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

 - Class of 1978

Page 1 of 150

 

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1978 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 150 of the 1978 volume:

it 11 ii ■ .1 , ' 1 % k M, l ' -i I ETY FILM 5063 - • ■ 13A KODAK SAFETY FILM 5063 Ji «« ' « • KfSP V h 4 jH MMMHHfe M • • ffy J i - 1 1 ■ ' 6 R U £f  1 a : TILM i 1 Bk ' 1 . Mi m J fj. KODAK SAFETY F LM 5063 15A KODAK SAFETY FILM 5063 MIRROR The Senior Class Dedicates The 77-78 Mirror To Simone Valvo m i •• • -, i •■-,■«, -- MBIMHlWiBWH Bra H % ■■■ MHBB . «l i CsTpj ? ' « 1%, wsusyj BMWpHcaa BUKsU •3 - Tr 1 %N iNi ,: m -. ' -.v : • . M 506. HP? S v S I fNr - at lit ' rrs A ( £ . ' fc Jp :• c w- ?? ll V 1 r i I J frl o J ifc mm® HI Ife i K rfo ' ' ; i 1 - P §8 ' ' V l - a rS, 41 Jl HSE k ■■- ' -.. 10 HALLOWEEN n 12 WORK DAY ■£ v; vi ' -f: ' '  •. ' ■ ;. . ■•. . 13 DIRTY ■ WORK AT THE CROSSROADS 14 , ft.iT .t_ivi bUb : KODAK HLM bUb i d K [ y i V w It? r tt , : i :a w H ; -%sR T 1 RLto.1 • k ♦  DAK SAFETY FILM 5063 KODAK SAFETY FILM 5063 Country Day earns respect despite 1A semifinal defeat W -- ' ' :■ ,,-, ' « : = : :-: :; 3::S:; : ; ' : ::-i ' 1977 Raiders Captains— Paul Theiss and John Keim Steve Mars Ken Sachs Howard Goldblatt Jeff Forman Matt Weisenberg Andy Heytow Arthur Handelman Terry McManus Jerry Ramseur R.J. Damen Donny Peters John Appelbaum Pete Wirtz Andy Nathan Pete Johnson Andy Sullivan Ken Karmin Dan Askow Scott Chileen Mike Feuer Steve Sachs Miller Bransfield Mike Elisha Steve Lewis George Smith Bill Penner 16 Raiders whip St. Rita, eye state playoff bid Mac McCarty has a philosophy that most football coaches would disagree with, but, nevertheless, it has worked for the North Shore Country Day coach. I don ' t believe in scouting another team, says McCarty, The kids ought to learn how to play on the field. We never know what the other team is like until we play them. 1 guess we ' re low-key. McCarty has also been successful this season, winning the Independent School League title with a 3-0 mark while compil- ing a 6-1 record going into Saturday ' s final game of the year against De La Salle ' s jun- ior varsity. The lastest win was over St. Rita ' s jayv- ees Saturday in Winnetka. And after a quarter and St. Rita ahead 8-0, McCarty had seen enough to start his team clicking. The Raiders quickly marched downfield with their next two possessions in the sec- ond quarter, both times scoring on pass plays from Paul Theiss to halfback Jerry Ramseur. The first was from 25 yards out and the second from the 32. The day proved to be entirely North Shore ' s, as the defense stopped St. Rita for 105 yards total offense. The Raiders had 266, including 129 through the air on Theiss ' 12-17 afternoon. But the best highlight for the defensive squad came midway through the final pe- riod. Tackle Matt Weisenberg caught a mishandled snap between the quarterback and the center in mid air and dashed 20 yards for a touchdown. Theiss passed to Andy Nathan from 12 yards out for the final score. We ' re little, but we get awfully good play out of our kids, says the North Shore coach. They brought out some 220-pound tackles, and our kids thought that this was the toughest game of the year. The game Saturday will be a big one for the Raiders. If they win, they will qualify for the first time for the state 1-A playoffs. The first year the playoffs started, we went 7-1, but the IHSA didn ' t count games against junior varsity teams, says McCar- ty. I think now they realize that most of the jayvee teams could easily win the 1-A tourney. The game is scheduled to start at 11 a.m. at the North Shore field. 