North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL)
- Class of 1971
Page 1 of 176
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1971 volume:
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i jScp rf ce 1971 artwork on these two pages by barbara montague DEDICATED TO BARBARA MONTAGUE i • Grant all kings and queens, long red carpets to thresholds of laced gold, to jeweled balls and country estates, to the gates of heaven. Crown them as the wisest of magicians, and of all the countless stars, the most scientific of astrologers, capable of capacities. Praise their good natured shields, on top of their faces, holding their breaths, and winning no peace. %. m nun •• • l? Ti mm mm V Someone called to me in my darkness today. She came innocent and sympathetic yet unknowing. I could have answered blackly and would have made her beauty sad. Then someone would call to her in darkness. Jr. - The Lunatic Genius Sits, Crouches rather, In his blue box, cutting four dimensional paper dolls. The Mad Prophet Stretches gaunt arms to the sky, Black in the sunset, And Shrieks contentedly. The Gray Flannel Man Clicks, Whirrs busily, automatic: Creditdebitcreditdebitcreditdebit. Plastic soldiers Creep through a cardboard jungle, hunting what? There! Shots ring out, chimes of doom. Silence The Lunatic Genius Bites his toenails, Melancholy in the night. The Mad Prophet Huddles, A quaking pile of rags, Whispers at the ground. The Gray Flannel Man Sleeps, Cogs and gears halted in mid-spin. Billstaxesbillstaxesbillstaxes. Black faces meld With the darkness, Only the eyes showing, Beacons of oppression and rage B Utter silence of a snowy afternoon Soothing peace and quiet of the deep flowing swirling whiteness While outside betrays little in the way of natural pain myself I find writhing lonely I hear actually a car pass obscenely for it destroys the con- science of the dream of peace and quiet.  ttr c T—n f m _ I M.m • • ' r ' j If s«« i roses breathe, coloring the silken nights that cling softly to summer silken roses to be rent by summer swords roses raging on a wall like black plague each a jealous queen in robes medieval red sorcerers work magic violence into red flowers known as roses so that night breathes, coloring the roses that cling softly to summer 13 ' , . â– 4 % â– ' V- « .1- $ - Hopelessly adrift amidst the frenzied, flannelled whimsey-waltz of words; the barrage of periodicals, My mind yearns backwards to earlier, once dominant and flourishing cultures; The Roman countryside, once trampled by soldiers; Rome itself, its marvelous gardens, full of busted statues, dusty sun-light, and uncut grass, grazed on by malleable, if contented, cows. Visions of Germans in beer gardens; Hitlers face leers, his cap malformed and meagre, from a picture south of Trier; Business-men, with their crisp knowing gestures, arms folded in grim determination on their desk, personify the wave of briny commercialism sweeping over us; The wind sighs a threnody through the window, the sun strokes an old vase with languishing fingers; outside spread slums, their bleak tenements and stagnating existence; Hope beams ever chimerically in the distance as I make one more brilliant lance into the shimmering sunset. 16 Drifting in the winds of buoyant youth he lived, and slew the stagnant dragon that drowned him in mortality. In the mocking laughter ' s wind, its caresses exciting he stumbled after whirling passion that knew no calm. In his ripening manhood the seeds of adventure grew like weed, strangling him in sweet smelling vine. The liquid wind of his swimming blood ran in torrents that summer ' s spring. That tired man crying at the dying of the wind, his cold ears deafened by the hiss of dampened flames, was crushed under weight of drifting dreams. The empty heart that feels no pain, void of affection, a muscle of neglection, whose imperceptible murmurs remind that its cancerous tissue is dying. The happy face that shows no pain, pale with the nausea of unquenched thirst, sealing beneath a rubber face a ghost that is crying for birth. Guilty is the mind that knows no pain, shedding no tear for the misery it begets, only infecting, when it tries to console, the innocent wounds it inflicts. â– â– .J lite S s â– i- ftar 3fe«B v â– r ' srfSfiK £ ' : y , - : ' - . , -;- ' « â– , â– ' X. ' ' . ,. .. A? -; ' v N 5 -i-j A w X rx : - ° 9t S?3pM 19 at %. «0 V ) V jt. . . n . r  tin i • iv. • •- 24 Page 4 David Ross, photograph 5 Genni Cremin, drawing Nina Babson, poem 6 Hattie Blair, photogram 7 Lisa Vogel, drawing 8 9 Henry Babson, photograph 10 Mike Wollaeger, drawing David Ross, poem 1 1 Henry Babson, photograph Anne Jackson, poem 12 David Ross, photograph and poem 13 Henry Babson, photograph Lisa Vogel, poem 16 Steve Fargo, photograph and poem 17 Bill Preston, photograph Peter Dammann, poem 18 Pat Bremner, photograph 19 David Ross, photograph 22 23 Pat Bremner, photographs 24 Ray Doherty, drawing 39 Henry Babson, photograph 58 Tara