North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL)
- Class of 1975
Page 1 of 172
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 172 of the 1975 volume:
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rr HOUSE WASHINGTON T0 THE 197 5 HIG orrV v itn y° c, me rica de P vo u ant nenges- Tu ° « ° Ca Isl-S - tM C eut to £.■«- - ::;;; ey «. jsbrr ope in vnat yon £ the tQ ur lx P ride Ire If ° U ill indeed rxng geek persevere. v,ll ; + i S f action you every success on the ! „ish you every %U $ V u Or ! $ . x; JiL. i ■W T4 J r  N  , « „| - S w r ys ss X Jfe .... S , ' 3S r the free assmc iations of a beginning typist it lach k it lacks the class of p tex -r ; finger painting, but hell ' ) I , what power W3gz£?£i$ tea for two and two for tea fingeres dance tap toe across keyboard now i can go to new york and be a secretary what a waste of education when you click you click the quick bronw fox jumps over the lazy dog now alii need is my own pencil sharpener oh, isee this poem is going nowhere sorry bill fredericks if you saw me buzzing across the board yousd forgive me why complicate things by using capitol letters eecummings may you read this someday in fact i think ill dedicate it to you and it can be my poem imitating a poet powem god bless you Lisa Lipton THE 1975 MIRROR IS DEDICATED TO GEORGE MITCHELL We asked the First Grade and here ' s what they said to tell us why they like Mr. Mitchell, Mr. Mitchell drives us on field trips. He took us to catch butter- flies! Sandy Seidman He helped me when I came to school and didn ' t know it was a holiday! Binky Gehrs He ' s nice! Helen Loennig He ' s cute! Roxanne Caplan Handsome, too! Stephanie Novak George moves all the snow in win- ter so we don ' t fall down. Elizabeth Toyooka He takes good care of us. Mark Bransfield Mr. Mitchell never gets mad. Allegra Flindt George tells us what bus to get on and to stay out of the street. Sara Geist I think he should be principal. Sean Kelly He comes to fix the heaters when water runs on the floor. He should be President! Ruddy Coltman Mr. Mitchell picks us up if our driver forgets. Mary McCarthy He helps us every day. Sam Adams He has purple pants for Country Day! Tony Hirschtritt GOOD-BY AND GOOD LUCK TO : DOROTHY FOLTZ-GRAY ni PAT LUMRY RON ESKREIS MARY ELSON 1st Row - Barbara Modisett, Violet Dormondy, Leslie Hartz, R. R. Horn, Linda Lenthart, 2nd Row - Jean Talley, Nancy Stevens. John Dean, A. Donald, Robert Anderson, Wayne Logan, George Mitchell F FACULTY C U L T Y „ v LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY 1st Row - Elizabeth Hunt, Kathleen Collingbourne, Carol Warkentien. 2nd Row - Mar- ian Holmes, Helen Turley, Joanne Thorsen, Carol Abelmann, Jane Dalton, Adele Za- zove, Harriet Tracy, Janet Rogers, Martha Gruenberg. MIDDLE SCHOOL From left - Kathleen Collingbourne, Charlotte Mars, Lewis Davis, Beverly Arment, Jean Pettibone, Elizabeth Hunt, Madeliene Thomas, Mary Ann Jentel, Michael Tratner. - ■■■■■-■.-, .::.:. PP . ' ' ' ' ' « mtv l ,« |MHfi JOHN ALMQUIST MARTHA PROKOS CAROL RADLOFF VINCENT ALLISON 10 SHELDON ROSENBAUM MARTIN McCARTY SUSAN TREFNY JAY BACH 11 MARY ELSON ROGER SHIPLEY imf DOUGLAS DAY PATRICIA LUMRY 12 DORTHY FOLTZ JOHN INGRAM DOUGLAS MACDONALD 177 sr m -2? ■•■■-—• ,j  , f ' Ji : «!8.v; ' 4 ' ■£ touf ANNE AVERY H SIMONE VALVO WILLIAM FREISEM DIANE DORN TAMARA PRINCE ELIZABETH HILL 77 EILEEN DONOGHUE JOAN YOUNG DAVID OSBERG WAYNE SCHRODERUS FRANK LOENNIG nil MICHAEL TRATNER Ill 17 s T U D E N STUDENTS S 10 KINDERGARTEN Seated in wagon - G. Glockner, T. Higgenbothem, C. Avery, E. Johner. Seated around table- J Griffin T Kelly, J. Reinsdorf, B. Rees, V. Toyooka, K. Spector, R. Caplan. Stand- ing - A Kogut, E. Segal, M. Herzog, L. Reagan, Mr. Eskreis, A. Vougas, J. Segal, E. Schnering B Bach, K. Levinger, J. Jacobson, Miss Gruenberg, S. London, Mrs. Turley, K. Liner, C. Griffin, J. Hutchison. Absent - N. Thompson, J. Thompson, F. Scott, M. White. What ' s your favorite toy? Alyssa Vougas a car Ari Kogut a train Billy Bach Big Jim Victoria Toyooka a puzzle Jock Thompson blocks John Griffin Billy Mary White a tricycle Jessica Segal a jump rope Kathryn Spector Frank Fritter Mark Herzog Spiderman Doll Jonathan Hutchison trains Eric Johner hamburgers Nina Thompson tile gluing Elizabeth Segal horses Terry Kelly G.I. Joe Chris Avery Super Friends J. B. Reinsdorf sports cars Freddy Scott stuffed animals Joel Jacobson talking G.I. Joe Laurie Reagan making numbers on the chalk board Katherine Liner teddy bear Christine Griffin Christy the doll Rachel Caplan chickens Gregory Glockner Leggo Timothy Higginbothem two diggers Kristin Levinger Barbie Camper 20 l i ryfci m% ' % l ' ' ' -tLty m ws if J %xas sj ' ( , ' JJ T.. H-ik li ■= „ — 7— s ' JL fc3 g S, a l s 1 i r 3 1 1| JT - ' ' }■- K. ft ' S ' i ■' ' ' 1st GRADE 1st Row - S. Geist, E. Toyooka, B. Ferdinand. 2nd Row - J. Rosen, B. Peters, R. Cap- Ian, S. Seidman. 3rd Row - S. Adams. 4th Row - A. Flindt, H. Loennig, S. Kelly, M. Bransfield, A. Hirschtritt. 5th Row - R. Coltman, G. Gehrs. Absent - J. Gordon, M. McCarthy. What do you want to be when you grow up? Roxanne Caplan an artist Allegra Flindt Mom ' s secretary Sara Geist a dancer Janet Gordon a teacher Helen Loennig a doctor Sandy Seidman a nurse Elizabeth Toyooka work with Allegra Samual Adams a housebuilder Mark Bransfield a cowboy Ben Ferdinand a gas station attendant Tony Hirschtritt a football player Binky Gehrs a scientist Sean Kelly a policeman Bruce Peters a five star general 2: 2nd GRADE 1st Row - A. Fisher, Wigglesworth the Rabbit. 2nd Row - Mrs. Holmes, W. Hayes, E. Almquist, F. Dau, E. Weissbluth, J. Jentel, M. Cancellier. 3rd Row - L. Frankenthal, T. Bach, J. Murphy, A. Viswanathan, A. Dean. 4th Row - K. O ' Malley, S. Griffin, M. Seymour. Absent - J. Scott, M. Atwater. What is your favorite T.V. show? Erik Almquist Bj  tman AnnDean Zoom Michelle Atwater Bugs Bunny Jimmy Murphy Land of the J- 08 ' Mary Symore Gilligan ' s Island Aditi Viswanathan A PP les Wa V Fernanda Dau Bannana Splits Shannon Griffin Little House on the Praine Wifit Hayes Gilligan ' s Island Jaques Jentel Charlie Brown Special Tracy Bach Ra Y Ra y ner Michel Cancellier Bugs Bunny Elliot Weissbluth Zoom Jackie Scott Emergency Katie O ' Malley Gilligan ' s Island Lindy Frankenthal I Dream of Jeannie AdamFisher Batman 24 3rd GRADE 1st Row - B. Griffin, J. Houghton, J. Wineman, J. Reichman, E. Fallarme, T. Sotorn, S. Frazier, M. Goldsmith, K. Lipman, D. Rosenbaum. 2nd Row - C. Levinger, G. Spore, J. Theiss, R. Greene, C. Foreman, K. Ferdman, J. Hendershot, J. Schnering, B. Peter- son. What would you do if you had a million dollars? Kenny Ferdman buy food (not Twinkies) Jamie Schnering I ' d go around the world Chris Foreman buy doggies Bret Peterson keep it Richard Greene give it to my family Marc Goldsmith spend it on a limosine Greg Spore put it in the bank and spend a little Scott Frazier buy T.V. ' s and a mansion Keith Lipman buy a crusier, join the navy John Hendershot buy a race track David Rosenbaum start a new life Jennifer Houghton go all over the world Elizabeth Fallarme buy all the candy in the world Jill Reichman buy a Jauar and drive around the world Nina Sotern buy all the books I wanted Jill Wineman a million Highlights Billy Griffin buy a farm Carl Levinger buy the Statue of Liberty John Theiss buy a castle 25 -: ■% ' ■. : 26 27 1XT - 4th GRADE 1st row - C. Kullberg, L. Hirschtritt, A. Wirtz. 