17 18 N. Shore ' s chalices By Mike Kliey AS THE SUNLESS afternoon wound down, the purple jerseys of North Shore Country Day blended more -and- mere with the gloom to the skies above Loyo- la Academy ' s field. Cwtotry Bay, overshadowed by the striking orange of larger, faster Genoa- lost 28-14 Saturday. Genoa- 1 A roundup Ktogstea will play Areola Friday fa Hot raal for the championship of the Class ■m. ; ■ , ■ ■ ' M least tfee losers had! a short tide home to Winnetka. They bused immedi- ately frpm ; WJtaptteto Country Day to drown their disappointment to their own j WE '   ¥ . WITT. They had mere speed and size. But we never quit, ' said Uarfia JfcCarty, coach otCountty Day I theagbt we m stay with them if we didn make mistakes ; But the Raiders made errors, the most crucial one with 3:50 remaining in the game and Genoa-Kingston leading 2144 It was fourth aad-oae for Country Day oa Ss own 24. Quarterback Paul Tbefes, who had fumbled twice to the first half , allowed the ball to slip from his grasp before the intended handoff. Thefes recovered on the run to his right, but was pushed out of btm8 short of fee first down. ' ' WE ' WERE Miti When Tbeiss got the ball so far to the side he almost got away from us, saM Genoa-Kingston coach Dave Russell. Almost. Halfback Phil Reints, who already had scored twice, thai made sure that the game would not get away from Genoa Kingston. Betotsran 21 yards for the last touchdown, and the Cogs rolled their record to 12-0. Russell was concerned that a bruised thigh would hamper Reints ' effective- ness. But the 170-pound senior rushed for 99 yards on 13 carries. THEY WERE able to ran and we weren ' t, said McCarty. Country Day ' s Theiss did complete 15 of 20 passes, including a 71-yard touchdown toss to 19 Field Hockey Mary Ames Jennifer Doolas Sonja Mars Cathy Cain Miriam Feinstein Hilary Fuller Molly Ingram Anne Modisett Barb Raffaldini Melinda Roenisch Jane Saks Liz Schwarz Adri Simeran Sue Snyder Courtney Spore Lucy Sievers Ellen Belcher Sarah Blackwell Karyn Chalem Karen Feinberg Kelly Wilder Sue Cooper Lynn Cruikshank Divah Feinstein Ellen Mandeltort Buffi Weisenberg 20 21 Soccer ,;.,,« .; 22 23 24 25 ■-- ■ y 26 27 28 29 30 Kindergarten Joanne Avery William Blau Ashley Brown William Caswell Elizabeth Cavanaugh Andrew Davidson Genny Charney Tripp Frank Eve Feldman Gregory Goldberg Nina Fischer Thomas Griffin Shannon Grogan John Hatfield Sarah Hart Patrick Horst Nicole Johnson Matthew Kornylak Marisol Mella Kevin Magner Phoebe Mills Richard Rosenthal Julie Mizock Josh Shifris Juliet Moffat David Smith Clare McVittie Donna Pettry Thierry Peugeot Jennifer Price Stacy Ratner Sevanne Sarkis Peggy Smith 31 1st Grade Jennifer Freels Carl Bonnett Martha Friedmen Adam Charney Beth Ghantous David Geist Peyton Johnson Robert Glazer Jennifer Lofchie Greg Golden Christina Meyer Micheal Grogan Hilary Mills Chapin Hemphill Paul Johnson Catherine ToYooka Thomas Smith Nicole Zimmer Lawrence Sperry 32 2nd Grade Anne Aggens Bryant Dunbar Jenika Childs Max Fischer Sarah Hendershot J. P. Hamm Kimberly Kantor John Levy Lisa Kornylak Kevin Lipman Amy Meyers Hugh McCarthy Beth Rees Andrew Meyers Jennifer Robison Nathaniel Mills Victoria Seidman Jonathan Reinsdorf Zack Sudler John Thompson 33 3rd Grade Marcia Brenner Christopher Avery Laura Gaines William Bach Christine Griffin Steven Glazer Adrea Nash Mark Herzog Lauri Reagan Joel Jacobson Elizabeth Schnering Christian Johnson Nina Thompson Ari Kogut Victoria Toyooka Adam Mizock Alfredo Ramirez Brian Schultz Frederick Scott Paul Zdon 34 4th Grade Faith Cristol Mark Bransfield Allegra Flindt Rudyard Coltman Sarah Geist Benjamin Ferdinand Sarah Ghantous William Fink Janet Gordan Gordon Gehrs Helen Loennig Anthony Hirschtritt Mary McCarthy Bruce Peters Kristen Moffat Stephanie Novak Alexandra Seidman Elizabeth Toyooka 35 5th Grade Tracy Bach Erik Almquist Melinda Frankenthal Richard Brown Michelle Griffin Adam Fischer Jody Katz James Gassel Catherine O ' Malley Jacques Jental Holly Pollard Kevin Johnson