Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT)

 - Class of 1973

Page 1 of 280

 

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1973 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 280 of the 1973 volume:

r Q i ik 0 F Q 12 . R 3 If L10 ickc The Faculty The Year: The Individual and The Community The Seniors Senior Index S M 1 Y! 6 A Loomiscellany 7 Barbara Erickson ,, , 1 5 'LM W - , ,sg Y Y w w bjx ,f ib,s x b'Y W Y I F vm DE D I' M x Frances and Frank Grubbs Frederick Torrey Aubrey Loomis Peggy Barnes Z2 'W' 9 av , 4 Q Phil Lebowitz Dodi Britton 6 l Leila Carlson Elizabeth Spears Rich Johnson Louisa Servici 'X 4 7 Don J off ray Tom Enright .nguuu HB5 , . Al Beebe ww ,ff m x'x 4' . 5+ . 'Y K. SL I 14 H sw QQ L5 1 E21 ' 1 mf f M ri 4 K gr 3 .... V. Nfwp , K v , X 5 2' mf. 1. Q ' i HW - K ,,., fu f Ebb. 4 A-ig' Q J A iv - 2 . .,y. M J oe Stookins Liz Traggis G .5 .V wavy 'En 1 . N ,kg y -x. .inn X -s .4,xA Q '. ,wg ff . 'u,,,- 3 .,v,f6l,-' bg, . Q' A ii! . a ' ,eh u K. 4. .win ,Muff h7: n'kw4 AV' ' f 1 . u A fb 7 ' :'n?'i4'K..'.'s?fr -,A-, 5'x, A ' 5 1 + H.. if .fu ,f ,U . , ,fig 1 V A fa Wsfk' 'Q r , .Q v, .Q jg 'H 1 112' .swf filo, .4 , .H opp, Harvey K nowles Dave Haller Jim Wilson Ulm Leila Carlson Alexander Gregorieff I 2 'I y se f 'S H. x ' win 0 sux Steven Opalick Peter Stevens Richard Venable Howard Baker lv 9 1 ' f K, ' f, he IMT? ' mi 6 ' 5 ff fi' l, 9365 K 1 Bill Hoppe L l Bob Southall Sue Greene Sam and Kathy Pierson l ,. is 1 JA illv me Dale Clayton Sandy Flash 5 Q w .wf f ..f -Lkb YQ ., mg sy 'SPS W : :- K - Q, . - J K,,,,w'M M .... 1 - S - . ,rw .- .- Y., K , 'f , ' . . , ,., . . K - M gr K ri ,K .3 ,.r.2.i.1.s, awk.. . 1 Bruce Carlsten in - S .uf if , '51 ,W-ani. 'T -Y A . M. .N 15:55 5 f 4 rf' fx O' 1 Q 1 15 David Simpson Rita Adams 'I6 Ron Marchetti Dan Wells if, .WL 'H ,l ww yizf g EZTY ' g Bonnie Stewart Claudio Remirez I7 Q' The Tzeutschlers Dorothy Fuller 1 a Aaron Pratt Martha Porteus Dodi Britton Squirrel Norris Joel Sandulli Peter Crlm , A: 1- .. 1 X 9 ek , X X -we X Q -f S X N 0 K , N Q X x.X.:5,,., an v,,.,,.. g '12-Q4 Charlie Vola Ted Plamondon 5' Bob Hartman Dick White Sam Stevenson .K ,eduf Q nn, ...,..m Bob DiCurci0 Sam Cutler Evelyn Smith Rusty McTeague 22 Sandy Hopton Bev Hall ssl 'WHvm,l.,,, H X 0 'FS M' xi. ml , :V Q .vp.'S,g -an 5 4 W, ,' 9 1- X -'51 nm lffyox Q- 5 rv' ,119 K l . K ' NCAA, ma-fx W -A ' wi ' if . ,,-1 . S.. N .f ...Aw- U X E if-f' K Peter Martocchio Doug Fenner Barry Moran Emu.. .... .ms R 'nl xg. we U I Marcia Sanderson Carol Hartman ,N.f,.a1'i ' .f .vi Glover Howe n f1Ti 'f T'j?f 'QI Walter Spencer Ben Meyers Eleanor Johnson X. Km 27 ,-ya 3, R , x.x, m mv? x. LL Q xx I ' I , I ,ff W, L f X 4 YI, N.: ' :- 64 :K x xr fit , .R , s ,W GNN? ,Q -A Lg 'www R, 'af'Fgwi ' 52245 wx qw . vvkwyi if R Wim Joel Sandulli , '- 'ww' c-,wil , -1 S, .-u.-n,w,y. 31 list 41,- Bank Greene V Stan Shlmklls Hal Sullivan Glover Howe Spencer Grey 30 George Hickok 1.4 ff Sherman Shelton Edie Treadway Frank House Janet Daggenhart Sue J off ray Helen Cohn SL, W Keith Palmer ,f ,' mumm-.s Marci Siedor Ginny Baker Bernita Sundquist Barbara Norris Q an . fi 1 4 If , , ff 5 f - S 1 +1 2 ,Q 1 JA? 'fi' , if ww H, 311 'dkfkh 4 'Q , N' wp f, 45 , 'Q Q .-an Q W K ',v X do f M Mg, ,Q vi . Q ' Q ii .,, 'I Q, is W. 1 . I' I -1. H., ii 2 If 3 wh- .51 , IK, u .1 H 4 -w 5 4 ' R a as 4, 5 9 Q az! N LM 4, ,F rg fx 1 ,, ,R .. 2 1 , ., , 5 1. , V' '-44 ':i1:.,,' ?1, k S 5- at :'-:.' 2 Q 2 :Q P 1 - eg v : if is 'Y , ,A Chuck Vernon Ray Lev Jane Barton kjv I W, H' I I .iq . ,!Q,,,-x!1.- I h , ,iii-g.f4.E.,-.f,, Marianne Devine K., an fhdqm Chick High Hal Sullivan Frank Grubbs Bill Eaton 'V' ., ' Mun ,,,,M'f'n in Q Hn: W ui, HZUWMT 'iiminzn ,g Wilma:-w W lla'iQ1Ai'W m 43l'lllS'9 ,, n'G'q2 13181, planter W' ?UVW'i'n Mtw,,,,, mauve V WM 4 ,i A :'. liill 3 r l Q1-'W 4l,4' fdnf' X W' ii .- ,N-.W...........,.. J 1' Q H5 'fflr Marilyn Rabetz Elaine Lowengard Duncan Newcomer Margot Torrey Q x 1 ,,-. V 4 ' . ml gif, f 'Wh' 2' lj in f E Mm f , wif: . nf ek New 2 aa HWUUIHM 6 2 1'7 ' H 4 5.7 I' 5' ' - ' 7 ..,,. f, A f !' W,f ' 1.5 VMMMW VA K V I f-nu ' , W' M-K..-A., The Individual and the Community From the student exchanges at South Kent, from internal crises here on campus, and from the reading of influential authors such as Slater and Fromm, an atmosphere of self-examination has arisen this year. The major issue this year concerned the quality of life on our campus. The Senate discussed this is- sue and died consequently. This topic is one that confronts almost every com- munity-just how much individualism and diversity can exist before the sense of belonging and the fabric of a community is destroyed. To what extent can an individual do his or her own thing before everyone's life becomes so frag- mented that it begins to lose all meaning? Slater describes the three elements that give life quality: the desire for community-to live in trust and fraternal cooperation in a visible collective entity, the desire for engagement-to come directly to grips with social and interpersonal problems, the desire for depen- dence-to share responsibility for the control of one's impulses and the direc- tion of one's life. What we hope to illustrate in this section of the book are the ways in which members of Loomis-Chaffee do their own thing and express their individ- uality, within the community, and to suggest that the fullest experiences are those that are shared with others and function as a part of a community. We believe that life is like being part of a team. Each player has not only his own responsibility to himself, but also the responsibility to his teammates. We real- ize that a member of the team playing for his own glory, is a failure to the rest of the team. And likewise a player who is suppressed, and not allowed to ex- press or demonstrate his individual talents is also a failure. Thus it is the spe- cial chemistry in the participation of the individual within his community that propogates success. K jgfgsskh l . ' I ...qi . . . doing our own thing and expressing our individuality within the community . . . our fullest experiences are those that are shared with others. VV . 2, , i 'f'1'5lw1ww1,LQ Mr'-y1.w ?' R was s r s In the competitive atmosphere one part of the total self is revealed. 1: -We Y We see that this year has been one in which this balance between the indi- vidual and community has begun to swing a little away from the do your own thing atmosphere: and we believe that the events and activities shown on the following pages reveal ways in which the individuals can and do express them- selves and their human identity while gaining the satisfaction and fullness de- rived from this sense of belonging as a functioning part of a community. The student involved in his work job in the dishroom, the player on his team, the musician in his rock group, the actor in a play, the artist in the studio, the photographer in Apercu and even the student living as a member on a corridor, all know that their happiness and sense of fulfillment are derived from their interaction within the community. It is only this kind of interaction, Professor Bergman reminded us in a Humanities Lecture, that the full self can begin to be revealed. We have realized that in order to gain this sense of self-fulfillment one must look beyond the academics of the school, for in the classroom each student must compete against one another. This competition hinders the growth and the re- vealing of the whole person. Only in the extra-academic pursuits, can the feel- ing, emotional self be revealed. Hence, it is only when the complete self is re- vealed that the full person can function. W a K MX ? 91 'Q xxx mf Q ,W 'B Q. 4- , , my sam wx ww A 1 , 4 an K f 1 S, ,ww- ' W x 4 an I an - 3 N Q Q , R!! ' .FQ-ff' 4. , . fl 1 ,,.an3lv-.ni-can f :..':: . .LVL xi H ' k JA f ' I V V' 4 7 w- .- WM ,, , 5- - ., 'E' Li L, . ,S f H' I .,- 4 . 'V' J , fi-,ff , .win ' f V ' ' -Q-if .W--1-1,--ew-HM' .- 'Ww,,... M ,, fy ,,. 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I 'W 5, L, I kr , , MQ V, f A H L -fig-X, IM- S,-wg , . W M- Q -Wi: Y ff --M , fx -if .5 '-A T X -.ax M S ' ji aff' -K +31 :gh pw' jfgfi 'H 'f ,,5'f- Q , M-,,,' 7 1 av- fx. A- f -ff 4' V -. W L.., -if rg .-.', a9?iL 735- ' V 4 W? 'Fi ff' 1' ,iw .4 M fy- - mm, M X .,-. . .4 ,Qu . If' M - V. -f fi' fm -. 4 'Tw-,M . W- - Q ig . ' Q-,rm L Q-+1-- --Q.. fi M 'W 1-2 -iv -- - --Q ' ' Q ' N .- W . ' Wm M if LA 1 7 1. 'iv' X , f Q1 LL'W '-bi fp fm? A fd .Vi V - F H W f' K , ,, , Y A I' M wg. ,, . mmf- V .. w ,M W ,, Q4 ., , H, , .1 .H M, , .- wr -1P1y,,k,k-. lyk. A A, -V I , ,V gl , V N, I -.,, L. Lggw 5-3, iw, .W K-, l M K i Z - X V4 H V, . M A y ,fi Nigga, ,V-Wm M I , ga A fn .LLM ww M L- A L WM ,? T'gl,L1 8 'vi . f M- Mk , , . - ,. L , ,, , . ,, Q , H 2- -Y - - f K f f f wa... Mm wfx il , X. ff if .1 J TS' 'nv gui R . 5137'- -f 4 w, W. 3' W' f M Alvz, , '7f4g7,Wfy-A K I 3 , :. 435524. mzwsfmzif VIS: Wi, ' 1' , , Mama , --num in QQ 'fq ' 47 .3 ' : The urge to merge! When we're apart, life's without heart, But then comes the start of the surge . . . 'cause It's never too late To co-educate- The urge, the urge, to merge! s i ily! ' ?TN2Hf-1'!',i.?'Xp' K' Q K I ,-Qlff : ',' M3153 I 1 'S' Q , J xvdmn., ...-.,, Q I ,Z 'r7 ' s v ,,T,,W,., i 1 l if o ,.. , if N , J ...a , t ,. if I ,f----fi gi, , I 1 i Q , , :.. ..', Q, . ' I . ----- -- , I- I-, , - , Q V ff. ' V . Wax : QQ . 6 j g Q -, 11 ' Q 1 I ms N, .. 5 5 -bp: 7 - A 'W A VA The first bus of the season waited outside Chaffee. Taking the leaping step from the outside world into the bus, an anxious atmosphere over- whelms us. Wax lips and bubble gum are passed around. Headbands around some of the heads and plastic mouthguards jammed between teeth, are intended to psyche-out the opponents. The Season was unforgettable. Every practice and game was fought with ex- ...I . ,mmih wwfaff' -I ., Wuswwunm-csv' '-'- 'f tremes of emotions. Anxiety-what will the starting line-up be, will I get to play both halves? calmness-felt only in the middle of a game or after a game well playedg de- spair-seeing the starting line-up, not play- ing both halves, a supposed victory gradually turning into a decided lossg hope-good mo- rale, the opposition not looking too tough, fury and tears-the ref or coach not being fair, a game called off for rain, a really mean, low opponent, aoceptance and laugh- ter-a victory, the pre-game bus ride, good playing all around, all of these emotions were evident numerous times. In retrospect, it was a rewarding but diffi- cult season. One of the most upsetting things was watching an astounding record of 6-1-0, be transformed in an end of the sea- son nightmare, to a mediocre 6-4-0. What happened? I suppose we just finished by playing some of the best teams on some of the worst days. However, we played those last games well and with spirit, just as we had played the first. 51 It was a long trip, we anticipated it and pre- pared for it. Before we left we knew nobody eX- pected much of us, and only a handful came to watch but those things don't count. It seems in- credible that we made it. So many different per- sonalities found themselves together for a few hours a day within the boundaries of the field. They weren't trapped there though, that's what made it so cool, they were just there becuase they wanted to play soccer. The guys did what they wanted to off the field, but on the field they did what they had to do. Everybody knew their capa- bilities and limitations and recognizing your limi- tations is the first step towards any achievement. On the field we were a machine doing its job, systematic practicing had molded our style. In ev- ery situation we were prepared and knew what we had to do. Everyone knew their job, we can thank the coaches for this, not everyone did it all the time, but we have only ourselves to blame for our lack of totality. We were far from perfect, everyone made mis- takes. Some only they knew, others the whole world seemed to see. Our strongest asset was our attitude which overshadowed even the most bla- tant flaws. Attitude has everything to do with athletics. It is as, or more important than skills and stamina. Our attitude was good because we were realistic. Sure we were out to win, every- body loves to win, but when winning becomes an end, in itself it's time to stop playing. Winning is just a means to a greater end. playing soccer was a means to a very positive end: having a good time. Regardless of the record we had a good time. That's what counts. n v 5 5 ff V... ZWM ?fW'F??417M1'5 3i1,7W4 f L'!fc5iWWmL f1KW 'E'3MWL 5 . L, L5 4. 1-fifgglsll i -.Q ' mi A, Q .f 5 .. if .fi 5. 'sf-,W Qs S if Ni is mf' Kingswood 2 Loomis Loomis 1 Mt. Hermon Loomis 3 Watkinson Loomis 4 Wilbraham Pomfret 3 Loomis Williston 2 Loomis Loomis 0 Deerfield Suffield 5 Loomis Loomis 2 Avon Hotchkiss - 2 Loomis Loomis 3 Taft Loomis 2 Choate Kent 3 Loomis 4-6-3 in Mm Qififfff 'I W Y .s N ai? 5 1. ,Bw 5 Q' S ,J Y ,. -. nr swim: ff rt? fr -N if an we l ,H W.. . i' ii is kiyv Q xr vw. A . N K. 31 Q yn an 4 x 8 , N . f . 5 mf SQ,g2,,Q' 3. xwg, f aw ,F - iualgga, ala . .L ,X - KE , Q' x fzega-X Q W. - 8' A W ' N S2250 if i av - ' 5 3' It all starts in the middle of the summer. In the rolling hills of southern Pennsyl- vania, a tall shirtless figure, shining with sweat, strides along a country road, the first challenge, about two months away. Along the banks of the Connecticut river four people match strides headed for the tobacco field, they too think of the chal- lenge. One runner alone tackles the terrain of New Mexico, it will soon be time. The first week in September, back at school the team gathers. Through the hot, muggy, Connecticut valley, each person carefully observes his running mate, and thinks Is he better than I? . Trips to the beach help cut the ever building tension as the first confrontation grows near. Fitness and endurance are still the major empha- sis. Each man learns to expect a hard ten mile run every day. The only meal of the day becomes dinner. Lunches are reduced to salad plates, cottage cheese and half a pear. The time is drawing nearer. People start to get trigger happy. Rumors start to fly, predictions on the outcome of the season appear in the Log. The tension builds and the pace speeds up. Uniforms are put on the rack, the manager takes out extra watches from the storage room. The course is given a final grooming. Two weeks to go. There is only one common bond of the runner, they know they have one of the best teams in New England. There are going to be many fierce battles in the future. The day comes for the first encounter. In seventeen minutes it is all over. Loomis has won. Most of the tension is gone. The structure of the team takes shape. Inter- team rivalry begins. People fight for the same position. Three weeks later Loomis has won six meets and lost none. The structure of the team is set. Practices are for tone not fitness. Times and records paly a greater role. The weather gets colder and the rain falls. The nerves of the top runners begin to fray, and the New England come and go. And with it come joy and heartbreak, Loomis does well. Two more dual meets are left. The first is won easily. The one expected to be the hardest is easily won. The season is closed with a decisive win. Five months, eleven wins, two loses, many disappointments, a dog-bite, pneu- monia, days of mental anguish, days of joy after that movement on the hot rolling hill of southern Pennsylvania. 57 WA e. 5 ' ,. t 'Aa Us -1 , 41:11. ,A . K ,V I-we ,--, I 35 X, f MSE? JM Loomis Loomis Loomis Loomis Loomis Loomis Taft Loomis Loomis Hotchkiss Loomis Loomis Loomis Windsor High Milford Acad Kingswood Choate Deerfield Williston Loomis Pomfret Wilbraham Loomis Avon Cheshire Kent 11-2-0 The 1972 team was different. It was a business team . There were no Superstarsg nevertheless people had the desire to win in competition. These guys were winners and they knew it. They were never over-confident, just self-confident. They subjectively acted on their physical emotions, never stopping to think about the obstacles that stood in their way. These players never had to get up for a game. They had a perpectual highness. Their pursuits were incred- ibleg like locusts swarming on food, they frustrated and intimidated the opposing quarterbacks, giving them and their backs nowhere to hide. Pure desire was paramount in giving them the ability to hold a block a second longer or to get up and pursue after being knocked down. These were the things that made up our team. We were indi- viduals, but our respect for each other and the confidence we had in all our players, brought us so close together that it made every game a genuine team effort. Probably the climax of the season was beating Kent and getting the silver spoon back which they had kept for three years. Another highlight was breaking Kingwood's thirteen game winning streak. On Founder's Day in front of a capacity crowd Williston was beaten for the first time in three years. Loomis football seemed to be going downhill on a path to obscu- rity. This group of players reversed the trend and revived the pro- gram at Loomis. The players put the class back into football by dressing in colorful uniforms, by establishing a deadly home and by running from a wishbone-T that the opponent and fans found equally explosive. Playing on the team was truly unique in the best of ways. 1' ,f.i -,Mg If:-' .