2nd row - M. Higgins, S. Soderblum, P. Ferdinand, J. Frankenthal, O. Mullady, Mrs. Zazove, P. Jentel, D. Kozlov, R. Sny- der, E. Lunding, M. Bransfield, R. Gordon. 3rd row - T. Kelly, J. Wineman, C. Char- nas, J. Schwarz. Absent - S. Friend. Who is your hero? Jon Schwarz me Reed Snyder Evil Knievel Tim Kelly Spiderman Scott Friend Larry Czonka Jeff Wineman Snoopy Laura Hirschtritt Daddy Caroline Kullberg my uncle Pam Ferdinand Judy Garland O ' Hare Mullady Nosy Mike Bransfield Cleopatra Robert Gordon Mayor McCheese Eric Lunding Larson (my dog) Siri Soderblum George Shering Jenny Frankenthal Robin Hood David Kozlov Mr. Benson Chris Charnas Jim Hart Allison Wirtz Dice Girl Maura Higgins Porky Pig 28 5th GRADE Kneeling - M. Bransfield, L. Osberg. 1st row - M. Shore, L. Bartell, M. Goldin, D. Lamensdorf, M. Melhus, S. Faurot. 2nd row - H. Gordon, S. Rosenbaum, J. Stone, L. Handelman, Miss Collingbourne. In tree - P. Clemis, M. Peters, L. Gigante. What do you look forward to in Middle School? Mike Goldin . . art, music, lunch, and all that stuff Marjie Bransfield .... another year with Miss Collingbourne Suzanne Faurot getting older Lauren Handelman more opportunities Laurie Osberg recess in the morning Mark Shore art and gym Martin Melius Little League Jennifer Stone getting new teachers Marc Peters playing quarterback David Lamensdorf . . . more advanced courses Sharon Rosenbaum music with Daddy Lisa Gigante I don ' t look forward to it, but, homework Perry Clemis floor hockey Howard Gordon .... going to another school 29 30 31 r fi ... - ;■;■G :i-- m.,-4 %J fK ' Jh . ' -? r :SZ ' ;. M t . w?. aHsKi Sfc «; ' 6th GRADE from back left - L. Tolan, N. Kogan, S. Kogan, R. Appel, P. Scott, K. Nedzel, L. Levy, S Lewis J Fuller, J. Louis, L. Harwich, R. Marx, W. Penner, G. Smith, T. Meek, B. Viswanathan, K. Furrer, M. Kotler, J. Weinbrenner, S. Almquist, J. Peters, K. Nielsen, W. Friend, L. Peller, E. Mackevich. Absent - K. Dolkart, D. Hines, E. Kogut, R. Kap- lan, H. Schack. 32 7th GRADE 1st Row - B. Raffaldini, M. D. Smith, C. Cain, D. Reinsdorf, N. Petersen, C. Tolan, M. Peebles. 2nd Row - J. Cain, J. Foreman, L. Sievers, J. Franke, J. B. Bossart, M. Roe- nisch, M. Bransfield, M. Elisha, J. Server, J. Ablemann, M. Weisenberg. 3rd Row - H. Fuller, J. Saks, S. Snyder, M. Perman, C. Spore, E. Schwarz, A. Handelman, P. Kar- min, A. Van Doren, T. Wright, S. Hem phill. Absent - T. Farmer, M. Feinstein. 33 I ; 1 1 1 I 1 1 i 1 k ' JI 34 35 V 8th GRADE 1st Row - S. Banhalmi, P. Friend, A. Goldmann, A. VanHooser, J. Springer, M. Kraft, A. McNear, N. Sotern, M. Harland, J. DeLong, B. Furrer, T. Stratton, J. Raffaldini, J. Ramseur, P. Wirtz, B. Higgins, J. Harza, K. Hurwith. 2nd Row - M. Kullberg, K. Holmes, L. Stone, K. Osberg, M. Lewis, C. Roenisch, A. MacLeod. Absent - P. Vick, M. Berman, K. Karmin, M. Mages. 36 37 39 9th GRADE 1st row - M. Magel, J. Hurwith, R. J. Damon, M. Thorsen, R. Wineberg, D. Fein- stein, G. Nevitt, J. Nedzel, B. Sklare, J. Green, L. Wright, G. Rogers, C. Cuncannan, L. Press. 2nd row - J. Keim, B. Pinsof, P. Theiss, P. Tower, S. Schwinn, S. Hitchcock, D. Makevich, B. Weisenberg, J. Kraft, T. Hatchett, A. Huiner, A. Seidenberg, S. Cooper, A. Walker, C. Rocca. Absent - J. Collomb, L. Tolan, J. Brundage, J. Matsou- kas, T. Parker, S. Timmins. 40 41 i 4i z t r « a I 10th GRADE 1st row - J. Soffer, C. Colbert, T. Deans-Barrett, B. Anderson, P. Gibson, S. Patton, B. Elisha, C. Schnering, J. Tolan, D. Sahlin. 2nd row - A. VanHooser, A. Siewers, J. Wilking, D. Roenisch, J. Feinstein, S. Bransfield, D. Deuble, F. Dammann, J. Berliss, J. Alexander, C. Smutny, J. Strauss. 3rd row - S. Spencer, M. Budwig, B. Peters, M. Lip- man, C. Macdonald, M. Kraft, M. Wells, K. Franke, N. Smith, L. Stone. Absent - A. Dalmar, A. Hines, K. Lewis, A. Newenhouse, R. Wittlin, L. Yee, R. Balderas, P. Kogut, D. Nedzel, D. Pritzker, M. Sargis, B. Thompson, S. Walter. 42 msr r r. ., ■SUP 44 m irsMfrw I ' Ati WVtfjamL v r z z . 11th GRADE 1st Row - S. Lazar, L. Ruwitch, N. Gottlieb, G. Lynde, B. Weiss, K. Kurrus, L. Eisner, K. Button, B. Bruemmer, J. Figg, P. Marienthal. 2nd Row - J. Parker, S. West, A. Brown, J. Hunter, R. Lipsky, N. Beisel, N. Castle, G. Jessen, S. Marshall, T. Loeff, S. Ames, J. Deuble, J. Smothers, M. Smerling, C. Esposito, K. Wirtz, K. Spencer. 3rd Row - T. Blumberg, J. Thomas, L. Hunt, T. Freisem, D. Steinschneider, P. Flanzer, C. O ' Connor, Y. Newenhouse, E. Weisenberg, J. Farmer, M. Mandeltort, F. White, P. Silberman, D. Meyer. 4th Row - W. Kaplan, S. Feinstein, J. McNear, S. Perkins. Absent - N. Balugo, L. Braan, M. Gerlits, M. Holmes, T. Jude, D. Carroll, K. Jaicks, V. James, C. Rosenburg, P. Thorsen. 45 46 s SENIORS N I O ■R S 47 THOMAS HENRY ABELMANN They that can give up essential Liberty to obtain a little temporary Safety de- serve neither Liberty nor Safety. Benjamin Franklin The great secret of success in life is to be ready when opportunity comes. Desraeli I do not know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know: the only ones among who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve. Albert Schweitzer Life is no brief candle for me. It is a sort of splendid torch which I have got hold of for a moment and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing it on to future generations. George Bernard Shaw i DAVID CRAIG BERNSTEIN Now, if 6 turned out to be 9 I don ' t mind, I don ' t mind Alright, if all the hippies cut off all their hair I don ' t care, I don ' t care Dig, ' cause I got all my own world To live through And I ain ' t gonna copy you White-collared conservative flashing down the street Pointing their plastic finger at me They ' re hoping soon that my kind will drop and die But I ' m gonna wave my Freak Flag high, high Wave on, Wave on Go ahead Mr. Businessman, you can ' t dress like me I ' m the one that ' s gotta die when it ' s time for me to die So, let me live my life the way I want to Sing on, brother, play on, drummer Jimi Hendrix Ideas came into my mind quite unrelated to graphic art, notions that so fascinated me that I longed to communicate them to other people. This could not be achieved through words, for these thoughts were not literary ones, but mental images of a kind that can only be made incomprehensible to others by presenting them as visual images. M. C. Escher . . . and as we wind on down the road, Our shadows taller than our soul, There walks a lady we all know, Who shines white light and wants to show, How everything still turns to gold, And if you listen very hard, The time will come to you at last, When all are one and one is all, To be a rock and not to roll. And she ' s buying a stairway to Heaven. Led Zepplin MICHAEL LAWRENCE BIRD 50 PHILIP BOAL The secret of living is to own a convertible and a lake. If the sun is shining, you can ride around in your conver- tible and be happy. It is starts to rain, it won ' t spoil your day because you can just say, Oh well, the rain will fill up my lake. If your lake is drying up, you