Jacqueline Scott James Murphy Elizabeth Schroeder James Owens Elana Thalberg George Penner Christopher Skramstad Elliot Weissbluth 36 Lower School Faculty Fifth Grade— Kathleen Collingbourne Fourth Grade— Lewis Davis Third Grade — Anne Sampson Second Grade— Caroline Ingram First Grade— Carol Abelmann Kindergarten— Rebecca Bray, Helen Turley, Gail McKeever Developmental Testing Reading Janet Rogers Science — Charlotte Mars 37 38 I m mi iim mmimmmmtmmti 41 42 43 CHRISTMAS DANCE 44 45 46 47 Basketball 48 «wmm m sw y ' - ' jm 50 51 Vaudeville 1978 Coordinator Carol Radloff Technical Director Roger A. Shipley Stage Manager Andy MacLeod Masters and Mistress of Ceremony: Jim Green, Matt Berman, Rachel Wineberg And including: A Cast of Thousands 52 54 55 6th Grade K. Abell J. Cottel E. Fallerme J. Dennis A. Hoffheimer C. Foreman S. Koff A. Ghantous M. Larson H. Glazer S. Newenhouse S. Goldin H. Nigro C. Mason J. Reichman W. Mecklenburg E. Simon M. Nikaidoh S. Van Hooser W. Reis M. Weisenberg J. Schnering J. Wright G. Spore J. Theiss 56 7th Grade M. Abelmann W. Aggens S. Cooper P. Ferdinand J. Frankenthal L. Galler S. Gately L. Hirschtritt C. Kullberg S. Lax S. Reinsdorf A. Rosen S. Soderblom A. Wirtz A. Blumberg M. Bransfield C. Charnas B. Coltman I. Flint S. Friend B. Griffith F. Habennicht A. Hirsch D. Howland P. Jentel D. Kanter P. Karmin T. Kelly J. Krohn J. Lindsay E. Lunding J. Mitchell J. Schwarz C. Seline R. Simonds R. Snyder T. Van Hooser J. Wineman A. Wolpert 57 8th Grade J. Atkins T. Beck M. Bransfield E. Briggs L. Burmeister W. Churchill C. Cummings M. Denavit S. Faurot S. Freeman L. Gigante L. Handelman S. Hurwith C. Kopeck L. Lustbader C. Nigro M. Noyes L Osberg E. Schwartz J. Stone A. Bresler P. Clemis J. Goldfarb M. Goldin R. Kleiman D. Lamensdorf F. Lieberman M. Melhus M. Peters A. Rickel B. Singer S. Spero Ft. Vieregg E. Weil 58 Middle School Faculty English— Beverly Arment, Julie Hall French— Mary Ann Jentel, Susanna Horwitz Mathematics— Jean Pettibone, Paul Dionne Science— Charotte Mars, Karen Hott Social Studies— Lewis Davis, Micheal Tratner, Henry Rubin 59 60 61 62 Opera 63 64 65 Sangerbund 66 Camerata 67 Barbershop Quartet .■ R.J. Damon, Ted Reihm«r, Matt Berman, George Rogers 68 One Acts THE LESSON directed by Rachel Wineberg NOT ENOUGH ROPE directed by Matt Berman FINAL DRESS REHEARSAL directed by Gwynne Sigel MOONY ' S KID DON ' T CRY directed by Dean Van de Motter 69 70 Prosods 197 .cur 7) : ' , ' .-. : ' :,■;■ ■cv. 11 y n ' • ■ ' ■ ' : Mirror Staff Editor: John Keim Business: Joan Kraft, Carol Cuncannon Contributing photographers: John Goff Lauren Press Dorothy Machevich Karen Olsson Special Thanks to: Walter F. Mullady I Bud Martin Casey Jones The Grateful Dead 74 Softball 75 Baseball 76 «£ 77 Upper School 79 9th Grade S. Almquist M. Ames T. Brabant J. Doolas K. Furrer L. Harwich D. Hitchcock J. Kalish E. Kogut L. Levy E. Machevich S. Mars B. Mecartney K. Mecklenburg L. McWeeny K. Nielson J. Peters A. Puth P. Scott S. Sekuler E. Simeran D. Thalberg R. Appel D. Askow M. Becker J. Berman D. Brodley S. Chileen P. Deimel K. Dixler R. Ellis M. Feur R. Fortune J. Fuller K. Gorman D. Hines S. Howland G. Johnson G. Johnson R. Kaplan J. Katz T. Klapperich R. Kleiman S. Lewis J. Louis R. Marx J. Molner W. Penner B. Perkins K. Sacks S. Sacks C. Sample G. Smith G. Ware 80 10th Grade E. Blank J. Pritzker J. Appelbaum M. Levy C. Cain B. Raffaldini M. Bransfield A. Marrison J. Cain S. Rahmann J. Britt S. Mason L. Diller M. Roenisch C. Churchhill T. McManus M. Feinstein J. Saks M. Elisha P. Nelles J. Franke E. Schwarz T. Farmer M. Pebbles H. Fuller L. Sievers J. Foreman D. Peters J. Graham A. Simeran H. Goldblatt D. Reichman M. Ingram M. Smith A. Handelman J. Sachs T. Keith S. Snyder J. Kanter J. Server H. Levy C. Spore R. Kaplan R. Tannebaum E. Miller T. Tilmon P. Karmin J. Tilmon A. Modi sett J. Abelmann J. Koppel M. Weisenberg 8) 11th Grade B. Ahlberg E. Belcher S. Blackwell K. Chalem M. Collett K. Feinberg G. Holtzman P. Johnson C. Kleiman M. Kraft K. Krohn M. Mages L. Ramos G. Sigel J. Springer K. Wilder C. Wood M. Berman P. Eklund T. Farrel B. Furrer K. Karmin W. Kenedy M. Lewis A. Macieod S. Mars L. Nash S. Olson J. Raffaldini J. Ramseur C. Ray T. Reihmer C. Roenisch A. Sullivan D. VandeMotter P. Vick 82 1 twV 84 uL.. 85 ■ . ■ ; ' A ' ,-!.. ■jf J i . i . .... .. j J ' 88SWT i «i ?