Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY)

 - Class of 1973

Page 1 of 192

 

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1973 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1973 Edition, Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1973 volume:

Underclassmen 73 Sports Administration Faculty A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance; A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep and a time to cast away; A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; “Ecclesiastes; Chap. 3 Verses 1-8 A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war and a time of peace. Erwin Richard Steier Karen Ann Schaefer Patricia A. Calhoun Oscar Rendon Gerald Woodrow Decker Barbara Ann Goldberg Robert Bellinger Joyce Jordan Stephanie Bryce Churley Michelle Bryson Mindy J. Streifer Paul L. Walnick Dawn Louise Little Carl F. Cluck Catherine Cace Ilia Walker Georgie Anna Lisanick Joseph J. Stachow, Jr. Virginia Patterson Alex Scott Chayut Connie Edith Breen John Charles Horton Susan C. Horton Sue Ellen Avery Vita Renee Thompson Kathy Lynn Chase Paul Lessin Albert M. Monroe Ralph Albert Steinberg Helen S. Block Michael David Cantman Linda Elsa Bressler Robert Ottino Cheryl Ann Skinger Corliss Cozart Janice Debra Finder Chris Vantoan Greg Cummings Lawrence P. Blasco, Jr. Denise Mary Riordan Melinda Haliczer Juan R. Gonzalez David B. Patterson Chris Rampe Audrey Joan Keller Tamar Edelkind Chester R. Smith Vince H. Albrecht Alan Stuart Kesten Debbi Carnesi Sharon Hargress Craig Peter Johnson Judy Lee Mclnturff Margaret Mann George Manzi Diane Marie Smith Bernard G. Lane Stanley G. Calhoun, Jr. John Louis Hofsommer Kimberly Alexander Stratton Richard Hall Lori Adina Schiff Lydia Gina Pistilli Robin McDonald Sean Patrick Moore Mitchell Zeidwig Linda S. Newman Kevin Rhyne Linda Susan Bonner Steven Kaufman Stella Drobysh Mary Edna Brown Charles Pirich, Jr. William H. Thelman, III Jeffrey Novick Neal R. Meddaugh Henry Suess Marie Vandervoort Jannie Marie Moore Paul Budoff Mindy S. Block Debra Ann Cassidy Brian D. Gager Paul F. Kelly Benny Ortiz Patti Lou Muller Barbara Meyer Camera Shy Leslie Bell Audrey Clark Craig Dobbs Ronnie Fello Kathy Foley Wendy Gavis George Hauss Ralph Hindley Micheal Ivory Arthur Knapp Robert Newman Richard Price Joe Snyder Randie Steinberg Tom Swingle Jane Taylor Wayne Wagner Frank Yates IN MEMORIAM Harold Supon 1955- 1971 CLASS HISTORY Our last season in Monticello High is slowly coming to a close. It is with many mixed emotions and great expectations for the future that we depart for points beyond. Let’s probe the past for a few minutes while we try to remember some of the experi- ences we have survived over the course of the past thirty-nine seasons. Richard Rubin started early by beating up Alan Kesten in nursery school. This violent event marked the time in our lives when we all found ourselves herded into civilized education called school, which began with kindergarten. Kindergarten, as we remember it, was a harrowing mixture of chocolate chip cookies or graham crackers and mid-morning milk, lessons in how to share”, and learning to survive without your mother. We remember . . . that Jim Hyde was hated because he managed to get the only bottle of choco- late milk while everyone else was suffering with white . . . Mrs. Bruning in White Lake’s Duggan school rang her little bell periodically mostly to hear the pretty sound it made ... in the Rutherford school, Mark Levine developed a strange rash for unknown reasons. When Mrs. Eisenberg told him to go to the nurse and Mark refused to budge, Mrs. Eisenberg challenged, What are you? A man or a mouse? Big brave Mark replied, A mouse.” Dawn Little demonstrated her in- stinctive gift of natural coordination by flaunting her knowledge of the correct method of tying shoelaces to the whole Wurtsboro class ... the Rutherford school produced a play in which Steve Kaufman was (type) cast as a chimney . . . John Hofsommer per- petually occupied the dunce chair . . . Helen Tieger found herself transferred to a Long Island school-for one whole month . . . Linda B. and Lorriane B. built block houses while Steve M. and Wayne S. knocked them down. When Rich Rubin refused to put on his shirt after he was politely asked to do so by Mrs. Eisenberg, he unknowingly began a long tradition which would continue for many years: visits to Mr. Lamberti. The first in a series of very friendly rela- tionships between Helen Tieger and numerous young men began when it was divulged that Helen liked the chocolate milk drinker, Jim Hyde. After we got over the tormenting experiences kindergarten wrought, we were plunged into a new “learning experience. A year of playing with toys, napping on rugs and the sharing” adventures we lived through did not exactly prepare us for the academic atmosphere first grade provided .. . Miss Friedman (Mrs. Molis) kept rabbits, chameleons and other assorted beasts. Donna Novick babysat for all of them when Miss Friedman was away. Competition began early with battles over who was going to be in the advanced reading group. All this time Richard Rubin wasn't just sitting by watching. He managed to strain his back while trying to pick up Eric Yonkers, but only on a dare from Jim Hyde. Second grade brought thingslike... Danny Freid- man and Charlie Pirich who went out under the pine tree to smoke cigarettes ... no one in Mrs. Winter- berger’s class got this question right: Which fraction is larger-1 8 or 1 2 or 1 10? David Graubard was liter- ally tied to his seat with a length of clothesline by Mrs. Morean because he continually ignored her warn- ings to stay in his seat . .. while David was struggling with the rope, Mike Atlas and David Graham were out on the playground living up to their nickname: the kissing bugs.” Sue Avery imitated Mrs. Kyle by walking into the room with her nose in the air, adjust- ing her sweater and smelling of terribly sweet per- fume . .. Mrs. Winterberger's farm and all her pet names: Diane Smith was Mrs. Puddleduck, The Little White Rabbit was Curtis McNeil, etc ... Mrs. Winterberger’s class put on a play: THE LITTLE WHITE RABBIT THAT WANTED RED WINGS. The play was such a success that it was shown on TV-twice. While the play was being filmed for TV, those not demonstrating their acting talents sat back- stage and ate jellybeans. Charlie Pirich had to wear Helen's blue tights so he could realistically portray a Little Blue Bird . . . and then there was Helen and Jim Keifer. Third grade brought Mr. Nartoff and another play, THE CACTUS WILDCAT, in which Mark