Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 176

 

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1969 volume:

For Reference Not to be taken from this library : to repent and Mansfield, Ma High school is part of our lives for four years. But what is a high school? An empty building, a silent COrLidOleer Classes, different, but somehow the same, day after day ... people, as individuals and as a group everything these people do ... CTA is neemnentame ... certain special moments and feelings. There is work, too ... ... but also joyous triumph as a unit and the very individual triumph of creativity. There are old experiences of laugh- ter with friends, and wonderful new experiences. We build for our futures —from the inside, out. so man cane a enn Sr Nees b Q wW o Ww) ° — oO — ise} = pa) es ° iS) a ios} 12) -_ o = o | en hind us as we venture outward, full of life. Bons Ng RES ay In response to what they have done for us, we dedicate this 1969 Yearbook to both of our advisors: Mrs. Meears and Mr. Young. adding our warm and honest thanks. We also thank Mr. Brandenburg for his help and understanding as we put together this yearbook. | 10 YEARBOOK STAFF Hannah Chase, Copy Editor; Marilyn Cheyne and Peter Brown, Co-Editors-in-Chief by %. Re Lg -% above: Diane D’Amico, Photography Editor; Stephen Cinto, Margaret McDonough and Alison Vickery—Art and Pho- tography right: William Vernon, Sallie Eusepi, and Richard Dutton Sports above: Roland Chalifoux (Business Man- ager), Lynda Thomas, Gretchen Maurer, Linda Kelley, Janet Turinese, Janice Macomber, Diane Gremore, Michael] Lodico— Advertising right: Deborah Staples, Karen Cipriani, Louise Antosca, Roberta Gentili, Denise Hovey, Joyce Hagerty—Typing above: Kathleen Wagner, Christine Vallett, Susan Bedard, Mel Haughton (Editor), Patricia Carpenter (Biogra- phy) 12 SUPERINTENDENT The Class of 1969 is proud to be the first class in this town to be graduated under Mr. Avery’s influence. We appreciate what he has done for the high school and for the rest of the school system as well. ASSISTANT TO THE SUPERINTENDENT Deep personal thanks are ex- tended to Mr. Quarters whom we remember as the Adminis- trative Assistant to the Super- intendent, but perhaps even more, as our principal for several years. Because of his warmth at the personal level, Mr. DeStefano has earned our warm thanks. We wish him continued suc- cess as he becomes the first principal of the new high school next year. PRINCIPAL We appreciate Mr. Sullivan for the education he gave us as a teacher, the fairness he showed as a_ disciplinarian, but most of all for the sin- cerity he exhibits as a person. 14 PERSONNEL Somer ete EET ERY above: Mrs. Polson, Secretary; Mrs. Hayes, Receptionist. below, left: Mrs. Merrifield, Executive Secretary. below right: Mrs. Moscaritello, Senior Clerk. 16 JAMES GALLO THE ARTS ee So E. B. CUNNINGHAM Art PHYSICAL EDUCATION PHYLLIS BERNARD DR. J. RICHARD MARSHALL aaa Dats x set , Chorus DANIEL SMITH eae ee iY 44) iy ROR: ee a 5 Sore MARY DRISCOLL Department Head FRANCESE PEARCE Bookkeeping Se ELSA HENCHEL Typing THERESA LAJEUNESSE General Business STEFAN THEODORE Business Law 17 ENGLISH Surloske through Literature MILDRED HANNON Department Head MARY CONNOLY FRANCIS ANTOSCA RICHARD McMORROW PAUL DUNPHY 18 MICHAEL BRANDENBURG Latin OMER DESLAURIERS French Mth ih Th LANGUAGE EDWARD ALBERTINI Department Head JOAN MEEARS French 19 20 PATRICIA GRANO ELIZABETH CHANDLER SIDNEY PRICE Department Head KAREN REILLY SCIENCE WALTER SAPOLSKY Physics — = NICHOLAS PACELLA Biology J. SPENCER KELLEY Chemistry JOHN DUNN Science 2! === ae ll PATRICIA PECK ADELE MILLER INDUSTRIAL ARTS left: ALBERT GOETZ Metal Shop center: NORMAN BRUNELLE Wood Shop right: RICHARD YOUNG Technical Drawing SOCTAL STUDIES PAUL McCABE ROBERT PAYDEN MARGARET WELCH, Department Head SPECIAL SERVICES MARY DITTO Remedial Reading CLAIRE GULAN, Librarian 23 24 JUNIOR WING top left: CATHERINE VERZOLA top right: MARY I. COOK left: LINDA COLSON right: MARLENE BAKER bottom left: JAMES TODD bottom right: DAVID PIERCE HENRY LEMIEUX GUIDANCE MARGARET NELSON RICHARD LOMBARDI 25 26 CAFETERIA STAFF Mrs. Landers, Mrs. Stukis, Mrs. Mara Mrs. Inglese, Mrs. Cinelli, Mrs. Bruno CUSTODIAL STAFF Mr. Scarpellini, Mr. Fontanini, Mr. Lombardi, Mr. Faria Leaps espe, 28 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS WILLIAM VERNON, President LYNDA THOMAS, Vice President JOANNE SOUZA, Secretary GRETCHEN MAURER, Treasurer . MARYANN ELIZABETH ALFONSO PAUL WAYNE ADAMS “Man to command and wo- “Every inch a king.” man to obey.” Football 3, 4 Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4 Drama Club South Pacific 3 Drill Team 1 Basketball 1 Glee Club 1, 4 Cheerleader 3, 4 J.V. Cheerleader 1 Tennis 1 Queen’s Court 3 Usherette— South Pacific 3 Yearbook Typing Staff 4 JAMES ELLIOT ALLARD LOUISE JAY ANTOSCA “Never a chatterbox be.” “My heart is like a singing bird.” ZZ JOHN JOSEPH AULD “Right makes might.” Ski Club 2 Tatler 4 Pep Squad 4 : Dance Committee 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1 Future Nurses’ Club 4 MARGARITE JACKSON BALL “Do but look on her hair, it is bright as Love’s star when it riseth.” MARY LYNN BARR “Men may come and Men may go, but I go on forever.” Tatler 4 Prom Decorations 3 Dance Committee 1, 2, 3, 4 Drill Team 1, 2 Color Guard 3, 4 Ski Club 2 Football 1, 2 RICHARD EARL BARRE “Independence is the virtue of the individual.” 30 SUSAN MARY BEDARD Softball 1, 2, 3, 4 “To be great is to be mis- Girls State Delegate 3 understood.” Class Secretary 3 Drama Club, South Pacific 3 Dance Committee 1, 2, 3, 4 Prom Committee 3 Drill Team 2 Treasurer 3 Color Guard 3 Captain 4 Queen’s Court 3 Tatler 4 Ski Club 2 Yearbook: Biographies 4 Basketball 2, 4 Softball 1, 2, 3, 4 Pep Squad 4 Basketball 3, 4 Ski Club 2 Tatler Reporter 4 Dance Committee 1, 2 Drama Club, Oklahoma 2 Senior Food Sale DAURENE ANN BELCHER “The best kind of beauty is that from within.” DAVID BENNOCH “Still waters run deep.” Queen’s Court 3 Ski Club 2 Pep Squad 4. Dance Committee 1, 2 OLGA ANN BERADI “Beauty is its own excuse for being.” 3! OTTO BINGEL “T am my own person.” Basketball 3 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 iiracka lae2eos Stage Crew— Oklahoma 2 Drama Club 3 “Exit Laughing” 3 Gym Club 3 3 4 RICHARD ALAN BLISS “No limit but the sky.” 32 DIANNE ARLENE BIRMAN “A winning way and pleasant woman’s smile, mark this friendly style.” Cheerleader 2, 3, 4 Captain 4 Variety Show 2 Gym Club 1, 2, 3 Usherette Okiahoma 2 South Pacifie 3 Queen’s Court 3 Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4 Pep Squad 4 LORRAINE BOWSER “The gain I seek is, quiet in to} ? the match.” PETER ALDEN BROWN “No evil can happen to a good man, either in life or after death.” Jr. Nat. Honor Society 1 Nat. Honor Society 3, 4 V. President 4 Stylus 3, 4 French Club 3 Math Club 3 Yearbook Co-Editor 4 EDMUND FRANCIS BUTLER, JR. “Silence is Golden.” ROBERT ELLIS BURT “Can a leopard change his spots?” Dracks le 2a 34 Math Club 3 French Club 3 Pep Squad 4 Tatler 4 JANET ISABEL CAPOLUPO “She moves a goddess and she looks a queen.” 33 34 SHARON LYNN CARL “The female of the species is more deadly than the male.” Queen’s Court 3 Chorus 1 Pep Squad 4 Dance Committee 1, 2 Student Council 1, 2 Ski Club 2 Tatler 4 Senior Planning Committee 4 Drill Team 1, 2 Color Guard 3, 4 Drama Club South Pacific 3 Girl’s State Delegate 3 French Club 3 Student Council 1, 2, 3 Secretary 4 Board of Directors 1, 2 Yearbook; Biographies 4 Tennis 2, 4 Jr. Nat. Honor Society 1 Tatler 4 History Forum PATRICIA MARY CARPENTER Delegate 3 “To add life to years, not years to life.” COLIN ROBERT CAULDWELL “Women delight me not.” ENG Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Track 1, 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Band 1 Tennis 2, 3, 4 South Pacific 3 Yearbook Business Manager 4 ROLAND WINNIFRED CHALIFOUX “Truly a little body often harbors a great soul.” HANNAH BATES CHASE “The greatest reward for do- ing is the opportunity to do more.” French Club 3 Yearbook Copy Editor 4 National Honor Society 3h al National Merit Semi- finalist 4 Drama Club 3 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Dance Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 Prom Decorations 3 French Club 3 ; Stylus Assistant Editor 3 Co-Editor 4 Yearbook Editor 4 Jr. National Honor Society 1, 2 4 i National Honor ‘ : u Society 3, 4 ] a National Merit Semi- a 7 al MARILYN RUTH CHEYN “T had a pleasant time with my mind, for it was happy.” STEPHEN ERIC CINTO “Oh, to be in England!” Class Vice Pres. 1, 2, 3 Nat. Jr. Honor Society 1 Nat. Honor Society 2 Stylus: Art Editor 2, 3 Dance Committees 1, 2, 3, 4 Drama Club 2, 4 Ski Club 2 French Club 3 Prom Decorations 3 Yearbook: Art Editor 4 Student Council 4 (Rep.) Board of Directors 4 Field Hockey 1 Band 1, 2 Yearbook Typing Staff 4 Basketball 1 Pep Squad 2 ms, ! | KAREN MARIE CIPRIANI “The only way to have a friend is to be one.” 35 PAULINE ANN CLEMENT “A smile to each a friend to all.” Basketball 1 Ski Club 2 Pep Squad 2 Dance Committee 1, 2 Field Hockey 1 Ski Club 2 s Pep Squad 1, 2 Cheerleading 1 Field Hockey 1 Basketball 1 Dance Committee 1, 2, 3 DEBORAH RAE CLIFFORD “Gentlemen always seem to remember blondes.” WILLIAM ARNOLD COLLINGWOOD “No man is happy unless he thinks himself so.” Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Track 1, 2, 3, 4 Student Council 3, 4 Board of Directors 4 Christmas Assembly 2, 3, 4, Drama Club South Pacific 3 Bob Blasser Special 3 Chorus 3 Gym Club 1, 2, 3 Stage Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 Prom Decoration 3 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Track 3, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Stage Crew 3, 4 LAWRENCE MIKEMEN COOPER “His friends—he has many; his foes; has he any?” 36 PAMELA DIANE CORLISS “Quiet, but a friend to all.” Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4 Prom Decoration 3 i SUSAN LEG CORLISS “What is precious is never forgotten.” ELLEN MARIE COUGHLIN “The only way to have a . . ” friend is to be one. Queen’s Court 3 Ski Club 2 Decorations 2 Band 1, 2 Gym Club 2, 3, 4 WILLIAM JOSEPH COUTURE “Let tomorrow take care of tomorrow.” 37 38 DIANE RITA D’AMICO “Most musical, most melan- choly.” Latin Award 2 Jr. Honor Society 1, 2 N.H.S. 3, 4 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 French Club 3 Junior Prom Decorations 3 Dance Committee 3 Stylus 4 Yearbook Photography Editor 4 Girls’ State Alternate 3 Biology Award 1 Honorary Member, New Century Club 4 PATRICIA ANN DELL’ORFANO “The most essential thing for happiness is the gift of friend- ship.” KEVIN EDWARD DONAHUE “A Socrates in every Class- room.” National Honor Society 3 Math Club 3, 4 Math Award 2 Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4 Football 4 Basketball 3, 4 Junior Honor Society 4 National Honor Society 3, 4 French Club 3 Math Club 3 Yearbook Sports Co-Editor 4 President National Honor Society 4 RICHARD CRAIG DUTTON “Virtue is but one of his attributes.” MICHAEL KEVIN EAGAN “A tall man, both physically and morally.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Boys’ State Alternate 3 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Historian 4 U.N.H. Music Scholar- ship 3 Stuscounsl, 2.3 Treasurer 4 Pep Squad 4 Field Hockey 2, 3 Captain 4 Softball 2, 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Yearbook Sports Editor 4. Jr. N.H.S. 1 Dance Committee 2 Planning Committee 4 SALLIE MARIE EUSEPI “Our actions are our own, their consequences belong to Heaven.” RALPH MICHAEL DANIEL FARIA “Talk of the devil and his horns appear.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 3 Stage Crew 3 History Forum Field Hockey 1 Chorus 1, 2 PATRICIA ANN FASULO “Friendship improves happi- ness.” 39 DONALD FREDRICK FLEURY “He that falls into sin is a FRANCIS PAUL FIORE man; that grieves at it is a “What’s the use of worry- saint; that boasteth of it is ine a devil.” Football 2, 4 Track 2 Baseball 1 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3 Track 1, 3, 4 Drama Club 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 4 Senior Food Sale 4 Prom Decoration Committee 3 Senior Food Sale 4 Queen’s Court Drama Club Oklahoma 2 South Pacific 3 Softball 2, 3, 4 Field Hockey 3, 4 Drill Team 1, 2 Color Guard 3, 4 Basketball 4 Captain 4 Gym Club 4 Senior Class Food Sale Dance Committee DONNA MARIE FLEURY JOAN GALANTI “Her voice was soft, gentle “Beauty of itself doth per- and low, an excellent thing in suade.” woman.” DONNA LEE GODDARD ROBERTA ANN GENTILI “This woman doth surpass “A friend to all who need the rest; by beauty, and one.” bounty, she stands the best.’ ess . Pa = ba Band 1, 2 Ski Club 2 Basketball 1 Student Council 4 Band 1, 2, 3 ; Field Hockey 2 Queen s Court 3 Sie Club 2 Senior Class Food Sale 4 Pep Squad 4 Yearbook Staff Typist 4 Senior Class Food Sale Basketball 1 Gym Club 1 Cheerleader 1 Chorus Dance Committee 1, 2 Prom Decorations 3 Chorus 4 Math Club 4 CAROL JANE GONSALVES STEVEN JOSEPH “Man has his will—but wo- GONSALVES man has her way.” “T took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference.” 4| 42 RUSSELL EDWARD GOODWIN “Well, I’m about as tall as a shotgun, and just as noisy.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Baseball 2 Drill Team 1 Pep Squad 4 Prom Decorations 3 KAREN GOOKIN “Innocence in genius, and candor in power, are both noble qualities.” VALERIE JEANNE GORHAM “God is my strength and my salvation.” Cheerleader 3 Dance Committee 1, 2 Football 1 ROBERT OLIVER GOSS “Man is born free, and every- where he is in chains,” JAMES DOUGLAS GOYEA “Come with me, my thoughts are full of mischief.” Football 1] Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Vice Pres. 3, President 4 Student Council 1 Tennis 1, 2 Math Club 3, 4 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 “Hornet” Advertising Staff 4 DIANE MARIE GREMORE “In New England the high school is the place where the band practices.” JOYCE ELLEN HAGERTY “A woman can look both moral and exciting if she also looks as if it were a struggle.” N.HSS. 4 Drill Team 1 Yearbook Typing 4 Dance Committee 1, 2 Pep Squad 4 Softball 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Co-Captain 3 NANCY LEE HARRAR “Is she kind as she is fair?” 43 RICHARD EARL HARRAR “Seated one day at the organ I was weary and ill at ease.” Organist 1, 2, 3, 4 Tennis 4 Prom Decoration 3 Tatler 3, Co-Editer 4 Drama Club 2, 3 Ski Club 2, Math Club 3, 4 French Club 3 Yearbook 4, Biography Ed. Christmas Assembly 3, 4 Football 4, Basketball 3 Track 1, 4, Tennis 2, 3 Class Pres. 2 : Stu. Coun. Alt, 3, 4 : Jr N. BSP ie RICHARD MELBOURNE N.HLS. 3 HAUGHTON “Like one that spies a far-off land where he would tread, wishing his foot were equal with his eye.” DAVID CHARLES HEMMINGSEN “IT myself am Heaven and Hell.” ORO Football 1, 4 Baseball 4 MICHAEL HICKEY “Much learning doth make thee mad.” CHRISTOPHER WALTER HOLM “And seem a saint, when most I play the devil.” Football 1 Gym Club 3, 4 Band I, 2, 3 Drama Club 3 South Pacific Soccer 4 Pep Squad 4 Yearbook Typing Staff 4 DENISE MARIE HOVEY “The friendship between me and you I will not compare to a chain for that the rains might rust or the falling tree might break.” ROBERT WESLEY JACKSON, JR. “Beware the fury of a patient man.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Track 1.2.3, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Weightlifting 4 Isometrics 1 Drill Team 1, 2 Drama Club 2, 3 Ski Club 2 Yearbook Advertising Staff 4 Pep Squad 1, 4 Dance Committee 3 LINDA SUZANNE KELLEY “Blushing is the color of virtue.” - Cdl! bd a lead hd oa ae ene? ie f SS ra eave ws : 4 a? Ge ont) 45 PAUL TIMOTHY KLENK RICHARD ALAN LAMBOS “Ambition has no rest!” “All the world’s a stage.” Football 2, 3, 4 Track 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Tennis 1, 2, 3 Drama Club 2, 3 Baseball 4 Ski Club 2 Student Council 1, 2, 3, Dance Committee 2 Ey Ticket Committee 3 Advertising “Oklahoma” 2 “Tf A Man Answers” 3 South Pacific 3 Stage Crew 1, 2 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Band 2, 3 Tennis 15.2 Glee Club 1, 2 Prom Decorations 3 ‘ GLEN GARY LARSON JACQUELINE ANN “The most potent thing in LETTENEY life is habit.” “Save a boyfriend for a rainy day—and another in case it doesn’t rain.” 46 JANICE MARIE MICHAEL LODICO MACOMBER “Oh, but we think him “Fate makes our relatives, greater than we say. choice makes our friends!” Golf 2, 3, 4 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Boys State 3 Band Board of Class Play 2 Directors 3 Oklahoma Tatler 2, 3 Yearbook 3 Tennis 1, 2, 4 Advertising Yearbook 4 Advertising Drill Team 1, 2 Color Guard 3, 4 Class Treasurer 3, 4 Basketball 2 STANLEY SUMNER GRETCHEN ELIZABETH MARSHALL MAURER “For everything you have “If she be made of white and missed, you have gained some- red, her faults will n’er be thing else.” known.” 47 48 DONALD BRUCE MAXWELL “To look up and not down, to look forward and not back, to look out and not in, and to lend a hand.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Student Council 1, 2 V. Pres. 3, Pres. 4 Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4 N.H.S. 3, 4 Math Club 3 Gym Club 3 Jr. N.H.S. 1, 2 Christmas Assembly 1, 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 1 Dance Committee 2 Queen’s Court 3 Tatler 4 Pep Squad 4 DONNA MARIE McCONNELL “There are often voice and words in a silent look.” MARGARET ELLEN McDONOUGH “Intolerant only of intoler- ance” Yearbook Art Staff 4 Track 2, 3, 4 Band 1, 2, 3 Drama Club 3 Soccer 4 Ski Club 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 3, 4 STEPHEN DRAKE METTERS “There may be heaven, there may be hell; meantime, there is our earth here-well.” ROBERT CHARLES MONTVILLE “He is always laughing, for he has an infinite deal of wit. ” Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Football 1, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Student Council 2 Drama Club Advertising 2 Golf 1 Track 2 MICHAEL DOUGLAS MORTON “The strongest man in the world is he who stands alone.” GARY WAYNE NORFTILL “Habit maketh no monk, nor wearing of gilt spurs a knight.” Math Club 3, 4 ROBERT JOHN O’FLAHERTY “TI long for solitude.” 49 DONALD GEORGE LINDA JEAN PAIVA OLDMIXON “Charm is a glow within a “He is straight, you can trust woman that casts a most be- him.” coming light on others.” Band 1, 2, 3 “Oklahoma” 2 Pep Squad 4 Football 4 Basketball 3, 4 DAVID PARKER DEBORAH LUCY PERI “Life is my adventure.” “As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living.” 50 ANN-MARIE PIERCE “Be the same to your friends whether in prosperity or ad- versity.” MARILYN ELIZABETH POIRIER “A witty woman is a treas- ure; a witty beauty is a pow- er.” Glee Club 1, 2 Student Council 4 Board of Directors 4 Pep Squad 4 Dance Committee 3 LINDA SUSAN PORTER “Politeness is the art of choosing among one’s real thoughts.” Pep Squad 1 Student Council 3 Tatler 4 Dance Committee 3, 4 Queen’s Court 3 Prom Decorations 3 Future Nurses Club 4 KATHLEEN ANN MARIE PRIEN “Better the last smile than the first laughter.” 