secretary; Alan _ Besecker, Treasurer. STUDENT COUNCIL: 1966: Joseph Basile, Cynthia Hart- ford, Carol Lundberg, Merril Jones, Robert Lyng, Richard McCarthy, Robert McCarthy, Joelle Murat, David Norcross, Martha Semonian, John McDonald, 1967: Roy Brooks, Clint Cave, Douglas Curran, Robert Dodd, Phillip Faflick, Denise Gaynor, Charles McCormick, William Porter, Robert Maguire, 1968: James Ferro, David Parker, Beverly Lenos, Mark Woodward, Donald Taft, Steven Colman, Dusty Hoyt, 1969: Keven Roffi, Lynne Alberts, Richard McGuire, David Webb, Steven Widowsky. SPANISH CLUB: Gail Van Wingerden, President; Michael Gordon, Vice-President; Donna Sebell, Secretary; Linda Johansson, Treasurer; Peter Wathen-Dunn, Coordinator of Ac- tivities. SKI CLUB: David Brennan, President; Charlie Arbeene, Vice- President; Marie Walsh, Secretary; JoĂ©lle Murat, Treasurer. RADIO CLUB: Warren Aulenback, President; Mike Raisbeck, Vice-President; Steve Bonfilio, Treasurer; Chris Cardillo, Sta- tion Manager. Winston Anderson, Ken Shufelt, Roger Stern, Paul Taeuzer, Licensed Members. PUBLIC AFFAIRS CLUB: Michael Gordon, Robert Johnson, Dennis Graham, Marie Flaherty, Sharon Dyer, Carole Stone, Margaret Halfman, John Carbert. ORCHESTRA: Cindy Anthony, Harran Appleman, Steve Bal- lou, Steve Bolster, Danny Branch, Joanna Cazden, Cheryl Clark, Paul Colpitts, Tony Fisher, Paul Grazulis, Phillip Jelatis, Nick Noiseux, Gail Spergel, Sue Stitts, Karen Thomas, Richard Wadoski, Ted Wyman, Marlene Aronin, Brad Bayliss, Beth Berkofsky, Anthonia Blombergen, Cedric Chao, Doug Clark, Alan Eaton, Dimitri Eleftherakis, Melissa Gavin, Paul Karsh, Robert Mahon, John McLeod, Erik Mollo-Christensen, Richard Pu, Gail Anderson, Curt Bowersock, Elizabeth Caz- den, Judy Cooper, Diane Eleftherakis, M. Fitzpatrick, Laura Holland, Jim Hudson, Kathy Lingane, Norman Phillips, Steve Shaw, John Wetmore, Ted Ballou, Jane Barthelemy, Dean Blake, Sue Eaton, Cindy Fogg, Steve Heimlich, Frances Pfaff, Lorraine Queander, Jim Rosenblum, Richard Shaner, Caroline Stevens, Gail Van Wingerden. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY: Dana Cobb, President; Bob Lyng, Vice-President; Mary Madden, Secretary; Kelly Frick, Treasurer. Kevin Gaynor, Jayne Gillespie, John MacDonald, M adelyn McCauley, Flip Nissel, Karla Pfeil, Gail Wan Winger- den, Alice Wang. See list of names under picture in Activities Section for members inducted in February. 51 MODERN DANCE: Jackie Anthony, Cheryl Astourian, Beth Berkofsky, Cheryl Cleaves, Sandra Cook, Diane Costello, Anne Cronin, Marie Cupp, Ginny Douglas, Laurel Drake, Linda Ennan, Senter Fouraker, Peggy Godwin, Debbie Gould, Janice Greene, Nancy Jeltsh, Joyce Kacoyanis, Paula Kily, Dale Kilkenny, Bonnie Meir, Barbara Meir, Marilyn Molloy, Ann Nagel, Sue Nagel, Claudia Ogilvie, Pricilla Owen, Vic- toria Pious, Bobbi Poulter, Ester Reyes, Susan Ryan, Amy Segal, Carol Smallman, Roz Sovie, Linda Stoico, Kathy Tal- ley, Martha Taylor, Chaarie Tang, Lindsay Tosekerg, Jacqueline Toye, Maureen Trani, Valerie Tropeano, Karen Wexler, Ruth Wideroe, Leticia Alba. MATH TEAM: David Stuart, Harry Terkanian, Jon Warren, Jim Hudson, Mike Raisbeck, Dan Bogen, Dave Grayson, Jeff Tiedeman. MALE DOUBLE QUARTET: Richard Bruno, Dave Carlson, Erik Mollo-Christensen, Larry Rich, Jim Rosenblum, Marc Selikson, Jon Warren, David Woodberry. MAJORETTES: Linda Duval, Sharon Faye, Co-captains. Linda Dankese, Denise La Bella, Julie Long, Chris Rosa Maureen Trani, Anne Vasseur. LIBRARY AIDES: Chris Sinkevich, President; David Taft, Alden Olson, Vice-Presidents; Barbara Priest, Secretary; Melissa Gavin, Treasurer; Lynne Alberts, Mercer Bonney, Diane Bova, George Brown, Chris Johnsen, Judy Nichols, Shirley Rodgers, Jay Amicangelo, Harold Asp, Debbie Cobb, Dimitri Eleftherakis, Dierdrie Fitzgerald, Dennis Graham, Bob Graustein, Joyce Hemel, Norma Herzinge, Sheila Jellis, Laurel Juthe, Fred Chamberlain, Jan Munroe, Robert McCauley, Robert Wein, Janet Buttlar, Harvey MacNutt, Ed Danielson, Nancy Pennini, Gila Rosenfield, Brian Yelland, Marie Linnell, Anita Berkof- sky, Karla Bjorkgren, Sherri Converse, Dennis Domenichini, John Foley, Donna Goldman, Susan Howard, Janet Hufton, Tim Bryson, Cathy Morse, Susan Toms, Sarah Wilson, Newla McGrath, Ron Russo, Susan Howard. JUNIOR RED CROSS: Marion Fitzpatrick, Edward Harrigan, Joyce May, John Murphy, Terri Priest, Katherine Quincy, Daniel Redhouse, Susan Toms, Nicholas Waldron. HIGH SPOT: James Schantz, Editor-in-Chief; Jayne Gillespie, Lyn McCauley, News Editors; Janet Keeping, Karen West, Editorial Directors; Dori Zalesnik, Dave Broderick, Features Editors; Eric Gordon, Bill Bornstein, Ginny Black, Sports Edi- tors; Debby Thurman, Managing Editor; Wendy Davis, Sue Ryan, Business Managers. GREEK ACADEMY: Manya Arond, Marlene Aronin, Nancy Barton, Janet Buttlar, Janet Collier, Holly Harstone, William Johnston, Marsha Rich, Anne Ronchetti, Robert Williams, Doris Zaleznik. GIRLS’ GLEE CLUB: Jane Barthelemy, Wendy Buck, Linda Cataldo, Joanne Crowell, Susan Doran, Susan Eaton, Anne Eriksson, Jane Gallagher, Erica Glassman, Andrea Gordon, Lauren Hogan, Diane Houghton, Pam Hurley, Kathy Ken, Cathy Lingane, Susan Martin, Ruth McLeod, Barbara Meier, Janice Munroe, Marilyn Richards, Roberta Rosenthal, Ellen Schatz, Marcia Trainor, Karen Thomas, Dottie Walsh, Noreen Webb, Susan Zorn. 52 where the action is ATHLETICS MEANS: GIVING UP LATE DATES PRACTICE ON WEEKENDS NO SKIING NO HANGING IN THE HALLS, OR ELSE. BUT, IN RETURN: A NEW FIELD HOUSE—BEAUTIFUL, VERSATILE, IMPRESSIVE RECOGNITION A NICKNAME—BIRDMAN, GORILLA, MR. MACHINE A CHAMPIONSHIP—THE WHOLE STATE LOOKS UP. =i) LEX. 12 18 NON 1965 FOOTBALL RESULTS Belmont Melrose Stoneham Winchester Newton South Wakefield Cambridge Latin Reading Concord Won4 Lost5 Tied 0 ORE: 15 15 14 14 18 54 The thrill of winning victories and the anguish of close defeats characterized the 1965 football season of the LHS Minute Men. This year’s team, the best the class of 66 has seen, maintained much of its tradition while adding much that is new. LHS won its first game of the year, upsetting 1964 Class B champion Belmont and a highly regarded Melrose team, to equal its total number of victories for the previous year. It appeared as if this was to be a revolutionary year for the Minute Men. Lexington might be put on the map as a football town to be reasoned with. To accomplish this, new methods and tactics had to be employed. LHS opened the season with a new image. Offensively, the Minutemen used an offense for passing, flooding an area with three receivers, running in specific patterns in the hope that one would get free. A new method of blocking, called isolation, was introduced. Defensively, LHS employed the new “monster man”, with the eleventh man or “monster” lined up in a critical position in anticipation of the play. There were other new aspects of the game devised which, when combined with Lexington’s traditional method of playing football, formed the basis for the Minutemen’s success this year. To carry out this strategy, Coach John Janusas called upon Carl ‘Trip’ Davis who could either hand off to fullback John Rizzo, to halfback John Crisp, or pitch out to halfbacks John Molloy and Merril Jones. To spark a drive either Davis or Crisp could throw long aerial bombs to ends Dave Caouette and Rod Sparrow. Blocking the passes and opening up holes for our runners were the heroes of football, the men of the forward line. Led by all Middlesex League tackles, Al Mulcahy and Art Klemm, along with guards Paul Tavilla and Joe Coyte, plus center Gerry Connell, the line could be equally ferocious on defense. Other defense standouts included John McDonald and Kevin Gaynor. After the Melrose game LHS was headed for an undefeated season, but then, were shutout by Stoneham. As the season progressed Lexington conquered Winchester 14-0 and Cambridge Latin 6-0 but succumbed to Newton South by only one point and B | lost to Wakefield in the final seconds of play. O ot Ceeer S LHS came into the Concord game the favorite with a 4- 4 record and an opportunity for a winning season. The 2 6 5 Lexington crowd sat stunned that Thanksgiving Day as Concord upset the Minutemen 18-6. However, the team will be remembered with pride and admiration as a most exciting and talented squad of football players. MEMBERS OF THE FOOTBALL SQUAD—C. Arbeene, D. E. Donahue, G. Connell, L. Stone, B. Detwiller, K. Yeomans, McElman, S. Hamilton, J. Centauro, R. Maguire, G. Granata, K. Gaynor, J. Potzka, D. Lovett, J. Malloy, S. Dever, B. Folk, S. Terrio, T. DiCiccico, P. Brown, K. Bixby, P. Gerraguto, P. R. Perry, R. Walton, J. Deardon, D. Taylor, B. Connell, P. Cassetarr, J. Hayes, D. Young, R. Sparrow, A. Mulcahy, J. Bellino, D. Whitney. Managers: B. Norcross, T. Donnelly, J. Coyte, K. Balchunas, P. Tavilla, A. Klemm, D. Couette, C. Kavanaugh, D. Jeanette. Davis, J. Crisp, J. Rizzo, M. Jones, J. McDonald, J. Harvey, “Football is a Dainty ANS wee f 56 First Row: R. Sampson, B. Shull, N. Guild, M. Gorden, A. Biggs, G. Luhrs, R. Black. Second Row: D. Rice, A. Eaton, D. Hoyt, B. Ken- nedy, D. Domini, C. Sikes, B. Gray, G. Ryan. Third Row: Mr. Downing, N. Ward, D. Larson, D. Worth, K. Morse, C. McCormick, J. Daley. Fourth Row: G. Hourihan, R. Ash- man, D. Carlson, N. Goff, M. Schulte, D. Robinson, J. Harrington, R. Black. lei... Puff by a Fk . See “ - —— . ” 4 | = S = . aor ; 2 „ 5 uF | q Ee 4 “Stay in a group and run with the man ahead of you”—Coach Downing’s words to the Cross Country team. This strategy pushed the harriers to tenth place in Class A and fifth place in the Middlesex League, quite an achievement, because this is the first season Lexington com- peted in the class and was the smallest team in it. Ricky Black and Chris Sikes were con- sistent leaders, with Jerry “J.D.” Daley, Nat Guild, Chuck McCormick and Andy Biggs adding wins for the Blue and Gold. Dave Dominie, “Dusty” Hoyt, Bill Schull, Dave Worth and Dave “Robe” Robinson contributed depth to this year’s squad. Co-captains George Hourihan and Dave Robinson did a fine job of instilling team spirit. Returning varsity runners and the out- standing J.V. squad provide an excellent outlook for next year’s squad. mn poe a , © 4 = ? —, ore le Pwd ae F 4 : kL : , P if le i hy aah ej hae VARSITY SOCCER—Second Row: Asst. Coach Roland Massimino, D. Anderson, C. Cave, D. Prentiss, D. Roberts, D. Suderow, H. Terkanian, G. McGrath, B. Modoono, C. Benoit, J. Rutherford, W. Cram, Coach Forbes Keith. First Row: D. Curran, T. Carlson, J. Herbold, L. Brouwer, A. Besecker, B. Dodd, S. Hatfield, B. Porter, G. Phalen, D. Nussdorfer, J. Coffin. “They’re great, they just can’t lose” was the reputation of this year’s fabulous soccer team. Highly talented and well coached, they brought many honors to LHS. With an undefeated season of 14-0-1, they were finally beaten by the Eastern Mass. State Champions, New Bedford, in the semi-finals of the State Tournament. “It will be a long time before Lexington again pro- duces such a fine team,” were the parting remarks of Coach Keith at the Soccer Banquet. The team was well-balanced with a high scoring offense and an opponent-frustrating defense. Co- captain Detlev Suderow led the offense with a school record high of 24 goals. He was honored when selected for the first team of the All-Scholastic selection. Lou Brouwer with eleven goals, and Wayne Cram with eight goals completed the “Fearsome Three” of the Lexington first line, which accounted for three-fourths of LHS’s goals. John Herbold, Roger Bevan, Robert Carlson, Robert Dodd, William Porter, James Ruther- ford, and George Phalen provided additional scoring points. Co-captain Alan Besecker led the strong defense, keeping their opponents down to an average of one goal per game. Doug Prentiss, Carl Benoit, Clint Cave, Scott MacKechnie, Dave Roberts, and David Nussdor- fer did an outstanding job in the background. Three fine goalies, Gary McGrath, Bill Modoono and Harry Terkanian kept many balls out of the LHS net. There is little left to say about this year’s “Booters.” Their greatness was self-evident. Of the starting eleven, seven besides Detlev Suderow received Honorable Mention on the All-Scholastic selection. In apprecia- tion of Coach Keith’s outstanding job, the team pre- sented the school with “Forbes Keith Most Valuable Player Award”; later awarded to Detlev Suderow. Seven of the starting eleven will return next year. If that team works as hard as this year’s, Lexington High soccer has a brilliant future. “Let's Hang On To What We've Got”’ Detlev Suderow SCORES Lex. 2) s v Winchester Concord Watertown Needham Acton-Boxboro Winchester Newton North Andover Academy Brookline Medford Acton-Boxboro Concord Belmont Brookline State Tournament Quarter Finals Sharon 1 Semi-Finals 0 New Bedford 3 Alan Besecker — WOWNAUNNNOWNA WINN RKeP Wr OorwodroOodfhR Re Ww Field Hockey: Stick-to-it-1veness The sun didn’t shine that day. Sticks down, rush!—and off ran the girls’ field hockey team to another good season. The familiar faces of Co- captains Renie Saulnier and Martha Semonian could always be seen at those long fall practices, where the girls tried to develop the fight, run, dribble, and drive that would bring them victory. The hours of chasing that little white ball up and down the field seemed endless, but so did the team’s enthusiasm. Field hockey is an exhausting sport, but the girls never gave up their fighting spirit in practice or in an actual game. Like the free throw in basketball or the field goal kick in football, the ‘sure’ scoring play is a corner in this sport. “Every corner is a goal,” the motto of this year’s team, instilled in the players a new zeal for the game. Although every corner was not a goal, Lexington still ended with a record of four wins, four ties, and one loss. Displaying an aggressive attack, led by center for- ward Sue Martin, and a determined defense, the team faired well against often superior opposition. The clash of sticks, as well as shins, the boisterous bus rides, and the stampede for refreshments after the game won’t be forgotten by the hardy girls who played field hockey this year for LHS. VARSITY FIELD HOCKEY-J. Keeping, K. Kalimon, S. Fritz, K. White, S. Martin, M. Semonian, A. Leavitt, L. Durkin, B. Priest, T. Priest, R. Saulnier, C. Ambrose, Manager B. Allison, Coach Miss Leavitt. Ve FLEE D HOCKEY Second Row: L. Head, A. Nichols, L. Bartel, K. Spears, J. Orsillo, J. Parker, J. May, P. Hurley. First Row: J. Murat, J. Mackechnie, A. Hayner, G. Robinson, M. Fitzpatrick, J. Ambrose, J. Silman, K. Storts, J. Buttler. “Only one person won the ball at a time.” . and up went a cloud of dust! ” VARSITY CHEERLEADERS—Second Row: P. Stokes, R. Bresnahan, E. Kotowski, K. Sampson, J. Glover, M. Poplawski, L. Woodward, A. Boisvert, J. Woodward, J. Desmond, M. Jones, M. Fenochetti, L. McDevitt, C. Hartford. Spirit! SPIRIT! Let’s hear it!! 62 The 1965-66 cheerleading squad was unique. This fall the girls were in full voice with all fifteen cheerleaders at the season’s events, but for the heavier win- ter schedule the varsity squad was di- vided into two groups, one led by Pam Stokes and the other by Lyn Woodward. While the JV and freshman squads alter- nated cheering at hockey and basketball games, the cheerleaders found that this method gave them more time for cheer- leading practice and for their studies. Though split into two separate squads, the spirit of the cheerleaders was one. The Qualities which make an LHS cheer- leader have not changed. Cheerleaders are still the cheerful, vivacious, deep- voiced girls seen at every football, soccer, basketball, and hockey game. Their bouncy jumps, staccato-like kicks, and wide smiles added an extra attraction to every contest as they cheered our athletes on. Every Lexington cheerleader exhibits the boundless enthusiasm and spirit that makes a crowd want to yell and a team want to win. Cheerleading is enthusiasm personified. 