can say, Oh well, this is nice weather for riding in a con- vertible. Charlie Brown There ' s a feeling I get When I look to the West And my spirit is crying for leaving In my thoughts I have seen rings of smoke Through the trees And the voices of those who stand looking And it ' s wispered that soon if we all Call the tone Then the piper will lead us to reason And a new day will dawn for those Who stand long And the forests will echo with laughter. Led Zepplin ELIZABETH ADAMS BREUER Behold this dreamer cometh . . . Genesis Man doesn ' t really exist unless he ' s fighting against his own limits from Bread Wine Ignazio Silone DONNA ILEEN BUDDINGTON One of the best paying professions is getting ahold of pieces of country in your mind, learn- ing their smell and their moods, sorting out the pieces of a view, deciding what grows there and there and why, how many steps that hill will take, where this creek winds and where it meets the other one below, what elevation timber line is now, whether you can walk this reef at low tide or have to climb around, which con- tour lines on a map mean better cliffs or moun- tains, this is the best kind of ownership and the most permanent. It feels good to say ' I know the Moose Basin ' , but of course you don ' t — what you know better is yourself, and the Grand Tetons and Moose Basin have helped. A! Elbereth Gilthoniel! silivren penna miriel o menel aglar elenath, Gilthoniel A! Elbereth. Tolkien :%? BARBARA CLAIRE CALLIHAN Wednesday morning at five o ' clock as the day begins Silently closing her bedroom door Leaving the note that she hoped would say more She goes downstairs to the kitchen clutching her handkerchief Quietly turning the back door key Stepping outside -She is free— SHE ( We gave her most of our lives ) IS LEAVING ( Sacrificed most of our lives ) HOME ( We gave her everything money could buy. ) She ' s leaving home after living alone for so many years. BYE BYE Father snores as his wife gets into her dressing gown Picks up the letter that ' s lying there Standing alone at the top of the stairs She breaks down and cries to her husband Daddy our baby ' s gone! Why should she treat us so thoughtlessly? How could she do this to me? SHE ( We never thought of ourselves ) IS LEAVING ( Never a thought for ourselves ) HOME ( We struggled hard all our lives to get by ) She ' s leaving home after living alone for so many years. BYE BYE Friday morning at nine o ' clock she is far away Waiting to keep the appointment she made Meeting a man from the moter trade SHE ( What did we do that was wrong? ) IS LEAVING ( We didn ' t know it was wrong. ) HOME Fun is the one thing that money can ' t buy. Something inside that was always denied for so many years. BYE BYE SHE ' S LEAVING HOME BYE BYE The Beatles HELENMARY CHARNAS All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost, The old that is strong does not whither Deep roots are not reached by the frost. J. R. R. Tolkien The man who fears no truths has nothing to fear from lies. Thomas Jefferson The woods are lovely dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep. Robert Frost Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has passed to a new genera- tion of Americans. John F. Kennedy Linus on Hidden Ability Everyone ' s upset because I didn ' t make the honor role . . . My mother ' s upset, my father ' s upset, my teacher ' s upset, the principle ' s upset . . . Good grief! They all say the same thing . . . they ' re disappointed because I have such potential . . . THER ' S NO HEVIER BURDEN THAN A GREAT POTENTIAL! Schultz When old dreams die, new ones come to take their place. God pity a one- dream man. Robert Goddard The heart hath its reasons, which the reason knows not of. Blaise Pascal JULIA FOSTER CORBETT Do not be embarrased to learn things you do not know. Do not blush at what you must be taught . . . rather blush if you are ignorant and not willing to learn. Tobriner Snum The highest and happiest of all things is for one to love, even though one is unloved; but most joyful of all is, while loving, to be oneself loved entirely. Tobriner Snum No treasure is more certain than sure friendship. Tobriner Snum ... in the inevitable inquest that followed, it was found by questionable means that our hero, a man of disputable substance, characterized by a smile on the sly as it wee, left us with a message classically opaque, but covertly to the point. It said: Dear Raul, I have died an amazingly silent death after being assassinated by a volatile young parasite, claiming innocence due to a somewhat nefar- ious affair of heart I was accused of perpetuating with a mutual loved one. I can ' t remember the name of my assailant or the color of his teeth (he did sport an energetic looking arm-band with matching socks). After my initial shock, my tormentor supplied me with an amiable pa- dre who was very generous, contributing to my silent passage with tan- gible, worldly relief. Before I go, I want to apologize for this burglary. You ' ll understand . . . PAUL G. Del GRECO RICHARD FREDERICK De LONG Searchin ' Walkin ' home from school Teachers bitchin ' ! Really bitchin ' ! Some done Really screwed Home from school Mother nippin ' Brother trippin ' All itchin ' Searchin ' for the peace Really miss my niece Thinkin ' movin ' East Really miss my peace Richard De Long CLARK C. ELLIOTT 1 WILLIAM LEWIS FREDERCK And now the end is near and I face the final curtain. My friend I ' ll say it clear, I ' ll state my case of which I ' m certain. I lived a life that ' s full, I ' ve traveled each and every high- way, And more, much more than this, I did it my way. Yes, there were times I ' m sure you knew, when I bit off more than I could chew. But through it all, when there was doubt, I ate it up and spit it out. I faced it all, and I stood tall and did it my way For what is a man, what has he got if not himself. Then he has to say things he truly feels And not the words of one who kneels. The record shows, I took the blows, and did it my way. Gilles Thibault JAY FREEMAN I MYLA JANET FROHMAN Only when a juggler misses catching his ball does he appeal to me. Kahil Gibran ooftS CLIFFORD GERARD GATELY SONS Most men, even in this comparatively free country, through mere ignorance and mistake, are so occupied with the factitious cares and superfluously coarse labors at life, that its finer fruits cannot be plucked by them. Henry David Thoreau To each his own. !fff Power unanointed may come - Dominion (unsought by the free) And the Iron Dome Stronger for stress and strain, Fling her huge shadow athwart the main; But the Founders dream shall flee. Herman Melville Gaily bedight, A gallant knight, In sunshine and in shadow, Had journeyed long, Singing a song, In search of Eldorado. But he grew old - This knight so bold - And o ' er his heart a shadow, Fell as he found No spot of ground That looked like Eldorado. And, as his strength, Failed him at length , He met a pilgrim shadow - Shadow, said he, Where can it be - This land of Eldorado? Over the mountains Of the moon, Down the Valley of the Shadow, Ride, boldly ride, The shade replied, If you seek for Eldorado. Edgar Allen Poe Woman is defective and accidental . . . a male gone awry ... a result of some weakness in the (father ' s) generative power ... St. Thomas Aquinas BRUCE KAY GOODMAN, Jr. The Life of every individual, surveyed as a whole, is a tragedy. A. Schapenhauer WENDY ELAINE GRIGGS Young love-making, that gossamer web! Even the points it clings to — the things whence its subtle inter- lacings are scarcely perceptible: momentary touches of finger-tips, meetings of rays from blue and dark orbs, unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and lip, faintest tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and indefinable joys, yearnings of one life toward another, visions of completeness, indefinite trust. George Eliot As a navigator might say, I steer my vessel without fear for my faith is strong and experi- ence too vast to be engulfed by the threatening waves. Wendy Griggs The problem of education is two- fold: first to know, and then to utter. Everyone who lives any semblance of an inner life thinks more nobly and profoundly than he speaks. R. L. Stevenson LAWSON W. HILL 66 ERNEST B. HOB ART A man who lives from a why can handle any how, but he who knows how, and not why, cannot even live as a man. Nietzsche It is better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a pig satisfied. John Stuart Mill S J When a man starts to learn, he is never clear about his objectives. His purpose is faulty his intent is vague. He hopes for rewards that will never materialize, for he knows nothing of the hardships of learn- ing. He slowly begins to learn bit by bit at first, then in big chunks. And his thoughts soon dash. What he learns is never what he pictured, or imagined, and so he begins to be afraid. Learning is never what one expects. Every step of learning is a new task, and the fear that man is experiencing begins to mount mercilessly, unyielding. His purpose be- comes a battlefield. What will happen to man if he runs away in fear? Nothing happens to him except that he will never learn. He will never become a man of knowledge. He will perhaps be a bully, or a harmless, scared man; at any rate, he will have put an end to his crav- ings. Carlos Castaneda The Teachings of Don Juan v ' v .  S ' 4i MARY GRISWOLD HUNT CHARLES HOWARD INGRAM The deepest feeling always shows itself in silence. Anonymous Never neglect friendship where it is offered, for there will be a time when that friendship will be needed. Charlie Ingram Perhaps, Please Irving You will find, as you look back upon your life, that the moments that stand out are the moments when you have done things for others . . . Anonymous That ' s nice, when a five year old comes in off the hill in the morning, before the sun has burned away the mist, and she ' s carrying a jagged fistful of Orange Poppies . . . And all the walk her own idea. And all the poppies a gift for you. Joan Baez MARY VICTORIA JOYCE A friend is someone who knows every- thing about you, And loves you just the same. unknown You may forget the one with whom you laughed, but you ' ll never forget the one with whom you cried Gibran Thanks for the thirteen years! ME And even suffering and grieving is better than nothing; there is only one thing worse than not being alive, and that ' s shame. But you can be alive forever, and you always wear out life long before you have exausted the possibilities of living. Go Down Moses William Faulkner MATTHEW STEVEN KAPLAN 71 THEODORE ROOSEVELT KILGORE III Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit, and lost without deserv- ing. Shakespeare Othello Act II Scene 3 If man wants to purge his soul from vileness, cling forever to his ancient Mother Earth. Dostoyevsky JANE ANDREWS KNOWLTON and the seasons they go round and round and the painted ponies go up and down We ' re captive on a carousel of time We can ' t return, we can only look behind from where we came and go round and round and round in the circle game. Joni Mitchell 73 GARY JOSEPH KOVACS And what will I say When they ask me of life? That I know A complete and fulfilling happiness, A love that will not surrender to songs of sorrow And A person who makes a life worth living. Jan Sikorski From DESIDERATA Go placidly amid the noise and haste and remem- ber what peace there may be in silence. As far as pos- sible without surrender be on good terms with all persons. Speak your truth quietly and clearly; and listen to others, even the dull and ignorant; they too have their story. LISA DAWN LIPTON Nothing on earth could be so fine As a loaf of bread, a jug of wine, And a wallabee full of granola. The lunatic, the lover, and the poet Are of the imagination all compact. Theseus A Midsummer Nights Dream The Lost Feed Seven actresses, impersonating hens and chickens, should, while retaining their human modesty and dignity, act out in as chicken-like a way as possible the drama of the lost feed. The feed for the day is missing. None of the hens or chickens present is responsible for the absence of the feed, but each one suspects that some one of the others on-stage may be the culprit. Whatever the hens and chickens do, they sould make no strictly personal remarks when they accuse one another. Their accusations should be rather flat and rather general, accusations which could be leveled at just about anybody about any- thing. Chicken life is not thought to be very dif- ferentiated. After the chickens and hens have been argu- ing for a long time, the feed should be brought in and given to them. If you know someone well you know when to pressure him, you know when to punish him, you know when to comfort him, and you know when to leave him alone. So if you know your- self well you will treat yourself the same. Live up to your best. Do not distress yourself. Be yourself. Be careful. Have faith. Love. Strive to be happy. Go humbly forward with confidence. Be human. Live. After 14 years at North Shore I have so much to look backward to with pride and a lot to look forward to with hope. Thanks! KIMBERLY CAROLYN LOUIS Prepare thee for eternity, and do not make delay, extreme thy precious time, which passes so swift away. TRACY VERNON MAYNARD NANCY HAWES MINER For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain. Philippians 1:21 But whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the sur- passing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish in order that I may gain Christ, and may be found in Him, not having a righ- teousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes from God on basis of faith. that I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings, being conformed to his death; in order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained it, or have already become per- fect, but I press on in order that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus. Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead. I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus Philippians 3:7-14 Each second we live in a new and unique moment of the universe, a moment that never was before and will never be again. And what do we teach our children in school? We teach them that two and two make four, and that Paris is the capital of France. When will we also teach them what they are? We should say to each of them: Do you know what you are? You a re a marvel. You are unique. In all of the world there is no other child exactly like you. In the millions of years that have passed there has never been another child like you. And look at your body - what a wonder it is! Your legs, your arms, your cunning fingers, the way you move! You may become a Shakespeare, a Michelangelo, a Beethoven. You have the capacity for anything. Yes, you are a marvel. And when you grow up you must cherish one another. You must work - we all must work - to make this world worthy of the Children. Pablo Casals JOSHUA PINCHAS PAUL 79 SHALA KAYE PRICE Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not high- minded nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God; who giveth us richly all things to enjoy; that they do good; that they be rich in good works, ready to distribute, wiUing to communicate; laying up in store for themselves a good foun- dati ° n ■' • 1 Timothy 17, 18, 19 If you love someone very much, set them free. If they return, they ' re yours. If not, they never were. Marnie -. z s 80 PAMELA LANE RAHMANN Prayer of the Vision Seeker Grandfather, great mysterious one! You have been always and before you nothing has been. There is no- thing to pray to but you. The stars all over the heavens are yours and yours are the mountains and the grass- es of the earth. You are older than all need, older than all pain and prayer. Day in, day out, you are the life of things. Grandfather, all over the world the faces of living ones are alike in tenderness for they come up out of the ground and look to thee. The mysterious one looks upon thy children that they may face the world and walk the good road to the day quiet. Teach me to walk the soft earth, a relative to all that live. American Indian Prayer JOHN BOYD RODGERS III Nippon CLAUDIA SYBILLA SCHIMERT A Picture is not thought out or settled beforehand while it is being done, it changes as ones thoughts change. And when it is furnished, it still goes on changing, according to the state of mind of who- ever is looking at it. Pable Picasso One may admire a painting; one visits with a statue. A paint- ing — being flat — can be viewed only from the front and makes a singular, though not necessarily simple impression. By con- trast, a sculpture must be surveyed in the round. It invites touch; it changes with the light and with the angle of view. It begs to be discovered. Paul Eluard ,. ' jJS 0$, • •- ' ' _■' . w. • ' Mf ;   . ' was . ' - - V I I ' ve never really done anything to create what has hap- pened. It creates itself. I ' m here because it happened. But I didn ' t do anything to make it happen apart from saying ' Yes ' . Ringo The moment passes. Yet, how many realize they will never behold it again? The time you love, laugh, or pass in sorrow, will never be repeated. To some this is good, to me it is not. D.S. I . DEBRA LYNN SERVER ' Imagine all the people, Living for today . . . John Lennon STEPHEN ANDREW SOLOVY If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter; for al- ways there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself. Desiderata Souviens-toi que le Temps est joueur avide Qui gagne sans tricher, a tout coup! C ' est la loi. ' L ' Horloge ' Charles Baudelaire I left my happy home to see what I could find out. I left my folk and friends with the aim to clear my mind out. Well I hit the rowdy road, and many kinds I met there. So on and on I go, the seconds tick the time out, There ' s so much left to know, and I ' m on the road to find out. Well in the end I ' ll know, but on the way I ' ll wonder, Through descending snow, and through the frost and thunder. I listen to the wind come howl, telling me I have to hurry. I listen to the robin ' s song saying not to worry. So on and on I go, the seconds tick the time out, There ' s so much left to know, and I ' m on the road to find out. Cat Stevens And it ' s wispered that soon if we all call the tune, Then the piper will lead us to reason. And a new say will dawn for those who stand long And the forests will echo with laughter. Led Zeppelin ELIZABETH ANN SPRINGER And let today embrace the past with remembrance and the future with longing. Gibran IF If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you, If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make allowance for their doubting too ' If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, Or being lied about, don ' t deal in lies, Or being hated don ' t give way to being hating, And yet don ' t look to good, nor talk too wise. If you can dream — and not make dreams your master; If you can think — and not make thoughts your aim, If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two imposters just the same; If you can bear to hear the truth you ' ve spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap of fools, Or watch the things you gave life to, broken, And stoop and build ' em up with worn-out tools. If you can make one heap of all your winnings; And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss, And lose, and start again at your beginnings And never breathe a word of your loss; If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew To serve your turn long after they are gone And so hold on where there is nothing in you Except the Will which say ' s to them: Hold on! If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with Kings— nor lose the common touch, If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you, If all men count with you, but none too much; If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds ' worth of distance run, Yours is the Earth and everything that ' s in it, And — which is more — you ' ll be a Man, my son! Rudyard Kipling KAREN BETH STONE Partir, c ' est mourir un peu. The Road Not Taken Two roads diverge - in a yellow wood And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the undergrowth Then took the other, as just as fair And having perhaps the better claim, Because it was grassy and wanted wear; Though as for that the passing there Had worn them about the same, And both that morning equally lay In leaves no step had trodden black. Oh, I kept the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back. MARJORIE JANE STRONG I shall be telling this tale with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I I took the road less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. Robert Frost RANDOLPH TRUMBULL Knowledge can be communicated, but not wisdom. One can find it, live it, be fortified by it, do wonders through it, but one cannot communicate and teach it. Herman Hesse MILES TICHENOR WHITE Old man sitting by the side of the road, with the lories rolling by Blue moon sinking from the weight of the load And the buildings scrape the sky Cold wind ripping down the ally at dawn and the morning paper flies Dead man lying by the side of the road with the daylight in his eyes . . . Blind man running thru the light of the night With an answer in his hand Come on down to the river of sight And you can really understand Red lights flashing thru the window in the rain Can you hear the sirens moan? White cane lying in the gutter in the lane if your walking home alone Don ' t let