Neponset High School - Zephyr Yearbook (Neponset, IL)

 - Class of 1960

Page 22 of 72

 

Neponset High School - Zephyr Yearbook (Neponset, IL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 22 of 72
Page 22 of 72



Neponset High School - Zephyr Yearbook (Neponset, IL) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

In 1956 sixteen insignificant but eager freshies left the beloved grade school and ventured into the big high school. Mr. Don Quinn and Mrs. Kathryn Crow soil attempted to get them settled, with the help of the officers selected by the class: Jack Scott, vice president; Gary Coates, secretary; Gary Stabler, treasurer, and, because of his tower of strength and protective abilities Sam Berry as head of the house for this little family. Initiation did the trick. They settled right down to this new phase of their lives. George Boehne and Marshall Holmes enrolled in time to help the class throw an all-school Valentine's Party. Eighteen sophomores who now knew what it was all about enjoyed letting the freshies know that they knew. Controlling the lusty troup were Mr. Ralph Manley and Mrs. Truett High. Jack Scott received the robe of presidency with Gary Stabler for stooge or in his absence the title of vice president, secretary Marshall Holmes, and treasurer Gary Coates. Two years in high school seemed to prove the class a bit trying. They had worn out four advisors when Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Price with a we-can-take-it look in their eyes shouldered the task. As juniors the class turned its interests to earning money. They furiously sold candy at games and at noon hours and magazines down every street and road in order to sponsor the lavish Junior-Senior Prom and Banquet held in the Kewanee Hotel. The theme was Oriental Gardens . Linda Shaner kept committees working as president, Gary Coates was busy with the minutes of the many meetings, and Sam Berry played with the coins. To lead them their last year together they chose Gary Coates as president with Carolyn Pratt as Secretary and Jack Scott as treasurer. Their advisors were Mr. William Seals and Mr. John Lavelle. With the generous support and energetic skill of their classmates, teammates, coaches, accompanists, and others, members of the class of '60 were able to bring special recognitions to N.H.S.: Verna Miller earned First , Superior Rating , with a blue-ribbon medal at the Illinois State Music Contest (as well as in the District Contest) for her French horn solo. During her grade and high school years Verna established an outstanding record in horn solo and sextet and vocal solo and trio work, bringing thirty-two blue-ribbon music medals to Neponset, fifteen of which were won in State Contests. In addition she often served as piano accompanist for other contestants. Jack Scott was awarded the Illinois State Farmer Degree for his excellent F. F.A. record. In the All-Conference balloting by Little Six basketball and Little Eight basketball and football coaches Neponset seniors received positions: Little Six Basketball—Marshall Holmes First Team Forward, Gary Coates Second Team Forward; Little Eight Basketball—Marshall Holmes Second Team Forward, Alan Kaiser and Gary Coates Honorable Mention; Little Eight Football—Gary Coates First Team End, Allan Bates Honorable Mention Quarterback. In this, the final year of the Little Six”, basketball was their last and only area of competition. The 1960 Neponset varsity team won the Little Six Basketball second place trophy. Placings in the Little Eight Conference Track Meet by the Neponset team were: pole vault second place tie, Allan Bates and Larry Pratt; discus third place medal, Marshall Holmes; high hurdles second place, broad jump fourth, eight-eighty fifth place, Gary Coates. In the Bureau County Track Meet Gary Coates was fifth place in each the high hurdles, low hurdles, and broad jump. Financing a class trip to Chicago was the motivation for the many money making schemes undertaken as seniors—a little work and most enlightening but lots of fun: the Senior Dance, the Carnival (a smashing success), the Homecoming float, the chilli dinners, the Christmas party, magazine sales, pencil sales, and the Senior Play. The three act play The Unguided Miss was hardly ready in time but drew one of the largest crowds to Neponset High theater in many years. So, chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Lavelle, thirteen of the graduates spent June first through fourth and the year's earnings—in Chicago, eating everything in sight , seeing the stage show The World of Susie Wong , etc. (See picture story.) The seniors were guests of the juniors at the highly successful Prom, April 30, and were guests of the Alumni Association at their annual banquet and dance. May 28, featuring Max Kuster, Joliet Junior College, and Charles Norton, Kansas State University, of the class of 1935. The Reverend F. G. Foster addressed them at the Baccalaureate Services held in the Methodist Church, May 22. At Commencement the seniors spent little time looking back , with regretful farewells. Each eagerly looked forward to challenging futures including summer school, military service, marriage, business with farmer-dads, new jobs, and college in the fall. Their last joint venture, June, 1960, was helping Mr. Lavelle complete the current issue of the Zephyr . Gary C. Coates