63 First Row: T. O'Shaughnessy, J. Crisp, A. Besecker, L. Brouwer, J. McDonald, Coach Massimino. Second Row: K. Bixby, C. Davis, W. Maguire, S. Maloney, K. Gaynor. Third Row: T. Hennebury, M. Bluestein, J. Hayes, J. Robbat. Fourth Row: H. Terkanian, T. Terkanian, R. Black, W. Hagman, G. Beedy. Taking a cue from the perennial success of the Boston Celtics, Mr. Massimino’s basketball squad depended on tight man-to-man defense and a fast breaking offense to bring victories in the Middlesex League. Having been exposed to “ball-u-man” all through high school, the team did the best job yet of nullifying opponents’ offensive prowess. As well as playing inspired defense, the 1965-66 edition of LHS basketball more than held their own in the scoring column. Co-captains John “Bullets” Crisp and Alan Besecker were the driving force behind Lexington’s success. Bullets was Mr. Everything: scorer, rebounder, and ball handler, and great under pressure. Alan was the team leader on and off the floor, scoring his share of points as well as passing off for many other baskets. But Alan’s real fortĂ© was defense, as he consistently held the league’s top scorers to well under their averages. This was no two man team, though. Adding to the scoring punch was Steve Conley, probably best known for his ability to draw opponents into offensive fouls. Mr. Clutch, Carl “Trip” Davis, could always be depended upon for tough defense, a few points, and incessant hustle. Controlling the boards for Lexington in every game were Kevin Gaynor, Wayne Maguire, and Jock McDonald. Though not known so much for offense, each one of this trio usually checked in with four or fi ve points a game. Backing up the regulars was a hustling, talented bench. Defensive demon Lou Brouwer, long tall Steve Maloney, and jumping jack Tom O’Shaughnessy were ready whenever Coach “Mass” needed them. Tom Henneberry, Ken Bixby, and a host of outstanding sophomores who shuttled between junior varsity and varsity promise success in the years to come. No account of the season would be complete without reference to Mr. Mass. The success of his defensive tactics and patented freeze speak volumes for his coaching talent. This, plus his refusal to run up the score with the first team or to rant and rave at officials, marked hi m as the Middlesex League’s finest coach. His team, too, was one of the finest in the league and the state. « - a oa ; ; ' 65 High Hopes ee ee First Row: R. Hinchcliffe, W. Schwartz, G. Phelan, R. Mur- phy, R. Anderson. Second Row: D. Bellinger, R. Wilkes, R. Rice, J. Woodberry. Third Row: W. Lunday, Coach Della- santa, R. O’Shaughnessy. 66 j a i 4 XAG e XINGTOg ) vo a oy „ Z mo “ Coach Keith Puts the Team on Ice The 1965-66 hockey team’s aim was to better last year’s 10-6 record. The Gold Line, consisting of Joe Gal- lagher, Dave Gennaro, and Jim Ofria was the offensive spark for the Minutemen. Joe, one of the best hockey men Lexing- ton has had, broke the record of 21 points in a season. Dave and Jim also did fabulous jobs for Lexington. The Red Line, too, did a great defensive job for the team. Consisting of Brian Sul- livan, Charles Carson, Bob Margosian, and Brian Cunha, it helped Lexington keep their opponents under 2 goals per game, a rare thing in high school hockey. First Row: P. Cassattari, J. Cunha, F. Skinner, R. Ostromecki, S. Johnson, J. Langille. Second Row: First Row: J. Cole, B. Margosian, B. McCarthy, J. Ofria, A. Lorrentzen. Second Row: Coach Keith, J. Gallagher, R. McDonald, D. Moreau, B. Gennaro, D. Pekins. Third Row: S. MacKechnie, C. Corson, B. Cunha, S. Terrio, D. Margolius, R. Hemeon. Fourth Row: D. Moore, D. McCarthy, Managers. Lexington also had more of the best de- fensemen in the Middlesex Hockey Loop. David Pekins and Ricky McDonald, the dynamic duo of LHS, helped keep the goal average down. All Middlesex goalie, Bob (Buba) Mc- Carthy, the captain of the team, kept the Minutemen in many close games and sometimes accounted for Lexington’s vic- tories. The Minutemen will again be a contender for the League Championship. With two lines and most of the defensemen return- ing, the LHS hockey future looks bright. Coach Hunt, J. Maxon, J. Trainor, C. Toomey, W. Donnelley. Third Row: J. Flynn, D. O’Shaughnessy, J. Emerson, F. Lowry, M. Hurley. 7 Noten a be vilen i lea Sal ee -— ww rs | The field house was busier than ever this winter with the advent of girls’ gymnas- tics as a varsity sport at LHS. Taking full advantage of the school’s brand new appa- ratus and of pointers from their coaches, the girls did extremely well for their first year of competition against often more experienced teams. The hours put into polishing up those cartwheels, hand- stands, and flying hip circles were long and sometimes discouraging, but the girls got a great deal of personal satisfaction when they finally did perfect their stunts. Girl’s gymnastics may be a new sport at Lexington, however, the enthusiasm of this year’s participants and coaches is going to make it an important one in years to come. Flexibility, finesse, and femininity! GYMNASTICS — First Row: M. Brunn, J. Yelland, S. Arnold, N. Curran, J. Nichols, C. Dillaway, M. McDonald. Second Row: S. Greig, D. Flannigan, L. Duval, M. Mc- Grath, L. Schwartz, S. Laird, S. Fritz. Third Row: Coach Leavitt, L. Nesbeda, K. Witte, A. Line, W. Lar- son, L. Townsend, C. Wells, Coach Jordan. Pass... Dribble... . og a y eee OOPS! VARSITY BASKETBALL—Coach Lawson, M. Semonian, B. Handrick, K. : Pfeil, L. Durkin, C. Crone, C. Ambrose, B. Priest, P. Jenson, J. Fox, R. Saulnier, J. Parker. ; eS : ; ‘ ; , y 3 gah aaa per eS i ae a Se oe J. V. BASKETBALL—First Row: J. Abkowitz, J. Paratore, D. Williams, J. Aiken, J. Ambrose, B. Allison, P. Jackson. Second Row: J. Parker, C. Lowry, S. DeCarlo, K. Meadows, K. Spears, B. Morris, Coach Jaworski. Pass, pass, dribble . . . swish! Though not all their baskets were as well-timed as this, the girls’ basketball team scored enough to give LHS another winning season in winter athletics. The unheralded hoopsterettes, led by returning varsity players Linda Durkin, Captain Karla Pfeil, and Cathy Crone, always displayed a fierce desire to win as seen in their 47—14 trouncing of arch-rival Concord. With superior ball control, shooting, and determination, the girls outplayed the majority of the teams they faced this year. Many a male spectator this year commented that girls’ bas- ketball is hilarious to watch. The girls’ play is too dainty, their shots are often wild bombs, the officials call a jump when- ever a player gets her baby finger on the opponent’s ball, observe the boys. Definitely the feminine version of the game has many idiosyncrasies which make it vastly different from the masculine version, however, both have the same objective—to win. And despite the apparent mass confusion on the court, the girls summoned enough organization, coop- eration, and desire to put the ball through the hoop and bring Lexington a victorious season. 69 First Row: Coach Todaro, B. Hines, S. Kelly, D. Gates, Co-capt., J. Godwin, Co-capt., R. Howard, T. Amiro. Back Row: S. Bryson, D. Ahern, B. Carpenter, M. Jones, P. Souza, B. Bryant, D. McEllman, Manager. Billy Hines 70 Flyaway to Victory Seniors and sophomores formed the nucleus of this year’s outstanding gymnastics team. So, while, half the talent is graduating, the other half will return for the next two years. After being the Champs of the Middlesex League last year and this, it looks as if Coach Todaro is building quite a gymnastics dynasty at Lexington. Senior co-captain Joe Godwin, one of the top few all-around gymnasts in the state, paced Lexington, scoring around twenty points a meet in free exercise, tumbling, and parallel bars. Bob Carpenter in long horse, side horse, and high bar; co-captain Don Gates in free-exercise and rings; Merrill Jones in the high bar and long horse; and Bob Bryant in the side horse were the other seniors who Coach Todaro depended upon for a multitude of points. - el ) @ td f mi aat i. | 11° ae - - « it .  Ae, wage wr PT v a To we A we Dick Ennis Steve Kelly, a junior, was injured for the first part of the year, but was able to come back and help a great deal in the rings and side horse. Dave Ahern The sophomores, who were such an integral part of the team’s success, were Dave Ahern, Billy Hines, Dick Ennis, Steve Bryson, and Tom Amiro. Though it appears gymnastics will be a successful sport at Lexington and there will be some great teams in the future, this year’s squad is one to remember. Its team and individual accomplishments will be hard to equal. 71 e First Row: Coach Ralph Lord, George Hourihan, Paul Tavilla, Steve Guild, Dave Robinson, Running co-capt., Ricky Black, Bob Lyng, co-capt., Dave Norcross, Mike Degan, Larry Gould, Bruce Blunt. Second Row: Dwight Fraser, Bill Modoono, Art Klemm, Joe Avallone, Harold Doiron, . Joe Potzka, Al Mulcahy, Jerry Connell, Bill Murphy, Steve Mudrey, Detlev Suderow, Dick W ld Alexander, David Carlson. Third Row: Chris Sikes, Bob Armstrong, Roy Brooks, Clint Cave, l Henry Barg, Carl Benoit, Andy Biggs, John Kelly, Dave Domine, Fred Lund, Peter Wadler, Jerry Hruby. Fourth Row: Bob Norcross, Bill Shull, Managers, Keith Petrie, Enos Hodgdon, Ricky Jones, Nat Guild, Kevin Roffi, Rex Morrill, Steve Swets, Bruce Beal, Doug Birch, Manager. Depth, desire, and determination were Herry Silva, Nat Guild, Chris Sikes, and the inspiration as well as the hard the keys to the Indoor Track team’s Andy Biggs all helped the team this year — workouts which spelled V-I-C-T-O-R-Y. success. It was ateam blessed with few _—_ and will surely improve on their present The 1965-66 team was able to make a real stars, but with several fine successes in the future. fine addition to Mr. Lord’s already over competitors who pushed each other to Much of the team’s accomplishment must seventy percent record in track and consistently superior performances in be credited to Coach Lord, who provided __ Lexington. each event. The team’s luck was not the best this winter. Three sprinters, Co-captain Bob Lyng, Dave Norcross, and Henry Barg were lost for much of the season with leg injuries. Many other small annoying injuries and sickness beset LHS, but the team’s depth showed through each time to produce an outstanding overall performance. Leading the team was a fine group of seniors who will be sorely missed next year. Sprinters, Bill Modoono and Steve Mudrey; middle distance runners, Paul Tavilla, Harold Doiron, Co-captain Dave Robinson, Bruce Blunt, and Larry Gould; miler Rick Black; hurdlers Det Suderow and Jeff Sen; high jumpers Bill Murphy and Joe Potzka; and shot putters Al Mulcahy, Gerry Connell, and Art Klemm have all performed well and helped the team greatly in their lady year at LHS. But an outstanding group of underclassmen will return to continue Lexington’s success. Dave Domini, Dan Plasse, Carl Benoit, Bob Dodd, Joe Coroon, Chuck McCormack, and a great young distance quintet of Gerry Daley, 72 You've Really Got a Hold on Me Constant improvement throughout the season was the trademark of this year’s Lexington High wrestling team. Led by Captain Kevin Sullivan, the grapplers were in almost every meet up to the end. A pair of last match wins by John Rizzo sparked the early weeks of the season. Injuries did their best to cripple the team’s strength as Sullivan, Joe Basile, Arthur Thibodeau, Dana Basney, and Bill Detwiller were incapacitated for parts of the season. As all these boys wrestled in the heavier divisions, strength among the “big boys” suffered. Lexington more than held its own in the light-weight divisions as Stuart Rothstein, Bill and Jim Coffin, Eddie Batson, and Jimmy Rosenthal consistently scored points for the blue and gold. Phil Cunningham, Tom Dicicco, Sullivan, Basney, Rizzo, and Dave Roberts were the heavy weights who usually were on the mats for Coach Janusas, and they, too, were always trying despite some setbacks. Since its start four years ago, wrestling has progressed greatly here at Lexington. Now holding their own with such perennial powers as Chelmsford and Hamilton- Wenham, our team is sure to be heard from in the future, though its record this year is nothing to be ashamed of, either. First Row: Blair Dobbie, Jim Rosen- thall, Brian Kelly, Stuart Rothstien, Jim Coffin, Gerry Wood. Second Row: Bill Porter, Bill Coffin, Dave Roberts, Kevin Sullivan, Dave Napoli, Paul Genet. Third Row: Tom Dicicco, Bill Detwiller, Ed Bat- son, Joe Basile, Dave Couette, Dana Basney. 74 As the LHS swim team left dry land and invaded the waters of interscholastic competition, they created quite a splash in the Greater Boston Area. Although unable to finish with a winning record in dual meets, the team was high in the Greater Boston meet, beating almost every team _that had defeated them earlier in the season. Co-captain Al Mulcahy was the team’s outstanding performer: undefeated in dual meets, league and state champion, and state record holder. He almost singlehandedly put the team on the map in swimming. Co-captain Ed Harrigan was also a consistent winner. Keith Koritz, Steve Bogen, and Bruce Labombard were other seniors who contributed points to the Lexington scores. SWIM TEAM—S. Bogen, E. Harrigan, B. LaBombard, K. Koritz, F. Morey, A. Mulcahy, A. Savenor, M. Se- bell, W. Sutcliffe, E. McCarthy, D. Brennan, P. Custance, P. Holleman, M. Maher, D. McElman, N. Ward, P. Quinn, P. Tropeano, M. Soule, H. Asp, Hans Clarke, P. Dunbar, M. Sinkevich, D. Taft, M. Winder, S. Sullivan, A. Fisher, D. Meyers, L. Salza. A Stroke of Janusas Late this winter, as soon as the snow was off the ground, LHS golfers were in force, correcting their slices and ironing out their back-swings. And in early spring, when Coach Janusas put out the call for team candidates, a multitude of swingers were on hand. Golf’s first few days were spent in the most incongruous of places: the weight room of the boys’ gym, where Mr. Janusas lectured on the fine points of the sport, and in the field house, where plastic practice balls provided the opposition to the chronic hooker’s sanity. When the Middlesex season got under way, Lexington proved itself a consistently low scoring team; and that’s good in this sport (the beauty of golf is its gentlemanly and friendly competition; sometimes, in fact even the coaches play each other). Unfortunately for the rest of the Middlesex League, it had to learn how to be a good loser most of the time when LHS was the opponent on the fairways. Seniors like Ed Martin, Jack Young, and Steve Watson proved in ’66 that golf is coming to the foreground in Lexington High. Running Wilder Outdoor Track continued its long established tradition of winning seasons under Coach Lord. With miler John Crisp, high-jumper Tom O’Shaughnessy, and javelin thrower Al Mulcahy spearheading the attack as returning letter holders, the team as always ran roughshod over the Middlesex League. With lettermen and promising underclassmen providing depth, a balanced attack was the team’s strength. Steve Mudrey, Dave Norcross, and Bob Lyng often flashed across the line in first place for the blue and gold in the sprints. Hurdlers Det Suderow, Jeff Sen, and Lou Brouwer were consistent point-getters, as were Dave Robinson, Bruce Blunt, and Chuck McCormack in the middle distance. One- two finishes in the mile by John Crisp and Rick Black usually provided a safe victory margin for Lexington. A young group of two- milers showed outstanding promise for continued Lexington success in the distance events. Mr. Nichols’ “‘apes,” the strong men of the team, consistently put points on the LHS side of the scoreboard from the shot put and discus circles and the javelin runway. Success in the jumping events was often the springboard for a Lexington victory. Many outstanding first place winners, in addition to a great deal of depth, was the formula for victory on the cinders for Lexington this spring. Numerous gold medals adorned the Lexington tracksters as they completed their season in hopes of bringing another trophy or two to the school’s trophy case. 75 SSipatornen tae ee TENNIS—Front R P. Sheahan, M. Wilson, D. Stuart, S. Clarke, R. Pi Saale varese, S. Fawcett. Back Row: D. Woodberry, D. Brennan, G. Luhrs, J. Charman, P. Seaman, T. Haner, A. Savenor. Swing