Levine (Cactus Wildcat) rescued Hope Deitsch (the sexy dance hall girl) from Steve Feirman (Terrible Pete). After the rescue, they all drank lemonade at the gopher hole ... various students went over to clean up Mrs. Drutt's house . .. Randy Nygard held the record for getting his head banged against the wall in Mrs. Duggan’s class . :. Mrs. Soule’s class heard tales of terror from Mrs. Duggan’s class .. . Miss White became Mrs. Kesten and Alan and his class threw a party. . . Mr. Nartoff taught his class to chew with their mouths closed . . . Mrs. Rubin invented a new subject called Phonics .. . playing games in the back of the room was the reward for doing your math right. Some of us spent a lot of time in the back of the room .. . Helen liked Steve Feirman. In fourth grade, we discovered that Joey Silver- man had a crush on Ellen Goldberg. He gave her perfume very often which naturally made the other girls jealous . . . Mrs. Ricketson, the dental hygienist, asked Russell Price to .name a juice containing vitamin C. Russell didn’t hear the question right and thought she asked for a food that contained vitamin C. Who- ever heard of turkey juice? Mr. Mack nominated Thursday as gum chewing day . . . Richard Rubin walked out of the locker room without his pants on but unfortunately, he walked straight into Mr. Lamberti . . . Mr. Damasek's required reports-if your mother didn't write, them for you, World Book En- cyclopedia did .. . every student owned at least three sets of stencils to make pretty covers for those same reports . . . Miss Slade, the music teacher, took all her classes outside to play kickball . . . Linda vomited in front of the door and no one could go to lunch until the custodian appeared with his magic powder. By the time the coast was clear, no one wanted to go to lunch . . . Kevin Rhyne asked permission to bring snakes to school, but at least he asked . . . Miss Cornelius, the librarian, adopted the famous art of applying masking tape to uncontrollable mouths .. . Mrs. Komancheck's volcanoes often ended in one of two ways: they either threw soot all over everyone or they wouldn't work at all ... Mr. Mack's class pre- sented a play in which Mark Levine portrayed Abraham Lincoln and recited the Gettysburg Address . . . future doctors Kaufman and Rubin brought in a cow's heart and dissected it for the science fair. It smelled so bad that it had to be thrown out . . . the libraries in Rutherford and Chase got moved to the back of the stage . . . Russell Price got his hair pulled by Mrs. Hamilton, a substitute teacher, because he wouldn’t stop laughing ... Mr. Greene, the drill-sergeant gym teacher was the only person ever to hold up against the team of Nygard, Hofsommer, Knapp, and Levine. For this reason, he was dismissed . . . David Cohen had a crush on Lori Schiff so he gave her a mirror which showed his love for her. Pat Dolan had to hand it to Lori because David was suffering from a common ailment known as embarass- ment . . . another play, which starred Steve Feirman (Ronald) who rescued Hope Deitsch (Lily) from the train that was speeding down the tracks . . . Helen Block completely destroyed Mrs. Fusner’s prissy lecture concerning respect by snapping “OK, Fusie!! to a question she was asked. .. (Keep-Away???) Linda Bonner and Lori Schiff fought daily in the playground . . . Mrs. Komancheck read ROBIN REDBREAST with such emotion that all her students were awed. No one would have read it on their own, but after her ren- dition, their was a two month waiting list for the book . . . Lori produced plays on her front lawn and charged admission to see them. Rich Rubin and Mark Levine had no money but they watched anyway be- cause ten girls were not about to throw two boys out .. . when Steve Feirman asked Mr. Damasek what he wanted to be when he grew up, Steve was promptly sent to the very end of the lunch line .. . Helen liked Steve Feirman for the second year in a row. Growing up and getting older meant a lot of things. It meant showing off your pierced ears, picking on the “little kids that used to be us, and a grand entrance into fifth grade . . . weddings took place in the courtyard with Richard Rubin officiating as Justice of the Peace. Among the more notable people he married were Mark Levine and Hope Deitsch, Brian Gager and Ellen Goldberg, and Stu Schnall and Karen Van Etten . .. Mr. Kelly did experiments on old tin cans that at one time con- tained fluid for the ditto machine . . . spin-the-bottle became a very popular game . . . while Mrs. Bertholf chased Chris Cummings around the room with her paddle, Paul Kelly actually asked Mr. Green to hit him with his paddle to see what it felt like .. . the three Jewish Muskateers, Mitch Shiftman, Martin Levine and Paul Walnick, came up with a password to jump ahead in the lunch line. Sholom became every- one's favorite word and the Trio found themselves suddenly busy inducting new members into Jews, Inc. .. . Helen Tieger had to be moved up in line at an immunization clinic because of her nerves . . . Miss Hammer talked incessantly of the Communist take- over . .. Miss Caruso, the talented music teacher of that year, screamed at anything, including Erwin Steier for not having his homework done. When Erwin whipped the paper out of his desk, Miss Caruso turned very red and mumbled something . . . Miss Townsend's classes never ended v ithout at least one person wearing masking tape across his mouth . .. many times Miss Townsend would slap the straight-line-maker across your desk, just to see if you were awake but it scared the life out of many terrified fifth-graders . . . there were times when the girls didn't know if they should be little kids and play hop scotch or be “mature” and discuss earrings . . . Miss Slade, the music teacher at Rutherford, contin- ued to teach kickball to her students ... we were all introduced to the flutophone which would lead to many great musical careers . . . Mrs. Bertholf’s name for Melinda Haliczer: “mercy, mercy me, Belinda . . . Mr. Kelly took away our comic books but then read them ... we all became “experts”at characterizations except Mamie Bryant, who complained she couldn't do hers because of heartburn .. . Mrs. Drutt used to walk into the room, pat Mindy Block on thehead, then turn and leave... Mr. Kelly and Mrs. Bertholf held com- bined English classes . . . Chris Cummings announced that he was going to be a basketball player and every- one laughed at him. The anguish of sixth grade and all its problems ... Steve Feirman, Mark Levine, Richard Rubin, Barbara Meyer and Ellen Goldberg all went to Mindy