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

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 174

 

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



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Text from Pages 1 - 174 of the 1969 volume:

I ft small boL] pulls Wo T shirt out of hi5 panfc and kl3 H hanodouxi over hi3 pocketi. J-i- 5 early dfierDoon, 5prinkb ashes -Itirou K hi 5 h ih road belou ' hjrnim in ci rdes ashs -falling m (jDid hoopi ' ' around hinn Mm and runs he tue n Ws -Id small hou5 on -flie corner dca on 1iie. -frorri- steps -felioous hinn insicJe 15 m ' lA afternoon. 5 -b in ik corner of the fc |( okino lk blot of 3un)iqM- JbSt 6ut5id -fhe door 5hade5 -flapping erTt|(j m tt ir e puste door acrc65 hall ca t 5cpare of 5on li ht has nnoid ihtldf and reach© r3 dcirk behind him { cjr)kr bij fht front door. X+ 1!) late a f rncof) carries Ki3 T shift in hi5 hand ii es blQci i]Oi :i) dirt walking doiun middle Aicis boil] hands into ih n 0 abte tes Ihtm into ■ Doaichs ihern doll around l|iiro. 1 -1 IS dinner W oms runs kliotm |tte on tit corner 6 11 Meandering Go Two, Through orange clustered trees Strolling by. Two ultra images Speaking of many things. Thoughts, From within. Of fantasy and life. Absurd and sane. Unacknowledged toes Seeking a path to match The mind. Take turns leading the feet Nowhere Traveling down an empty trail. Two leave it Far behind. Amusing Grins, Neglecting the time. Laugh. First In a long time 15 .Tell You V. ALOO- LOT? A UN HM NO MORE WORK! W6Mc ec :HfMNU0K. ' go MORE WlfjQ ' 5 ' . wo MOKE WbRK ! fO Mope Hor-poor Thii tevoliifm stuff is loads of g f UM!! we , im HOMt OF THE Fi ee IMP qex iouH mo s a hgo in ev a ET 5UCIr LISTS o ' .! ( ET A f ce HIU- OF A1AC6 ' UARN H6VU T HAKe OMSS ' . ' . (i6T KKj ED DUT OF ScHOOL (THf TRftDENflBK You 1 CAM Trailer ' ' I made my way down towards the road. At the gap in the wall leading down to the last terrace, the sun- flowers gave way to a more familiar crop of corn, and standing sentinel where the crops divided was a fig tree, its buds just bursting into young green. Its silver boughs held the buds up against the bright sky with an en- chanting grace, and against the rough cast of its stem some wild vinelike plant clung, with flowers as red as anemones. I stopped to pick one. The vine was tough, and a shank of it pulled away from the trunk, uncover- ing something that lay below. On the bleached silver of the exposed stem, scrawled in red, was the sketch of a running dog. The drawing was crude, but lively; the thing was unmistakably a long-haired greyhound with a plumed tail. Carefully I folded the tough paper and put it into my pocket. Again, my hands grasped the stem of the flower and pulled at it with force. The thick stem snapped sud- denly and sent me sprawling to the ground. I picked up the bright red flower, got on my feet, and continued my journey down the endless road. 18 We had a strange A barbed-wire Notion. We admitted it To each other. And After the first Pains of honesty Was born A cautious Respect. And you told Me and I Told you How much it hurt. Our conscious birth. And we knew In the day-light In the real In the grief-light That We had not Cut the cord But were born Bound By love and promises To others To time-before And could only Cling to each other Like twins Hoping desperately Not To fall Backwards. 21 22 The taipole [c, l iinss in -(lie oioDrii liiclati Ever 5b gecAb s-e sWis Ver so Ttit suns oik 15 leti 26 Tfie piy? curlij U Is Ilk a curled nooJIe It 15 mUii too. Roseij IS ife tree S ' l ' i +hd floujers in tie Sfrin M cheefe f kijs. Tfie mlltu Loaa unKIU In 1ti -{iliiWi . J old UJilloix) thee.. C]oinj uj) the isst ri eb W ' l+li dark U)i lw fr es. -Dave Blanches 5w ui a tac jfij f6t-ili Live iUfi rfii fun. Fell in a jreen;i)lackjvin ' ite jiive The Venus flutrap She cheats on bi f li s- 23 Reflecting your face Sometimes very funnily Making people laugh But often telling the truth Mirrors are wonderful things. 