Softly and Carry a Big Racket TENNIS—Chris_ Viano, Carney. Denise Gaynor, Paula Jenson, Ruth 76 Tennis. A strange conglomeration of sensual experiences: the scorching sun (eyes and backs of legs burnt pink), the racquet (firm, yet saturated with perspiration), and muscles responding when they’re supposed to. The different sorts of satisfaction: a well placed shot that scores the winning point—cither a delicate drop shot that barely clears the top of the net, or a forehand to the cross court. The chores of tennis: retrieving stray balls in distant corners of the court. And the discoveries: finding at the end of the game a freshly cleaned uniform can get dingy and rumpled in a very short time. And, when the team has won: feeling simultaneously enervated, exhausted, and absolutely ecstatic. The fateful march to the Little League Field: candidates for the girls’ softball team compete for a good position. For the survivors, settling down to the grind of daily practice: charging at the ground balls and (prodded by Coach Jordan), perfecting the hit of home runs. . . learning how to specialize: infielders, to click on the double plays, outfielders, to chase flyballs that end up as far afield as Worthen Road. A muddy uniform, grass stained at the knees, a right handed catcher’s mitt for a lefthanded catcher, and a fielder in a puddle of mud—all for the sake of the great American sport. SOFTBALL—Front Row: L. Durkin, R. Saulnier, M. Semonian, D. Williams, Jean Paratore. Back Row: K. O’Neill, J. Parker, L. McDevitt, B. Morris, P. Jackson. Batmen infiltrate even LHS sports Lexington continued their new found tradition of success in baseball this Spring. A nucleus of fine Senior ballplayers and a promising group of underclassmen consistently provided exciting action on the diamond. Fielding demons Alan Besecker and Steve Conley, keeping up their defensive tradition from basketball, and aided by Bill Modoono and Joe Bisognano, allowed few balls to penetrate the infield. The outfielders, led by Merrill Jones, made many clutch putouts, and along with Junior catcher Dave Margolius deal completed the team’s outstanding defensive strength. =e The strong right arm of Artie Klemm hurled many a Ă© victory from the LHS mound; several underclassmen Ah also toed the rubber successfully for Coach Todaro’s tbe? 2 Se, i team. The hitting of Besecker and Jones in particular, as well as the rest of the squad, provided the offensive ℱ. spark for many a Lexington win. — — Hustle and spirit were the by-words all season on the Lexington diamond. As well as being a success in 66, wer uP. . — . LHS baseball holds promise for many years to come. we: ae il yy --—„ ae 77 oo“ ee) , me 78 the grind . Living it, day to day, the good points of the grind can be lost in banality. But the excitement of Discovery and Understanding, despite insurmountable odds, does occasionally come to the surface. If nothing else, there are inevitable yellow bus field trips, but an unexpected moment of creativity may generate enough enthusiasm to make the whole thing worthwhile. 79 Mr. Johnson , our principal man. Our Assistant Principals: Mr. Thurlow, Mr. Adzigian, Mr. Harris. These are the people who live in the offices that organize our lives. They see that school life runs smoothly, program classes and activities, and generally maintain the peace. They have the final say on what we wear and how we should behave. But they don’t just care for us; they care about us. “But what if it snows in May?” HLA ti . a Sd The unit rulers include, First Row: Mr. Gibson, Dr. Satz, Mr. Collard, and Mr. Baker. Second Row: Mr. Southwick, Mr. N. Gray, Mr. Dwyer, Mr. Procter, and Mr. P. Gray. 80 Mr. Coffin, H-Unit guidance counselor. Guidance Counselors from E, G, and J units are Mr. Not shown are Mrs. Garry, D-Unit Krichmar, Mrs. Blythe, and Mr. Cuzner. and Miss Mastin, F-Unit. Our guidance counselors for B, C, and A units respectively are Miss Enrico, Mr. Schofield, and Miss Stamas. Guidance People can cure seizures of Freshman Trauma or help a senior plan his college career. They have the books and the pamphlets and necessary forms to change a person’s life or quell his qualms. The traffic to their offices is almost constant. There is always someone who has changes in classes or is signing up for a college tea or wants information on the Achievement Tests. And because of their infallible knack for suggesting solutions, they are indispensable to us. ‘But I don’t want to go to Pine Tree A M!” ier: BS. Harvard; EdM., Tufts: Ass't | Principal ae ee BS. US. fared nee MEd, Harvard | Harris: oe, Colby; MSs UW. Mae Asst Principal Carol Enrico: B.S., U. of Illinois; Ed.M., Tufts eh ae Lois Garry: B.A., U. of California; M.A., BU. - “Freel Thurlow: B. A, U. Se eine: MEd, ign Oscar Krichmar: B.S., Tufts; M.A., B.U. ts ___ Eleanor Mastin: A.B., U.N.H.; M.Ed., B.U. -———s Howard Schofield: B.S., M.Ed., Northeastern ian eee _ Anne CR cole NE Pee cy BS., _M.Ed., BU. 81 Here they are: First Row: Mrs. Dickinson, Miss Lydon, Mr. Cobb, Miss Mathna, Mr. Nichols, Miss McCanne, and Miss Hayward. Second Row: Mr. Neil Gray, Mrs. Chapman, Mr. Cornog, Mr. Peter Gray, Mr. Kirk, and Mr. Bagley. ' Here are some more: First Row: Miss Russel, Mrs. Bonney, Miss Bujnievicz, Mr. Cheever, Miss Ridill, Miss Angoff, and Mrs. Flagg. Second Row: Mrs. Humez, Mr. Fay, Dr. Satz, Miss Rider, Mrs. Lyon, Mr. Larrey, and Mr. Damon. Mrs. Abrano, Miss Kinley, and Mr. MacDonald were absent. Carol Abrano: B.A., La Sierra College Marion Angoff: B.A., Wellesley; M.Ed., Tufts Guy Bagley: B.A., U. of Conn.; M.Ed., B.U. Margaret Bonney: A.B., Vassar; M.Ed., Harvard Jennie Bujnievicz: B.A., U.N.H.; M.A., Middlebury Doris Chapman: B.A., M.A., U. of Maine Wilbur Cheever (Head): A.B., A.M., Harvard Donald Cobb: A.B., Bates; M.Ed., B.U. Michael Cornog: B.A., M.A.T., Harvard John Parker Damon: A.B., Harvard; M.Ed., B.U. Constance Dickinson: B.A., Conn. College; Ed. Cert., Lake Forest College 82 ‘Is 1t judgement ot Robert Fay: A.B., Amherst; Ed.M., Harvard — Neil Gray: B.A., U. of Michigan; Tufts = Peter Gray: A.B., Merrimack College; M.Ed., Rivi Virginia Hayward: B.A., Jackson; M.A.T., Vande : Elizabeth Humez: A.B., Radcliffe Margaret Kinley: B.A., M.A., Acadia U. Robert Kirk: B.A., Colby; M.A., Clark U. Louis Larry: A.B., M.A.T., Weslevan Mary Lydon: A. B. , Bryn Mawr; M.A.T., Harvard Joy Lyon: A.B., Wellesley: B.A., B.U. ; William MacDonald: A.B., Bowdoin; Ed. M. , Harv Chane Mathna: A. BR Bucknell “When our English class renders Hamlet we really render Hamlet!” . . . English literature analyzed in depth. . . anew class in journalism grinding out High Spot. . . Twice a week a special outlet for Creative Writers. . . incoherent themes on “Simplicity” red-pencilled “Be simple”. . . Somebody yelling: I’ll trade you a Twelfth Night for a Lord of the Flies. . . frayed old Laureate Editions (edited by the users), and Words of Power with the binding broken. . . “To be or not to be” faintly breathed as source theme final drafts fall due. . . “is not strained. It droppeth as the gentle rain from”. . . “Aprille with his shourĂ©s sootĂ©â€ . . . And another voice asking of ketchup-spattered “Agamemnon”: “All right now, people, just what is tragedy?” ichols: B.A., Dartmouth; M.Ed., B.U. a Rider: A.B., U. of Maine _ : Ridill: A.B., Jackson; U. of Mass. J ces Russel: B.A., U. of Maine; M.A., U. of North yy Satz: B.A., U. of Michigan; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard Cries of “Stamp Out Ethnocentricism!”. . . And all you could learn about the Exquisite Mysteries of the East from THE history course: Far East and Latin America: Cheng Ho! and plans for a trip to Hong Kong and settling for dinner at Joyce Chen’s . . . other ambitious excursions: Washington, D.C., the U.N.; visits that gave you a chance to mingle with the shrunken heads at the Peabody Museum or get lost in the Greek relics or the Ming Vases or the Chippendale at the Museum of Fine Arts. . . The voices of famous people: “I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man” o r “Lizzie Borden took an axe”. . . (that was the same year as The Oxbow Incident, The Turner Thesis, and Manifest Destiny). . . and there were exercises in parliamentary procedure and mock filibusters, (“And now a little recipe for duck soup,”). . . and the times when it was 3 o’clock in the morning and the cardnotes for a source theme on “Irrigation In The Prairie States” were arranged in little piles all over the bedroom floor. Pcie Gi Saree nce aia aie ae 84 Clyde Davenport: _ Joseph Gibson: B.A. ae si os 4 ena a AEE GR LONE SRE INR ATT SIE TA ae a aust 5000 years of Lexington’s gay, smiling history experts are: First Row: Miss McIntyre, Mrs. Atamian, Miss McConnon, Miss Lewis, and Miss Pool. Second Row: Mr. Brady, Mr. Martin, Mr. Southwick, Mr. Gibson, and Mr. Shea. More gay, smiling history experts are: First Row: Miss Harrison, Dr. Murray, Mrs. MacArthur, Mrs. Calvert, Mrs. Truitt, and Miss Livingston. Second Row: Mr. Boyle, Mr. Robbat, Mr. Davenport, Mr. Landers, Mr. Procter, and Mr. Kershaw. Mr. Wilgoren and Mr. Sewell were absent. i cons Proctor: B.A., Suffolk U.; M.Ed., Mass. State Teachers’ Richard Robbat: A.B., Colby Quentin Sewell: B.A., Wheaton; Morton beg ga Theol. Seminary; Ed.M., B.U. _ Paul Shea: B.A., Brandeis; M.A.T., POE ‘George Southwick: A.B., Dartmouth: M.A., B. UL Patricia Truitt: B.A., Duke; M.A., Purdue DL ae baer ay ae _ Richard Wilgoren: B. A., ‘Le Mass; M. oe qT. Westover v. aad 85 Je suis, tu es, il est, nous Our multilingual language teachers say cheese ie for the camera: First Row: Mrs. Hambright, Mrs. Vogt, Miss Brega, Miss Allen, Miss Coleman, and Miss Halfter. Second Row: Mr. Jenanyan, Miss Piermarini, and Mr. Barrera. More multilingual language teachers say cheese: First Row: Miss Raissman, Mrs. Zust, Mrs. Kendrick, Miss Sulides, Mrs. Davis, and Miss Leppanen. Second Row: Miss Kane, and Mr. Kenealy. Mr. McElearney and Miss Wood were absent. summus ? That unique squeaky garble: language lab headsets at rewinding time; and our garble against those maddening voices with the one-hundred percent guaranteed continental French accents (‘‘Uh, let’s see, vwah-see mah sir, elle ai tray jolly, nez pah?”). . Pinatas and Adeste Fideles at Christmastime (as well as Virgil, Caesar, and Winnie Ille Pooh). . . the French department’s yearly pull for a summer of Cultural Enrichment. . . (and the subsequent postponement). . . Aclassful of eager Germaniacs consoling a classmate: ““That’s okay, kid. How were you supposed to know “Wie geht’s Ihnen?” doesn’t mean ‘the sugar is on the table’?” . . . voluntary submission to the glory that was Greece after school with Greek Academy. . . And the French class that actually makes it to Quebec in the spring! . . . And somebody all alone in the Quadrangle, singing “La Cucaracha.” x + manatee ETNA ad 7 The mad scientists of LHS are First Row: Miss Wheeler, Mr. Wilson, Mrs. Donovan, Mr. Piacentini, Mr. Batalis, Mr. Fruscione, and Mr. Rennie. Second Row: Mr. Rocci, Mr. O’Brien, Mr. Hardacre, Mr. Stuhr, Mr. Ames, Mr. Cortner, and Mr. Harunk. The rest of our mad scientists are: First Row: Mr. Soule, Miss Lidback, Mrs. Piper, Miss Smith, Miss DeCesare, Mr. Richards, and Mr. Choate. Second Row: Mr. Rocci, Mr. Latham, Mr. Champlin, Mr. Martin, Mr. Hassard, Mr. Winter, and Mr. Boynton. Mr. Richards and Mr. Rossi were absent. ae Ames: BS., M.Ed., BU. e Cay Cortner: B.S.Ed., M. Ed., oe State : Hee Ae B. A, Reset MA Tek 1 Revolutions of electrons and The Science Lecture Series proudly presenting Dr. Konrad Bloch, Nobel Prize winner in 1965. . . and physics classes at play with slinkies on the stairs or paralellax viewers on the football field. . . a puff of blue smoke, a series of eerie noises and strange smells and: another catastrophe in the murky depths of the chemistry lab (“What were you guys trying to do in there, blow up the school?”) . . . and examining a candle in Chem. Study, and later on, a black box . Sophomores multiplying fruit flies and seeing who can roll his tongue . . . and a new book in Earth Science, not to mention the pile of extraneous rocks. explosions in labs. ank: B “BS., Seehcia: MSS., U. Maas se ard: B wh Ed., ee ee State Teachers ith Piper: BS, ch of haw tie MAT, Harvard hn ennie: AB. heaton M.A, poets , ris :7 ] Richard Rossi: B.S., M.Ed., Boston College Margaret Smith: B.A., Oberlin; M.A., U. of Wisconsin Neil Soule: B.S., U. of Maine; M.S.T., U.N.H. Edgar Stuhr: A.B., Princeton; A.M.T., Harvard Agnes Wheeler: B.S., U. of Vermont David Wilson: B.S., M.S.Ed., Tufts James Winter: B.S., Calif. State Polytechnical; M.Ed., B.U. MAN So ee 89 ‘Do computers ever make mistakes?” Our authorities on math from addition to advanced algebra are: First Row: Mr. Schulz, Miss Haley, Mrs. Kennedy, and Mr. Goodwin. Second Row: Mr. Franz, Mr. Dincecco, Mr. Gralla, Mr. Todd, Mr. Baker , and Mr. Dwyer. The rest of our authorities on math include: First Row: Mr. Buck, Mr. Moyle, Col. Head, and Mr. Burri. Second Row: Mr. Rourke, Mr. Irwin, Mr. McNear, Mr. Koetke, and Mr. LeBlanc. Mrs. Snouffer and Mr. Schutt were absent. Clifford Baker: B.S., M.A., B.U._ Richard Buck: A.B., Dartmouth; A.M.T. Harvard Carl Burri: B.S.Ed., B.U. Nicholas Dinecco: B. S., Ed.M., B.U. John Dwyer: B.S., Bono Ralleges M.Ed., Boston State Teachers’ Robert Franz: A.B., B. U;; Ed. M., Harvard Russel Goodwin: B.S.Ed., Salem State Teachers’ Sie John Gralla: B.S., U. Mass. Nancy Haley: A.B., Wheaton; A.M., Boston College _ N. Landon Head: B.S., U.S. Military Academy; M. Ed. Walter Irwin: B.S.Ed., M.Ed., U. of Maine Mildred Kennedy: B. S. apie tied State Teachers’ Walter Koetke: B.S., M.I.T.; Harvard David LeBlanc: B.S., M.Ed., Northeastern John McNear: B.S., M.I.T.; A.M.T., Harvard 90 Mathematics the game: finding a solution to “What is the limit of f(x) as x approaches Insanity?” . . . and the language: “positive cruller” and “‘supplementary acute angle”. . . contemplating the rumor that Mr. Koetke set up house in the computer room. . . and all the esoteric new courses in calculus, probability, matrix algebra, computer programming = opportunity for the ambitious. . . A muffled sob and somebody moaning “If I can just remember long enough to pass this test I can forget the quadratic formula forever!” . . . That sinking feeling that comes when the exam scale is posted. . . And while some lowly mortals turn scratch paper into shredded wheat and muddle through Algebra II, there are the usual number of 800’s on the college board aptitudes and on level II achievements. Mr. Collard is th e coordinator of the Work Experience Program, which provides students with job training in conjunction with studies. 92 a;ssidkfjgh ...a P. SI LHS business teachers include Mr. Llewellyn, Mrs. Spiller, Mrs. Hutchinson, and Mr. Flynn. Seated are Miss Campbell, Mrs. Kinner, and Miss Spidle. Mrs. Cadran left early in the year. ikfigh ... a;sldkfj asdfghijkl;. . . Feet on the floor, fingers curved, eyes on your copy, ready—relax—smile . . . one minute timed writings. . . modified block style letters. . . throw that carriage. . . 