Block's house every Sunday to play spin-the-bottle ... Mrs. Wagner put gum in your pockets if you didn’t stop chewing it... Mr. McAndrew gave out F’s to anyone who laughed ... if you were happy, it meant you were pregnant .. . Vita Thompson couldn't go to the Christmas party because she didn't do her homework . . . Mr. Elvins was the morn- ing teacher at Duggan and he tried not to be around when we all got into trouble in the afternoon. Mr. Diamond did the same thing at the Chase school . .. Wayne Schellhaus had to give a report that dealt with war. The idea finally so unnerved him that in the middle of his dissertation he ran out the door, down the hall and into the boys’ room screaming .. . Mrs. Wagner refused to let her kids put tuna fish on the hard rolls at lunch. The entire class took the problem to Mr. Elvins who got mad at them because they’d made her cry . . . one day the female cool kids from the Cooke school met the retards from Rutherford in an all-out battle of kickball to settle once and for all who was better. The score was forgotten” ... the top three girls in Duggan were Dawn Diaco, Linda Bressler and Lorriane Barber . . . Mrs. Wagner inno- vated an independent reading program where she gave us the answers along with the questions. Like any normal, healthy, American kids, we discovered that it was much easier to do the answers and ignore the questions . . . Mr. Steinberg had just completed a lecture about keeping all four chair legs on the floor when he fell over doing what the class wasn’t supposed to do . . . Mr. McAndrew made hurricanes in his hurricane box. The same class kept a record of the temperature every day at noon ... it was a known fact that all the cute boys were in Rutherford and all the cute girls were in Cooke . .. Jim Hyde got his first taste of “dirtiness” when he discovered that if you cover up the zil” part of Brazil, you have “bra” left . . . couple parties and makeout parties were all the rage . . . George Manzi was removed from his office of class president because he very unpresidently told Miss Cornelius to shut up .. . Mrs. Wagner wouldn't let the girls wear T-shirts or sweaters . .. Mark Levine ripped the shirt off Sandra Contos’ back ( and front?) ... Mr. Diamond confis- cated SLAM books and got his jollies reading them . . . Bressler and Walnick were the defending attorneys in the case of Class of '73 vs. Mrs. Wagner and Mr. Elvins was the judge. The respective coun- selors won, naturally . . . during recess, Mr. Steinberg showed us some of his famous dance steps . . . Miss Slade was replaced by a skinny blond named Miss Walker. When Miss Slade left, so did kickball .. . popularity elections (Best Dressed, Best Personality, etc.) took place in which Lorraine won a title every time because she got 90% of the boys’ vote. Cooke, Chase, Rutherford and Duggan were united for the first time in a terrifying place called the Middle School. We entered seventh grade under new conditions in that building. We were the first class in a long time to enjoy the reasonable uncrowdedness of the old-fashioned halls .. . at first we were introduced, to the big, tough guys called monitors. After we got used to them, we settled down to getting to know each other ... we couldn't decide whether Miss Delena would marry Mr. Lanuti or Mr. K. ... we all suffered through our first years of trying to learn a foreign language, whether it was French with Mrs. Racine, Spanish with Mr. Alvarez, or Latin with Miss Maney. Mrs. Racine made Paul Walnick hang his head out the window from the third story because he happened to yawn at the same time Mrs. Racine happened to be looking at him. In Spanish, the kids terrorized Mr. Alvarez by playing basketball with the wastepaper basket in the comer. Miss Delena gave us a Christmas party which turned out to be utter chaos in several ways. For one, a milkshake drinking contest never came off because the milkshake was spilled all over Miss Delena and the floor. Miss Delena’s classes were unforgettable, especially her 7E class which occurred right before lunch. If we were “bad,” according to HER defini- tion, no one got to eat. Marilyn Cohen did a “how to speech entitled “How to Make A Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich.” She gave away the examples to many a starving student. Jamie Oppenheim’s version of a convincing speech was one in which he stated, “I am here, but the rest of this class isn’t. Everyone was turned on to Mr. Lanuti's biology class-to such an extent where we were all willing to stay until 6:00 o'clock to help. And then things started happening . . . for ten pieces of bubblegum, Martin Levine pulled the fire alarm and managed to evacuate the entire school in record time. Bonnie Levine lost her teddy bear on a Girl Scout trip and she wouldn't let anyone go home until they found it. I.D. bracelets were passed around like footballs. If you didn't have one that belonged to a boy, you managed to find one among your mother's junk. Steve Kaufman almost married Jeri Logun and Steve Feirman almost married Barb Goldberg. Arthur Schwartz invented a game called college. No one was positive about the rules, but everyone played along . . . During a trip to the Bronx Zoo, Sally in her best blue dress, Rocco and Danny sat in the back of the bus the whole way. The story is that Rocco and Danny ate blue- berry pie the whole time. The male members of the biology class went on a camping trip and almost didn't make it back to civilization. Helen's love was Jeff Novick. Eighth grade found us floundering in the second year of foreign languages with Mrs. Racine, Mr. Alvarez and Miss Dixon. Miss Turner, we soon found out, predicted the weather and often related stories about her trips to Arizona and the Indians to us. At St. Peter’s, where some of the more privileged members of the class of '73 were afforded the oppor- tunity of going, Tracy Garrett spilled red nail polish all over the gray floor during a lecture by the princi- pal. Mari Vandervoort and Helen Tieger hadn't had enough of Mr. Lanuti in seventh grade, so they went back to see him for homeroom during eighth grade. They would mischievously wrap his keys in a roll of masking tape and “forget” to unwrap them. Stories were being told about the Bar-Mitzvahs of the summer before ... ah, the truth comes out: Rocco had such a good time at Alan's Bar Mitzvah that he had to have his stomach pumped. All the Bar Mitzvahs involved a great deal of exploration of hotels by the guests . . . Miss Turner took the entire eighth grade to N.Y. City to the Museum of Natural History and the Hayden