North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL)

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 168

 

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 7, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 11, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 15, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 9, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 13, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collectionPage 17, 1967 Edition, North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1967 volume:

£ skmm x SSHSs JJMRROJ JRlWWM S ?: In Memoriam Perry Dunlap Smith Purpose he had, without doubt, and an end in view, but not axioms, postu- lates or formulae, for the end in view was as complex as man himself. For him there was no standard model of a child or of a man. Each was to make and to be his own model. He sought to impose nothing on us, not even freedom. But we knew this was what he wanted for us. Lynn A. Williams, 1967 The North Shore Country Day School Winnetka, Illinois ■ For his youthful spirit And understanding We honor Frank Wallace With the Mirror of nineteen sixty BICYCLES The bicycles lie In the woods, in the dew. Between the birch trees The highroad gleams. They fell, fell down Mudguard to mudguard, Handlebar to handlebar Pedal to pedal. And you can ' t Wake them up! Petrified monsters, Their chains entwined. Huge and surprised They stare at the sky. Above them, green dusk Resin, and bumblebees. In the luxurious Rustling of camomile, peppermint Leaves they lie. Forgotten, Asleep, asleep. Andrei Voznesensky He keeps them, like an ape, in the corner of his jaw; first mouthed, to be last swallowed. Shakespeare st so; V— ,,- - et vuii Liliane Durham William W. Talley Carol Mussey Kathleen R. Welsh William W. Biddle Virginia S. Deane John Almquist Sheldon Rosenbaum Barbara Foote Sue Maland John C. Woodbury Paul Bohannan Quentin Carter : Simone Valvo Sandra Donnelly Elvira Scarpa Richard A. Lacey 13 Stephen S. Ober Elsie Harridge David W. Osberg ;V- i Martin J. McCarty Pamela Bent 14 Linda Gawthrop Frank Zebell Jay Bach Marion Bowes Jean Talley Jane Croft • .«•? ■■• ( Elsie Harridge Sandra Donnelly Violet Dormody Esther Gladstone Lower School Left to right: Mrs. Tillotson, Mr. Eldredge, Miss Harman, Miss Collingbourne, Miss Renoe, Mrs. Thorsen, Mrs. Goldsmith, Mrs. Conner, Mrs. Parsons, Miss Dalton, Mrs. Kratz, Mrs. Koch, Mrs. Schofield. iWfl w W Middle School Left to right: Mrs. Tillotson, Mrs. Pettibone, Mr. Eldredge, Mrs. Scarpa, Mr. Thomas, Mrs. Thorsen, Mr. Davis, Miss Ingram, Mr. Bannon, Miss Arment. 16 r Tiddy-um-pom-pom! They swung together and the music grew fainter as they swung. Tiddy- um-pom-pom! Oh, the circling sea, that rocks us all in its mighty cradle! Tiddy-um-pom-pom! Oh . . . swing me round like a bubble in the falling tide. Swing me round— tiddy-um . . . Swing me round— pom-pom . . . Swing me . . . Swing me . . . Swing . . . From Mary Poppins Opens the Door by P. L. Travers. rV d ' f Z L 21 , ■ I Junior Kindergarten FRONT ROW: M. Gately, P. Lau, G. Goren, F. Fischer, G. Hart, M. Roenich, R. Gellersted, L. Woodbury. SECOND ROW: E. Schwarz, S. Schuldt, B. Bowen. THIRD ROW: H. Marsland, E. Biddle, Miss Gawthrop, H. O ' Riley, M. Cahan, M. Bransfield, G. Getz, A Roth, Mrs. Schofield. ABSENT: J. Abelmann, G. Maland, L. Sievers. 22 Senior Kindergarten FRONT ROW: F. Evans, P. Strauss, J. Silvia, A. Berlin, J. Fargo, M. Fitzgerald, J. Harza, A. MacLeod, L. Lauke, K. Osberg, R. O ' Riley. SECOND ROW: P. Friend, T. Jackson, M. Harland, J. Springer, N. Sotern. ABSENT: L. Gordon. P.S.: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Turtle. 23 yirr ■■ •• V f m 3 £BPK r V Hr 5f n t HON ?erCR iRrt. MPlRK Auu£ aS k One night Santa Claus jumped down from his sleigh To deliver all the toys for Christmas day. His nose was red. He wore a hat He wasn ' t lean, he was short and fat, And he looked and he looked for the Christmas tree And he said to himself, I hope no one sees me. Then all of a sudden, the children woke up, They gave him hot chocolate in a beautiful cup And he said to the children, Thank you for the chocolate, and now I must go Back to my hideout on a hill with the snow And as he rode off, they hear a Ho-Ho-Ho, and a Merry Christmas. The First Grade frqpt Grr c(£. ? w oMy ratals Oirtri4qy ' ' • • -mi? WmL Second Grade FIRST ROW: C. Dowd, A. Graham, M. Fisher SECOND ROW: G. Ware, M. Lipman, D. Stern, M. Gluckman, C. Colbert THIRD ROW: C. Schnering, F. Dammann, L. Gordon, S. Rransfield, W. Saunders, A. Hines, K. Funk, D. Deuble, J. Strauss 26 Third Grade FIRST ROW: L. Harza, J. Cohen, L. Eversz, P. Blackburn, A. Grana- telli, M. Macejak. SECOND ROW: J. Sudak, G. Jessen, N. Beisel, K. Button, V. Du- Vernet, R. Waite, M. Russell, Y. Duham. THIRD ROW: K. Wirtz, S. Perkins, K. Spencer, J. Edwards, J. Deuble, C. O ' Connon. ABSENT: J. B. Gord on, C. Ophetveld. Grey is a person you don ' t want to meet. Laura Harza 3rd Grade Black and Orange Black and Orange is the Bear ' s color! The bears are the best football team in the world. Hurrah! Purple purple is the color of a drippy popsicle. purple sounds like the color of thursday. purple is sometimes the color of a hotdog. purple looks like the color of a machine-gun. Clint 3rd Grade Hurrah! shout ha ha! go go! Bears Hurrah! go! Jim Deuble 3rd Grade 28 Fourth Grade 1. Ann Ross 2. Clark Elliott 3. Tom Ablemann 4. Ted Lauke 5. Mark Wollaeger 6. Elizabeth Springer 7. Jodi Roberts 8. Elizabeth Breuer 9. Michael Searle 10. John Kowalik 11. Bill Corrington 12. Arnold Berlin 13. Kimberly Louis 14. Jennifer Herndon 15. Tracy Maynard 16. Vicki Joyce 17. Katherine Zeit- lin 18. Donna Buddington 19. James Damaske 20. Philip Boal 21. Timothy Ober 22. Mrs. Conner. 