60 space line, margins 20 and 80. . . no erasure crumbs in the basket. . . the variable line spacer, tabulator, carriage locking lever, ribbon color changer . a balance sheet. . . profit and loss statements. . . trips to the State House . cost of goods manufactured . bills of sale. . . supply and demand . inflation. . . adding machines and comptometers . . . stenography and transcription. . . preparation for a career in the business world. ce Howard Licvenya (Head): B.S., Salem State Teachers; M. Ed., B. U. —_Tittian Spidle: B.S.E., Salem State Teachers ; 1 ee: -___ Rozalind Spiller: B.S.Ed., Salem State Teachers =| gees Merrel Collard: B.A., M. Soe CA G aa B U.; (Work Experience) 93 Our home economics teachers are Miss Thoren, Mrs. Lutrzykowski, and Mrs. Clark. Two cups sugar What’s cooking in the Home Economics Department? The delicate scent of scalding milk or Charlotte Mousse, cranberry cake or pizza. . . A long skinny girl swathed in measuring tape and pieces A, B, D, and H of Butterick Pattern 4251 fora floor length granny gown. . . In December a real live fashion show with soft lights, models, and a moderator from New York . A class in psychology (how to win friends and influence people). . . A display of wool jumpers in the showcase window . Perpetual stitching, measuring, altering, hemming, and a finished product you can really wear. and a 5 8 inch seam Mr. Gumb and Mr. Malcolm teach students driving skills through a program of class instruction and on- the-road training. Welds and bolts; spark plugs and throttles The industrial arts teachers are: First Row: Mr. Burnell, Mr. Messina, and Mr. Gittzus. Second Row: Mr. Elliott, Mr. Dufour, Mr. Downing, and Mr. Adams. Wood shavings flying. . . saws grinding. . . hammers hitting thumbs. . . the shop under water. . .a broken water main. . . mild electrical shocks . volts, watts, amps. . . technical drawings . . . protractors, T squares, slide rules. . . things made of wood and metal. . . metal boxes. . . andirons. . . practicing for a real job later on.  Clark: BS.Ed., Framingham State; M.Ed., B.U. Walter Burnell: B.E., Keene Teachers; M.Ed., Fitchburg | Lutrzykowski: B.S., Nasson; M.Ed., U.N.H. Teachers” ; cy Thoren: B.S., Framingham State Melvin Downing: B.S., E. Kentucky State; M.Ed., Northeastern U. -Gumb: A.B., Bates; M.A., N.Y.U. Ronald Elliott: B.Ed., Keene Teachers; M.S., Oswego State ald Malcolm: B.S., B.U.; M.Ed., Keene Teachers Leo Gitzus (Head): B.S., Fitchburg Teachers; M.Ed., B.U. Adams: B.E., Keene Teachers; M.E., Northeastern U. Phillip Messina: Franklin Inst.; General Motors’ Training Center 2 95 Finian’s Rainbow and abstract art ‘ ; : ; ‘ : Âą “ee, Edward Bolton: B. oy tes M Ed, orden State Teachers Marion Coletta: B. s., Mask: College of age Paul Gruen: B.F.A., B.U. Russell Mann (Head): BF.A., MF. A. U. of Coigrado. Eleftherios Eleftherakis (Orchestra): B.Mus., M. Mus., B. Uy Music Maestros Mr. Vasil, Miss Kinyon, and Mr. Gillespie pose for their pictures. Mr. White, Mr. Eleftherakis, and Miss Germain were absent. The Brahms Requiem . . .a Pops Concert . Finian’s Rainbow . . . atonal music. . . music tapes to sleep by. . . “Boys, this is a Double Quartet, that means eight voices” . Mr. Vasil’s baton. . . “Get with it basses” . warmups. . . The Winter Choral Concert. . . going to concerts in Symphony Hall . the first movement for the Bartok Concerto for Orchestra is in Sonata Allegro form. . . tone color . twelve tone music. . . musical literacy. . . don’t be passive, feel the music, sing . Art teachers Mr. Bolton, Mr. Gruen, Mrs. Colletta, and Mr. Mann pose by some of their students’ art work. Visiting the art rooms: a sensual experience. . . the smell of turpentine through the open door . paint smeared across table top. . . a sculpture . ceramic jewelry . . . leather belts. . . piles of paper . all shapes, sizes, and consistencies. . .a curlicued red swatch on the floor. . . a sink full of empty cans, dripping paint brushes, greasy caps . Mr. Gruen surveying one room. . . Mr. Mann . pink surveying another scene in one of his famous vests . . plans for art school . The Globe Art Contest . z Donald Siok (Head) _ Sandi Kinyon: B.A., B.S. up es Thomas Vasil: B. Mus., N. E.G TECOY pove ote et BP. E., LHS nurses Mrs. Mogan and Mrs, DeScenza. Above are LHS coaches Mr. Hunt, Mr. Massimino, Mr. Janusas, Mr. Dellasanta, Mr. Lord, and Mr. Todaro. Doc Co-ed Judo on Monday afternoons. . . meen was Shas Below a roe age Mrs. ar : ann 66 h nderson, iss Lawson, iss Leavitt, rs. JOrdan, an 1SS green gymsuits fe t rusts to the aver, count of 4, ready, go”. . . privileged seniors with a choice of badminton, basketball, dance, advanced apparatus . drizzling showers. . . inspection . 10 laps around the fieldhouse track . softball, tennis, field hockey, cha, cha, cha, football, golf, archery. . . the freezing gym. . . muscle tone . satisfaction. . . exhaustion. Field house Frolics Forbes Keith: B.S., B.U. _ Sandra Lawson: B.S., BouvĂ©-Boston School Hunt: B. . B. U. heer dei.) oa Dons Leavitt: AB., Rolling; BouvĂ©-Boston School nusas: B.S., Boston College; M. A, B bik er Ralph Lord: B.S., Springfield; Ed.M., B.U. Fra aworsky: B.S., B.U. . Roland Massimino: B S., U. of Vermont F art ra Jordan: B.S., U. of Oreg on Nathan Todaro: B.S., MS., Springfield — 97 Mr. DiGiammarino is in charge of the newly expanded Audio-Visual Department, which supplies all departments with projectors, films, and other materials. Our library staff includes Mrs. Gavin, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Rose, and Mrs. Schwenz. Mr. Leach, our Reading Consultant, has helped many students improve their reading speed and comprehension through the reading program. Special opportunities . . The Central Library—an ideal place to study! . . . 800 college catalogues. . . 135 magazines, records, filmstrips. . . 13,000 books . . . sublibraries. . . reference books and novels . overnight books. . . overdue books. . . library notices. . . permanent library passes . . new librarians. . . hushed whisperings and loud warnings . . an Instructional Materials Center in the War Memorial Library. . . being there in study halls and after school—especially during source themes. . . Jean Gavin: B.S., Simmons Jeanne Rose: A.B., William Jewell College; M.A., U. of _ Denver Dorothy Schwenz: A.B., Douglass College Frank DiGiammarino: B.A., A.M.T.. Harvard; (audio-visual advisor) ae N. Richmond Leach: B.S., Bowdoin; M.A., B.U.; (reading) 98 LHS unit secretaries are: First Row: Lucille Alan, Eleanor Turzyn, Claire McCarthy, Jane Casey, and Juliet Velte. Second Row: Elinor Baldwin, Catherine Nickerson, Marjorie Nelson, and Ann Hartford. The secretaries who work in the main office are Miss Ann Palmer, Miss Esther Sampson, Miss Judy Stickney, Mrs. Hazel Haugh, Mrs. Connie Ward, and Mrs. Gertrude Nelson. At left are LHS custodians. First Row: Harold Petty, Fred Cassanos, Raymond Petty, and Edward Willett. Second Row: Fred Ennis, Charles McEnro, Carl Heinz, Vincent Nazzaro, Joseph Swan, and Head Custodian George Doughty. Not present were Gilbert Bourdeau, Thomas Humphrey, Robert Lichtenberg, Harold Nutt, Vladimir Zuzula, and Chris Pearson. Our Lunch ladies are: Third row: Mrs. Brown. Second row: Mrs. Kling, Mrs. Ferraira, Mrs. Terrasi, Mrs. Buttrick, Mrs. Muller, Mrs. Lawson, Mrs. Locke, Mrs. Setterlund, Mrs. Clyde, Mrs. Verano, Mrs. Domine, Mrs. Fullerton, Mrs. McSweeney, and Mrs. Collins. First row: Mrs. MacDonald, Mrs. Benoit, Mrs. Graham, Mrs. Noies, Mrs. Bezzulo, Mrs. Marcussen, Mrs. Dever, and Mrs. DeFelice. 100 we A sprawling campus: enormous and many-peopled. And the unity that comes from experiences shared: Early morning madness (getting here on a bus, fighting with your locker). A walk across the parking lot to homeroom, the boredom between 8:00 and 8:05 a. and then the 2:20 crush of getting out. 101 CLASS OF SIXTY-NINE First Row: H. Geanacopulos, B. Aiken, F. Meeks, D. Boyd. Second Row: N. Henneberry, J. Sullivan, Sec., R. Wadoski, Pres., F. Sullivan, V.P., C. Wells, Treas., M. Cupp. Third Row: D. Branch, C. Klein, S. Pomerantz, A. Tartakoff, V. Savage, R. Ronsheim, S. Wagner, J. Nejar. A UNIT COUNCIL First Row: A. Cronin, J. Cavaretta, Co-Chm., S. Arnold, Sec., R. Bond, Chm., J. Butts. Second Row: F. Frick, D. Dempsey, V. Easton, D. Kelly, P. Hench. B UNIT COUNCIL First Row: E. Margolius, M. Sayre, Sec., D. Webb, Chm., J. Phillips, Co- Chm., G. Tetreault. Second Row: M. Larrabee, R. Rasmussen, M. Wetmore, D. Mathews, C. Smart, M. Napoli. From the pinnacle of the junior high school hierarchy to the depths of LHS freshmanship—a radical change of scene for the class of 69. If nothing else, eighth graders provide a bit of “young blood” among the veterans and war horses of the upperclassmen. Ninth grade is a year of assimilation—half of Lexington (say the Muzzeyites) must bury their former hostilites and learn to live with the other, (like Diamond). It is a year of adjustment and surprises; learn- ing to live in a unit and conduct a science lab and go to a Promenader’s dance. At the end of the year, freshmen gather to- gether the last vestiges of their former confidence, forget their faint qualms, and demonstrate once and for all that they are here to stay and the rest of the school should be glad of it. 103 Al First Row: W. Howland, R. Hoover, J. Harvell, V. Hodges, J. Heard, M. Horowitz, J. Guilmartin, B. Hadley, A. Hammer, R. Hall. Second Row: D. Heighton, V. Henneberry, D. Hib- bard, D. Houghton, L. Hogan, K. Hruby, B. Hall, M. Henneberry, P. Hench, K. Hammer, Mr. Larry. Third Row: R. Hathaway, T. Hayner, L. Heinrich, R. Hunt, E. Hodgdon, D. Hall, R. Hall, S. Harris. A2 First Row: P. Johnston, S. Kelley, M. Kiniklis, E. Kay, B. Kelley, R. Kel- ley, D. Johnson. Second Row: C. Johnsen, N. Jeltsch, D. Kelly, L. Ivarson, Mr. Latham. Third Row: D. Johns, P. Johnson, B. Keeping, L. Hutchinson, J. Kirkland, W. Johnson, G. Hyde, K. Kaufman, C. Johnson. A2 First Row: S. Kritsick, E. Kotowski, P. Jelatis, J. Kennedy, K. Jervis, E. Kavangh, B. Jacquith. Second Row: C. Klein, M. Iandoli, K. LaFauci, J. Kacoyanis, B. Joseph, P. Kasper, C. Knodel, P. Knight, Mr. MHassard. Third Row: P. Jeanette, P. Kloper, D. Kilkenny, R. Jackson, R. Jones, S. Korponi, D. Kaufman. FRESHMEN A2l First Row: H. Allen, D. AI- berstine, S. Ballou, L. Bartlett, C. Andrews, S. Arnold, S. Bai- ley, L. Baldwin, R. Benoit, L. Arseneau, Mr. Kenealy. Sec- ond Row: E. Bayle, N. Bellino, C. Balazy, A. Barthelemy, E. Bayliss, C. Anthony, L. Al- berts, S. Barowski, C. Ander- son, D. Antonucci. Third Row: J. Asselta, R. Anker, S. Baum, B. Benkley, B. Beal, J. Apple- man, R. Alan, S. Abel, K. Balon, C. Abraham, R. Arm- strong. A2?2 First Row: C. Berkofsky, D. Boyd, M. Bonn, J. Boyce, B. Bevington, D. Bova. Second Row: T. Blake, M. Bonney, L. Birch, M. Boughton, L. Bowker, L. Brackett, C. Bick- ford, Mr. Franz. Third Row: R. Bond, J. B. Bonasera, B. Boyington, S. Bolster, D. Bovley, G. Bonbara, B. Boyd, D. Boyce, D. Besecker. A23 First Row: P. Breslin, D. But- trick, S. Brown, J. Butts, J. Bryan. Second Row: C. Briana, R. Broderick, D. Burke, P. Byrne, W. Buck, L. Budreau, A. Busa, Miss Wood. Third Row: S. Brehm, J. Bridgman, O. Brown, S. Brown, D. Branch, D. Busa, S. Breitmaier, J. Cabral, M. Buivid. 104 UNNET F 105 A224 First Row: R. Catarelli, E. Carlson, W a Gaster, Ris Gotten Si CobbyaD: Cinello, M. Carney, E. Cenerizio, S. Cantor, J. Chapman, J. Carrig. Sec- ond Row: Miss Coleman, E. Carlin, C. Canfield, K. Charlantini, E. Chase, L. Campbell, J. Cataldo, E. Carter, C. Clark, J. Cazden. Third Row: G. Ciccola, L. Chase, B. Car- penter, S. Clark, J. Cavaretta, P. Clifford, T. Campbell, D. Cherny, S. Chapman, J. Carlson, S. Cianci. ADS First Row: W. Cusolito, P. Colpitts, Ji Cyne Covert. B] Cornish.) D: Collentro, N. Curran, J. Dale, R. Davis, S. Colangelo. Second Row: Miss Harrison, J. Collazzo, J. Colli, J. Creamer, L. Culbertson, J. Crowell, A. Cronin, M. Dailey, D. Corkum, S. Cross. Third Row: L. Comstock, M. Curtis, P. Cormier, L. Dearborn, R. Cushman, T. Costa, T. Cormier, R. Cunha. A26 First Row: G. Dodley, S. Devoe, J. Downey, T. Desmond, D. Dreher, C. Dillaway, C. Diamond. Second Row: S. DeCarlo, M. DeSimone, D. Del- Vecchio, J. Dini, R. Dyer, N. De- Cicco, D. Dyer, B. Dunton, M. Devlin. Third Row: R. Dunn, P. Di- Bacco, P. Dunbar, D. Dempsey, D. Dubois, B. Delay, J. Dolham. FRESHMEN A27 First Row: K. Eames, S. Francis, P. Eifler, T. Elliott, D. Fox, N. Farwell. Second Row: L. Enrico, S. Fouraker, K. Eaton, Cate Fallavollita, D. Flewelling, B. Epstein, A. Fitzpatrick. Third Row: I. Easton, R. Elliott, G. Fox, L. Ericson, S. Foley, B. Eberle, C. Edmundson, J. Foss, A. Fisher. A28 First Row: L. Graham, N. Grant, J. Gallagher, B. Gould, J. Frazer, K. Gryboski, J. Friedman, A. Gordon, A. Gordon, R. Golay, R. Golay, D. Fullerton. Second Row: D. Gould, P. Grazulis, K. Good, N. Guild, P. Gennaro, F. Frick, R. Graustein, A. Gravallese, G. Galvagno, M. Gedig- ian, L. Friedman. Third Row: M. Gildea, R. Gillespie, P. Guditz, R. Goldstein, A. Friend, C. Garland, G. Gallini, J. Ganshirt, J. Goff, H. Gean- acopulo s, J. Graham. Bl First Row: G. Tetreault, A. Sullivan, S. Sweet, C. Tang, A. Tartakoff. Sec- ond Row: N. Sullivan, P. Thompson, S. Tabeling, K. Thomas, J. Sullivan, S. Sumby, J. Stevenson, J. Swasey, Mrs. Dickinson. Third Row: C. Sulli- van, B. Stroum, F. Sullivan, S. Swets, J. Sutcliffe, M. Strong, J. Thompson. 106 First Row: N. Webb, D. Tremblay, G. Trani, J. Way, S. Wayne, K. Un- derwood, C. Wells. Second Row: C. Tuck, D. Tringale, R. Townsend, B. Trzaskos, V. Tropeano, B. Watson, M. Trainor, D. Tweedy, N. Van Wingerden, R. Vallie re, R. Wadoski, T. Van Egmond. Third Row: R. Vol- picelli, S. Treat, D. Walton, B. Watt, D. Webb, J. Wanamaker, D. Toomey, L. Tierney, P. Webster. B3 First Row: J. Wood, L. Zwicker, M. Woodward, J. Yelland, S. Willey, M. Wetmore, B. White, S. Woods, A. Zani. Second Row: L. Zeoli, M. Yewell, J. Woodfin, A. Wright, S. Winchester, S. Zorn, K. Wheeler, J. Wentzell, J. Zusman. Third Row: T. Wyman, J. Wylder, J. Young, J. Whalen, T. Works, N. Wilkinson, J. Wertheim, R. Wolf. B2l First Row: S. Lawson, S. Laird, C. Bynch Pes Leary, wlan leccett. mA le Blanc. Second Row: W. Litant, B. Lunday, C. Locke, J. Lorette, W. A. Larson, K. Lowe, S. Lyons. Third Row: J. Lund, C. Lewis, J. Leyenaar, P. Lloyd, M. Larrabee, K. Lowe, D. Larkin, R. Lefebvre. 107 FRESHMEN B22 First Row: C. McArthur, S. Lyons, K. Maguire, J. MacDonald, A. Maher. Second Row: L. MacNutt, A. Magill, G. MacGarvey, L. Mac- Dougall, E. Margolius, J. MacLean, Mrs. Vogt. Third Row: R. Maienza, A. Maranian, B. Mahoney, R. Ma- guire, D. Magarian, B. MacWilliams. B23 First Row: M. Massimilla, R. Mc- Cormack, R. McLeod, G. McCabe, J. McDonough. Second Row: C. Mazerall, M. McGrath, M. McCann, M. McDaniel, E. McDonald, E. Mc- Kenna, E. Mattson, Mr. Dincecco. Third Row: R. McNutt, D. Mc- Manus, J. McCarron, D. Mathews, T. May, E. McSweeney, J. McNicholas, S. McCarthy. B24 First Row: B. Murphy, D. Naka, J. Najarian, B. Morrison. Second Row: D. Miers, C. Najarian, B. Meier, C. Millican, S. Nicolai, E. Morey, C. Miller, S. Morrall. Third Row: R. Monahan, B. Minsky, R. Napoli, J. Miley, J. Morehouse, B. Morrill, C. Mortimer, N. Millican, K. Meadows, Miss Davis. Fourth Row: M. Napoli, F. Meeks, D. Miller, M. Nichipor, D. Napoli, G. Murphy, K. Morse, R. Metro, F. Nagle, G. Murphy. 108 eb25 First Row: L. Nonnemaker, J. Noyes, J. Perloff, N. Noiseux, D. O’Neil, T. Place. Second Row: B. Noyes, J. Nichols, C. Oppenheim, C. Pfaff, J. Nielsen, J. O’Nanian, D. Paone, M. Ogilvie, Miss Abrano. Third Row: L. Peyton, S. Pomerantz, V. Pious, B. Overly, F. Pennell, D. Parsons, D. O’Neill, L. Piraino, E. O’Brien, S. Pittman. Fourth Row: D. Olsson, T. Nolan, J. Phillips, T. O’Brien, K. Petrie, L. Nielsen, B. Oliver, R. Paul- sen, R. Pendl eton. B26 First Row: L. Raisbeck, B. Rogowitz, C. Power, L. Porretti, R. Ronsheim, P. Procopio. Second Row: J. Reizes, S. Rodgers, J. Rizzo, E. Quinlan, J. Redick, M. Richards, P. Redhouse. Third Row: A. Riffin, K. Roffi, J. Powell, P. Lloyd, R. Rasmussen, J. Randolph, G. Reffeitt. B27 First Row: R. Schratter, B. Sahaglar, J. Sayre, M. Sayre, L. Schwartz. Sec- ond Row: R. Rosenthal, J. Ryder, A. Saunders, P. Scanlon, V. Savage, E. Schatz, Miss Pool. Third Row: M. Schmid, P. Seaman, C. Savage, P. Sampson, M. Santora. ain PL - $ yf rT AAUe OQUNARAN yl wT A ALAM AAAAA ; meyer ns AAD ANE? MVEMINI RENT OR HAA AerPe? — 109 B28 First Row: M. Stetson, C. Sharkey, A. Stewart, J. Shaner, V. Simcox, A. Skov, N. Schneider, “G. “Silva, J. Stokes. Second Row: B. Soule, S. Shaughnessy, M. Sorenson, L. Stoico, A. Stendahl, S. Severance, D. Stacy, S. Stitt, G. Spergel, J. Sommers, S. Souza. Third Row: P. Spuria, P. Sheahan, D. Sokol, C. Smart, W. Simmons, Ps Spencers) P. silva, J. Spuria, R. Stevens, P. Stratford. Gleaming sterility, impersonal cubicles, strange noises, and your own voice (or is it?). Novel and exciting but even Freshmen grow glassy eyed. 110 CLASS OF SIXT Y-EIGHT Suddenly Security, welcome after the long year’s siege of freshman bewilderment. The maze of classrooms, halls and lockers is no longer a chaotic labyrinth signifying nothing, and there are two whole grades, Freshman and Eighth, down below. Crossing the grass, skipping into class as the bell rings, scribbling down math assignments with complete abandon in homeroom when they’re due first period— this is the only kind of life a sophomore can lead. By June the half-way point is over and while inheriting the place of the Upper-classmen will mean a new kind of security, it will also mean a special and new kind of bewilderment . First Row: G. Sparrow, Sec., R. O’Shaughnessy, Chairman; L. Salza, Chairman. Second Row: C. Toomey, A. LaRose, D. Williams, B. Mead, R. Rice, J. Marcus. First Row: V. Stinson, M. Owen, M. Forte, Treas., D. Hinchcliff, Vice-Pres., M. Baptiste, Sec., L. Mortimer. Second Row: J. Robbat, S. Hatfield, J. Beld- ing, B. Berkofsky, B. Mead, S. Kalifatus, J. Ba tchelder, C. Rachel, M. Yeo- mens, R. O’Shaughnessy. First Row: D. Hopkins, R. Crosby, C. Chao, A. Davis, C. Paptson. Second Row: J. Geaman, J. Colli, P. Godwin, A. Bond, M. Donnelly, P. Deblan. 