- an V , if Q-QQ' 3' as ' V'1,, . a Q af' ,f 'f Y 2 a 2 ,hw YM fk, ,, V if ' ' A ' , ? L 13 if ? X .if .. up H if-' fag .' ry?3'2f SMQ.,.- z - my sf ,4 W L P 1224 g ffwffi Q f f 1, ?v Ig 4! . 53X'7 gx? Z4 9 Q, ,Mu 163 40, ,E Sp AL fx: . 63? I 51 8 3 ,gil What can you say about a team that goes 6-2 for the season, barely losing to once- beaten Wilbraham and unbeaten Hotchkiss? This was the best record attained since Coach Eaton has been at school. The team scored more points and held the opponents to fewer points than in any of the previous five seasons. 62 E. 1 l li v 4 'V XL ,v k L' ' K 5 Q ,fl I . I' '-i: ?Q2' ,,- 5+f':' . My . 5 V , A h ., , 4 , X b , ' 5 ' 15.4,-'VV 9 it wa I W W hive-V 1--Ifkzfw f Q 7 f Y in LQ . wzziw I M H ,-:L-r 5, V i V. N' - ' KK.'L 1 L Y f 2 Q LLLKAL ai if L' , lm A, , L' A ' YL- Q, V ,V ,W . ,h,, W k ' ' gn f V V ' ki 5 .V A 5 ' I ,lf -2. 'H- f5 ..'a1'f-. 1 pf j UQn ' .V ' -V . ' ., my ' - is 'N f . V ,, , m f ' V4 .,', --t 224VQ:S7Qgg rv f V FV-Q 'iw 53. . if-yiV ff 'V+ '- Safely 'A'L 'f ,fve,s' W, . ,T AV' ma ' f Veg-V f Sw ' X ' V, , j!i'iggi:,, .,., fig, V, V -h.k kr K, , .gg KLVV W ' C f ' fy ,--, ' ,YL A, R. fm, ,'L- gww'-. ,fp 2 ff fV'1 , 2,V 'VE-P51 - -. z' I , .I K A A . .,,,,,, . .wg 559555 iq W g M K , Q , V. mf , ,, .m, ' P , 2 A X V. V ' -QQ f -ff ,,7,L K V ' g 4 . g , . 1 - V fi , I A im V ' ,' 'fi it af, - . -ze, . -my k If A we I K W W ,, MQQWELV I , I W V V V, -'V - V. V 'ii fs V 1 L. . 'W , ' J Aff -r faux w . ig, 75,455 ,Vw fix, kg JE , V, V Wi 2 4 Va 9 ., , fi k V a 1 V TQ Y gf YW 7' -'Ke' f f V - , Vp Q , ., , - f V V V f , y it i V 1 5? QWNV fi ., gf w ,, , ,ig gf Q K? ' 7 Sa J 11 V' f YMEVQQ-VV V1 A X' 1, S 9 11 V Q ' 4 M ,3 , , ' H' V - 4 4, fir f 3 . is ,V V V. ff it V, ,b V , -5. . 1-V Q ,Vu 71, -A 'V .z ff f-QQ 4V Vi K ,F L, kV, I MA Rim , if, M K2 XV , 2 QV 1 , , ,A , in ,Q .V ,., V . V V f V V ,V ,, L M ' L 3' , , Q, ,V . V M VV, RV Vw new l V , V AV ,,, V ,Ml ,aw , ,. , H qw, A N XE ,6 ,. , K i - gig 'r em! r.-, g,1,,Lg - we in pf E sg H3221 Vw?--ex V S ., , 7e1?fW alla sam, . f ,Q + W M -5 W if wi' 4 bi ' K me 'W' L' Vi fig M Q . K, V H ma J 9 Y . fag, -.,,k, , S ' V V1 I .SVV W - A QV - is . LQ-A V . W, 7 fx, E - : L it my, gi. Z , gli 5 xi , k ww R K Vw V, M L X V V ,iw , , ,a W-5 W4 M, 1 V.: Y ii : ., y 'Q 1 'ii V' ' i , R , k f ff my 5 K V f'5N, H, ,k , . W K ,V ,gm sg ,L an A E ,k V. V Y ., Q 3 k K, X Q '- '- .ws fx, 'QR 3 ' ' ' E 1 A 4- Jag Q A ,.,xfQ?b..i, E N' 49 Q, 1 V V ,. wg , ak ,Q Q if , V ,,,e5H fi ,A-QL i 5: . 1 Q , 3, , is an V kg? , A ' R V A .bv QW kd , W 1 X ,S Q 8 V V ,, I in A - V, 3 - 1' ms . Y W , 5 is 1 5 , vig? ,, M W is ' my .g V K Sf he ,V-, i V . Q 'K A lv V. ,V 6 Q' as 4, x W 1 'W'-Mya M' . ,L , 3. s Q, ' , '13 NSE? Pamp- ,,.-f-' ,gp-mr as KN. hu-avi' fi 1 -cswnmmk N 'Ye it x K' 1: px N R 'R' ' fb 115, ,gl gig., ,V x Xfw ,V X an ff 5' . . if 3 . Vg. V --yf ' A , 4 I 533 4555 ng K VR. , x 4 Lee 3 V Q'-'ffm -Mm WE, 'ire 1' iq? Jr , Q v 1 A -w, 1 wszfwivif' vw-W gi , 'vs Mk Y' . . . life is like being part of a team, each person contributing . . . . . . this is where the individual is revealed . . . 67 1 Where I come from one can see miles on end of gray dusty earth, if the sun ever shatters through the low slung clouds. I was raised on a flat and monotonous plain that revealed to my eyes corn field after soybean field after potatoe field after corn field. In the winter we sled down my uncle's barn ramp, attaining speeds just great enough to allow us to fake a spill at the bottom. I have ob- served these sights with interest, but always from afar, without any contact between us. Eventually I left home to go away to school, last year I climbed my first cliff. Mountains have a particular appeal. From one perspective they are an ultimate threat to man, from another they cultivate him to his greatest potentialities, bringing out all that lurks un- touched in his nature. Mountains are an alien en- vironment to which man is ill-adapted to survive. Climbing them can be dangerous and brings scant fame. However, being a hostile environment that poses severe threats, men must tax themselves mentally, spiritually, and physically to survive the cliff's challenge. Doing so brings out undiscovered facets and unrealized limits and capacities in one's self. Climbing becomes an intimate relation- ship between man and the mountain, a loving one. As I look up above me now I see a rough hewn beam, black and splintery, set off against the fresh plaster of the ceiling. I grasp it. It looks to be so simple to pull myself up to it, but I can't, not from want of strength but because it is simply beyond the realm of my power to do so. This I am brought to an understanding of myself, who I am, and of what I am capable. Is this harsh? I think not. Compare this to an organ fugue, violent and passionate, struggling ever higher with deter- mined fury until it finally blossoms forth into ethereal light and serene beauty that pervades the listener to the extent that he himself is united with it. It is thus, after struggling with pain, muscle, anger, and frustration, I pull myself onto the top of the cliff. Suddenly I can rest, my breathing slows, my body is pleasantly relaxed. The world passes in slow motion and I am in it. This year was destined to be either the begin- ning or the end of rock climbing at Loomis. Within the first few weeks of school over thirty people had signed up to go climbing, two or three times the number of the previous year. To some this was evidence of a heightened sensitivity among students toward life and nature, an in- 68 creased desire to find themselves. I, on the con- trary, viewed this as a disastrous turn of events. Would the beauty of climbing and that intimate relationship fostered between the cliff and the climber not vanish under the Loomis-Chaffee hordes? This I was afraid would sound the death knell of climbing at Loomis. As it turned out, I was wrong. This has become a beginning, not an end. There were not screaming hordes, instead, a great deal of intensive climbing was accomplished. When I first started climbing I imagined it to be an incalculably dangerous effort, violently death defying. However, climbing as we do it at Ragged or Monument Mountain is not dangerous as long as no one gets careless. As an association of people, this is the great paradox we faceg climb- ing is an internal psychic experience, but is de- pands on an external force fthe belayerl in order to take place. In no way is it comparable to win- ning something, beating someone, or competing for a championship. On the ideal climb, one that takes one to one's limit but not beyond, the climb- er loses all track of time, feeling perfectly ade- quate, lost in the present. The air, the rock, the self are all that one needs. Afterwards one joins in communion with others who have shared these experiences. By stretching alone to the limit of one's self, fulfilling one's destiny, the individual climber is brought to a closer, more intimate knowledge, love and acceptance of his or her companions. With the next snowfall my uncle's barn will col- lapse-a great tragedy since it was so old and so beautiful. We can do nothing for her, she is too expensive a mistress. And when.I walk up the ramp it will lead to nothing, not even a good tumble down, for I have grown and no longer is the height challenging. And as the earth wrenches itself from the sun, and evening's last shafts throb red and gold and silver upon the At- lantic's vast expanse I see only gauzy detergent of the high tide and the pop corn and bubble gum splotched boardwalk. Ultimately, even the best and most remote cliffs will be destroyed, leveled under the bolts and pitdns of climbers and the lit- ter of tourists, but the children they nurtured will endure. Their Wisdom will enrich us. This is their eternity. -Edmond Horsey ls 'L Q- ,. ' Qhiiffgf ' , experience. 2243 , . '-. fl 'lf E13 4 s f b kgs. , ruff: 191 ,,-ff' M, is vs M 0 'wc 1 Q ' W 5 S 3 ,, ' ' Y-4. Q' is 1 Q L 5 In one sense it fclimbingy is the most vitally dependent act one can dog in another it estranges one the most from others. On the ideal climb, one that taxes one to one's limit but not beyond, the climber loses all track of time, feeling perfectly adequate, lost in the present. Climbing IS internal psychic ll David cmd Lisa, gn ff M an Q 0' 5 1 72 3 Y ,ff -.Q , ,ff -f wp, Wnwyh, W -H I 43, ,,,W,,, W W 'wwf ' ,zu W l ' M ' f ,yr -5 QM M fam M, W' ww pu, ww , 1 wf,,,, ywmfyy ,mmf Most of education consists of some people trying to convince other people that nothing is really going on Unfortunately at Loomis, this seemed to work too well. It took no work at all to make this belief a fact. Students had been shutting everyone out for perhaps, shut- ting themselves ini for so long. They seemed like partic- pants in a dead game of hide and seek. The seekers stopped looking. The hiders had found such secure hiding places that they didn't want to to come out to the light where they might be seen. Very few people communicated at all, touched or saw anyone else. Very few people allowed themselves to be seen. one studcnt's perspective L. .-...rf 5 .- f M ,sg A . ,.,, , .,.. , II gli A y. 'iii ,hw lx ...a-fri, .. Q... JL , , f v 7 Y 2 -. v nv Num x ! f it M Mal rm- L0 Ns Lu Ln Go Ge As Se ,. . W, ., 'Rb 'sf Av yzf kNb Mo la 5: 5' W. if V: , Cs Bc Hf To W Rc ? 2: in 4: 22 ff Fv Ro ff La uce 'vf ,Nd xl V IR fl. is U- A , .f +1 .. M .. H . . z 1. 'Q i, 25 3. 'f at Ru Rh Pd A9 Cd In Sn Sb Te I 'f 5 fr fa 'r Ai? H? E if 'H Os Ir Pt Au TY Pb B6 Po At Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb D? . 5 We Q Af WTF: 'vu nu 'No Mm. Am Em sk -up CENTRAL SCIENTIFV' The Seminars . ' ff ,wilful X .w i I if al' if The Seminars gave the students and faculty a chance to express their individual feeling or emotional self to the community rather than the everyday academic self-thus representing the other side of his or her personality. 78 an Wi 1 S .H- N ark -iwisw xfif-ltr 'xiklihx 'Q 3 4 fi a Is if I 2 2 1 Z 1 Q E 5 Q 81 gm I ,P fm W W 3' pf, , , ' 'I',L,.w-+1 NN ww W'Ei1'wuu. A f,Z '....,..,m wr, -. Sis 1. fw- vdf if w fx if 5 8 he GQ 'lug i -419 V Nxizw This year's basketball team was like a frosty cold milkshake. Five players blended their talents to- gether to make a superb drink. A daring heart and soul rebounder and shooter-two bustling guards play- ing mostly defense but adding as- sists and points too-a clutch shooter, rebounder, and defensive standout, and a consistant picture shooter. Five gutsy men and a bench meshed together to make a team that battled incessantly, won contin- ously, lost occasionally, and devel- oped a special team unity. Don't believe it was easy. The four month season began early in Novem- ber with skull sessions to familiarize ourselves with a new offense before we hit the court. It was brought to our attention that due to club and J. V. practice we could only get one hour of practice a day. Without de- bate, a 6:30 post Loomis suppertime practice was scheduled. Dayboys and grades suffered, but conquering odds and difficulties adds to the con- tentment and satisfaction. The Loomis squad is woefully lacking in height, said the Kingswood In- vitational Tournament booklet, it looks like a very iffy season. Some- one needed glasses! As the team became accustomed to doing, they surged from a 23-6 defecit to a 57-54 sweet victory in the K.I.T. final. Not bad for a team favored to come in seventh. The ingredients fought to win five games by three points each, one game by one point, and were invited to the New England Prep School Championship Tournament. Some teams don't win but have a good sea- son because of the experience of working together. This team not only worked together, played for each other, and established life-long memories and relationships, but won too! Mr. Meyers can make one hell of a milkshake! 86 58- A S515 N ' To many, wrestling may seem like a dull, grinding sport. But for those acquainted with it this year, spectators and grapplers alike, it provided some of the most dramatic, athletic moments of the year. Three home meets came down to the last match, providing the Loomis crowd with something to get hoarse over other than basketball. But aside from the team's almost uncanny ability to come through in the close ones, what will be the most remembered was the team's youth. The lineup included four sophomores and a freshman. The youngsters certainly made their presence felt and were a chief source of the groups boundless enthusiasm. Watson, Nome, Pelgrift et. al. never ceased to enjoy their tag-team, pile-up style wrestling during an usually all too tedious practice. The decisive factor in the teams unexpected success was its coach- ing stuff. Coaches Pierson and Carlsten initiated a two-pronged strategy aimed at both mental and physical preparation. Psyche was developed in a number of unique ways including a wrestling tri- via examination and written goals for the season. Not so unorthodox was the emphasis on conditioning by rigorous workouts and daily routine running. There were no superstars on the team, but this is not to say that individuals didn't stand out. When an individual had an outstanding match, the whole team could join in the euphoria, especially because it was usually the second effort of one or two that made the differ- ence in all the meets that we Won. For example . . . Ben Gross's clutch meet-winning pins-a feat he performed in four meets . . . Ed Deming's humiliating dump. Ed got up so quickly that his opponent was facing him one second only to be put on his back in the form of a little ball, all in one graceful move . . . Joe Zautra's key pins against Taft and Hopkins given Loomis a come from behind tie and victory . . . Al Templeton's riding time Victory over Taft's captain . . . Ed Quinn's come from behind pin at Hopkins allowing Loomis an in- credible win from a 27-6 deficit . . . Garth Gibson's 6 minute plus against a tough Taft opponent . . . John Beardsley's hard fought wins against Wilbraham and Kent . . . Bart Litvin's dedicated ef- forts coming in for injured Beardsley. Dennis Watson's overtime victory against last year's state finalist and then succumbing to the eventual state champ by a one point decision . . . Nick Allen's first period pins against Kent and Williston . . . Ken Werner's upset at Kingswood and five point move on the state champion at his weight class . . . Mark Nome's exciting wins at Hopkins and his strategy ploy against Taft . . . The refreshing wins by freshman Pelgrift fcoming in for weight weary Steve Demingl at Cheshire and Kent . . . Perhaps it was grinding, but it was never dull. W Emi i ex ,S , f Q is f' 53 RJ H .Q 9 2 4 A A Jeff' . LL Q .. ,K3,,1, I .. Q V 0. 1 ... 4. ab, ,. vbfgw gi if WJ, 'fk, A ff5Q.,,'fv W + 7 f aj? L +7 f AAI f : 2 f ,'w? ,f ,gg Lf' if ,f f A wiffsf 3 J . ,X I 1,757 Y! ,',f. ff 44 V 'mf ., 'M A W L.,e,,. - W. as Q k X s X VN,s:gf'f'.e - X. it X C ,, C Q , s tw The Loomis Alpine Ski Team started its second season with an en- thusiastic crowd. We all participated in the essential pre-season training period of running, lifting weights and soccer. We were far better con- ditioned for skiing than last year's team. The difficult decision of cut- ting down to the more feasible sized team was done by Coach Ron March- etti after Christmas vacation. We were a young team, having no expe- rienced seniors on the team. Unfor- tunately the other teams did. Sam Eddy, Jon Leffel and Mike O'Malley were the only returnees from last year's team. The rookie boardsmen were sophmore Kin Schildbach, Bill Leete, Bruce Schine, and Bill Cohen. The season wasn't overly success- ful in terms of a win! loss record. Al- though the members of our team were outclassed in an individual basis, the team shared a 'esprit de corps throughout the entire season. With 10093 returning veterans and this team spirit, Coach Marchetti awaits a much improved season next year. I ,,, uah'?' if 'N 3 VA J A' V 4 IRQ ,A-aura, A A .. wc -S 'J' .- rv Nw. 5. Q E 'E ur wx ,EX -i 9' Q X. :fe um. ' .1 ,wk I .Q y k.- is ' '- -a l l .Q H we W, ,, .,, is .E H.. ' w -Q . 'E-- ,',: K d -- :. .,,: The swimming season has come and gone, and with it a successful year of record breaking and overall team achievement. Cruising past teams like Che- shire, Canterbury, and Wilbraham-Monson, the team swam to a four and seven standing and a fifth place in the league championships. Swimming dynasties such as Deerfield, Hopkins, Suffield and Avon were all too powerful to over- come, but even facing these -odds, exceptional swims were recorded. Loomis- Chaffee showed its strength when they swam a strong Mount Hermon squad. Like the Westminister meet last year, the winning team was determined in the last event. The result was not the same however, as Loomis-Chaffee lost its hardest meet ever, by one-tenth of a second. Although a heartbreaking loss, the team's performance gave a promising look at the future. Success or failure is decided by practices. This year, practices were run in a more technical level with swimmers being grouped according to ability and stroke. Coaches Bob Hartman and Barry Moran, and Manager Toni Ship- penberg played a more active role in practices this year. They took times and helped individuals with their strokes. The loss of Brent Taylor, Kurt Hand- schumacher and Jon Levine will be felt by next year's team, but with a new pool, varsity swimming is here to stay and prosper. . 