Page 21 text:

 HISTORY of the Class of 1960 The history of the class of 1960 covers twelve years, from first wade through high school graduation, because approximately a dozen of those beginning together in first grade were among the seventeen graduating from high school May ‘27, 1960. Of additional interest are the seventeen other students who were classmates for a time, but who left the ranks, in from two and a half months to seven years, and the fact that this was the last class to attend public school in three different buildings in Neponset. Sixteen wide eyed little girls and boys were greeting by Miss Lewis the last day of August, 1948. By spring the entrance of Sandra Swearingen and Verna Miller made eighteen squirming first graders for Miss Mary Lewis, besides a class of cocky second graders, in the same temporary” room, in the old Town Hall building. Eleven of them: Allan Bates, Sam Berry, Gary Coates, Eileen Golby, Alan Kaiser, Dolores Moore, Carolyn Pratt, Jack Scott, Linda Shaner, Gary Stabler, and Dennis Yepson, completed all twelve years together—starting in the old Town Hall their first year; attending the brand new Neponset Consolidated Grade School for most of the second grade; and entering Neponset Township High School for their ninth year, 1956. Verna Miller and Forrest Pratt were also with the class the full twelve years minus only a few months. Verna entered in February of first grade. Forrest attended Galesburg High the first semester of his junior year. The others graduating in 1960 were Paul Heberer and Ivan Bennett who were with the class from the second, John Bennett from the seventh, and Marshall Holmes from the ninth grade. Of those who were classmates for only part of the twelve years, two lived in Neponset long enough to be missed more than the rest. Kay Bennett, with them for five years, grades three through seven, moved to Osceola, graduating, an outstanding student, from Toulon High School, Michael Yordy, with the class the first four and a half years, moved to Atkinson High School where he, too, graduated with honors. The fifteen other students, who will be remembered as classmates for varying lengths of time, together with the grade entered, were first: Sandra Swearingen, Robert Berry, Judith Foltz, Robert Bennett; second: Harvey Armstrong, Roger Failon, Ruth Ann Swearingen; third: Donald Frederick; fourth: Robert Hill, Larry Byrd, Stanley Lathrop; fifth: Robert McClain; sixth: Karla Krughoff; seventh: Fred Sutton, Rosemary Hansen; ninth: George Boehne; eleventh: Richard Tasker. In the second grade the class was divided. Eleven of the class were taught by Miss Lewis along with the first grade, and twelve by Mrs. John Mock along with the third grade class. It was again split in the third grade. Mrs. Mock taught twelve of the class and the second grade, and Mrs. Ruth Gould taught the other twelve of the class and the fourth grade. The class of ’60 finally got together in the fourth grade and reached, during that year, their highest enrollment peak: twenty-five students. Mrs. Gould was their teacher. Mrs. Charles Berry taught the class in the fifth and was their sixth grade homeroom teacher, teaching their social studies through the eighth grade. The sixth grade meant the beginning of departmental work. Mrs. L. H. Whaples taught language arts and, during their seventh grade, had charge of the twenty-one students in home-room. Miss Agnes Golby guided the seventeen remaining through eighth grade and taught them mathematics and science in sixth, seventh, and eighth. Personages of vital incluence during this period (1948-1956) were principals: Miss Golby, Mrs. Whaples, and Mr. Paul Slocum; athletic coaches: Mr. George ( Gerrond and Mr. Slocum; band directors: Miss Jeannette Miller (Mrs. Robin Lahman), Mrs. Gene Kessler (Mrs. Stinson), Mrs. Besse Heck, Mr. Edward Skwierawski, Mrs. L. Renner and Mr. Howard Sandlund; music and operetta directors: Miss Shirley Stabler (Mrs. John Pickering), Miss Miller, Mrs. Kessler, Mrs. Heck, and Mrs. John Gerrond; and custodians: Mr. Frank Stout, Mr. Gerrond, and Mr. Tom Bigham. Practically unnoticed by the class of '60 were the worthy men serving on the grade school board those years: Marvin Kuster, Theron Lyle, Dr. William Bertelsen, Tom Studley, Cecil Cinnamon, (presidents); Ralph Stabler, Wilbur Blake, Joe Papacek, Charles Wood, Willard Stabler, and Dean Scott. Memories of operettas every Christmas and spring time, band contests, basketball and track, cheerleader contests, recess fun, parties, and Mr. French speaking at eighth grade graduation form a bright mosaic to illustrate the history of the class of 1960.

Suggestions in the Neponset High School - Zephyr Yearbook (Neponset, IL) collection:

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