Steinschneider, photograph Peter Dammann, poem 68 Henry Babson, photograph 127 Karen Bernbaum, drawing 25 William Talley r f James Borland Suzanne Altenbach 26 77f Sheldon Rosenbaum Simone Valvo John Almquist Frank Loennig Diane Dorn Cathy Glover 41 ' Robert Long David Osberg Paul Krajovic 91 1 Joyce Sisskind Barbara Montague Vincent Allison Martin J. McCarty ?1 Jay Bach Wayne Schroderus fill Carol Radloff David Lee Faith Crissey 31 Tamara Prince Lea Durham Adrienne Weisse Roger Shipley fc if • , ' r LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY George Eldredge HEADMASTER 34 j • v F Middle School Faculty Standing: Virginia Ingram, Liz Hunt, Lewis Davis. Sitting: Jo Anna Woo, Gregg Barselou, Jean Pettibone, Timothy Bannon, Beverly Arment, Linda Wilner, Jack Roth 35 up FIRST ROW: V. Dormody ; D. Gersdorf; J. Talley. SECOND ROW: D. Lilley; J. Thorsen; L. Beutel; A. Austrins. MAINTENANCE 4| . I FRONT ROW: H. Wright; G. Montagne; R. Anderson. SECOND ROW: G. Mitchell; T. Mottley; G. Washington; G. Kirkland; M. Lichmira. 36 11 I! 37 39 r i KINDERGARTEN First Row: J. Saltoun, C. Henkle, C. Blumenschein, C. Rickel, J.Schwarz. Second Row: B. Monsees, R. Gordon, M. Bransfeld, J. Schnering, S. Thompson, C. Charnas, L. Hirschtritt. Third Row: S. Friend, J. Penrith. Back Row: T. Whiting, A. Wirtz, J. Horsch, E. Lunding, M. Harris, K. Severson,D. Rosenbaum, S. Weinstein, P. Hoffman, J.O ' Kieffe, B. Jones, M. Lee, R. Smith, T. Kelly, C. Foreman. Absent: O. Mullady, M. Cummings, M. Seymour, E. Gillies, E. Almquist 41 Vtf, First Grade FRONT ROW SITTING: George Blumenschein ; David Sturgis; Lauren Handelman; Sarah Potter. SEATED AT TABLE: Laurie Osberg; Tammy Beck; Perry Clemis; Jennifer Stone; Lisa Gigante; Margie Bransfield; Suzanne Faurot; Doug McCarthy . WINDOW SILL: Mrs. Abelmann; Jim O ' Donnell; Jeff Elias; Mike Horsch; Howard Gordon. ABSENT: Allen Rickel; Kathryn Jones, Marc Peters. 42 .A- .S K .? $ ' SECOND GRADE On Steps: L. Tincu, B. Friend, T. Todd, D. Hines, R. Marx, G. Smith. On Side Railing: J. Sudak J Peters L Harwich Back D Zweifel, P. Scott, S. Almquist, J. Louis, K. Nielsen, J. Weinbrenner, Mrs. Ramsay. Absent: K. Furrer, E. Mackevich, K. Mepham 43 44 45 8 S THIRD GRADE Front Row: M. Feinstein, A. Wood, J. Franke, J. Foreman, J. Abelmann, M. Smith, M. Roenisch, L. Gordon, E. Schwarz. Back Row: L. Sievers, J. Cain, A. Handelman, M. Bransfield, A. Baron, L. Kleinman. Absent: M. Peebles 46 FOURTH GRADE FIRST ROW: Jerry Ramseur, Ted Wiedemann, Julia Springer, Allison McNear, Mike Potter, Andy MacLeod, John Harza. SECOND ROW: Pam Friend, Michelle Harlan, Peter Wirtz, Clint Roenisch, Blake Furrer, John Gnaedinger, Ken Osberg. ABSENT: Nancy Sotern. ,„„.... . % ' ' s im . . .. ,.,.. ' ' I s4 Fifth Grade Standing at back counter: M. Gluckman, M. Thorsen. Around table: A. Joseph, C. Angelos, B. Buzick, E. Smith, J. Nedzel, R. J. Damon, M. Harwich, P. Sturgis, G. Rogers, I. Punnett. Under table: C. Schwarz, N. Feinstein, K. Lunding, E. Garvin, D. Neibel,G. O ' Donnell. Absent: J. Sudak,T. Louis 48 49 50 SIXTH GRADE FIRST ROW: C. Mullady, M. Lipman, D. Nedzel. SECOND ROW: T. Deans-Barrett, V. Ware, F. Dunseth, D. Roenisch, A. Van Hooser. THIRD ROW: T. Downing, E. Perelman, S. Patton, D. Fox, K. Franke, J. Dammann. FOURTH ROW: L. Stone, A. Hines, T. Wilson, C. Schnering, C. Dowd, C. Colbert. FIFTH ROW: J. Feinstein, D. Upton, R. Bassler, P. Kogut, D. Deuble. SIXTH ROW: J. Strauss, J. Moos, D. Van Doren, K. Funk, 0. Millard. ABSENT: S. Bransfield. M M 1T.5, t .â– ' Nj ' W SEVENTH GRADE FIRST ROW: S. Marshall, V. DuVernet, G. Jessen, L. Harza, K. Wirtz. SECOND ROW: J. Gordon, K. Button, J. Smothers, P. Oliver, F. Barker. THIRD ROW: R. Crane, R. Peters, T. Porter. FOURTH ROW: S. Steinhoff, J. Hunter, J. Stearns, A. Blumberg, P. Dovenmuehle, N. Beisel, S. Perkins, H. Finnell, A. Granatelli. FIFTH ROW: P. Thorsen, C. O ' Connor, J. Deuble, J. Sudak, E. Weisenberg. SIXTH ROW: P. Silberman, 0. Neibel, E. Ruwitch, K. Spencer, D. Faulkner. SEVENTH ROW: J. McNear. 54 EIGHTH GRADE FIRST ROW: J. Herndon, H. Charnas, B. Callihan, K. Louis, D. Bernstein, J. Wolfson, C. Gately, D. Hatch. SECOND ROW: T. Maynard, V. Joyce, D. Buddington, K. Stone M Frohman B. Goodman, J. Rodgers, S. Feinstein, J. Trump, G. Kovacs, R. DeLong J McDowell. THIRD ROW: G. Edwards, J. Roberts, C. Noyes, M. Upton, M. Stron| A Seeburg, E. Springer, N. Todd, E. Breuer, M. Searle, M. Wollaeger, C. Elliott, J. Montgo- mery, P. Boal, T. Abelmann, T. Ober, H. Howard. ABSENT: S. Black, N. Fink. 55 There is beauty here. So complex and yet so subtle that too often it goes unnoticed. It is not the splendor of a mountain waterfall. It is a reflection in a small pool of melted snow. It is a blackbird Tost amid the confusion of a construction site. The deafening drone from the city ' s workings condemns all to silence. A setting sun hides behind a misty veil. It weakly reassures us of nature ' s omnipresence, ever among the steel the soot the glass the noise of the city. Man, nature — a strained coexistence. 