29 k£££ Fifth Grade FIRST ROW: R. McArthur, P. Schneider, S. Dowd, D. Bohannan, B. Crowle, L. Salisbury, K. Whiteman, N. Stibolt SECOND ROW: C. Weary, A. Morse, J. Golden, M. Taylor, R. Gard- ner, L. Lyon THIRD ROW: H. Sinker, P. Geraghty, E. Winston, A. Milliken, K. Eldredge, P. Stern, A. Dammann 30 Thanksgiving Day This story is about Thanksgiving in 1990. With the help of modern equipment the amount of shopping the Martin ' s had to do was limited. The first thing Mark did that morning was to watch the Johnson City Parade on TV. After that Mark had his breakfast which had Kellogg ' s Sugar Toasties (they came out about 1972), bran muffins, grapefruit, cake and milk. At ten o ' clock Mark ' s father took him to a football game between San Diego State and Johnson City University. When Mark came home he had a bowl of caracus (a combination of carrots and asparagus) soup and crackers. Then Mark watched the Lilly Bowl Parade on TV. After that they had friends over and with their rented turkey making machine that in the machine has the ingredients for 1 to 5 turkeys, all you do is press the number of turkeys you want. They had a giant turkey with cornbeans. After that they watched another parade on TV. Finally the guests went home and that ends another Thanksgiving. Howie Sinker In 1966 Thanksgiving day is on Nov. 24, 1966. On Thanksgiving day in 1620, the pilgrims landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Plymouth is also a gasa- mobile. This Thanksgiving we ' ll be doing very many pilgrimage things. We ' ll have fun with glory. The Lord ' s Prayer Our father who are in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our debts, As we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temtation, But deliver us from evil, For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory forever. A-MEN Bill Crowle 31 32 far from the yellow brick road now. L. Frank Baum, The Wizard of (h Sixth Grade FIRST ROW: A. Clarke, J. Perkins, W. Hines, R. Saunders, F. Dille, J. Montague, J. Pugh, S. Howe, C. Cray, P. Salisbury, B. English, C. Conant, K. Ayer, K. Flynn, L. Morse, C. Spencer, J. Berry, C. Manegold. SECOND ROW: D. Harper, S. Roberts, L. McCormick, V. Leslie, T. Preece, P. Par- sons, N. Babson, H. Jessen, H. Joseph, B. Lipman, B. Darrow, R. Ober, K. Cassidy, M. Wollaeger, F. Stanton, B. Garvin, C. Bragman. 34 I % v Seventh Grade FIRST ROW: E. Harwick, C. Maynard, J. Carroll, G. Boone, T. Cass, D. Manegold, M. Dern, J. Leimert, B. Delaney, H. Blair, K. Borowitz, S. Colbert, A. Weaver, S. Schmidt, G. Wirtz, G. Hobart, C. Cook. SECOND ROW: J. Porter, B. Stibolt, A. DaMiano, J. Carton, N. Johnson, C. Breuer, J. Eldredge, A. Sheman, W. Mack, S. Becker, K. Corrington, C. Hemdon, M. Paul, K. Dobroth, P. Dammann, S. Gray, H. Babson, B. Saunders, S. Milliken. 37 Eighth Grade FIRST ROW: M. Milliken, T. Boal, A. Kurd, E. Benson, M. Parsons, A. Leimert, A. Howard, L. Harper, G. Present, S. Severson, N. Green, M. Ware. SECOND ROW: C. Jackson, S. Kopple, P. Fortune, D. Eiseman, J. Ayre, J. Flynn, J. Saunders, D. Severson, G. Hollerith, B. Wilson, S. Punnett, O. Lyon. THIRD ROW: D. Dobkin, R. Wirtz, B. Stern, M. Preece, G. Searle, A. Alsberg, M. Parisi, J. Cremin, E. Millard, M. Herndon, K. Dole. ABSENT: F. Wollaeger. 38 the room with ligh ' fills, r f$iat then the chills, the candle bright that shined last flight, will soon go biit. the morning light that seemed so bright, but then the dar k, charms of music sweet and mellow, no longer souhd. Susan Severson I 8th Grade , .,; Softly the cat stole across the grass, pounced, But the butterfly whispered away as a stronger silence passed. Cautiously the cat stole across the street, paused, But the car whisked away as a stronger silence passed. Ellen Benson 8th Grade ,. HI I woke up and was in a monstrously rebellious mood. 1 put on my Saturday winter clothes rapidly not really earing what the hell I wore. I devoured my soggy corn Hakes holding my nose in disgust, swung open the heavy wooden door and phmged defimmtry up to my. waist in the alabastrine, immaculate The fluffy white, wel snow la? on tlie ground like cotton on a ol green like peanut butter cow ers bread, in mounds ol smooth and rough textures, with swirls like ice milk: a milky-w hitcy ' - ' ' inn covering a bit; cake. r  • • V jgfel I only took the tegular courses. ,„;,_,,,„,, What was that? inquired Alice. Reeling and Writhing, of course, to be- gin with, the Mock Turtle replied; and then the different,,, branches, M .Aritbr .,.,,,, metic-Ambition, Distraction, Uglifica- tion, and Derision. Lewis Carroll Alices Adventures in W ond en • S i ' r Ml lr  ► - IP I Et ' .lfejw ■« « w -- ..- , . Ninth Grade FIRST ROW: N. Golden, S. MacArther, L. Lipman, P. Becker, M. Kowalik, L. Young, L. Litten, S. Wells, G. Miller, H. Brown, C. Graham, R. Burnell, P. Ross, B. Perkins, R. Mayor, D. Flint. SECOND ROW: A. Patton, M. Manegold, L. Schmidt, P. Carton, C. Reinhold, B. Nevins. ATOP JUNGLE GYM: M. Springer, R. Hadsall, R. Philipsborn, D. Whiteman, J. Golden, D. Schweppe, D. Wood, L. Rivkin, W. Porter, T. Allison, J. Hoffman. THIRD ROW: M. Garvin, J. Leslie, C. Johnson, G. Booz, S. Geering, A. Jessen, F. Watkins, R. Cody, M. Florian, J. Kenly, T. Church. ABSENT: J. Isaacs, E. Gordon, E. Mooney. 45 oodcut by keetsj llar I see gold and yellow children and roaring red trees and timeless orange-likes. When yon are away T see yoyo adolescents and filmy faraways and frozen gray clocks. mi a Tenth Grade KNEELING: A Locke, B. Blair, M. A. Sewell, N. Colbert, C. Askow, N. Wilkinson. LEFT FIRST ROW: E. Weinrib, J. Kentor, C. Jarchow. RIGHT FIRST ROW: J. Miller, A. Kopple, M. Geraghty, J. Strong, M. MacLeod, E. Gardener, D. De Peyster, L. Bartholomay, W. Comstock, B. Hyman, A. Struthers, C. Barman, D. Lyon, J. Loomis, J. Wilson. LEFT BACK ROW: D. Misch, W. Boal, M. Clark, W. Berry, J. Witte, J. Leimert, M. Millard, L. Breuer. RIGHT BACK ROW: S. Folds, D. Severson, J. Victor, P. Kuh. BACK ROW: K. Wollaeger, J. Gailbraith, J. Hobart, S. Pugh, A. Searle, A. Philipsborn, R. LeBolt, P. Crane, P. Delaney, F. Fortune, D. Lyon. ABSENT: H. Foote, L. Marder, S. Schulman. 