28 1 Henry Babson (photograph) Frank Wollaeger (sculpture) 2 Doug Severson (photograph) 3 Robert Damon, 5th grade (poem) 4 Mark Thorsen, 5th grade (poem) 5 Mim Geraghty (poem) Lucy Bartholomoy (illustration) 6 Lucy Bartholomoy (photograph) 7 Doug Severson (photograph) 8 Mim Geraghty (poem) 9 Sarah Pugh (drawing) 10 Anita Locke (poem) 11 Sarah Pugh (drawing) 12 Mary Ann Sewell (drawing) 13 Martha MacLeod (photograph) 14 Jill Witte (poem) 15 Corky Millard (drawing) 16 Larry Marder (comic strip) 17 Doug Severson (photograph) 18 Nancy Pfisterer (story) 19 Martha MacLeod (photograph) 20 Lucy Bartholomoy (drawing) 21 Jill Isaacs (poem) 22 Henry Babson (photograph) 23 Chris Flaps (poem) 24 Doug Severson (photograph) 25 Raymond Doherty (photograph) 26 3rd Grade (haiku) 27 Mary Ann Sewell (dry point) 28 Julie Cohen, 5th grade (poem) 25 JUNIOR KINDERGARTEN FIRST ROW: T. Thorsen, J. Pellouchoud, S. Rosenbaum, R. Kleiman, M. Horsch, D. Zubrick, M. Bransfield, E. Klap- perich, D. Howard, S. Faurot. WINDOW SILL: Mrs. Rogers, M. Haggerty, D. Bowen, M. Peters, L. Osberg, J. O ' Donnell, M. Niedringhaus, L. Handelman, M. Sponsiello, Miss Durham, D. Sturgis, G. O ' Riley. ABSENT: A. Cummings. A. Rickel 26 SENIOR KINDERGARTEN TOP ROW: N. Carruthers, E. Carruthers, R. Marx, N. Nielson. MIDDLE ROW: S. Almquist, W. Friend, J. Sudak, G. Smith, T. Todd, J. Eldrige, J. Louis. BOTTOM ROW: P. Scott, D. Mines, A. Peterson, M. Sidhu, T. Haggerty, K. Mephom, T. Lucas, H. Gordon, L. Harwich. ABSENT: E. Mackevich, J. Peters, J. Keim, D. ZweifeL 27 FIRST GRADE TOP ROW: P. Strauss, K. Carruthers, J. Cain, M. Roenisch, BOTTOM ROW: J. Abelman, L. Sievers, M. Bransfeld, A. Handelman, L Kleinman, M. D. Smith, G. Goren, L. C. Cascino, D. Parsavand, L Gordon, G. Getz, E. Schwarz, Norris, B. Bowen. M. Feinstein, M. Peebles. SECOND GRADE FIRST ROW: J. McLaren, J. Sabini, A. McNear, D. SECOND ROW; B. Files, P. Friend, J. Springer, L. Lauke, Comess, N. Sofern, P. Wirtz, K. Osberg. S. Dudenhoefer, J. Ramseur, A. MacLeod, J. Corrington. THIRD ROW: C. Roenisch, M. Harland, T. Wiedemann. ABSENT: J. Harza. 29 THIRD GRADE SEATED: D. Feinstein, T. Louis, M. Olson, D. Dudenhoefer, STANDING OR SEATED: M. Lucas, E. Garvin, C. Angelos, J. Sudok, R. Damon, M. Thorsen, L. Getz K. Lunding. M. Gluckman, G. Rogers, M. Harwich, A. Joseph. KNEELING ON BLOCK: E. Smith, G. Gale, C. Schwarz. ABSENT: P. Sturgis. 30 FOURTH GRADE FIRST ROW: D. Roenisch, A. Mines, S. Hoffman, R. Bossier, TOP ROW: T. Wilson, J. Strauss, M. Lipmon, C. Mullody, F. Dunseth, L. Gordon. J. Feinstein, C. Doud, C. Schnering, K. Funk. SECOND ROW: V. Ware, S. Bransfield, J. Dommann, ABSENT: D. Nedzel. M. Fisher, D. Deuble, C. Colbert. FIFTH GRADE FIRST ROW: P. Blackburn, A. Granatelli, C. O ' Connor, J. Deubie, P. Thorsen. SECOND ROW: N. Comess, M. Russell, R. Durham Cohen, K. Button, V. DuVernet, G. Jessen, L. Harza. THIRD ROW: J. Sudak, D. Wirtz, N. Beisel, J. B. Gordon, J. G. Sengstack, C. Ophetweld. TOP ROW: S. Perkins, K. Spenc er. 32 SIXTH GRADE SEATED: J. McDowell, D. Hatch, B. Cailihan, N. Todd, T. Maynord, K. Louis, A. Seeburg, J. Roberts, M. Strong, J. Herndon, N. Fink, E. Springer, J. Dancey. STANDING: S. Feinstein. T. Abelman, E. Breuer, V. Joyce, B. Corrington, C. Gately, J. Rodgers, M. Searle, M. Wolloeger, P. Boal, C. Elliott, T. Lauke, M. Howard. ABSENT: J. Wolfson, T. Ober, J. Montgomery, J. Kowalik, D. Buddington. 36 SEVENTH GRADE SEATED: C. Lynde, W. Buzick, W. Hatch, D. Roewer, T. Stahl, W. Crowle. STANDING: E. J. Winston, B. Borowitz, T. McKnight, C. Weary, A Carton, K. Kellogg, B. Dobroth, P. Geraghty, J. Booz, M. Taylor, R. Graf, T. Corbett, R. Klein, P. Schneider, R. MacArthur, H. Sinker, S. Dowd, S. Rogers, D. Bohannan. ON TRACTOR: P. Nielsen, L. Cass, N. Stibolt, A. Milliken, H. Damon, J. Golden, K. Eldredge, K. Whiteman, S. Hern- don, M. Dole, P. Akopiantz, A. Dammann, K. Stern. ABSENT: A. Nedzel, L. Salisbury, A. Morse. SEATED: J. Damon, B. Garvin, W. Mines, D. Hubbard, L. McCormick, K. Ayer, S. Howe, N. Babson, R. Marx, C. Blair, K. Cassidy, H. Joseph, S. Wolfson, R. Saunders, B. Lipman, S. Wilson, J. Pugh, L. Miller, M. Wollaeger, J. Montague. TOP ROW: W. Darrow, F. Stanton, M. Conant. EIGHTH GRADE SECOND ROW: S. J. Roberts, M. Parsons, B. English, L. Tobey, C. Spencer, A. Clarke, V. Leslie, D. Harper, L. Morse, H. Jessen, M. Sturgis, J. Mines, R. Ober, J. Todd, P. Salisbury. ABSENT: J. Berry, T. Preece, J. Perkins. 