58 x 1UB ' 1MB - X. X. x FRESHMEN SEATED ON GROUND: J. Golden; B. Heath; N. Stibolt; P. Parsons; T. Gradman. AGAINST WALL: T. Steinschneider; A. Dammann; H. Damon; C. Marshall; S. Rosenberg; L. Salisbury; M. Taylor; J. Warner. THIRD ROW: H. Sinker; P. Dreyfus; L. Brown; C. Shay; K. Harden; W. Spencer; S. Jones. BACK ROW: D. Schulman; S. Rogers; S. Smith; J. Fraer- man; R. Thomas, D. Bohannan; P. Geraghty ; S. Dowd; R MacArthur. ABSENT: M. Soule; M. Block; J. Booz; W. Buzick; F. Goss; G. Heiss. 59 . . m S- : U-kv SOPHOMORE CLASS Front Row: L. Morse, P. Jacobs, K. Ayer, M. Bird, J. Berry, N. Babson, P. Peterson. Second Row: L. McCormick , N. Pfisterer, T. Howland, V. Leslie, L. Pettibone, C. Spencer, L. Spector. Third Row: J. Wineberg, B. English, A. Frederick, J. Todd, J. Carone, H. Joseph, B. Humes, S. Cragg, B. Hines, F. Stanton, M. Wollaeger, B. Lipman. Fourth Row: J. Gatlin, J. Perkins, N. Jessen, S. Howe, J. Pugh ' , B. Darrow, R. Ober, J. Montague. Back Row: N. Johnson, R. Thomas. Absent: A. Clarke, J. Damon, T. Friedman, G. Gradma ' n, D. McCluskey, T. Preece, P. Salisbury. 62 HMMSMM â– - mwmwm tmm 63 1 i lirrF 1 Ikrrr !, '  ; ' til ! ' v. %-, vft An tt JlS j«t f ?« % â– tf ' . ' ' t  %r 4 M i ' Y A JUNIORS First Row: G. Hobart, M. Matthews, D. Rice, P. Dammann, B. Fischer, H. Babson. Second Row: A. Scheman, J. Leimert, J. Eddy, K Bernbaum, D. Frohman, B. Lerman, G. Wirtz, S. Schmitt, R. Doherty, C. Breuer. Third Row: A. DaMiano, M. Dern, S. Bieelow, S. Stetson, H. Blair, B. Preston. Fourth Row: J. Faulkner, D. Widen, R. Liss, B. Stibolt, C. Wald, P. Beatty, J. Vance, P. Herndon, P. Hamilton, J. Woodward, H. Rogers, N. Pfisterer, R. Gill, N. Johnson, S. Colbert, M. Malpede. Fifth Row: B. Flint, A. Dalton,M. Rentschler, B. Steinschneider. Absent: J. Carroll, E. Endsley,C. Maynard, J. Eldredge,B. Fink,M. Paul, D. Ramspeck. 65 • .. ' • £ • 67 Thus we sat peacefully exhaling small puffs and taking little sips at our glasses, while every moment we felt ourselves growing lighter and more serene. Hesse It is destroyers who set snares for many and call it the stale; they hang a sword and a hundred desires over them. And he who has to be a creator is good and evil, truly has first to be a destroyer and break values. I flew too far into the future: a horror assailed me. . . .time was my only contemporary. Zarathustra Eos reigns mysteriously in the peach-hued dawn. A black piano is on this beach of dawn-day and sitting comfortably at its keys is a blue monk. She listens passively on a voluminous and snow white cloud to the insane strains of music. Eos is carried away, away into the days as the sun really rises. David Lincoln Ross Mark Dominic Parisi If you think about it; the best reason in the world is, because I don ' t want to. Mason Williams Congratulations Jim Pugh: Sorry Jim and Sam If you are in distress just think of how nice it could ' ve been if you wouldn ' t have done it in the first place. by an unknown but an ingenious author Man must be stark raving mad; he cannot even make a worm and yet he makes gods by the dozen. Michael David Rudman Boetius Henry Sullivan 71 â– Irl Houston Marshall Anne Carlyle Jackson Consider not for whom the bell tolls— as long as you can hear it, it must be for someone else. It ' s Uncle Ivanovitch ' s turn to throw the bomb. 72 Done lay around, stay around, this old town too long, but it seems like I ' ve gotta travel on . . . . but. . . . we were the best of friends. Bob Dylan Ne demeurez jamais. Andre Gide Robert Sterling Rogers A man should never be ashamed to admit he is in the wrong, which is but saying in other words, that he is wiser today than he was yesterday. Jonathan Swift William Rockwell Wirtz 73 And at last, slowly, afraid he would find nothing, Douglas opened one eye. And everything, absolutely everything, was there. The world, like a great iris of an even more gigantic eye, which has also just opened and stretched out to encompass everything, stared back at him. And he knew what it was that had leaped upon him to st ay and would not run away now. I ' m alive, he thought. — Ray Bradbury, Dandelion Wine Patricia Louise Carone i Happiness can neither be achieved or appreciated until you ' ve been very sad. — Suzy Creamcheese Fayette Aurelia Nichols 74 Katheryn McCauley Dole When I carefully consider the curious habits of dogs I am compelled to conclude that man is the superior animal. When 1 consider the curious habits of man I confess, my friend, I am puzzled. Ezra Pound Lee Furguson Barker Shake back your hair oh red- headed girl. Let go your laughter and keep your two proud freckles on your chin. Carl Sandburg Nancy Allen McLeod You shall, above all things, be gla d and young. For if you ' re young what- ever life you wear will be- come you: and if you ' re glad whatever ' s living will yourself become. — Anonymous Meredith Waite Herndon nineteen I accept the fact that love is love, though I understand it not at all. 1 understand your belly though and tulips in ajar and only that I ' d make of you exactly what you are. — Rod McKuen Walter Alan Goldstein You mean, there ' s a catch? Sure there ' s a catch, Doc Daneeka replied. Catch-22. Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn ' t really crazy. There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one ' s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn ' t, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If he flew them he was crazy and didn ' t have to; but if he didn ' t want to he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle. That ' s some catch, that Catch-22 , he observed. It ' s the best there is, Doc Daneeka agreed. — from Catch-22 Karen Armstrong Black Today I want to leave this all behind me, like a fog, it must be melted by sunshine, better times. — Anonymous Anne Cora Leimert . . .Hello babies, Welcome to Earth. It ' s hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It ' s round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you ' ve got about a hundred years here. There ' s only one rule that I know of babies — -Kurt Vonnegut Jr. David Ronald Dobkin Senior spots: The ultimate expression of your cumulative knowledge!! — Wow! In 8th grade; I couldn ' t wait; a senior; able to espouse obscure philosophies. The witty quote; meaningful only unto himself; able to challenge the system; backed by Neitzche, Elmer Fud, Sartre, Weird Harold. The Hand that wields the broom on Satur- days can best on Sundays, fondle and caress. Faust 8th graders, if ya find philosophical meaning in this, well, you ' re one step ahead of me; if not, ya got a whole lifetime to worry about it ' Good Night David -Chet 1 Robert Warner Dehlinger We artists agree, true beauty is the sleek and colorful lines on a Cana- dian National Railway Streamliner! It ' s too early to make decisions. There ' s so much more I need to know. I cannot settle my opinions on several facts. There ' s room to grow. Ask me in a couple of years; by then I should be able to say that which hides amongst my fears and won ' t reveal itself today. Alice Bermingham Alice Bermingham 79 Directions : You will have 20 minutes to plan and write the essay assigned below. First consider care- fully the following statement. Then, read and follow the directions that are given in the assignment that follows the statement. Some possessions like a mink coat, a particular kind of car or dog, or membership in a particular club, by seeming to confer upon their owners a particular status, influence the average person more than he realizes. — College Entrance Examination Board 1971 The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. — As You Like It Shakespeare Ann Yantis Howard Karen Maxine Kaplan Each generation must watch the next throw- ing away its golden opportunities. How strange that the young should always think the world is against them--when in fact that is the only time it is for them. — Mignon McLaughlin Ann Bradford Page Edward Robinson Hoyle All knowledge is spendable currency, de- pending on the market. Maya Angelou (I know why the cage bird sings) 81 Genevieve Amberg Cremin All you know is what you are, and what you do and see. Julie Ann Williams 82 Patrick Seeley Bremner Stephen Barrow Edge Qu ' est-ce que L ' homme dans l ' infini? Blaise Pascal Robert Young Jordan II I do my thing and you do your thing. I am not in this world to live up to your expectations, and you are not in this world to live up to mine. You are you and I am I. And if by chance we find each other, it ' s beautiful. F.S.P. Thomas Boal Jr- Andrea Fern Kanter I know I should realize that this should be serious, but hot spit, why bother, right? Right? This is supposed to be weird, I hope it is. These words mean nothing to anyone, but you should all enjoy it very much. 1500 lb. animal bear, animal food, Bert the Barber, Peter Frank ' s Air Force, Hot Rats, and drowned Teddy 4, animal pictures, and Schlitz beer. I owe much to Wally and Dickie; to Wally I owe much cuteness, and to Dickie I thank him for his words of wit and wisdom, it was most wonderful. Bobby Hull T-Shirts $3.00. Tony-0 Bigelow Joseph M. Schlitz spoke these immortal words, Whiskey on Beer never fear, beer on whiskey mighty risky. Pretzels, pepperoni, cabbage and pigs ears, are much fun at dinner. Middlepuddle Hangnail (c) 1932 ] i John Morrill Lilley 85 Phillip Alan Fortune Xenon amongst the platitudes, importunately parturient. In this cold side-street your leg sliced in half; thoughts of the expendable driver imageless (supposedly) as the regulator kills him through his thorax, lethal intersion. (Wonder that we are not more real as death-the welling life being so evanescently short-lived, vulnerable: but so self-assured, here-and-now presumptuous!) So that on every dull frosty morning, tearing down the faubourg (how can a one think to any original purpose, greatness, out of all the similar squalor? how there be any thinking out of our condition and its history, any