2 is 3 K 5 s .ft Q in 1 S !f ' 1 it is 1 l i .L A if fsy,s,'5 L... Wilbraham Westminster Avon Salisbury Westminster Loomis Loomis South Kent Hill South Kent Loomis Loomis Wilbraham Salisbury Gunnery Canterbury Williston Westminster Gunnery Millbrook ,fx 5 43 - 5 5 8 3 6 3 7 10 4 5 2 5 4 5 6 7 9 12 5 5 3-16-1 Loomis 2 Loomis 0 Loomis 4 Loomis 1 Loomis 2 Longmeadow 2 Millbrook 5 Loomis 3 Loomis 0 Loomis 2 Canterbury 2 Windsor High 2 Loomis 2 Loomis 4 Loomis 4 Loomis 1 Loomis 5 Loomis 3 Loomis 2 Loomis 3 fi1 'i- ' gif J , Bliasi lx':i,!3!SYiL,:x K 5 . 1 . ,T N it js 4 xx ,tw S siifm' W ' . '47 1' - 0, S' Hifi ji? fix -lv-wnnwauw' 5 f 1' I NA if my M 'N 1 If. my . f 5 in ,Q K R p 3 , I f 1 - ZYQ 2, A is if . f J? if -1 Q V Q Q. k f 5. R :ff 'Q' , W M Q. , I 4 5 kk 3 . . wr 5' 5' 5154324 'W 12- . 45 Y A 3 Wh 'P M - . . f 3' ,. W ff, -- - g,,gE5gg4..:fQ N .X.,...,gN , -' M ,xx if X. K wg... S x I al' 1LXX im A friend questioned me as to the outcome of the recently completed Loomis hockey campaign. For what seemed like the two-hundredth time, I revealed our record of 3 wins, 16 losses, and one tie. Not one to conceal his feelings, he laughed and said, You guys must have really stunk. Three and sixteen, nice record. Being a part of the team, and therefore an object of that remark, I feit an obligation to answer with a statement of redeeming value. We had a lot of fun, and there were many satisfactions, despite what the record might in- dicate. It seems he had heard that somewhere before, and he replied, How much fun can you have during a season with a record like that? I told him of the thrill of playing on a team with a bunch of guys-each one pulling for the next guy, shouting encouragement from the bench to the players on the ice, and sharing in the joy of success and the disappoint- ment of defeat. The satisfaction of knowing that you've given your best effort, whether or not the game was won. I told him of that delightful, musty odor of the locker room after a rough practice, beads of sweat building up on my already blurred glasses as I peel off my pads and try to catch my breath after that last sprint down the ice. Chris Norton's brilliant rink-long rushes were a sight to see, I told him, as was Cueball's picturesque skating while he led an attack on the enemy goal. If only he could have seen the eXpression's on the faces of the players after we scored four goals in one minute against Windsor High School! It was as if we had finally uncovered a hidden ability within ourselves and had unleashed it all in the one fell swoop. During that solitary interlude we realized that the hours of practice really weren't in vain and that we could actually accomplish great things on the ice. Hockey is the thud of a good check, the beauty of a crisp, cross-ice pass, the kick-save, and the Longmeadow goalie's expression as he is sprawled out on the ice, the winning goal, signaled by five Loomis sticks raised high in the air. Mark Davis 96 I4 ' if AW No' Ali Q .,.. , it N 5 . . , xt X 5322 W 1 Y 3 ww vm 3 N mfs A T 3 APG' sw... X rg ..-597 ipir '.f, . 3 o I 3 1 2 f x X X 35. The Glass M enagerie if V A E J 101 PA TI EN CE + f M ,mi 1 . .affifff if W? Q if v T wifi? ' if gfffi 3 ' 329 s 21 ti qw Q r W, - , ' 'ills' ' , six-s 255295 -b WHEN? J- I It seemed this year we changed our rational- izations for performing our work jobsg we realized from our day to day existence that each one of us depended on the next guy .. . . If no dishwashers showed up, no food was served. ww lk SLI? K ,gy -bw if 1 L' I-4 V I 9-' ,Q 'ix 9 .kd .QQ if I ,,.,... 5. '7 f, . A A 3' N W ,,,f lg W' 'WTI There is only one possible, productive so- lution for the relationship of individualized man with the world: his active solidarity with all men and his spontaneous activity, love and work, which unite him again with the world, not by primary ties but as a free and indepen- dent individual. Eric Fromm n-.,,,......-...paw-Or L-an 107 Si Q L The job of a revolutionary is to show people that things can get better and to move them directly and unceasingly toward that goal. The better things get the more aware people become that they needed not tolerate the injustices and miseries that remain. -Philip Slater, from the required Humanities reading lm v T ' , The Humanities Boycott On Feb. 26 several members of the senior class, declared a boycott of a Humanities lecture in or- der to demonstrate the seniors deep sense of frus- tration and confusion toward the course, to em- phasize the lack of continuity of the lectures, discussion groups, and the lack of careful plan- ning by a divided and dispirited Humanities fac- ulty. We felt that abolishing the Humanities re- quirement for the senior class would force the Hu- manities faculty to respond immediately to the problems of the course, which would therefore sink or swim on it's own merits. Bronco Brown and I first discussed the possi- bilities of a boycott midway in the winter term. We had both been members of a student formed and operated Humanities Committee which had presented suggestions for the improvement of the course to the Humanities faculty. After months of meetings, we were left with the im- pression that the Humanities faculty was toying with us. Many of our ideas, though acclaimed by members of the Humanities faculty as being sound, constructive improvements, were through lack of initiative, sincerity, or factional argu- ments buried in the chaos which surrounded the course. A second problem which had also arisen was that many members of the Humanities fac- ulty questioned whether we really represented the senior class, or that our complaints were theirs. It was at this point that we informed Bruce Gellin, another member of the Student Hum com- mittee, of our idea. He expressed some interest in a boycott and several weeks of careful and soul- searching planning began. None of us were radi- cals or for that matter potential revolutionaries. To boycott a class is a virtually unmentionable act in an independent school such as Loomis-Chaffee, let alone in our minds. Yet we felt the situation was serious enough to warrant a boycott, and the possible hazards which we or the school might face. We hoped that with the leadership of Bruce and Bronco, the senior class president and the president of the Student Council respectively, the rest of the school might recognize the seriousness of the situation and the constructive intent be- hind our actions. The boycott was a success and a failure in sev- eral ways. A majority of the senior class did boy- cott the lecture. Of those who did, many were truly concerned, and some were just along for the ride. Many, however, did attend the lecture. Some because they felt we were wrong, some because they agreed with our goal but objected to our means, some out of politeness to the speaker, and sadly some because it was the easiest thing to do. We failed to reach our primary goal. However, we did give the Senior Class a desperately needed sense of existence, and unity. We forced the Hu- manities faculty to reevaluate their present and future position towards the students, and the course. Most importantly, we did prove that the students at Loomis-Chaffee can act, and for the most part care enough about their school to risk suspension. EPILOGUE: on Monday, May 28, the joint faculty of the Loomis-Chaffee School abolished the Humani- ties requirement, and replaced it with a weekly lec- tures deries for the Senior Class, and their teachers. -Henry Horsey 1 N N X 2 i 1 1 1 N N N 'l'I0 'K v M X . 1 Y is wx ww, f 1.',fV,QLtp. 1. a 'QA ,V 'sw 'I12 f ,L ow air vi ' m .. ' gk as ,Ay 'Q L' if wx x' 5. WR Nix L. w f 1 J ,Y Q. -vp U W ef s ' r xwxz 'l 113 Big - ,.5..,.i,h3-,.. ,,,ak ,Lp 1,. ,,,,i I., QNK K -N aaf I W a .. . -.av . fzaixgx It H ,, 35' 1 .wgxfgf Ewa.. -'UW Q ill x W ies CRS n The Loomis Varsity Tennis Team encountered their fourth consecutive loosing season. The team, following up the previous year's disappointing season, played a weak Avon squad and claimed their one and only win of the year. Hopes for a good season, possibly a winning season, were in sight. These hopes quickly diminished as the sea- son wore on. The team was kept alive in the early part of the season with a few near wins. As the season continued, teams such as Taft, Kingswood, and Hotchkiss smothered hopes of a fair season. Along with these hopes, most of the enthusiasm and the desire to win were lost. The obvious problem was one of inexperience. The problem grew increasingly apparent as the season continued, and we were outclassed by the majority of our opponents. Coach High realized the problem and accepted it early in the season. He dealt with us in a way not so much stressed on winning as a team, but on developing individual skills. The emphasis on winning is more of a per- sonal accomplishment than a point for the team effort. f 'Y , f I e Ag Y4 ? f fy' J , . . . L . - , , r , Q , Q ,i , . , , W est : ,W i' is , , , 5 5, I 4. .4 f -H . . , Y 1- ,lf M, 1 N, , 4 , ,E 'F x - ' n . . . .. . on ,,W.M ,,..:.WL..,s,,L,.,......8ins -V+ . . 5 .. , ,A .q 4 1- ., ,M . -X ' V , A...,..,. ,is f 4 - If 5 5'ff,',-Af. ,Q ' if f - 1 f f 1 fff1g-- 1 ff Q 4 guy 1 . , , i vig ?'t ?'ff'V- Wi fi' ,N ?,,,f,li,,.2?.,.g.,,. gmge. f -W! 'Q ef --:MF 9 W4 Z V synth 6' 'iw--af awgw-is-fg Mr- 5 ,M f V Q 'W-5'-Qfwrf-se' 2 rf-'ii . A . I K I . , --r 5-,A+ffM.yv,.f-.,..A.,fiv1i,.is,4 . +I ,wg ,,,,,?.t?v.Y,4 ,,4,-,L,4,tz,4.Q I it Q . , .-:. ws Loomis 6 Avon 3 Deerfield 9 Loomis 0 Berkshire 8 Loomis 1 Williston 5 Loomis 4 Taft 9 Loomis 0 Pomfret 5 Loomis 4 Suffield 8 Loomis 4 Salisbury 5 Loomis 4 Trinity 9 Loomis 0 Westminster 6 Loomis 3 Kent 9 Loomis 0 Kingswood 9 Loomis 0 Hotchkiss 9 Loomis 0 1-12-0 115 -'Iii Q 'ff AY' -faq, J , ,1 .- K ,.. Y ,Y fwfr, A ,Q M ,. , . .?,.f,.Kv,,mKl, I . 1. 3, y ' ff! AQ, Q CQ, pu f. f QT V 51a ,- A-ga rx if Q- N 'Q M , kr? f 4' A 1 fix ll for J ti? H: kb JH 4? 1' f ae, w ,' .3 ?f4'f We .. f' 2F' f , Q V A , 7..f-- -A ,A .1 t is 'ji , t , n 'Win 1' -v , , -E, .P 51-' 4 8, ,L , , ., . I would have to say that the bicycling season was successful. I say this not because our team ever won a raceg it didn't. I say it because We suc- ceeded in making bike racing a talked about sport after the race was over. Bike racing is really not a spectator sport though it is colorful. It's a sport for participants, people who race with their mind and their bodies. It's fast, dangerous, exciting, supremely exhaust- ing, and very competitive. Many people were up- set bv the number of accidents. Bike racing is es- pecially dangerous when you have poor courses, inexperienced riders, and very fast racing bicy- cles. Normally it's dangerous. When you think of diving into a sweeping corner at twenty-five miles an hour with only a half a square inch of rubber on the road at any one time, you know it's dangerous. That's what it was like going through the turn in front of the Torrey's. The racer on the Hetchins slid out and was out of the race. I went into the corner too fast and Went up on to the dirt bank but I stayed up. I didn't like the thought of flipping over the guard rail into the Farmington. Our team had tremendous potential and a lot talent. Andy Grunenbaum was determined. Gary Curtis seemed to keep trucking on. Peter Holzer kept hanging in their like a horse. Ed Deming was so strong and there was no question about his talent. John Lamb never got discouraged. It was an exciting spring for all the racers. Ben Collins 1 17 A xii.: W . ,K ,Q M.-1 -suv-' ...Q an .Q 'Jn Q 4 Q. .nl . ',,v , 'E U, I ff.. if 'sniff ' ' 't .4 A S- ' .. 'IV ,V ' ,.-ff w'4. 5?' '32 -'A- 3? . JN. 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A , N ' 9' 34- My 51' 'T' .QTL ' ggi 'T L ivy 9?f!6,z,uPM , U. QV, - - ' - - V A H9 Af .51 ' 'mml N. Q .ri ll N U5 .Av E l A of Loomis Homecoming Day- 1973 Parents and alumni gather around the playing field to watch the day's eventsg la- crosse, tennis, track and . . . baseball? A careful eye scans the diamond but sees nobody, not even a rake or a fungo bat. Where is the baseball game? queried the old-timer What is a homecoming day Without a baseball game to be played? queries the old timer. The group of grim looking Loomies break into convulsive laughter at the man's remark. They con- tinue to play catch with an or- ange ball and lacrosse sticks. Hey yells one of the boys didn't you know that baseball is dead around here? Why don't you watch an exciting game like lacrosse, tennis or track? Those are the sports around here. Yup, baseball is dead. No- body wants to watch those guys play An average baseball game at the Loomis school attracts about fifteen to twenty people. When the lacrosse game ends, there are an additional thirty people who have nothing better to do. These people make' their way to the diamond. Obviously, then, the Pelican baseball team does not enjoy the benefits of vocal fan support which other teams do. In spite of its lack of exposure, the 1973 team posted a remarkable 9-4 record in the Erickson league. The fans that did see the team were treated to an excellent brand of high school baseball. Bloomfield High School, champion of the Connecticut Valley Conference, was soundly thrashed by the Pelicans in a pre-season game, proving a fact which has been apparent to most keen observ- ers in recent years., the fact that prep school baseball teams in this area are equal if not bet- ter to other public high school teams. Taking into account the team's 7-1 record in the St. Pe- tersburg league, the final record for Loomis baseball 1973 is 17-6 . . . Not bad for a dying sport. Loomis 12 Pulaski 5 Loomis 10 Cheshire 3 Loomis 5 Williston 0 Loomis 6 Deerfield 3 Loomis 6 Suffield 1 Taft 9 Loomis 4 Choate 9 Loomis 2 Loomis 4 Trinity 2 Milford 3 Loomis 2 Loomis 4 Hopkins 3 Loomis 5 Kent 4 Loomis 4 Wilbraham 2 Kingswood 3 Loomis 1 9-4-0 Loomis Crew Bill Cosseboom, Hugh Maxwell, Steve Cushman, and Sam Eddy ap- peared at the Loomis Hockey at 4:30 A.M. to go rowing before breakfast three times a week and in the after- noon four times a week. They ar- rived to row in all states of mind and in all conditions. But they did arrive, in the rain, and in the snow, and what little sunshine there was. Chris Norton and Allen Shope rowed the pair at the same time and put up with the problems that seemed to keep arriving. We were on our own this year, making our own decisions, deciding on our own hours, financ- ing our own team. But most of all, in our informality we took responsi- bility for our own satisfaction. Chaffee Varsity Lacrosse Team is if -:L -'51 ' , NVE' x W 4 u, i 1. . QF van-on-an now.-.Q-Q Q x x Q A Q wg 'Q if W: as ,f , -1...?3'ff'5? A 5533515 f naw: 1- ' , . 01 bm ss.:-Qfwsisff PM ' -P P'!'r31f? 5?:5 'iff' wig fair? u :Its 5, Kew Qssasxsfswnlt f in Q,Unrf:gf.PRUA ,ef J zany mm. x xfgyguqxl sus:-as V., I.. my an ggi. Q W 'A Nl .W if S figg i?5ai 3!5 ,gg-A '45-3'.SS 'l .. ,gm may ff.-S 1 wuxwS 'l santa S -75-1' ' 4' f 4 'Iliff 'ggg fggjgsaa m L fnf' ':::w:: ,vllisgf funn vu: s . '-'m.,1g'?lQnacn 9' Qiffnm QWPQIRH ,fe g..' Q1-naval -v ei-as N . ::::: :. 89 3.3M 1 91 :fnaus 4 .Q Q I!! rQUQDUl . , raw-Q..-.- S . -:::::::::: 'fQ?g:n..n-..r- ,Iva .. .. aes-:JE-:A Ukincnsuirlll' i , gn.-.J-...sl Yadvg' A 4 ,gf fauna l U ll. Lh.::::.-5 . . , ...u':::.-- 4-A any-.1fvv ' 'QM MM S f '.' +4 W S it f 1 1 Wi' ' ' g J .,?mmfwz,5:, f , M ,I ,3,,4Qr,,4: ,wwf WN' f W , 7 I , 1 , fx' 49 'if ' 7 ,Q ww, J , ,nf ,way ,g :ri. 1 :5 ' , f-Q7 f M V 'f- ' A' ' 'A gm- L,,,' 145' ' H W X wx What will I remember of lacrosse at Loomis? It might be the first time I ever heard of the game, saw it played and became intrigued by it. It might be running and drilling during a windy, wet afternoon in the meadows. It may be practice jerseys, game socks and splintered sticks or it might be the frustrating hot afternoon practices when nothing seemed to go right until ice cold Pepsi relieved us from exhaustion. I may remem- ber the long bus rides or playing in my first game or the shot that went wide or the man that got by. Maybe it will be the record of a particular game we should have won. It may be the final minutes of the last game of the season, voices seemed to come from everywhere screaming, This is it! But whether I remember any or all of these events, I will never forget the feeling of satis- faction I got when pushed to an outer limit, ex- periencing a unique sensation as if I'd gone beyond myself, doing more than hopes and aspira- tions ever let me envision. As a team we were best at this. We knew we had the talent if it could be developed. We were destined to be a did have and not a could have team. But most important we were a team in the purest sense of the word, each depending upon the others. When injuries weakened our numbers, they strengthened our unity of purpose and ev- eryone became that much more important. We will never forget the feeling of being inter- dependent individuals doing our best as each of us knew how. Though often this seemed a team of specialists, it was a team and a very special one that I will always remember. Bruce Gellin l SWE! 