■ 86 defend fBsr Farm Mattery _ frnm enemy Ml U £ flTHER ! 87 90 91 92 93 94 I ' ve heard lot ' s of people say They ' re goin to settle down You don ' t see their faces And they don ' t come around Well I ' m not that way I ' ve got to move along f!Bl k What ' s the problem here! All the world Is a stage And all the men and women are merely players. William Shakespeare Scott Bresler There are books of which The backs and covers are by far the best parts. Charles Dickens 95 John L. Brundage It ' s so easy to slip It ' s so easy to fall All the people that you missed Do they really exist At all —Robert Weir 96 Man ' s mind once stretched to a new idea never returns to it ' s original dimensions. —Oliver Wendell Holmes Friendship ' s the wine of life. Susan Elizabeth Cooper Reach high, for the stars lie hidden in your soul Dream deep, for every dream precedes the goal. —Starr Fly like an eagle, let my spirit carry me. —Steve Miller Band Thunder only happens when it ' s raining Players only love you when your playing. — Stevie Nicks 97 98 It ' s easier to tell a lie than it is to tell the truth It ' s easier to kill a fly than it is to turn it loose It ' s easier to criticize somebody else Than to see yourself It ' s easier to give a sigh and be like all the rest Who stand around and crucify you while you do your best It ' s easier to see the books upon the shelf Than to see yourself It ' s easier to hurt someone and make them cry Than it is to dry their eyes I got tired of fooling around with other people ' s lies Rather I ' d find someone that ' s true It ' s easier to say you won ' t than it is to feel you can It ' s easier to drag your feet than it is to be a man It ' s easier to look at someone else ' s wealth Than to see yourself. — George Harrison No Enchilada! Do what ' s good for you, or your not good for anybody —Billy Joel So many faces in and out of my life, Some will last, some will just be now and then. Life is a series of hellos and goodbyes— I ' m afraid it ' s time for goodbye again. —Billy Joel Never neglect friendship where it is offered, for there will be a time when that friendship will be needed. —Charlie Ingram Carol Louise Cuncannon 99 R J Damon Go Navy! Dwain 100 Bob Diamond Get up Get back on your feet You ' re the one they can ' t beat And you know it Come on let ' s see what You ' ve got Just take your best shot and don ' t blow it —Tommy Shaw You can take me to paradise And then again you can be cold as ice I ' m over my head But it sure feels nice —Christine Mcvie 101 Memories they can ' t be boughten They can ' t be won at carnivals for free Well it took me years To get those souveniors And I don ' t know how they slipped away from me. —John Prine Plans I ' ve made A masquerade Fading in fear of the coming day Hero ' s tales Like nightingales Wrestle the wind as they run away. —Dan Fogelberg Love when you can Cry when you have to Be who you must That ' s a part of the plan Await your arrival With simple survival And one day we ' ll all understand —Dan Fogelberg Nadivah Feinstein I am a Bear of Very Little Brain, and long words Bother me. —A. A. Milne 102 Before talking of holy things, we prepare ourselves by offerings . . . one will fill his pipe and hand it to the other who will light and offer it to the sky and earth . . . they will smoke together . . . Then will