Planetarium. Sometime while no one was looking, Mitch Shiftman and Paul Walnick and Mike Reich rode around New York on the subway and even took in Central Park West and the Empire State Building. Two weeks detention for each of them was the reward they earned. Once more, a play: Mr. Powers’ 8E English class did HOW TO PROPOSE, with Rich Rubin as the impassioned cave woman, chased a half nude Paul Walnick (cave man) around the auditorium; Helen Block never got close enough to Jeff Novick to really kiss him; Jamie Oppenheim ( the narrator ) was set upon by Sue Horton but the chair broke-in the middle of a per- formance. The talent show featured Sandra Contos and Lori Schiff singing “Downtown. Lori was so nervous that she rolled her dress halfway up to her tonsils before she realized what she was doing. Miss Turner had sneakers to match every outfit she owned, but that didn't stop Dawn Diaco, Jill Feinstein and Jeri Logun from thinking she had no toes. While Karen Reiber won the Religion award at St. Peter's, Tracy Garrett and Jim Reiber won poetry awards for poems they didn’t write. The honors math class thought they were really original when they put Mr. Ratick's wastebasket on the roof by way of a convenient window. Their humor, however, was wasted on him: he was so angry, he wouldn’t even speak to them for the rest of the period. While that was going on, Mr. Frank convinced Barbara andMeyer that snakeheads and turtleheads lived in the bottom drawer of the filing cabinet in the far corner at the back of the room. Leaky ceilings, smoke-filled bathrooms and a new principal awaited us in the new high school where we were nothing more than plebes. We all thought we’d never attain the great honor of being seniors with all their special privileges and freedoms. Ninth grade brought ... George Verlaine, for one thing. When asked what they'd fed him down there in North Carolina, George coolly replied, “Taters and corn puffs.” Linda and Debbie read TRUE CON- FESSIONS on debate trips. When things got dull, the upperclassmen read to Mr. Bradshaw to see how badly they could make him blush. We really goofed on Miss Thoelen (Mrs. Silverstrim)... Linda and Dawn sat in the back of the room ripping huge pieces of paper into teeny weeny pieces, both managing to look innocent the whole time. Stu Schnall would smoke cigars while Miss Thoelen (Mrs. Silverstrim) continually said, “Now, Stu, stop that. This brought outbursts of uncon tollable laugh ter from the rest of the class. Mrs. Shellman was too “sick to teach us every “morning. Marilyn Cohen’s cry in Mr. Lockard’s class was “What's a nation-state?” In Mr. Rader’s class, everyone spoke in laymen's terms. Mr. Rader, however, said marine sediments with a midwestern accent and Maureen always woke up because she thought he was talking to her. Craig Grund became Jack the Ripper and to this day the name has stuck. Karen had a party one night and Gary and Debbie somehow managed to turn the water on while Steve and Dawn were standing in the shower. Tenth grade saw us at parties at Alan's house: holes suddenly appeared in the walls and no one knew how they got there ... the night they stripped Chumpy to his underwear and threw him in the snow. Jay, Rock, Alan and Charlie then proceeded to bury him alive. We cannot forget the infamous Pine Lodge, a high class well established hotel in the center of the Catskill resort area. The Lodge housed the C.I.O. Organization that was later to become known far and wide. Unfortunately, this first decent place of em- ployment for most of the degenerate senior boys was destroyed in its prime by fire. Since then, the C.I.O. Organization has relocated itself to either 442 Broad- way or Lili's. Miss Effel kneeled on a desk while wearing a dress to prove to her 10 HP English class that she knew the correct position one assumes when firing a rifle. Then we discovered that Mr. Camorani smoked his chalk. And always, biology: Stu Schnall's collection of names for Mr Weinstein, which included-Mr. Chromosome, Chromcross, Cronkite, Chronicle, Chromatid, Cuca Racha, Creinstein and Cockamamie. Karen made paper dolls to decorate the top of the blackboard. Rich Rubin sang Urea, I just met a girl named Urea. We can’t forget Mr. Ratick's failure to teach the honors class ANYTHING. We had Mr. Lockard for a second year but Marilyn was still trying to find out what a nation-state was. We soon learned that it was much easier and less of a hassle to just go to sleep than pretend you were listening and interested. There were times, however, when Maureen and Dawn remained awake to tickle Erwin and laugh at Stu's antics. When Mr. Lockard gave all his classes except ours a party, we were probably sorry that we’d hid his podium in the girls room across the hall and hid his briefcase in the mess on the back book- case. But if we weren’t sorry, it was all made up for the day Stu sat in class with a box over his head for forty minutes before Mr. Lockard said anything. Mr. Ferreira's first period geometry class saw the beginning of the game I Give To You a Witch. When Mr. Ferreira was asked this question he replied, “A what? which happened to have been the right answer but he didn't know that. Mr. Dannacher’s tenth grade homeroom in 118 was not exactly over-ambitious. Guy and Randy suddenly appeared with a box of food for the Food Drive. We found out that they’d borrowed it from another homeroom. Mitch Zeidwig came to Monticello and immediately won everyone's friendship by doing his fishlips imita- tion and by balancing a desk on his nose. Dawn and Linda were invited as houseguests by Debbie on a freezing cold night in February after Mindy's Sweet 16. While Linda fell asleep on the couch, Debbie and Dawn ate oreos, fritos, a Chinese TV dinner and frozen miniature pizzas. Rich Rubin was appropriate- ly dressed for his role as Bundle Man in red tights. Charlie and Danny tried to kiss KVE on the Religious Instructions bus and when they succeeded, she cried. As juniors, a large percentage of the Class of '73 practiced for their graduation by going to that of the Class of '72. A trail of beer cans, bottles and other incriminating evidence was strewn from one end of town to the other. Senioritis hit Dawn, Jim, Linda, Paul and Rich a little too early (like a year). Each day a collection was taken up, the votes were cast, and Jim and Dawn’s Deliveries would go to town for such goodies as milkshakes, pizzas, heroes, etc. We were introduced to the weird wit of Mr. Quigley: we soon got over being em harassed and just got sick. Sally and Linda skipped out of art a minimum of twice a week