48 How odd, it ' s over. Suddenly My feelings have been switched off. And have survived intact tearless. And, so to speak relatively happy or something. But probably not in actuality. Dissociated again. And all the hushed and feared and terrifying Conjectu rings are nothing or something But probably not in actuality. Robin Geist Of life and death Of the immediate and the unforseeable eternity Commingled with blood and lust Seeking some value but Finding only depravity Amongst the flaccid fleshy forms Of creatures which Mean nothing and are nothing Seeking the mere corruption of comfort Gazing at the garbage heap Of cast off virtues and inhibitions lost Confused by pleasures past which Felt and seemed and were but Are no more but Offer still a Tempting Tryst and the Naive denial of involvement Offering in lieu Comfort to everchanging cells Which pulse and grow and expand Only to die To die, to sleep, to live No more The eternal peace A lash of being To exist No more And to have done much less Without marks made in The surging rat-race world Save for the remains In the bodies of others Bill Brickman 50 goggled on-lookers chromed in a fixed gaze of bewilderment— but . . . within the ignorant crowd, a maudlin child staring at the ground- All that she can comprehend. a rumor of death trickling thru special acquaintances flourishing from the roots, until exploded to the gnawing curiosity of the public. A destroyed sorrow. Diane Gillispie HAIKU I wonder if all Things as splendid As the moon Are as far away. drawing by Michelle Booz 51 What the painter adds to his canvas are the days of his life, the time that passes or does not pass. Sartre Y Jl QjA 9 j : Jj f Vi 7 f— N -- zi : ? x . • 1 52 It hurts to be close while so far. And it aches when a distance is so hear. How it pains when a smile misses by one face And there is no antidote. Robin Geist Tim MacD onald jmmm Vj i ■ % v. ,: • I ■ ' ■:. fL- ' A ' - ' - ' --■ ' . .. ' -■ ' ... . JUNIORS BACK ROW: J. Parshall, F. Loomis, R. Stern, F. Soule, C. Macleod, B. Har- ridge, M. Watrous, D. Misch, P. Chris- topher, S. Barr, C. Moses, L. Bredimus, L. Bliss, S. Goldsmith, B. Barber, F. Cook, J. Samuels, S. Greeley, B. Allison, S. Wood, M. Rogers, P. Patton, G. Dern. MIDDLE ROW: M. Lynde, H. Dam- mann, A. Bolotin, J. Price, J. Howe, T. Browne, K. Gait, E. Eddy, S. Locke, D. Hollerith, H. Hoyle. FRONT ROW: M. Booz, S. Green, J. Nevins, D. Dunn, P. Thompson, S. Askow, M. Durling, F. Donahue, S. Fox, J. Rockwell, E. Green, S. Peters, D. McPhee, C. Babson, D. Gillispie. 55 I imagine you are near. I imagine that you lie next to me You ' re there to talk to. You ' re close to hold on to. Your eyes are so near mine I can see my tears Tears that make me realize You ' re so far away you Could never realize how much I long for you I watch the sun settling carelessly in the west and imagine it caressing you there, as I long to do. Perhaps you watch it rise in the east, and you imagine, too. When the sun is down, I wish it was up, so that I needn ' t spend another night longing for you, alone. When the sun is up, I wish it was down, so that I might dream of your blue eyes, alone. D. Gillispie P «% r v 4  % Carolyn Victor • ««« ? V • His life was like a scratch on a table: in comparison to the table it was minute, but if analyzed it became infinite in its complex- ities. Helen Brown i M I I t a L • • - Learning makes a man fit company for himself — Young Howard Reid Strong I am a moldy, moldy man. I ' m moldy through and through. I ' m a moldy, moldy man. You would not think it true. I ' m moldy til my eyeballs, I ' m moldy til my toe. I will not dance, I shy balls. I ' m such a humble Joe. John Lennon Kathryn Jan Steverson People don ' t think Volkswagens count. I ' m going to paint some teeth on mine. Anonymous Romanticism: the feel- ing of two against the world. Adam and Eve must have been Russian. They had no clothes, no place to live in, only an apple between them — and they call it par- adise. Unknown Scott Keith Heitmann In every man there is a certain amount of pride. This pride will be the stimulus for his success or the cause of his fail- Paul Cleveland Fairbank Farewell Jessica Randolph Harper ' ?••. 1 imothy Holt MacDonald Courtney Winston Kling What is it so transforms the boulevard? The lure of the passerby is not of the flesh; There are no movements; there are flowing rhythms And I have no need of eyes to see them there. The air I breathe is fresh with spirit-savor. Men are ideas that a mind sends forth. From then to me all flows, yet is internal; Cheek to cheek we lie across the distance, Space in communion binds us in one thought. Jules Romains You said keep on the sunny side Life is just a rainbow ride A silver-studded surfboard glide On the wine of waves to keep you high Don ' t hit the moon if you fly too wide It ' ll bring you down below the tide Where noone keeps their tears inside The waters hide them if you cry For in the waves there are no mysteries. Eric Anderson Frances Lee de Peyster Christopher Minot Weld, Jr. . . . we want to know not only whether we are being heard but whether we are being understood. Arthur Lawson No single thing abides; but all things flow. Fragment to fragment clings— the things thus grow Until we know and name them. By degrees They melt, and are more the things we know. Titus Carus i f Paul Andrew Logan Life is like a sewer— what you get out of it depends on what you put into it. Anonymous Jane Margaret Bulger A woman. Holding soft respect sprinkling love childish laughter tears. Sun brown colours her hair her joy her life her love. A woman. 