111 SOPHOMORES Cl First Row: B. Hooper, B. Jackson, S. Hatfield, B. Hines, N. Herzlinger, B. Howe, J. Jamgochian, E. Janes, R. Hutchins, M. Hurley. Second Row: M. Hourihan, S. Holt, C. Hyde, H. Hartstone, H. Howalt, D. Hopkins, S. Jackson, L. Heiligmann, L. Hyde, V. Iannazzi, Mrs. Donovan. Third Row: A. Jamison, L. Hildebrand, J. Hayes, F. James, R. Hinchcliffe, B. Hartery, De Hovigd. Hayvnene hs Herboldnade James. Go First Row: I. Karas, L. Juthe, D. Jos- lyn, S. Jellis, C. Johnson, J. Johnson, J. Joseph, S. Kalafatis. Second Row: J. Jenkinson, S. Kanter, T. Keegan, P. Karsh, L. Kaplan, E. Janes, R. Jones, B. Julin, Mr. Ames. @1 First Row: T. Agresti, T. Amiro, C. Bateson, M. Barowski, M. Arond, N. Barton, J. Batchelder, C. Bartolotti, H. Asp, B. Bayliss. Second Row: D. Anderson, D. Avery, E. Baltz, M. Baptiste, S. Allen, J. Aiken, Am Bacigalupo, M. Alexson, J. Abkowitz, E. Adams, Col. Head. Third Row: E . Andrews, D. Ahern, D. Baker, L. Basney, C. Bamberg, R. Banks, G. Abel, J. Amicangelo, R. Anderson, C. Balulescu, J. Adams. 112 Spat Âą neue 2 „ aay 5 113 G2? First Row: R. Block, G. Bellows, B. Berkofsky, D. Boyce, E. Bosinoff, J. Belding, T. Blackwell, D. Bogen. Second Row: E. Blunt, G. Bjorn, L. Bennett, M. Benoit, K. Bellinger, A. Bond, K. Blake, M. Bonnell, C. Bixby. Third Row: F. Bisognano, D. Bettencourt, D. Birch, M. Bluestein S. Blume, D. Bode, Mr. Goodwin. ’ 23 First Row: M. Caouette, M. Carchia, J. Camirand, A. Campbell, M. But- ters, D. Cahill. Second Row: E. Buda, T. Busa, C. Buchanan, A. Brown, K. Caddy, C. Brynes, Callahan, Mrs. J. Hambright. Third Row: S. Bryson, J. Breitmaier, K. Breslin, B. Briggs, S. Budreau, F. Cairns, S. Calvarese, D. Byers. C24 First Row: K. Churchill, R. Catron, J. Colli, G. Colbourne, J. Coffin, J. Carota, C. Chase, E. Chicarello, B. Cataldo, S. Colman, F. Chamberlain, S. Cole. Second Row: E. Chandley, D. Cobb, J. Collier, C. Chamberlain, K. Cawley, M. Carlson, J. Cavanagh, A. Champion, C. Chase. Third Row: J. Clausen, P. Cassettari, C. Chao, S. Choate, W. Carney, D. Clark, B. @handler, LE. Clark, HH.) Clarke, V- Catron. SOPHOMORES Ges First Row: J. Demontigny, P. Connolly, R. Degrazia, M. Coyne, R. Crosby, R. Coveney, C. Costello, D. Darden, D. D’Abbraccio. Second Row: Miss Livingston, S. Davison, J. Comley, S. Cook, D. Corbett, H. Crosby, R. Coverey, C. Costello, D. Colony, J. Davis. Third Row: H. Corday, J. Dean, G. Daley, J. Cor- roon, D. Dalrymple, T. Comstock, S. Cooper, J. Curtis, J. Cunha, S. Cur- ran. BUELL, |] {tt ib oe rEg ‘ee | P C26 First Row: P. Devlin, J. Dyer, K. Doyle, P: Doyle, K. Dwyer, L. Dratch, P. Detwiller. Second Row: Mrs. Calvert, J. Emerson, B. Empey, L. Dutcher, R. Dietmeier, S. Dyer, S. Dowd, A. Dever, W. Donnellan. Third Row: S. Donovan, R. DiLuzio, 4 M. Donnelly, A. Eaton, D. Elefthera- (gpjgueg kis; P? Dunbar. P Derek; Ry Dexter, vanes = J. Donahue. (Coat) First Row: R. Esecson, D. Flannigan, Jie Parrar, Ds ritzcerald;) band.) Ferro. Second Row: M. Gavin, M. Flaherty, E. Forrester, M. Forte, K. Flaherty, C. Galante, P. Fabiszewski, Mr. Kirk. Third Row: B. Gassmann, J. Geaman, S. Flynn, P. Friedman, A. Fishlin, J. Flynn, R. Ennis, B. Fitz- | gerald, K. Francis. 114 115 C28 First Row: P. Gilbert, S. Gilden, J. Harding, A. George, J. Goldberg, J. Grazulis, W. Gilbert, C. Greene, E. Glassman, P. Gilman, D. Hale. Sec- ond Row: D. Graf, Gordoy, P. Gomes, J. Grant, J. Hamel, S. Hammond, K. Glenn, M. Halfman, M. Godwin, I. Gould, S. Greig, R. Graustein. Third Row: J. Goff, A. Hammer, D. Gray- son, D. Graham, J. Harrington, R. Gray, C. Graham, C. Grant, R. Guil- martin, Mr. Damon. DI First Row: C. Weston, J. Tripi, W. Turzyn, P. Wather-Dunn, J. Ward, W. Van Alstine, B. Wein, J. Tro- peano, Mr. Wilson. Second Row: N. Uraneck, K. Valley, D. Walsh, C. Uzinsky, V. Westerlund, D. Trask, C. Tucker, K. Wexler, N. Tufts, K. Watson, J. Travato. Third Row: W. Vaccaro, G. Weiss, C. Walton, P. Valihura, R. Weimar, D. Wentzell, B. Vasseur, G. Watson, J. Watts, B. Ward. D2 First Row: S. Williams, M. Yeomans, M. Woodward, S. Wilson, M. Winder, Miss Allen. Second Row: P. Winter, C. Williams, C. Youngerman, D. Wil- liams, W. Wright, D. Widell, E. Wheeler. Third Row: C. Williamson, R. Williams, J. Woodberry, R. Wilkes, M. Wilson, F. White, S. Wil- son, T. White. SOPHOMORES D21 First Row: R. Leek, S. Lannan, J. Lewis, K. Lamantea, F. Lambie, M. Leary. Second Row: M. Keljikian, C. Kellett, M. Kelly, K. Lima, R. Keren, D. Kelly, A. LaRose, Mr. LaBlanc. Third Row: J. Lebeau, A. Lind, P. Lewis, B. Lind, B. Lenos, P. Kirk- ham, T. Labate, D. Knobel, B. Kowal. Fourth Row: S. Larson, R. Krinov, G. Kilkenny, J. Langille, T. Kendall, D. Landau, E. Light, D. Kelly, T. Klemm. D22 First Row: M. MacDonald, D. Manti- neo, P. Mayo, R. Magarian, Mr. Shultz. Second Row: D. Luca, L. Lipshutz, J. Maroo, D. Lowry, S. Lovett, M. Lit- tle, J. Marshall, F. Lowry. Third Row: W. Lynch, G. Luhrs, A. Mac- Donald, D. Maxner, L. Martin, J. Maroney, D. Lowry, S. Lovett, M. Lit- Marcus. D23 First Row: C. McElman, J. Metro, B. Moris, E. Mollo-Christensen, K. Mul- kerin, D. Meals. Second Row: P. Mc- Donald, P. Mostila, S. McElman, M. Moffit, B. McAllister, J. Munn, A. McNamara, L. Mortimer, B. Mead, Mr. Jenanyan. Third Row: H. Mc- Carthy, G. McKay, R. Moulton, P. Moates, R. McCauley, S. McCraig, J. Miller, R. Melin, J. McLeod. 116 117 D24 First Row: E. Nichols, K. O’Keefe, J. Paris, P. Onanian, C. Noonan, V. Paquette, Miss Sulides. Second Row: A. Nestico, R. Nowell, R. Norcross, R. O’Shaughnessy. Third Row: B. Neal, S. Nordahl, J. Nickerson, M. Monroe, S. Nagel, J. Monroe, E. Nesbeda, M. Owen, M. Patterson. Fourth Row: E. O’Gorman, R. Ostromecki, R. Murphy, P. Norcro ss, C. Page, R. Patrician, D. Parker, J. O’Neil, R. Passanisi. D25 First Row: D. Prentiss, S. Pulkkinen, J. Petnov, J. Richey, C. Rochelle, D. Petschek, W. Phillips, R. Pu, G. Phelan. Second Row: L. Potzka, A. Rawls, P. Randolph, M. Quinlan, J. Piret, C. Peiser, M. Rich, J. Pian, L. Pennell, G. Petrucci, Mrs. MacArthur. Third Row: E. Reyes, L. Pfister, P. Quinn, C. Pherson, J. Pettibone, R. Poplosky, R. Rice, G. Redick, J. Phinney, D. Plasse, J. Potter. D26 First Row: S. Rothstein, C. Sampson, P. Savage, L. Salza, J. Rosenthal. Second Row: Mr. Landers, R. Rider, J. Rowland, R. Sann, T. Ryan, S. Roberge, L. Russell, S. Savet. Third Row. W. Sahatjian, C. Rosenthal, B. Schmidt, W. Rosa, S. Robinson, R. Russo, D. Sampson, T. Rodgers. D27 First Row: Miss Lydon, E. Schwartz, S. Servente, E. Scimeca, C. Skov, G. Selian, E. Sherman. Second Row: D. Sparrow, G. Sparrow, C. Steinhauser, D. Snow, S. Stern, C. Smallman, D. Scurto, R. Smith. Third Row: M. Sinkevich, S. Staines, A. Siano, F. SKINNGII Boe IL VEStrOn 7, oll Vaey (G: Sikes, R. Shuman, M. Slocombe. D28 First Row: J. Sullivan, C. Sweet, S. Taishoff, K. Swanson, C. Stone, P. Thomas. Second Row: V. Stinson, P. Tanna, A. Townsend, M. Trainor, M. Stoots, J. Toye, E. Sullivan, Miss Mathna. Third Row: S. Thyng, D. Thomas, C. Stolz, T. Terkanian, C. Toomey, D. Taft, R. Swenson, D. Terey, D. Theriault, P. Taenzer, Fourth Row: D. Stone, S. Sullivan, W. Swartz, B. Sullivan, A. Thibo- deau, J. Trainor, J. Tester, P. Suss- man, D. Tobiason. 118 CLASS OF SIXT Y-SEVEN HOMEROOM REPRESEN TATIYV.ES ben pep tetas The ranks closed in September—a Junior Cl ass that owned two special units of the school and lived for the multitude of things that only a junior can really appreciate: PSAT’s, U.S. History, a prom in the spring, and a new license to bomb around with. The tone was a fusion of the chaos of being a Freshman and the exuberance of being a Sophomore, combined © First Row: C. McCormack, R. Millican, D. Rae. Second Row: P. Morey, C. Crone, B. with the glorious anticipation Maguire, Pres., S. Mahan, Sec., B. Mathews, Vice-Pres., B. Wylder, L. Hodges. Third that comes from knowing next Row: K. Anderson, P. Faflick, R. Kovitz, J. Paratore, D. Gaynor, P. Bergin, C. Bruce, year your class will be the S. Spruce. seniors. E AND F UNIT COUNCILS First Row: P. Cunningham, T. Dempsey, B. Langy, S. Shaw. Second Row: L. Mc- Devitt, P. Jenson, E Unit Chairman, J. Anthony, P. Kelly, F Unit Chairman, D. Quincy, F Unit Sec., R. Bresnihan. Third Row: C. Mitchell, P. Owen, C. Hamacher, P. Bergin, G. Black, D. Yeigan, N. Friedman, S. Terenholme. 119 JUNIORS El First Row: A. Haycox, C. Hamacher, B. Hawkins, C. Hamilton. Second Row: J. Hemeon, S. Hall, M. Hanra- han, C. Hargrove, L. Hazel, L. Head, J. Hall, Mr. Piacentini. Third Row: B. Henry, D. Hastings, D. Haines, A. Hadley, T. Henneberry, P. Halfman, iG Uslerealiinye, Sh cakkieniitern, 1 Hemeon. Ee First Row: D. Gately, L. Howland, K. Holmes, M. Herterick, R. John- son, V. Ignico, P. Jackson, A. Iodice, Pa Har ley Second meow. ns: Hinchliffe, L. Hodges, S. Hofstedt, P. Jensensae see) ellissee Gali Cesme Vis Holmes, L. Holland, Mr. Boynton. Third Row: A. Johns, R. Iodice, R. Hodt, P. Holleman, M. Jensen, D. Holt, J. Hruby, R. Hurley, J. Hudson. F 21 First Row: L. Bartel, B. Allison, J. Bartram, C. Ball, G. Anderson, G. Alcorn, L. Anderson. Second Row: C. Arbeene, C. Arsenault, H. Barg, J. Anthony, S. Banks, J. Ambrose, L. Anderson, W. Aulenback, J. Ackroff, M. Alen, Mrs. Zust. Third Row: S. Baker, L. Allen, B. Armstrong, R. Ashman, B. Anderson, B. Ansell, A. Aalereed, A. Barnard, K. Anderson. 120 121 E22 First Row: D. Boisvert, I. Belcik, A. Benoit, E. BeauprĂ©, N. Bertin, G. Beedy, D. Bellinger, D. Bolton, V. Black, L. Blund, A. Biggs, N. Bennet. Second Row: Mrs. Kendrick, R. Beven, E. Batson, K. Bixby, W. Beaudry, P. Bellino, C. Benoit, W. Bellows, S. Bonfilio. B23 First Row: D. Bouras, M. Bonn, D. Bryant, M. Brunn, C. Butler, N. Buchanan. Second Row: Mr. Todd, S. Boyd, R. Bresnihan, S. Brehm, C. Bruce, K. Busa, C. Burrell, J. Bruc- chi. Third Row: O. Boyd, R. Brooks, T. Brown, J. Briggs, R. Bruno, J. Broderick, P. Brown, J. Breitmeier. E24 First Row: C. Connor, J. Cody, J. Cafarelli, L. Cataldo, D. Cammarata, R. Carney, J. Cahill, J. Cassella, E. Cazden, M. Circle Eagle. Second Row: B. Chatel, J. Cassella, M. Car- rig, L. Cederberg, J. Butlar, N. Cady, M. Campbell, J. Colby. Third Row: C. Buttrick, R. Carlson, J. Cassidy, C. Cave, B. Connell, B. Cardini, P. Cavaretta, V. Cole, T. Cody. JUNIORS LBA First Row: D. Curra, W. Cronier, C. Corssino, L. Covert. Second Row: J. Cullen, M. DaRu, L. Day, L. Covey, L. Dankese, C. Curro, B. Currier, C: Cunha, Mr. Nichols. Third Row: J. Corbett, E. Danielson, L. Davidson, D. Costello, M. Cormier, D. Cupp, Ba Goyies Gee Crone, Je @ooper aris: Dargie, J. Cook. Fourth Row: D. Curran, P. Custance, D. Cuccinello, W. Cooke, B. Cunha, B. Davis, P. Cunningham, C. Corson, J. Corr. E26 First Row: J. Doiron, M. Diosy, S. Doran, J. Desimone, J. Disalvatore, D. Domenichini, B. Douglas. Second Row: B. Dodd, L. Dini, S. Dollinger, N. Dogde, P. Donahue, E. Denek, C. Doherty, J. DiRocco, B. Dobbi. Third Row: P. Detwiller, D. Dominie, J. Dryden, T. Dem, E. Deveau, S. Deven. F27 First Row: W. Doyle, J. Fisher, L. Flannigan, R. Fitzpatrick, D. Eifler. Second Row: S. Earnshaw, M. Flynn, J. Elkins, D. Eleftherakis, M. Fitz- patrick, K. Enright, Miss Lewis. Third Row: P. Ferraguto, K. Dussik, S. Fawcett, P. Faflick, P. Finnerty, E. Duncan, B. Flood. 122 123 E28 First Row: J. Franceschi, M. Gorden, C. Godoy, C. Golay. Second Row: J. Glover, J. Gone, A. Galen, P. Garo- falo, A. Gilman, N. Friedman, K. Goodrich, Mr. Flynn. Third Row: C. Granata, P. Garrity, G. Grant, D. Gaynor, S. Fox, M. Franey, C. God- dard, E. Glassman, E. Griffith, B. Garrett, T. Grasso. Fourth Row: R. Greer, J. Graham, N. Goff, M. Gom- bosi, B. Folk, B. Gow, B. Ganshirt, S. Grace. Fl First Row: J. Woodward, L. Zittel, B. Wylder, R. Yasui, J. Yagoda. Second Row: J. Whitehouse, D. Yegian, G. Wood, S. Wills, D. Zaleznik, M. Wright, C. Wright, Mr. Gumb. Third Row: C. Willson, K. Wanyoike, D. Worth, W. Woodhull, B. Yelland, D. Whitney, R. Williams, J. Wilson. lei First Row: S. Trenholme, P. Tocci, G. Van Alstine, M. Traill, R. Ward, B. Valihura, P. Wang, M. Walsh, S. Trask. Second Row: J. Vassallo, F. Timmons, G. Van Voorhis, W. Tor- pey, P. Tropeano, D. Watson, P. Wadler, J. Webster, M. Tiedeman, Mr. Fay. Third Row: A. Therrien, K. Weiner, D. Weitemeyer, N. Ward, J. Wells, R. Walton, N. Waldron, A. Van Egmond, S. Terrio, J. Thomp- son. JUNIORS F 2] First Row: L. Kling, L. Johnson, G. Kasey, C. Jorden, C. Johnson. Second Row: S. Kelly, D. Kapulka, L. John- son, J. Johnson, B. Johnson, K. Kuhn, .S; Kelley, ©. Johnson; P: Kent. Third Row: W. Johnson, B. Johnson, R. Kunicki, P. Kelley, P. Kerber, W. Kennedy, K. Juthe, J Kelly, E. Joseph. [22 First Row: W. Leggett, P. MacDon- ald, B. Lydiard, A. Leavitt, J. Lafley, M. Linnell, M. Leonard, A. Lorent- zen, J. Langley. Second Row: B. Landry, B. Lunday, B. Langley, E. Maartmanmoe, E. Luongo, S. Leveine, S. Mackechnie, T. McClean. F23 First Row: L. McDevitt, S. Mat- thews, S. Mahan, M. Marim. Second Row: M. Maher, L. Matheson, N. Maxner, A. Marion, P. MacWilliams, S. Martin, S. MacMannus, S. McNutt. Third Row: B. Matthews, C. McCor- mack, R. Margosian, B. Martin, D. Mattson, D. Margolius, B. Maguire, J. Martin, J. McCarthy. 124 125 Ve 9) za e e „ F24 First Row: M. McKay, P. Morey, J. N. Natale, P. Murray, A. McGrath. Second Row: D. Morrison, D. Meade, S. Murray, E. McGrath, R. Mortensen, V. McGonagle, R. Mc- Donald, W. McLatchy, J. Modoono. Third Row: G. McManus, P. Modoono, D. Moreau, R. Millican, W. McInnis, J. McManus, D. McEl- man, G. McGrath, H. McNutt, D. McGuire. eos First Row: R. Paratore, I. Nichols, J. Parker, K. Peterson, L. Odegarde, A. Oberteuffer. Second Row: G. Parson, N. Nicolai, B. Ostalkiewicz, L. Neil- son, I. Nickerson; J= Obear, “A: Nichols, M. Pahigian, J. Peper, M. Oscillo, H. Payne. Third Row: R. Peabody, E. Nickerson, P. Peterson, P. Natanson, J. Pasciuto, D. Perry, R. Nelson, J. Peckham. E26 First Row: D. Peterson, S. Plasse, E. Reyes, N. Roberts, G. Reckard. Sec- ond Row: D. Redhouse, S. Pressman, T. Rheum, D. Quincy, J. Ritchie, N. Place, J. Quinn. Third Row: W. Porter, D. Roberts, D. Rae, P. Rob- erts, D. Rich, D. Prince, N. Phillips. JUNIORS Baad First Row: §S. Roy, J. Sanford, D. Sebell, S. Rosenblum, A. Ryder. Second Row: EE. Saakvitne, A. Ronchetti, J. Schaffner, L. Schmidt, G. Robinson, J. Sawyer, G. Rosen- field, Mr. Cobb. Third Row: G. Ryan, F. Rosa, J. Rutherford, R. Ruskton, A. Schuller, M. Rule. F28 First Row: M. Steeves, C. Spears, C. Shaner, S. Simon, P. Strong, L. Short, L. Speer. Second Row: P. Souza, W. Shull, B. Smith, D. Sinclair, R. Strat- ford, S. Taylor, S. Spuria, M. Sullivan, S. Silva, J. Shiff. Third Row: R. Sher- man, R. Spears, W. Sould, P. Strout, J. Taylor, R. Stern, D. Stewart, S. Shaw, R. Stetson, P. Stevens. 