38 FRESHMEN FIRST ROW: J. Carton, V. Simmons, K. Goodfriend, M. Dern, S. Schmitt, H. Blair, P. Dammann, B. Pierson, C. Cook, S. Kopple. SECOND ROW: M. Healy, S. Gray, S. Bigelow, M.J. Leimert, G. Wirtz, V. Cass, V. Hobart, H. Babson, J. Carroll, H. Rogers, J. Eddy, R. Stibolt, J. Woodward. THIRD ROW: D. Widen, P. Hamilton, N. Pfisterer, C. Maynard, S. Colbert, E. Harwich. FOURTH ROW: A. DaMiano, P. Beattie, C. Gannaway, R. Gill, J. Vance. TOP ROW: D. Ramspeck, B. Flint, M. Malpede, C. Breuer, J. Faulkner, M. Paul, M. Rentschler, R. Fink, J. Blossom, N. Johnson, A. Scheman, J. Eldrege, R. Lerman, S. Becker, C. Herndon, R. Corrington, J. Jenkins. ABSENT: B. Steinschneider. 41 SOPHOMORES SEATED: M. Herndon, A. Page, N. Green, M.A. Parsons, R. Doherty. SECOND ROW: G. Present, M. Parisi, S. Edge, D. Sever- son, A. Heitlinger, S. Punnett, J. Restin. THIRD ROW: N. MacLeod, A. Jackson, A. Howard, A. Leimert, D. Dobkin, F. Wollaeger, W. Stern, T. Haney, T. Boal, I. Marshall, J. Lilley, K. Kaplan. TOP ROW: M. Ware, E. Alsberg, S. Severson, P. Fortune, L. Millard, J. Bartholomay, W. Wirtz, G. Cremin, B. Sullivan, J. Stern, E. Hoyle, R. Rogers, M. Rudmon, S. Fargo, A. Hurd, J. Ayer, A. Kanter, D. Ross. ABSENT: A. Berminghom, K. Dole, L. Vogel, A. Marshall, M. Preece. 44 JUNIORS FIRST ROW: A. Northrop, S. Geering, A. Blossom, H. Brown, J. Hoffman, C. Graham, R. Burnell, L. 5. Lipmon, R. Mayer, E. Mooney, J. Targ, N. Golden, J. Adajian. SECOND ROW: J. Golden, P. Becker, A. Patton, E. Perkins, B. Nevins, S. Wells, J. Issacs, D. Damon, S. Fend, P. Gaudreau, D. Whiteman. THIRD ROW: J. Leslie, G. Booz, M. Graham, G. Atkinson, B. May, L. Schmitt, D. Flint, R. Hadsall, J. Schwartz, S. MacArthur, D. Wood, C. Johnson, T. Allison, A. Jessen. TOP ROW: K. Johnson, R. Philipsborn, M. Springer, F. Spears, W. Porter, T. Church, M. Komie. ABSENT: M. Garvin, C. Reinhold. 47 LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY FIRST ROW: Evelyn Kratz, Carol Brown, Roberta Goldsmith, Jane SIncell. SECOND ROW: Timothy Bannon, Janet Rogers, Kathleen Collingborne, Barbara Gilmour, June Meador, Jane Dalton, Helen Turley, Margaret Parsons. 52 MIDDLE SCHOOL FACULTY STANDING: June Meador, Lewis Davis. SITTING: Susan Hall Benjamin Thomas, Jean Pettibone, Joanne Thorsen, Timothy Bannon, Beverly Arment, Virginia Ingram. Stephen Ober John Almquist Nancy Hoff Wilkinson . . . The moment one man takes another man ' s truths to himself, calls it his truth and tries to live his life by it, he becomes a grotesque and the truth he embraces becomes a falsehood. Sherwood Anderson Donald Arthur Misch Displacement Vector Sara Lee Current Events COOKIE Tolly-HOI The departure of CPS 112- Death of a tradition. Mary Cordelia Millard In the beginning God created the earth, and he looked upon It in His cosmic loneliness. And God said, ' Let us make living creatures out of mud, so the mud can see what We have done. ' And God created every living creature that now moveth, and one was man. Mud as man alone could speak. God leaned close as man sat up, looked around, and spoke. Man blinked. ' What is the purpose of all this? ' he asked politely. ' Everything must have a purpose? ' asked God. ' Certainly, ' said man. ' Then I leave it to you to think of one for this, ' said God. And he went away. The First Book of Bokonon. The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one. J. D. Salinger 69 Lawrence Peter Marder r ad ihis...(trutjA -7T|n-ri go ' hodj+he pixels crawling ' i came in troc 4 ' win ia ' msaae ' There is no Aoobt aboui- 1+ ' Bur, f ' ? c|Uiie san€ ' ' IS dig it J ' rts over ■ , knwj it; ' 7 - 01 5 ' long from] sleepeejoe , ' who some (jf vftrs — loo number one k rl Kiarx , I SOphU nOciSon ygie creanacheesel bi l!)e(cleri)ecke |im sterenko - 1 bessie smith W t aleq « poppa weazrou; bl ' ck e ' K Stan lee, -f eoia po eroo.. the beetles Uwrence peter... Lucy Crawford Bartholomay ro ond hair shir cia moon howler iujQ-UJa),TREE oniO,3artoBrvieo CristTofori. ond raedio mindedness. ' Miriam Noyes Geraghty When I learn that the stars I see may be but the bocks of the stars I see there, I om filled with terror which is the beginning of love. They tell me space is endless and space curves. And I understand. Dylan Thomas 6 William Warren Berry Dedicated to NFL, Carrot top, SDS, My son, Douglas J. T., Herb, CPS, Large, and Groovy Doovy, from the Vegetable. Hello Governor . . . succinctly put, J. T. . . . flabber grabber . . . Beringa . . . twos through tens wild . . . de Blairka . . . this deck is fixed! . . . stranger, if I had a gun . . . how dare you grab my flab? . . . von er Thomp . . . gefilte fish . . . Mischma . . . double zero, everbody loses . . . this wheel is fixed . . . rotund . . . Mcfingo . . . knochel . . . Rosenzweigsma . . . every- thing wild except clubs . . . five kings? Not good enough! . . . Sterling Burke ... El Speedo ... he thought the fire alarm was the bell? . . . Big Eddie sez ta trow da gome . . . Dan Davis . . . that race was fixed ... I tink dis guy ' s a Fed ... his greatest was the shoe duel with Comstock. That made him immortal . . . Sunday Bunny . . . Vender Boy! Eddie, my son, my son . . . Pitchin ' Pal . . . yes. Papa, son is good boy . . . point clear, shall we soy? . . . bicyle to Milwaukee? . . . hey, Chun, what ' s count? Two and two . . . and bringing up the rear is Tudor Call! 71 Amy Ann Kopple He who knows nothing; loves nothing. He who can Do nothing, understands nothing. He who con under- „ Stand nothing is worthless. But he who under- stands also loves, notices, sees . . . the more Knowledge is inherent in a thing. The greater the Love . . . Anyone who imagines that all fruits ripen At the same time as the strawberries knows nothing About grapes. Paracelsus John Thomas Leimert M2 ■I Just forget it; besides, why should I care? It doesn ' t matter much anyway . . . If ignorance were bliss, t ' were folly to be Couid G greater miracle take place than for us to look through eachother ' s eyes fol an instant? Henry David Thoreau If it was good for Daddy it ' s good for me. Karen Anne Wollaeger For when it is in the hope of making a priceless discovery that we desire to receive certain impressions from nature or from art, we have certain scruples about allowing our soul to gather, in- stead of these, other inferior impressions, which are liable to make us form a false estimate of the value of Beauty. Proust Anita Cutler Locke And I say, if she ' s ha ' died, Ethan might ha ' lived; and the way they are now, I don ' see ' s much difference between the Fromes up at the farm and the Fromes down in the graveyard; ' cept that down there they ' re all quiet and the women hove got to hold their tongues. Edith Wharton Richard Ashley Lebolt Edmund Jeffrey Weinrib ail cz L 50 2ia:Jis 0-rU -j U tlai - d U MSLcf vjov td c Moicnt to cspH ' h ' ir foTM o-f AjiicfArtss ■ ■ ■ Bpc cse TLsco-l Mary Ann Martha Macleod This is a day when life and the world seem to be standing still— only time and the river flowing past the mesas. I cannot work. I go out into the sunshine to sit re- ceptively for what there is in this stillness and calm. I am keenly aware that there is something. Just something which comes in a hushed inflowing. All of me is still and yet alert, ready to become part of this wave that laps the shore on which I sit. I feel a lot of people don ' t know what high-school including those who are in it. People are stupid. They never stop to question things. They just accept. Can you imagine a nation who never questions the validity of cheerleaders and pom-poms? Frank Zappa Jeffrey David Kentor I wish I were now what I was when I wanted to be what I am now. Deborah de Peyster But that ' s how we ' ve grown up, Ren and I: that and a thousand little glimmers on the water, a thousand red streaks in the sundown sky, a thousand puffs up the trail. Everybody goes about it differently, of course, but I don ' t guess we ' d trade any of it. It ' s meant a few flashes of almost unbearable beauty which I can only coil religious experiences (and if religion means anything, that ' s what they were.) Most important is an imperishable attitude, a philosophy if you like, a way of laying out the world and planting ourselves in it. Now we know what is trivia and what is real. On the Loose, Terry Russell Catherine Askow O low tai o beng nashti benshen patshashasa. Na may kharunde kai tshi khal tut. Bikashtesko merel i yag. Feri ando payi sitshopie te nayuas. Si khohaimo may patshivalo sur o tshotshimo. The Rom Gipsy Tribe Andrew Irving Philipsborn From quiet homes and first beginnings. Out to the undiscovered ends, There ' s nothing worth the wear of winning. But laughter and the love of friends. Hiloire Bellac Charles Allen Barman Nothing to say. Josephine Webster Strong The road goes ever on and on Down from the door where it began Now far ahead the road was gone, And I must follow, if I can. Pursuing it with eager feet. Until it joins some larger way Where many paths and errands meet And whither then? I cannot say. J. R. R. Tolkien