51 site RE 5 eons soessemcesemsnoerncnnceceey st HES Re SS es | iiainsmiencensneeceeieaonemmtems ie i | ARSE LONE so py lp, 52 SHERRY MARIE REASONER “True innocence is ashamed of nothing. ” Soccer 4 Gym Club 1 Baseball 1 KENNETH EDWARD RUSSELL “The wildest colts make the best horses.” MITCHEL GRANT SEIFERT “Reckless and fearless of what’s past, present or to South Pacific 3 Prom Decorations 3 Dance Committee 2, 3 Football 1 Track 1, 3, 4 Band 1, 2 Student Council 3 Ski Club 2, 3 JOAN ELIZABETH SEQUIN “So long as we can lose any happiness, we possess some.” GERALDINE ANN SHELDON “Quietness is best.” Drill Team 1, 2, 3, 4 Chorus 2, 3, 4 Student Council 2 Band 1 Field Hockey 2 Tatler 4 Typing 4 Dance Committee 1, 2, 4 Prom Decorations 3 GAIL ANNE SIGNORIELLO “Being a woman I will not slack to do my _ part.” KAREN MARIE SLINEY “The warmest of personali- ties gathers the best of friends ” Class Treasurer 2 Student Council 1, 4 Drill Team 1 Dance Committee 2 Class Secretary 1, 2, 4 Pep Squad 2, 4 Band 1 Tatler 4 Drama Club Oklahoma Understudy 2 Dance Committee 1, 2, 3 Ski Club 2 Math Club 3 Cheerleader 1 Basketbal] 2 JOANNE MARGUERITE SOUZA “T expect woman will be the last thing civilized by man.” 52 Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Boys’ State Alternate 3 MICHELLE STEIN ROBERT EDWARD SOUZA “Man is a rope. stretched between the animal and the superman.” DEBORAH ANN STAPLES “Woman is something between a flower and an angel. ” Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Recording Secretary 3 U.N.H.S.Y.M.S. Alternate Scholarship ihe Student Council 3 Gym Club 3 Stylus 3 Business Manager Yearbook Staff Typist 4 Senior Class Food Sale 4 Basketball 2, 3, 4 Softball 2, 3, 4 Drama Club “Oklahoma” 2 DONNA MARIE STEPHENS “Silence is golden but I'd rather talk.” KA MICHAEL LEE STREETER “He lives longest that is awake the most hours.” Football 1 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4 Gym Club 3 Football 1 DANIEL JOSEPH SULLIVAN “Is it sport? I think it is!” KEVIN GUY STUART “Sober but not serious, quiet but not idle.” Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Board of Directors 2 Stage Crew 1, 2, 3, 4 Audio-Visual Club 1, 2, 3, 4 HAZEL AGNES TATUM “An interest in humanity rather than herself.” 55 5h LORRAINE ELIZABETH TEARS “What lurks behind those darkened locks?” Drill Team 1, 2, 3 Captain 4 Dance Committee Drama Club “South Pacific” 3 Pep Squad 1 Football 1 Gym Club 1 DENNIS PAUL TESSIER “Laughter is life!” LYNDA MARIE THOMAS “Personality is the first rung up the ladder of success.’ b Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 4 Student Council 1, 2, 3 Ski Club 2 Drama Club 2 Y earbook—Advertising ky ® Tatler Reporter 4 JOHN TITUS “What is the use of speech! Silence were fitter.” RALPH LEON TOPHAM “T fear no woman because fame is the perfume of heroic deeds.” Football 1, 2, 3, 4 Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4 Track 3 Basketball 1, 2 Band 1, 2, 3, 4 Asst. Treas. 3, Treas. 4 NLS: 1,2 N.H.LS. 3, 4 Tatler 2, 3 Stylus Essay Editor 4 Student Council 2, 4 Math Club 3 U.N.H.S.Y.M.S. Scholarship 2 Girls’ State 3 Yearbook Advertising 4 JANET ANN TURINESE “Music is the medicine of the mind.” WILLIAM HERSEY TURNER “Speak but little and well if you would be esteemed as a man of merit.” Football 4 Track 2, 4 Band 1] THOMAS FRANCIS UNGER “Gnawing my bonds asunder, I gained my _ freedom.” 57 CHRISTINE ANN VALLETT “Love sought is good, yet given unsought is better.” Drill Team 1, 2 Color Guard 3, 4 Tatler 4 Prom Decorations 3 Pep Squad 1 Dance Committee 2, 3 Yearbook: Biographies 4 Senior Food Sale 4 Class President 1, 3, 4 Student Council 2 Board of Directors 2 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 Jr. N.HLS. 3, 4 Boys’ State 3 Yearbook: Sports Co-Editor 4 WILLIAM BRADFORD VERNON “A tall gentleman, by heaven, and a most gallant leader.” ALISON BETH VICKERY “A sunny heart wins lasting friendships.” Band 1, 2, 3 Stylus, Asst. Essay Editor 4 Yearbook Art Staff 4 Drill Team 1, 2 Treasurer 4 Color Guard 3, 4 Yearbook Biography Staff 4 Tatler 4 Prom Decorations 3 Dance Committees 2, 3 Future Nurses Club 4 Senior Food Sale 4 KATHLEEN FRANCES WAGNER “To be happy and gay, yet liked by all, is an accom- = plishment few attain.” DAVID CROCKETT WHITE “A man of few words, but many thoughts.” Track 1, 2 Gym Club 1, 2 Ski Club 2, 3 DANA SCOTT WIESE “T love the life I live.” Stage Crew 1, 2 Golf 2 MARK STEVEN WISNIEWSKI “What fools these mortals Football 1, 2, 3 Track 1, 2, 3, 4 Isometrics 1 Basketball 1 Gym Club 1, 2, 3 Boys’ State 3 Dance Committee 2 Ski Club 2 ,4 Drama Club 4 CHRISTINE ELIZABETH YORK “As soft and silent as the snow that falleth upon the earth.” 59 STUDENT GOVERNMENT DAY Vernon The Winner, William THE OTHER CANDIDATES Michael Lodico Mel Haughton Lynda Thomas 60 62 63 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Jean Verzola, Secretary; Louis Certuse, President William Shaw, Vice President; Denise Kovich, Treasurer Row 1: M. Baptiste, R. Butler, P. Bedard, J. Bedard, V. Bedard, S. Beltamy, P. Bedard, R. Barnes, W. Bennett, M. Athanasia. Row 2: D. Cuneo, A. Cutillo, L. Cutterill, C. Cogen, D. Coughlin, E. Carine, S. Churchill, P. Crisp, L. Certuse, S. Bonney. Row 3: W. Faria, M. Everett, L. Epstein, B. Day, E. Chartier, D. D’Abreau, C. Doncaster, D. D’Abreau, G. Dethlefs, P. Ceplon. Row 4: D. Hinchey, S. Healey, W. Goddard, B. Goss, D. Faber, D. Fleury, R. Federici, P. Frisoli, R. Franey, M. Faria, K. Fallon. Row 5: D. Kovich C. Kalvin, M. Juaire, C. Johnson, E. Jameson, C. Inman, S. Ingram, E. Holm, J. Horton, D. Hoppe, D. Hayner. Row 6: S. Legon, R. Larner, K. Lemire, R. Langille, R. Liberatore, D. Lefler, M. LaNifa. Row 1: M. McDermott, G. Moretti, T. Merrifield, B. Medeiros, G. McNamara, A. McKay, K. Marvelle, J. Maddock, G. Mc- Namara, R. Martin. Row 2: J. Picciandra, J. Potter, J. Prescott, D. Pierce, J. Nordberg, J. Mugford, J. Morton, P. Maurer, E. McCoy, K. McLaughlin. Row 3: N. Roche, K. Rockwood, J. Russell, D. Ryan, P. Repucci, D. Rondeau, C. Pavone, J. Pernock, A. Prien, R. Picchi. Row 4: P. Sheldon, W. Shaw, P. Seymour, T. Savini, J. Scialoia, D. Signoriello, R. Sequin, K. Smith, S. Szabo, E. Sliney, S. Richardson. Row 5: J. Verzola. 1. Vierra, V. Vassalotti, H. Torey, C. Sargent, P. Schulz, N. Titus, T. Tatum, L. Tarte, D. Spiezo, A. Steeves. Row 6: K. O’Buchon, B. Wills, D. Wynn, S. Walker, R. Walker, B. White, E. Westhaver, S. Wiese, D. Wood. 65 66 SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS President; Robert Vernon, Vice President; Anna Colella Treasurer; Patricia Precourt, Secretary; Jane Wheeler Row 1: A. Bedard, C. Buck, J. Brabham, M. Blackader, D. Bell, G. Bachiocchi, D. Anton, C. Annese, P. Anderson, L. Alperin. Row 2: B. Conner, P. Corliss, R. Carlson, D. Ceplon, R. Cushman, S. Bruun, J. Brown, R. Bella- vance, D. Bishop, A. Barr. Row 3: M. DeLong, D. Deviney, P. Day, K. DeBaggis, S. Doncaster, D. D’Ambra, D. Candella, J. Cross, A. Colella, C. Chase. Row 4: H. Fillion, V. Fisher, A. Florencio, J. Fiore, M. Fuller, M. Farinella, R. Eusepi, D. Demers, G. Durant, R. Dee, B. Dee. Row 5: B. Havey, B. Haskell, G. Hall, L. Hardy, M. Gilbert, J. Garland, G. Gugenheimer, V. Gaul, D. Gookin, K. Galanti, A. Gaboury. Row 1: R. Lettl, P. Lodico, B. Lodge, P. Keenan, J. Kudzol, J. Jackson, S. Ings, P. Horton, D. Hoppe, L. Hill. Row 2: P. Pernock, A. Pond, D. O’Flaherty, M. McCarthy, R. Marvelle, T. McDonald, R. Musto, R. Miller, D. Mutlow, L. McAulay. Row 3: L. Rose, S. Regula, L. Randall, J. Rathbun, T. Reed, J. Pernock, A. Pellegrini, P. Precourt, D. Pascucci, J. Peterson. Row 4: S. Stearns, A. Sarro, R. Joseph, B. Schulz, S. Seifert, C. Sim- mons, E. Spilewski, W. Stuart, P. Scialoia, D. Rondeau, S. Robinson. Row 5: P. Washburn, G. Wood, R. Vernon, J. Wheeler, G. Wood, S, Travers, L. Scannell, V. Shaw, J. Shepardson, A. Salachi. 67 68 FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Secretary, Christine Tartaglia; President, Thomas Souza; Vice-President, Lynn Pearce; Treasurer, Kathleen McDermott. Row 1: P. Bedard, M. Bedard, R. Beatty, P. Beatty, A. Baxter, C. Barrows, W. Barnes, L. Auld, R. Anton, L. Anderson. Row 2: B. Butler, M. Byrnes, P. Boldrighini, D. Birman, N. Bowser, C. Bouchard, M. Bieriecki, M. Bell, J. Bell, K. Bernard. Row 3: R. Clement, J. Chartier, K. Chambers, R. Churchill, A. Certuse, J. Caseley, R. Carnevali, R. Card, A. Carbonetti, S. Caldwell. Row 4: R. DeGirolamo, A. D’Afile, J. Cutillo, R. Crisp, J. Creeden, L. Corliss, C. Corliss, S. Corley, P. Corey, W. Cook, V. Collins. Row 5: J. Gaul, E. Gilbert, G. Ferguson, D. Ethier, L. Epstein, J. Eagan, L. Dwyer, D. Diamond, M. Devlin, P. DePillo, J. Devnew. Row 6: L. Hawes, S. Hartford, K. Harris, J. Harris, K. Harrar, L. Goss, D. Gray, K. Gilleran, L. Gonsalves, G. Goguen, K. Goddard. Row 7: L. Inglese, A. Holm, C. Hull. Row 1: N. Moorhouse, C. Mandolesi, M. MacLeod, K. Lombardi, J. Letteney, W. Larner, J. Krauth, K. Koukol, S. Klenk, M. Jackson. Row 2: V. Martin, K. McDermott, D. McCrady, M. McGee, S. Marshall, K. Matto, A. Metters, A. Melchiorri, J. McLaughlin, D. McNeill. Row 3: W. Palanza, M. Packer, R. O’Donnell, M. O’Malley, M. Noonan, B. Nilson, J. McPhee, P. Morton, C. Martin, R. MacPhee. Row 4: S. Schulz, D. Scarpellini, E. Savini, C. Ske I. Romancier, G. Richardson, K. Reagan, M. Piccolomini, L. Pearce, S. Pedini, R. Page. Row 5: P. Shaw, . Spiezio. Row I: A. Richards, I. Roberts, P. Repucci, G. Russell, R. Rivera, R. Pierce, W. Phillips, E. Peterson, M. Pernock, J. Paulson. Row 2: T. Souza, L. Shepard, W. Shepardson, D. Scott, K. Sherman, S. Stanley, R. Steele, M. Steele, M. Spiezio, J. Richard. Row 3: M. Upper, V. Unger, J. Titus, C. Tessier, J. Tartufo, P. Thomas, M. Thomas, G. Sullivan, C. Southern. Row 4: C. Zaffini, W. Wood, C. Wellington, R. Weineck, D. White, S. Vierra, M. Vickery, S. Vose, F. Viani. 