126 127 School is a conglomeration. Of study halls for studying and study halls for talk. Of lunches alone and lunches with eight or ten kids crowded around a table. Of being by yourself getting things done. Or working together. CLASS OF SIXTY -SIX JOHN E. McDONALD, Jock, 17 Grassland Street; Junior and Senior Class President: N.H.S.; Football; Basketball; Track; Student Council; Varsity Club; High Spot; A.F.S. KEVIN GAYNOR, Key, 10 Hill Street; Soph- omore, Junior, and Senior Class Vice-Presi- dent; N.H.S.; Football; Basketball; Soccer; Homeroom Representative; High Spot; Varsity Club; Leader Corps; Guest Greeters JANE DEBORAH CHURCH, Churchie, 12 Constitution Road; Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Class Secretary; Homeroom Representa- tive; Yearbook, Underclass and Senior Editors: Lunchroom Committee; Art Club; Library Staff, Unit Librarian; F.T.A.; Humanities; In- tramurals; Ski Club; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee; Assembly Commit- tee; Big Sister Club; Public Affairs Club ARTHUR KLEMM, 4rt, 133 Worthen Road; Senior Class Treasurer; Football; Basketball; Baseball; Varsity Club; Homeroom Represent- ative JOHN McDONALD President KEVIN GAYNOR Vice President JANE DEBORAH CHURCH Secretary ARTHUR KLEMM Treasurer So there we were. Sophomores. And on double sessions and thinking to ourselves how good it would be not to have to be in school when it was dark outside and wondering how the upperclass guys got to be as old looking as they did. And we thought to ourselves ‘‘Gee, the homework around here is unbelievable,” and ‘“‘Man, is this school ever big.” And it was all like some kind of crazy kaleidoscope. And then we were juniors and things changed. The school got even more enormous with “units” and a science building and field house: “the funny round white flying saucer thing with bubbles on top.” Not only that, the homework got heavier, (“Being a junior is an absolute curse.”) and we had to eat school lunches again “from these yellow plastic tray deals with dents in them for the food.” The pieces in the kaleidoscope shifted. And then, sometime between the junior prom and the day we were measured for caps and gowns, we turned into seniors ourselves. The conspicuous and the non-descript. The Folkies and the madras boys. The poets and the musicians, the F.N.A. and Math Team members: all 516 of us red blooded American kids. We had a lot in common in our third gruelling year together. Ordinary things like the quadrangle on a snowy day or Mrs. Nelson’s afternoon announcements or the language labs. And Movements: campaigns designed to drum up School Spirit and rallies before the Lexington-Concord game, and drives to get cars washed and concert tickets sold. In spite of the superficial things—the kind of shoes we wore, the length of our hair, and whether, when we bought out the record store, it was for the Beatles, Thelonious Monk or J. S. Bach—there was unity. Of sorts. Our Class broke records. (Who’s senior play rated a new set?) We admired the same people. (From President Kennedy to Robert Frost and Illya Kuryakin.) And the same sort of things hung heavy over our heads. (Vietnam and college, for instance.) So here we are. Just about graduated. At the threshold. On the brink. Finding and fulfilling, to greater or lesser degree, our singular and collective promises. Unique, if not remarkable, a never to be had again class of seniors. We are what we are. The Spirit of ’66. 129 JAYE LOUISE ADAMS, 69 Paul Revere Road; Ski Club; Art Club; Yearbook PAULA ALDERSON, 8 Essex Street RICHARD KARL ALEXANDER, Dick, 6 Augustus Road; High Spot; Ski Club; Indoor ; , re se. Track; Outdoor Track; Fretted String Club Th Be Pele EE a lle SR CAROLE MARGARET AMBROSE, 286 Wo- JAYE LOUISE ADAMS PAULA ALDERSON burn Street; Field Hockey; Basketball; Softball ELISA AMICANGELO, 61 Kendall Road ARLENE ANDREW, 3 Bowker Street; A.F.S. CAROLYN ANDREWS, 48 Harding Road; A.E.S. DONNA ANDREWS, 48 Harding Road; F.N.A. KAREN ANDREWS, 44 Robinson Road; F.N.A. JOHN ASH, Jack, 15 Middleby Road CHERYL ASTOURIAN, 1122 Mass. Avenue; Modern Dance Club, President; F.T.A. JOSEPH AVALLONE, Joe, 25 Carville Ave- nue; Radio Club; Hockey; Football; Baseball; Track ° : MERRIEL BALAZY, 69 Bedford Street; As- RICHARD ALEXANDER CAROLE AMBROSE eee ee Pep Squad; F.T.A.; Li- rary Sta EDMUND BALLOU, Ted, 38 Highland Ave- nue; Concert Choir; French Club; Orchestra PAMELA BARNES, Pam, 3 Lawrence Lane; A.F.S.; Equestrian Club; New-Comers Club JANE BARTHELEMY, Yovanka, 34 Grant Street; Orchestra; Chorus; Concert Choir; A.F.S.; Spanish Club JOSEPH BASILE, Joe, 4 Welsh Road; Soccer; Baseball; Indoor Track; Wrestling; Assembly Committee; Sophomore Class President; Intra- murals; Ski Club; Art Club; Homeroom Rep- resentative DANA BASNEY, Bas, 12 Baskin Road; Year- book, Sports Editor; Rifle Club DEBORAH SHIRLEY BEAN, Debbie, 26 Spates bie eek asta EE NOR EW Parker Street; A.F.S.; French Club CAROLINE BEATON, Bug, 91 Bow Street; High Spot; Debating Club ANN LISA BELLIVEAU, 30 Oak Street; Ski Club; Homeroom Representative; Yearbook Staff; Senior Prom Committee; Humanities JANICE BENFANTE, 81 Forest Street SCOTT BENTON, 3115 Mass. Avenue CAROLYN ANDREWS DONNA ANDREWS KAREN ANDREWS JOHN ASH 130 JOSEPH BASILE. CAROLINE BEATON ANN LISA BELLIVEAU JANICE BENFANTE SCOTT BENTON CHERYL ASTOURIAN JOSEPH AVALLONE MERRIEL BALAZY EDMUND BALLOU PAMELA BARNES 131 tile nore, apt tote ON an plese: pew ( BJORKGREN JOHN STEPHEN BOYD M. BLAKE DAVID BRODERICK DAVID BOISVERT PAUL BOISVERT ANDREW J. BORELLA WILLIAM BORNSTEIN 132 THOMAS BRUCE ALAN BESECKER, Alley, 8 Eastern Avenue; Soccer; Basketball; Baseball; Assembly Com- mittee; Varsity Club, Treasurer JOSEPH BISOGNANO, Biz, 28 Dexter Street: Baseball; Assembly Committee; Soccer; Bas- ketball KARLA BJORKGREN, 577 Marrett Road; Business Service Club CHARLES RANDALL BLACK, Randy, 46 Buckman Drive; Cross Country, Manager; Basketball; Track; Humanities; High Spot; Varsity Club RICHARD BLACK, Ricky, 46 Buckman Drive; Cross Country Team; Basketball; Track; Varsity Club DEAN M. BLAKE, 40 Prospect Hill Road; Orchestra; High Spot, Sports Photographer; Yearbook, Sports Photographer; A.F.S. BRUCE BLUNT, Brutas, 9 Barrymeade Drive; Track; Student Council Representative STEPHEN BOGAN, Clyde, 9 Paul Revere Road; Intramurals DAVID BOISVERT, 2 Wachusett Circle PAUL BOISVERT, 2 Wachusett Circle; Foot- ball; Leader Corps ANDREW J. BORELLA, Andy, 9 Ward Street WILLIAM BORNSTEIN, Bill, 18 Peachtree Road; Yearbook; High Spot; Ski Club; Senior Play JOHN STEPHEN BOYD, Steve, 4 Oxbow Road; Ski Club; Student Leader Corps PATRICIA ELAINE BRASWEL, Pat, 143 Reed Street DAVID BRENNAN, Dog, 65 Harding Road; Ski Club; Ski Team DAVID BRODERICK, Brod, 15 Maple Street; High Spot; Creative Writing; Senior Play LOUIS BROUWER, 336 Marrett Road; Soc- cer; Basketball; Track; Leader Corps PRUDENCE BROWN, Prudy, 37 Maple Street; Chorus; Concert Choir; A.F.S.; Soft- ball; Orchestra THOMAS BRUCE, Tom, 52 Middle Street; Leader Corps; Weight Training CAROL BRUSSARD, Dimples, 383 Concord Avenue; Rifle Club; Pep Squad; Business Serv- ice Club CLARK WILLIAM BRYON, Billy, 2 Hilltop Avenue; Audio-Visual Club; Intramurals; Jun- ior Prom Committee; Lunchroom Committee ROBERT BRYANT, Bob, 20 Burlington Street; Gymnastic Team; Leader Corps THOMAS BRYSON, Tim, 20 Loring Road; Yearbook; A.F.S.; Track Team PATRICIA BUCKLEY, Pat, 43 Cedar Street : i | atk LOUIS BROUWER PRUDENCE BROWN CAROL BRUSSARD CLARK WILLIAM BRYON ROBERT BRYANT THOMAS BRYSON PATRICIA BUCKLEY ry LESLIE BULL DALE BURGESS CAROL BURKE SHELIA MARIE BUSA LLOYD BUTTRICK Ct RONALD CAMPISI JOHN CANTRELL DAVID CAOUETTE eee he ee JANE CARINE DAVID A. CARLSON DEBORAH CARNEY ELIZABETH CARNEY 134 ROBERT CALDARELLA LESLIE BULL, Les, 47 Liberty Avenue DALE BURGESS, 34 Downing Road; Dramat- ics; Ski Club; A.F.S.; Student Council Repre- sentative; Senior Play CAROL BURKE, 5 Frances Road; F.T.A.; Li- brary Staff SHELIA MARIE BUSA, Sie, 38 Circle Road; Ski Club; Pep Squad; Vaudeville; Modern Dance; Leader Corps; Softball; Intramurals; Homeroom Representative LLOYD BUTTRICK, 996 Mass. Avenue; Stu- dent Leader Corps WILLIAM CAIN, Bill, 16 Welsh Road ROBERT W. CALDARELLA, Bob, 34 Law- rence Lane; Leader Corps; Intramurals RONALD CAMPISI, Ronnie, 36 Chase Ave- nue; Hockey; Soccer; Leader Corps JOHN CANTRELL, 180 Grove Street; Ski Club; Radio Club DAVID CAOUETTE, Dave, 28 Balfour Street; Football; Varsity Club; Leader Corps STEPHEN CAPUTO, Steve, 3 Williams Ave- nue , JANE CARINE, 77 Bedford Street; Ski Club; tage Homeroom Representative; Leader Corps; As- SUSAN J. CASELLO JAMES CASEY sembly Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Intramurals DAVID A. CARLSON, 97 Cedar Street; Band; Chorus; Cross Country; High Spot; In- door Track; Outdoor Track; Varsity Club; A.F:S. DEBORAH CARNEY, Debbie, 5 Myrna Road; A.F.S.; Yearbook; Field Hockey; Soft- ball; Basketball; F.T.A. ELIZABETH M. CARNEY, Betty, 126 Burlington Street ROBERT CARPENTER, Carp, 18 Pineknoll Road; Gymnastics; Student Leader Corps JOHN CARROLL, Johnny, 31 Allen Street; Leader Corps SUSAN J. CASELLO, 82 Ward Street JAMES CASEY, 318 Lowell Street MARGARET A. CASEY, Peggy, 1063 Mass. Avenue; Ski Club; F.T.A.; A.F.S.; Humanities; Equestrian Club; Student Council DEBORAH CASTLE, Debbie, 12 Hancock Avenue; Chorus; Student Council; Office Helper; Ski Club; Equestrian Club; Public Affairs Club; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee CAROLYN ANN CATALDO, Carol, 669 Mass. Avenue; Pep Squad; Modern Dance Club; Office Helper GERALD CATALDO, Jerry, 157 East Street; Intramurals; Gymnastics 135 CAROLYN CATALDO GERALD CATALDO MARC CENERIZIO MARTHA CHAPMAN JANE COCHRAN WILLIAM COFFIN THOMAS CHARLANTINI ELIZABETH CLARKE 4 TANIA COLETTA SUSAN COLLIER REBECCA, CLARKE CHERYEVGLEAVES SUSAN CLEMOW DANA COBB STEPHEN CONLEY GERALD CONNELL 136 MARC CENERIZIO, Ceno, 255 Marrett Road MARTHA CHAPMAN, 6 Patriots Drive; Cheerleading; Yearbook, Senior Editor; F.T.A.; Humanities; Equestrian Club THOMAS CHARLANTINI, Big Tom, 67 Val- ley Road; Chess Club ELIZABETH CLARKE, Liz, 43 Highland Avenue; Chorus; Concert Choir; A.F.S. REBECCA CLARKE, Pogo, 24 Moon Hill Road; Concert Choir; Glee Club; High Spot; Gymnastics; Chorus; Dramatics CHERYL CLEAVES, Sheri, 19 Grove Street; Basketball; Modern Dance Club; Leader Corps; Intramurals SUSAN CLEMOW, Clem, 37 Highland Ave- nue; Field Hockey; Assembly Committee; Chorus; Ski Club; Girls’ Gymnastics; Basket- ball; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee DANA COBB, 34 Eldred Street; Assembly Committee; N.H.S., President; High Spot; Var- sity Club; Chorus JANE ELIZABETH COCHRAN, 10 Banks Avenue; Chorus; Glee Club; Concert Choir WILLIAM COFFIN, 40 Normandy Road; Leader Corps; Wrestling; Track LYNNE COHEN, 26 Dane Road; Ski Club; F.T.A.; Equestrian Club; A.F.S.; Young Mod- erns TANIA COLETTA, 86 Cedar Street; Dramat- ics; Chorus; Concert Choir SUSAN COLLIER, Sue, 3 Chandler Street; Art Club; Yearbook; A.F.S. JAMES COLLINS, Jim, 39 Fottler Avenue STEPHEN CONLEY, Pierre, 7 Theresa Ave- nue; Basketball; Baseball GERALD CONNELL, Gerry, 55 _ Forest Street; Football; Track; Student Council; Fretted Strings Club GAIL CONNOR, 33 Brandon Street; Business Service Club; Leader Corps; Intramurals SHERRIE CONVERSE, 40 North Hancock Street; Lunchroom Committee; Library Staff; Chorus; Intramurals RANDALL COOK, Randy, 68 Bow Street; Track DAVID COOMBS, Dave, 17 Shade Street; Leader Corps; Rifle Club; Track TIMOTHY CORBETT, Tim, 26 Bedford Street LYNNE COHEN JAMES COLLINS. - an ae ia GAIL CONNOR SHERRIE CONVERSE RANDALL COOK DAVID COOMBS TIMOTHY CORBETT 137 CYNTHIA CORKUM JOSEPH COYTE ROBERT CRAM JOHN CRISP STEPHEN CROSBY RITA CUNHA REYNOLD CURRIER JR. JOY CURTIS JUDITH CUSOLITO JAMES CUZNER STEPHEN DASHO ALICE DAVIS RICHMOND DAVIS WENDY DAVIS 138 CYNTHIA CLARE CORKUM, Cindy, 15 Meriam Street; Drama Club JOSEPH COYTE, Posh, 15 Fern Street; Foot- ball ROBERT CRAM, Hot Ticket Crammy, 759 Waltham Street WAYNE CRAM, 759 Waltham Street; Soccer JOHN CRISP, Bullets, 8 Ross Road; Basket- ball; Football; Track; Varsity Club; Leader Corps; Homeroom Representative STEPHEN CROSBY, Cros, 25 Blossom Street RITA CUNHA, 425 Bedford Street; F.N.A.; Chorus REYNOLD CURRIER JR., 24 Preston Road; Football; Baseball; Glee Club JOY CURTIS, 19 Maple Street; Chorus; Con- cert Choir; A.F.S.; Senior Play JUDITH CUSOLITO, Judy, 7 Burroughs Road; A.F.S.; Basketball; F.T.A. JAMES CUZNER, Cuz, 173 Marrett Road STEPHEN DASHO, Stef, 15 Winchester Drive; Focus, Editor-in-chief; High Spot, Car- toon Editor; Chorus; Concert Choir; Senior Play; Operetta ALICE DAVIS, 32 Chase Avenue RICHMOND DAVIS, 314 Concord Avenue; Ski Club; Library Staff; Focus WENDY DAVIS, 66 North Street; High Spot; Library Staff; General Chorus; Ski Club; Stu- dent Council; Operetta; Senior Play; Dramatics MARK DEAN, Dino, 1949 Mass. Avenue; Ski Club GERALDINE DEFELICE, Angel, 21 Mellen Road MICHAEL DEGAN, Mike, 334 Lincoln Street; Track BEAT DEGAN, 50 East Street; Ski Club NANETTE DEL VECCHIO, 17 Eldred Street; A.F.S.; F.T.A.; Chorus; Math Team JANE ELLEN DENTREMONT, 29 Wilson Road; Focus; Gymnastics NANETTE DEL VECCHIO JANE DENTREMONT MARK DEAN GERALDINE DEFELICE MICHAEL DEGAN 139 | | | CHERYL DERBYSHIRE PAULA DIROCCO STEPHEN DOHERT EDWARD DONAHUE JOHN DOOLEY GUY DORAN SUSAN DRURY LINDA DURKIN LINDA DUVAL JOEL DWYER JUDITH EARNSHA 140 SUSAN EATON LAUREL DRAKE LINDA EIFLER 141 CHERYL DERBYSHIRE, Cheri, 24 Douglas Road; Intramurals JUDITH DESMOND, 5 Revolutionary Road; Ski Club; Young Moderns; Modern Dance; Field Hockey; Cheerleading; A.F.S.; Junior Prom Committee WILLIAM D. DETWILLER, Bill, 14 Smith Avenue; Football; Wrestling PAULA DIROCCO, 12 Dunham Street; Busi- ness Service Club STEPHEN DOHERTY, Steve, 74 Adams Street; A-V Club; Track DENNIS DOMENICHINI, 4 Alcott Road JOSEPH DOMINA, Joe, 134 Marrett Road EDWARD DONAHUE, 25 Curve Street; Football JOHNS DOOLEY ack 77 bakerereavenuc: Soccer; Track GUY DORAN, 150 East Street HAROLD DORION, Chub, 5 Park Street; Tennis; Student Leader Corps; Rifle Club; Chess Club ARLAN DOUGHTY, 75 Paul Revere Road; Band; Art Club; Senior Play THALIA DOUKAS, 119 Cedar Street; Focus; A.F.S., Secretary; Drama Club; Senior Play LAUREL ELISABETH DRAKE, Laurie, 32 Locust Avenue; Modern Dance Club; Dramat- ics; Equestrian Club; Focus; Senior Play SUSAN DRURY, Sue, 792 Waltham Street; Ski Club; Intramurals; Pep Squad LINDA DURKIN, Durk, 18 Manley Court; Field Hockey; Basketball; Softball, Captain; Student Leader Corps LINDA DUVAL, 109 Mass. Avenue; Major- ettes, Captain; Leader Corps; Ski Club; Gym- nastics; Equestrian Club JOEL DWYER, 193 Follen Road; «Track; Football; Ski Club JUDITH EARNSHAW, Judi, 410 Marrett Road; Pep Squad SUSAN EATON, Sweeton, 36 Hayes Avenue; Orchestra; Chorus; Concert Choir; Girls’ Glee Club LINDA EIFLER, 10 Ellison Road; Office Helper WARREN E. EMPEY, 3 Eldred Street LOUIS EPOSITO, Skippy, 116 Bedford Street E. ANNE ERIKSON, 41 Preston Road; Greek Club; French Club; Equestrian Club; Operetta HILDE ESTERBERG, 10 Barrymeade Drive; Equestrian Club WILLIAM FARFARAS, Flash, 14 Leonard Road M. SHARON FAY, Shar, 10 Milk Street; Ma- jorettes, Co-Captain; Ski Club; Modern Dance; Leader Corps; A.F.S. LYNN FERRARI, 24 Leonard Street; Eques- trian Club; Dance Club; Chorus; Humanities; AGES: MICHAEL FERREIRA, Mike, 249 Marrett Road PAULA VERONICA FITZPATRICK, Fitzi, 6 Green Lane; Young Moderns; Pep Squad; Equestrian Club; A.F.S. NANCY FLANNIGAN, 335 Marrett Road; Equestrian Club; Ski Club; Pep Squad CYNTHIA FOGG, Cindy, 10 Hilltop Avenue; Orchestra; Chorus; A.F.S. JOHN FOLEY, 47 Cary Avenue; Echo; Li- brary Staff; F.T.A. MARIE FOLEY, 5 Harrington Road; Rifle Club CYNTHIA ANN FOX, Cindy, 117 Spring Street; Concert Choir; Senior Play; Operetta; A.F.S.; Ski Club DOREEN FOX, Chickie-Poo, 3 Redcoat Lane; F.T.A.; Assembly Committee; Pep Squad; Drama Club; Ski Club JANET FOX, Foxy, 8 Oakmount Circle; Chess Club; Leader Corps; Guest Greeter; Basketball; Ski Club; A.F.S.; French Club PETER FRANKS, 21 Sherman Street; A-V Club DWIGHT FRASER, Ed, 49 North Hancock Street LINDA FRAZER, 50 Hillcrest Avenue; Art Club; Modern Dance Club; Leader Corps ELAINE FREITAS, 45 Lincoln Street; Soft- ball; Humanities; Field Hockey; Leader Corps; Ski Club; Intramurals MARIE FOLEY CYNTHIA ANN FOX DOREEN FOX PETER FRANKS DWIGHT FRASER LINDA FRAZER ELAINE FREITAS 143 JOSEPH GALLAGHER SONIA FRIEDMAN ROSEMARY GAGE PATRICK GALLAGHER EDMUND GALANTE DENNIS GANE 144 CAROLYN ELLIS FRICK, Kelly, 17 Smith