it bring you down. Niel Young MARK ANDREW WOLLAEGER How can you be in two places at once, when you ' re not anywhere at all. F.T. We build models of the past and then use them spatiologically to reify and measure Time. Let us take a familiar example. Zembre, a quaint old town on the Minder River, near Soriere, in the Valais, was being lost by degrees among new buildings. By the beginning of the century it had acquired a definitely modern look, and the preservation people decided to act. Today, after years of subtle reconstruction, a replica of the old Zembre, with its castle, its church, and its mill extrapolated on- to the other side of the Minder, stands opposite the modernized town and separated from it by the length of a bridge. Now, if we replace the spatial view (as seen from a helicopter) by the chronal one (as seen by a retrospector), and the material model of old Zembre by the mental model of it in the Past (say, around 1822), the modern town and the model of the old turn out to be something else than two points in the same place at different times (in spatial perspective they are at the same time in different places). The space in which the modern town coagu- lates is immediately real, while that of its retrospective image (as seen apart from material restoration) Shimmers in an imaginary space and we cannot use any bridge to walk from one to the other. In other words (as one puts it when both writer and reader flounder at last in hope- less confusion of thought), by making a model of the old town in one ' s mind (and on the Minder) all we do is to spatialize it (or actually drag it out of its own element onto the shore of Space). Thus the term one century does not correspond in any sense to the hundred of feet of steel bridge between modern and model towns, and that is what we wished to prove and have now proven. Vladimir Nabokov Ada The Seniors have made the following College choices : Tom Abelmann Northwestern University David Bernstein Not attending Mike Bird Hobart Philip Boal Ohio University Liz Breuer Connecticut College (Jan. Donna Buddington Kirkland Barbara Callihan Vassar Helenmary Charnas Smith Julie Corbett Skidmore Paul del Greco Miami University (Ohio) Richard DeLong New England Clark Elliott New England Bill Frederick Macalester Jay Freeman Reed Myla Frohman Stephens Cliff Gately Evergreen State Bruce Goodman Pomona Wendy Griggs Northwestern University Lawson Hill University of Colorado Bud Hobart University of the Pacific Mary Hunt Ohio Wesleyan Charlie Ingram Denison Vicki Joyce Drake Matt Kaplan Carleton Ted Kilgore Amherst Drew Knowlton St. Lawrence Gary Kovacs Wabash Lisa Lipton Ithaca Kim Louis Sweet Briar Tracy Maynard Colby Sawyer (N.H.) Nancy Miner Yale Josh Paul Yale Shala Price Ohio University Pam Rahmann Stephens Chip Rodgers Northwestern University Claudia Schimert Undecided Debbie Server Vanderbilt Steve Solovy Brandeis Liz Springer Carleton Karen Stone Smith Marjorie Strong Vassar (76) Randy Trumbull Middlebury Miles White Hamilton Mark Wollaeger Stanford Lyntje Braam (Class of 76) University of Arkansas 92 KINDERGARTENERS TO SENIORS Clark Elliott, Tracy Maynard, Kim Louis, Philip Boal, Liz Breuer. 93 94 s p o R SPORTS S 95 FOOTBALL 1st Row - Bob Peters, Paul Theiss, Mark Magel, Mark Thorsen, Bruce Pinsof, Dan Deuble, Bob Elisha, R. J. Damon, Paul Kogut, Charlie Colbert, Dave Sahlin. 2nd Row - Peter Silberman, Dick Meyer, Peter Thorsen, Mark Wollaeger, Philip Boal, Jim Deuble, Charlie Ingram, Jeff McNear, Gary Kovacs, Mike Bird, Clint O ' Connor, Bruce Good- man, John Smothers, Philip Marienthal. SCORES North North North North North North North North Shore 26 Shore 29 Shore 41 Shore 20 Shore Shore 71 Shore 23 Shore 32 24 Roosevelt Northwestern Military Lake Forest 14 Glenwood 48 Morgan Park ' 16 Lake Forest ' 22 Morgan Park 22 La Lumiere ,v.:v . ' . -■' denotes championship playoff 96 ■tii ' j g W 97 . «U«. - 98 99 100 SOCCER 1st row - D. Roenisch, J. Parker, M. Smerling, T. Blumberg, T. Loeff, T. Freisem, C. Gately, G. Rogers, R. Balderas. 2nd row - V. James, T. Kilgore, P. Flanzer, A. Brown, J. McNear, T. Abelmann, B. Thompson, A. Siewers. No scores available 101 FIELD HOCKEY 1st Row - Lore Wright, Gabby Nevitt, Lynn Tolan, Helenmary Charnas, Liz Breuer, Shala Price, Mary Hunt. 2nd Row - Carol Cuncannon, Vickie Joyce, Gwen Jessen, Rob- in Lipsky, Betsy Bruemmer. 3rd Row — Caroline Schnering, Shelly Spencer, Sarah Pat- ton, Tracy Maynard, Pam Gibson, Karie Wirtz, Sue Bransfield. 4th Row - Sue Perkins, Kathy Button, Karen Spencer, Marjorie Strong, Nina Beisel. SCORES I i North North North North North North North North North North North North North Shore - 1 Shore - 3 Shore - 1 Shore - 1 Shore - Shore - 2 Shore - 1 Shore - 3 Shore - 3 Shore - 4 Shore - 5 Shore - 1 Shore - - U-High - Parker - Ferry Hall (forfeit) - Morgan Park 2-ULS 2 - Latin - U-High - Latin - Parker - Morgan Park - Ferry Hall l 0- St. Mary ' s 1 - USM denotes tournament 102 103 VARSITY BASKETBALL 1st Row - Dan Carroll, Jim Deueble, John Smothers, Peter Flanzer, Tom Friesem. 2nd Row - Clint O ' Conner, Charlie Ingram, Matt Kaplan, Mark Wollaeger, Clay Rosenberg, Peter Silberman, Matt Mandletort, Jay Bach. SCORES North Shore 59 Lake Forest 26 North Shore 40 Latin 49 North Shore 49 Francis Parker 65 North Shore 32 Glenwood 51 North Shore 63 Harvard St. George 57 North Shore 56 Morgan Park 58 North Shore 27 St. Michaels 69 North Shore 50 U-High 82 North Shore 64 Lake Forest 47 North Shore 52 Latin 50 North Shore 47 Francis Parker 69 North Shore 43 Glenwood 69 North Shore 63 Harvard St. George 57 North Shore 36 St. Michaels 84 North Shore 46 U-High 89 North Shore 41 Morgan Park 74 North Shore 39 De Sales Prep 65 North Shore 75 Roycemore 32 ' North Shore 52 Immaculate Conception 74 denotes IHSA Tournament 104 FROSH-SOPH BASKETBALL 1st Row - Paul Thiess, Jeff Tolan, Paul Kogut, R. J. Damon, Dan Deuble, Mac Mac- Carty. 2nd Row - Dave Roenisch, Mark Magel, Bruce Pinsoff, Bob Peters, John Strauss, Charley Colbert. SCORES North Shore 54 Lake Forest 29 North Shore 26 Latin 34 North Shore 41 Francis Parker 44 North Shore 39 Glenwood 31 North Shore 45 Harvard St. George 47 North Shore 39 Morgan Park 51 North Shore 54 St. Michaels 52 North Shore 50 U-High 62 North Shore 53 Lake Forest 32 North Shore 36 Latin 21 North Shore 52 Francis Parker 50 North Shore 44 Glenwood 49 North Shore 56 Harvard St. George 55 North Shore 52 St. Michaels 56 North Shore 51 U-High 70 North Shore 56 Morgan Park 61 North Shore 32 De Sales Prep 59 North Shore 56 Roycemore 26 North Shore 55 Midwest Prep 26 105 107 VARSITY CHEERLEADING 1st Row - Helenmary Charnas, Liz Eisner. 2nd Row - Nina Beisel, Shala Price. 3rd Row - Betsy Bruemmer, Karen Spencer. 108 FROSH-SOPH CHEERLEADING Lyn Tolan, Carol Cuncannan, Joan Kraft, Caroline Schnering, Lori Wright. 109 VARSITY GIRL ' S BASKETBALL 1st Row - Karen Spencer, Kathy Button. 