69 EIGHTH GRADE Row 1; D. Bellavance, F. Bernard, N. Bernard, E. Bedard, D. Bedard, M. Barrows, L. Athanasia, J. Auld, R. Ander- son, S. Andberg. Row 2: C. Butler, P. Bruun, M. Bruno, L. Boldrighini, J. Birman, J. Brunetti, D. Brown, R. Bonvie, D. Briggs, R. Brown. Row 3: D. Colby, D. Chambers, G. Cananzey, D. Clarke, H. Clodius, J. Caseley, C. Cogen, V. Capolupo, R. Caldwell, M. Butler. Row 4: B. Cutillo, T. Cushman, R. Curtis, S. Crisp, P. Coughlin, L. Cotterill, M. Corliss, B. Conroy, M. Connell, E. Collins, C. Colella. Row 5: S. Drummey, R. DiGiampietro, P. Devine, M. Devine, D. Dethlefs, M. DePalma, M. Demers, D. DeLong, V. Danforth, K. D’Ambra, C. Czuj. Row 6: A. Fasulo, J. Fisher, D. Fillion, K. Fernald, D. Federici, E. Ethier, A. Durant, C. Dunner, J. Duarte. Row 1: J. Giovino, R. Giles, R. Galanti, W. Gaboury, N. Fulp, C. Fuller, N. Frongillo, S. Forbes, D. Fleury, D. Fleury. Row 2: R. Haynes, M. Hartford, J. Hardy, V. Guerrini, R. Goyea, C. Goss, C. Goss, L. Gookin, F. Good- man, E. Goddard. Row 3: E. Johnson, C. Jentsch, L. Inman, G. Ings, R. Hughes, D. Hovey, V. Hill, S. Higgins, P. Hickey, C. Hagerty. Row 4: D. Marvelle, P. Lomuscio, J. Letteney, N. Legon, J. Kuplast, E. Koukol, R. Keat- ing, M. Knights, J. Kett, W. Kelley, R. Kashtan. Row 5: K. McCalsky, M. Mahan, T. Maderosian, K. Marquis, R. Mackey, L. Main, N. MacElree, K. Magro, L. MacLeod, J. Magro, M. Maurer. Row 6: T. Mowry, J. Motyl, D. Morton, R. Morse, G. Monaco, B. Mitchell, G. Miller, P. McNamara, M. McKay, S. McCrady, C. McCoy. Row 7: G. Nelson, J. Nash, D. Muth. Row I: R. Pelrine, P. Pedini, 5, Peloquin, D. Pellegrini, K. Payden, R. Palmer, C. Page, R. Packert, B. Oldmixon, K. O'Donnell. Row 2: K. Roane, S. Reasoner, J. Reagan, D. Rathbun, M. Randall, T. Radnor, D. Purrier, D. Power, W. Poirier, C. Pierce. Row 3: C. Sibilia, E. Shepardson, D. Sheldon, C. Scialoia, P. Sargent, D. Sargent, K. Rose, M. Roche, D. Robitaille, F. Reuter. Row 4: R. Tatum, W. Sullivan, R. Straughn, B. Swanson, L. Stephens, J. Stein, C. Staples, C. Steves, J. Spiezio, D. Spears. Row 5: R. Washburn, C. Wagner, G. Wade, W. Van Ryzin, V. Vallett, M. Unger, R. Tintindo, D. Thomas, R. Treannie, G. Terry, N. Thayer. Row 6: R. Zarella, J. Zaffini, D. Wood, H. White, V. Wheeler, J. Westhaver, C. Webb. 7A 72 HALL OF FAME left: Best All Around: Louise Antosca, Richard Bliss. above: Most Talented: Marilyn Cheyne, Stephen Cinto. below left: Most Likely to Succeed: Marilyn Cheyne, William Vernon. below: Most Dependable Gretchen Maurer, Donald Maxwell. 74 above: Most Athletic: Sallie Eusepi; Robert Souza right: Best Dressed: Sharon Carl, Stephen Cinto below: Most Independent: Joanne Souza, Ralph Faria below right: Most School Spiri t: Diane Birman, Robert Mont- ville 75 76 Wittiest: Roberta Gentili, Dennis Tessier THE IDEAL DATES SEX APPEAL: PERSONALITY: FIGURE: EYES: MOUTH: VOICE: Ralph Topham Ralph Topham Richard Bliss Mel Haughton Richard Bliss Robert Souza Donald Fleury Richard Bliss Thomas Unger Class Flirts: William Collingwood, Mary Barr Janet Capolupo Joanne Souza Marilyn Poirier Louise Antosca Joanne Souza Marilyn Poirier Susan Corliss Joanne Souza PET PEEVES AND AMBITIONS PAUL ADAMS MARYANN ALFONSO JAMES ALLARD LOUISE ANTOSCA JOHN AULD MARGARITE BALL MARY BARR RICHARD BARRE SUSAN BEDARD DAURINE BELCHER DAVID BENNOCH OLGA BERADI OTTO BINGEL DIANE BIRMAN RICHARD BLISS LORRAINE BOWSER PETER BROWN ROBERT BURT JANET CAPOLUPO SHARON CARL PATRICIA CARPENTER COLIN CAULDWELL ROLAND CHALIFOUX HANNAH CHASE MARILYN CHEYNE STEPHEN CINTO KAREN CIPRIANI PAULINE CLEMENT The “hub” of Mansfield. 55 Chevys. A certain Senior homeroom teacher I had. Boys who don’t talk on dates. Mr. Antosca. Norton girls who don’t have their own boyfriends. Going steady and white socks. Mr. McCabe. Rumors. Sophisticated girls. Miss Reilly’s Quizzes. Happy endings, phonies, rules. People who can’t make up their minds. Typing Speeds. Big mouths in little towns. People who jump to conclusions. The nickname “Brownie.” M.H.S. dress code. Immature girls who are only good at showing off. Thailand. Waiting for the weekend. People who call me “Codwell.” Life without a laugh. Green paint trim on red brick build- ings. Worthlessness. Small noses, rumors, Mansfield, and long blond hair. Owls that don’t fly. Girls from Taunton who don’t have their own boyfriends. To seek my fortune. Secretary. Service, College, marriage, Secretary. To get a job. To marry Steve C. and get out of Mansfield fast! To get the things money can’t buy. To be President of The United States. Airline hostess. To join Tiny Tim tiptoeing through the tulips. College. To be a human sacrifice. College. Hairdresser. Airline pilot. Secretary. Math teacher. College. To beat Sharon to the altar. To beat Janet to the altar. Teach kindergarten. To bench press 400 Ibs. To never be lonely. Nursing. To be worthwhile. To marry Margo B. live in England, and grow my hair L-O-N-G. Secretary. To own a fire-red Shelby. 77 DEBORAH CLIFFORD WILLIAM COLLINGWOOD LAWRENCE COOPER PAMELA CORLISS SUSAN CORLISS ELLEN COUGHLIN WILLIAM COUTURE DIANE D’AMICO PATRICIA DELL’;ORFANO KEVIN DONAHUE RICHARD DUTTON MICHAEL EAGAN SALLIE EUSEPI RALPH FARIA PATRICIA FASULO FRANCIS FIORE DONALD FLEURY DONNA FLEURY ROBERTA GENTILI DONNA GODDARD CAROL GONSALVES STEPHEN GONSALVES RUSSELL GOODWIN KAREN GOOKIN VALERIE GORHAM ROBERT GOSS JAMES GOYEA DIANE GREMORE JOYCE HAGERTY NANCY HARRAR RICHARD HARRAR 78 Route 24. Fickle Freshman girls. 180 days of school. K. F. and E. W. Fat people and boys with long hair. Air Force recruiters. The General. Doing trivial and worthless work that consumes too much of life. None. Narrow minded people. Being called “Tennis Player” by a certain gym. coach. Silence in study halls. Short Irish math teachers. Phoney friends. None. Blonde Red Sox fans. People who think they are it. Tina and Kathy always being together. People who make fun of my Rambler. Girls who think they can get anyone by a snap of their fingers. Small towns. Goober Jelly. People who call me “Wee Wee” Homeroom with Mr. Theodore. Me. Everybody. Tennis Coaches. Teachers who don’t know what they’re talking about. Navy. Bleached Blondes. Organs that don’t work. To hack CF. A 66” highjump. To put Humpty Dumpty together again. To be happy with Walter. Marry Jimmy and live in Switzerland. To “hook” a certain Air Force guy. To be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound. To know myself. To be happy. To beat the Establishment. College. . College. To be 55”, To understand what makes some Fresh- man tick. To find what’s good in life, To marry Karen. Architecture. To separate Tina and Kathy. Secretary. To get a car to beat the “THE BIRD.” The “big city.” College. To be the biggest man in the world. Airline Stewardess. Minister. To get out. President of Uganda. Secretary. Famous Biologist, Secretary. Nurse. To be a professional organist. RICHARD HAUGHTON DAVID HEMMINGSEN MICHAEL HICKEY CHRISTOPHER HOLM DENISE HOVEY ROBERT JACKSON LINDA KELLEY PAUL KLENK RICHARD LAMBOS GLEN LARSON JACQUELINE LETTENEY MICHAEL LODICO STANLEY MARSHALL JANICE MACOMBER GRETCHEN MAURER. DONALD MAXWELL DONNA McCONNELL MARGARET McDONOUGH STEPHEN METTERS ROBERT MONTVILLE MICHAEL MOR TON GARY NORFTILL ROBERT O’FLAHERTY DONALD OLDMIXON LINDA PAIVA DEBORAH PERI ANN-MARIE PIERCE MARILYN POIRIER LINDA PORTER KATHLEEN PRIEN SHERRY REASONER aa , FRBIAE, Rags SSO) ate, a Riese sre. Girls who get “headaches” Finding some place to sit at lunch. Cheryl. Fred Viani. Alarm clocks. Boredom. People who never smile. A certain line coach. 8:00-2:27, Monday through Friday. Girls that go to the Cape on weekends. Living so far from N.Y. People without sideburns. My middle name. Dum-dum. Gym class with 20 eighth graders. Thoroughly Modern “Millie.” Schools with no spirit. Hate, prejudice, mace, and fake hip- pies. The name “Duh.” Italians. Bells. 8:08-2:27. Cafeteria lunches. Miss Reilly. Ann-Marie’s short skirts. Sue’s problems. Long skirts. Corvettes driven by girls. Gym class. Small towns, big mouths. Mr. McMorrow. To be as uninhibited as Holden Caul- field. To solve my problems. Chery]. To be 50 times smarter than our Prin- cipal. Secretary. To find an interest in life. To be happy. College. To raise the Iron Curtain. To graduate. Secretary. Penguin II. Business management. To go to college. Success. Scrambling Q.B. New York Giants. To find my rings at Horseneck. To be a tour guide in Tibet. To freeze to death in Mag’s Inferno. To invent a foot cleaner for Italian grape stompers. Armed Service. Be manager of Englehard Industries. College. To find a certain English teacher’s still. To wear my skirts as short as Ann- Marie’s without getting caught. To solve Sue’s problems. Airline stewardess. To have my own corvette. Secretary. To get some ambition. Hairdresser. 79 KENNETH RUSSELL MITCHELL SEIFERT JOAN SEQUIN GERALDINE SHELDON GAIL SIGNORIELLO KAREN SLINEY JOANNE SOUZA ROBERT SOUZA DEBORAH STAPLES DONNA STEPHENS MICHAEL STREETER KEVIN STUART DANIEL SULLIVAN HAZEL TATUM LORRAINE TEARS DENNIS TESSIER JOHN TITUS RALPH TOPHAM LYNDA THOMAS JANET TURINESE WILLIAM TURNER THOMAS UNGER CHRISTINE VALLETT WILLIAM VERNON ALISON VICKERY KATHLEEN WAGNER DAVID WHITE DANA WIESE MARK WISNIEWSKI CHRISTINE YORK 80 School. Cliques. Sharky. Study halls. Franklin girls who don’t have their own boyfriends. Two-faced girls. Blonde-haired girls. Kryptonite, and seniors who work at Sannies and don’t wash. Insincere people who don’t accept you for what you are. Mr. McMorrow’s English class. Eleanor. People who are “put on.” Mr. Dunn’s pep talks. People who use the word “soul” and will never be able to achieve it. The band. Mr. Pacella. Small towns. Haircuts. Giant Killers. A skiing ping-pong player. People cutting down Fords. Fords. Miss Hannon’s English classes. People who ask how tall I am. Fake hippies and phonies in general. Flint Cows. The new “initiation.” “You can’t take it with you.” Funny English teachers who play piano. School. To get out of school. To live a Long, prosperous, and happy life. Happiness. Executive secretary. Business College. Nursing. To own a G.T.O. and live in Taunton. To be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound. To find out what I know, and do something about what I don’t know. Secretary. To go to Florida. To live a happy life. To take over Yaz’s position. College. To travel. A happy, healthy life. Become a medical technologist and marry someone like Mr. Smith. To fly across the Atlantic Ocean on a dragonfly. To. get one complete day’s sleep in Mr. Payden’s class. To be a French teacher. To get by Mr. Pacella without wearing a tie. To capture the Wild Man of Borneo. To be a success. To put on 100 pounds. To tour Tibet in a rickshaw. To be successful and happy. To have one date with Irma the Body. Beating the Jolly Green Giant. To sleep 25 hours in a day. Marriage. It’s my table and you can’t have HAH!! ! CANDIDS ™ Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead! (I’ve got to stop using that Hai Karate.) 