Avenue; Yearbook, Editor-in-Chief, Art and Layout Director; N.H.S., Treasurer; A.F-S.; Homeroom Representative; Senior Play; Class Secretary, Soph. A.M. SONIA FRIEDMAN, 5 Battle Green Road; Focus; High Spot; A.F.S.; French Club SUSAN FRITZ, Fritz, 1960 Mass. Avenue; Field Hockey; Tennis; Basketball; A.F.S.; Ski Club; Student Council; Homeroom Representa- tive; High Spot; Intramurals; Unit Council Representative JANET FROST, 31 Hayes Avenue; A.F.S.; Chorus; F.T.A.; Concert Choir ROSEMARY ANN GAGE, 990 Waltham Street; Ski Club; Equestrian Club; Pep Squad; Young Moderns EDMUND M. GALANTE, Eddie, 11 Bur- roughs Road; Hockey JOSEPH GALLAGHER, Joe, 81 Shade Street; Hockey PATRICK GALLAGHER, Pat, 181 Follen Road; Riffle Club; Wrestling DENNIS GANE, 12 Estabrook Road; Rifle Club; Ski Club; Equestrian Club JEFFREY GARRETT, Jeff, 49 Spring Street; Soccer; Hockey; Art Club; Homeroom Repre- sentative DONALD GATES, Don, 17 Wheeler Road; Gymnastic Team; Track; Varsity Club; High Spot, Reporter DAVID L. GENNARO, Buddy, 108 Winter Street; Hockey KATHLEEN GIBBONS, Kathy, 23 Haskell Street; F.T.A.; Assembly Committee JAYNE GILLESPIE, Jani, 4 Fairland Street; Band; Orchestra; Chorus; Concert Choir; High Spot; Debating Club; N.H.S. JOSEPH GODWIN, Jose, 65 Baskin Road; Gymnastics; Varsity Club DONNA GOLDMAN, Dee Dee, 30 Stimson Avenue; Library Staff RUTH GOLDSTEIN, Ruthie, 248 Worthen Road ELIZABETH GOOD, Liz, 37 Wellington Lane; F.N.A.; Assembly Committee ERIC GORDAN, 35 Peacock Farm Road; Band; High Spot; Track; Ski Club LAWRENCE GOULD, Larry, 24 Coolidge Avenue; Track MARILYN GRAHAM, 8 Rangeway Road; Modern Dance; A.F.S.; Debating Club; Cho- rus; Ski Club JEFFREY GARRETT DONALD GATES DAVID L. GENNARO KATHLEEN GIBBONS JAYNE GILLESPIE JOSEPH GODWIN DONNA GOLDMAN RUTH GOLDSTEIN ELIZABETH GOOD ERIC GORDON LAWRENCE GOULD MARILYN GRAHAM 145 DONNA C. GEANACOPULOS, Dee-Dee, 15 Wilson Road SUSAN Y. GRANT, Suzi, 25 Balfour Street; Leader Corps; A.F.S.; Pep Squad JANICE GREENE, 59 Ledgelawn Avenue; Modern Dance Club; Ski Club JUNE GREENE, 58 Williams Road; Ski Club; Girls’ Glee Club; F.T.A. JEN GRIFFITH, 5 Winthrop Road STEPHEN A. GUILD, Steve, 50 Asbury Road; Track LAWRENCE GUILMARTIN, Larry, 16 Con- stitution Road; Chorus; Concert Choir; Drama WALTER HAGMAN, Buddy, 39 Downing Road; Band PRISCILLA HALLETT, Pat, 34 Middle Street; F.N.A.; Young Moderns BETTY HANDRICK, 516 Concord Avenue; Band; Ski Club EDWARD HARRIGAN, Ed, 122 Marrett Road; Yearbook; Intramurals CYNTHIA HARTFORD, Cindy, 16 Longfel- low Road; Cheerleader; Student Council; F.T.A., Vice-President; Homeroom Representa- tive; Modern Dance Club; Ski Club; Eques- trian Club JOHN HARVEY, Juno, 16 Hathaway Road; Football LINDA HATFIELD, 10 Woodland Road; Ski Club; Tennis; Equestrian Club WAYNE HAUGH, 44 Simonds Road; Chorus; F.T.A.; Assembly Committee; Public Affairs; Humanities ANN HAYNER, Annie, 5 Colony Road; F.T.A.; A.F.S.; Chorus; Echo; Softball; Field Hockey; Unit Representative, alternate STEPHEN HEIMLICH, Heim, 1796 Massa- chusetts Avenue; Orchestra; Chorus CAROLYN HENDERSON, Carol, 136 Maple Street; Pep Squad; Business Service JOHN HERBOLD, 4 Ballard Terrace; Soccer; Ski Club KATHLEEN HILFERTY, Kathy, 33 Cottage Street; Modern Dance; Equestrian Club SANDRA M. HOUGHTON, Sandy, 50 Coo- lidge Avenue; Student Leader Corps; Humani- ties; A.F.S.; Echo Staff; High Spot; Chorus; Concert Choir; Homeroom Representative; Senior Play; Operetta WALTER HAGMAD EDWARD HARRIGA DONNA GEANACOPULOS SUSAN Y. GRANT JANICE GREENE JUNE GREENE JEN GRIFFITH 146 CYNTHIA HARTFORD STEPHEN A. GUILD BETTY HANDRICK JOHN HARVEY LAWRENCE GUILMARTIN 147 LINDA HATFIELD WAYNE HAUGH aek ANN HAYNER STEPHEN HEIMLICH CAROLYN HENDERSON JOHN HERBOLD oY 4 Hpbi KATHLEEN HILFERTY SANDRA M. HOUGHTON GEORGE HOURIHAN JANICE HOURIHAN GEORGE HOURIHAN, 22 Butler Avenue; Cross-Country; Indoor Track; Outdoor Track JANICE MARIE HOURIHAN, Jan, 28 Bridge Street; F.N.A.; Junior Red Cross REX HOWARD, 19 Muzzey Street; Football; Gymnastics SUSAN HOWARD, Sue, 15 Ewell Avenue: A.F.S.; Library Staff FRANK HUDSON, Chuck, 23 Baker Avenue; A.F.S.; Creative Writing; Humanities; General Chorus; Male Chorus; Operetta; Soccer JANET L. HUFTON, Jan, 162 Burlington Street; High Spot; Chorus; Guest Greeters; Radio Club; Library Staff KEITH A. HUTCHINS, 2 Weston Street KENNETH IANDOLI, Dolie, 289 Emerson Road MEREDITH IRWIN, 20 Clarke Street; Leader Corps; A.F.S. MARIANNE IVES, 9 Burlington Street; Ski Club; Art Club; Equestrian Club MARILYN JACKSON, Flame, 62 Colony Road; Band; Dramatics; Chorus; A.F:S:; F.T.A.; Concert Choir LINDA EILEEN JOHANSSON, Linnie, 10 Lawrence Lane; Chorus; Junior Red Cross; F.T.A.; Pep Squad; A.F.S. ALLAN JOSEPH JOHNSON, 4 , 8 Stinson Avenue; Football; Weight Lifting BRUCE D. JOHNSON, 5 Cary Avenue; Track; Intramurals CHARLES W. JOHNSON, Chucky, 9 Battle Green Road; Tennis; Cross Country; Gymnas- tics; Ski Club; Varsity Club DALE JOHNSON, 15 Bedford Street DANIS MARIE JONES, 50 Turning Mill Road; Leader Corps; Art Club; Ski Club MARY ELLEN JONES, Mary-Jel, 29 Webb Street; Intramurals; Humanities; Dramatics MERRILL A. JONES, 30 Colony Road; Stu- dent Council; Assembly Committee; Varsity Club; Football; Baseball; Gymnastics RICHARD JONES, Scoppa, 36 Woburn Street; Basketball RUTH JONES, Ruthie, 36 Woburn Street; Chorus; Basketball; Pep Squad SUSAN HOLLY JONES, Smiley, 186 Cedar Street; F.T.A.; A.F.S. REX HOWARD 148 SUSAN HOWARD FRANK HUDSON, ees KEITH A. HUTCHINS MEREDITH IRWIN ae a ae MARIANNE IVES DONNA MAY JORDAN, 30 Cottage Street; Leader Corps; Field Hockey; Basketball; Soft- ball; Lacrosse ROBERT JAMES JOSEPH, Bob, 32 Eldred Street; Chess Club; Basketball MARK STEPHEN KACOYANIS, Kac, 22 Lawrence Lane; Debate Club; Rifle Club; Sen- ior Play; Audio-Visual Club; Homeroom Rep- resentative; Art Club KATHRYN KALIMON, 12 Frances Road; Field Hockey; Leader Corps; Ski Club; Cho- rus; Girls’ Gymnastics Club ANN KASEY, 143 Maple Street; Pep Squad RICHARD KAZANJIAN, Richie, 75 Winter Street JANET KEEPING, 13 Sunnyknoll Terrace; Field Hockey; High Spot; Tennis Team; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee; Treasurer of Sophomore Class; Homeroom Representative; Unit Council Representative FLORENCE KELJIKIAN, 156 Lowell Street; F.N.A.; Equestrian Club; Senior Play JAMES KELLEY, Jim, 24 Turning Mill Road; Chorus ROBERT KENNEDY, Bob, 30 Brandon Street; Student Leaders; Cross Country Team; Track Team PAUL KENT, 63 Blossom Street PETER B. KING, Pete, 39 Preston Road; Or- chestra; Wrestling; Band GLORIA KIRKLAND, Glo, 50 Woburn Street; Leader Corps; Arts and Crafts; Office Helper DIANNE KISSINGER, DeeDee, 13 Mass. Avenue; Leader Corps SUSAN KLEINER, Su, 34 Hayward Avenue; Yearbook; Equestrian Club; Ski Club; A.F:S.; French Club; Junior Prom Comm. KEN KNIGHT, 154 Maple Street; Leader Corps; Chorus; Bridge Club KIETH KORITZ, 8 Ingleside Road ELEANOR KOTOWSKI, 11 Brandon Street; Cheerleader; Chorus; F.T.A. VALERIE JEAN KROLL, Val, 51 Wellington Lane; Young Moderns; Pep Squad; Junior Prom Committee; Equestrian Club DENISE LABELLA, Dennis, 31 Ewell Ave- nue; Majorette; Chorus; Orchestra; Debate Club; F.T.A. BRUCE LABOMBARD, 24 Fair Oaks Ter- race; Baseball; Football; Equestrian Club 150 JAMES KELLEY SUSAN KLEINER KEN KNIGHT He re MARK KACOYANIS KATHRYN KALIMON ANN KASEY RICHARD KAZANJIAN JANET KEEPING ROBERT KENNEDY PAUL KENT GLORIA KIRKLAND DIANNE KISSINGER KIETH KORITZ ELEANOR KOTOWSKI VALERIE JEAN KROLL DENISE LABELLA BRUCE LABOMBARD : 151 LINDA LANGILLE MICHAEL LARKIN DAVID LARSON PETER LARSON GAIL LIEBFRIED AMY LIND LINDA LINDELL ANNE LIPSHUTZ EDWARD LOCKE 152 LINDA LANGILLE, Donald Duck, 38 Bow Street; Business Service Club; Pep Squad MICHAEL LARKIN, Mike, 8 Wachusett Drive; Echo, Editor-in-chief DAVID LARSON, Dave, 117 Lincoln Street; Ski Club; Chorus; Cross Country; High Spot PETER LARSON, 12 Calvin Street LEO THOMAS LENTINI, Tom, 25 Middleby Road; Highspot; Echo ANN LEVIS, 18 Hayes Lane; Yearbook, Copy Director; Girls’ Glee Club; A.F.S.; Ski Club; Modern Dance Club; Chorus SUSAN LEZER, Suki, 3 Goodwin Road; Field Hockey; Gymnastics; Modern Dance; A.F.S. GAIL ELLEN LIEBFRIED, Leapfrog, 37 Grant Street; Pep Squad AMY LIND, 23 Lincoln Street; F.T.A.; Ski Club; Prom Committee LINDA LINDELL, 471 Waltham Street; Cho- rus; Assembly Committee; Humanities ANNE LIPSHUTZ, 32 Hill Street; Ski Club; Modern Dance; Gymnastics; Chorus; Art Club EDWARD LOCKE, Eddie, 18 Harbell Street; Ski Club JULIE LONG, Gem, 58 Paul Revere Road; Ski Club; F.N.A.; Leader Corps; Majorette; A.F.S. DENISE LOONEY, Loon, 33 Bernard Street; Ski Club; Junior Prom Committee DONALD LOVETT, Cooz, 10 Forest Street; Football; Track; Varsity Club; Ski Club CAROL LUNDBERG, 139 Worthern Road; F.T.A.; A.F.S.; A ssembly Committee; Student Council; Homeroom Representative; Public Affairs; Young Moderns; Ski Club; Junior Prom Committee ROBERT ERIC LYNG, Bob, 15 Valley Road; Track; Student Council, Vice-President; N.H.S., Vice-President; Soccer; Varsity Club MARY MACDONALD, 1963 Mass. Avenue; Ski Club; Chorus; Humanities RODERICK MACDONALD, Rick, 28 Sum- mit Road; Hockey; High Spot; Homeroom Representative; Football JANE MACKECHNIE, 23 Greenwood Street; Homeroom Representative; Unit Representa- tive; Assembly Committee; Ski Club; Chorus; Field Hockey; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee JULIE; LONG DENISE LOONE CAROL LUNDBERG ROBERT ERIC LYNG 153 RODERICK MACDONALD JANE MACKECHNIE JOHN A. MACNEIL MARY CELIA MADDEN JOHN A. MACNEIL, Alan, 102 North Han- cock Street; Public Affairs Club; Soccer MARY CELIA MADDEN, 955 Mass. Ave- nue; Band; Chorus; N.H.S.; Ski Club; Concert Choir LINDA MAGARIAN, Gidgett, 286 Emerson Road CHARLES MAGUIRE, Chucky, 291 Wood Street WAYNE MAGUIRE, 5 Wyman Road; Bas- ketball; Varsity Club MAUREEN MAHER, Mo, 12 Adams Street; Pep Squad; Intramurals; F.T.A. WAYNE MALCOLM, 32 Bow Street; Audio- Visual Club; Lunchroom Committee; Baseball; Intramurals STEPHEN WILLIAM MALONEY, Steve, 123 Woburn Street; Transfer from: East Catholic High School, Manchester, Connecticut BARBARA MANN, Barbi, 26 Farmcrest Ave- nue; F.T.A.; Assembly Committee; Pep Squad JUDITH MANTINEO, Judi, 11 Cottage Street; Business Service Club LINDA M. MARASHIO, 653 Lowell Street WILLIAM MARCY, Bill, 167 Cedar Street EDWARD P. MARTIN, Ed, 12 Valley Road; Golf Team MARGARET MARTIN, Margie, 8 Crescent Hill Avenue; Modern Dance Club; Pep Squad; PeteA3 ROBERT MATTSON, Bob, 390 Marrett Road JOYCE MAY, Joy, 5 Leeland Terrace; F.N.A.; Ski Club; Field Hockey; Lacrosse ANN PATRICIA McARDLE, Andi, 33 Fol- len Road; Chorus; F.T.A.; Assembly Commit- tee; Senior Play; Student Council; F.N.A. EUGENE WILLIAM McCARTHY, Gene, 34 Maple Street; Football; Homeroom Repre- sentative; Leader Corps; Equestrian Club PATRICIA A. McCARTHY, Pam, 34 Maple Street; Ski Club; Chorus; Homeroom Repre- sentative; Operetta; Senior Prom Committee RICHARD McCARTHY, Tuba, 454 Marrett Road; Student Council; Homeroom Represent- ative; Assembly Committee; Hockey, Manager; Art Club; Intramurals; Varsity Club; Junior Prom Committee; Yearbook; High Spot ROBERT McCARTHY, Boober, 454 Marrett Road; Student Council; Hockey; Homeroom Representative; Intramurals; Varsity Club MADELYN McCAULEY, Lyn, 2 Moreland Avenue; N.H.S.; Concert Choir; High Spot; Debating Club; Senior Play; Operetta GEORGE F. McCORMACK, 32 Hayes Lane; F.T.A.; Homeroom Representative LINDA MAGARIAN 154 CHARLES MAGUIRE MAUREEN MAHER BARBARA MANN WAYNE MAGUIRE WAYNE MALCOLM JUDITH MANTINEC JOYCE, MAY ANN McARDLE HE: PATRICIA McCARTHY INDA M. MARASHIO ROBERT McCARTHY MADELYN McCAULEY GEORGE F. McCORMACK 155 ANNE McCURDY MARIANNE McINTIRE RICHARD McMANUS MAUREEN McDONALD ROBERT LEO McGUIRE RICHARD B. McKEON WILLIAM McMANUS. 156 ANNE McCURDY, Nancy, 16 Sutherland Road; Dramatics; A.F.S.; French Club; Cho- rus; Senior Play MAUREEN McDONALD, 840 Mass. Avenue; Business Service Club NUALA McGRATH, 15 Crescent Hill Ave- nue; F.N.A.; Pep Squad; Senior Prom Com- mittee ROBERT LEO McGUIRE, Bob, 25 Bedford Street MARIANNE McINTIRE, 205 Wood Street; Leader Corps RICHARD B. McKEON, Rickie, 582 Mass. Avenue RICHARD McMANUS, Mic, 3. Fairland Street; Basketball, Manager; Intramurals WILLIAM McMANUS, Bill, 88 Winter Street; Intramurals; Lunchroom Committee JAMES F. McNAMARA, Jim, 18 Tarbell Avenue; Cross Country; Track BONITA J. McNUTT, Bonny, 4 Wheeler Road; Modern Dance Club; Intramurals; Senior Prom Committee RICHARD McSWEENEY, Rich, 24 Bell- flower Street; Intramurals MARSHALL MEEKS, Mott, 26 Oakland Street; Leader Corps; Ski Team MICHAEL J. MENDOZA, Mike, 39 Adams Street; Chorus; A.F.S.; Senior Play RAYMOND E. MERRILL, Ray, 155 Burling- ton Street; Ski Team ANN MILEY, 29 Robinson Road; Chorus; Art Club; Yearbook; N.H.S. SAMUEL ANTHONY MODOONO, Sam, 191 Woburn Street WILLIAM MODOONO, Modoo, 285 Woburn Street; Baseball; Basketball; Soccer; Assembly Committee, President; Varsity Club; Home- room Representative; High Spot JOHN MOLLOY, 9 Whipple Road; Football; Baseball MARILYN MOLLOY, 9 Whipple Road; Hu- manities; Equestrian Club; Junior Red Cross; French Club JEANNE MONAHAN, 25 Bernard Street; Modern Dance Club; F.T.A. JAMES McNAMARA MICHAEL MENDOZA WILLIAM MODOONO RAYMOND E. MERRILL JOHN MOLLOY RICHARD McSWEENEY ANN MILEY MARILYN MOLLOY MARSHALL MEEKS JEANNE MONAHAN ANTHONY MONGELLI RICHARD MOORE FRANCIS MOREY SHARON MORRILL JOHN MORRISSEY CATHERINE MORSE VIRGINIA MORSE SUSAN MOSBY ALBERT MULCAHY JOELLE MURAT SHEILA MURPHY WILLIAM MURPHY 158 ANTHONY MONGELLI, Toni, 92. Bon Street; Student Council RICHARD MOORE, Dick, 14 Fairland Street; Hockey, Manager; Football, Manager; Varsity Club; Art Club; Chorus FRANCIS MOREY, Fran, 12 Daniels Street; Indoor Track; Outdoor Track; Leader Corps; Equestrian Club SHARON MORRILL, 8 Grant Place; Assem- bly Committee; Ski Club JOHN MORRISSEY, Mouse, 4 Wildwood Road; A.F.S.; Equestrian Club; Student Coun- cil; Ski Club CATHERINE MORSE, Cathy, 12 Shirley Street; F.N.A., President; Pep Squad, Captain; Ski Club; Library Staff; Young Moderns VIRGINIA MORSE, Ginny, 12 Shirley Street; F.N.A.; Modern Dance Club; Pep Squad SUSAN MOSBY, Mosb, 18 Diamond Road; Modern Dance Club; Ski Club; Rifle Club ALBERT MULCAHY, Gorilla, 23 Moreland Avenue; Football; Track; Intramurals JOELLE MURAT, Jelly, 16 Garfield Street; Yearbook, Features Editor; A.F.S., Publicity Manager; Student Council; Ski Club, Secre- tary; Field Hockey; Equestrian Club SHEILA MURPHY, 26 Estabrook Road; Art Club; F.T.A.; Focus; Equestrian Club; A.F.S. WILLIAM MURPHY, Billy, 45 Woburn Street; Football; Track; Baseball PETER MURRAY, 31 Eaton Road ANN NAGEL, Chestnuts, 4 Stonewall Road; Modern Dance Club; Dramatics; Chorus; Jun- ior Red Cross; F.T.A; Equestrian Club; French Club VICTOR NAWOICHIK, Goop, 16 Nichols Road R. BRADFORD NEWMAN, Brad, 17 Moon Hill Road; Sophomore Class, President; Stu- dent Council; Band; Ski Club ELIZABETH NEWTON, Betsey, 12 Woodland Road; Yearbook; A.F.S.; High Spot; Ski Club; Echo Staff; French Club MARCIA NICHOLS, Nick, 67 Liberty Ave- nue; Leader Corps; F.N.A.; Ski Club; Gymnas- tics DEBORAH NICKERSON, Big Deb, 2198 Mass. Avenue; Ski Club; Equestrian Club; Lunchroom Committee PHILIPPA LYN NISSEL, Flip, 8 Rolfe Road; N.H.S.; Yearbook; Chorus DAVID PAGE NORCROSS, 50 Forest Street; Student Council, President; Track; Yearbook; Varsity Club Ne ee PETER MURRAY ANN NAGEL VICTOR NAWOICHIK R. BRADFORD NEWMAN | ELIZABETH NEWTON MARCIA NICHOLS DEBORAH NICKERSON PHILIPPA LYN NISSEL DAVID NORCROSS 159 ia ry = ae ——— JOYCE NOWLIN RICHARD OBAN DAVID O'BRIEN JAMES OFRIA CHARLES NOYES CAROL E. OBEAR CLAUDIA OGILVIE 160 JOYCE NOWLIN, 29 Maple Street; A.F.S.; Softball; Dramatics; Humanities CHARLES NOYES, Charlie, 24 Manning Street; Baseball; Humanities RICHARD OBAN, Dick, 37 Downing Road; Band, President; Leader Corps; Rifle Club CAROL E. OBEAR, Obes, 142 Grant Street; F.N.A., Secretary; Ski Club; Equestrian Club; Young Moderns; Office Helper DAVID O'BRIEN, Dave, 420 Mass. Avenue RICHARD O’BRIEN, OB, 8 Ellison Road; Football JAMES OFRIA, Jim, 10 Foster Road; Hockey; Equestrian Club; Varsity Club; Chess Club; Leader Corps CLAUDIA OGILVIE, 2 Locke Lane; Eques- trian Club VIRGINIA OLDAKOWSKI, Ginny, 300 Wal- tham