2nd Row - Pam Rahmann, Liz Breuer, Betsy Bruem- mer, Karey Wirtz, Sue Perkins, Sue Bransfield, Helenmary Charnas, Sue Trefny. SCORES North Shore 72 North Shore 52 North Shore 33 North Shore 54 North Shore 61 North Shore 64 North Shore 35 North Shore 51 North Shore 26 North Shore 86 North Shore 65 North Shore 35 North Shore 80 North Shore 46 25 Ferry Hall 32 Latin 31 Francais Parker 29 Morgan Park 23 Harvard St. George 23 Morgan Park 12 Harvard St. George 18 U-High 12 U-High 6 Ferry Hall 30 Latin 28 Francais Parker 25 Roycemore 28 ULS denotes practice games 110 J.V. GIRL ' S BASKETBALL 1st Row - Lori Wright, Sue Trefny, Katherine Franke, Kathy Louis, Lyn Tolan. 2nd Row - Buffi Weisenberg, Anita Dalmar, Carol Cuncannan, Shelley Spencer, Nancy Smith. Record North North North North North North North North North North Shore 30 Shore 44 Shore 36 Shore 25 Shore 13 Shore 35 Shore 30 Shore 26 Shore 18 Shore 28 20 Ferry Hall 5 Latin 9 Francis Parker 11 Morgan Park 4 Morgan Park 9 U-High 12 U-High 4 Latin 4 Francis Parker 6 Ferry Hall 111 . JQfc L ■J i 112 1 ■i 113 VARSITY VOLLEYBALL 1st Row - Nan Castle, Nancy Gottlieb, Shala Price, Pam Rahmann. 2nd Row - Tracy Maynard, Kathy Button, Karen Spencer, Liz Breuer, Kim Kurrus, Mary Elson. RECORD Won 1 Lost 9 114 J.V. VOLLEYBALL 1st Row - Carol Cuncannan, Lyn Tolan, Shelley Spencer. 2nd Row - Anita Dal- mar, Cammy Macdonald, Anne Seidenberg, Caroline Schnering, Mary Elson. RECORD Won Lost 10 115 VARSITY GIRL ' S TENNIS 1st Row - Carol Cuncannan, Gwen Jessen, Julie Corbett. 2nd Row - Sue Per- kins, Kathy Button, Liz Breuer, Tracy Maynard. RECORD Won 5 Lost 2 117 ■9 1 SS Jki Hr fm V ?K dp «1 ?$M  Sfe VARSITY BASEBALL 1st Row - Paul Theiss, Randy Trumbull, Clay Rosenberg, Stuart Ames, R. J. Damon, Bob Elisha, Jeff Tolan. 2nd Row - Mac, Jim Deuble, Peter Silberman, Charlie Ingram, John SmoTReTs, Bob Weiss, Philip Boal, Gary Kovacs, Jay Bach. Record North Shore 9 2 Latin North Shore 12 Morgan Park North Shore 5 8 Francis Parker North Shore 4 3 Lake Forest North Shore 8 4 St. Michaels North Shore 14 3 U-High North Shore 23 Latin North Shore 8 2 Harvard St. George North Shore 1 2 Harvard St. George North Shore 1 10 Loyola North Shore 1 4 Francis Parker North Shore 12 Lake Forest North Shore 3 4 Morgan Park North Shore 15 5 St. Michaels North Shore 3 1 U-High denotes State Championship Playoff 118 assa ' 120 VARSITY TENNIS 1st Row - Dan Carroll, Peter Flanzer, Clark Elliott, Peter Thorsen. 2nd Row John Strauss, Mark Thorsen, Francis Stanton, Frank White, David Roenisch. Record Won Lost 4 6 1st place - Independent School League Tournament 121 GOLF Matt Kaplan, Warren Kaplan, Bud Hobart, Elliot Weisenberg, Bruce Goodman. Record Won 4 Lost 4 122 A ACTIVITIES T I V I T I E S 123 SANGERBUND 1st Row - Mr. Rosenbaum, Mr. Allison. 2nd Row - Sue Marshall, Robin Lipsky, Bar- bara Callihan, Helenmary Charnas, Karen Stone, Julie Corbett, Myla Frohman. 3rd Row - Karen Spencer, Sue Perkins, Lauren Stone, Sarah Patton, Liz Ruwitch, Gwen Jessen, Nancy Smith. 4th Row - Philip Boal, Steve Walters, George Rogers, Jim Greene, Tom Loeff, Warren Kaplan, David Roenisch. 5th Row - Yan Newenhouse, Bruce Good- man, Charlie Ingram, R. J. Damon, Bud Hobart, Vernon James, Steve West. 124 CAMERATA Karen Spencer, Barbara Callihan, Nancy Miner, Susan Marshall, Susan Per- kins, Karen Stone, Warren Kaplan, Steve Walter, Mr. Allison. 125 IOLANTHE CAST Lord Chancellor Charlie Ingram Lord Mountararat Steve West, Ted Kilgore Lord Tolloller Vernon James Strephon Warren Kaplan Phillis Robin Lipsky, Barbara Callihan Iolanthe Karen Stone Queen of the Farries Karen Spencer, Susan Perkins Celia Julie Corbett, Helenmary Charnas Leila Susan Marshal, Kim Louis Fleta Nancy Gotlieb, Myla Frohman Private Willis Matt Kaplan, Bruce Goodman Train Bearer to the Lord Chancellor John Fuller (first name appeared Friday night) PRODUCTION STAFF Musical Direction Vincent B. Allison Stage Direction Carol Radloff Assistant Director Lauren Stone Design and Technical Direction Roger Shipley Production Coordinator Jane Alexander Assistant Coordinator Anita Dalmar Stage Manager Bill Fredrick Ticket Chairman Genie Lynde Assistant Ticket Chairman and House Manager Liz Ruwitch Lighting John Wilking, Jeff Tolan Stage Crew Lyn Tolan, Amy Van Hooser, Bill Thompson, Anne Walker, Carol Cuncannon Recording Steve Hitchcock Make-up Shelly Spencer, Nina Beisel Poster Committee Chairman Liz Breuer Poster Distribution Chairman Tony Blumberg Display Committee Chairman Al Siewers Telephone Committee Chairman Clint O ' Conner Refreshment Committee Chairmen Barbara Callihan, Helenmary Charnas 126 127 129 The Mischievous Machinations of Scapin Cast and Crew Octave Steve Solovy Silvester David Bernstein Scapin Dan Pritzker Hyacinth Cammy Macdonald Nina Beisel Argante Charlie Ingram Geronte David Sahlin Leandre Clint O ' Connor Carle Andy Brown Zerbinette Barbara Callihan Nerine Anita Dalmar Nancy Smith Two Porters Jeff McNear Tony Blumburg Director Carol Radloff Assistant Director Susan Perkins Technical Director Roger Shipley Assistant Tech. Director Bill Frederick 130 131 132 133 IN LIGHTS Willcommen Robin Lipsky and Bruce Goodman Magic Bruce Goodman and Lisa Levy Do-Re-Mi Susan Perkins, Sarah Geist, Tracy Bach, Jill Wineman, Laurie Osberg, Margie Bransfield, Laura Hirschtritt, Maura Higgins Hello Josh Parker and Steve West Majorette Debra Server In The Mood Barbara Callihan, Cammy Macdonald, Nancy Gottlieb, Susan Marshall Dinner For One Steve West and Luke Hunt Daisy, Daisy Barbara Raffaldini, Elizabeth Schwarz, Jane Saks, JoBeth Bossart, Margot Perman, Lucy Sievers Albonzo Brothers Nancy Gottlieb, Clint O ' Connor, Phil Boal Lida Rose Vin Allison, Jack Ingram, Warren Kaplan, Susan Marshall, Charlie Ingram Instrumental Josh Parker The Rope Rachel Wineberg and Anne Huiner Singin ' In The Rain Robin Lipsky, Susan Perkins, Karen Spencer Night of Nights Tony Blumberg, Andy Brown Three Bears Boogie Barbara Raffaldini, Elizabeth Schwarz, Hilary Fuller, Courtney Spore In The Park Clint O ' Connor, Nancy Gottlieb, Charlie Ingram Big Noise From Winnetka Betsy Hill, Susan Perkins The Dr ' s Office Tony Blumberg, Adam Bezark The Bus Stop Charlie Ingram, Nancy Gottlieb, Clint O ' Connor, Dan Carroll I Know a Youth Barbara Callihan, Bruce Goodman Friends Sarah Patton, Nancy Smith Tramp, Tramp, Tramp David Sahlin, Al Siewers, Derrick Nedzel, Mark Sargis, Roman Balderas Guest Lecture Tony Blumberg, Jim Hunter, Adam Bezark, Nancy Smith, Karen Spencer Lullaby of Broadway Myla Frohman, Barbara Callihan PRODUCTION STAFF Director Carol Radloff Technical Director R. A. Shipley Design R. A. Shipley Stage Manage Bill Frederick Assistant Stage Manager Jane Alexander Lighting Head — Lauren Stone Jeff Tolan Spots Head — John Wilking Lynn Tolan Steve Hitchcock Sound John Keim Props Bill Thompson Carol Cuncannan Anne Hines Curtain Mike Lipman Costumes Anita Dalmar, Cammy Macdonald Make-up Shelly Spencer, Anita Dalmar Vaudeville Committee Anita Dalmar, Lynn Tolan, Phil Boal, Carol Cuncannan, 234 Cammy Macdonald, David Sahlin w ,5 ' East of Eden by Christopher Morely Cast Cain Bill Thompson Wife Anne Huiner Adam Steve West Eve Anita Dalmar directed by Helenmary Charnas b H Bf _ ; L- i u | 1 l- ' i .vJ LI vum R 1 ■1 JB! WKam ■, y PBEe. • : ■_- 2T3HI 136 The Romancers by Edmond Rostand directed by Nina Beisel Cast Sylvette Susan Marshall Percinet Warren Kaplan Bergamin Andy Brown Pasquinot Tony Blumberg Straforel Yan Newenhouse Swordsman Jeff Tolan Musicians Cathy Rocca Rachel Wineberg Torchbearers Jim Green Scott Timmons directed by Liz Ruwitch I A Marriage Proposal by Anton Chekov Cast Stephan Stepanovich Choobookov . . . Charlie Ingram (read in preformance by David Bernstein) Natalia Stepanova Genie Lynde Ivan Vassilievich Lomov Dan Pritzker 137 [ P I v B WKf Mm B -.. - Q directed by Susan Perkins Here We Are by Dorothy Parker Cast He Clint O ' Connor She Cammy Macdonald Opening Night by John Cromwell Cast Fanny Ellis Robin Lipsky Hecky Karen Spencer Callboy Jim Green The Producer Jeff Tolan directed by Barbara Callihan 138 STAGE CREW John Keim, Roger Shipley. On scafold - 1st Row - Anne Hines, Lauren Stone, Amy Van Hooser, Jane Alexander. 