Peter Michael Kuh A man needs a little madness, or else he never dares cut the rope and be free. Zorba Paul Theodore Delaney Whoever leads a solitary life and yet now and then wants to attach himself somewhere, whoever, according to changes in the time of day, the weather, the state of his business and the like, suddenly wishes to see any arm at all to which he might cling — he will not be able to manage for long without a window looking onto the street. And if he is in the mood of not desiring anything and only goes to his window sill a tired man, with eyes turning from his public to heaven and back again, not wanting to look out and having thrown his head up a little, even then the horses below will draw him down into their train of wagons and tumult, and so at lost into the human harmony. Franz Kafka Alice Louise Marshall The secret of man ' s being is not to live but to hove some- thing to live for. Dostoyevsky Steven Robert Schulman The difference between a madman and me is that I ' m not mad. Dali God has given us a world that nothing but our folly keeps from being a paradise. Shaw Fantasy and reality often overlap. Disney Close the bloody windows Number one. Peace between countries must rest on a solid foundation of love between individuals. Love gives man a partnership in the cares and needs of others. Hate and contempt then yield to cooperation. Ghandi There ' s nothing to it but to do it. Porps Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night. Santa Clous If you con erase the confusion of this jumble of thoughts, drop me a letter and straighten me out. Write me a letter anyway. Love, Carolyn Jarchow I have a house where I go When there ' s too many people, I have a house where I go. Where no one can be; I have a house where I go. Where nobody ever says ' NO ' Where no one says anything — so There is no one but me . Frederick Andre Fortune Men are what fhey have to be. Will Durant Sarah Williams Pugh Ignorant people really must be educated; that Is, they must be made to stop feeling something, and compelled to begin knowing or measuring everything. Then (then only) they won ' t threaten the very non-existence of what all simple people call civilization. E. E. Cummings Roger Jay Ruby We are the creatures that know and know too much. That leaves us with such a burden. We hove a choice, to laugh or cry. We do both, depending on the season and the need. Ray Bradbury Jill Witte They laughed when I said I heard the hills talking and the singing of the lands Fool kid, they said, how many tears ore misting the sky-bowl? But a faint half-smile lingered on the day, and I knew that talk made up their world and song was mine. Bruce Buckingham Blair Fond Memories and Highlights of My Years at North Shore 6th Grade — learning how to do a Chodus Face from Bill C, Hunt, John V. and Louis. 7th Grade — J. T. Leimert using the utmost concentration during Moth. Every single day of Miss Reihman ' s French class. (Phew!) 8th Grade — Mr. Ostrom spanking George Hills. Dancing like Bill Batson with Mim. 9th Grade — Jim Getz blowing his nose in M. Ex. Ben Earle sitting on his mouse Algernon. 10th Grade — Doug Severson missing a freethrow against Harvard St. George because a curious noise emerged from one of their players. I read this one in the New Yorker, Hey Lidey Lidey Lo . . . 11th Grade — Joel Parshall and Fred Cook on the team bus. Raising $500 for the Blake Allison Prom Fund. Mrs. Maland yelling KAISER . 12th Grade — A Jr. Kindergartener throwing up on Mary Ann ' s lap during Morning Ex. Calls of Walt from Dick, Jim, and Zack. Sykes ' locker room entertainment. Giving Bill Berry a Killer Kowalski Abdominal Flab Grab. Jack Loomis ' rather well placed kick during the Parker soccer game. Thank you faculty and students for seven immortal years of fun, and good luck to the class of 1 970 David Morton Ginnes Anne Fuller Searle So Man is not what he appears. I had been blind a thousand years. Wisdom older than the seers Beauty much too deep for tears And holy silence bursts the ears. Ssh. The music of the spheres. Terry Russell What they have done, what they have seen, heard, felt, feared,— the places, the sounds, the colors, the cold, the darkness, the emptiness, the bleakness, the beauty. Till they died this stream of memory would set them apart, if imperceptibly to anyone but themselves, from