'N W ' H -yiwf waz.--w Esgguu 5x',B'M r:t-Fsi:-11'?-R-.'2f 3 7 H 51 4 Yi x vm K gglg, H lx 'Tix L 2 Fiigi-.lei fsSrlfl '4'lXi5l'- 1 'i 2?.i'f-we to lhilgpsi 7 Xxx His KW e ' 1 Q 1754 ll N 1 A Q in n li is --Sw if if ,glue 7 gasses-:mg Hit 1 H Q i K um 1 .Gigli me i if 'su 7 iirn .ewwu335if5s gl! sigmliliffl 55355423 Whit 1 'u l- ll lat , fiiixtlllllliilillf .Fm 4igg:m,g3::,,x 9 iii 7 ill. .lk ' f tl 4 H lv1'll ss4'f f f 1 . rl 1:-a fi h' r Slaff' 4 4 sliiiefilii 4 7 'fm Loomis 6 Kent 2 Loomis 15 Wilbraham 2 Loomis 8 Deerfield 4 Mt. Hermon 4 Loomis 3 Loomis 5 Trinity Fr. 4 COTJ Loomis 17 Cheshire 1 Kingswood 10 Loomis 6 Westminster 7 Loomis 4 Loomis 8 Williston 5 Loomis 9 Taft 7 COTI Loomis 6 Conard 4 Hall 7 Loomis 5 Choate 8 Loomis 7 Hotchkiss 4 Loomis 2 8-6-0 Looking back to the spring of 1970, one would have found Hurwit, Johnson, Rothenberg, Rosen- thal, and Kohl, learning what track was all about. The were the seeds tif you pardon the expressionj that were to bear fruit in the future seasons. That freshman year none were truly outstanding. The team's record that year was five and four. The next season two additional members of the class of 1973: J. Williams and Russo, joined the team and the first sparks of brilliance became evi- dent as Jeff Hurwit leaped 21'101A in the long jump to set a new school record. Jim Johnson switched from quarter mile to the hurdles and Jeff Rothenberg became the number two miler on the team. This team was undefeated, due greatly to the performances of the upperclassmen, but it would not have been possible without the some- times winning and back-up points provided by the sophomores. It was this blend that made the team go all the way. The 1972 season brought out many new faces: M. Carter, M. Halvorssen, K. Handschumacher, P. Ogilby, M. Williams, and S. Tufty. Jeff Hurwit was a consistent fifteen point winner, in the sprints and the long jump, and Jim Johnson was a perennial winner in the hurdles. Not surprisingly, both Were elected co-captains. Kurt Hand- Schumacher was the New England Hammer Champion. Morgan and Jamie Williams went one- two in dominating the pole vault for Loomis. Steve Tufty became a proven Winner in the high jump. Pete Ogilby, Jeff Rothenberg, and Mike Halvorssen strengthened the distance team with 128 '. their performances. This team was undefeated also, continuing with the preceeding year's record for an unprecedented NINETEEN CON- SECUTIVE VICTORIES. Senior year, spring 1973: even before the season began, Jim Johnson and Morgan Williams were lost for the year through a freak accident and a dose of hepatitis. The team accepted this and showed their determination as Steve Tufty learned a new event, the hurdles, and became a champion at it. We lost our first meet. It seemed a shame with all this talent, but it happened. As the season progressed other seniors showed their desire to win as Kurt Handschumacher learned the high jump and the discus, Jeff Rothenberg the long jump and the relay, Frank Russo the hammer, and Rob Kohl the long jump and the javelin. Folkert Elbrechtz improved to the state where he was the third best half-miler in New England. Ogs became Loomis's top miler. Jamie Williams quietly smashed the pole vault record with a vault of 12'43A . Mike Carter was the number two vaulter. Saving the best to last, Jeff Hurwit was voted the most outstanding track athlete of the year, and for good reasons. He ended the year as the New England Champion in the one hundred yard dash, number two in the 220 yard dash, and num- ber four in the long jump. The track team's final record was eight and two. The four year track record compiled was 32 vic- tories and 6 defeats. n-4-A-su-.........,,. 3, Q55 TN -v a 5 fs V L ZA 3, .L A:W,,,,,Mg:.f'Q,. 1 , 1. I ,,.,,MWMWm-AWLMMW 4 ' . . www AL .,,,g,.f,gz,,nvamwwf .W ,N K ., , X .MA fv- ,, Q.. f L!! gr ,,.,.' WWW. www any an Mm ...X ..M....,.WM lil!!! Q D rv. 1-' ia' Chaffee Spring Day Spring Day found Chaffee disguised as an enchanted castle, teeming with White knights, dragons, and fair maidens, holding together a tradition that has been going on from Old Chaffee. It has been a special day for the girls to meet the new freshmen and raise money for the school and charity. s fifgffm ui i li9 e 'lvl ' ng' M.. I 'dtllfw ff 1' rg i xv , A ia E 5 Kayak surfing and canoeing at Weekapoug and in our backyard , the Farmington. Cider sales, bird- house salvaging, a renovated fiber- glass shop for general boat repair and construction and the floods . These were major activities of this year's conservation and ecologically- minded Darwin Club. Every Thursday night at 7:00 P.M. the Darwinites flock over to the Homestead for an evening of future planning, easy-going discussion and pop corn eating. Talk centers around anything from recent wood duck sightings to that early morning ex- cursion down the river from Wind- sor Locks. 134 4 W M rd-ji. ' . W1 . mm .sq vs: W 1 . . .the special chemistry in the participation of the individ- ual and the community is what creates the success. Don '15 Drfinlc The Water What impressed me most about the Loomis-Chaffee presentation of Don't Drink the Water was the obvi- ous talent displayed by each per- former involved. A comedy such as this is usually either successful or disastrous, depending upon the abil- ity of each player, when the set is good fin this case it was the most elaborate if not the best set in Loomis-Chaffee productionj and the script is faultless, the play is funny. In a stroke of casting genius, Mr. Le- bowitz for Whoever is responsiblej has collected a group of the funniest and most talented performers the Is- land has to offer. A special note of admiration is offered by myself to a number of the players whom I doubted would ever be able to be funny. Some people are born with a natural ability to make people laugh while others are more adept at seri- ous acting. Don't Drink the Water offers both kinds of performers, and has proved to me that the unnatur- als have the talent to become funny characters when they really try. -Peter Sturman ir., -f A sw X3 ww ug 3' if qv.. J 'X wax'- vn. 5 2 f was fi V, xggiy fc rf'- ,yin fl? xx. , 4. fk ,e i' 'Tx Lge?-H 2 KUIIIHHIN! . . . the musician in his rock group knows his happiness and sense of fulfillment are derived from his interaction with the community. mmm4 9 .-.G-in X 'Lge-. ..,' A N 'if I ' V ff7lAEz9? ' 4 - : 1 MILK, WMM A VV , . . ff ' f ' V 'A 1' 1' , ' n 4 3 ,,gmr- ,ky M A w fl ,gm-,Q 1 A S' ia.. K ' M ,,kk V 1 - l fMAY V W .1 .4 3 wgv r nk ,, A, ge.- ,X :PL-, y X YI! X V! Wys .I iff ,H 'iv 14 46 if L , vu... 4 'H 9 iam! 55: walks' 33393 rswwzai: a '5 . 'Ext nbfhu 'ffvwm-Sin-M-m , :Frank anh ?ranw5 Q mhii12 3m . -afmwmfwmwlm. leigh Q3 ,ing -4 mn ' X hut' Nils: auf: Mhffns qggfyaa Mulurhfuh., '5f'1lN his ww m-213' -fm-1 212'-r 1813? W'1' 4-me-wa 315mm Wililiqf kg. lrusmy 'lu 'M We xx? in 'havin can We believe in the uniqueness of the individual, and abhor the idea of placing a stam'p of mass-produced youth on any of our products. Q1960J Frank Grubbs Loomis Teacher, Coach, Counselor, Headmaster and President 1 930-1973 WE we-um 19561 'HFIIHISP yf ff A' T Q,-I fel' mwah 1 I E3 nl ,ff wal' '14, 4, 'S Xie. L ig, 6 , vm Wv, ' ll In jay V: ,f 'V I in 6 2 M p 4, mv' -. K AA1 ff' , ,' -mnu, 4 ,, fwway 3 3 it G sri ' 4. Nw-1-aU P'u .1 'K-on 'MW ff gf: ww-mumps-wvmwgw-w ix x Q LDUMXQ af pf Wk Y s-41:3 gs EPKQ' 5 ,Q vq 149 There is a hatred of lies and simulation, stemming from an easily provoked sense of honor. There is another such hatred, from cow- ardice, since lies are forbidden by a divine commandment. Too cow- Chris Norton ardly to lie. Nietzsche 150 Dian Pickoff Charlie Ashinoff The fancier your clothes Were, the less you had to dance. Martha Graham iw- You have the freedom to be yourself, your true self, here and now, and nothing can stand in your Way. It is the law of the great Gull, the law that is. Richard Bach This above all elseg to thine own self be trueg and it follows as the night the day, thou canst not be false to any man. William Shakespeare Ted Hickcox Molly Murphy Robin Sandler Joe Zautra And in between what might have been and what has come to pass, A mis be gotten guess alass, and bits of broken glass. James Taylor xx.. Education is an admirable thing, but is well to re- member from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught. Oscar Wilde Sbeve Cohen Jamie Williams 154 5255 rea ill? .' W. have a' .ily KRW? E F Ill z lun: my if W ali' ' fwigiffww - ii.. , -. we, its - 'og , mm , w2,,..m,wa' . lah 1 X fullvl W' .. 1 Happiness is Where it is found and seldom Where it is sought. And if, to all men, life is made of hail and farewell, then the sailor more than any other calls the most goodbyes. He and I were sailors both. Nancy Fitzgerald Jay Fisher 155 HUNT i 'Wi' Y' 7 All w - ..a ,MQ Qf. J O U 9, aa 'si 4 iw, J MM., 1'ZT,,fsQ71 k 1 MW Y--w...,-.., ' in ,f..f if i 2 1 Qi' 'Mn' -K if , , W i , M . , ,mm .--, 4 ,., I it '4rx,v.x1 '-+ 3? ll ' . Q , - ' - QE'-Wa 1 I . Y Q 5 1 D Y K Y Q i k 5,4 f .Zia at i ,, .. , i f , -A H Weef'M f'F'fWfg,fg1Le5gg.Q - f't,vg.,, -,gg i - AK,. .,,. . iw .,,,,.,. f , c'fiji? LZe-7-JA WF, ' , ,, ' Y ' - r i 'AM K ,.- H1 . by . 1. T! W . mi? '1 1 Oh a false clock tries to tick out my time To disgrace, distrack, and bother me And the dirt of gossip blows in my face And the dust of rumors covers me But if the arrow is straight, and the point is slick It can pierce through dust no matter how thick. . . And though the line is cut it ain't quite the end So I'll bid farewell till we meet again. Bob Dylan Always be prepared for both the ex- pected, and the unexpected. Peter Samis Michael Halvorssen 156 What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not yet been discov- ered. . . Ralph Waldo Emerson W-. ,vt Andrea Miano Jim Johnson in v .li ass ., fr r 4, ,g.','f -13 ,rm 1353, ,t fe I' l .,,.f ,sr ,gd V. 'tflft f, , ' 934' N s Q f ar, '- ,fr '5'T'ff!Sr A3 vrwfn' '. 'x 'Hf. 'w1la z 'fl-Y' 1 -' or f.L'N- 'J':7 fm2f Qsm --f ff WH.. ,.,,. Ny . W, fs Q '- -ff'.,. W5fi.,1'..,t 4' , 2ts'Rf.,'4zf,Sif5fAQW.,H'g, ff :ff H gt lf. L YH-1 f15f'v1'. i1fa.f 'h5fF.44.,x avg 1-fe Things don't turn up in this world unless somebody turns 'f W--an ,QQ W J I 1 ,, ,f , .2 V my .nf ,- .wif-,ff W , E V - ,f5f,Q!f?'x22iJg ,V ,fx Jeff? fi 4-v , ,. 1 V V '., Tf?:'f'Tx-W' 3'1 -f !LiirT9F11L . X - sf 9 'bf x.. f A ,Q mtgaijiguh ray, fi, ,Y 1 ,W T- 4,1 :rf .f x A mkpvga V . A, , eel.:-Mwuv??ph.h? fwg., L, w M l , gy , nf f.k3w,JY,,,m VL 1 All V robin' .VVQQMV L QA. 'I-4372 dyxi ,Ai M it . . .my 1 an Q, f 531 , , W. v Wg Af? fw nip' ff.,-:V j N il, W A - 1, ,., mia cf qv ,4 , My , ' ,gf-.i www ,S ff - f ,1.H1+2,q.j, Z, Qin, -Y i 4 L ' Y Y 3 1' 7 , ,A:,x54,,a-A 7, Q, - , , WV, . 'fvff 1493 L I 158 M- QA. i ,,QH, , 3, them up. Shakespeare Peter Kern Kate Sikorsky LZ' Going to Chaffee for four 1 1 viili e ll elll A l years to be able to burgers at W' McDonalds. 'B-N Sara Russell Frank Hoskins 159 Y Il . W, X l,,,.,M.'s.,:.-...tw M 1 , , 6 , Jw ,4 1- L- 1 Maw - if 1, ,S rgf-1. ya i 7 -'I f WM. , fQi.7 we ni. ' if wil ,. A . 'flip' '- 1. -ff.: i Joys, too exquisite to last And yet more exquisite when past. John Levine Claudia Lindsey 160 Montgomery Smile some sunshine down my way, lately I've been lonesome. James Taylor .ii Mathematics, rightly viewed, pos- sesses not only truth, but supreme beauty-A beauty cold and aus- tere, like that of sculpture, with- out appeal to any part of our weaker nature. Without the gor- geous trappings of paintings or music, yet sublimely pure, and ca- pable of a stern perfection such as only the greatest art can show. Bertram Russell For Thou hast delivered my soul from death, My ears from tears, My feet from stumbling. Ps. 11628 On the last day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried out, If any man thirst, let him come to me and drink. He Who believes in me, as the Scripture has said, 'Out of his heart shall flovv rivers of liv- ing Water ' John 7:37-8 Jesus said to her, Did I not tell you that if you will believe, you will see the glory of God? John 11:40 David Brody Grace Tufts 161 I am the vine, you are the branches He who abides in me, and I in him he bears much fruitg for without me you can do Harry Broadman Joan Kingston Knulp said: Every human being has his soul, he can't mix it with any other. Two people can meet, they can talk with one another, they can be close to- gether. But their souls are like flowers, each rooted to its place. One can't go to another, because it would have to break away from its roots, and that it can't do. Flowers send out their scent and their seeds, because they would like to go to each otherg but a flower can't do any thing to make a seed go to its right placeg the wind does that, and the wind comes and goes Where it pleases. -Hesse -John 15:5 Gary Helman 1 K, Air Do anythingg take us out of this gloom . . . -Steven Winwood Tis the times' plague, when madmen lead the blind. -W. Shakespeare What is the matter with Susan Jane? She's perfectly Well, and she hasn't a pain. But look at her, now she's beginning again!- What is the matter with Susan Jane? Reason is, and ought only to be, the slave of the passions. David Hume .ali Susan Brady u oo,, l me 4 He once told me you got to play your hand, some- times the cards ain't worth a dime, if you don't lay them down. Grateful Dead Free your mind and your ass Will follow .... The king- dom of heaven is within. Funkadelic Julius Wiggins Jon King YW gy ,X 1-L, M N, wp, ,fu -1. . - 11 'vm Wi mlm Q - A 1A ...f 4.54 , .- if R, , u E -gg 'R 5, sh, iuwbi f.,?g ' ,mg 'M .E an h,., rr.. -W ,K HA, V 4' - ' f. nuff L , if' i -H A me ' .i N .4-5. Ak i ,ye wwf Adnan iyrvai -by WML- A i 1- in I i J i -7 3551- 3o.1xf,' 1. , efixgikss- 3 I i i . 5?-as-4 3l5wJQ,f:1 f s No, no, no, I don't want it all, just a little bit Pig Pen One climbs, one sees one descends, one sees no longer, but one has seen. R.D. Wendy Cohn Jim Rudnick It r,fr.w, .gk Q ' , naw J. 'ui , 'L ,I , It Igfynge Lf I ', I Q is W- I. 1. '- A t..... I. wr what 'I V ,, V i s,.f,iT,', ..... M-,Bm I ,,,, ., ,,.. A only Janus , ,,f'e.. :ffl ' 'V' Q-A J i H 'V 4. 5 Q , Q 3 If-of . , 'QV V ' 1- W' - e:v'v,1-.434-f:+' ,K ..,,,N?f,v:,w, ,,,,xf,-'N 'f 'I' Nw -mann-'.'W iw, 'WM ' , gk.. I su, f ' p ur ' ww' 1 W., ,I A-Q,:hy. ft' ,mf ,. E W., if V- f- V JH? .1 I just Want to know about the rooms behind your minds. Do I see a vacuum there, or am I just blind? Things like Love The World and Let your Fancy Flow. Is this true? Please let me talk to you. Let me talk to you. ri E ' ' ,qf'fi'K. ' 51:5-Q ' ,.'.'.- Visy 4 ' i ' ' H , 'Q , .-an United we fall, divided we stand. N J. E. R. . X .L NMNP' .mf John Rubinow Ed Deming 166 1 I CIW' ,- is .V r it 935' K . ... -A ' D did ri' Mr? K 05 gg ff. . . - - 23544. , 5 - if kifmwm , K . .,,. . M ' - -r -Z Ill . ,l V s'3i'13' , . . get we' ' . . V i p , f- . .1 ,. :,Hy,.-i+r-5k ' - A .ii 1. ' ,ef w ,A ' ' Q- . ,, . 1 it A .v':lFk'fi. E sf .V W3 Avi ' '57fvVflvi'. ... Let us be, first and above all, kind, then honest and then let us never forget each other. Fyodor Dostoyevsky A face cannot be grafted or interchanged. A face is a message, a face speaks, often unbeknown to the person. Is not the human face a living mixture of mystery and mean- ing? We are all able to see it and are all un- able to describe it . . Is it not a strange marvel that among so many hundreds of millions of faces, no two faces are alike? And that no face remains quite the same for more than an instant. The most ex- posed part of the body, the best known, it is the least describable, a synonym for an in- carnation of uniqueness. Can we look at a face as if it were a commonplace? Abraham J. Heschel Bill Sinsigalll Sharon Bard 167 -,gs ' ulllll'W F ,,': i UHHTI ll 'IUUW 'F',. l ,f,,, n an a ma Qi! lll?C puanaaxu A awk lmnvdnwfff--ve Willst du immer weiter schweifen? Sieh, das Gute liegt so nah. Lerne nur das Gliick ergreifen. Denn das Gluck is Uber allen Gipfeln ist Ruh, in allen Wipfeln im mer da. Authur-Goethe spurest du Raum sinen Hauckg Warte mus, balde ruhest du auck. Peter Ogilby Mark Underberg 168 You have noticed that opin- ions Without knowledge are all ugly. Plato The song is over . . . it's all behind us now . . . The Who Goethe ,K R -...Mme A I , K.-sm W., 1, H- .W f-17-q.mg,,w -View M' W K -.