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Page 14 text:
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First row: Kathleen Davignon, Arline Merrow, Eliza- beth McNally, Joan Osgood, Marilyn Evans, Nancy Keysar. Second row: Ruth Harding, Marjorie McKee, Philys Jochim, Dawn Bailey, Edith Hammond, Elizabeth Greatorex, Shirley Falconer, Columbine Demars, Vir- ginia Thomas. Third row: Henry Parkhurst, Armand Gaffney, Richard Worden, Royce Pinard, Ronald Clifford, David Regan, Robert Desmarais, Allen Bean, Jay Chandler, Ralph Momaney, Michael Sicard, Leonard Peduzzi. Sunday, September 11, the reception committee greeted the largest Freshman class ever to hit our college. Varied were the emotions experienced those first few days—excitement, fear, brave hope for the coming year, but everyone ready to drive on toward their goal of becoming teachers of mankind. The freshman class consists of 64 members after losing a few, but gaining three new members at the semester break. Six states and Vermont lay claim to these youth—Georgia, New York, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Ohio. Because of the large increase in enrollment this year, the loft of the boys' dor- mitory was finished off for additional living quarters. The freshman boys were chosen the first to initiate the loft in the upper chambers, and they have arranged it in a very pleasing, livable fashion. The boys should also be commended on the way they have proven the honor system can work, even in tight quarters. This class has proven big not only in size, but also in action. They are well represented in all activities of the college. The SNEA membership, for example, is largely composed of freshmen. Skiing seems to be a favorite pastime of the freshman class and they boast many outstanding skiers. F R E S H M A N 10
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Page 15 text:
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First row: Anita Lontine, Sherry Cole, Nancy Brooks, Rosalie George, Jean Irons. Second row: Gail Martin, Diane McCarty, Maxine Emery, Carolyn Smith, Rachel Astle, Jean Davis, Emily Eaton, Barbara Sanville, Rose Dutton, Angela DeCosta. Third row: John Bushey, Raymond Brooks, Paul Mon- tague, Seavie Rideout, David Warden, Richard Hook, Charles Woods, Roger Sicely, Kenneth Welch, Dom inic Mastrapasqua, Frederick Hill, John Gambeski. C L A S S Sports have really drawn from freshman resources. The boys are the backbone of the JV basketball team, and three boys made the Varsity, with Raymond Brooks being among the top ten scorers in New England. The girls have also done their part by supplying six girls for the basketball squad, and six others supporting the volleyball team. The other fields of activity have not been forgotten. Henry Park- hurst, along with Wallace Harris, represented Lyndon Teachers College's Co-op at the National Cooperative College Conference in Kansas. They brought back many suggestions on ways of improving our campus co-op and information on coopera- tive houses, which may be food for thought for a growing college. Dominic Mastrapasqua, Paul Montague, Richard Worden, Henry Parkhurst, David Warden Charles Woods took a trip south to Brattleboro to attend the Vermont High School FTA Conference. The delegation discussed teacher education and told some of the highlights of campus life at a teachers college. The class put its united efforts into one of the best masquerade Halloween dances ever experienced by Lyndonites, led by their officers Ralph Momaney, president; Raymond Brooks, vice president; Nancy Brooks, secretary; Elizabeth McNally, treasurer; and Dominic Mastrapasqua, student government representative. II
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