they be ready to talk. Mato-Kuwapi, or Chased By-Bears, a Santee-Yanktonai Sioux Breath deep the gathering gloom Watch lights fade from every room Bedsitter people look back and lament Another day ' s useless energy spent Moody Blues Say thats near fetched George Carlin If everyone in the world was fat we would all be closer together Micheal Goldstein 104 James Green In the arms of woman does every man fall — J.C.G. Lillies that fester smell far worse than weeds. —Bill Shakespeare Was she told when she was young that fame would lead to pleasure? Did she understand it when they said, That a man must break his back to earn his day of leisure Will she still believe it when he ' s dead? — Lennon McCartney 105 As we shift into the Next phase of our lives, Which is like being between Skylla and Kharybdis. Peradventure we should Cherish the carefree days And spontaneous associations. Because, for all we know, We may never pass this way Again. With Fond Memories, Tammy E. Hatchett Class of 1978 106 Andy Heytow 107 You ' ve Just got to MAINTAIN Steve Hitchcock You who are on the road Must have a code that you can live by And so become yourself Because the past is just a goodbye. Teach your parents well Their childrens hell Will slowly go by And feed them on your dreams The one they pick The one you ' ll know by Don ' t you ever ask them why If they told you, you would cry So just look at them and sigh And know they love you — Grahm Nash I ' ve gone from grease to grass to granola. I mowed the lawn, I smoked the lawn, and now I ' m eating it. —Funky Joe Schneider 108 I am earnest. I will not equivocate; I will not excuse; will not retreat a single inch; and I will be heard! William Lloyd Garrison His brow is wet with honest sweat, He earns whate ' er he can, And looks the whole world in the fece, For he owes not any man. He that is rich need not live sparingly, and He that can live sparingly need not be rich. James Milton Hurwith Jr. 109 I don ' t need a reason to be happy. I don ' t have to consult the future to know how happy I am now. —Hugh Prather On this shrunken globe, men can no longer live as strangers Our prayer is that men everywhere will learn, finally, to live as brothers, to respect each others differences, to heal each others wounds, to promote each others progress, and to benefit from each others knowledge. — Adlai Stevenson IBLY! Friendship is the golden thread that ties the hearts of all the world. —John Evelyn No man is an island No man stands alone Each mans joy is joy to me Each mans grief is my own. We need one and other so we can defend Each man as my brother Each man as my friend. Nancy llene Kaplan (Yeni K. 1st, Beans, Kins, Mom, Sprouts, Gefilte Face, Kaplouse, Bud!) no r |f John Keim Ml Joan Kraft When you ' ve seen beyond yourself— then you may find, peace of mind, is waiting there— And the time will come when you see we ' re all one, and life flows on within you and without you. George Harrison Friendships are not based on the mind, they are based on the heart. Mark Crow No Enchilada! For ye shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace: the mountains and the hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the tress of the field shall clap their hands. Isaih 55:12 There is a call to life a little sterner, and braver for the yearner, earner, learner. Less criticism of the field and court and more preoccupation with the sport. Robert Frost You, who are on the road, must have a code that you can live by and so, become yourself because the past is just a good-bye. C.S.N. Y. 112 Don ' t let it bring you down, it ' s only castles burning. Just find someone who ' s turning — and you will come around. Neil Young Dorothy P. Machevich Ellen Beth Mandeltort All our yesterdays are a memory, and all our tomorrows are a hope, but every day well lived makes all our yesterdays