8 82 then you add TT r’ and divide by Hey Paul! Is Hmmm ... I think you call that a ... clarinet. everyone out to lunch? A little lower to the left ... Ahhh! That’s it! Guarding their secret formula. 83 84 What do you mean “are you hiding the ball?” We'll have that toothache cleared in a jiffy. Ipso Facto. We're ahead ... maybe I should put it in the safe. HOBO DANCE Q5 86 88 iBegemenes reere MEE ECEED EE [SP REH BEES Li dhe Aes asleacales tec IBEGYUEREE MERLZUHEED BER WRB e ES BR ERE WE (es ee i i eB { Hh ie Be ek ee CeeeKERe Cee eke ey BRECK EES E BECREED CHES eS RkeYUE BRE OS ‘Frreres sere eee ceeeesere 90 The Tatter 4 |: : Row 1: T. Allett, J. Bedard, D. Belcher, G. Moretti, P, Lodico, Linda Gonsalves, E. Gilbert, I. Brabham, L. Tarte, Mr. Antosca. Row 2: M. Barre, K. Wagner, D. McConnell, K. Rockwood, J. Wheeler, G. Signoriello, K. Lemire, C. Kalvin, R. Federici. Row 3: L. Thomas, S. Bedard, L. Epstein, M. Farinella, S. Regula, L. Alperin, J. Cross, J. Souza, S. Carl, M. Haughton. 7 eebstswe 4 Row 1: P. Brown, A. Cutillo, M. Vickery, C. Barrows, E. Savini, J. Brabham, S. Stanley, A. Holm, P. Bedard, M. Cheyne, Mr. Antosca. Row 2: M. Gilbert, S. Regula, C. Buck, L. Gonsalves, D. Deviney, S. Vose, D. D’Amico, M. Chapman, C. Inman, A. Gaboury. Row 3: J. Cross, L. Alprin, M. Farinella, J. Horton, A. Vickery, D. Hinchey, J. Turinese, J. Wheeler, K. Rockwood. SEER RIN ARGCREN ERIS Ss 9! 92 MATH CLUB Row 1: Mr. Sapolski, S. Regula, C. Buck, L. Lodico, J. Brabham, D. Deviney, D. Gremore, A. Gaboury, R. Cushman. Row 2: Mr. Price, Mrs. Chandler, P. Anderson, P. Horton, K. Lemire, J. Turinese, L. Alprin, J. Cross. Row 3: K. Donahue, D. White, R. O’Flaherty, T. Merrifield, M. Packer, S. Gonsalves, D. Coughlin. INVESTORS CLUB BOARD OF DIRECTORS Row I: R. Goyea, M. Cheyne, D. Birman, J. Letteney, Karen Cipriani, S. Carl, Mr. Theodore. Row 2: S. Ingram, R. Harrar, S. Marshall, F. Fiore. CHORUS Row 1: C. Simmons, W. Stuart, P. Keenan, R. Larner, D. Scarpellini, E. Gilbert, P. Shaw, M. Devlin, C. York, M. D’Afile, K. Chambers, J. Peterson. Row 2: M. Bell, G. Bachiocchi, L. Goss, D. White, P. Boldrighini, D. McCardy, C. Roane, D. Rondeau, L. Hardy, S. Ings. Row 3: S. Gonsalves, C. Buck, C. Buchard, B. Goss, J. Russell, S. Doncaster, R. Eusepi, W. Bennett, J. Allard. DR. MARSHALL 93 94 BAND, DRILL TEAM, BAND BOARD OF OFFICERS pi HB Sack tate ae e KY ARE EAH FF “fA Ist Row: S. Bellamy, S. Eusepi, D. Gremore, J. Turinese, J. Macomber, C. Kalvin. 2nd Row: K. Koukol, D. Colby, C. Buck, J. Brabham, W. Stuart. 3rd Row: L. Tears, K. Wagner, S. Bedard, J. Goyea. BAND SENIORS “s thee gaan 95 96 re. ok Seat AP STUDENT COUNCIL Row 1: W. Sullivan, D. Federici, P. Carpenter, A. Pierce, C. Barrows, D. D’Ambra, P. Lodico, L. Scannell, G. Wood, L. Gonsalves, D. Spezio, R. MacPhee, A. Durant, R. Morse. Row 2: S. Eusepi, S. Stanley, D. Clark, K. Sliney, D. Scarpellini, A. Carbonetti, A. Cutillo, J. Bedard, A. Gaboury, P. Day, C. Roane, M. Roache, . Hovey, T. Noname. Row 3: J. Souza, R. Gentili, E. Westhaver, J. Turinese, R. Federici, S. Regula, L. Alperin, D. Pascucci, L. Thomas, J. Cutillo, P. Pedini, P. Clyde. Row 4: S. Cinto, D. Maxwell, E. Holm, P. Repucci, R. Lambos, J. Potter, W. Collingwood, L. Epstein, M. Thomas, A. Melchiorri, P. Repucci. BOARD OF DIRECTORS S. Eusepi, D. Maxwell, P. Repucci, P. Carpenter, P. Repucci, M. Haughton, A. Pierce, W. Collingwood, R. Federici, S. Cinto. MISS REILLY: Advisor 98 1968 FOOTBALL TEAM Row 1: R. Topham, R. Dutton, R. Lambos, P. Klenk, R. Faria, C. Cauldwell, William Collingwood, R. Souza, M. Wisniewski, L. Cooper, D. Fleury, R. Bliss, M. Eagan, D. Maxwell. Row 2: M. Hickey, R. Haughton, R. Goodwin, P. Adams, R. Mont- ville, R. Martin, S. Bonney, W. Shaw, K. Marvelle, L. Certuse, K. Fallon, W. Turner, R. Jackson. Row 3: J. Hawes, L. Mc- Aulay, S. Bruun, R. Rouillard, A. Barr, A. Sarro, D. Ricard, S. Stearns, G. Eagan, R. Liberatore, S. Ingram, W. Faria, D. Fleury. Row 4: Backfield Coach Daniel Smith, Head Coach Edward Cunningham, Line Coach Paul McCabe. SENIOR PLAYERS 100 SENIOR STARTERS PAUL KLENK RICK BLISS RALPH FARIA DAVE PARKER MIKE EAGAN DON MAXWELL RICK LAMBOS LARRY COOPER COLIN CAULDWELL 101 CO-CAPTAINS BOB SOUZA RALPH TOPHAM Hockomock League Tri-champs OFFENSE aR Fe da as | (ihe ¥. 102 Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield Mansfield 1968 SEASON North Attleboro Somerset Case Oliver Ames Canton Stoughton Franklin King Philip Foxboro 103. 105 CHEERLEADERS McDermott, P. Precourt, L. Cotterill, L. Antosca, D. Birman, K. Galanti, J. Verzola, D. Kovich, T. Martin, D. Spezio. FIELD HOCKEY Row 1: J. Brabham, L. Hill, D. Fleury, S. Eusepi (Capt.), M. Juaire. Row 2: Miss Bernard, R. Eusepi, R. McCoy, L. Rabdall, R. Federici (Capt.), M. Everett. JUNIOR VARSITY q nd MANSFIELD wee 4 SFI 4 4 q MANSFIELD 4 Moretti (Capt.), G. Wood, J. Bedard, A. Carbonetti, V. Unger. Row 3: Miss Bernard, R. MacPhee, if Wheeler, A. Colella, S. Regula, D. Pascucci, J. Cross. 108 THE BASKETBALL TEAM R. Marvelle, P. Klenk, D. Parker, W. Collingwood, R. Dutton, D. Sullivan, W. Vernon, R. Bliss, R. Souza, M. Eagan, A. Salachi, L. Epstein, R. Montville, Mr. Dunn. SENIOR PLAYERS BILL VERNON BOB SOUZA DAVE PARKER BILL COLLINGWOOD 109 DAN SULLIVAN BOB MONTVILLE DICK DUTTON SEASON’S RECORD 9 Victories 9 Losses HIGH SCORERS Bob Souza Bill Vernon Dan Sullivan PAUL KLENK Row 1: R. DeGirolamo, K. Marvelle, J. Brown, L. Certuse, D. Pierce, L. McAulay, W. Faria, A. Florencio, T. Souza. Row 2: M. Farinella, D. Lefler, E. Holm, S. Stearns, G. Dethlefs, H. Stencil, R. Vernon, G. Egan, Mr. Kelley. 110 GIRLS’ BASKETBALL Miss Lajeunnesse, R. Federici, L. Thomas, N. Harrar, D. Fleury (Capt.), S. Bedard, L. Hill, D. Belcher, G. Moretti. Absent: S. Eusepi, R. Eusepi. LYNDA THOMAS NANCY HARRAR SUE BEDARD 112 DONNA FLEURY DAURENE BELCHER JUNIOR VARSITY Be Kneeling: S. Regula, J. Brabham, L. Pearce, M. Everett. Standing: D. Demers, D. Pascucci, R. MacPhee, C. Kalvin, K. Rockwood, Miss Lajeunnesse. 113 Row 1: S. Eusepi, D. Stevens, D. Demers, G. Moretti, N. Harrar, S. Bedard, D. Fleury, D. Belcher, J. Bedard, J. Scialoia, J. Morton. Row 2: K. Magro, C, Cogen, K. Chambers, C. Martin, M. Demers, S. Peloquin, K. Koukol, M. Bedard, D. Scarpellini, P. Bedard, L. Pearce. SENIORS Nancy Harrar, Sue Bedard, Donna Fleury, Daurene Belcher. 114 BASEBALL ae co ae iy SFO EG ae Row 1: R. Beatty, L. McAulay, M. Eagan, S. Marshall, R. Souza, R. Montville, D. Sullivan R. Lambos. Row 2: S. Marshall, G. Eagan, A. Salachi, Mr. Dunn, L. Epstein, A. Forencio, W. Shaw, L. Certuse. SEASON’S RECORD Mansfield South Easton Regional . Mansfield North Attleboro Mansfield North Attleboro Mansfield King Philip Mansfield King Philip ... Mansfield Foxboro Mansfield Foxboro Mansfield Stoughton Mansfield Stoughton ...... Mansfield Blue Hills Mansfield Blue Hills Regional .... Mansfield Mansfield Oliver Ames Mansfield Mansfield Franklin Mansfield Canton Mansfield Canton Mansfield Sharon Mansfield LA het : sre, ay ae : armeuacicomaal Sea een wrt 116 M. Thomas, R. Dut- as o a f=) oO ail 8 i=) ne gb =| 5°] Fe) a s o 2 = oO pe Ss oO on o o) oO S = ue f= | Oo , =o ©) if =} ie Sas oS ANS, = =) mS os = Ss = sO ac = fac} is As 5, ae Lore pe 2 ae © SENIORS 1h GIRLS’ TENNIS Row 1: P. Maurer, P. Carpenter, R. Federici, L. Thomas, S. Richardson, K. Rockwood, P. Boldrighini. Cutillo, E. Jameson, D. Gremore, M. Juaire, M. Everett, J. Macomber, K. Annese. With an undefeated record, the Girls’ Tennis Team won the Hockomock League Championship for 1969. D. Faber, J. Woodlock, J. Mugford, Mr. Theodore, D. Pierce, M. Lodico, J. Paulson. Sa Chater) Ce age A NO) PS 120 7 oh pain Bin ne Bsn THE PROM ae : a FOO EEN TE tassels - Oo CC YOO AN, wie — wil 123 12 125 4, 4 a SP WISEA = ——y 35 AUTIES oF EUROPE =— Se —_— — f — = : A AIIEKETS Mea deg | ra =gil Ou, aN AGN Naa Nee, oP DIRECTORS : Directors. cas tigate eee MRS. PATRICIA WILLIAMS Musicali Directorseer ae DR. J. RICHARD MARSHALL CGhoreovrapher mee er eee MRS. JEAN ANTONIEWICZ CAST BillysBicelowne eee STEPHEN INGRAM Julie@joxdonge ae ee MARILYN CHEYNE Enocheono Wee ee ROLAND CHALIFOUX Carrie Pipperidge ...... RAE ANN FEDERICI JigeersCraigingar reer PETER REPUCCI WEE ITU Soo et esos gee ec CANDY KALVIN David Bascombe .. WILLIAM COLLINGWOOD Nettie Fowler ........... ... MICHELE JUAIRE Starkeeper™ (2... eee ee JEFFERY HORTON Louise Bigelow ............ DIANE CLARKE Heavenly Friend .......... LOUIS CERTUSE Enoch Snow) (see STEVEN GONSALVES 126 127 128 So 2 129 NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY INDUCTION pena ee ja eo ee as aa me we Mi | ue ft wpe rl ff 130 NEW N.ALS. MEMBERS Row 1: J. Wheeler, C. Inman, J. Bedard, J. Verzola, D. Wood, P. Carpenter, K. Lemire. Row 2: S. Regula, C. Buck, D. Pascucci, M. Juaire, P. Repucci, D. Hinchey, J. Mugford, K. Marvelle, A. McKay. SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT a e it state PR Row 1: D. D’Amico, W. Vernon, S. Eusepi, J. Hagerty, J. Turinese. Row 2: R. Dutton, P. Brown, H. Chase, M. Cheyne, P. Carpenter, D. Maxwell, K. Donahue. II] i ae nite BOG 132 CLASS DAY MANSFIELD HIGH SCHOOL 1Ss69 CLASS BANQUET 136 of 137 S S = aS Re Sa) COTEVERGIBYE oss STrepHeN Eric Cinto ee Tuy g’ PPP Veracca ena 7 4 -¢ or ea we ig ie u , 13 — fae wIF oS teed od dP a a Ss ad EN A a a Ce ee eee (0) Pon ORE 6 ee a a oe aE Es a eo oe ASS oe Yo oS Pitan eee oaleg Pie | ig 20 a A a ee | a Ca f i S| a i ae ee ee = Fy en Pm 7 ASG ae 00S ae coerce iS aa BS — See a 0-5 6 See o_o Hh |} Yh } Hh oo i }—_tt | 1 Pe, _| jg el ee ee eee oe eee oa eee eee | eee 8 Beier batern man a [| a@ “ @!i a8? 2.4 e with SSE bretitude . So, pood oye to Pa the old and bring on all the 0 Sora oe TE MA aren eee Tf sO) Cy Coe) | @ Eth VP Tesi eo SO tg 4 Pe P| EE ED SN 44] | 2.427 Ea ELA Reh ER arr ee | ET LA new. Qous:) es bue.. ese Nese. AE) Gonlbys, Boca by, oar Altogether F ; (ay , lS ae oe ra T A. eee eters. AD yt eae ge pret e Big Be Pgatieeelgeian —— o (Boys?) now we're leavmp,time has slipped. aes. Ntopether Tow we're. leaving tout our memories will stay. Coad ee 141 WHERE IS THE LIFE? by Diane D’Amico We can see in the eyes of another an understanding of our pain or joy. We can feel the petals of a flower and touch the mystery of creation. We can watch the waves roaring across the sands and sense the power of existence, and with a longing and aching that almost chokes us, we can try to find a heaven. We are alive. Each human being has a chance to mold a beautiful life full of feeling and accomplishment. Yet many people try to exist with as little thinking and feeling as possible. Life for them is like a lump of clay, worked and shaped by all the forces except those of their own hands. They do not dare ask them- selves if they are happy, for they have filled their lives with convenient but meaningless activities. Now they pass from day to day in a grayness which their eyes cannot penetrate. They are lost. Their feelings and thoughts belong to others. The best reason for joining a certain club is the fact that their neighbors belong. Because everyone in their age group thinks a particu- lar entertainer is fantastic, they do. A man becomes confused and hopelessly lost when he stops listening to the murmurs of thoughts and feel- ings within himself that might be trying to tell him who or what he is. It is important that a person first take the time to learn what reaches and affects him, to learn what makes him warm, joyful, gay, or dis- gusted, angry, and cold what makes him feel loved, needed, wanted, or unloved and rejected. Some- one might discover that he is sixteen and likes classical music, or that he is fifty and can understand the songs of Peter, Paul and Mary. Is it fear that makes people follow others and live without thinking? Are they afraid to face reality, to know themselves, afraid they will find that there is something lacking in their personalities or missing in their lives? If it is fear, then to run away from it is wrong, for.fears never go away, wounds never heal, and pain can never be eased, if one does not first admit their existence. This refusal to recognize the strength and weakness in one’s character forces some people to spend their entire lives pretending to be something they are not. People often think that they will not be accepted or that they will fail if they do not conform. A boy may have the ability and desire to become a great painter, but because it is an unusual profession in which few seem to succeed, he may never try, or because he is too easily discouraged by those around him, he may quickly abandon his dreams. In time he may become an insurance salesman. Imagine an artist trying to be enthusiastic over fire, theft and collision policies! Pretending to be someone they are not is only one way people run away from themselves. Some fill their lives with busy work to make certain they do not have time to think. Then there are others who have time, but the minute it is quiet they turn on the television, or théy start talking, filling the air with words which they have said a million times before, but which they say again to kill the silence. When people want time for something, they usually find it. There is time to watch a favorite soap opera, or to gossip on the tele- 142 phone, and there are hours upon hours to watch foot- ball and baseball games. But where is the time to learn, to understand, to feel? If a man does not hide from himself, if he allows himself to feel, he will be able to see more than the near and the obvious. Looking at the clear night skies, he will see more than specks of light on black; he will see infinity. He will know that there is not a roof on the world. Watching the endless breaking of the waves, he will meet eternity. And sensing the reality of his existence, he will know immortality and perhaps find peace. If a man knows himself and allows his emotions and instincts to speak to him gently, he will be able to understand others. He will be more sensitive and able to look into another’s face and know his thoughts, to listen more carefully and hear a word or two that will tell him that a person he thought to be arrogant and hateful is as lonely and confused as he is himself. In living today, it is easy to get lost somewhere between the morning traffic and the eleven o’clock news. It is terrifying that it is so easy. Repetition and sameness come almost without warning, and people find that they can only talk about the weather or the price of bread. Living brings failure and discourage- ment and a person’s ability to feel deeply, fades. People can know each other for years and never reach each _other, and the most. tragic of all is when a person stops believing in happiness. It is true that if a man allows his mind to think beyond the near, he will be hurt and despair might haunt his thoughts. He will see the cruelty man is capable of, and it will horrify him. He will discover his own inabilities, and it will discourage him. But all is not evil and ugliness, and man is capable of perceiving goodness and feeling love. If man allows his feelings to speak, he will be hurt also. He may offer his hand to one who will scorn his very presence. He may try to relieve another’s pain and only increase it. But all is not sory nd failure, and man is capable of goodness and love. If a man has known himself and loved others in his lifetime, even though he will not have changed the world completely, he will have been a living part of that world. He will have allowed himself to feel, to absorb some of life and to give some of himself. And no one will dare ask where is the life he lost in living. CONCEPTIONS OF BEAUTY by Marilyn Cheyne Beauty is that quality or aggregate of qualities in a thing which gives pleasure to the senses or pleasurably exalts the mind or spirit. It is physical, moral, or spiritual loveliness. Considered in another sense, it can mean a beautiful person or thing, as a beauty, or a particiular grace, ornament, or excellence, as the beauties of nature. At least, this is the way Webster defines this un- definable term. One reason that beauty is undefinable is that our conception of what is beautiful is con- stantly changing as we grow, age, and mature. To an infant, beauty is found in security. His senses are given pleasure when he is cuddled, tossed or talked to in the reassuring mumblings that form the first language between mother and child. This early atti- tude lasts until the child reaches the age of reason and can see a little beyond his own security. Before this time, should one ask him what his mother looks like, the child, if he has a happy home life, will be very apt to reply that his mother is the most beautiful lady in the world, which may hardly be the general opinion of the woman. Once the home is no longer the constant environ- ment of this child, and he begins to look beyond himself, he may see the beauty of nature. A child revels in the fields he races over, and may even pause a moment in wonder at the soft tenderness of spring. These mo- ments are brief, and passing, for his world is too full for reflection, but the instant under a Christmas Eve skyful of stars, the moment on a pink-edged beach at sunset, the fall afternoon clothed in brilliant leaves— all have piled their images in a corner of his memory to be conjured up at the word “beauty.” Adding to this early experience, society teaches him examples of classic beauty: fine art, music, and litera- ture. In some of these classics, he may be able to recognize the same views of beauty that he himself has noted. Suppose, for example, he happened to be visit- ing New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Here hang paintings that have been judged great for cen- turies. But as he wanders into the Rembrandt section, one painting captures his attention; it is a portrait of Christ, yet unlike any other portrait of Him. In his young, but ageless face, both the Man of Sorrows “and the Son of a God of Love are expressed. The greatest tenderness shines from the eyes, and kindness softens the man’s mouth. Standing before the painting, the boys sees all he knows about God, man, and. the world reflected in that face. Here is a new beauty, deeper than all the glories of sunny day, and it is, like the other memories, stored away for future refer- ence. But then as the boy becomes a man, and the re- sponsibilities of life are thrust upon him, his memories may fade into the dusty corners of the attic of his mind. Time becomes ordered, scheduled, pressured. When the furious pace subsides, he can no longer be joyously idle with time to observe beauty, and when he loses the ability to see beauty, his life is swallowed up by order. Occasionally