everyone else. For they had crossed the continent and come back, the first of all. Bernard De Voto Carolyn Kane Zelle John Stebbins Loomis III Why is it that writing a Senior Spot for the Mirror is so difficult? Probably because each senior feels obligated to state either his philos- ophy of life (at the age of eighteen) or some witty reflection of his years at North Shore in only a couple of sentences. Rebelling against such nonsense, I ' ve got an easier solution — give the Mirror readers what they really want. Ail right Mirror readers: YOU ' RE BEAUTIFUL, IN- TELLIGENT, IMPORTANT . . . Suzanne Dewar Folds As large as life and twice as natural. Oh dear, Alice said, I ' m afraid I must have every- thing that ' s here. But you can ' t! cried the wise merchant. I ' m afraid you just can ' t have everything, little girl. Ah yes, Alice replied. Then if I can ' t have everything, I ' m sure I must have just a little of everything, a great deal of something, and all of everything that ' s not here, please. And I want to carry it with me. Jeffrey Stephen Kaiser For we are like tree trunks in the snow. In appearance they lie sleekly and a light push should be enough to set them rolling. No, it can ' t be done, for they are firmly wedded to the ground. But see, even that is only an ap- pearance. Kafka Hunt Hamill, Jr. Christina Waples Fleps We struggle perpetually to free ourselves. Or . . . while we seem so intently and even desperately to be holding on to ourselves, we would far rather give ourselves away. We do not know how. So, at times, we throw ourselves away. When what we really want is to stop living so exclusively and vainly for our own sake . . . Saul Bellow North Shore 60 Angel Guardian 56 North Shore 73 Lake Forest Academy 48 North Shore 60 St. Michaels 53 North Shore 73 Glenwood 36 North Shore 68 St. Gregory 58 North Shore 79 Chicago Latin 67 North Shore 80 Chicago Latin 62 North Shore 88 Morgan Pork 55 North Shore 73 Morgan Park 52 North Shore 67 University High 44 North Shore 69 University High 53 North Shore 55 Francis Parker 45 North Shore 58 Francis Parker 37 North Shore 82 Harvard— St. George 38 North Shore 49 Angel Guardian 33 North Shore 73 Lake Forest Academy 60 North Shore 95 Harvard— St. George 28 North Shore 73 Elgin Academy 55 North Shore 67 St. Benedicts 74 North Shore 89 Roycemore 35 North Shore 79 St. Michaels 64 North Shore 91 Glenv ood 47 North Shore 70 Elgin Academy 46 North Shore 49 University High 43 North Shore 69 Elgin Academy 40 The Idea Girls ' Basketball W m MIRROR council semester 121 IN MEMORIAM PURP Yankee Doodle Dandy Freshman Girls Perpetual Motion Anne Searle, Josie Strong, Brad Williams The Inscribed Circle Senior Girls Oedipus Tom Church Huntley-Brinkley I Jeffrey Hoffman James Golden Balances Bruce Blair Brigadoon A Cappeilo Pan Am Brad Williams Clowns Susan Wells Phyllis Becker Jerry and the Dog Craig Johnson Songs Kathleen Johnson Balances Bruce Blair Faculty I Faculty Dodge Fever Nancy Golden Kathryn Eldredge Ya Gotta Have Heart Junior Girls Intermission Holy Rollers Songs By the Fire Ensemble Huntley-Brinkley II Great Norton Piano Plus One Karl Norton Ruth Meyer Balances Zotzi Holy Rollers Where Is Love Barbara Borowitz Lalo on the Move Jacqueline Miller Love Songs Susan Severson Faculty II Faculty Balances Holy Roller ' s Tap Dance Holy Rollers Couple of Song and Dance Men Vincent Allison Taber Allison A Call from Long Island Laurie Sue Lipman Gayley Atkinson Holy Rollers G ' NIght Dear Ruth Meyer James Leslie More Gauze Laurie Sue Lipman Thomas Church Huntley-Brinkley Holy Rollers ' Wine Ned Bananchec James Golden James Leslie Me David Ginnes Finale CAST Florian Tom Church, Brad Williams King Hildebrond Craig Johnson, Roger Ruby Cyril Bucky Marshall Hilarion Steve Geering Arac ArtJessen Guron John Leimert Scynthius George Booz, John Ayer King Gama Tony Heitlinger, Taber Allison Melissa Josie Strong Lady Psyche Jill Isaacs Lady Blanche Jill Witte Sacharissa Susan Severson, Chris Fleps, Alice Marshall Chloe Gayley Atkinson, Anne Searle Princess Ida Kate Johnson Ada Laurie Lipman Daughters of the Plough Dave Ginnes, Jeff Ken- tor, Jeff Kaiser, Dick Stevenson. Musical Director Vincent Allison Stage Director David Newman Coordinator Fred Fortune PATRONS Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Irwin J. Askow Dr. and Mrs. John P. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Barman Mr. and Mrs. Orville C. Beattie Mr. and Mrs. Adam A. Breuer Mrs. William P. Church Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Colbert Dr. and Mrs. Frederic A. dePeyster Mr. and Mrs. Dan S. Fargo Dr. and Mrs. Victor H. Fink Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Carl J. Fleps Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Folds Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Geraghty, Jr. Mrs. Pattie Q. Ginnes Mr. John D. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Hunt Hamill Mr. and Mrs. Jewell L. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Royce A. Hoyle, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert E. Howard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Kentor Dr. and Mrs. Louis A. Kopple Mr. and Mrs. John H. Locke, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Loomis, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Marder Mr. and Mrs. Irl H. Marshall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. Millard Mr. and Mrs. John E. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Misch Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Mullady, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Pettibone Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Pugh Mrs. Arthur E. Reinhold Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Schulman Mr. and Mrs. David K. Sengstack Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Sewell Mr. and Mrs. Russell T. Stern, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Stibolt Mr. John L. Strauss Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Strong Mr. and Mrs. George E. Victor Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ware The Rev. and Mrs. Hadley B. Williams t Mr. and Mrs. Irving A. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Winston, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Wollaeger Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Wood 144 145 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS t i f Skokie, Illinois OF 69 146 Greenbay Rd. Winnetta Hi 6-4492 235 Ridge Rd. Wilmette AL 1-4400 GR 5-4400 Children ' s Clothes with Distinction 574 Lincoln Ave. Hi 6-1177 APMREL 57a Lincoln avenue WINNETKA. ILLINOIS |LLCF1EST 6-d7SO N. A. Hanna, Inc. 952 Spanish Court, Wilmette, Illinois Plaza de Logo 251-0467 Women ' s Apparel For All Occasions Ball and Bridal Gowns Children ' s Clothes Betty Lotz Interiors Member American Institute of Interior Desgners Hlllcrest 6-4084 569 Lincoln Avenue Winnetka, Illinois Baumann-Cook 551 Lincoln Avenue Winnetka, Illinois Hillcrest 6-5000 Established 1930 North Shore Real Estate Christine B. Collins Janet Ator Mabel Coulter Ruth M. Elwood Lucy-Jane Hedberg Mary Ann Seidel Florence S. Cook Lucille Octigan Claire Sherwood Rose Silsbee Edythe Layden 148 BETTY ' S OF WINNETKA 551 Chestnut St. Phone: Hi 6-4800 araware Co, ESTABLISHED 1888 WILMETTE, ILLINOIS 1219 WILMETTE AVENUE ALPINE 1-3060 Phone ALpine 1-2775 Glenview and Evanston — Enterprise I 238 SCHULTZ DRY CLEANERS, INC. Shirt Laundering • Tailoring Quality Dry Cleaning Same Day Service including Saturdays I 1 52 Cerrfral Avenue Wilnne+te, Illinois 635 GREENBAY ROAD WILMETTE. ILLINOIS ALpine 1-0878 Be A CAPIT y lST It ' s easy. Start a savings account. The money you put in is capital; the interest we pay you (4% quarterly) is return on capital. The more you add, the bigger capitalist you ' ll be, and the more your money will earn. While it ' s in our hands, your capital will be working usefully- helping people buy homes and automobiles, helping local businessmen to grow In service to our community. That ' s capitalism. It ' s a good system, and it works. Drop in some Friday evening, and give it a try. THE WILMETTE State BANK 1200 Central Avenue • ALpine 1-8100 WILMETTE Sfiont VERSINO BROTHERS, Prop. 605 Green Bay Rd. WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL ADIDAS RIDDELL SHOES WILSON and RAWLINGS SPORTING GOODS DISTRIBUTOR Why Look Further? Baseball Basketbal 1 Football Tennis Badminton Skates Sharpened Trophies Golf Rol ler Skates Hunting Fishing Archery Guns Boxing Bowl i ng Table Tennis Softball Ammunition Tennis Restringing O F WjNNE TKA 837 flM STREET l jINWETKAfjILL. When you embark on the stormy sea of life, you ' ll need a good bank . . . Keep us in mind! Winnetka Trust and Savings Bank TALK THE TOWN 65 Linden Ave., Glencoe PAUL ' S RECORDED MUSIC Phonograoh Records Art Supplies 1151 Wilmette Ave! AL 1-8281 FOR: LONGHAIRS JAZZ COLLECTORS HIT HUNTERS JUST BROWSERS flND IWINNET KA . LAKE forest! 