then a man ' s such learnings preserved?) I Asmodeous; into the butchers one stoic membranous morning in filthy aluminum. Peter Jones Curtis Eugene House 86 Carla Ann Smyth Gina Pacita Present Of night, solitary, blind-eyed. Empedocles Of day, accompanied, bright-eyed. G. Present Marry the wonders, but nothing walks stranger than man. dophocles For no abyss is wider than his mind. G. Present Men should know that war is general and that justice is strife; all things arise and pass away through strife. Heraclitus a generation of peace Nixon the police are here not to prevent disorder but to preserve disorder. Daley 37 Nancie Nicol In the midst of winter; I discovered there was in me, an invincible summer. — Camus Julia Lee Bartholomay Asleep, awake, by night or day, the friends I seek are seeking me; no wind can drive my bark astray, nor change the tide of destiny. What matter if 1 stand alone? I wait with joy the coming years; My heart shall reap when it is sown, And gather up its fruit of tears. — John Burroughs Mary Agnes Parsons Things change so fast — who has time to notice a word, a look given to them once on a spring day? But perhaps as time is moving, just one word I say may linger in the mind of just one person — and 1 shall live forever. Alison Elaine Hurd After fourteen years, I ' m speech- less. — Ann Howard Anthony Lance Heitlinger I would have nobody to control me, I would be absolute; and who but I? Now, he that is absolute can do what he likes; he that can do what he likes, can take his pleasure, can be content; and he that can be content, has no more to desire. So the matter ' s over; and come what will come, I am satisfied. Cervantes Don Quixote Thomas Joseph William Haney Happiness is a perfume you cannot pour on others without getting a few drops on yourself. Let us realize that what happens round us is largely outside our control, but that the way we choose to react to it is inside our control. What greater joy is there than realizing that with his smile your neighbor is offering you all that he has — himself Shelly Steffens 90 David Lavern Severson Humpty Dumpty sat on his wall And I ' ll give you odds 10 to 1 that somebody pushed him just for fun. — Jerry Goodman Lisa Vogel What is everything, anyway? — Severn Dardin The happy man is the man who does not suffer from either of these failures of unity, whose personality is neither divided against itself nor pitted against the world. Such a man feels himself a citizen of the universe, enjoying freely the spectable that it offers and the joys that it affords, untroubled by the thought of death because he feels him- self not really separate from those who will come after him. It is in such pro- found instinctive union with the stream of life that the greatest joy is to be found. — Bertrand Russell Nancy Montgomery Green I then refer to an incident in the history of Nolandia, a country just southeast of Utopia. On the strength of some ancient marriage, the King of Nolandia thought he had a claim to another kingdom, so his people started a war to get it for him. Eventually they won, only to find that the kingdom in question was quite as much trouble to keep as it had been to acquire. There were constant threats of internal re- bellion and external aggression. They were always having to fight either for their new subjects or against them. They never got a chance to demobilize, and in the meantime they were being ruined. All their money was going out of the country and men were losing their lives to pay for someone else ' s petty ambition. Conditions at home were no safer than they ' d been during the war, which had lowered moral standards, by encouraging people to kill and steal. There was no respect whatever for the law, because the king ' s attention was divided between the two kingdoms, so that he couldn ' t concentrate properly on either. Hello Mr. President — Swing a leg Eric Douglas Alsberg 92 Stephen Scott Fargo Probable Goal: To travel the country carpentering, painting, whatever work I can get, taking that money and buying a Country House in England amidst rolling meadows and sunlit architec- ture, like that on the Cam River. John Palfrey Ayer Papa writes to Johnny, Johnny can ' t come home Papa writes to Johnny Johnny can ' t come home Johnny ' s been on the road too long Summer ' s almost gone Winter ' s comin ' on And it seems like I gotta move on. . . . . .We were the best of friends. — Bob Dylan Do anything you want in life as long as you ' re open to serve anyone. 