71 Frederick Titus Croft Silence is golden Ruth Miriam Swenson Ah, but a man ' s reach should exceed his grasp, or whats a heaven for?. Robert Browning The past four years at North Shore Country Day haven ' t been a total waste, even though I failed to convince the faculty that all men are created equal . 72 James Dougal Darrow If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. Henry David Thoreau 1817-1862 If a man does keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears the same drummer. Let him also step to the music which he hears. James Dougal Darrow 1949- Charles Hibbard Schweppe There is nothing eidier good or bad but thinking makes it so. Shakespeare 73 Robin Meredith Geist Why is there so much stench, But not enough moral impurity? Why do I cry, When I should be happy, on a Friday afternoon? Everyone else in the world ( At least on the North Shore eats three meals a day. So why do I feel guilty; and horribly hideously horrendously FAT If I do? or sit under tables and stand on stools; A young colossus astride from stand to stand- push— scrape, one foot then another. Slow, low, loco-motion— no fear of automation here. And why continue to scrawl and wipe my pen on my slip? or attach security to an oversized jacket? Why— give— why— cry— why- live? But who wants to die? for I act best when being Nibor which is me, backwards. William Hudson Harper To Studs Lonigan and Hamlet, Agamemnon, Baby, Zooev and Frank. Jean-Paul S., Sammy L. and Christ. Woody, Willy, Jules Feiffer and Ho Chi Mihn. Wendel Sr., Marquis de Sade, Mr. Anne- hauser, Raymond and Francais. Orestes, Sidney, Ophelia and Gale Sayers, Ulysses, Emerson and Howard; A song and a seagull and a cigarette with love and a feather. Wickliffe Malott Loomis I love the Baby Giant Panda; I ' d welcome one to my veranda. Ogden Nash John Michael Moreschi Long live Ferrari and The Man At Ease; Be UNIQUE! for Individu- ality is the salt of common life. You may have to live in a crowd, but you do not have to live like it, nor subsist on its food. Henry Van Dyke Molly Overton Brown INTROSPECTIVE REFLECTION I would live all my life in nonchalance and insouciance Were it not for making a living, which is rather a nousciance. Ogden Nash Wendel William Meyer My supreme desire is to climb the highest point on earth, face the four winds, spread my arms apart and yell, Ask me how much I care? 76 William Stewart Pettingell « , i I ' m tired of trying to think; I think I shall simply behave. Behavior may drive you to drink But it ' s thinking that leads to the grave. Lloyd Frankenberg The day is dark; My mind is bleary; The window pane With mist is smeary; Mine eyelids are A little weary. But when the sun Shines bright and cheery, Can life be sad And dull and dreary? The answer ' s yes To that deep query. A Corinna - « . . « •- ' , - f A Carolyn Ann Victor hap py am I with a simple a crazy a thing a singing in the snow 77 Lorraine Virginia Dille Frustration is having a friend home from school and not being able to talk. Frustration is not being able to say Merry Christmas to a nice person who is friendly on a street corner. Frustration is not being to scream out the older year and welcome the new. Frustration is not being able to order a chocolate milkshake at MacDonalds. Frustration is not being able to tell Meg Delaney and Barb Haight that Berkeley is a good school. Happiness is not having to answer your mother when she tells you it ' s time to get up. Happiness is not having to talk to dull people who always have so many words but nothing to say. Happiness is not having to answer the telephone when you are in the middle of the murder in a James Bond book. Happiness is being able to swear at some- one and not have them know. In conclusion, Happiness and Frustration are a state of mind. And I am . John Rollin Church Winnetka is on the outskirts of the drafty city. Kenneth Haywood Montgomery Stephen Kennedy Cook Th e cook was a good cook as cooks go; and as cooks go, he went. Saki Take me disappearing through the smoke rings of my mind Down the foggy ruins of time Far past the frozen leaves The haunted frightened trees Out to the windy beach Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky With one hand waving free, Silhouetted by the sea, Circled by the circus sands With all memory and fate driven deep be- neath the waves, Let me forget about today until tomorrow Bob Dylan Joan Henderson Gately Friendship, friendship, what a perfect blend- ship. Hayley Mills, ' 60 Quite so Plato Arthur Dibrell Hynes In my frequent thoughtful and even philosophic moods I have sometimes thought that I would like to express, but can ' t. I enjoy art because I seek to express myself in it. Time has gone too quickly for me at North Shore. I ' d like to stretch it out. It will soon be memories . . . football practices and games, yell- ing at basketball games, afternoons in the art room, Ensemble, individ- ualism and independence all a- round me and within me, and free- dom .... My pride in North Shore will go with me. 80 Elizabeth Ann Waldman The skylight Sunders The darkness in the attic Until night. Brandishing imagi- nation, I thrive on moon- glow. And plant myself On a stage. Unresolved. William Joel Brickman Suffering is the sole origin of conscious- ness. Dostoyevsky It is the fate of man to be forever alone and isolated. True understanding and empathy between two beings does not exist. Our re- lationships with others are limited, yet what else is of value? I