a memory of joy and our tomorrows a promise for today. You ' ve got to get up every morning with a smile on your face And show the world all the love in your heart Then people gonna treat you better You ' re gonna find, yes you will that you ' re beautiful as you feel Carole King Life is a disappointment only to those who let it become so. Mark Crow IT ' S BEEN . . . BULLETS! IBLY! 114 Stephen Mecklenburg Two roads converged in a wood, and I— I took the one less travelled by, And that has made all the difference. Robert Frost 115 Youth is a beautiful dream, but it ' s sweetness is enslaved by a dullness of books and it ' s awakening is a harsh one. Kahlil Gibran Life is made up of small comings and goings, and for everything a man takes with him, there is something he must leave behind. Herman Faucher Knowledge is power Bacon It ' s all up to what you value down to where you are It all swings on the pain you ' ve gone through getting where you are. George Harrison Jane Miller 116 Andy Nathan am not prejudice. — J.R. From Theiss to Nathan . . . r S 5jSS Brickhouse When you finish up by winning, you ' re glad. Not for the money. But for the feeling. —Walter Payton 117 T.F. Wang The wise man is the one who knows not and knows he knows not. Socrates Jared Nedzel 118 mmm i 1 1 n % Z 2 r 1 % A3 The past rings in my mind like an eternal chime. It ' s not loud and dominating, but it always seems to be there. It sounds music for the future. If growing up means it would be beneath my dignity to dim a tree, I ' ll never grow up. Peter Pan Karen Olsson Playing in the band. 119 The important thing is not what others think of you, but what you think of yourself Ted Parker No treasure is more certain than sure Friendship Tobrier Snum 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 A friend is someone who knows everything about you And loves you just the same. 120 ' u ' r 5?5sl HB w -9$: L ' musm That ' s why I ' m easy Easy like Sunday morning — Commodores — Bruce Allen Pinsof M4, • %£i ' it ' ,: ■ PETERS and CO. ACCOUNT NO. DATE BUY SELL 121 122 The Pool Players Seven at the Golden Shovel. We real cool. We Left Scool. We Lurk late. We Strike straight. We Sing sin. We Thin gin. We Jazz June. We Die soon. Gwendolyn Brooks Jerry Lee Ramseur Keeping Things Whole In a field I am the absence Of field This is Always the case Wherever I am I am what is missing When I walk I part the air And always The air moves in To fill the spaces Where my body ' s been we all have reasons For moving I move To keep things whole . . . It ' s the end of a new beginning . . . To the class of 79 Goodbye Oh Darlin ' Bye North Shore 123 Rivers belong where they can ramble, Eagles belong where they can fly; I ' ve got to be where my spirit can run free, Got to find my corner of the sky. Pippin Cathy Lynn Rocca If You Believe If you believe Within your heart you ' ll know That no one can change The path that you must go. Believe what you feel And you know you ' re right because The time will come around When you ' ll say it ' s yours. Believe that you can go home Believe you can float on air Then click your heels three times If you believe, then you ' ll be there. Believe in yourself right from the start Believe in the magic that ' s inside your heart Believe all these things Not because I told you to But believe in yourself If you believe yourself Just believe in yourself As I believe in you. The Wiz I remember the days of my childhood ... the sorrows and the joys of the past . . . and I ' ve come to this one conclusion . . . youth fades away all too fast . . . I remember the friends who were faithful ... the mischievous games we played . . . then, too, recollec- tion discovers . . . the foolish mistakes I made . . . I remember the voice of my mother . . . full of ten- derness and so sincere ... the haunting lullibies she sang . . . still echo in my ear ... I remember the kisses she gave me . . . far sweeter than any I ' ve known ... in reverie I see my father . . . who taught me to stand alone . . . these memories are priceless treasures . . . and as I approach bleak 124 UNITED FARM AGENCY, INC. 810-Y Rice Bldg , 10 High St., Boston, Mass. 02110 FOR SALE 8 Room House Built in 1770 Part of the old Quissett Harbor House — Must be moved from present site. Waterfront lots available 200 yards away Desirable wide floor boards, rare fire- places and in sound condition. $5,000. L. W. Francis • 497 Sippewissett Road Falmouth — on Cape Cod, Mass 02540 Phone 617-548-0803 FOR S They tell of a new brakeman on the Cape Cod who was instructed that in announcing Buzzard ' s Bay station, he must add, Change for Wenaumet, Pocasset, Cataumet, North Falmouth, West Falmouth, Falmouth and Woods Hole. He strove hard to memorize the list, but like Snug the joiner, he was slow of study. As the train eased toward a stop there on his first trip, he enter- ed a car and bellowed, Buzzard ' s Bay; change for Wunaumit-uh-Cataumit- uh-oh, dammit, Woods Hole! George Shepardson Rogers Pack up all your dishes Make note of all good wishes Say good-bye to the landlord for me Sons of bitches always bore me Throw out those LA. papers Moldy box of vanilla wafers Adios to all this concrete Going to get me some dirt road backstreet If I can just get off of that L.A. Freeway Without gettin ' killed or caught Down that road in a cloud of smoke Towards a land, a land that I ain ' t bought. Here ' s to you old skinny dinnies The only one I think I will miss I can hear your basement singing Sweet and low like a gift you ' re bringing Play it for me one more time now Got to give it all we can now I believe every word you ' re saying Keep on, just keep on playing If I can just get off of that L.A, Freeway Without gettin ' killed or caught Down that road, down that road Towards a land, a land that I ain ' t bought. —Jerry Jeff Walker Borne On the first warm winds of Feelings newly found Fly But remember Don ' t look down Take as much as you think you ought to Give just as much as you think you can Don ' t forget what your failures have taught you Or else you ' ll learn them all over again Lessons learned are like bridges burned You only need to cross them but once Is the knowledge gained Worth the price of the pain Are the spoils worth the cost of the hunt? Dan Fogelberg Susan Mary Sharp Your children are not your children. They are the sons and daughters of Life ' s longing for itself. They come through you but not from you. You may give them your love but not your thoughts. You may house their bodies but not their souls For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams You may strive to be like them, but seek not To make them like you, for life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth Let your bending in the archer ' s hand be for gladness. Kahlil Gibram You ' re shining star No matter who you are Shining bright to see What you can truly be —Earth, Wind Fire   - THE MEDIUM IS THE MESSAGE TO UNDERSTAND THE MESSAGE, YOU MUST UNDERSTAND THE MEDIUM A gentleman is one who considers the rights of others before his own feelings, And the feelings of others before his own rights. John Wooden Paul W. Theiss I never lost a little fish— yes, I am free to say. It always was the biggest fish I caught that got away. Eugene Field ■ ' . ■:■• :.-l .7 r : ' -J, I seldom went to bed before two or three in the morning, on the theory that if anything of interest were to happen to a young person it would almost certainly happen late at night. E.B. White To know the road ahead, ask those coming back. ■ Chinese Proverb 128 Patrick Carleton Towe ! 