a comment may be passed on the loveliness of a sunset, but he sees few of the ordinary beauties which were once a very recognizable part of his life. Seeing and appreciating beauty takes time and per- ceptive sensitivity. When one cannot see beauty, general- ly he feels it has been engulfed by the ugliness of his own life. He may realize that he has not looked beyond the narrow boundaries of his life for as many years as he has felt the beauty taken out of his life. Looking beyond oneself takes courage, for there is a great deal of ugliness to fear and to hide from in the world beyond one’s mind. But, upon close inspec- tion, threads of loveliness are entwined in the burlap of the world’s ugly portion. It is easy to see the beauty in a glorious sunny day, when the tentative spring rays of light illuminate each tender new blade of grass, but to appreciate ponderous beauty in the heavy gray day of rain is a little more difficult. To recognize the awesome beauty of the Grand Canyon is a simple task; to see the beauty in Boston’s ghetto areas requires more searching. Yet such obscure beauties do exist. Where is the beauty in the ghetto? Surely the scat- tered trash heaps, broken windows, and crumbling brick buildings are not aesthetically pleasing. There- fore, beauty cannot be in the physical aspect of these 143 areas. It is left to flit across the face of a child playing in the rubbish—a child who has not yet learned to hate those whose injustices have bred th e ugliness in his life. Beauty dwells in the eyes of a mother sitting with her baby on the wobbling stairs of their tene- ment building, sharing the passing security of love. Seeing these little moments, oases in the ghetto, will help one to realize how very little beauty can exist in that world. The child’s smile passes, the baby out- grows his mother’s lap and arms, and they are all left to loneliness and their bleak ‘surroundings. Perhaps the knowledge of this ugliness makes them more aware of beauty when it comes. Perhaps it drives them to find, by any means, some meaning for their lives. Perhaps they disappear into the mire of their lives because there was no beauty for which to live. It is true that one is better able to appreciate beauty when one has a knowledge of ugliness, just as one is better able to understand and welcome love when one has experienced the overwhelming loneliness of a lack of love. The ugliness in life is the absence of beauty. Therefore, the ghetto, with its sparks of beauty, can be only partially ugly, for beauty lies deep in its core of hard reality. Life becomes unbearable when one completely loses sight of all beauty. The beauty in a life is unlike that of a landscape, which anyone may attribute to the dark, lacy outlines of pines against the sky. The most beautiful moments of existence are those in which one is happiest and most aware. Beauty in a life viewed by others lies in love given honestly to the world. Beauty in one’s own life is strongest when one is loved or loving. Ugliness is most overwhelming in moments of terrible loneliness and despair, when love seems all too far from one’s grasping fingers. Love, life, and beauty are closely re- lated parts of the life well-lived. To live a truly beautiful life requires a beautiful person. Fortunately, beautiful (as a word applied to people) has taken on a slightly different, more signifi- cant connotation. Beautiful people are no longer those whose physical charms command attention, but rather are those of wonderful character. The beautiful person’s very beauty lies in his freedom and honesty. He is honest about himself to himself and in all his relation- ships with other people. His actions are spontaneous and openly caring. Consider, for example, a person who would take a group of crying, dripping children and offer them shelter on a rainy day. The beautiful per- son’s actions are not motivated by hope of reward nor for gratitude. They are impulsive acts of l ove. The beautiful person, because: he cares, is better able to observe. He is, therefore, able to appreciate the simple beauties around him. For example, have you ever noticed how large buildings cut the sky into a jagged-edged blue sheet? This edge continues to change shape as one walks. One space becomes smaller with each step, still another disappears entirely as two buildings meet. This constantly adapting scene is just one of the beauties of the modern city. Beauty has many meanings. There are the changing concepts of growing, the contrasts in beauty and beauty- in-ugliness, and the idea of beauty in life and in the individual. Life is as beautiful as the people who live it, and the world is made more beautiful by the number of honest and caring people it contains. Within the range of this paper is a tremendous potential for the beauty which is found in persons. You are those per- sons. Your life and your world are as beautiful as you make them by your awareness and openness. How others will conceive of beauty will depend on how you present beauty in your lives, for man, in his idealism will always seek to raise standards above those he sees in the faulty world. In a sense, this can be a commencement exercise for everyone. We can all commence living—honestly and meaningfully—so that life need not conflict with our individual concepts of beauty as we can live it. SHOULD A MINORITY RULE by Richard Dutton College disturbances have been the cause for much concern in recent months. Dissatisfied students have decided to take direct action to correct what they feel are the wrongs in our society. Students have, and should have, the right to dissent. However, when they abuse this right by resorting to violence, by taking over college buildings, and by carrying guns, then they have gone beyond their rights. Dissent is good as long as it does not turn to violence. The following is an excerpt from an article in TIME magazine, May 9, 1969, which is typical of so many recent news releases: “Violence and disorder continued to flash like early summer lightning across the cam- puses of the United States last week. There were dis- ruptive demonstrations, strikes, sit-ins, clashes with police, confrontations between students and what has now become the ultimate sign of defiance—students standing against authority with firearms in their hands ...” “The sound and fury in Washington and in state capitals had little immediate effect on the campuses. Students last week occupied school buildings at Stan- ford, Southern Methodist, St. Louis, Memphis State, and Columbia Universities and at Queens College in New York. Rebels armed with knives and guns took over the administration building at the largely Negro Voorhees College in South Carolina and looted the cafeteria of $5,000 worth of food. Smoke bombs were thrown and fires started at Brooklyn College. A hun- dred men and women students invaded the office of Dr. Mary Bunting, the president of Radcliffe, and shouted obscenities at her!!!” Perhaps one of the best reasons for student concern is what they feel is an irrelevant curriculum. They feel that some of the courses that they take are outdated and not related to today’s world. However, there are more peaceful methods for resolving this prob- lem than resorting to violence. If the students would sit down with the faculty and administration and seri- ously discuss this problem, a good solution could be arrived at. This solution might not come about as quickly as desired or be as complete as desired, but it would not cause violence. The problems of minority groups, most notably the blacks, is another very important cause for concern. Black students have been the subjects of injustice throughout their lives. They want to have the same rights as others and they should have them. However, when they take over a university building and demand that an Afro-American history department be set up with themselves having control over the hiring and the firing of the faculty, then they have gone beyond their rights. If the removal of racial injustice is to be hastened, blacks must be allowed their rights under the law, but no special consideration should be given them in an attempt to make up for centuries of injustice. Special consideration would perpetuate their separation from other races. The blacks also must be content to have ch anges brought about more slowly and more peacefully. They should not be allowed to carry guns as they did at Cornell last month. The policies of our government are very important to students, who are vitally concerned with the situation in the world. The Vietnam War is the cause of most disenchantment with our government. Students feel that we should not be in Vietnam and because of this anything concerning the military meets with disapprov- al from many students. It is up to the individual stu- dent to decide whether he thinks that we- should be in Vietnam or not, but he should at least be aware of some of the historical and political realities. Students should remember that the youth of today have never felt threatened by Communism or any other enemy. World War II and Korea are read about in history books. However, the takeover of Czecho- slovakia should point out that the Communists are still interested in controlling other lands. The United States has to meet any attempt by Russia or China to spread their power. This was the case in Korea and is now the case in South Vietnam. This is also the case in the Middle East. where the Arabs are supplied by the Russians and Israel is supplied by the United States. War and killing are the most sickening aspects of modern society. However, it is necessary for the United States to fight and stay strong so that Americans can continue to be free and have the right to