93 John Crowell Stern 94 96 97 A6nl FIRST ROW: P. Dammann; C. Breuer; B. Fink; J. Lilley ; R. Hoyle; D. Dobkin; P. Herndon; R. Wirtz; M. Rudman; N. Johnson. SECOND ROW: R. Liss; P. Geraghty ; J. Gatlin; B. Stibolt; J. Pugh; R. Thomas; S. Rogers; M. Malpede; B. Sullivan. THIRD ROW: R. MacArthur; S. Dowd; S. Smith; S. Howe;B. Hines; J. Perkins; B. Lipman;P. Hamilton ; R. Ober. North Shore 36 Francis Parker 6 North Shore 6 Morgan Park 14 North Shore 48 Elgin 6 North Shore 6 Lake Forest 13 North Shore 32 Glenwood 14 North Shore 6 Latin 13 North Shore 8 Loyola North Shore 6 Driscoll 6 98 99 100 101 u Is t M 103 104 GIRLS ' HOCKEY 106 i m - i ' S : Ml fm. Basketball North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North North Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore Shore 108 34 Roycemore 44 Morgan Park 67 St. Michaels 54 Latin 54 Driscoll 66 Lake Forest 46 Driscoll 51 Francis Parker 86 Harvard St. George 32 Glenwood 65 Elgin 49 University High 37 St. Michaels 38 - Latin 80 Morgan Park 62 - Francis Parker 59 Lake Forest 39 Glenwood 68 Harvard St. George 48 Roycemore 47 University High 63 University High(tourn.) First Row: J. Bach, J. Perkins, J. Gatlin, J. Pugh, S. Howe, P. Hamilton, Mac. Second Row: R. Wirtz, R. Hoyle, R. Rogers, M. Malpede, J. Lilley, B. Stibolt, B. Clark. Absent: N. Jessen. â– :â– .: ! ■■•■■■MHHNM P H â– Ugjl W V m 54 l W l m d m. j|H wT V }% GIRLS ' BASKETBALL SEATED: S. Colbert, J. Bartholomay. KNEELING: A. Berm- ingham, D. McCluskey , P. Salisbury, S. Schmitt, T. Spencer, K. Dole, M. Herndon, A. Page. STANDING: J. Golden, W. Spen- cer, S. Jones, S. Bigelow, N. Stibolt, N. McLeod, M. Dern, A. Dammann. ill A â– A VOLLEYBALL TEAM 112 Girls ' Softball Girls ' Tennis 113 V , ; : v ' m BOYS ' TENNIS 115 ifcj ,i, ' . r . - ,— - t ' H - â– ' â– ' .,,â– â– :â– - â– W.;.- . â– A : 4 ' ft$$. Mm J J .gfetf BASEBALL FRONT ROW: B. Darrow, J. Perkins, R. Hoyle, M. Rudman, B. Sullivan. SECOND ROW: M. Malpede, J. Montague, S. Cragg, R. MacArthur. THIRD ROW: D. Ramspeck, M. Block, B. Humes, P. Geraghty. 117 MIRROR 118 jfO - MIRROR PHOTOGRAPHERS Back: N. Green, M. Dern, D. Ross. Middle: J. Leimert, R. Doherty , S. Colbert, J. Williams, T. Steinschneider, T. Haney. Front: G. Wirtz, H. Babson. Absent: J. Eddy, P. Fortune, K. Bernbaum, H. Blair. Back: H. Babson, M. Dern, J. Leimert, S. Colbert, G. Wirtz, R. Doherty. Front: T. Steinschneider, D. Ross, J. Williams, N. Green, T. Haney. Absent: P. Fortune, J. Eddy, K. Bernbaum, H. Blair. MIRROR PHOTOGRftl â– .â– f It 4 I r j V L MORNING EX COMMITTEE 120 121 COUNCIL First Semester Second Semester V  ' P( ' ( G.A.P.A. 123 SANGERBUND STAGE CREW 125 The Smiling Fernando Brothers The Ultimate in Multi-Media Entertainment 127 H.M.S. PINAJ r 1 130 CAST Little Buttercup Karen Bernbaum Susan Stetson Boatswain ' s Mate Ned Jessen Dick Deadeye Brandon Lipman Ralph Rackstraw Thomas Howland Captain Corcoran Stephen Edge Josephine Victoria Leslie Sir Joseph Porter John Ayer Cousin Hebe Teel Spencer Meg Matthews Carpenter ' s Mate William Hines Musical Direction Vincent B. Allison Stage Direction Carol Radloff Design Roger Shipley 131 The Golden Axe 1 â– fc K i - â– ' â– 1 •• I 133 B A R B E W I R E C L XJ B Train-Watcher ' s Club c L XJ B S A N D 134 Stargazer ' s Club M A T H C L U B 135 PURE AS THE DRIVEN SNOW CAST Mrs. Zamah Logan Ginger Hobart Jonathan Logan Robert Jordan Leander Longfellow Robert Hoyle Purity Dean Meredith Herndon Mortimer Frothingham Stephen Edge Mrs. Hewlitt Maggie Parsons Alison Hewlitt Lauren Spector Eric Z. Pickens Bill Hines Imogene Pickens Aurelia Nichols Jed Lunn j h n Stern Boetius Sullivan Mrs. Faith Hogue Nancy Pfisterer Nellie Victoria Leslie I - e Director Carol Radloff | ; c Design R oge r Shipley IJ4- 1111 13£ 139 H iP. f W â– {W vr KssSS ' m£ JUL PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. John P. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. George S. Barker Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bartholomay III Mr. and Mrs. Clinton P. Black Mr. and Mrs. William A. Buzick Mr. and Mrs. William A. Cremin Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dole III Mrs. Courtney B. Dovenmuehle Mr. and Mrs. Peter Edge Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Ellman Mr. and Mrs. Dan S. Fargo Dr. and Mrs. Victor H. Fink Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Gradman Mr. and Mrs. Jewell L. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Eugene V. Heitlinger Rev. and Mrs. Jack B. Van Hooser Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Howe Mr. and Mrs. Royce A. Hoyle Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kanter Mr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Peebles Mr. and Mrs. Warren E. Preece Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Rogers Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred P. Seymour Mr. and Mrs. Albert Stern Dr. and Mrs. Gerald W. Vogel CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1971 144 Compliments of Hazel Baxter 567— A Lincoln Avenue Winnetka, Illinois Black ' s Book Bar, Inc. Books for all ages We Mail 559 Chestnut 446-4066 Winnetka Travel Winnetka ' s Own Travel Agency Complete Travel Arrangements 561 Lincoln Ave., Winnetka, 111. 446-0814 Children ' s Clothes with Distinction ranees HE FFERNAN, Inc. 572 Lincoln Avenue Winnetka A most distinguished name among America ' s finest Specialty Shops, serving the discriminating since 1932. 