2p«ss3 Necessity is blind until it is conscious. Freedom is the consciousness of necessity Karl Marx For this most amazing day I thank you God For the leaping greenly spirit of And a blue true xlream of sky And for everything which is infinite hich is yes e.e. cummings I have never been hurt by anything I didn ' Calvin Coolidge If thou art a master, be sometimes blind If a servant, sometimes deaf. Thomas Fuller Flight Whatever any other organism has been able to do Man should surely be able to do also, Though he may go a different way about it Sammuel Butler  :, fl ww i i 4 % 3. J ■Esiaiill. I ■I s J a y V 100m 3P From this hour, freedom! Going where I like, My own master . . . Walt Whitman Dorian Vieregg Friendship often ends in love, But love in friendship— never ends. ' Chas. Caleb Colten 130 ' ' I came upon a child of God he was walking along the road and I asked him, where are you going and this he told me . . . I ' m going an ' get my soul free we are Stardust we are golden and we ' ve got to get ourselves back to the garden Joni Mitchell You who change the course of rivers who with the seed sows the flight of your soul. Stand up. Look at your hands. Take your brothers hand so you can grow Victor Jara That ' s all nonviolence is— organized love Joan Baez Jung taught himself and men how to read the language of dreams as if they were the forgotten language of the gods Lauren Van der Post 131 Elizabeth Buffi Weisenberg Now I say by hook or crook this peril too shall be something that we remember. Homer I ' m only speaking a melancholy truth. Reality doesn ' t always come up to the ideal, you know. But that doesn ' t make me believe any less in the ideal. Aldous Huxley 132 « dj -f ffi S3. lS —4 — ■ A ( -t O l 135 136 To The Class of 78 with pleasant memories with bright hope we wish you well. The Woman ' s Board 137 In UJinnetko. First notional Bonk of UJinnetko 520 GREENBAY ROAD • WINNETKA 60093 • (312) 446-8525 For the gift with something extra . . . something different . . . for long enchantment %(t SHOES AND BOUTIQUE 138 821 Chestnut Court in Winnetka 446-8380 China crystal silver antiques objects of art. Bridal Registry WINNETKA, ILL. 60093 PHONE 446-8456 HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. 60035 PHONE 432-0456 Stern ' s Camera Sound Center, Inc. the pinnacle of optical perfection 818 ELM STREET, WINNETKA SINCE 1926 J orter 6, rnc. 813 Elm St. Winnetka, III. 60093 446-0044 RRB Cycles NATURE ' S DIGGIN ' S 598 GREEN BAY ROAD WINNETKA ILLINOIS 60093 I3I2I 446-I920 !lry y ' i r Custom Jewel with a touch V£ « of elegance -- StS Jean Reed The Laundry £■ 566 Chestnut iO - n Winnetka, Illinois 60093 ' flfe 441-5211 139 Rust-Oleum... tough enough for industry, good enough for me! RUST- OLEUM CORPORATION 140 2301 OAKTON STREET • EVANSTON, ILLINOIS 60204 photo ironies 740 Elm Street, Winnetka OneStep FrttftWinnelka Union 76 574 Grccnbaj Rd. Wlmdu, II. 60093 444-3095 SPECIALISTS IN: • DIAGNOSTIC TUNE-UP • BRAKE WORK • TIRES BATTERIES FRED MAJEWSKI • FRONT END ALIGNMENT • AIR CONDITIONER SERVICE • EXHAUST WORK DEALER POLAROID LAND CAMERA 143 Rust-Oleum... tough enough for Mushy, good enough forme! RUST- OLEUM CORPORATION 2301 OAKTON STREET • EVANSTON, ILLINOIS 60204 140 photo ironies inc. Fred Winnetka Union 76 574 Gretntwj Rd. Vrtmw a, in. 60093 446-3095 SPECIALISTS IN: 740 Elm Street, Winnetka OneStep jAMAMOOMM} __. • DIAGNOSTIC TUNE-UP • BRAKE WORK • TIRES a BATTERIES FRED MAJEWSKI • FRONT END ALIGNMENT • AIR CONDITIONER SERVICE • EXHAUST WORK DEALER POLAROID LAND CAMERA 143 ci - ' e t- inter 1 collecjicile press, inc. JR 11 I r 1 - 33 34A J 1 Id f fl I ■ ' ■■■■;■. Wr 1 1 Mm%a m m ■ ■ a nflm ' 1 1 1SH f ' i


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

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

North Shore Country Day School - Mirror Yearbook (Winnetka, IL) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981


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