-:mf Gln- , , ., we-2fmm,,,mq ' --... --au.. .M c W '-- --.... is At the deep recesses of the Earth's core the metal monsters rumbled, spewing power to the masses above. Heat, raw energy, became miliwatts and thus the fires of civilization were stoked. Milt could feel them through the floor and they shook his entire soul. His teeth be- gan to chatter and he began to shiver uncontrollably. He lay back under the covers. . . Stewart Wilson Chris Reed 169 Leave the flurry To the massesg Take your time And shine your glasses. -Anonymous Mike Dubilier Phil Van Wyck . Nancy Tomasso Steve Cushman Now I know how the sun must feel everytime it shines. Chris McVie Does it hurt? asked the Rabbit. Sometimes, said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful. When you are real you don't mind being hurt. Does it happen, like being wound up, he asked, or bit by bit? It doesn't happen all at once , said the Skin Horse. You become. It takes a long time. That's Why it doesn't happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have been carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get too loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don't matter at all, because once you are Real you can't be ugly, except to people who don't understand. Margery Williams .1-5, f X l 572 in - , jlv 1 Only the Spirit, if it breathe upon the clay, can create Man. Antoine de Saint- Exupery A I. 2 l'? a li f 4 xv. ,Q L n 2 Q f f , , Lisa Buell Tim Morison Karen Menzer fi I V 5 if Qffffli ',2QQ,f,,'g,,fl5l9,l.1f1 mzrcomir 61 l If I am not for myself, who Will be for me? And if I am only for myself, what am I? Hillel The greater part of what my neighbors call good I be- lieve in my soul to be bad, and if I repent of anything, it is very likely to be my good behavior. Thoreau There was a man with a tongue of wood who essayed to sing. And in truth it was lamentable. But there was one who heard the clip-clap- per of this tongue of wood and knew what the man wished to say. And with that the singer was content. Stephen Crane Somehow I always see you with a bird perched on your shoulder I always think of how happy hell be When you learn to fly. It won't be long now. Paula Swilling Pam McArthur Connie Packard Here, knowing that love is to share, Each one believing that love never dies, Watching your eyes and hoping I'm always there. To be there . . . J. Lennon-P. McCartnry 419 174 W The sea runs without end, sometimes slowly, sometimes swiftly, eternally creating formations and im- ages in the sand. It is the same with life. We live, some of us quickly, others with caution, taking time, and the experiences create lines and impressions, and our faces, like the sand, show what happens in our souls. funknownj Darcie Cashman Scott MacLachlan -'QUE vi aw Laurie McLean Judith A. Jonke Dep0rt from the highway and transplant thyself in some enclosed ground, for it is hard for a tree that stands by the wayside to keep its fruit until it be ripe. John Chrysostom They can because they think they can fPossunt, quia posse videnturl Vergil, Aeneid 175 When this you see, remember me and bear me in your mind. Let all the World say what they may, speak of me as your find. Brian Jones ta' 4 F N 5 ' Mi .'I' sv If ' milf. f-H o ,ggi A Vive as x so 2 Navi Nh-if Q w , ,MJ , il . Jaw ffggig. i 5 -UVQ., . g MQ Wg, Vim? ,-Efr is 52? xl 3' I should choose to ex- plode my days as popcorn. Endure and you will succed. Carey Bartram John Lamb 177 And God stepped out on space, And He looked around and said, I'm lonely-I'll make me a world James W. Johnson Dennis Killoren Tim Quish I ,R , , , .tswkswfsi .K .,., f YQ Vlf' I 4' at 3- F we. ,:'L, '.YW A . . K 'r-s... -W 1 K- N. 'xxx Don't we look alike? Well, at least we think so. From nursery school to weekends at Suffield C. . . they came in through the bathroom win- dow J and we still managed to remain loyal to Loomis. We've been from Maine f you mean this is the campus??'?! J to Florida C'do pretzels float?-yes Kell, and so did the beer cans J with a stop at the New York Hilton C'What is this crazy yen we've got? J for cocktails. Sometimes we've disagreed C'but I don't wanna go on a blind date. J but most times see eye to eye. C'How about picking up a couple guys from . . . J. Sara always astounded us with her price- less comments C'I feel like an ice cream cone , and Cindy just kept on flashing her smile and checking out the possibilities f Have you seen the Choate team?! J. We've definitely had your share of problems Q Well . . . they can slip in my car if they want . . . J but after all, it wouldn't have been any fun without them! Cindy Dodd Sara Moran 'I79 Now here you see, it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get some- where else, you must run at least twice as fast as that. Lewis Carroll Charles Ewing Scott Van Arsdell Man is a fountain of immense mean- 'f ing, not merely A H a drop in the t or ocean of being. ' A iz Abraham J. Heschel , A 180 Nag, , Y., 'ae xi, 351755, . Q, . i ,Q vt at . . . mi i If you love me you will remem- ber. If not, it is better that we both forget. Unknown l i Walking along with a friend of mine, Got enough space, got enough time Pieces of fruit and glasses of Wine. Love comes in the summertime And I don't Want to lose you. Carole King Joy that is shared grows even greater while sadness shared is lessened. Winston Abott I If gov. Ove me evil! rernemb'-T, HW or mm Fogqzt Qt Kathy Makgill Lucy Lonning 'I81 Sure if there was such a thing as the faibre busi- ness.-I'd have chain stores! Woody Allen You're lucky, it could have been worse. It could have been better, or actually, it could have been any other way than the way it was. Hugh Prather Randy Gregory Martin Ginsburg Does anywhere know me? Speak thus? Where are his eyes? Either his notion weakens, or his dis- cernings are le- tharged. Ha! Waking? Tis not so. Who is it that can tell me Who I am? Shakespeare -K., wr 7' Q'g',i:.QQQ2fffg:f'QQff:i:::::Eff Fi 44.-JE :i:15: Tl11f-'-'::::::::ifi.--- iv .AA , .. ., ,. N, fy ,, , ,,,.fff,,wie,,,i l'wq '1, Joy, truth, simplicity is gained, to bow, and to bend, we will not be ashamed to turn, will be our delight. Till by turning, turn- ing, turning, We come round right. Traditional John Pearson Betty Hennessey 183 1' gy , R. , hx S a Finish everyday and be done with it. You have done what you couldg some blunders and absurdities crept ing forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new dayg you can begin it well with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense. Happiness doesn't de- pend on how many ex- ternal blessings we have snatched from life. It depends only on our attitude to- ward them. Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn Bob Muir' Mark Strickland 184 Emerson No One in Particular I am not anyone in particular. A chewing gum wrapper. A streetlight. Still, somehow I manage to exist, And as each day starts I manage to leave my nice warm bed Feeling that perhaps today Something beautiful will happen. It never does. This in itself is beautiful. I am not anyone in particular. A philosophical shoe. A sheet of paper. Perhaps I am lying. fAnother one of my very bad habitsj If so, At least no one can be hurt By such slight deceptions John Perreault Jay Wiener Robin Sue Harris You could have been more Than a name on a door On the thirty-third floor in the air More than a credit card Swimming pool in the backyard While you still have the time You could get away and find A better life, you know the grind is so ungrateful Racing cars, whiskey bars No one cares who you really are. Joni Mitchell 'Ui xi Stephen Brown Donnie Caldwell It's true that all the men you knew were dealers who said they were through with dealing everytime you gave them shelter. I know that kind of man. It's hard to hold the hand of anyone who is reaching for the sky just to surrender. And then sweeping up the jokers that I left behind you'll find I did not leave you very much, not even laughter like any dealer. I was watching for the card that is so high and wild. I'll never need to deal an- other. I'm just another Joseph looking for a man- ager. Then leaning on your window sill I'll say one day you caused my will to weaken with your love and warmth and shelter and then taking from my wallet an old schedule of trains, I'll say I told you when I came I was a stranger. You 'hate to watch another tired man lay down his hand like he was giving up the holy game of poker and then, while I talk my dreams to sleep, you'll no- tice there's a highway that is curling up like smoke above my shoulder. While I've been waiting I was sure we'd would meet between the trains we're waiting for. I think it's time to board another. Please understand I never had a secret chart to get me to the heart of this or any other matter, and when I talk like this, you don't know what I'm after, but now it's you my love, you who are the stranger. Leonard Cohen lil I86 S . , 155, egsfgf rf 4. w 'xii ' .. iffy Q1 r is if? ,gi ,M,,i?s 5 is X sf: .L L 3, A x Qi in....ist it n Because the rmad is rough and long, shall We despise the skylark's song? Anne Bronte If one looks at a thing with the in- tentions of trying to discover what it means, one ends up no longer seeing the thing itself, but thinking of the question that has been raised. One cannot speak about mysteryg one must be seized by it. Rene Magritte Henry Horsey Jill Wawro Perhaps in this world of ours it is better to be wise in madness than mad in wisdom . . . beware gentle knight of your bitter enemy, reason. Don Quixote .3 :Y :iv ska ,, .0 91, A. an aw 4 lc' .5 4 A -41 1 5 t M4 4 4' Hn-I' hmm , . Al Shope Ted Hathaway 3 A Don't worry they'll never catch us. ib- MQ RUN! the voice kep' screaming RUN! But ths river swirled at my bacl and the voice said nothing about swimming. And fo once, I wasn't able to rul for my miserable life. Kesej LDUMIS Greg Lawrence Mike Carter E? , ar riff' . 4 if' L' n kgii giliiiff fm And now here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightlyg what is essential is invisible to the eye. Antoine de Saint Exupery t is xii Lisa Vogel Betsy Atkins I90 And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter and sharing of pleasures. For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed. Kahil Gibran ll. But you cannot under- stand life and its mys- teries as long as you try to grasp it. Indeed you can- not grasp it, just as you cannot walk off with a river in a bucket. If you try to capture running Water in a bucket, it is clear you do not under'- stand it and that you will always be disappointed, for in the bucket the Wa- ter does not run. To 'have' running water you must let go of it and let it run. Alan W. Watts i , '-- a ' 4!MH!9iyis p ppip n90529 Bill Cosseboom Richard McCollum I am the light of the worldg he who fol- lows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life. Jesus After reading the doctrines of Plato, Socrates or Aristotle, we feel that the specific difference between their words and Christ's is the difference between an inquiry and a revelation. Joseph Parker Philip DiLorenLo Tony Greene Cecil Prescod 192 1 Q, af! amiga Y? M3 if I' Rob Litter To be nobody- but-yourself in a world which is doing it's best, night and day to make you every- body else, means to fight the hard- est battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fight- ing. e.e. cummings Q r ,i Aww You only go around once . . . unknown Joe VanVleck John N iekrash Have I been too subtle for Loomis? Mark Weaver J im Edinberg Smile that's warm as summer sun, Smile that gets ya through, Smile that tells a story Sad and deep as you. D. Mason Over sweet is the refuge of trusting' Return and sing, O my Dreams In the dewy and palpitant pastures, Till the love of living awakes And the strength of the hills to uphold me. Paiute Indian Great things happen when men and mountains meet. William Blake 196 x .gf M 550 X i A ' X 'fix i 'i Eflfi 'Q A an x It gi T S an People you meet, some will say hello. There's a time to share and a time to go. So fly little girl, come dance with the breeze, And if you want you can do what you please. -G.A. Try to remember when life was so tender that no one wept except the willow, Try to remember when life was so tender that dreams were left beside your pillow. And so you must understand that your life is not your own-it has become a part of mine-and so it follows that my life does not belong to me-It is yours. Tally Tripp Gina Arons We are a religious people whose institutions pre- suppose a Supreme Being. Justice William O. Douglas Everytime I thought I got it made it seemed the taste was not so sweet. Hugh Maxwell Andy Fegelman David Bowie When I was all set to go, when I had my bags and all, I stood for awhile next to the stairs and took a last look down the goddamn corridor. I was sort of crying. I don't know why. Holden Caulfield .-H-f s S' i - i , X 'gk 198 The rise of democracy set some men free po- litically, while at the same time giving birth to a society in which the individual feels alienated and dehumanized. Eric Fromm Between the iron gates of fate The seeds of time were sown, And watered by the deeds of those who know and who are knowng Knowledge is a deadly friend When no one sets the rules, The fate of all mankind I see Is in the hands of fools. King Crimson This task fthe central developmental task of adolescence itselfj is self-def- inition. Adolescence is the period during which a young person learns who he is, and what he really feels. It is the time during which he differ- entiates himself from his culture, though on cultures terms. It is the age at which, by becoming a person in his own right, he becomes capable of deeply felt relationships to other individuals perceived clearly as such. Edgar Friedenberg Bronco Brown Mark Sykes Molly Silliman Bruce Gellin We found nothing, no one, nowhere, because the way it happened was: suddenly we reached an immense edge- Walter Benton My felling is that the ten- dency to carry youthful characteristics into adult life, which renders man perpetually immature and unfinished, is at the root of his uniqueness in the universe, and is particu- larly pronounced in the creative individual. Youth has been called a per- ishable talent, but per- haps talent and original- ity are always aspects of youth, and the creative in- dividual is an imperish- able juvenile. Eric Hoffer One of the weaknesses of life today is that man can no longer distin- guish his needs from his greeds . . . Folkert Elbrechtz Pam Valentine 200 i ' s fi L YR, .Ss f f ' ' i SIR? 5 Martha Fink Phyllis Halpern Loneliness-A flitting butterfly! Look! Look there! , I start to call-but there is no one by. Taigi translated from the Japanese by H.G. Henderson The day is short and the work is great. Pirke Avot Every child comes with the message that God is not yet discouraged of man. Don't let me introduce your chain of trout. Eddie Batchelder Ben Dobbin 202 'Yi Jeff Rothenberg Bernie Ellis '-in... Fx is .,V W Q Yet although we may lack fun ideas temporarily, we're not ready to abandon our ideals. We come here because We're still looking for the answersg only sometimes we're look- ing for the questions tool And the seasons they go round and roundg painted ponies go up and down. We're captive on the carousel of time. We can't return We can only look behind from where we came and go round and round in the circle game. Joni Mitchell W' it - I g f U, If A 'L 1 . . . The Dodo suddenly cried out The race is over! and they all crowded around it, panting, and asking, But who has won? 7? Lewis Carroll John MacRonald Cleveland Horton 204 Ahhh, Freedom! Why do what the sign says? You own the road. Ted Williams Driving School Staff slogan Chris Zingg Peter LaBau 205 3 IM i. i 4 W 52 'Z if My ff don't kno to say, It makes no dlfference anyway Whatever it IS I m agamst It And so it goes. David Elias Allan Templeton Kurt Vonnegut l l l i 2 1 3 3 208 his 'S ,av sri' W .. 1. -4 ie wwf, in K K v in Y., sa W nv-rv' Though divided by sky . . . and sea, Love brings thy lover to thee . . . forever. Divided would ye be . . . in hatred, Under a sky cleft asunder . though heaven be one. Loganit Translated by Seni Pramoj gf' Steve Russell Arun Chirachavala 209 Rock 'n' roll is all that counts. Doug Arnold Jim Fuller 210 Roger Daltrey Make a cup inside our hands and whisper lovingly my name, and if I die along the Way, I'll get back just the same. Batteau As to Whether Boris Cocachino will be schleping is umimportantg what is important is that he was here. And before he left, he piled his lives into an imaginary heap, gorked it, and went off gallump- ing into the sunset happily. Arnold 'Q Ben Warren Jon Fletcher un., If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. Thoreau Wind is in the cane. Come along. Cane leaves swaying, rusty with talk, Scratching choruses above the guinea's squawk, Wind is in the cane. Come along. J. Tommer 211 Rufus Hcllendale Steve Wilde is 5 o E gg i if .ls- E , Q - 5 E 5 5, I ,, 5 A . A5 1' .f , za .. - fi . .1 ,-Z V 2 :- LZ, Q s , -:,, V. 5 .',.' .' 'I lf Q 'I F ,I I , 3 IL, '. 5 sigh , I K ri ,5 .