Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA)

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 226

 

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1967 Edition, Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1967 Edition, Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1967 volume:

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X' 1. 1 ,X1 1 1 ,.. 1 1 1,151 1 1 3 - , X-11,.X1. 1 ' , 'iaQ111'1 1.2451 11- -up-' ,' ' -1 1 1 1 1 1 gf, ' 1,11 631.2191-.3.. 2 1- ,111-1 -1 zqfq., XX - X1:L111' 5-11,3 sf'-13.X15?yg11 ,X1 .. 1 4-1, , f4.v.aV.-A1.M.11,,.,.' -1,1121 ZiH5Gt1f5f1ffE3'Y r' V 1 linters ',munm,,,, Q- flu ll 20 'QE N O Spring Number Nineteen Hundred and Sixty-seven Splinters Editor-in-Chief PRUDENCE ALLEN Literary Board MARTHA CHIGAS DEBORAH GALE CATHERINE COWLES JANET KENDALL LYDIA DESHLER SHERILL WICKWIRE Business Board M ariager-CHALLIS XAIALKER MARTHA BAKER SANDRA HALL MARIAN CROCKER SANDRA SHIPTON AMY VVHITEHEAD Art and Photography Edif0T-GAYLE DEBELL MARTHA FISHER LYNDA PRYOR Art Contributors BETH BULLOCK LAURA LocKvvooD DONNA CoRRooN LESLIE MAGGY DEBORAH GALE ALIDA MCILVAIN ISABEL KINNEY LISA STRASBURG JODI LANDWEHR KATHLEEN SULLIVAN JAN LAUNDON SHERILL WICKWIRE Faculty Literary Advisor Faculty Art Advisor MRS. BANKS S. VVORSHAM MRS. JOHN PERLOFF , . 1 Y x ' ag 5' - -N K 9 N v , I 1 4 ' , 3 , xx r -,X , -. x, XR X Q -V+, 1- A X U A e , , , 1 1 V ' rw, - ' 1 I .A I w 1 N f I 1 x -A N -- . x x 1 L 1 . ' f ..f I A S I' ,. , -' 1 x ff? I N- ' A It 4 ' l l ll if Q tipky' t 1 I J' f' 'gat' .v'- 4' 1 - 5 - 'L f 41 bf vi x ' ,ix -'qui 'f , . '46 W , ff., I 31 f f MQ 97,21 'Q ' A' I rn .ix ,il I Q 2 . -25.91 ..2Pfa'2-..r Ja.. f - f . ,. Fl ff'f ,. Inf-f ' 'ff R-,'I5Sf,' f 'l Six f ' 'I 17' Q. V - if 35. lg, L fig , ' . J - 1 'lux I 4 ' ,J f- 3 , 3. .' n -lfl ' ',j' e ' 4 - 'I 5 'f..- ,,, Z 1, .' if .--XJ ' 1 - - 4gg,,.,, . fl' , ' 7. ff.-. ' ke '2- 1 6 .:. ,,v T' Vol. 75 Literary, 1967 No. 1 Editorial When Americans converse, we usually stand at a regulated distance from each other. Without any trouble, we speakers can extend our arms so that the index fingers will neatly Ht into the listeners' ears. ln conversation, we maintain the proper arm's distance to talk at one another. Symbolically, American conversation is merely a physical extension of our thoughts that we poke into any conveniently distanced ears, which ironically cannot hear, for they are well-plugged. It seems, then, that we can hear only ourselves while we talk at everyone else. The intimate French conversations greatly contrast with the typical exchange system that we have adopted. Instead of isolating the interest of a few with our news, we manage to arrange a vast number of people in perfect spacial relationship, then, we poke our ideas and convictions into their deafened ears. Our image of the popular Party-person is the artful conversationalist who simply resembles a bicycle wheel that rotates his body about a group and consecutively extends his arms as spokes into the perfectly orientated ears. Or, taking another commonplace example, we walk toward each other on a street, we halt when our fingers can tightly plug ears, we poke hello, thank you, and how are you, then we walk on wondering who it was we greeted. We talk on and on with outstretched fingers, and for all our talk, We hear only ourselves. Italians do not poke and plug, they talk with their hands so people of all sizes can hear, question, answer, and then understand. We, on the other hand, try to poke someone who is just half our size. With the advantage of a longer arm we can stuff all that we want without fear of encountering a question. Shorter arms cannot poke back. lf an unconventional attempt to speak is made, we simply remind our listener that we must never shout at people out of ear-poking distance. We can turn from our small victim and let him pick from his ears the message, he, in turn, can poke words of love, freedom, justice, and Freud into some still smaller plugged ears. This poking-plugging tradition is so much a part of our conversational habits that it is instinctive for a small babe to fondle stuffed animals by poking deaf ears. Americans could move a considerable step back or a friendly step closer to talk at the targets of our conversation. We could put down the coffee cups and cigarette butts. We could unplug our victims' ears and set free our hands. And