574 Lincoln Ave. Hi 6-1177 E. B. TAYLOR § CO. Housewares, Toys, Hardware 560 Chestnut St. Winnetka, Illinois 145 COMPLIMENTS OF Telephone 835-0038 North Shore Services CARLSON BUILDING Cleaning Care for Your Wardrobe Your Home AND 336 Park Ave.,Glencoe, Illinois Henry C. Wienecke, Inc. LIBRARY PLAZA HOTEL Housewares Hardware The Toy Shop IN 680-682 Vernon Ave., Glencoe, 111. EVANSTON VErnon 5-3060 P.O. 91 FOR THE NEW THE SENTRY POST and 547 Lincoln J|- ' Winnetka i_y|lmee â– WINNETKA • LAKE FOREST! i r UNUSUAL IN CLOTHES Good Luck Class of 1971 146 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 197) Mr. Mrs. Irving Dobkin Family C. ELLSWORTH EATON, f?. Ph. 353 Park Avenue, G Uncoe, Illinois VF-5-0387 Wally King ' s Music Center 669 Vernon Ave. Glencoe, 111. Phone: 835-3433 Instruments Sheet Music Records Guitar Lessons LITTLE TOUCH ,OF HOLLAND Vitr The Bakery with the European Touch 343 Park Avenue Glencoe VE 5-3527 147 BEST WISHES HILTON HOTELS CORP. AND THE HERNDON ' S udman OLDSMOBILE Edens at Clavey HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. 148 Glencoe Realty Inc. 362 Park Avenue Glencoe, 111. 835-1800 Multiple Listing Service Hic,WL k o Park WifJNETKA 831-4500 MisterEeasing Corporation 416 Skokie Valley Road Highland Park, Illinois 60035 FAMT6-66LT5 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1971 H. E. Howard Jr. $. Family 149 When You Look In Your MIRROR Lindwall Antiques Collectors Items Early Glass, China, Silver, Dolls Jewelry 894 Linden Ave. Hubbard Woods, Winnetka, Illinois (near Tower Road in the courtyard) Phone HI 6-0145 Be FELL Dressed THE FELL COMPANY 520 Green Bay Rd. Winnetka, 111. Best Wishes to the Class of 1971 LLOYD MILLER AGENCY, INC. General Insurance Evanston, 111. Lloyd D. Miller George L. Lilley 150 151 HUBBARD WOODS 936 Lts bEN five: 152 Taamifa osco 153 Lnahfoi VARIETY DEPARTMENT STORES Headquarters for all staple and seasonal variety store merchandise 808 Elm St. Winnetka Woznicki Jewelers 819 Oak Street Winnetka, 111. 60093 446-0658 y — â– 810 ELM ST. WINNETKA Tolford Galleries 956 Linden Avenue Hubbard Woods, Dl. 60093 312-446-9005 AL ' S PRIME MEAT MARKET Formerly Grocerland at Hubbard Woods ' Gourmet Foods 1080 Gaee Street Hubbard Woods Charge Accounts Welcome Phone Orders Delivery Service 446-6261 446-4049 AL SPERA No matter how you look at it A The Winnetka Bank Has a savings plan for you. Come in today and ask about our Golden Passbook Account or Regular Pass- book Account. From any angle, savings are a good investment at The Winnetka Bank. Elm and Green Bay Rd. Winnetka. Illinois 60093 Member F.D.I.C. Phone 446-0097 Winnetka Shade, Shutter, Drapery 28 Green Bay Rd. Winnetka, 111. 60093 446-6287 We clean and repair everything we sell Anything for the Door or Window Hugh C. Michaels § Co. Financial 6-7766 Hillcrest6-7100 Realtors Main Office - 105 W. Madison St., Chicago Suburban Office— 751 Elm St., Winnetka Licensed sales personnel: Patricia Dillon Phyllis Robinson Jane Fitzgerald Virginia Sheridan Marjorie Lochridge Courtney Sjostrom Mary Alice Neylan Itsy Smith Lynn Patterson (Exclusive No. Shore representative HOMERICA, nationwide homefinding service) o new kind of convenience First notional Bonk In Winnetka. PHONE 446-8525 155 740 Elm St. Winnetka Truck on down park ave bootery IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC DELICACIES JOHNSEN ' S FINE SEA FOODS FRESH FISH AND OYSTERS AT ALL TIMES 805 Elm Street Winnetka, 111. 446-2103 446-2 1 04 Smiling Cow Imperial Motors Downstairs — Fell Mall FINEST HOME OF FIAT 732-E Elm St. Winnetka Sales and Service 446-1660 721 Greenbay Arts Crafts Wilmette 256-0606 156 COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND 157 m S ii ' m M: Your money ea rns interest from date of deposit to date of withdrawal in regular passbook savings accounts at FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS ass D oc°.at.on OF WILMETTE Green Bay Road and Central Avenue Phone: 251-7200 THE NORTH SHORE ' S LARGEST SAVINGS INSTITUTION at The I Winnetka Bank We are ready to serve your every financial need be it checking accounts, savings pro- grams, or a quick cash loan. The longest banking hours in town, convenient drive-in windows, and free-off-street parking are just the beginning. See us for the answers to your financial questions. Answers to Your Financial Questions TheJ Winnetka Bank Winnetka Trust and Savings Bank I Elm and Green Bay Road Winnetka, Illinois 60093 i Member F.D.I.C. Phone: 446-0097 WILMETTE Sp nt 5 f.(obliih« I9J2 VERSINO BROTHERS, Prop. 605 Green Bay Rd. WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL ADIDAS RIDDELL SHOES WILSON and RAWLINGS SPORTING GOODS DISTRIBUTOR F if ivv=- =£J r — - .-4 - — j, S 0RHNGJQUIMIB Why Look Further? Baseball Trophies Boxing Basketball Golf Bowling Football Rol ler Skc tes Table Tennis Tennis Hunting Softball Badminton Fishing Ammunition Skates Archery Tennis Sharpened Guns Restringing 159 Runnfeldt § Belm ont Service Station 475 Chestnut St. Winnetka, 111. Phones: Hi 6-0009 and Hi 6-0334 Complete automotive service for gas, oil, greasing, washing, tires, batteries, motor re- building, brake relining, ignition service, body and fender work and painting for your car. Meyers Co. Realtors Evanston— North Shore Board of Realtors Member: Multiple Listing Service. 