and took refuge in the home ec room. Mr. Dannacher tried to give lectures but couldn’t because he kept putting himself to sleep. Sean Moore was offered $12.00 by the sixth period chemistry class to hit Mr. Storrs. Sean missed-all three times. When things got really rough, Sue, Gary, Kathy and Karen climbed out the chem window. When it was raining and they couldn't climb out through the window, Kathy, Karen and Sue played choo-choo train all the way into the lab prep room, but Mr. Storrs never noticed. The HONORS chem class made a desperate attempt to destroy Mr. Finateri’s mind. Unfortunately, (for whom?) they succeeded. Mr. Quigley's classes were the scenes of countless games of concentration, numbers, trivia, charades and black velvet. While the rest of the class was concentrating on figuring out the twenty-three uses of a stapler, David Graham was climbing out the window from the second floor. Mr. Williams’ sentences containing vocabulary words always concerned sex. Mr. Jacobs lectured about legality but when he was asked a question that in- volved legal matters, he would snap, ‘T don't know, I'm not a lawyer,” but then we'd be referred to Michelle Gellman's father. Homeroom 500 contrib- uted almost $100 to the Thanksgiving food drive. During a debate trip, Rich woke Jeff Novick up at 4:00 a.m. and told him he was late. Jeff was fully clothed and on his way to breakfast before he realized that it was still dark outside. We remember how hard we worked on the Harold Supon Memorial Dinner and how proud we all were (are) of its financial success. Paul, Paul, Jim and Rich compiled a four-man meat loaf record by consuming seventeen plates of meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy. Lori’s Sweet 16 was such a success that no one could re- member anything about it the next day. Class rings came into Johnson and Elliot with the wrong year engraved on them. Richard Rubin closed out eleventh grade with a pie in his face, courtesy of an illustrious freshman. One by one, we slowly came to the realization that the last three seasons of our high school careers were fast approaching. We greeted our senior year with ideas that twelth grade would be a cross between the Garden of Eden and some kind of utopia. Disappointment hailed some; to others, it was just another year in school. We leave . . . Dr. J and the fondest of memories; the soccer team celebrations (whether they won or not) at Danny’s house; Froggy, Stumps, Rock, Chumpy, Cleo, Gantsky, Bronto, Puddin’, Hawk, Zak, Zeke, Divit, MoMo, Fox, Carrottop, Ritz, and Pasquale; the day Chumpy's directions to Brooklyn ( I used to live there”) landed Chumpy, Charlie and the 442 in Staten Island; A1 and Mike started to smell like musk oil; the soccer team got all its energy from Danny's Orange-Plus and vitamin V ; a group of persons that travelled to Troy to see Chicago (or was it Chicago to see Troy?) by way of Jim Blumenfeld who thought he was going for free. He did, except for $4 worth of gas, $2 to wash the eggs off his car (it was Halloween) and two hub caps that somehow disappeared. We'll remember room 605 and how it was remodeled by the Ace Business Staff with borrowed articles from some un- known but not often used, area; the P. A. system that was almost destroyed but not quite; the miles we put on all the cars going to away soccer games and going out to eat... the great turnout for the first road rally where record attendance reached eleven cars; how the Honor Society was supposed to tutor people but didn't want to; the Syracuse Citizenship Conferences where a certain group proved themselves very poor citizens; a different group going to Albany to see the Beach Boys but getting snowed in with eighteen inches ... ; the hassles of applying for colleges and finally graduation. Life, we found out, is but a series of ever-changing seasons. Spring is over; we now enter the summer of our lives. After that, we’ll be out in the world, part of the cycle of the seasons that will continue for generations to follow, each one waiting to complete THEIR fifty-two seasons in Monticello Schools. We may change with the seasons, but the seasons will not change us. 6. David Graubard 7. Paul Lessin 8. Caroline O'Bannon 9. Mindy Block 10. Stephanie Churley 1. Karen Van Etten 2. Pam Hall 3. Audrey Keller 4. Linda Bressler 5. Hope Deitsch Dawn Little Trudy Vassmer Steve Feirman George Verlaine Mike Gantman Kathy Rennison Lydia Pistilli Chip Steinberg Helen Tieger Lori Schiff Joe Stachov Jimmy Rieber Chester Smith Debbi Logan Frank Porpora 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Patti Muller Diane Smith Barbara Meyer James Blumenfeld Dawn Diaco Joanne Becker Craig Grund Chris Cummings Richard Rubin SENIOR DIRECTORY Avery, Sue Ellen- Student Council 2; Bundle Drive 3; Pye Club 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Senior Play 4; Ski Team 1,2,3,4; Baker, Richard- Cross Country 4; Track 4; JV Bas- ketball 1,2; Varsity Basketball 3,4; Becker, Joanne- Student Council 3; Montie Printz 1,2,3,4; PYE Club 1,2,3,4; Corresponding Secretary PYE Club 3; Drama Club 1; Interact 3,4; Rotary Art Show 1,2,3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Band 1; All School Musical 3; Monti' 73 Art Editor 4; Blasco, Lawrence- Student Council 4; PYE Club 1; Stage Crew 1; JV Soccer 1; Ski Team 1; Block, Helen- Student Council 1,4; Spanish Club 1,2,3; Sewing Club 3; Block, Mindy- Student Council 2,4; Bundle Drive 2; Food Drive 2,4; Montie Printz Circulation 1,4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Interact 3,4; Blumenfeld, James- Student Council 3,4; Food Drive 3,4; Bundle Drive 3; Students Rights Committee 3,4; Chairman Students Rights Committee 4; Chairman Student Council Publicity Committee 4; PYE Club 1,2,3; Ham Radio Club 1,2,3; President Ham Radio Club 3; Monti High Radio Show 4; Photography Club Secretary 3; Monti '73 Photography Staff 4; All School Musical 2,3; Talent Show 2,3; Senior Play Lighting Staff 3; Bressler, Linda- Student Council 3,4; MODAC 1,2,3,4; Kiwanis Club Essay Contest Winner-3rd Prize 2; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Debate Club 1; National Forensics League Degree of Merit; Spanish Club 2; Syracuse Citizenship Conference Delegate 3,4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Monti ’73 Layout Editor 4; Sew- ing Club 3,4; Women’s Club Sewing Contest Winner 3; All School Musical 2; Monti High Radio Show 4; Carlisle, Cindy- OfFice Squad 4; Carnesi, Debbi- PYE Club 1,2; Junior Prom Commit- tee 3; Psychology Club 3; Champagne, Thomas- Student Council 2,4; Wrestling 1,2,3,4; Cohen Marilyn- Student