dissent. It is interesting to note that destruction and death, the re- sults of war, turn out to be the very same results of the protest against war. The S.D.S., Students for Democratic Society, is the cause of many disturbances. This group is composed of radical students, many of whom may not really be demonstrating out of firm convictions but rather as a way to release their hostile feelings against au- thority or just for the pure excitement of it. Father Hesburgh, president of Notre Dame ex- pressed his reactions to student violence in a letter to the faculty and students of that university. “I have studied at some length the new politics of confrontation. The rhythm is simple: 1) find a cause any cause, silly or not; 2) in the name of the cause, get a few determined people to abuse the rights and privileges of the community so as to force a confron- tation at any cost of boorishness or incivility; 3) once this has occurred, justified or not, orderly or not, yell police brutality. If it does not happen, provoke it by foul language, physical abuse, whatever, and then count on a larger measure of sympathy from the up- to-now apathetic or passive members of the communi- ty. Then call for amnesty, the head of the president on a platter, the complete submission to any and all demands. One beleaguered president has said that these people want to be martyrs thrown to the toothless lions. He added, “Who wants to dialogue when they are going for the jugular vein?” The draft, R.O.T.C., and recruitment by companies such as Dow Chemical, which makes napalm have become specific objects of student unrest because of Vietnam. Those who protest these military conditions in the United States might find solutions worked out within the government system to be better, more lasting and generally more advantageous to the majority. In any case it is necessary that we find a solution to the immediate problem of student disorder and violence. Even when students have valid reasons for being upset, such as an irrelevant curriculum, injustice to minorities, and the war in Vietnam, they should not be allowed to become violent. Administrators should be firm in handling student demonstrators. Students who have gone beyond their rights should be warned to disperse immediately or be suspended. If they don’t disperse after the warning, they should be asked to show their student identifica- tion cards. Those who don’t produce identification | should be arrested for trespassing. If, after this, stu- dents still refuse to disperse, they should no longer be considered members of the student body and should be treated as trespassers. Colleges that do not use this method or one similar to it will find that the problem of student unrest on their campuses will become greater as it has in many colleges during the past month, and far from having a democratic educational system—a minority might rule. 145 From the relative freedom of the world, we are transported to this sometimes secure, sometimes im- prisoning land ... ic 2 Bees pani ae ches ‘ ped pin nat, 146 ... where all sorts of activities keep us temporari- ly occupied and involved within the boundaries of brick walls ... _ . ; ne eS is ee hiicpatnanieninactsenem™ a _ ee 147 ... Exhaustion overtakes the mind from the effort of occasional study or steady routines ... Gi oy 148 The good times are related to the people that we share them with, and that, through our sharing, we might learn to love ... 149 150 one nesmiap reece nny wsintnrwniniare mmatntnnn manne: ite Then some go, leaving others to dream of the freedom that must be just outside the window. And the windows remain when all are gone, waiting to invite those who will come to look out upon the liberty of the open sky. THE MANSFIELD PRESS, INC. with complete facilities for the production of commercial, social and book printing A Mansfield Institution Since 1873 Compliments of HERBERT E. KING AGENCY CHARLES A. WHEELER RALPH H. SEIFERT JOHN B. ANTOSCA 100 North Main Street Mansfield, Mass. hs ta aa ae oe. , OAKLAND LUMBER COMPANY Building materials of all kinds The store for homeowners’ 41 River St., 152 Dedham, Mass. By Compliments of SEARS ROEBUCK AND COMPANY Catalogue Office Mansfield, Mass. REED'S T.V. Service and Sales Home Products Center 121 North Main Street Mansfield—Foxboro JODICE-FORANT BUILDERS 20 South Main Street Mansfield, Mass. 339-4503 MANSFIELD TIRE COMPANY . . B. F. Goodrich Tires . Quality Retreads . . Wheel Alignments . Wheel Balancing 8 Cottage Street Mansfield, Mass. 339-8813 MANSFIELD FINANCE COMPANY LINDA JODICE HAIRSTYLING SALON 510 Elm Street Mansfield, Mass. We curl up and dye for you 339-9024 Compliments of DREEGHARLES GOLELUAN 453 ACORN MANUFACTURING COMPANY, INC. Builders and Cabinet Hardware Mansfield, Mass. 4a “ _ 339-4500 i WE “oa he: Wee. rst Compliments of DONALD V. MORSE C.P.A. Compliments of CARBONETTI'S 339-9623 Free Delivery 2 ji Hugo and Wilma Carbonetti Compliments of GEORGE'S CLEANERS AND SPEEDWASH LAUNDRY NEW CAR DEALERS ASSOCIATION OF MANSFIELD Mansfield Garage, Inc. Mansfield Motors, Inc. Old Colony Motors, Inc. Paul Mitrano, Inc. Savini Pontiac Sales, Inc. Vickery Motors, Inc. Williams Ford Sales 154 JOHN L. CLEMMEY COMPANY, INC. Manufactures Oil, Gasoline and Septic Tanks Tanks of Every Description Mansfield, Mass. Compliments of LORD'S PHARMACY Visit our store and see our modern materials to - serve and better comfort you. MORINI'S SUPER MARKET Bird's Eye Frozen Foods 377 North Main Street MANSFIELD ATLANTIC SERVICE CENTER Good Luck and Best Wishes ‘ to the CATALANO'S, INC. CLEC) ANE : ot i769 Bar Supplies | Glassware S.S. Pierce Gift Packages 155 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED Attleboro, Massachusetts Compliments of FAIRFIELD OPTICAL COMPANY Compliments of ROYAL B. PATRIQUIN COUNSELOR AT LAW 144 South Main Street Mansfield, Mass. 339-7900 Compliments of STANDARD METALS PRODUCTS Best Wishes From DR. SIBILIA Compliments of SARRO'S MARKET 156 HAMILTON JEWELERS 189 North Main Street Mansfield Watches—Clocks—Shavers Repaired 339-2600 EAMES AGENCY Real Estate Insurance 339-7913 Compliments of ERNEST L. WHITE JR. Professional Building Compliments of MARTIN FABRICS Compliments of THE CIRCLE “C” STABLES Home ot Horsemanship and Hospitality 1427 West Street Mansfield, Mass. ate Best Wishes to the Class of 1969 THE MANSFIELD CREDIT UNION Serving Alumni Since 1916 157 for every shoe Richardson cleats are found on the very best professional shoe and all grades down to the real ''sand lotter.'' Available in sizes, and several grades, shapes and styles. The Standard Wherever Baseball is Played CHARLES A. RICHARDSON, INC. ESTABLISHED 1853 CUNEO'S Always ee C—heerful U—nderstanding N—eighborly SANNIE'S ‘where Manstield styles begin’ Mansfield, Mass. E—nterprising O—bliging Compliments of DR. ELLIOT KIRSCHBAUM D.D.S. a a ‘3 «ee ie, a. POMFRET LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS. INC. Rugs Storage 158 AL TARTUFO JOE FALOTICO Compliments of DR. RAYMOND GUILLETTE AND DR. JOHN P. TOSCANO 112 North Main Street Mansfield, Mass. 339-2772 HERBERT F. PATRIQUIN Attorney At Law AMICI FUNERAL HOME Mansfield, Mass. Service Within the Reach of All'’ 339-7595 115 North Main Street Mansfield, Mass. MANSFIELD MUNICIPAL LIGHT AND POWER DEPARTMENT An Indispensable Service ata Reasonable Cost Owned and Operated by the Town for the Sole Benefit of the Town 159 F. E. WILLS INSURANCE Agency—Insurance—Realtor THE MANSFIELD HOUSE ree Mansfield, Mass. 339-291 | Best Wishes From SWEET MANUFACTURING COMPANY Gilbert Street West Mansfield, Mass. PIONEER MAKERS OF JEWELRY CHAIN 160 With Best Wishes MERCKENS CHOCOLATE COMPANY Division of NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Mansfield, Mass. 339-8921 Quality Chocolate Products Since 1903 MANSFIELD CO-OPERATIVE RELCHOLD CHEMICALS, INC. BANK Blane Chemicals Division . North Main Street Home Loans Savings Accounts Veith vrres 16] STERLING MANUFACTURING COMPANY Division Scientific Scales Corp. Makers of Technical Equipment Mansfield, Mass. “EHRLICH INSURANCE AGENCY 206 North Main Street Mansfield, Mass. BRUCE WOOD, INC. Expert body repairs Robo 2 minute car wash Chauncy Street a i Mansfield, Mass. EARNS SON Established 1873 162. Stationery —Gifts—Books—Toys—Hobbies Wo BAY STATE ® TAP AND DIE MANSFIELD, MASS. a ‘community minded’ corporation ...@ good place to work ...@ leading manufacturer of Taps, Dies and Gages for industry BAY STATE TAPAND DIE Division of THE CLEVELAND TWIST DRILL CO. P.O. Box 6656 - Cleveland, Ohio 44101 BONNE CHANCE a La | tere IV ieme, II] ieme, Il ieme 163 y 1th, - igi Oi, Aig nip €9 eLD fre Congratulations and the besr of luck! We at Loring are proud of the part we have had in helping to make your classbook a permanent reminder of your school years, recording with photo- graphs one of the happiest and most exciting times of your life! We hope that, just as you have chosen us as your class photographer, you will continue to think of Loring Studios when you want photographs to help you remember other momentous days to come! When you choose Loring portraits, you are sure of the finest craftsmanship at the most moderate prices! LORING BW STUDIOS New England’s Largest School Photographers 165 pe} AYLOR PUBLISHING COMPANY “The World’s Best Yearbooks Are Taylor-made” ‘ va a | ty! | , Fmt irr ee eS


Suggestions in the Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) collection:

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Mansfield High School - Hornet / Green Years Yearbook (Mansfield, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972


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1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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