Street; Pep Squad ALDEN OLSON, 534 Lowell Street; Library Staff; High Spot CHARLES OLSON, Charlie, 15 Hastings Road KATHLEEN O’NEIL, Kathy, 4 Philip Road; Sophomore Class, Treasurer; Softball; Home- room Representative JO ELLEN ORSILLO, Jo, 5 Sunnyknoll Ave- nue; Field Hockey; F.N.A.; Lacrosse; Intramu- rals; Ski Club SUSAN OSBORN, Sue, 11 Lockwood Road; Focus THOMAS O’SHAUGHNESSY, Tommy O, 24 Garfield Street; Homeroom _ Representative; Basketball; Track; Cross Country; Leader Corps; Varsity Club CALVIN F. PAGE, 25 Oakland Street; Rifle Club VICTORIA PAQUETTE, Vicky, 223 Lowell Street; Equestrian Club; Ski Club; Junior Prom Committee; Pep Squad; Intramurals ROSEMARY PARATORE, Rosie, 11 Berwick Road; French Club; Ski Club LINDA PAYNE, 15 Chase Avenue; Assembly Committee; Chorus DAVID PEHRSON, Dave, 16 Butler Avenue CHARLES OLSON KATHLEEN O’NEIL JO ELLEN ORSILLO SUSAN OSBORN THOMAS O’SHAUGHNESSY CALVIN F. PAGE ROSEMARY PARATORE LINDA PAYNE DAVID PEHRSON CTORIA PAQUETTE ELAINE PETERSON LINDA PETRUCCI FRANCES PFAFF KARLA PFEIL — ROBERT PITT RALPH POIRIER JEAN POLHAMUS STEPHEN M. POLITI MICHELE POPLAY BARBARA POULTER JOSEPH POTZKA. MARILYN PRASINOS DOUGLAS PRENTISS PATRICIA PRESI 162 MARY PHINNEY _ MICHAEL POTTER SUSAN POTTER 163 ELAINE PETERSON, 6 Wildwood Road; French Club, President; Dramatics; Pep Squad; A.F.S.; Ski Club LINDA PETRUCCI, Patruce, 20 Hillcrest Avenue; Leader Corps; Softball; Modern Dance Club LINDA PETTIBONE, 118 Blake Road; Art Club; Ski Club; Greek Club FRANCES PFAFF, Fran, 6 Rowland Avenue; Ski Club; Chorus; Band; Orchestra KARLA PFEIL, 43 Wachusett Drive; N.H.S.; Yearbook, Sports Editor; Basketball; Softball; Leader Corps LINDA PHILLIPS, Winnie, 66 Ledgelawn Avenue; Dramatics; Modern Dance Club; Ski Club MARY PHINNEY, Ernie, 17 Columbus Street; Art Club; Leader Corps ROBERT PITT, Pittly, 2361 Mass. Avenue; Leader Corps; Ski Team; Soccer; Gymnastics; Rifle Club; Ski Club RALPH POIRIER, 24 Cary Avenue; Golf JEAN ALICE POLHAMUS, 81 Blossom Street; Chorus; Operetta STEPHEN M. POLITI, Steve, 25 Deering Avenue; Homeroom Representative . MICHELE POPLAWSKI, Mike, 14 Oxbow Road; Cheerleading; Echo; High Spot; A.F.S. MICHAEL POTTER, Mike, 21 Fair Oaks Terrace; Equestrian Club; Assembly Commit- tee; Chess Club SUSAN POTTER, 19 Walnut Street; Chorus; Ski Club; French Club; Intramurals BARBARA POULTER, Bobbi, 217 Follen Road; Hockey; Basketball; Softball; F.N.A. JOSEPH POTZKA, Joe, 14 Banks Avenue; Football; Track; Chess Club MARILYN PRASINOS, 2 Benjamin Road; Homeroom Representative; Junior Red Cross, President; F.N.A.; A.F.S.; Modern Dance Club; Ski Club; High Spot DOUGLAS PRENTISS, Doug, 72 Blossom- crest Road; Varsity Club; Soccer PATRICIA PRESTON, Pat, 295 Waltham Street THOMAS PREZIOSI, Mazinni, 12 Lockwood Road BARBARA PRIEST, Bar, 19 Diana Lane; Li- brary Staff; Field Hockey; Basketball; La- crosse; Equestrian Club; Leader Corps; F.N.A. TERRI PRIEST, 19 Diana Lane; Echo Staff; Field Hockey; Equestrian Club; Lacrosse; Leader Corps LORRAINE QUEANDER, Louie, 2 Middle Street; Orchestra; F.T.A. KATHERINE QUINCY, Kathy, 1 Aerial Street; Chorus; F.N.A.; Assembly Committee; Equestrian Club; Basketball Intramurals; Field LORRAINE QUEANDER Hockey; Homeroom Representative; Humani- ties; Pep Squad; Ski Club; Young Moderns KATHLEEN QUINLAN, Kathy, 2 Eliot Road; Greek Club ROBERT RAFTERY, Rats, 5 Fuller Road JUDITH RANDOLPH, Judy, 31 Curve Street ROSALIE RICCI, 8 Fairland Street; Chorus; Humanities LAWRENCE J. RICH, Larry, 1 Pelham Road; Library Staff; Radio Club; Audio-Visual Club; Track; Chorus JANE RILEY, 90 Concord Avenue; Field Hockey; Junior Prom Committee JOHN RIZZO, Riz, 10 Webster Road; Foot- ball; Homeroom Representative; Varsity Club; Leader Corps KATHERINE QUINCY KATHLEEN QUINLAN JAMES ROBERGE, Jim, 3 Benjamin Road; Leader Corps; Track CAROL ROBERTS, 17 Battle Green Road; Art Club; Equestrian Club; High Spot TAMZON B. ROBERTSON, Tammy, 100 Meriam Street; Homeroom Representative; F.N.A. DAVID H. ROBINSON, Robi, 6 Loring Road; Cross Country; Indoor Track; Outdoor Track; Varsity Club PATRICIA RODGERS, Pat, 248 Marrett Road ROBERT RODGERS, Stupid, 248 Marrett Road PATRICIA ROLASFEVICH, Pat, 39 Wood Street = MARIA ROMANO, 124 Lowell Street; Mod- ROBERT RAFTERY JUDITH RANDOLPH ern Dance Club CHRISTINA A. ROSA, Chris, 58 Valleyfield Street; Assembly Committee; Majorettes; Echo Staff; F.T.A. JAMES ROSENBLUM, Jim, 28 Patterson Road; Concert Choir; Ski Club; Dramatics FRANK RYAN, Fere, 46 Gleason Road ROSALIE RICCI LAWRENCE J. RICH JANE RILEY JOHN RIZZO 164 ROBERT RODGERS PATRICIA ROLASFEVICH MARIA ROMANO x - fall ta te CHRISTINA A. ROSA JAMES ROSENBLUM FRANK RYAN JAMES ROBERGE CAROL ROBERTS TAMZON ROBERTSON DAVID H. ROBINSON PATRICIA RODGERS 165 JERRY RYAN KATHLEEN SAMPSON KATHLEEN SAVAGE. RICHARD C. SCHANER. SUSAN RYAN RENEE SAULNIER ALAN SAVENOR JAMES SCHANTZ 166 JERRY RYAN, Harv, 36 Ward Street; Hockey SUSAN RYAN, Su, 2692 Mass. Avenue; Art Club; High Spot; A.F.S.; Modern Dance Club KATHLEEN SAMPSON, Kathy, 27 Robbins Road; Cheerleading; Pep Squad; Dramatics; F.T.A; A.F.S.; Equestrian Club; Junior Prom Committee RENEE SAULNIER, Ren, 671 Marrett Road; Field Hockey; Basketball; Softball; Leader Corps KATHLEEN SAVAGE, Jean, 107 Woburn Street; F.N.A.; Chorus; Pep Squad ALAN SAVENOR, Al, 14 Ballard Terrace; Band; Chorus; A.F.S.; Concert Choir RICHARD C. SHANER, Dick, 40 Williams Road; Orchestra; Band; Dance Band JAMES SCHANTZ, Jim, 7 Linmoor Terrace; High Spot, Editor-in-Chief; Dramatics; Musical Productions MARY L. SCHNELLER, Schnell, 169 Blos- som Street; Ski Club; Art Club; Gymnastics; Equestrian Club; Modern Dance Club; F.T.A. SUSAN SCHRAGLE, Suzy, 64 Ledgelawn Avenue; Field Hockey; Basketball; Softball; Homeroom Representative; Junior Prom Com- mittee; Senior Prom Committee; Equestrian Club MICHAEL SCHULTE, Rainbow, 20 Baskin Road; Cross Country; Hockey; Track ANITA SCIMECA, 104 Kendall Road DUNCAN SCRIBNER, 7 Highland Avenue; Equestrian Club; Track; Ski Club MARK HENRY SEBELL, 25 Somerset Road; Concert Choir; Chorus; Dramatics; A.F.S.; Ski Club; Yearbook; Science Club MARTHA ROSE SEMONIAN, 504 Lowell Street; Field Hockey; Basketball; Softball; Stu- dent Council, Secretary; Leader Corps; Year- book, Sports Editor; Chorus JEFFREY SEN, Jeff, 24 Baskin Road; Soccer; Track; Leader Corps LINDA EVE SENTER, Ladybug, 142 Bedford Street; Concert Choir; A.F.S.; Chorus DEBORAH SHARKEY, Deb The Shark, 9 Hazel Road; Chorus RICHARD SHERMAN, Buddha, 7 Bates Road; A.F.S.; Unit Council Representative; Li- brary Staff; Public Affairs Club; Chorus; Op- eretta JANE SILMAN, 250 Marrett Road; Field Hockey; Basketball; Leader Corps; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Prom Committee SUSAN SCHRAGLE MICHAEL SCHULTE DUNCAN SCRIBNER MARK HENRY SEBELL MARTHA SEMONIAN JEFFREY SEN DEBORAH SHARKEY RICHARD SHERMAN JANE SILMAN 167 GERALD SKINNER DANIEL SLISKI JANICE SOUSA ROSALYN SOVIE RODNEY SPARROW RUTH SPINELLI JOHN SPLAINE KAREN STORTS DETLEV SUDEROW ANNE ST. GEORGE DAVID STUART KEVIN SULLIVAN CAROLINE STEVENS PAMELA STOKES LARS STONE 169 JAMES SILVA, 303 Concord Avenue CHRISTINE MARY SINKEVICH, Chris, 19 Normandy Road; Library Staff; F.N.A.; Pep Squad; Junior Red Cross; Chorus; Modern Dance; Ski Club ROBERT SISK, Bob, 76 Bertwell Road GERALD SKINNER, Jerry, 124 Woburn Street; Football DANIEL SLISKI, Dan, 15 Volunteer Way DAPHNE M. SLOCOMBE, 18 Belfry Terrace; Art Club, Treasurer; Creative Writing DEBORAH SMITH, Deb, 44 Grant Street; Cheerleader; Ski Club; Sub-Unit Librarian; Jun- ior Prom Committee; Equestrian Club WILLIAM SMITH, Bill, 50 Fern Street JANICE SOUSA, 435 Bedford Street; Assem- bly Committee; Art Club; Ski Club ROSALYN SOVIE, Rosie, 517 Bedford Street, Melrose High School, Melrose, Mass.; Modern Dance Club RODNEY SPARROW, Rod, 8 Wingate Road; Football; Homeroom Representative, alternate; Varsity Club; Ski Club; Unit Council Repre- sentative RUTH ELIZABETH SPINELLI, Spinooch, 39 Fairbanks Road; Assembly Committee; Year- book; High Spot; Art Club; Humanities; Junior and Senior Prom Committee; Big Sisters Club; Ski Club; F.T.A. JOHN SPLAINE, Mickey, 33 Center Street ANNE ST. GEORGE, George, 5 Volunteer Way; Chorus; Concert Choir; Ski Club; Homeroom Representative CAROLINE STEVENS, Cardine, 209 Follen Road; Orchestra; A.F.S.; Yearbook, Activities Editor; Senior Play PAMELA STOKES, Tobbi, 21 Oakland Street; Chorus; Cheerleading, Co-Captain; A.F.S.; Dance Club; Homeroom Representative; Unit Librarian; Junior Prom Committee; Ski Club LARS STONE, Stonie, 15 Sutherland Road; Football KAREN STORTS, 1 Grassland Street; Field Hockey JAMES STRINGOS, Homer, 50 Fletcher Ave- nue ROBERTO STROSCIO, Bob, 19 Weston Street DAVID STUART, 32 Vinebrook Road; Audio- Visual Club; A.F.S.; Assembly Committee; Math Team; Tennis Team; Ski Club; Ski Team DETLEV HANS SUDEROW, Det, 8 Drew Avenue; Soccer; Indoor Track; Outdoor Track; Varsity Club KEVIN SULLIVAN, Sully, 7 Sutherland Road; Wrestling; Football; Varsity Club HARRY TERKANIAN SUSAN CASE TOMS WILLIAM SUTCLIFFE JEANNE M. P. TESTA PETER TORCI LAWRENCE SWEET DEBORAH THURMAN MAUREEN TRANI 170 DAVID TAFT MARY TROPEANO KATHLEEN TALLE JOHN TOBIAS JEAN TROVATO PAUL TAVILLA DONALD TAYLOR DOUGLAS TOCIO 171 PAUL SULLIVAN, Sul, 73 Grant Street; Hockey, Manager WILLIAM SUTCLIFFE, Sydney, 4 Myrna Road; Ski Club LAWRENCE SWEET, Larry, 17 Tower Road; Leader Corps DAVID TAFT, Dave, 61 Bertwell Avenue; Library Staff, Vice-President; Rifle Club KATHLEEN TALLEY, Kathy, 18 Diamond Road; High Spot; Modern Dance Club; Dra- matics PAUL TAVILLA, 17 Burroughs Road; Foot- ball; Track; Leader Corps; Varsity Club; Homeroom Representative DONALD TAYLOR, Red, 259 Marrett Road; Rifle Club, President; Intramurals HARRY TERKANIAN, Terk, 352 Concord Avenue; Soccer; Basketball, Manager; High Spot JEANNE M. P. TESTA, Geni, 14 Hathaway Avenue; Leader Corps; Equestrian Club; F.T.A.,; Intramurals DEBORAH THURMAN, Debbie, 4 Scotland Road; High Spot, Managing Editor, Exchange Editor; Mass. Girls’ State JOAN P. TIERNEY, Joni, 76 Buckman Drive; Rifle Club JOHN TOBIAS, Jack, 198 Mass. Avenue CHERYL TOCIO, Cheri, 19 Ingleside Road; Leader Corps; Homeroom Representative DOUGLAS TOCIO, Doug, 19 Ingleside Road SUSAN CASE TOMS, Sue, 394 Marrett Road; Chorus; High Spot; Focus; Operetta; Library Staff PETER TORCI, Icrot, 13 Tower Road; Cho- rus MAUREEN LAURA TRANI, Reeni, 11 Slo- cum Road; Majorettes; Red Cross Club; Mod- ern Dance Club; F.T.A. MARY TORPEANO, 20 Revere Street JEAN TROVATO, 282 Mass. Avenue; Modern Dance Club JOHN W. VALLEY, 5 Moon Hill Road; A.F.S. DEAN VAN NORDEN, 447 Waltham Street Ei ANNE VASSEUR ROBERT WALLIS CHRISTINE VIANO PATRICIA WALSH | Wy CHERYL VAN VOOHRIS, 17 Thoreau Road; Ski Club; F.N.A.; Pep Squad GAIL VAN WINGERDEN, 21 Oxbow Road; Orchestra; N.H.S.; A.F.S.; Leader Corps ANNE VASSEUR, Annabell, 24 Rindge Road; Majorettes; Leader Corps CHRISTINE VIANO, Chris, 6 Audubon Road; Field Hockey; Tennis MONIKA VICHYTIL, Mona, 209 Follen Road; A.F.S.; Concert Choir KIM WAINWRIGHT, 509 Bedford Street; Ski Club ROBERT WALLIS, Bob, 556 Lowell Street PATRICIA WALSH, Pat, 3 Weston Street; Chorus ALICE MAI-LIEN WANG, 7 Wingate Road; A.F.S., President; N.H.S.; Yearbook; High Spot; Echo; Homeroom Representative; Junior Prom Committee JONATHAN BRADFORD WARREN, Jon, 39 Adams Street; Concert Choir; Chorus; Cross Country; A.F.S.; Operetta; Orchestra REBECCA WATHEN-DUNN, Becky, 44 Maple Street; A.F.S.; Focus; Ski Club STEPHEN WATSON, Wats, 38 Wachusett Drive; Basketball; Golf; Ski Club; Leader Corps JONATHAN WEEMS, Jon, 4 Eustis Street; Current Affairs Club; Rifle Club; Intramurals LEE WERTHEIM, Shultzy, 11 Minute Man Lane; French Club; Art Club; A.F.S.; Intra- murals KAREN S. WEST, 6 Angier Road; Tennis; High Spot DOROTHY WHEELER, Dotty, 31 Sylvia Street; Pep Squad STEPHEN WHITCOMB, Lurch, 29 Fern Street; Football; Hockey; Baseball; Leader Corps KAREN WHITE, Kare, 36 Eastern Avenue; Ski Club; Field Hockey; Gymnastics; Junior Prom Committee KENNETH WHITE, Ken, 16 Wheeler Road; Leader Corps WILLIAM WHITNEY, Bill, 24 Fairlawn Lane; Football; Track JONATHAN WARREN REBECCA WATHEN-DUNN STEPHEN WATSON JONATHAN WEEMS KAREN S. WEST DOROTHY WHEELER KENNETH WHITE WILLIAM WHITNEY RUTH WIDEROE, 4 Churchill Lane GLORIA WILCOX, 4 Pleasant Street; Young Moderns Club; Ski Club; A.F.S.; Equestrian Club; High Spot; Pep Squad; Junior Prom Committee NANCY WILKINS, Wilks, 10 Berwick Road; A.F.S.; Ski Club; Homeroom Representative; Modern Dance Club KENNETH WILLIAMS, Ken, 18 Kendall Road ROBERT WILLIAMSON, Bob, 150 Grant Street JOYCE WILSON, 103 Meriam Street; Pep Squad SARAH LEETE WILSON, 24 Bennington Road; Library Staff; A.F.S. JOYCE WISCHHUSEN, 39 Peacock Farm Road; Assembly Committee, Secretary; Year- book; A.F.S.; Pep Squad; Equestrian Club; High Spot; Ski Club; Junior Prom Committee; Young Moderns Club ARAN WISE, Bipo, 3 Winchester Drive; Track; Cross Country; Leader Corps; Football KAREN WITTE, 103 Outlook Drive; Home- room Representative; Field Hockey; Leader Corps; Basketball; Gymnastics; Junior Prom Committee DAVID P. WOODBERRY, 1454 Mass. Ave- nue; Chorus; Operetta; A.F.S.; Yearbook, Ac- tivities Editor; High Spot LYNNE WOODWARD, Pootsi, 24 Robinson Road; Cheerleading, Co-Captain; Homeroom Representative; Chorus; Ski Club; Young Moderns KENNETH YEOMANS, Ken, 956 Mass. Ave- nue; Student Council Representative; Football; Ski Club DAVID YOUNG, 86 Winter Street; Football; Baseball JACK H. YOUNG, Ben, 35 Harding Road; Golf Team; Wrestling; Ski Club, Vice-Presi- dent; Leader Corps TANIA ZAITZ, 34 Bridge Street ALBERT ZANI, Al, 37 Homestead Street RUTH WIDEROE KENNETH WILLIAMS ROBERT WILLIAMSON : | JOYCE WISCHHUSEN ARAN WISE CAMERA SHY MARY BARTHELEMY ANITA BERKOFSKY GAIL BURNHAM KAREN WITTE DAVID P. WOODBERRY' WALTER CICCOLO STEFAN FILIPOWSKI MARCIA GORMAN STANLEY HARLOW DANIEL HOYT ELAINE KINIKLIS LYNNE WOODWARD KENNETH YEOMANS GARY MERKSAMER THOMAS OSTROMECKI DARROW SHEPARD NANCY THIBODEAU KENNETH TUFTS DAVID YOUNG JACK H. YOUNG PETER ULCHAK MARC VILLA THOMAS WOLFE TANIA ZAITZ ALBERT ZANI 175 The Spirit of ’66 has been produced by Wm. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. It is a product of the Keller Velvatone Lithographic process. The pages are 80 pound White Anniversary Text with Black Ink for all printing. The end sheets are 65 pound Imperial Blue Strathmore Cover. The text of the Spirit of ’66 is set in Times New Roman type. The hard-bound edition is covered in Blue Roxite Linen and stamped with Blue Pigment Foil. This book is one in an edition of 1100 books—S00 hard-covers and 600 paper- bound. Anxiety, animosity, affinity, affection. Now we may look back and evaluate what we’ve done, or look ahead and de- cide what we shall do, but now is not the time to sit in the sun and close our eyes. We must see for ourselves what we are about, and now is the time to begin, at the end. 176 asy. oa RAT LA Pec al if Bid,’ rj Ui we | 4 : v7, | i ’ 4 „ . ‘we ‘ -  r ' ‘ b , 5 o ‘ a mn s Ls ‘ pies L oh tie (be Cve 7 : Ty ol tin, ; ul) ; if a i eal i be be 61, ac inate De i Mare ria = is e rae ae bt ; el : 7 : aa . ; } P ie i. j Fit Nae ie Âą va ny a4 asl , + 7 oo) . j , 4 ‘ ' hi, ; he i a Oe 7 hoe ye y? is bi a - 5 ‘Y. Âą ' o  nT a hy | @ « ws eAteeÂź yj M es 6) ites a tick ; at ain 1 Âą  C's we wbtiows of : 7 a . 4 Ves a ve we wie car , a 7 4 ere are aes se a i, oe | i = |S Ln ic el ae cat — et oe | i how age Ws brary ponte eves aye ary 5 H IANO Rony tent +! A a Oa) ‘ 4 ‘ heh MULE Udita YM the tH Leet s.: Fits DRG oe Ue ee VE ete iad | Dees f fate taÂź ) ti 2:65 egg ag 5%) hag yhs Wea LOA gary higiatate Fat afd hota Aur kota a SOT) t WO Ht Poe eeteig gh 6 as Bins tate. Lae SOn aT ae HP OTR, Bo ae CACO Ow ry 46 ale @ Vesee eo ne re lan , fa CRSP OO DEE Se ye Pot SEL tap 8 CF DFO AL WOES ‘ et Peto pe ery b O98 fates Chea te r CN yaar a


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Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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1968

Lexington High School - Lexington Yearbook (Lexington, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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