1 For The New and Unusual in Clothes 729 Elm St. 29 E. Illinois Rd. Winnetka Lake Forest 153 CONGRATULATIONS to the class of 1969 FIRST NATIONAL BANK Telephone hi 6-1462 mCaRPORATCO 1913 BUILDING CDNSTRUCTIDN 545 LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINOIS QONgreTulBTibns To me Class or Pickwick Galleries In Winnetka Personalized Picture Framing — Custom Mirrors Decorative Wall Accessories Fine Prints— Antique— Contemportxy Professional Advice Here Or lo Yo ' JT Home On Suitable and Attractive Wall Arrangements Photograph Frames Paintings Restored 557 Lincoln Ave Winnetka HI 6-2262 Taylor Hardware House-Wares Toys Hardware 560 Chestnut Winnetka 156 146 Greenbay Rd. Winnetta Hi 6-4492 235 Ridge Rd. H E trance F F E R N A N New Collection OF Lilly ' s For Resort and Summer 572 Lincoln Winnetka chas. ■a. Stevens pouder Box ' 0 0 linden ave. TOMORROW ' S SLACK TRENDS ARE TRANSLATED INTO THE NOW FASHIONS BY JAYMAR. Serious slack collectors know the wearing comfort, good looks and fine tailoring of JAYMAR slacks. The diverse JAYMAR collection includes YMM belt loops and adjustables, GARY MIDDLECOFF slacks and the patented JAYMAR SANSABELT slack featuring the unique elastic waistband that moves with you and never binds. JAYMAR slacks are designed in a wide selection of fabrics, colors and patterns to fit the mood of the man on the go. JAYMAR-RXJBY. INC. MICHIGAN CITY, INDIANA DEPARTMENT STORES Headquarters for all staple and seasonal variety store merchandise 808 Elm St. Winnetka ;0HPLiHE T5 OF ■ ' ' ---- . M f- 1 MC . r-i WiNNfTitAjiLl. 740 Eltn St. Winnethajlll. 810 ELM ST. WINNETKA THE HOME OF BASS WEEJUNS JOYCE OLD MAINE TROTTERS EDITH HENRY SANDLER OF BOSTCnI MISS AMERICA Compliments of azel Baxter 567-A LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA. ILLINOIS PET SUPPLY lAJILMETTEjlLLimS HAROLD KfLLEN JOE KELLE ; 800 ELK 5T, ILLlNOie, NORTH SHORE LAUNDRY 566 Chestnut St. Winnetka STUART-RODGERS STUDIO PORTRAITS BY PHOTOGRAPHY 2504 GREENBAY ROAD EVANSTON UN 4-7322 619 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE CHICAGO SU 7-8696 i n Time BULdVA Accutron When You Look In Your MIRROR Be FELL Dressed The Fell Company 520 Green Bay Rd. WInnetka, III. GIRARD PERREGAUX and of course our dependable low-c: ' ' Caravelle By Bulova WOZNICKI JEWELERS 819 Oak Street Winnetta, Illinois - 446-0685 1875 WILLOW ROAD NORTHFIELD, ILL 60093 Phone 446-8570 RUNNFELDT BELMONT Service Station 475 Chestnut St. Winnetka, III. Phones: Hi 6-0009 and Hi 6-0334 Complete automotive service for gas, oil, greasing, v ashing, tires, batteries, motor rebuilding, brake re- lining, ignition service, body and fender work and paint- ing for your car. TEEN-AGE TEN COMMANDMENTS 1. Stop and think before you drink. 2. Don ' t let your parents dov n, 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 wont 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 Commondments. JOE JACOBS CHEVROLET 435 Green Bay Road Wilmette, Illinois HENRY C. WIENECKE, INC Housewares — Hardware The Toy Shop 680-682 Vernon Ave., Glencoe, III. VErnon 5-3060 P.O. 91 Ef roN,f?.Ph. 353 Park veaue, GvLencoe, Illinois lE-5-0387 good luckj VZuffy THE SENTRY POST I incola • Tinnctka lU inncI Ua LET ' S GO PLACES HI 6-0814 561 LINCOLN AVE., WINNETKA, ILL. (Winnetka ' s OWN Travel Agency) Complete Travel Arrangements Individual Hair Styling • Expert Hair Tinting 554 Green Bay Road Winnetka, Illinois Phone HI Merest 6-0762 to1he class of ?6 ' John phone: Al- ' O WINNETKA SHADE SHUTTER DRAPERY CO. 732 ELM STREET WINNETKA, ILLINOIS 446-6287 We Clean And Repair Everything We Sel Anything for the Door or Window For Shoes That FIT As Well As They LOOK LOOK TO Children ' s Shoes From Tots To Teens, Adult Casuols Barnes §f Bootery IN NORTHFIELD JESSE BARNES 735 ELM STREET I WlMNETt ) lU lols,||J


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

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, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

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, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972


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