with close attention to international conversing habits we might learn the meaning of our talking, unplugged people will hear and will react. We might learn the truth of our meaning, unplugged people will question and will teach. We might even learn the art of talking to, not at, our fellow ears. PRUDENCE ALLEN '67 Viet-Commercial There is fear, perhaps distaste, in your heart. You have a desire to be some- where else catching the sun's rays in your mouth, as you run until you drop from exhaustion. You visualize the large, brown eyes of Vietnamese children, looking for night and day upon your face, as they hide in the shadows. You are the protector of the buildings that house them and the dispenser of warmth and security. It makes a man out of you when you have no desire to be a man and play father. Your eye must be capable of distinction between purity and filth and your mind prepared to absorb lead and reward. You must feel a sense of accomplishment whether you clothe a naked child or repair a weapon to be used later to kill your enemy. Smile as though you were warm inside even if you bitterly oppose your superior. Don't let your face be hardened into a frown from which the mass observes your dejection. You are a minute part of the mass Ca regiment of peopleD made poor through expulsion of morals, faith and love. V Be realistic in conception of war. Have no fantasy of victory or disillusion- ment in defeat. You know what you are seeking and possibly you are being sent to find it, although your vision is obscured by the density of the jungle and your desire is dampened as you trudge through marsh to avoid the undergrowth. You are a pillar to remain standing until war takes the ouch out of the Curad band-aid covering the hole in your chest, through which your enemy gazes into the future. SHERI Wroxwuus '67 way, N . 'Yu IK 7 X, X XSL ' X ' I V. ,I 1 f 1 , I yi. N Q If :J fn' fr , 1 ' . 1 f P if jd!!! ' A V it ,. . X X Z. 4, 4 ff 1, 1 ,N V - J, V KJ. VL, f I -Mffh 355,443 ! 4- A I jgfg .J I I 3 5 ,At L, , A - A I' 4 gli - Q -Q Aff ,mf . , v -4.1911 c V ' Z J? xi 9. :I rikf. If .- N ,WY I IV Ili R , -I V5 xi-X NX Aix ,S L si Q Q17 J' - mv Q' f , 1 1' E 1' 1 1 if 1.1: yi, :V .yi 4 fx ' . If . , d ,f . .' A -If if ' f I ' ,Y A .. 3 If I I ' ,Q f r ' 'U 'lr - ,if ,' , ' gif ' N Q ' f 51' 3 V. .: E E I ,Q ,xg ' If XX s 1 ,ff V I f f Q , 33 5 1, Q L 'f H K I X , 1 X ' iq ,, . 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Rust, gold, scarlet And red, Drifting from above my head. V ICTORIA HARP '69 - -v.11 '- I pf .,......f....u 'I Qubii 1 14 1 V 'Q . 5 me , Q . h. : 6' , ii , 9, j,f4!V',f'f 1.4 , ' T' 1 .A ,I ' . 4 I' I ' xi 'X . ' fr . 1 W- -' i 1' .'A 6 L I HT ,Q'?'1f1+ e 'fx . agp. . 2 ' K'- X L 0 - ' . 5 ii -S' :u Q- QL-t 1. -rv . as A. f-e 'I y' 51, fgg .ji 1 5. Anticipating Urange Now the ugly snow is once again slushing under and around my feet. I feel that my long wait will never terminate, these harsh days of sorrow will never cease. I wonder-When will better days rescue me? When the snow turns dirty and undesirable, I know that spring will come marching forward, waving her hands over all the front yards, and suddenly the snow will dribble away into the sewers. Once again I will have my bare streets and will feel my frayed wits slowly draw closer together with anticipation. Then summer will abruptly bounce in but soon sail away with the same old clouds in a gust of cold wind. I' will feel my anxious spirits climb out-of the dark cave where they were hiding. Because, alas, fall will be here! Yes, after all those long days of anxiety, hope, and anguish, I will feel, in a sense, relieved that it is autumn. For that is the time that I Cwith my clear friend and companion, Charlie Brownl will be able to meet once more with our savior, The Great Pumpkin, JANET KENDALL '67 l r The Party Thousands of crushed cigarettes left the room with a musty, suffocating smell. White clouds lingered in each corner, hovering over the ratty chair and sofa, so as almost to hide their ugly appearance. Glasses lay on their sides with their staining the wine-colored rug. In the far room, the same record wore on. Only few were left now, perhaps they would leave soon. Their voices carried them further OH until the only sound was that of the record, and I stood alone. I crossed the room and into the bedroom. My hand snatched at the needle, scraping the record. On each