find that I am thoroughly disenchanted with democracy, myself, and materialistic objects. I have found myself in- capable of love for all but one and in this single triumph I revel. Often times I want to end this meaningless existence, to destroy the body that supports my mind, but stop because I realize that for a few microseconds I have been able to transcend the restrictions of my flesh and feel a truly deep attachment to another. Eventually I will erase myself from this jungle, but until that time I intend to live as much as is possible and to drink in every moment of life as though it were my last. Thomas Bodley Stibolt, Jr The essence of knowledge is, havin, it, to apply it, not having it, to con fess your ignorance. Confucius Margaret Wallace Delaney The pace of events is so fast that unless we find some way to keep our sights on tomorrow, we cannot expect to be in touch with today. Dean Rusk Sidney Tison Keel, Jr. UN CLc JOHNNY cQONSi WHECE ARE yoU ? Camilla Coffee Ewen Friendship The smile, the act, the relationship is hung in space, in the immediacy and purity of the present, sus- pended on the point of here and now; bal- anced there, on a shaft of air, like a seagull. A. M. Lindbergh 003 Martin Luther Jack, Jr. Knowledge conquers. Chemistry II=H 2 S Octavia Miranda Miller Red hat, red boots . . . red, red, red. Some think I ' m naive, but naive people are very trustworthy. I laugh merrily, believe endlessly, and discover wonderingly. White Powders, Inc. 84 David Hobart Ingersoll All ' s well that ends better. J.R.R. Tolkien 7:-.-. ; .■. ' ; .t.;:;.v: ' ' : :. :■;:,. Robert Nathan Mayer You must fuse at white heat the several par- ticles of your learning into an element so ductible and so strong that nothing can destroy it without destroying you. Owen D. Young 85 Peter David Watrous At the writing of my first senior spot Pete Watrous and God knew what was written. Now, only God knows. In my high school experience, which is vast, there were two moments that loomed frightening and hallowed in the future — senior spot and graduation. Now only the latter remains. The loss of my senior spot I now receive as a mixed blessing and possibly fate. The essence of it was a philosophy of life in school such that by weighing each day ' s good points with its bad and so each week, each month, and each year, thus arriving at a mathematical judgement, I find my whole high school experience to be a draw. A veritable stale-mate. I do look forward to the time when I will be able to unlearn most of what N.S. has taught me about living in a society. I also look forward to a return next Christmas to see friends in next year ' s class. As for my own class, I can only say that for the friends I ' ve made I ' m grateful. For those I ' ll never know, take it easy. — Fifty years from now, who ' ll give a damn. PDW You can pick your friends, and you can pick your nose, but you can ' t pick your friend ' s nose. Anonymous Mary Caroline Welch Wait for the west wind to find the constant star. Hold to it, hold to it. James A. Michener Patricia Dorothy Missner I don ' t know half of you half as well a I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve. Bilbo Baggins of Hobbiton, on his eleventy-first birthday, September 22, SB (Shire-reckoning) 1401 (Third Age of the Middle Earth), as quoted in J. B. B. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings. Richard Andrew Lane Go out into the sunlight and be happy with what you see. Winston S. Churchill DO IT NOW, tomorrow there ' ll be a law against it. 87 Irving Stuart Wilson -. -. Vv  . .  .• K. .   , • .• . .♦ . •♦.•ill ■ ■ There is always someone worse off than your- self. Aesop Susan Cranage No matter how hard you try to be what you once were, you can only be what you are here and now. Ray Bradbury 88 John Cadwalader Menk, Jr. Regrets, remorse, repentance are only yesterday ' s joys viewed in retrospect. Andre Gide Manan Dietzgen She ' s not to blame for G.A.A. She perenially tries to shrug her flapping G.A.A. banner. One hears her quiet peep in study hall or dis- gustedly leaves the noisy senior girl ' s room. But she ' s a grind only about coffee. Successfully she has lived down the Dietzgen ' s legasy at Nort h Shore. Somehow Sunday morning always comes. Why live such grief over again that time has gone for us? Aeschylus 89 Kyoji Nakano Will you give your attention for my speech for a moment. That was the summer of the year when I was in the twelfth grade of high school. I was a member of the rugby team, but I wanted to partici- pate in field and track events, and I wanted to know mv ability. I participated in race about two miles and three and a half miles race and bent all my energy. But I was tired after two miles race, and it was scorchingly hot— When I approached first lap. Conscious was hardly. I was running blindly. I don ' t remember what happened after race; sound of ambulance, a white wall, smell of medicine . . . When I got up after a long time sleeping, I saw my parents at the side of my bed, and they had a certificate of merit of first for me. I ran. I ran to the end. The loneliness of a marathon runner and the loneli- ness of American life are the same. But I believe that they both are wonderful goals. Now I am running to believe that. And I am run- ning with your kindness. Thank you very much! BANSAI!! Pamela Carol Anderson Skoo ba doo ba doo Not my car again! Bzzzzzzz What coordination? I ' m a star athlete. 004 Never heard of freck- les? Cool it Navy forever! The Hot Nuts A 9c tip! Happy He found a door in a wall; but it was locked, and there was no room for a fat little rabbit to squeeze underneath. 