Council 2,3; Food Drive 2; Non-Athletic M 3; Class President 3; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; MODAC 3,4; Literary Magazine 1; Debate Club 1,2; Cohen, Mike- PYE Club 1,4; Student Council 1,4; Chess Club 1; Intramurals 1; Track 1; Cross Country 4; Wrestling 4; Contos, Sondra- National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Student Council 4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Office Squad 4; Broad- casting Squad 4; All School Musical 1,2; Spanish Club 2; Drama Club 1,2; Montie Printz 1,4; Intramurals 1,3; Athletic Certificate 3; Girl's Basketball Team 3; Cummings, Greg- JV Basketball Team 1,2; Varsity Basketball 3,4; Deitsch, Hope- PYE Club 1,2,3; Interact 3,4; Secre- tary of Interact 4; Montie Printz 1,4; Spanish Club 1,2; Vice President Spanish Club 2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Junior Prom Court 3; All School Musical 3; Broadcasting Squad 4; Diaco, Dawn- Student Council 1,2; Band 1,2; Band Council 2; Pep Band 2; PYE Club 1,2,3; Sewing Club 3,4; Literary Magazine 1,2; Health Careers Club 3; School Chairman American Cancer Society 3; Drama Club 1,2; Secretary Drama Club 2; Intramurals 1; Monti ’73 Class Historian 4; Feirman, Steven- Student Council 1,3,4; Class Presi- dent 1; Students Rights Committee 1; Student Council Treasurer and Sergeant-at-Arms 4; Food Drive 1,3,4; Bundle Drive 1,3,4; Student Evaluation Committee 4; Co-Chairman of Constitution Commit- tee 4; “Merit's Who’s Who Among American High School Students 1971-72 4; Band 1,2,3,4; Marching Band 1; All County Band 1,3; All School Musical 1,2,3,4; Band President 4; Pep Band 3,4; Area All-State Band 3; NYSSMA Solo Competition 1,2,3; Brass Ensemble 1,2,3,4; Stage Band 4; Band Council 4; Music M. Chevron, Key, and Plaque; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Representative to Boy’s State 3; Literary Magazine 1; MODAC 1,2,3,4; Spanish Club 2; Photo- graphy Club 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Key Club 3,4; Vice-President of Key Club 4; Lieutenant Gov- ernor of Hudson River Key Club 4; Key Club Board of Directors 4; Republican Watchman News School Page 3,4; Montie Printz 2,3,4; Co-Editor-in-Chief of Monde Printz 4; Vice-President of Athletic Associa- tion 4; Homeroom Basketball 1; Cross-Country Letter 1,2,3,4; Track Letter 1,2,3,4; Non-Athletic M 1,3,4; Carl Drobysh Award 2; Field, Deborah— Student Council 1,2,3,4; General Organization President 4; Food Drive 2,3,4; Bundle Drive 2,3,4; Class Secretary 3; Student Evaluation Committee 3,4; Students Rights Committee 3,4; Junior Prom Chairman 3; Junior Prom Court 3; Grievance Council Chairman 4; Republican Watch- man News School Page 2,3,4; All School Musical 2; Interact 3; Monde Printz 1,2,3,4; Talent Show 3; Non-Athletic M 3,4; Key Club Auxiliary 4; MODAC 1,2,3,4; PYE Club 1,2; Debate Club 1,2; National Forensics League Degree of Merit; Finder, Janice- PYE Club 1,2; Junior Prom Commit- tee 3; Gantman, Michael- Student Council 4; Grievance Council 4; Monti '73 Business Staff 4; Track 1,2,3; Wrestling 1,2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Junior Prom Court 3; Garret, Tracy- Art Club 4; Goldberg, Barbara- Student Council 1,2,3; Class Secretary 1,2; Bundle Drive 2,3; Food Drive 2,3; Drama Club 2; Chorus 2,3; All School Musical 3; Graubard, David- National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Representative to Boy’s State 3; Intramurals 1,2; Track 1,2,3; Home- room Basketball 3; Grund, Craig- Coordinating Editor Monti '73 4; Debate Club 1,2,3; National Forensics League Degrees of Merit, Honor, and Distinction; Treasurer of Debate Club 3; Math Team 1,2,3,4; Captain of Math Team 4; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; President National Senior Honor Society 4; Student Council 2,3,4; Chairman Student Evaluation Committee 4; Photography Club 3; Interact 3,4; Edward Feldberg Memorial Scholar- ship 1; Women’s Club Award for Social Studies 3; Harold Supon Memorial Scholarship 3; Rensselaer Polytechnical Institute Alumnus Award 3; National Merit Scholarship Letter of Commendation 4; Bausch and Lomb Award 4; Syracuse Citizenship Conference Delegate 3,4; International Youth Day Representative 4; Mon ti High Radio Show 4; Chorus 1; Haliczer, Melinda- Junior Prom Committee 3; All School Musical 3; Intramurals 1; PYE Club 1; Hargress, Fenton— Peoples Club 2; Wrestling Team 2,3,4; Track 3,4; JV Baseball 2; Horton, Susan— National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Math Team 2,3,4; Math Team Secretary-Treasurer 4; Drama Club 1; Literary Magazine 1; Debate Club 1; Peoples Club 1; Spanish Club 2,3,4; Spanish Club Treasurer 3; Mademoiselles 1,2; Band 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 1,2,3,4; Solo Competition 2,3,4; Duet Competition 3; Sextet Competition 4; Intramurals 2; Johnson, Craig- JV Soccer 1,2; Varsity Soccer 3,4; Kaufman, Steven- Student Council 1,2; MODAC 1,2,3,4; Key Club 2,3,4; Photography Club 2; Wrest- ling 1,2; Ski Team 2; Track Team 2; Kesten, Alan- Student Council 1,4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Business Manager Monti '73 4; Ski Team 1,2,3,4; JV Soccer 2; Varsity Soccer 3,4; Lessin, Paul- Student Council 4; Class Treasurer 2; Math Team 1,3,4; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Merit Scholarship Letter of Commendation 4; Bausch and Lomb Award 4; Spanish Club 2,3; Monti ’73 Sports Editor 4; Debate Club 1,2,3,4; President of Debate Club 3,4; National Forensics League Degrees of Merit, Honor, Distinction, and Excellence; Syracuse Citizenship Conference Delegate 4; Band 1; Tennis Team 1,2,3,4; Athletic M 2,3,4; Basketball Timekeeper 2,3,4; Homeroom Basketball 1,2,3,4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Lewis, Jesse- JV Basketball 1,2; Varsity Basketball 3,4; Little, Dawn- Student Council 1,3; Bundle Drive 1; Food Drive 1; Literary Magazine 1; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Treasurer 4; Student Council Refreshment Commit- tee 3; All School Musical 3; Montie Printz 3,4; Junior Prom Committee 3; Monti ’73 Class Historian and Business Staff 4; Logun, Jeri- Student Council 1,2,4; Vice President of Class 1,2,4; Election Committee 2,3,4; Chairman Election Committee 4; Montie Printz 3; Junior Prom Court 3; Intramurals 1; Girl's Ski Team 1,2,3,4; Mann, Margaret— Transfer Great Mills High School, Great Mills, Maryland Manners, Scott- Transfer El Camino Real High Sch ool-Cali forn ia Manzi, George- Cross Country 1,2,3,4; Track 1,2,3,4; Silver Charm in Track 4; Meyer, Barbara- Montie Printz 2,3,4; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Kiwanis