side of me were the signs of the party. I didn't like it, for it seemed to me that something wrong had been done. Everyone had done it together and yet alone. drippings They each had laughed and talked and it had seemed good at the time. But now they would all go their own ways back home, and in their swirling, aching heads, th-ey would begin to realize how they had tricked themselves. They had covered reality with a musty suffocating smell. Each sip-they knew-drained a little more of the brain . . . The brain which the entire body revolves around. Yet they all tried to destroy it-and themselves. Quickly, I picked up each bottle and glass . . . threw them into a carton and left them outside my door. I I crawled into bed and switched the light off. I attempted sleep, but the musty clouds engulfed my head. DEBBIE GALE '67 'D.0X.l At Midnight A death-like calm begirded the town. The vast dark sky sent a faint wisp of air to rustle the few remaining dead leaves on the stalwart trees. Like stark steely pins spiraling up to pierce the darkness, the trees formed a regimental line guarding the broken, cracked pavement of the narrow roadway. Behind them the shadowy buildings loomed in repose like tombs marking an ancient burial ground. The town was a timeless area with no past or future. It was a space that seemed destined to stay hushed and immobile. BETH BULLOCK '68 Undertow Grey clam shells on pearl wheels passing through fathoms of veiled hate and scorn crawling in the muck and mire of indecency and degradation. Infinity will engulf the dead wood and relics tossed into its insatiable claws. Only the non-parasites will be untouched by the grasping tides of Hell. MARTHA CHIGAS '67 The Storm The sky was an ever-changing pattern over the rolling sea. The directionless wind began to blow. The storm mounted. Dark and foreboding floated the endless skiesg emerald green, the angry sea. White froth upon Neptune's vast acres tossed and turned. The sable night in Olympian luster grew as a ritual for Zeus and Thor, who came rushing with blind- ing Hash and deafening crash. The boat's straining hull bent itself against the fury of destruction, as walled mountains of fluid hell paused as if in thought and then rushed downward in a never-ending flood. Swallowed within the monstrous grasp, the boat breathed its last. LEE MCKALLAGAT '68 Ode to a Draft Card Burner black soot on brick walls fingertips of a little boy void of pretense running in the sun along cobbled streets ashes yellow fingertips of youth along a rail fence and the spikes won't pierce leather boots and a green dot is followed in search of winter wheat and disfiguration is horizontal. ' and he is not crowded by harsh noise and silenced by distaste and a hair crosses over his eye and another Hows under his collar. and his shirt is removed and hidden under a black towel and he wipes his face with neutrality and his hair splits the black with color blond purity grapes dropped from basement windows and dried in the sun diluted with rain Water drained of impurities through mesh screen wine quench the dirt Hoor and quench his tongue, removing ill word and unsanitary mud caked on boots. quench the particles of his conscientious objections safely' in glass canisters. and war bumps his bottle possibly cracks it under red umbrellas- and the wind whispers his name through plaid trees squinting in perspective pouring emotion through spokes of the umbrella raised to shelter a red ant. SHERI Wicxwrnie '67 , 1 wgflsx f i'5 lM-- 1 ,. ,wi -X :,f:,'.z1, Q , Xu ff f. we fa. Y of 1 'H+ 1+ :www 'w ' 1. -vt aww vw? . A f gilflfi-1?-if-kr. Q 44-asfwe-e, M, .W t tinmff pCP '-5, Little Blue Riding Hood Once upon a time, there lived a fair young girl named Blue. She lived in a city apartment with her auntie. One day, Blue's auntie suggested that Blue ought to take her grandmother a copy of the latest TV Guide. Blue agreed. On with her blue cape and off she went. She hopped the nearest subway and, after three stops, she got off and marched up the street to Gran's apartment. Strangely enough, outside the building was a motor scooter. This seemed very odd to Blue, since Gran 'lived in the city housing project for the elderly, but she thought that someone must have parked it in the wrong space. Perhaps it belonged to a customer of the coffee house next door. She skipped up the steps to Gran's place and sounded the buzzer. As usual, the