-+11 - t s I knew that we counted little in com- parison to the universe, I knew that we were nothing, but to be im- measureably nothing seems in some way to overwhelm and at the same time to reassure. Those figures, those dimensions beyond the range of human thought, are utterly over- powering. Is there anything whatso ever to which we can cling? Amid that chaos of illusions into which we are cast headlong, there is one thing that stands out as true, and that is love. All the rest is nothingness, an empty void. We peer down into a huge dark abyss. And we are afraid. Julian Green Got to move on, got to travel, walk away my blues. Jerry KL Renny Russell. On The Loose Elizabeth Behl I would rid my soul of all the weeds invading it. Kazantzakis Golden cymbals flying on Ocarina sounds Before wild Medusa's serpents gave birth to Hell, disguised as Heaven. Tie your painted shoes, and danceg blue daylight in your hair. Overhead, a noisy seagull stands aflame. Wonder ev'rywhere. Those were the days. Anonymous Jonathan Prestley 213 Y. gg 3 K 5 a X Hx Q' W . .. if-Q4 - f S 5, N Nix 1 X Q, Mu f. www www by - Q Bill Broaden Bill Willis WAVES WITHIN Baby child as a man Is a living grain of sand . . . Sitting on the ever changing shore, Greeting the sunrise . . . No reason to get excited though things be kind of slow. - there are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke. One moment feels good, the next not the same The only thing changeless is change. The pendulum swings the tides creeping in In the darkness we question The sun must goo down! Sun must go down and so are we bound To give way to inevitable changes. One more time around but look what we ve found A fresh dawn, a new growth for the ages. As we flow on our trip once again have a grip, on the hassels that we probably lack the sun shine on we turn our backs. THE SUN MUST GO DOWN Afterwards, baby child sipped a heartful of ocean Spit out the waste and walked upon the NEW DAY. Jimi Hendrix!Omar Mesa 215 Your Soul is often times a battle- field upon which your reason and your judgement wage War against your passion and your appetite. Kahil Gibran Joanne Kelly Nadine Liscord 216 Let's live our lives in such a way that We can laugh when we're together and smile when we're alone. Alan Sherman Fulfill something you are able to fulfill, rather than run after what you will never achieve. Nobody is perfect. Remember the saying None is good but God alone And nobody can be. It is an illusion. We can mod- estly strive to fulfill ourselves and to be as complete human beings as possible, and that will give us trouble enough. C.G. Jung Corley halted at the first lamp and stared grimly before him. Then with a grave gesture he extended a hand towards the light, and smiling, opened it slowly to the gaze of his disciple. A small gold coin shone in his palm. James Joyce To be left alone on the tight rope of youthful unknowing is to experience the excruciating beauty of full freedom and the threat of eternal indecision. Maya Angelou Wonder if where I've been is worth the things I've been through . . . James Taylor David Ross Michelle Pallas Y Y L. YS X r , L is 'Q WSE: ,wa 'ff . .,..,,,..,x avg.. 53' Q., Y ,', xx? ' i 'fx ,HRX is.Q'wl-if .l Q s sassy-asf Q Mc.L fseiwt 217 ig as Z ff A 'QL arf .cg ff? it lay, A Sue Bernhart Nina Savin The end is not the end, but the whole purpose of the be- ginning. And when the snow is gone they become the shade of another spring. Gorden Parks Who's that coming down the road, a sailor from the sea, she looks alot like me, I'd know her anywhere, as a spare. Phil Ochs 218 BW . . . Beaches where you dig and build not caring that the tide will fill and wash away. Lawrence Collins from Only a little planet ,. rf A I o ,e 9 : .s ',' 4.Q.'U'.O'!, 'o ' ' ' 4 ' I .I .I 4. I 5 4 x s i 0' 4 a'i O o'o l'g 'A' 'Q' 0' n ,, Qs Q .4 ' 5.0. x'.u'.0.'l Q 5 s 5 A 9 I . K s s.s o.,' 0 0 s' ' 0' ,S 0 .' 0 0 ' ' ' ' s ' Q 4 Q' ' wb' Q' Q 'P 0 U va in 1 0 ' 1 Q' '-' 5.0.1. 0 .' ' if I O o a , . 'I 0 I saw a man pursuing the horizong Round and round they sped. I was disturbed at this I accosted the man. It is futile , I said You can never- you lie, he cried, and ran on. Stephe They missed it because it didn't happen. Hugh McCrystal Billy Rowland 220 Jerome Lawrence CN vis COURAGE vi? FAITH? i -V Y vw- Tw A. V Y , , M-, W Y. W Q ,M ,,,,,,,,g,.:-V--A -yvg, --f --f-- -gi ' x Q, 3, ff! ' And so it goes. Kurt Vonnegut, Jr Don't let the past remind us of what we are not now. Steve Stills Rob Kohl Frank Caufield 221 Priscilla Wilde Pam Adams 222 Sit yourself down at the piano, just about in the middle. Put all your fin- gers on the blacknotes, anywhere you want to. Sing along-write a song, and understand that you can play. Graham Nash If we consider the frequent reliefs we recieve from laughter, and how often it breaks the gloom which is apt to depress the mind, one would take care not to grow too wise for so great a pleasure of life. Addison I get by with a little help from my friends. Strength comes from knowledge, knowing who you are, where you want to go, what you want knowing and accepting that you are alone on this spinning, tumbling world. No one can crawl into your mind and help you out. George Jackson Joanne Ball Tom Barber J. Lennon-P. McCartney Wi ' 5, v But you and I, we've been through that. And this is not our fate. So let us not talk falsely now. The hour is getting late. Bob Dylan When you're lost in the rain in Juarez And it's Easter time too, Don't put on any airs when you're down on RueMorgue Ave. Because they got some hungry women down there and they really make out of you Bob Dylan Ben Collins Bart Geer Hey Koops! Yea Katz? It's the next street on the right. I know Hey do that again. Nancy . . . y0u're crazy! But so are you! O.K. I'll give it a try Nnnn . . . Well? TRICE . . . NNNOOO nnnooo? No! The other ear! Birds? You know . . . Birds! Birds? Trice . . . think! And Pigs! Mother Farner! greasy Preppie! Home? Where? Nancy? Trice? I thought this was supposed to be profound Isn't it? 226 e,,lS,.,w T 1 2 'W 1 1 i Oh . . . Birds! And teddy bears and rats and foxes . . Nancy Katz Trice Koopman Brent Taylor Tom Kneipp N A man can do what he wants, but not Want what he wants. Schopenhauer These walls and bars can't hold a dreaming man. Anonymous Edward O'Connell Charlie Kerans '.g '.L-E! Sli' -'l f'.' U 'J 5 1' - :ev 5 gag, -- Y-Iiii' 'If TES . 1. 2 H K . ff f'-J AL-Y 'B i- ,:,,3,' do K 5 j' wfwrfffv vw .fm L 9' .uf 'iq i 1 iGf.57E5ii5iSlfYi f if :- Y as in ri - ',,. 3 pn-f 'favs ig suti ?1 g fy if , ,.e,.iw--w-4+ ' ,,,,,,.v--W-N 30 But that is the beginning of a new story-the story of a man, the story of his gradual regeneration, of his passing from one world into another, of his initiation into a new unknown life. That might be the subject of a new story, but our present story is ended. Fyodor Dostoyevsky What, me worry? Alfred E. Newman David Tomaszek Jim Bruyette f Q S Y' Frank Russo Peter J achym f Q K'f- 45. W Q. .f 1 M in Q 4 M .ae- ?'5f. f av- P f ' M J -:s.i,,,:Q' - ww 'A ' W 4 ,,, -Jr 1 4 Q, , ,'L Joanne Machernis Jacqueline Harris 232 Time is but the stream I go fishing in. I drink at itg but While I drink I see the sand and detect how shal- low it is. Thoreau Do not go gentle into that good night rage, rage against the dying of the light Dylan Thomas Kurt Handschumacher Come on Baby, grease your lips. Put on your hat, and shake them hips. And don't forget to bring your whips. SS. And then for each of us, it will end. It will all end. However long postponed, everything composed must decompose. A.W. Watts Morgan Williams Michael Saunders M. if ,7 1 , f, ,V Q afgeema-W fa.. any my 234 Ballad ff Easy Rider The river flows. It flows to the sea. Wherever that river flows that's Where I want tc be. Flow river flow Let your waters wash down. Take me from this roaf to some other town. All he wanted Was to b free and that's the way it turned out to be. Flow river flow. Past the shady tree. Flow river flow. Down to the sea. The Byrc Will you Walk a little faster? said a whiting to a snail. There's a porpoise close behind us, and he' treading on my tail. Lewis Carroll Now if you excuse me, I must be on my Way. Hendrix Let the bad guy win ev- ery once in a while. Preston Ain't no use getting uptight, just sit tight until the storm blows over. Sheila House Steve Tufty ,-.a'i5- nfiiisfbs- Mgt. J ib Chapman Chuck Schwartz 236 N -m Mmwm, . - . .Www , , The world is poor and men are bad. There is of course no more to add. lVe do not mind confessing the whole thing is depressing. Ne take no comfort from your bunk 'or everything's a heap of junk. Bertolt Brecht -K i Q 11- .YQ 3,'..'3E3'c 50 as 0' 'vazzo' ii irr 3,0030 ,Q ei ' 0 ig 0. 45 U 4 0 if 1 , Q .x.-rlf., I am a woman of heart and mind With time on her hands. No child to raise. You come to me like a little boy And I give you my scorn and my praise. You think I'm like your mother Or another lover or your sister Or the queen of your dreams Or just another silly girl When love makes a fool of me Joni Mitchell Aaron Mitchell Paula Kasler 7 Peter Anderson wwf... l Go and open the door Maybe outside there's a tree or a wood, a garden or a magic city. Go and open the door. Maybe a dog's rummaging. Maybe you'll see a face, an eye, or a picture of a picture. Go and open the door. If there's a fog it will clear. G0 and open the door. Even if only the darkness picking, even if there's only the hollow Wind even if nothing is there. Go and open the door. Miroslav Holub Grace Yoemans Here IS hfe ln front of us llfe the surface of a pond lnvltlng us to S311 on lt A voyage an experlment Waltlng to be performed Jerome Lawrence and Robert E Lee The Night Thoreau Spent zh Jazl In Memory Of Kirke and Chff DuTemple , , ... ! 7 ' 0 ADAMS, Pamela D., 1226 Enfield St., Enfield-Glee Club, Vocal Group-Chamber music, recitals, Juilliard, The Presidents Physical Fitness Award, my almosttmarriage to Morton, April 18th, the Giant Jotter, corrupting Corby, The Easter Bunny, learning a lot and loving my friends-SMITH. 12221 ANDERSON, Peter J., 12 Cornfield Rd., Windsor-Basketball, Varsity Cross Country, Varsity Golf-Close relationships with members cy' the faculty and with many students, running the Kent CC race, a Loomis education-BUCKNELL. 12381 ARONS, Gina, 35 Westwood Rd., West Hartford-Assembly Committee, Glee Club, Theatre Association- letters I've written never meaning to send . IF dt NIP, Jim and John, dandylions, willows and wheazfields, and all my pals-SMITH. 11961 ARNOLD, Douglas S., 341 Lexington St., Versailles, Kentucky-Football 1Captain1, Lacrosse 1Captain1, Senate and Student Council 1Secretary1 Nina Savin, the ultimate relationship, Bobbie Nabotcheclds Porche, Battiaux, All-American, Friends-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. 12101 ASHINOFF, Charles, 214 East Rd. Portsmouth, Virginia-President, Designer and Builder of the Radio Station-Millbrook Store, Shiela House and friends, Cannabis Sativa, Fridelhoppers-ITHACA COL- LEGE. 11511 ATKINS, Betsy L., 20 Howland Rd., West Hartford-Glee Club, Theatre Association-WILLIAM SMITH. 11901 BALL, Joanne E., 461 Edgewood St., Hartford-BSA, Log1Managing Editor1-Sherman and Jaki, Peter and Hope, Gina, Betsy, The Sisters-PRINCETON. 12231 BARBER, Thomas H. Jr., 53 Robin Rd., Windsor-Club Hockey, Ludlow Baseball-Saturday nights in Penn's basement with everybody, watching our teams beat Kingswood, shooting the breeze in the dining hall-UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT. 12231 BARD, Sharon D., 451 South Main St., Suffield,-Seminar Staff, Sphere tutoring, Varsity Field Hockey, Tennis, and Volleyball, Loomiscellany-Marnie, Transcendental Meditation, Freshman Biology, Susie, Team Dinner at Steak and Brew-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT. 11671 BARTRAM, Carey G., 6 Scotland Rd., Bloomfield-Assembly Committee, Current Affairs Club 1Presi- dent1, Glee Club, Social Committee 1President1, Tennis Team, Vocal Group-Insights, growing-VASSAR. 11771 BATCHELDER, Edward, W., 3401 Partridge Rd., Oklahoma City, Oklahoma- Talking, Touch ing and Un- derstanding-HAMPSHIRE. 12021 BEHL, Elizabeth, 179 Kenyon St., Hartford-Chaffee Service Organization-UNIVERSITY OF PENN- SYLVANIA. 12131 BERNHART, Susan A., 7 Terrace Rd., West Hartford-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT. 12181 BOMBARD, Keith E., 47 Pilgrim Dr., Windsor-Cum Laude-Aviation Club, Outward Bound, Varsity Rifle 1Captain1-Aspirators with DNA, Morison, Tineey, 319090 and Savageman Sandulli, Great White Whales, Harveslore-BOWDOIN. 12191 BRADY, Susan J., 30 Forest Hills Lane, West Hartford-Chaffee Council and Senate-Midnight Ram- blers, Mrs. Sundquist, Mr. Knowles, Debbie 's elevator, Ninatihka-TUFTS. 11631 BROADEN, William E. III, 15 Colonial Dr., Windsor-UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. 12151 BROADMAN, Harry G., Crawford Rd., Harrison, New York-Cum Laude-Apercu, Mountaineering Club, Student Council, Senate, Loomiscellany Editor-in-Chief-Growing-BROWN. 11621 BRODY, David S., 189 Brewster Rd., West Hartford-Four years of knowing Mr. Stookins, a great educa- tor and a great person, trying to convert Mr. Johnson, living in Phil and Mac's room senior year, WRGO with John Bermon and others-MIT. 11611 BROWN, George J. 1Bronco1, 17 Slumber Corners, Weston-Academic Committee, Athletic Association 1co-president1, Student Council, 1Vice-president1, Varsity Baseball and Soccer-Flagg, the porch, the Hu- manities Boycott, T.N.C., the halos, pink slip or green slip? Palmer 25-Faculty 7-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA-1Morehead Scholar1-11981 BROWN, Stephen H., Hill and Dale Rd., Carmel, New York-AMERICAN UNIVERSITY. 11861 BRUYETTE, James J., 30 Parkwood Drive, Windsor-Foreign Policy Association, Varsity Basketball, Cross Country, Golf-The D's, Vacations, Pimping down the Quad, Amherst Trips-DUKE. 12301 BUELL, Elizabeth L., 19 Parkwood Dr., Windsor-Theater Association, Vocal Group-Dennis, Mr. Ber- mon, Molly-TUFTS. 11721 CALDWELL, Donald B. Jr., Glenwood Rd., Ellington-Student Council, Varsity Lacrosse and Hockey- Friends: Ogs, Max, Ted, Eddie, James, Brownie, Rubes, etc., Batch 2nd-JOHNS HOPKINS. 11861 CARTER, Michael C., 37 Dandy Dr., Greenwich-Allyn Soccer, Student Council, Theatre Association, Var- sity Track-Theatre, Diane, Mort, The Gym Crew in '72-TRINITY. 11891 CAUFIELD, Francis E., 45 Shadow Lane, West Hartford-Varsity Lacrosse and Football-ITHACA COL- LEGE. 12211 ' CASHMAN, Darcie M., 84 Brookside Dr., West Hartford-Varsity Tennis and Volleybal1-GEORGE- TOWN UNIVERSITY. 11741 CHAPMAN, George B. IV, 39 South LaSalle St., Chicago, Illinois-JOHNSTON COLLEGE. 12361 CHIRACHAVALA, Arun, Student's Department, Royal Thai Embassy, 1906 23rd St., N.W., Washington, D.C.-Cum Laude-Chess Club, Glee Club-It is my only year at Loomis-Chaffee and my jirst in the United States. It gives me a pretty good impression of America, though I know Loomis-Chaffee is not the American standard. I got to know quite a few people and have learned a lot of new things-good and bad. Anyway, I will never regret that once I spent a year here, and was changed by the environment in this school-STANFORD. 12091 241 COHEN, Steven D., 36 Rutherford Ave., Haverhill, Massachusetts-Aviation Club, Photography Club, Ski Club-Nancy, friends, flying, a few good teachers-BRANDEIS. 11545 COHN, Wendy J., 135 Woodland St., Windsor-Theatre Association, Varsity Basketball and Field Hockey- We love you, Shielag TNB, Mason, Weekends, games-CASE-WESTERN. 11655 COLLINS, Benjamin N., 136 E. Hunting Ridge Road, Stamford-Bike Racing, Medical Club, Varsity Cross Country-Tate and Ogs, Running at away CC meets, the pressure of getting into college, winning the big bike race at Loomis, messing around, talking, passing time and senior sliding-SWARTHMORE. 12255 COSSEBOOM, R. William, P.O. Box 343, New Hartford-Aviation Club, Crew-Private Pilot License, flying to Nassau with Mac and Steve, Crew with Al, Cush, Max, Sam, Jane, and Risa, People from Warham 3rd sophomore year, Shope-TUFTS. 11915 CUSHMAN, Stephen B., 10 Reservoir Rd., Newtown-Cum Laude-Crew, Loom, Loomiscellany, Student Council-Teachers, books, ideas, and people whom I could not begin to count, let alone thank-CORNELL. 11715 DEMING, Edward W., 15 Bainbridge Rd., West Hartford-Allyn Senior Soccer, Bicycle Racing, Medical Club, Varsity Wrestling-Being coached by Mr. Pierson, Short Story with Mr. Knowles, Mr. Bermon's Death course-DUKE. 11665 DI LORENZO, Philip A., 20 Ridgeview Dr., Farmington-Allyn Football, Coach for Allyn Jr. Basketball- Bull Sessions in the lounge, Setback-Military Service. 11925 DOBBIN, Benson H., 35 Bainbridge Rd., West Hartford-PRESCOTT COLLEGE. 12025 DODD, Cynthia M., 58 Waterside Lane, West Hartford-President of Glee Club, Social Committee, Theatre Association, Varsity Lacrosse Manager 1Loomis5, Vocal Group-Patience, Tuna Team, Mason II '72, Sujjield, and lacrosse with Kelly-VASSAR. 11795 DHBILDIER, Michael J., 1 Ridgeway Rd., Larchmont, New York-Cooking Club, Student Council, Moun- taineering Club President, Seante-Cross Country Skiing, Mountaineering, Rock climbing, eating, sleep- ing, existing-CONNECTICUT COLLEGE. 11705 EDINBERG, James, Apartado 62284, Caracas, Venezuela-Excitement in bookstore sophistication, bore- dom with bovine feuds, the Important word with Mr. Joseph Stookins, the last laugh on the lopsided dancer, Palm Sunday at the North End, amusement with the perverted elite-INDIANA UNIVERSITY. 