90 Ann Christine Gougler We are now in a period of crisis. Every man who is acutely alive is acutely wrestling with his own soul. The people that can bring forth the new passion, the new idea, this people will endure. Those others, that fix themselves in the old idea, will perish with the new life strangled within them. Men must speak out to one another. u '  J James Spencer Marcus It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, be had nothing before us . . . Charles Dickens 91 Skeets Hyde Millard The neat thing about being a little kid is that you get to get off the ship first. Anonymous Iamblichi 501-442 B.C. I ' d like to take this space to thank Frank Wallace for his invisible moustache; Richard Lacey for his expertise in Judo; Jack Loomis for whatever ' s hap- pening, baby; Mayor Daley for Chicago; and Fritz Bransfield for being so tough. Barbara Lindsay Haight Uncompromising realism tempered by strong senti- ments. A traditionalist with contemporary overtones. Impatience with mediocrity. Insatiable curiosity about the world and its happenings. Ability to make the most commonplace humorous. Perceptive, can- did, and sensitive. Likes history, Fauve paintings, long walks, Barbara Tuchman, and Paris. Dislikes pretense, slow reactions, math, and pseu- dos. Self-sufficiency personified. Look! Up in the sky! It ' s a bird! It ' s a plane! No, it ' s SUPER-CLASS. The Class of ' 67, who came to school with brains and abilities far beyond those of common clods. SUPER-CLASS, who can change the course of mighty curriculums, bend problems with their bare hands, and enter college in a single bound. And who, disguised as mild-mannered idiots of a great surburban asylum, fight a never- ending battle for money, success, and true happiness in life. Fred and Ethel Senior, 1987 93 a %. New Study Hall Rules Clothing Committee Questionare Boys Clothing 1. Turtlenecks 2. Bleached jeans 3. Sweatshirts 4. Collarless shirts Girls Clothing 1. Sandles 2. Slacks at basketball games 3. Levi ' s at basketball games Yes No COUNCIL 96 Cj.A.A. r -t 4 ■ M ' 7 A K v — «4| gnci Itad isriio 9rfi bn£ fc n E d rmblirfD 9 rfi iud Anon Jjj s an obsencsrcofi the N.S.C.B.S 1 JjffijySrrbTrro 1 he ima g ine ' ay, Trappy Country Day SchcxSlf l gflifesiafibn Sf W ' aimn wwl ' ferke fild IftflftJrfe f a numfcfli ieilrPi a iteftJfl Jfiiftce befcSft |rfrt«v eSn J fhe full truth fe lW thaqtfMflia lwij MB stud ahiWatfeift a ibWgistaged bef Wp?!ldll}tfi jfiHt glfiat risk dtf cfid and, a ffWDrfeVeabng it. wE Mr. Walla ktwiii Figment on3v( Now 2M Sffi fcfflfi r e y n 1 nFir iMftiPSSrW much 1 are 3fiW? gftftly Iw ffevJi wHTr There is only questions, and othi Morning Ex. And, excdpt this man? on o d ad. A)dwhyis 3 r£ttB$ ar n fo aid his i mtrageoushhSptarsWi have the ai isu er to this question. :e s ' desk one night, 1 found a wit ' ' pirtiiro Tf wa marlp nnt plast urgffls gration? Did nglish until he came to America i g l oWleSftrfSig gnglish (an i resentative was seen running tr y Mffla9d 1 Fiflm e lives .) And ©H«T?ppA(3i?i3HapzK0urn to ; given in the person of a racing j DMIiqA-HW 8AMT8DIH3 ne man_w ©aat ive us the ans ' rs,„CQnfess. , -Mr Jrank Wallace KJ S_ I fji£U A V r , ' v ' I « i :: ' ■!:, HU6AWARM PUPPV 1 3    ; 11 OU UEHOER, MlWOft • TO =F CH |p PA Bill h. 99 i f w - StageXrew f J 41 ,  ' • f Arts II I ■£ 103 Hy i ' nn UMJ i A ROCK, A TREE, A CLOUD Play adapted by Linda Rreuer from a story by Car- son McCullers. Son, I can love anything. N longer do I have to think aboj it, even. I see a street fu people and a beautifuljL. i comes in me. I watch a 1J ' tthe sky or -I meet a trav ]the road. No longer do to think about it, even, toing, Son, and everyboi stranger and all loved. ' ■  A , Everyman C £ „.l$fe if« ' J '  i — • 5 . Iolanthe Arlene Bolotin nela Anderson lary Millard sorah Dunn -Hist Jill Witte i i is Iolanthe Strephon Phyllis ' Lord Chancellor Kathryn Severson Macgill Lynde Susan Cranage Howard Strong Stephen Co -M. Lord Tolloller Lord Mountarat Private Willis iNg— lomas Church amilton Moses Joel Parshall Sl. MB w 7T - VAUDEVILLE ' 66 IF MAMMA WAS MARRIED ELECTRONIC DANCE IN THE BATH A CAPELLA URIED Deborah Dunn, Sara Green ! Gwendolyn Miller, Margaret Carton, Helen Brown Tison Keel, Paul Fairbank DANCING IN THE STREETS Cy thia Babson, Diane Gillespie, Susfen Goldsmith, Dennis McPhee, Stephen Geering WHO ' S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA DEANE? Freshman Girls SUTYLE Jim Leslie, Robert Cody, Steve Geering, Jeff Hoffman GET RID OF HIM GQJNG TO A GO-GO | l Sandy Locke, Katie Gait, %iane Gillespie, Cindy Babson, nary Eddy, MarniejBogers, T Tarret Wfcay] e ENSEMBLE MISCONSTRUDE ROBIN GEIST Jill Witte, Mary Ann Sewell, Josephine Strong CHAMELEON Kathy Severson ACROBATS Blake Allison, John Samuels, Macgill Lynde MISALUBA Susan Goldsmith, Pussy Harper, Cindy Babson YOU ' VE GOT TO PICK A POCKET OR TWO Lindsay Harper, Ellen Benson Athletics flM J±, ... ... , vti fcE.VWr?aB i ' k Tk. .K % w l M Patrons Mr. and Mrs. Theodore N. Anderson Dr. and Mrs. John P. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bartholomay Mr. and Mrs. Ervin E. Beisel Mrs. M. Storrs Booz Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Brickman Mr. and Mrs. James J. Brown, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Bulger Mrs. Edward J. Bumell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Button Mrs. William P. Church Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cranage Mrs. John D. Creigh Mr. and Mrs. James J. Croft Mr. and Mrs. William W. Darrow Mr. and Mrs. James A. Delaney, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Frederic A. de Peyster Mr. Joseph E. Dietzgen Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Dille Mr. and Mrs. J. Sanford Doughty Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Ewen Dr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Gait Mr. and Mrs. John Gately Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Geist Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. J. Gillispie Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W. Gougler Dr. and Mrs. John B. Graham Mr. John D. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Haight Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Harper, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. William Harridge, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Hart Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Heitmann, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Royce A. Hoyle, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Hynes Mrs. Dorothea D. S. Ingersoll Mr. and Mrs. Sidney T. Keel Mr. and Mrs. Walton S. Kling Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Kneip Mr. and Mrs. John W. Lane Mr. and Mrs. John H. Locke, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Logan Mr. and Mrs. Wesley H. Loomis III Mrs. Pendexter Macdonald Mr. and Mrs. Jules A. Marcus Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Mayer Mr. W. Dale McLaughlin Mr. and Mrs. John C. Menk Mr. and Mrs. Wendel N. Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. Millard Mr. and Mrs. Middleton Miller Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Misch Mr. and Mrs. Phil D. Missner Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. John J. Moreschi Mr. and Mrs. Price A. Patton Mrs. Donaldson Pettingell Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Schulman Dr. and Mrs. John S. Schweppe Mr. and Mrs. John G. Severson Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Sewell Mr. and Mrs. Russell T. Stern, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Stibolt Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Strong Mr. and Mrs. Irving G. Swenson Mr. and Mrs. George E. Victor Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Waldman Mr. and Mrs. David G. Watrous Mr. and Mrs. Ross S. Welch Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Weld Mr. and Mrs. Irving A. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. Woodward 128 Lnahlki VARIETY DEPARTMENT STORES Headquarters for your daily needs In the tradition of the old five and dime 808 Elm St. Winnetka Telephone HI6-0145 73rd year in Winnetka LINDWALL ' S Upholstering Furniture Repairs Traditional Fabrics Antiques 808 Oak Street Winnetka, Illinois Congratulations from M THE WRINKLE SET I ' ll miss ya next year Congratulations! 002 001 004 003 006 G o o d B y e Crow Island T h e T w i n s When You Look In Your MIRROR Be FELL Dressed The Fell Company 520 Green Bay Rd. Winnetka, III. CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS SWITCHBOARD MOTHERS Summer Activities for YOUR YOUNG SON OR DAUGHTER All Day — Mornings — Afternoons Select the Program which Fits Your Needs North Shore Country Day Camp McKinnoy Play Clubs C. Bertram McKinney Hlllcrost 4-2712 WINNETKA TAKE TIMEOUT. N TO SHOP AT BETTY ' S OF WINNETKA 818 Elm Street V Compliments of MURPHY TRAVEL SERVICE 710 Oak St. Winnetka ' Murph ' s your man P. Fairbank ° V u V For Shoes That FIT As Well As They LOOK LOOK TO ® LIFT PARTS SERVICE CO. 4424 West 63rd Street Chicago Children ' s Shoes From Tots To Teens, Adult Casuals Barnes § f Bootery IN NORTHFIELD JESSE BARNES 2504 GREEN BAY ROAD • EVANSTON, ILLINOIS UN-4-7322 NORTH SHORE LAUNDRY 566 Chestnut St. Winnetka TALK ' 0 THE TOWN 65 Linden Ave. LI I I I 111 WALLY GIBBS PURE OIL 574 Green Bay Rd. Winnetka, III. HI 6-3025 WINNETKA IMPORT MOTOR, INC. 666 Green Bay Rd., Winnetka, III. North Shore Gift Headquarters for the Young Set LEEDS JEWELERS Highland Park WALLY REID sm 1719 Shermar Evanston, Illinois HALLOCK MUSIC HOUSE 301 Happ Rd. Northfield, III. Willow-Hill Shopping Center Phone: 446-2813 Instruments, Accessories, Records and Sheet Music Music Lessons Kjruner Aewelru Co. 612 Church Street Evanston, Congratulations Class of 1967 the BANKING HOURS (including walk-up and drive-in windows) Tuesday through Friday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to noon in addition WALK-UP AND DRIVE-IN WINDOWS Monday 8 a.m. to noon FIRST NATIONAL BANK of WINNETKA the southwest corner of Elm Street and Green Bay Road Phone: Hlllcmt 6-0010 ■ a Mf Jaeok INTIMATE APPAREL 579 Lincoln avenue Winnetka. Illinois HIllcrest 6-4750 fyxmr LITTLE TOUCH JP-OF HOLLAND t ' .f K ' it — The Bakery witli the European Touch 343 Park Avenue Glencoe VE 5-3527 Go ©n To College vo n Time BULdVA HAMILTON LONGINES WITTNAUER GIRARD PERREGAUX and of course our dependable low-cost WINNETKA WATCH COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE GAS - OIL • CREASING - WASHING TIRES AND BATTERIES MOTOR REBUILDING — BRAKE RELINING IGNITION SERVICE BODY AND FENDER WORK — PAINTING Runnfeldt Belmont Service Station 475 Chestnut Street, Winnetka, III. Phones Hi 6-0009 Hi 6-0334 WOZNICKI JEWELERS 819 Oak Street Winnetta, Illinois - 446-0685 137 Best of Luck To The CLASS OF 1967 John Welter, Florist Phone: AL 6-0891 615 Ridge Road Wilmette, Illinois WALLY KING ' S MUSIC CENTER 669 Vernon Ave. Glencoe, III. Phone: 835-3433 Guitars and Accessories Sheet Music Records Guitar Lessons M.C. Record Hops ranees H E F F E R N A N 572 Lincoln Winnetka WHITE ' S DRUG STORE Complete Drug Cosmetic Departments 454 Winnetka Ave. Winnetka, III. Hi 6-2625 A Complete Drug Store REHN ' S HILLMAN PHARMACY C. Ellsworth Eaton, R. Ph. 353 Park Avenue, Glencoe, Illinois VE5-0387 LET ' S GO PLACES HI 6-0814 561 LINCOLN AVE., WINNETKA, ILL. (Winnetha ' s OWN Travel Agency) Complete Travel Arrangements Individual Hair Styling • Expert Hair Tinting 554 Green Bay Road Winnetka, Illinois Phone HI Merest 6-076: Winnetka Zrust and Savings flank Winnetka, Illinois Northwest corner Elm Green Bay Road Telephone Hi 6-0097 $rmtuj in Heart You ng Juniors 6 to 14 Juniors N ' Jr. Petites 3 to 15 Hubbard Woods Official Seventeen Store 990 Linden Avenue Winnetka d kmee - FELL SHOES - IWINNETI (A • LAKE FOREST! A Name You Know With Shoes You 1 For The New 729 Elm St. 29 E. Illinois Rd 1 and Unusual in Clothes Winnetka Lake Forest Love 44 Years on the North Shore 932 Linden, Hubbard Woods 635 Central, Highland Park TEEN-AGE TEN COMMANDMENTS 1. Stop and think before you drink. 