1062 Gage Street - Winnetka, 111. 446-9335 §$tf8 8BJ0ES -73.(0 tuo -St. |n TM£ faxty,, 46-3883 WinJet kA, 1 -t- r r R«v. ft. CHARGE AcccvJttfTS IrMVITGp 160 L.P.3 Shoppe 11 54 Central Wilmette, 111. FEATURING: Health Foods Natural Vitamins Health and Beauty Aids paintings frames restoration valuation Anne Elizabeth Galleries Plaza Del Lago Beth Jernigan ' 515 Sheridan Road, Wilmette, Illinois 6009 1 Telephone 312 251-2332 PEOPLE WHO LIKE TO EAT EAT AT WALGREEN ' S 161 NEW SATURDAY DRIVE-IN HOURS Now we ' re open for drive-in banking every Saturday morning from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For routine checking and savings transactions (money-in and money-out), this new Saturday morning drive-in service has been added for your convenience. W THE WILMETTE BANK 1200 CENTRAL AVENUE 251-8100 MEMBER FDIC. Baumann-Cook 551 LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Hillcrest 6-5000 Established 1930 North Shore Real Estate Christine B. Collins Florence S. Cook Janet Ator Lucy-Jane Hedberg Mabel Coulter Lucille Octigan Ruth Elwood Claire Sherwood Kay Willi Pickwick Galleries Personalized Picture Framing-Custom Mirrors Decorative Wall Accessories Fine Prints-Antique-Contemporary Photograph Frames Paintings Restored 557 Lincoln Ave. Winnetka Hillcrest 6-2262 162 CONGRATULATIONS FROM YOUR FRIENDLY MAILMAN PETTI BROS. TV CO. 874 GREEN BAY RD. HUBBARD WOODS, ILL. 446-3551 446-3552 Television-Radio Air Conditioners-Stereos— Tape Recorders SAM MARIO (312)446-1091 The Mushroom Vose Bootery Gifts and Antiques Located in the Winnetka Walk 554 Lincoln Avenue Winnetka, Illinois 60093 837 Elm 1924 Central Winnetka Evanston Trudy Ahlstrand Murphey Travel Service A. W. Zengeler Cleaners 552 Lincoln Ave. 272-6550 Winnetka, 111. 163 COLBERT PACKAGING CO RPOR ATION S o 7 Hubbard UUoods PHARMACY v, EO l£VtN A -Ph. Ralph Schick ft.pA. 10 H Q AC E WiNNETKA H fc-6iOo Ve. 5-0236 Fell Mall 732c elm street winnetka, ill. 60093 312 446 1410 one flight down undercover boutique 4ne uHima+e in in+irW Desiflher orioina fs in Imqerle Lucie. Anne Pucci LqnZ of Saiz-bura Eyeful Eve 5fiHmah Dior Oievefte Stella Faain dnd manu more providing wide raiVc e. of Inner fashions Tor fre. +rul J eleaarrt- lo k fn n + 1 - gkio out Plaza Dtl Lago 25 Compliments of Village Toy Shop 807 Elm Street Winnetka, 111. 164 Joe, Jacob Chevrolet 135 G-re v Bavi RoacJ VliliHeihe, Illinois rx± f PHARMACY Allah FndKf R PH- Uwtta 1-003 Selly ' s JUNIORS. . . A Size, Not An Age specializing in sizes 3 5 7 9 1 1 13 722 ELM STREET-WINNETKA 5008 OAKTON STREET-SKOK1E 23 SOUTH PROSPECT-PARK RIDGE Ptar ahead! (xei ne%+ year ' s wardrobe -Hiis v ear ah crulw o c ait 44 H -r t.«nbav Koad 1875 WILLOW ROAD NORTHFIELD, ILL 60093 Phone 446-8570 Wivw«.+ka y 165 WORLDWIDE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS STUDENT TRAVEL LOW AIR FARES STANDBY TICKETS EURAIL PASSES Alice Childs, Peggy Johnson, Mary Isham 732 Elm Street Winnetka, Illinois 60093 Telephone 312-446-6964 416-6140 L £5 i CUiX - BFAUTY SALON DON J86 A AJ? W o ops wi iierKA hcinoLS PH6R PHoue H«-1°30 J. ACIENHOF TAIL Of?  55c SH fCN Bay « o, V ikINET KA, ill Bratschi Plumbing Company 80 1 Oak Street Winnetka 446-1421 446-1040 PONTIAC William S. Mougey President Chieftain Pontiac, Inc. 925 Linden Avenue - Winnetka, Illinois - 446-1217 Kuecks £ Hanus Pharmacists 166 940 Linden Hubbard Woods, 111. Phone Hlllcrest 6-6500 The North Shore ' s Finest Prescription Service WILMETTE € u Sfu a 5 6 l.labl..h d I9J2 VERSINO BROTHERS, Prop. 605 Green Bay Rd. WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL ADIDAS RIDDELL SHOES WILSON and RAWLINGS SPORTING GOODS DISTRIBUTOR Porting wuiPiEM| Why Look Further? Baseball Basketball Football Tennis Badminton Skates Sharpened Trophies Golf Rol ler Skates Hunting Fishing Archery Guns Boxing Bowling Table Tennis Softball Ammunition Tennis Restringing For Shoes That FIT As Well As They LOOK LOOK TO Barnes Bootery Children ' s Shoes Adult Casuals NORTHFIELD ijll WINNETKACpg L, cmish For the gift with something extra , . . something different . for long enchantment Chestnut Street at Chestnut Court in Winnetka HI. 6-8380 China crystal silver anlique furniture, jewelry objects of art. J Undian UraiC I friends recommend us . . -(â– . _ji ff ,u ..Jg e believe you will too. ,A - — N, Chestnut Street at Chestnut Court in Winnetka HI. 6-1703 Delightful dining in a congenial atmosphere. § $ %£® HHt 083-9 - jikmvi Jhc, 54 (o Uncoil Avc Ut. VJi 4kflL,Tl(rr pi5 167 Telephone 256-5800 Bertie iei u  IJO 1515 SHERIDAN ROAD W1LMETTE, ILLINOIS 60091 VJ. Killian Co. Plumbing Heating Appliances Winnetka Lake Forest 168 I ' J I Â
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