11955 ELBRECHTZ, Folkert, 3578 Schwalmstadt 1, Hephata, W. Germany-Cum Laude-Brass Ensemble, Con- cert Band, Junior Varsity Cross Country, Orchestra, Stage Band, Varsity Track-Mr. Eaton fCoach1, Mr. Knowles 1Advisorj, Mr. di: Mrs. Howe, the boarding experience, American open-mindedness, distance run- ning-12005 ELLIAS, David S., 118 Charlotte White Rd. Ext., Westport, Massachusetts-Intramurals, Medical Aides- Maine with Jim Dinsmore, Calculus, Maher House, Queenie, The Boycott-TUFTS. 12085 ELLIS, Bernard W., 235 North Virginia Ave., Massapequa, New York-Varsity Football, Varsity Track, Senate President, B.S.A., Student Council President-YALE. 12035 EWING, Charles A., 71 Bowdoin St., Portland, Maine-Cross Country, Log, Outward Bound, Patience- Work as a Lab Assistant, Cross Country running, Local Union 236, the Sharps-BATES. 11805 FEGELMAN, Andrew J., 86 Lawler Rd., West Hartford-Apercu, Foreign Policy Association, Log-Al- gebra I with Charlie Pratt, getting thrown out of the library, Mr. Stevenson and the Allyn Aardvarks- NORTHWESTERN. 11971 FINK, Martha G., 2 Harvest Lane, West Hartford-Cum Laude-Current Affairs Club, Debate Team, Medical Club, Orchestra-Mrs. Greene 's Biochemistry class, next time you feel creative Prudence, dor1't break your engagement ring, stick to smashing heart lollipops on people 's heads, the fearsome foursome - RPI. 12011 FISHER, Jonathan H., 48 Barndoor Hills Rd., Granby-Club Hockey, Varsity Lacrosse and Soccer-Cindy Pullen, Sports, Mr. Levy, Humanities-the worst course I took here, the happiness of sometimes being able to make a few people laugh-BOWDOIN. 11551 FITZGERALD, Nancy J., 81 Westmont, West Hartford-Cum Laude-YALE. 11551 FLETCHER, Jonathan A., Box 1712, Lenox, Massachusetts-David St Lisa Crew, Orchestra- Weekends- CORNELL. 12111 FULLER, James S., 555 Main St., Suffield-Ecological Society, Log, Photography Club, Loomiscellany- Batch 2nd and the Teen Center, Bets, Midnight Gorillas, Teen Originals-HOBART. 12101 GEER, Bartlett R., 6 Hope Drive, Darien-Varsity Lacrosse and Soccer-Mr. Wise 's , Mr. Pierson's, and Mr. Grey's English Classes, Friends, faculty and students all of them different but equally likebale, la- crosse with Grim and Mr. Vernon, the end of it all-it's so good and so bad-DARTMOUTH. 12251 GELLIN, Bruce G., 89 Brainard Rd., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Lacrosse, Log Sports Editor, Oke-Fun- Oke, Senior Class President, Soccer 1captain1-Spring vacations, insights, thanks to those who did and meant so much . . . You know who you are-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, 1Morehead Scholar1 11991 GINSBURG, Martin L., 1387 1 East 87th St., N.Y.C.-Log, Stage Manager for Fantastics, Track-Dexter Bullard, Mr. Sharp, Mr. Frost-TUFTS. 11821 GREENE, Anthony D., 226-05 Merrick Blvd., Laurelton, New York-CASE WESTERN. 11921 GREGORY, Randall Scott, 43 Fairfield Rd., West Hartford-Aviation Club, Social Committee, Student Endowment Committee, Varsity Football, David St Lisa, Patience, Don't Drink the Water-The theatre with Dexter and Phil, flying, Mr. Howe, cast parties-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. 11821 HALPERN, Phyllis Louise, 237 Preston St., Windsor-Cum Laude-Log News Editor-Joanne, Laurie, Is- rael-VASSAR. 12011 HALVORSSEN, Michael 1., Ovre Hogstad Goard, Asker 1370, Norway-Foreign Policy Association, Var- sity Track, Soccer and Riflery, Ski Club- The Howe's The Shea 's, and everybody else whom I had any ac- quaintance or relationship with during my years at Loomis-Chajfee- 11561 243 HANDSCHUMACHER, Kurt R., 90 Northford Rd., Branford-HAMILTON. 12331 HAN DY, Edward A., 36 Barker Rd., Scituate, Massachusetts-Allyn Baseball, Paper boy, Student Council, Varsity Football and Hockey 1co-captain5-UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS. 12295 HARRIS, Jacqueline A., 365 Holcomb St., Hartford-B.S.A., Pelican Captain, Varsity Lacrosse and Vol- leyball-The gang, the circus, Math class with Goldie, Biology I, Mrs. Carlson, Ht-BATES. 12325 HARRIS, Robin S., 114 Sharon St., Hartford-B.S.A. Secretary, Glee Club, Minorities Committee, Varsity Basketball and Lacrosse-Labs, Harris, Harris, Hennessey, The Corner in Freshman Biology 1 Thanks Mrs. Carlsonj and Math, Jackie, Betty, Phyllis, Joanne B., Joanne M., The gang, Comp I and Short Story, Sisters at Chafee-PRINCETON. 11855 HATHAWAY, Edward, 43 Sage Dr., Manchester-Conn. Citizens Action Group, McGovern Campaign, Varsity Hockey-An empty mailbox-CONNECTICUT COLLEGE 11885 HELLENDALE, Rufus P., 21 Shoal Point Lane, Riverside-LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY 12125 HELMAN, Gary, 216 Cedar Ave., Hewlett, New York-Apercu, Loomiscellany-BROWN 11635 HENNESSEY, Elizabeth M., 297 Plainfield St., Hartford-Cum Laude-Assembly Committee, Basketball, Lacrosse-Harris, Harris, 49: Hennessey 2 HB, Lady Laurie, Mrs. Carlson-BARD 11835 HESS, David, 728 McDonald St., Dora, Florida-Bronco, Kayaking, Softball, Mrs. Treadway-DREW 12145 HICKCOX, Edward, 30 Rosedale Rd., West Hartford-Varsity Lacrosse, Varsity Soccer-New Orleans at 4 AM, Sam Pierson, Saturday Nights in Penn's basement-MIDDLEBURY 11525 HILL, Richard E., 113 Hyde Rd., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Admissions Committee, Log Staff, Social Committee, Senate, Student Council, Student Endowment Fund-Debbie, Frank, Pete, Bob, Pine Hill- CORNELL 1206.5 HORSEY, Edmond P., On the Green, Dover, Delaware-Cum Laude-Mountaineering Club, Climbing- HARVARD 12245 HORSEY, Henry R., On the Green, Dover, Delaware-Grim, Harry, Bronco, Dales . . .Ms. Elaine . . . 'Sure Fred 11875 HORTON, Cleveland B., 258 Avede Tervueren, Brussels 1150, Belgium-Davidand Lisa, Don't Drink the Water, Dorothy Parker-Cast Parties-VASSAR 12045 HOSKINS, Frank E., 29 Pond Brook Circle, Weston, Massachusetts-Garry and Ginny, Hoskins' bar and grill, Teen Center-UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS 11595 HOUSE, Shiela, Beckwith Circle, Windsor-NEO, Parties with Shelly-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT 12355 JACHYM, Peter C., 642 Bloomfield Ave., Windsor-Cum Laude-Chorus, Band, Sailing, Student Council, Log, Admissions Committee, Political Debate Forum-YALE 12315 JOHNSON, James W., 247 Branford St., Hartford-Printing Club, Apercu, Medical Club, Varsity Track 1Captain3, Glee Club-Palmer 3rd, The Clan, Walter and Marilyn Rabetz-POMONA 11573 J ONKE, Judith A., 23 Treeborough Dr., West Hartford-Mrs. Carlson, Mr. Cutler, Mr. Fenner, Mr. Stoo- lcins, Mrs. Sundquist-My gratitude always-TRINITY 11753 KASLER, Paula S., 93 Westerly Ter., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Chaffers, David and Lisa-Jay and the 16th of May, 1970, Jellybean Vogel, NEO, Maine summer-BOWDOIN 12373 KATZ, Nancy J., 36 Proctor Dr., West Hartford-Glee Club, Theatre Association, David and Lisa, Glass Menagerie, Don't Drink the Water-Betsy Atkins, Peter Crim, Phil Lebowitz, Trice-CONNECTICUT COLLEGE 12263 KELLY, Joanne L., 27 Ludlow Rd., Windsor-Loomis Varsity Lacrosse 1Manager3-the Lounge, Deannie, Pooh, Florida with Cindy and Sara-DICKINSON 12163 KERANS, Charles, 23 Witch Lane, Rowayton-ST. LAWRENCE 12283 KERN, Peter F., 9711 Carnoustie Rd., Perrysburg, Ohio-Varsity Football, Lacrosse, Student Council, Loomis Athletic Association, Ben, Doug, Rob, 2nd floor, Mason A years-VANDERBILT 11583 KINGSTON, Joan E., 27 Walbridge Rd., West Hartford-Varsity Field Hockey, Varsity Tennis, co-cap- tain-Debbie, Timothy, Porculus, Steve-ALFRED UNIVERSITY 11633 KILLOREN, Dennis W., 62 North Circle Dr., East Longmeadow, Mass.-Varsity Baseball, Basketball, Football-Basketball, Mason 2nd, Mr. Howe, Niek, Truck and my roommate the slob-AMERICAN IN- TERNATIONAL COLLEGE 11783 KING, Jonathan C., 18 Longview Dr., Bloomfield-Varsity Football, Lacrosse, Sports Publicity Club-Bull Sessions in the lounge, Library seminar room, Tom Enright, Taylor, Deming, Pearson, Twilight softball - MIDDLEBURY 11643 l KINGSTON, Joan E., 27 Walbridge Rd., West Hartford-Varsity Field Hockey, Varsity Tennis, 1co- captain3-Debbie, Timothy, Porculus, Steve-ALFRED UNIVERSITY 11623 KNEIPP, Thomas, 12301 Stony Creek Rd., Potomac, Maryland-EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE 12273 KOHL, John R., 42 Bonny View Rd., West Hartford-Loomis Athletic Association 1co-president3, Varsity Football and Track, Social Committee-Football, Williston game-DUKE 12213 - KOOPMAN, Beatrice, 17 Brookside Blvd., West Hartford-Academic Committee, Graduate Council, Com- mittee X, David 8: Lisa, Don't Drink the Water-Munchkin 62 Pooh, Clevage db Bill, Living, NEO-KE- NYON 12263 LABAU, Peter E., 67 Duncaster Rd., Bloomfield,-Mort, Tate, Frankie, The Blue Streak -MIDDLE BURY 12053 LAMB, John A., RDZ Listitia Lane, Mt. Kisco, New York-Club Soccer, Club Hockey, Theatre Associa- tion-Walter Rabetz, Hox, Arnie, Joey and Paul, the others, Bill Bud, Ray, Rick, Rudy-117 71 LAWRENCE, Gregory K., 136 Greenfield St., Hartford-BSA, Varsity Basketball 1Captain1, Social Com- mittee-UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA 11891 LEVINE, Jonathan C., 20 Circle Dr., Windsor Locks-Photography Club President, Varsity Swimming, Log- The Swimming Letter, Petition and The Team itseyf the famous one and a haU' off railroad bridge, unpublished works of Billy the Poet, beginning the famed slide prematurely, learning to cope with defeat- UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 11601 LINDSEY, Claudia F., 32 Chestnut Hill Rd., Glastonbury-Cum Laude-Glee Club, Greyhound Captain, Junior Varsity Lacrosse, Treasurer Chaffee Senate,-Marcie Creamcheese, The Gang, Cecil, James, Debbie and Bonnie-WILLIAMS 11601 LISCORD, Nadine H., 110 West St., Doylestown, Pa.-Academic Committee-Contoocook, Kel, Jim, Tuna, Eclipse, Doylestown, Camping, Molly, New Londen, Wedding, Florida, Rochester fplane tripj-DAR- MOUTH 12161 LITTER, Robert, 274 Capen St., Windsor-Golf Team-LAFAYETTE 11931 LONNING, Lucy G., 225 Halladay Ave., Suffield-David and Lisa, Theater Associates , Varsity Tennis, Varsity Volleyball-Mrs. Carlson, Mr. Berman, The Gang, Peters fall of themj, Stephen Dinsmore and Curtis Carlston, What Goes 1Beaner and the restj-MACALESTER COLLEGE 11811 MACHERNIS, Joanne, 344 Palisado Ave., Windsor-Cum Laude-VASSAR 12321 MACLACHLAN, W. Scott, 106 Mntn. Terrace Rd., W. Hartford-Cum Laude-Varsity Football, Club Hockey, Varsity Lacrosse-Grim, Bruce, Steve, Mr. Bedrick, Kathy, Skiing '73-WILLIAMS 11741 MACRONALD, John J., Apartado del Este 60404, Caracas, Venezuela-JOHNSTON COLLEGE 12041 MAKGILL, Kathleen P., 100 Hilcrest Rd., Windsor-Cum Laude-Chaffee Athletic Association 1Pres.1, Loomis-Chaffee Glee Club, Varsity field hockey, volleyball, and lacrosse teams-Let me have, Singing down the mountainside, bobby pins and frizzy blond hair, my private taxi cab service, the ability to excel in sports, the gang, and most of all let me have lips that smile-SMITH COLLEGE 11811 MAXWELL, Hugh C., 26 Marine Ave., Westport-The Crew-UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE l 11971 MCARTHUR, Pamela S., 90 Sherman St., Hartford-Cum Laude-playing recorder and harmonica, psy- chology and religion, driving in to school late, trees by the river-COLLEGE OF WOOSTER 11731 MCCOLLUM, Richard E., cfo Creole Pet. Corp., Apartado 889, Caracas, Venezuela-Club soccer, Loomis Aviation Club, Stagehand-K. Palmer and Mr. Muzroll-two of the best teachers I had-PURDUE UNI- VERSITY 11911 MCCRYSTAL, Hugh K., Briarciiffe Rd., Shoreham, NY-JoHNsToN COLLEGE 12201 MCDANIEL, Robert E., 33 Crest Drive, Vernon-David and Lisa, Class night Follies, Varsity Hockey- Mason second, 'Tleartsn at Cueball's, all my friends, and Joe Hockey, Whoever he may be-ST. VINCENT COLLEGE 11765 MCGRATH, Gerard J. P., 179 Beach Bluff Ave., Swampscott, Mass-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT 12295 MCLEAN, Laurie A., 93 Pioneer Drive, W. Hartford-Chorus-David and Lisa, Patience-NEO theater, the meadows, Eddie-PITZER 11755 MENZER, Karen, J., 87 High Ridge Rd., W. Hartford-Cum Laude-Cast member of Patience, Glee Club-Taking the 4:30 bus home while Nancy, Marty, and Judy sat in my car at Chafee and waited for me to drive them, Hiding under the dashboard after I almost hit Mr. Carlsten's car, Fearsome Foursome- TUFTS UNIVERSITY 11725 MIANO, Andrea A., 367 N. Granby Rd., N. Granby,-Vocal Group-getting one science credit, Srwball ftwi- light softball leaguej, smoking permission, Vocal Group 1'3Scotch and Soda'Q-ST. JOHN 'S 11575 MITCHELL, Aaron, P., 88 Riverside Drive, Binghamton, N.Y.-Math Team, Set Construction, Seminar Planning Comm., S.P.H.E.R.E. tutoring-Lester and the Molesters, The Teen Originals, The Muzz, Les- ter-CARNEGIE-MELLOW 12375 MORAN, Sara S., 44 Claybar Drive, W. Hartford-Sufjield, The Bounce, Letters, Senior Joke, AGE, Flor- ida, Tim, Friends-DUKE 11795 MORISON, Timothy F., 9 Riggs Ave., W. Hartford-Varsity Rifle, Loomis Aviation Club, Sky-Life Flying Club-MIT 11725 MORRISON, Mark, A., 35 Vista St. Pymble, NSW, Australia, 12145 MUIR, Robert B., 16 Sunny Reach Drive, W. Hartford-Photography Club, Ski Club, Social Committee, Student Endowment Comm., Varsity Football and Lacrosse-Mason second and third, Friday nights be- fore the games, Friends who meant more to me than anything else, Incidents in a Volkswagon and Vega, Sharing my laughters and sorrows-VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY 11845 MURPHY, Margaret G., 104 Ridgewood Rd., W. Hartford-Glee Club, Lovesick Maiden: Patience, Moun- taineering Club, Secretary-treasurer: Chaffee Senior Class- Tres, The Gang, The Corner in Math Class, Junior Class Retreat, Ceramics, Infamous ski trips-MANHATTANVILLE COLLEGE 11525 NIEKRASH, John E., 19 Juniper Lane, W., Hartford-Foreign Policy Association, Varsity Baseball 1co- captain5 and Basketball, Wolcott football-My thanks to the D's-Penn, Hicks, Jimmy, Truck, a few Chaf fers, Mark, Killer, and Johnny. Also Mr. Myers, Mr. Erickson, Mr. Enright, Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Howard, Mr. High, Mr. Beebe, Mr. Muzroll and the rest of the faculty and frie nds I got to know. My best memories- leopard'2' Old Gym, K.I.T. '72, stretchers, spring vacation, Penn 's Cellar,' Whitney's,' Hank-TRINITY 11945 NORTON, Charles C., 1264 150th St. Whitestone, New York-Varsity Hockey 1co-captain5, Varsity Soc- cer-HARTWICK 11505 O'CONNELL, Joseph E., 38 Arnoldale Rd., W. Hartford,-Cum Laude-Foreign Policy Assoc., Loomis- Chaffee Log, Senate, Senior Scholarship Committee, Student Council-The Library crowd, all teachers, and two years with the Loomis-Chaffee Log-YALE 12285 OGILBY, Peter, R., 316 North Princeton Ave., Swarthmore, Pa.-Cum Laude-Cross Country, Student Council, Track,-FRIENDS, Tate and Ogs, with Donnie at Hamilton, Batch 3, Warham 2-UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN 11683 PACKARD, Cornelia N., 1044 Main St., S. Glastonbury-Co-Captain J.V. Basketball-WRGO? winter term, Chaffee basketball-fJump!j, Ronda, Dave-UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 0735 PALLAS, Michele P., 123 Elbridge Rd., New Britain-weekends, RAC, Colorado-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT C2175 PEARSON, John E., 1096 Albany Ave., West Hartford-Cycling, Log, Medical Aide-Photography, the li- brary, working in HarQ'ord Hospital, Mr. Lungaho's Black Prose class, Club sports-TUFTS 11831 PICKOFF, Dian J., 39 Putnam Blvd., Atlantic Beach, N.Y.-Cycling, Loomiscellany-merci, M. Stookins, The Chapel at any time, Mr. Pratt, Mt. Washington winter '73, Darwin Cabin, and all the people in Batch-BENNINGTON-f151j PRESCOD, Cecil C., 109-115 173rd St., Jamaica, N.Y.-Chorus, Black Students Association, Foreign Policy Association fco-presidentj, Patience-Accepting Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior fJan. 15, 19 72j, Duf fey-70, McGovern- 72, Messrs, Simpson, Norris, Mrs. Sundquist, Ms. Seidor, Chaffee Jr. Informals, The Clan, Black Awareness, Thank You, Jesus!