2. Don ' t let your parents down, they brought you up. 3. Be humble enough to obey. You will be giving orders yourself some day. 4. At the first moment turn away from un- clean thinking. 5. Don ' t show off when driving. If you want to race, go to Indianapolis. 6. Choose a date who would make a good mate. 7. Go to church faithfully. The Creator gives us a week. Give Him back at least an hour. 8. Choose your companions carefully. You are what they are. 9. Avoid following the crowd. Be an engine, not a caboose. 10. Keep the original Ten Commandments. JOE JACOBS CHEVROLET 435 Green Bay Road Wilmette, Illinois Beulah ' s 946 Linden Avenue Hubbard Woods Hi Merest 6-0593 PAUL ' S RECORDED MUSIC Phonograph Records Art Supplies 1151 Wilmette Ave. AL 1-8281 FOR: LONGHAIRS JAZZ COLLECTORS HIT HUNTERS JUST BROWSERS jDsdi cz7fa%duja%z and jio%t±. 1923 Willow Road Northfield, Illinois Specialists in: Baseball, Football, and Basketball Equipment Ful I Line of: Fishing, Hunting, Hockey and Skating Equipment 810 ELM ST. WINNETKA THE HOME OF BASSWEEJUNS JOYCE OLD MAINE TROTTERS EDITH HENRY SANDLER OF BOSTON MISS AMERICA u lAJ fffl m i m 635 GREENBAV ROAD WILMETTE, ILLINOIS ALpine1-0878 Compliments of Vt azel Baxter 567-A LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Phone ALpine 1-2775 Glenview and Evanston — Enterprise 1238 SCHULTZ DRY CLEANERS, INC. Shirt Laundering • Tailoring Quality Dry Cleaning Same Day Service including Saturdays I 152 Cen+ral Avenue Wilmette, Illinois WILMETTE s« Spnt SI EilgUuU i 1912 VERSINO BROTHERS, Prop. 605 Green Bay Rd. WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL ADIDAS RIDDELL SHOES WILSON and RAWLINGS SPORTING GOODS DISTRIBUTOR ET ' z—ai it t r-v=. ORTIHGiQUIPMEjt Why Look Further? Baseball Tro phies Boxing Basketball Golf Bowling Football Roller Skc tes Table Tennis Tennis Hunting Softball Badminton Fishing Ammunition Skates Archery Tennis Sharpened Guns Restringing Courtesy of Mr. Walsh WINNETKA DRIVING SCHOOL 609 Ridge Road Wilmette AL 1-6403 ECKART HARDWARE CO. PORTER ' S 735 Elm St. Winnetka CURT ' S RESTAURANT Congratulations to the Illinois 601 Green Bay Rd. Wilmette ALT -9679 A Casual Atmosphere Fish Fry Friday Evenings All You Can Eat Open 7 days a week 6 A.M. - 8 P.M. Class of ' 67 Complim ents of Wil-Shore Motors 145 Dry Cleaners- Since 1857 In Winnetka — North Western Railroad Station In Hubbard Woods — Our Drive-In 1010 Tower or call HI 6-0898 Since 1886 North Shores Oldest Savings Loan WINNETKA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 814 Elm Street Winnetka, Illinois HENRY C. WIENECKE, INC. HOUSEWARES - HARDWARE - THE TOY SHOP 680-82 Vernon Ave. - VErnon 5-3060 - Glencoe, ' i m p. i w Compliments of BERT J. DREW Groceries Congratulations to the Graduates of the Class of 1967 Vose Bootery of Winnetka 837 Elm Street Winnetka, Illinois for: convenience profit safety and service save in person or by mail at FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS OF WILMETTE FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF WILMETTE Green Boy Road and Central Avenue, Wilmette, Illinois Telephone: Alpine 1-7200 The North Shore ' s Largest Savings Institution NORTHFIELD FOODS, INC. Complete Line of Groceries Produce Prime Custom Cut Meats Free Delivery L. Weskamp W. Meier 1652 Willow Road Northfield, Illinois Hi 6-2270 w • 8§ 1 $ !? v • jff ' 1.4 PHOTOTRONICS, INC. 740 Elm St. Winnetka, III. Children ' s Clothes with Distinction 574 Lincoln Ave. Hi 6-1177 e E L Z E AND IE 146 Greenbay Rd Winnetta Hi 6-4492 LAKESIDE CDFFEE CELLAR BOO ELM STREET WINNETKA, ILLINOIS 235 Ridge Rd. Wilmette AL 1-4400 GR 5-4400 Telephone HI 6-1462 INCORPORATED 1913 pMRDA-ANDHgDNfmiaNr BUILDING CONSTRUCTION 545 LINCDLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Congratulations Class of ' 67 MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL L, e WBnl  M Com a i r SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETTS • ORGANIZED 1851 HERBERT GEIST, C.L.U., GENERAL AGENT SUITE A-1625, INSURANCE EXCHANGE BUILDING TELEPHONE 175 WEST JACKSON BOULEVARD HARRISON 7-0985 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60604 150 G R E E N Ming the Merciless Shaver Stretch Heinie The Woman ' s Board, North Shore Country Day School, wishes to express its appreciation to the school families, both parents and stu- dents, for their gracious and generous support throughout the year. BAUMANN-COOK 37 years Christine Baumann Collins ' 21, Florence S. Cook Janet Ator Mabel Coulter Ruth Mills Elwood Lucy Jane Heolberg Edythe Layden Lucille Octigan Frances Olmstead Ellen Riddle Claire Sherwood The Spot The North Shores Largest and Best Congratulations Class of ' 67 For your new Mustang deal with Tom Gordon GLENBROOK FORD 2038 Waukegan Rd., Glenview Congratulates The Graduating Class TROOPING THE COLOUR 896 Linden Ave. Hubbard Woods HI 6-6360 Congratulations Class of ' 67 THE NORTH SHORE LAUNDRY WW ! SDfiRSW M l@i! S52g5 iSi!i%-


Suggestions in the North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) collection:

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970


Searching for more yearbooks in Illinois?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Illinois 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.