Essay Contest Winner-lst place 2; Spanish Club 2; Election Committee 4; Interact 4; Girl’s Bas- ketball Team 3,4; Intramurals 3,4; Athletic Certifi- cate 3; Band 1,2,3,4; Music M and Chevron 3; Pit Orchestra 3,4; Woodwind Ensemble 2;. Clarinet Quartet 3; Miles, Melvin- Track 3; PYE Club 4; Interact 4; Mon tie Printz 4; Monroe, Albert- Chess Club 2; Moore, Jannie- Junior Varsity Cheerleader 2,3; Junior Varsity Captain 3; Varsity Cheering Captain 4; Treasurer of GALS 1; Pride 2; Chorus 1,2,3,4; Music Librarian 3; Moore, Sean- JV Baseball 2; Varsity Baseball 3; Student Council 3; Morris, Guy-Student Council 2; Junior Prom Commit- tee 3; Junior Prom Court 3; Class President 2; MODAC 2,3,4; JV Soccer 1,2; Varsity Soccer 3,4; JV Baseball 1; Varsity Baseball Team Manager 2; Morris, Joann- GALS 1; Muller, Patti— Student Council 1,2,3,4; MODAC 3,4; Monti '73 Layout Editor 4; PYE Club 2,3; Drama Club 1; Math Team 1; All School Musical 2,3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Junior Prom Queen 3; Intra- murals 1,2,3; Chorus 1,2,3,4; Mademoiselles 1,2,3; Music M , Chevron, and Key; Music Librarian 1; Novick, Jeffrey- Chorus 1,2,3,4; Music Librarian 2; President of Chorus 4; All School Musical 1,2,3; County Choir 1; Area All State Choir 2,3; NYSSMA Solo Competition 3,4; N.Y.S. Conference All State Choir 4; Music M, Chevron, Key, and Plaque; Madrigals 1,2; Modulators 3,4; Debate Club 1,2,3,4; Interact 4; Montie Printz 1,2; Drama Club 2; Literary Magazine 1; Student Council 1,2,4; Food Drive 4; Chorus Council 4; Ottino, Robert- Chess Club 2; Pavlick, Gary- Student Council 3,4; Grievance Council 4; National Senior Honor Society 4; Montie Printz 4; JV Soccer 1,2; Varsity Soccer 3,4; Soccer Letter 4; Ski Team 1,2,3,4; Ski Letter 2,3,4; Tennis Team 3,4; JV Baseball Team 1; MODAC 3,4; Pirich, Charlie- Cross Country 1,2,3; Track 1,2; Varsity Baseball 3; Porter, Bob— Track 3; Rendon, Oscar- Student Council 4; JV Soccer 1; Varsity Soccer 2,3,4; Track 1,2,3,4; Renkin, Joan- Transfer Benjamin Cordoza High School 9th Grade. Junior Prom Committee 3; Junior Prom Court 3; PYE Club 2,3; Drama Club 2; All School Musical 2,3; Interact 3,4; Broadcasting Squad Rennison, Kathleen- Vice-President of Class 3; Student Council 4; Interact 3,4; All School Musical 3; Monde Printz 4; Girl's Ski Team 1,2,3,4; Rubin, Richard- Student Council 1,2,3,4; Food Drive 1,2,3; Bundle Drive 1,3; Non-Athletic M 1,3; Student Council Parliamentarian 4; Student Evalua- don Committee 4; National Junior Honor Society 1; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Debate Club 1,2,3,4; Nadonal Forensics League Degrees of Merit, Honor, and Excellence; Ham Radio Club 1,2,3; Secre- tary-Treasurer of Ham Radio Club 3; Chess Club 1,4; PYE Club 1,2,3; Interact 3,4; Photography Club President 3; Monde Printz Photographer 3,4; Monti '73 Photographer 4; Band 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 1,2,3,4; Marching Band 1; Modulators 2; Music M. Chevron; Pep Band 3; Basketball Timekeeper 1,2,3; Stage Crew Manager 2; Intramurals 2; Monti High Radio Show 4; Office Squad Award 3; Nadonal Merit Letter of Commendation 4; Schiff, Lori- Student Council 1,3,4; Bundle Drive 1; PYE Club 1; Drama Club 1; Acdvides Editor Monti '73 4; Monde Printz 2,3,4; Talent Show 1; Interact 3; Key Club Auxiliary 4; Office Squad 3; All School Musical 1; Junior Prom Committee 3; Class Treasurer 3,4; March of Dimes School Rep. 3; Intramurals 1; JV Cheerleader 2; Varsity Cheerleader 3,4; Cheering Megaphone 4; Athletic M 3,4; Choir 2,3; Setren, Robert- Chorus 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 3; Literary Magazine 1; PYE Club 2; Intramurals 1,2,3; JV Soccer 1; Homeroom Basketball 2; Shiftman, Mitchell- Student Council 4; Chairman Food Drive 4; Nadonal Senior Honor Society 3,4; Mond ’73 Layout Editor 4; Monti High Radio Show 4; Chess Club 1; Math Team 3,4; Band 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 2,3,4; JV Baseball 1,2; Varsity Base- ball 3,4; Stage Crew 2,3,4; Stage Crew- Manager 4; Skinger, Cheryl- Student Council 4; Monde Printz 1,4; PYE Club 3,4; Interact 3,4; Drama Club 1; All School Musical 2,3; Intramurals 3; Smith, Diane- Student Council 1,2,3,4; Nadonal Junior Honor Society 1; Student Council Publicity Committee 4; Monti '73 Underclassmen Editor 4; Senior Class Secretary 4; Monde Printz 4; All School Musical 1,2; Drama Club 1,2; Junior Prom Committee 3; Intramurals 3; Steier, Erwin - Student Council 2,4; Class President 4; Key Club 4; MODAC 4; Monde Printz 4; Band 1; All School Musical 3; JV Basketball Manager 1; JV Basketball 2; Varsity Basketball 3,4; Intramurals 1; Steinberg, Ralph- JV Soccer 1,2; Varsity Soccer 3,4; Varsity Wresding 1,2,3; Wresding Letter 1,2,3; Home- room Basketball 1,2,3; Streifer, Mindy- Student Council 2,3; National Junior Honor Society 1; Spanish Club 2; All School Musical 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Tieger, Helen— Student Council 2,4; Food Drive 3; Hospital Volunteer 3; Volunteer at Nursery School 4; Drama Club 1,2; Literary Magazine 1; Monde Printz 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 1,2,3; PYE Club 2,3,4; Interact 3,4; Intramurals 1; GALS 1; Debate Club 3,4; Photo Club Treasurer 3; Junior Prom Committee 3; Mon d '73 Class Historian 4; Vassmer, Trudy- Chorus 1,2,3,4; All School Musical 2; Verlaine, George— Student Council 4; Monde Printz 4; Mond '73 Photographer 4; PYE Club 4; All School Musical 2,3; JV Baseball 1,2; Varsity Baseball 3,4; Wresding 2; JV Soccer 2; Varsity Soccer 4; Walnick, Paul- Student Council 1,3; National Senior Honor Society 3,4; Math Team 2,3,4; Business Mana- ger Monde Printz 4; Intramurals 1,2,3,4; Homeroom Basketball 1,2,3,4; JV Baseball 2; J.R.R. Tolkien C. Sonnenschein M Shapot C. McBride P. Stackhouse K. Skinger J. McCarthey R. Stefl L. Smith J. Greene D. Sutherland L. Leshner J. Farrow G. Swingle E. Levine J. Ferguson C. Thelman E. Levy D. Foster M. Tittman W. Lindridge W. Friedman R. Seymoure J. Lorino W. Fries S. Turick T. Lorino N. Fuchs M. Tyburski G. Lounsbury R. Garsh B. Van D. Lowe L. Geyer J. VahFradenburg D. Lowell R. Giglio G. Walker M. Lowenthal C. Gluck D. Reinshagen J. Lubniewski D. Goldenberg A. Rendon P. Lungen P. Goldstein R. Rosenthal M. MacCormac J. Goldych D. Ruben R. Mandel R. Kimmons L. Schick S. McArdle A. Wallace C. Dougherty P. Papsidero M. Wapnick D. Dumont V. Patterson T. Ward K. Edwards T. Payne S. Watson D. Epstein D. Perlmutter D. Wechsler B. Ernst F. Peters S. Weiner J. Cordan J. Petrowsky J. Weiss A. Graber J. Pirich T. Weiss H. Grant E. Pittaluga S. Wertheim E. Gray C. Platt