-HAVERFORD-11921 PRESTLEY, Jonathan H., 519 Mountain Rd., West Hartford-Concert Band, Jass Band, Orchestra-The piano in the chapel, electronic music, day hops, a few boarders-YALE-f213J PULLEN, Cynthia N., 57 Spencer Dr., Windsor-J.V. Volleyball team, Loomis varsity soccer assistant manager, Varsity Lacrosse Team-Jay and Feb. 13, 1972, the Gang, Mrs. Carlson's bio class, Shoot out at Sugarloaf Mtn, trees and ice storms-COLBY-11293 QUISH, Timothy S., 117 Tudor La., Manchester-Club Cross Country Coach, Varsity Basketball,-Mr. Howe, Mr. and Mrs. Plamondon, Breaking scoring record in Basketball 1421, Sara Moran, The home King- swood game, Winning the KIT and receiving MVP, and Mr. Meyers-WILLIAM PENN COLLEGE-C1781 REED, Christopher, 2607 s. St. James, Evansville, Indiana-JOHNSTON COLLEGE f169J ROSENTHAL, Stephen Harris, 16 Northcliff Dr., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Academic Committee, Medical Club, Loom, Ski Club, Soccer, Track- Whirlpool in the training room, Mr. Plamondon, Russian Studies with Messrs. Levy and Stevens-AMHERST-f224Q ROSS, David Alan, Green Chimneys School, Brewster, New York-Mr. Dinsmore-MIDDLEBURY C2171 ROSS, Peter D., 70 Robin Rd., Windsor-Club Basketball and Football, Outward Bound, Stage and Con- cert Band-Being a 'hnite bewildered on Bear Mtn., 72-0 onslaught on my club football team, the fatal mistake on the Delaware River-HOLY CROSS C2075 ROTHENBERG, Jeffrey Ki., 18 Orchard Rd., Windsor-Admissions Committee, Allyn Sr. Basketball, Var- sity Cross Country, Varsity Track-Glover Howe, Mr. Eaton, Mark Underberg, even before Tate and Ogs, the D's, especially Neik and Et., Mrs. Farrel-UNIVERSITY OF PENN 12033 ROWLAND, William C., Mill Brook Lane, Southington-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT l220l RUBINOW, Jonathan E., 68 Butternut Rd., Manchester-Batch 2, Varsity Golf and Hockey-J V Baseball, Mr. WesU'all, Flagg 3, Hockey with Grim '73, Donald Caldwell, my best friend-TUFTS l1661 RUDNICK, James Gaskill Rd., Worcester, Mass-Loom, Student Council-HAMPSHIRE f1651 RUSSELL, Sara L., 86 Windsor Ave., Kensington-Going to Chafee forfour years to be able to sling bur- gers at McDonald's-SIMMONS l1591 RUSSELL, Stephen M., 401 Woodland Dr., Hartsville-Don't Drink the Water, Varsity Football and Cap- tain Varsity Tennis-Debbie, Penthouse, TJZO, Maher House, learning from John Bermon-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA f2091 RUSSO, Frank T., 137 Scarborough St., Hartford-DUKE 12311 SAMIS, Peter S., 12 Wildwood Dr., Great Neck, New York, Cum Laude,-Apercu President- Traversing New England On Wednesdays and Saturdays, Maher House, Wells, Dylan, The Rabetzes-COLUMBIA f1561 SANDLER, Robin B., 65 Grandview Ave., Newington-Football, Ludlow Basketball-Killerman Dennis, Joe Hockey, Glover Howe, Mason 2nd and the Big Bog fMoose1-KENT STATE UNIVERSITY QI531 SAUNDERS, Michael R., RFD itl B Rd., Houlton, Maine-Darwin Club, Varsity wrestling, Wolcott Soc- cer-Mr. Howe, John Bermon, Joe Hockey, Clevedge Horton, Robin Sandler, Mason 2nd, Broad Run, Vir- ginia-UNIVERSITY OF MAINE 12341 SAVIN, Nina E., 1011 Mountain Rd., Bloomfield-Athletic Association, Varsity Field Hockey, Lacrosse, Volleyball fcaptain1-Stacey, Susie, Cathy, Douglas, The Midnight Ramblers-DUKE f2181 SCHWARTZ, Charles S., 36 Parsons Dr., West Hartford-EARLHAM C2361 SHOPE, Allan P., 327 Hopmeadow St., Weatogue-Loomis Crew, Bill Cosseboom. What do you want to do tonight? , Pam-TUFTS C1881 SIKORSKY, Katherine F., 96 Canterbury St., Hartford-Student Council-DUKE C1581 SILLIMAN, Molly J., 26 Prospect St., Windsor-Glee Club, Orchestra, Patience Don't Drink the Water, Student Council and Senate, Vocal Group-Dine, Susie, Lisa Nance, Goldmund, thank you all but, The party's over -MIDDLEBURY l1991 SINSIGALLI, William A., 507 Broad St., Windsor-Student Council, Varsity Baseball-Mr. Sandulli, De- mocracy with Mr. Cutler, Varsity baseball with the D's-HAMILTON-C1671 STRICKLAND, Mark D., 12 Cornfield Rd., Windsor-Chorus, Patience-New York Follies, The Raptuous Maidens dt Dragon Guards, R-r-r-ronda! France '72 with the gang, The Cast,Party-TRINITY-11841 STURMAN, Peter C., 141 Lawler Rd., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Horror Film Festival, Varsity Soc- cer-Hops, 'T'sycho , Whatever Happened to Baby Jane , The Fly , Jaguar-UNIVERSITY OF CHI- CAGO-12071 SYKES, Mark E., North Farm, Abbotsley, Huntingdonshire, England-Varsity Soccer-Thanks to some really great people, who oyien picked me up when I was down. I look forward to hours of pub crawling with any of you yanks who can drop by in England-UNIVERSITY OF KENT AT CANTERBURY-C1983 TAYLOR, Brent H., 150 Hunter Dr., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Varsity Soccer and Swim Teams-Mr. Bedrick was an outstanding figure in my Loomis career, There were many others K teachers and students! who were positive forces, Anchoring the championship relay-BROWN-12275 TEALE, Philip G., 655 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow, Mass.-ACADIA C1761 TEMPLETON, Allan, 37 Race Brook Rd. West Hartford-Coin Club, Republican Club, Wrestling Team- Wrestling with Benjie, Tieing Taft, Coin Auctions, American History with Mr. Cutler-YALE-12085 TOMASSO, Nancy A., 132 Roslyn Dr., New Britain-Theatre Association, Student Council, President, Varsity Field Hockey-Play Competition '72 Freshman initiation on the train, Senate with Molly, Ted Williams driving school friends-TUFTS 0713 TOMASZEK, David E., 19 Kellogg St., Windsor-Cum Laude-Foreign Policy Association President, Hartford Model U.N. President, Varsity Golf-GoUQ especially Kingswood '72, The Florida Trip, Tragic Vision and the Brothers Karamazov, Jackets, Ties, and Eggtimers-WILLIAMS-f230J TRIPP, Tally L., 120 Cliffmore Rd., West Hartford-Glee Club, Loom editor Photography Club, Ski Club President, Vocal Group, Loomiscellany editor-cycling, Midnight Ramblers, Vincent and the Indians, Col- orado Rocky Mountain High, Gina Nothing, Mt. Washington, Winter '73, Grim, Harry and the Yearbook- ROANOKE-C1961 TUFTS, Grace W., 101 River Rd., Merrimacport, Mass.-Cum Laude-Christian Fellowship, Glee Club- Finding the love of God, seeing it live in my brothers and sisters in Christ, wise and loving adults-too many to list-who weren't too busy to share themselves-11615 TUFTY, Steven, 3812 Livingston St., Washington, D.C.-Hilcrest Club, Kayak Club, Supper Club, Varsity Soccer and Track-My Yak, Tate's stereo, the long week-end, sophomore chicks, tramjc-M.I.T.-C2351 UNDERBERG, Mark A., 199 Palmerston Rd., Rochester, N.Y.-Log Editor-in-Chief, Don't Drink the Wa- ter-Tate and Ogs, Marvin, Dules, Trials and tribulations with the Log, Karen, Mort, Frankie and the Gang, Liz-CORNELL-0681 VALENTINE, Pamela S., 78 Uplands Dr., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Midnight Ramblers, Senior Class President, Varsity Field Hockey and Loomis Tennis-PRINCETON-12001 VAN ARSDELL, Scott W., 3 Sedgebrook Rd., Pittsford, N.Y.-Cum Laude-Cross Country, Manager, Cross Country Skiing, McGovern Campaign, CCAG, Outward Bound-Adrian Bronk, Ray and Shelley Levy, Brownie, Batch 2nd, and the Teen Center-BOWDOIN-11801 VAN VLECK, Joseph IV, 127 Hunter Dr., West Hartford-Admissions Committee, Foreign Policy Asso- ciation, Ludlow Basketball, Varsity Baseball Cco-captainj and Football-Honary Derelict, New Orleans, Bourban St., Captiva Delegation, Horses and Dogs, Setback, Mr. Sharp, Mr. Howe, Oxjbrd St., Keep on Truckin'-HOBART-C1941 VAN WYCK, Philip, RFD Landgrove, Londonderry, Vt.-Don't Drink the Water-UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT-11703 VOGEL, Lisa E., 284 No. Quaker Lane, West Hartford-Glee Club, Patience, Vocal Group President-Jel- lybean McDougal, Paula Sylene, 'TIey, Rae , Bets, Bernita Sunquist-COLGATE-l190J WARREN, Benjamin S. III, 451 Lakecrest Lane, Grosse Pointe, Michigan-Varsity Soccer-Glover Howe, Fires, The Z, Doug, Pete, Rob, Steve, Joe, Carey, Letters, Hating dt Loving-UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA-C2113 WAWRO, Jill A. N., 44 Walbridge Rd., West Hartford-Cum Laude-Glee Club, Log, Varsity Field Hockey, Lacrosse and Basketball-The Midnight Ramblers, Whipping Post, Junior Year, Spring Vaca- tion, '73, 'you betcha -ENGLISH SPEAKING UNION, BROWN-f187J WEAVER, Mark, 175 Silvermine Ave., Norwalk-J.V. cross country, J .V. track, Loomis-Chaffee Fellow- ship-Cross Country, Christian Fellowship Mr. Simpson-UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER-C1951 WIENER, Jay L., 3858 Redbud Road, Jackson, Mississippi-Log-Shiela's van di: the total Loomis experi- ence, senior year, Warham 62 its perversion, Rufus, being educated with Grim, dt Photo 1, Taylor III -the tears aft the tears-EMORY f185J WIGGINS, Julius D., 38 Gilbert Ave., Bloomfield-OBERLIN 0641 WILDE, Priscilla A., 22 Stoner Dr., West Hartford-Athletic Association, Basketball, Varsity Field Hockey, Lacrosse-co captain-Gill, Bud, Midnite Ramblers, Golddust-BATES f222J WILDE, Stephen W., 5 Dodge Dr., West Hartford-L.A.A., LOG-Sports Editor, Mountaineering, Student Council-Wendy, Mason 2nd 1972, Spring vacation '72-73-Mount Washington, December '73, a lot of friends-CLAREMONT MEN'S COLLEGE C2125 WILLIAMS, Morgan H., Carrollton, Kentucky-manager Tate and Ogs, Varsity Track-Chafee spring day '73-TUFTS f234J WILLIAMS, James, 541 Mapleton Ave., Suffield-M.I.T. C1541 WILLIS, Bill, 34 Gilbert Ave., Bloomfield-Duncan, Sherman, Jackie, Mrs. Treadway, Eddie's room, mu- sic and all the REAL people-PITZER f215J WILSON, Stewart, 1701 Juniper Ave., Silver City, New Mexico-UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA- SANTA BARBERA 1169! YEOMANS, Grace A., 11 Walbridge Road, West Hartford-Committee X, Glee Club-letters and phone calls from friends, playing the piano, Dublin, N.H.-SMITH-C2385 ZAUTRA, Joseph J., 511 Percival Ave., Kensington-Cum Laude-Foreign Policy Association, Hartford Model U.N., Varsity Wrestling- Wrestling, Russian Studies, Model United Nations, Dave Tomaszek's wit- WESLEYAN 11531 ZINGG, Christopher D. 164 East 72nd St., New York, New York-Senate, Student council-OOzy, Cschenlc fone fy' the few dogs who understoodj and all other friends and acquaintances here at the institute- KENYON C2051 Mr. and Mrs. Arons Mr. Evelyn Ball Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Bartram Wongang Behl Timothy Brewer III Arthur Broadman Bernard Brody David Carter Mrs. Joyce Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Edward Deming Mr. and Mrs. John Dobbin Mr. and Mrs. L. Kellsey Dodd Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dubilier Mr. Arend Elbrechtz Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Samuel Fuller Samuel Gellin Robert Handschumacher Robert Hellendale Curtiss Hickcox Michael Horton Frank House III Albert Hurwit William Kasler John Kneipp Richard Koopman Elwin Lindsey William MacLachlan Mr. C. H. MacRonald Prof. and Mrs. Harvey McArthur Mr. and Mrs. James McCrystal Mr. and Mrs Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Rt. Rev. and Lauchlin Mclean A. Menzer Phillip Moran Robert Muir Robert Murphy Edward O'Connell Mrs. Lyman Ogilby Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pallas Dr. and Mrs Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. William Prestley Richard Pullen Charles Reed Merrill Rubinow Oscar R. Rudnick Joseph Russo II Harold Sandler Peter Savin Mortimer Schwartz Shepard Schwartz Warren Silliman Stanley Taylor Stanley Teale Angelo Tomasso Jr. Matthew Tomaszek William Tripp Walter Vogel Benjamin Warren Mrs. Edith Weaver The Wieners Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Wilde William Willis Clinton B. Yeomans Joseph Zautra Congratulations to the Class of 1973 Connecticut Boiler Repair and Manufacturing Co., Inc. 252 POST ROAD STAGES. INC. COLLINS BUS SERVICE 1105 Strong Road Wapping, Connecticut daumgusnua 644-1531 HAROLD COLLINS oy clmes. Compliments of CENTRAL YARN 81 DYEING GASTONIA, NORTH CAROLINA There are two kinds of interest at a bank that listens. The first is measured in dollars. The second is in you. THE CONNECTICUT BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Pam Adams Gina Arons Susie Brady Trice Koopman Dian P ,fin Moll S'lliman T ll T pp Pam Valentine Jill Waw Priscilla GOOD LUCK, GIRLS!! VALLEY INN Rt. 305 at Interstate 91 Windsor 688-5221 Compliments of COII1pllIT19I1tS of Green Chimneys School B'eWStef' New York Whalens Chair Rental Samuel B. Ross, Ir. Headmaster UNITED SERVICE ,Je o h, LICENSED AND BONDED DETEC9TgvgRiLiriE,2D, INC Q-' 'v NEW YORK sum 528530 SQ- xt NEW JERSEY HARTFORD CONN 06103 esfnnuwfb MASSACHUSETTS ' 1929 . -. VERMONT 22031 246,858-s 7 C Q CONNECTICUT 4 V x50 Ovgp We FOI!!-llflllllllf .9nU0Jfl'yaf1'unJ-gjmwra! .gzerurify 255 CONGRATULATIONS To The Class of 1973 .Et FCI? 'EaF:lX!IIXlIE1'.-E H Office throughout Greater Hartford Compliments of Smith Sz Fazzina Inc. . The Windsor House From a Frlend 219 Broad St. W To All Our Fans from Beacon Light and Supply Co TATE SL OGS We're with you all the way HARTFCDRD NATIGNAL BANK TRUST 4 t F' TATE MORT THE TED WILLIAMS DRIVING SCHOOL sears approvedl DOLPHIN FRANKY tTED hly Skilled instruct odern testing facil t Compliments of The Black Dog Tavern Suffield Canton Compliments of Mart's Music M art With Best Wishes For A Bright Future. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Broadman BEST WISHES Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Helman CUSTOM FRAMNNG ' H XR'I'I4'URlJ-SIM Compliments of First National Bank of Carville's Motor Lodge Suffleld and Restaurant 30 Bridges St. 29 Windsor Ave. Suffield CWhere Rte. 5A and I-91 interseotj 12035 525-1461 Established 1864 Member FDIC Steve Wilde ,. ' S ., W l Bruce Gellin .. R TS Q W 1 Z' 1' i Nina Savin A Steve Cushman V' F E f ANGELO TOMASSO INC NEW BRITAIN , CONNEOTICU T SHERMAN-TOMASSO CONCRETE TOMASSO OF NORTH HAVEN TOMASSO OF FARM! N GTON HELMING BROS. tlwlfci H atulations, Class of 1973-Thanks Compllments of f haring your victories and defeats . . th us . . . especially football and Sufflgld SaV11'1gS Band l sse! A couple of fans. Mgmber Compliments of TUFTY COMMUNICATIONS, INC. Publishers of- Value Engineering Digest The only commercial publication in the Value Engineering!Value Analysis field. Compliments of Price-Whitford WILSON DRUG CO. Travel Agency MSDN 41 GOODWIN, LOOMIS 81 BRITTON, lNC. INSURANCE Chester H. Loomis Sumner F. Bissell Charles P. Britton Theodore D. Olmsted Frederick D. Houghton R. Michael Curran Robert T. Spencer, C.L.U. Lewis Street Hartford SAVIN BROTHERS, I C. Roads, Dams, Bridges, Tunnels 522 Cottage Grove Road Bloomfield, Conn. 64 'Trademark Registered OwensfCorn: 9 F b gl This amazing combination of plastic plus Owens-Corning glass fibers is putting strength and durability into a majority of pleasure-boat hulls built today. Fiberglas' plastic is improving a huge variety of other products, too-such as pipe, car bodies, tanks, vaulting poles, and skiis. ln fact, it's estimated there are more than 33,000 ways Fiberglas materials can profitably replace metals, wood or cloth. They're already in many of these uses right now, moving fast into others. Our goal-to give you more performance, beauty and value in today's new products. We're going full speed ahead on it. Owens- Corning Fiberglas Corp., Fiberglas Tower, Toledo, Ohio' 43601. Fiberglas plastic is full speed ahead. 265 BLAIKIE MILLER 5: HINES, INC. Food Service Management Sc Consultants We proudly serve LOOMIS SCHOOL Cheshire Academy Barnard School for Boys The Hewitt School Low-Heywood School Lincoln School for Girls The and Ethel Walker School Browning School Walden School The Choir School Columbia Grammar School Rectory School THE DAVES REALTY REALTOR SERVING wlNosoR AND GREATER HARTFORD 487 BROAD STREET WINDSOR, CONN. Compliments of Youth Centre Compliments of FUEL foulp FOR THOUGHT 5.5. AMES DEPARTMENT STORES, INC. AUTUMATIQEEEJEAFURT' COPD- Greater Hart'ford's Largest and Most Experxenced Fuel Service 66 Q Q09 C3 r IFITSIN.. .i T IT3 IN AT tl Compliments of City Supply 8: Paper Co., Inc 3080 Main St. Hartford, Ct Compliments of W. A. Crossup Compliments of Windsor Optical COMPLIMENTS OF OLDE-TOWN LINCOLN MERCURY Mercury, Montego, Capri, Continental Mark III Sales and Service Winds 250 Broad St. 258 Windsor A e. Windsor v Conn Wilson, Con O Big Car Quality at Low Cor Cost ARDERY CHEVROLET INC. 125 Poquonock Avenue Windsor, Connecticut Tel. 688-3696 Frederick H. Ardery, Jr. ARTHUR DRUG of Windsor 144 Broad Street - 688-5283 TO THE GRADUATION CLASS 1973 We Wish you continued success in your endeavor to learn The Ashinoff Family Portsmouth, Virginia fs- J. ff f A ' TEL. VMS- bi Uiiompwri Flow arzmffip sir, 55 POQUONOCK AVE. WINDSOR, CONN 06095 l 688-4241 cn X on uh X It Pays To Keep Clean AMERICAN LINEN Connecticut Celery Co. Specializing in Fresh Fruits, Vegetables, ' n And a Complete Line of Froze Foods 68 Printing Specialists For Schools Printers 8. Lithographers Since 1905 The Bond Press, Inc., 71 Elm St. Hartford, Conn. 06106, Tel. 525-1121 Compliments of Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Plato Said It Long Ago. 'CTHE DIRECTIGN IN WHICH EDUCATIGN STARTS A MAN WILL DETERMINE HIS FUTURE LIFE We agree. 3-'Q-'ECOMBUSTION '-- ENGlNEERING -T - PROGRESS FOR INDUSTRY WORLDWIDE Compliments of WINDSOR DRY Compliments of 293f333o17gjng ve- EDWARD J. KERNAN COMPANY INSURANCE 8. REAL ESTATE Compliments of I87 Broad Street Huntington's Bookstore WMO C0 eC'lCU' QXRNXBQ Restaurant f U J' ,r Cl-Rm BOX lv LIL - ww ...where quality and care are a matter of habit! 1291 Silas Deane Highway, Wethersfield just 8 minutes from downtown Hartford. For reservations: 529-7761 Visit the other Clam Box restaurants in Westport or Cos Cob, Conn. -seafood dining traditions for over 25 years. Route I-91 CExit No. 241 0 271 l e i The editors wish to thank those who have given up the beginning of their summer vacation and have worked hard on this publication . . . Bruce Gel- lin, Toni Shippenberg, Alex Feldman, Sharon Bard, Diane Alfano, Henry Horsey, Tim Holt, Keith Raphael, Gary Helman, Randy Parks, Al Shope, Dan Nussbaum, Diane Pickoff, and Steve Wilde. We also wish to thank Liz Traggis and Grim. 6 -Harry and Tally I si l lil milk! , E A W.. 1. k at F ei a MMA 'T' V 7 1 i L n W K r 5 . 1 I 1 1 l 1 1 I 1 1 :AN 1 ll wi I r 1 S R :E-,xt


Suggestions in the Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) collection:

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985


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