2nd Row - Carol Cuncannan, Steve Hitch- cock, Bill Thompson, John Wilking, Mike Lipman, Jeff Tolan, Bill Fredrick. 139 to i § tettHNMi ' THE LUNCH CLUB 140 Mark Wollaeger, Barbara Callihan. LITERARY MAGAZINE PELICAN CLUB John Wilking, Mark Sargis, Diane Dorn, Jane Berliss, David Sahlin, Tamara Deans-Barrett, Alfred Siewers. 141 1st Row - Helenmary Charnas, Astrid Newenhouse, Pat Lumry, Bruce Goodman. 2nd Row - Philip Boal, Tony Blumberg, Matt Kaplan, Peter Flanzer, Warren Kaplan, Yan Newenhouse. MIRROR STAFF Helenmary Charnas, Editor; Pat Lumry, Advisor; Bruce Goodman, Editor. 142 M O R N I N G E X sr Madame Valvo, Barbara Callihan, Karen Stone. c o M M I T T E E 3rd Grade Movement Class Moby Dick 143 1st TERM Alfred Siewers, Student Chairman; Mark Sargis, At-Large-Student- Affairs-Committee Chairman; David Sahlin. STUDENT GOVERNMENT 2nd TERM Matt Kaplan, Student Chairman; Peter Flanzer, At-Large-Student- Affairs-Committee Chairman. 145 Robin Lipsky, Project Head; Margret Holmes, Secretary-Treasurer; Spencer, President; Kathy Button, Vice-President. Karen GAPA ADMISSION COMMITTEE 1st Row - Myla Frohman, Clint O ' Connor, Charlie Ingram. 2nd Row - George Rogers, Betsy Bruemmer, Robin Lipsky, Karen Stone, Sue Marshall, Dick Meyer, Jane Alexander, Cheryl Smutney. 146 WORK DAY -j Le Kp P - ' k ■nL ., ' - H mutt hj HALLOWEEN 148 c H R I S T M A S 0% i THE CLASS OF 1975 1st Row - Kim Louis, Jay Freeman, Liz Breuer, Dick DeLong, Marjorie Strong, Chip Rodgers, Liz Springer, Charlie Ingram, Myla Frohman, Tom Abelmann, Lawson Hill, Claudia Schimert, Randy Trumbull. 2nd Row - Bud Hobart, Wendy Griggs, Clark El- liott, Donna Buddington, Philip Boal, Debbie Server, Josh Paul, Mary Hunt, Steve Solovy, Lisa Lipton, Matt Kaplan, Vicki Joyce, Ted Kilgore, Shala Price, Mark Wol- laeger, Bruce Goodman. 3rd Row - Paul del Greco, Julie Corbett, Bill Frederick, Pam Rahmann, David Bernstein, Tracy Maynard, Mike Bird, Barbara Callihan, Cliff Gately, Helenmary Charnas, Miles White, Karen Stone, Gary Kovacs. 150 PATRONS Ms. Susan R. Breuer Mr. Mrs. James W. Button Mr. Mrs. F. Donald DeLong, Jr. Mr. Mrs. George Dormody Mr. Mrs. Walter Y. Elisha Mr. Mrs. Sidney I. Freeman Mr. Mrs. David S. Frohman Mr. Mrs. Bruce K. Goodman Mr. Mrs. Harold H. Hines, Jr. Mr. Mrs. John D. Ingram Mr. Mrs. Walter James Mr. Mrs. Howard E. Jessen Mr. Mrs. Mortimer J. Joyce e Mr. Mrs. Robert L. Lipsky Mr. Mrs. James G. Maynard Mr. Mrs. Herbert J. Miner, II Dr. Mrs. Milton H. Paul Mr. Mrs. Donald S. Perkins Mr. Mrs. David L. Server Mr. Mrs. Roger Stone Village Toy Shop The Mirror wishes to extend its warmest thanks to everyone who contributed. 154 ¥ she s« S¥iir en€« i__i — U-Tsn i — l_j — i_j — i_j — l_j i r k i GOOD LUCK. CLASS OF 75! n J 7 ' cU 0J- V (J (I Mu«w U jj 3 o T 1 . te D aw 12 - Q Z- --4 VL-rvL l Or U T i ' l Sjt( L hT(rt HL, we think that the MIRROR 1975 IS GREAT The Woman ' s Board of The North Shore Country Day School 156 o new kind of convenience First national Bank In Winnetka. PHONE 446-8525 Good Luck and Our Best Wishes to Gary and the class of 1975 GALEN The Bar Ko Group Production Co., Inc. Stern ' s Camera Sound Center, Inc. the pinnacle of optical perfection 818 ELM STREET, WINNETKA 157 ro First National Bank of Wilmette SHERIDAN ROAD AT TENTH STREET • WILMETTE, ILLINOIS 60091 PHONE (3121 256-5610 MEMBER F.D.I.C. Good Luck to the Class of ' 751 Mr. Mrs. Jerold Solovy May you further learn to uphold a standard of excellence in mind and heart so that man may PROGRESS! Anonymous 158 KUTTEN OIL COMPANY Retail and Bulk Fuel Oil Retail Gasoline - Diesel Fuel For 24 Hour Oil Burner Service CALL 256-001 1 WILM SAFETY LANE CAR, TRUCK BUS POLLUTION SAFETY TESTING TRUCK BUS REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE SERVICE JERRY TEEGAN Manager Call 251-9040 3510 Wilmette Ave. Wilmette, Illinois 60091 o Hubbard UJoods PHARMACY Z k Ed Levin R. Ph. - Ralph Schack R. Ph. FREE FAST DELIVERY 1046 GAGE at Linden, Winnetka Phone: 446-5100 one: 446-3025 FRED ' S WINNETKA 76 Fred Majewski Owner-Manager 574 GREEN BAY ROAD Winnetka, Illinois Specialists in: DIAGNOSTIC TUNE UP BRAKE WORK FRONT END ALIGNMENT ' HAND ' CAR WASHES TIRES BATTERIES ' 76 ' AUTO CARE LUBRICATION photo ironies 740 Elm Street, Winnetka The LION MRRK S ntique English Silver Antique {jewelry 721 Elm Street, Post Office Box 276, Winnetka, Illinois 60093. Phone 31 2-446-8448 Charles W. Packer — Virginia W. Packer CALEDONIAN, INC. FINE FURNISHINGS-UNUSUAL ACCESSORIES INTERIOR DECORATING 562 LINCOLN AVE. WINNETKA 446-6566 Who knows the clothes you ' re looking for? (Look in the MIRROR) 83HTOJ3 JAU8A3 HOT 83X38 HTOa nofcnevH (notgntnO nsnrodS nsswlsS) .JSjItbD Uowi zilanatwiz to tflE (Lolltu%£. JLook 572 Lincoln Avenue Winnetka, Illinois 60093 FOR THE NEW AND UNUSUAL IN CLOTHES imee WINIMETKA LAKE FOREST BARRINGTON ECKART HARDWARE CO. 735 Elm St. 446-0843 Winnetka, 111. 60093 Stevens -paxton COMMERCIAL PRINTING ALL ELSE FOR AN OFFICE PUBLISHERS OF PAXTON DAILY RECORD is our trademark along the North Shore, we are better known by our performance standards of Quality and Economy STEVENS PRINTING COMPANY -21 8 NORTH MARKET STREET — PAXTON, ILLINOIS 60957— (217) 379-4313 160 E. B. TAYLOR CO. WINNETKA, ILL. - PHONE HI 6-1111 Everything For House Lawn Garden j£ tmd Sd. jtationer4, jfinc. 691 VERNON AVENUE GLENCOE 546 LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA, ILLINOIS 60093 952 Linden Ave. Winnetka 446-8456 633 Central Ave. Highland Pk. 432-0456 G E L Z E R and WILDE 7 I 4 ELM STREET • WINNETKA, ILLINOIS 60093 Realtors Good Luck To The Class of 1975 161 When you look in the Mirror be FELL dressed! THE TOP A OF BANKING o h TOP INTEREST TOP SECURITY TOP SERVICE ALL UNDER ONE ROOF The Winnetka Bank Elm and Green Bay Road, Winnetka, Illinois 60093 Phone: 446-0097, Member F.D.I.C. 162 COLBERT BERT|d=fl PACKAGING CORPORATION 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 Woznicki Jewelers 819 Oak Street Winnetka, 111. 60093 446-0658 ALLAN FRIDKIN. R. PH SANFORD DISHMAN. R PH. 736 ELM STREET • PHONE 446-0032 • WINNETKA. ILLINOIS Good luck to the Class of 1975! THE CARLSON BUILDING 636 Church Street and THE LIBRARY PLAZA HOTEL Orrington at Church EVANSTON 163 GOOD LUCK to the Class of 75 164 Kunnfeldt Belmont Service Station 475 Chestnut St. Winnetka, 111. Phones: Hi 6-0009 and Hi 6-0334 «««FUDT P L ETEaOt o SEP ICE Complete automotive service for gas, oil, greasing, washing, tires, batteries, motor re- building, brake relining, ignition service, tow- ing service, free pick-up delivery.
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