S. Williams D. Greene J. Porter R. Winarick R. Guarino P. Porter K. Wlodarski M. Hall P. Quick M. Young P. Hanson M. Radziewski B. Wallace P. Hembdt K. Ramsey P. DeRuggerio R. Horton M. Raskin L. Desimone D. Irons B. Robinson C. Dewitt K. Jacobs J. Appelbaum Q. Armstead K. Backer E. Bates J. Becker P. Berman J. Blackburn J. Bogner M. Bogner D. Booth P. Boyle C. Breen J. Brochu J. C. Brown J. M. Brown L. Bruning J. Bryan S. Budoff P. Bulga L. Bell B. Frishman C. McNeil F. Michelson T. Morgan V. Mudd V . Murphy D. Murran A. Newsuan D. Nygard B. O'Bannon L. Oestrich C. Manners G. Olivieri R. Ortiz C. Pagan S. Burge M. Bush J. Carlucci D. Carpenter S. Casterlin J. Catalano C. Chase J. Churley E. Cohen P. Cohen R. Cohen D. Coney M. Cooper W. Cox K. Culligan D. Johnson M. Kaiser E. Keesler R. Kelz A. Kiss G. Klein V . Koberlein F. Kolarick L. Koster K. Lane T. Lauferswiler A. Le'shner K. Alenky K. Allen R. Allen M. Appel D. Armstead B. Avery K. Badendyck M. Balensuela R. Barber D. Barrett J. Berstrom S. Bessel J. Bickham R. Birness D. Bivins S. Bowers S. O'Rourke E. Okun J. Oretsky B. Padwa W. Pammer I. Pass S. Pasterchik R. Petrus S. Pfeister M. Bolduc D. Tong W. Bov ers N. Pittaluga T. Bray S. Powell L. Brochu V. Quartaro C. Broskin T. Rausch A. Bryan B. Black R. Burns L. Blackburn S. Burns E. Blanding D. Cahill I. Blank S. Calhoun S. Blech D. Caiman R. Bloom D. Desio T. Dexter C. Dissinger V. Dombal J. Driscoll K. Druckman K. Doty J. Farrow M. Feinstein L. Fialkoff M. Forman G. Gerow D. Davis C. Misukewsics G. Rendon M. Robinson D. Rosenbaum H. Rosenberg R. Rosenberg A. Ross M. Rozbruch J. Rubin K. Ryder G. Saulsberry K. Schaefer P. Schmick M. Schoonmaker C. Jacobsen M. Jenkins K. Jung R. Kapito S. Kapito B. Keil B. Keller P. Kenjersky M. Kiefer J. Klein K. Kocis K. Kroeger J. Kujan R. LaGrutta B. LaVecchia V. Lake G. Lasky P. Latimer J. Lawler J. Leahy V. Levin T. Levine J. Little B. Littman C. Litvack D. Lorgan I. Cohen L. Gellman B. Gersten J. Deithchman D. Gettel N. V eiler J. Giangrande A. Weisbrod D.'Gibbs J. VJeiss C. Gitlin C. V ilhams D. Gitlin P. Williams D. Glenn D. Wilson B. Goergen L. Wissman V. Goetschius K. Young L. Goggins R. Zauner L. Goldych E. Zeh R. Gonzalez J. Desimone M. Graubard F. Hargress M. Graubard K. Lowe J. Guardia M. Lovmdes K. Guarino R. Mahramas R. Carvajal J. McBride S. Chernoff K. McBride A Clark J. McCarthey R. Cohen D. Meyer F. Collins L. Goggin M. Conway D. Glenn M. Cooper C. Moore T. Culligan R Mulier M. Culver G. Neails A. Dankberg C. Niven J. Davey C. Nov lin J. Davidoff D. 0'Bannon R. DePace R. James assili K. Sutherland D. Thompson H. Thompson E. VanEtten J. VanEtten M. Livingston P. Tufano D. Stratton K. Somerville M. Vicidomini B. Wagner J. Wagner W. Walder K. Ward R. Wasserlauf S. Weglinski M. Shapiro J. Shapp K. Shiftman H. Siegel K. Silverstein G. Smith S. Solomon K. Somerville D. Spiro A. Steier I. Steinberg S. Strang S. Verdi M. Verlaine A. Wadlington V. Sorrantino J. Steinberg K. Heins T. Helm D. Hendrickson C. Holland J. Holland P. Horace T. Howard L. Hoyt J. Hyde P. Williams J. Armstead D. Lewis M. Adelstein L. Villicana R. Pashkow T. Akers J. Walker A. Pavlick G. Alii P. Walker L. Pearsall W. Altman S. Walker P. Luca S. Appelbaum T. Moriarity B. Hollane F. Armstrong B. Morson J. Horace S. Avery S. Moss E. Iotanim L. Backer R. Mueller G. Jackson N. Baker P. Muller K. Jackson J. Begbie K. Nagoda M. Jenkins J. Bell N. Newman P. Johnson W. Bivins K. Novick R. Johnson N. Blackman L. Nowlin B. Jones W. Thiele A. O’Bannon K. Joshpe L. Tieger C. O'Bannon A. Kagan R. VanEtten T. O'Connell R. Kaiser J. Victor A. Oppenheim R. Jenkins L. Villani I. Pagan s E. Raffo S. Wiles B. Schellhaus J. Shore D. Wilson S. Schiff F. Skinger R. Yeomans M. Schwartz S. Sloat S. Zakheim D. Sear gent V. Smith E. Zayas E. Seargent D. Sonnenschein M. Zayas C. Buchman J. Sosa C. Zeidwig G. Buchsbaum J. Spitolnick B. Ziegler R. Buckles L. Stanton J. Rend R. Bums H. Starr G. Richardson B. Bush S. Steinkol R. Reynolds C. Callihan R. Walsh 0. Rodriguez D. Chase D. Wapnick P. Rodriguez A. Clark F. Watson J. Roenberg K. Coble J. Watson S. Rosenheck D. Cohen S. Wechsler J. Rubin E. Conklin H. Weinstein T. Rudiger E. Contos R. Weiss H. Ruggeri J. Conway R. Weiss B. Rustic P. Conway S. Weiss C. Ryder N. Cook M. Welsh R. Linzer J. Green B. Brown M. Klein R. Green K. Brown C. Lehman K. Gregory J. Brucher D. Lieberman B. DeGraw B. Bruning T. King C. Guttman F. Perry J. Lopez N. Hall L. Phelps L. Lowenthal R. Hall M. Tong J. Lowerre R. Hastings P. Pino K. Lowndes J. Havas V. Piper C. Macker C. Hawkins J. Platt C. Madnick K. Hofsommer G. Porpora J. Marini D. Block T. Porter R. Martinek A. Bolden D. Piazza N. Mason F. Bonner D. Price C. Cluck J. Booth F. Price J. Coldfarb P. Boshes S. Provda P. Goldfarb L. Bradley J. Provenzano L. Goldman A. Brasinton M. Prussack 0. Gonzalez R. Bray M. Rapkin J. Gray C. Breen D. Raskin J. Gray R. Greco D. Breen M. Rausch M. Massey P. Knight L. Gant man D. McBride K Knopman K. Gilmour B. McCarthy C.Kuller J. Ginobbi P. McCarthy J. LaCrutta V. Vassmer C. McCrea T. Lavecchia G. Cosme L. Mclnturff J. Lauferswiler L. Cosme S. McKenley C. Lav rence D. Coven L. Miller B. Laymon P. Craig R. Millspaugh B. Leshner K. Culligan S. Mioduszewski R. Levin L. Curry R. Monroe C. Duncan. M. Danvetz J. Monroe . R. Dunn G. Dauch N. Morgan D. Ehrle T. Davey E. Morganstein G. Ellis L. Davis T. Longwell T. English J. Deschambeault M. Magos W. Fedun N. Dexter A. Martinez E. Feirman J. DiMarzio T. Manzi R. Flood S. Domingo C. Keller T. Watkins D. Driscoll R. Kesten K. Foldes M. Drobysh S. Kiefer J. Kimmel C. Folsom L. Drummond n t wmmmsm. Sophomore Class Officers Junior Class Officers Freshman Class Officers Pres. Shelly Cohen Pres. Tom Lorino Pres. Richard Kaiser V. Pres. Mindy Appel V. Pres. Ed Cohen V. Pres. Lisa Tieger Sec. Suzie Verdi Sec. Linda Leshner Sec. Naomi Morgan Tres. Peter Tufano Tres. Ed Levy Tres. Josephine Monroe Your friendly yearbook advisor from both of us (room 605) Best Wishes and Good Luck in College and in your future life. Joe ( Smiley ) Slayton Slayton Studios 421 W. Broadway, Monticello Best of luck to all of you Best wishes from Mr. and Mrs. Michael Quigley and Mike, Jr. and Sean And the seasons they go round and round And the 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 and round In the circle game Joni Mitchell


Suggestions in the Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) collection:

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Monticello High School - Monti Yearbook (Monticello, NY) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.