little peekhole opened and a brown eye appeared. Blue was suspicious of nothing CGran had brown eyesj. The door slowly opened and there stood Wolf. She was surprised. Then Wolf made his first move. He said, How's about a date tonight, Blue Baby? Her reply, Fine with me. That evening, after Blue had returned from her frightening experience at Gran's, she heard a roaring sound outside her apartment, She looked out the window and there was VVolf on his Honda, all ready to go. He gave a blast on his horn and a loud whistle. ln a few seconds, Blue was on the back of the bike. Off they went, happily ever after, of course. CAROL ROWLEY '67 , : -- -, ... -M --I A X .. - ,f -- .IL ' i - s1- Quit- -vlggx ---f -sf.: XP B -m ',...-vs - -- .Ti N ki - A. X S175-:-, '-:.... -Lx-1.-. ?-is-ii? . -14- N i Q-:QNX 5' 'im -1 ' ' ...Y rbi' ' 4 sf' -xx -A Y ...Mx JAQ A 'Nr--'V qw. C ff as 5- W! ,qs f' f' ' . : an .,:,12 . l qw ....-, X- ,, , - .' 1- -1 ,ff - -- 1 ,.-'gf -. Vis., J . .:1:aJ?2 . Tbr- K 'g n'f-if-'ff' --r-4' 7: ' ., 7:05-1. A 'l' f .. , . 'fr is Z. - -'.-. ,.-is - A W, , ' - . . 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UMM. .1 ' -11 . ,,..vjQs.., 55. r - 2+ t 5' ' 34.5 - , fy, -fi,-'fi .. ., v !7'f5n 'X W' itgliftff' if fr 'ilffi ii N-M WJ if swkfwrsiffg, 1? 4 f'Ww.N..2lJ' .gQXxQ f' Q Q' 'gil A '-49' iff? farm 'ff tr- f, ff ,nf 1 sg ig, M-vs-H 9 f-1 WWW if I 3 XX W JiJ a- its ws, nik 5 my b L W I Q k s ,fix if 'PP if ilairns ,JT 'ig T... , 'W W ,arm i l' If ffnigaf -any-sv., CNF 7' in if rv-12.4 l' 1 as -b.T,i 3 l H his wi :if Z Y V 'li 'VLY r' 1 P Q!-'-154, .1-it 'VG GQ' T H 'H N K Lgbhak K ,Ex F ! gnqyif a 's M this All 3hlk1'r wifngtgzir' J 4' 3' f Q B it 5.-.ws ,.. . 11 ,i,,5'W'fa if -Q. fe-ff 'i if K fr- ima V K is i fl f 11 3. - xxx Q Vx lf? fxxk X dui' vNv'lv l 1 NA' In the Morning In the morning Late birds dart through the air Landing here and there But never for long. The wind is sharp and cold Whistling through the trees Taking all the leaves The winter gains its hold. LORRIE LACOUR '68 ' E .:l Crystal Child On gilded wings of the golden angel bear them away to the castle A perilous trip up through tangerine sky the word of love means die. Children's love in crystal eyes reflecting a world passing by Light and laughing minds in autumn play never suspecting their cold day. Gaze through a convex watch crystal translucent water colors infiltrate a portrayal of one hundred small bodies huddled in dismay imbibing a final display, cascading iridescence, warmth and love. Then dusk with red afterglow silent sea wind begins to blow Purple cloak suspended high the power divine obliterated view and begirded all childkind In this state if only it not befall through blank space the free fall of the unloved crystal child. BETH BULLOCK '68 .45-N u-v '--x ...M- -Aw ..,-nv' 3M ima V ix ! 9 r . U:':l53f? XZ' ,gg f I N'4nu-Wx f ! f f N X? CU f Y gi 1 I 1 TH f 7 xA x wk 5 f QQSXH 'f 5 y JIQQ ,f r Um-, Y . 7 X! !'33KTYx 3 X2 !f'5ff5 5 iff' gf KM XE 3 l A XV ff A 1 xX,4,,ff 5 N f?lf33w'3i W' ',-n , , X Aw, ,My - fggrwz. -,.. 5 Hey You l Hey you, have you ever looked at yourself? B-E-A-L-L-Y looked? Kind of brutal aren't you? Quite the independent one! Don't need anybody to lean on. Watch it when you fall. Nobody will clean you up. We'll walk all over you! Joni Sunday's Decline Masses descend somewhat happy but pensive. Interrogations begin, replies are aflirmative. The past is recollected, revealed. The commotion lulls- dejection sets in. LANDWEHR '68 SANDRA HALL '67 Blue ls Blue has no shape or size or odor or sound. Blue attaches itself to objects or parts of objects. Blue may look different to everyone, but to everyone it is cool, and sometimes sad. If you paint a room light blue, in the winter it will have an uninviting and frigid aspect. It is like the inside of an ice cube. Blue is the artist's brush on the shadow of a man's face. Blue goes with blond hair, and blue is the shadows of snow. Blue is looking out a window at the moon or at twilight with a candle flickering in your room. Blue is the sea and water. Blue is for boys. Blue is what you feel when you've been crying for a long time. Blue is metallic, dull. Blue is sweet and innocent. Blue is dark and mysterious. Blue is my favorite color. SUE BRIGGS '67 El Ploto Supremo The open trap door revealed El Baron with x his custom-made super-destructive, infallible cap . I pistol. El Baron stepped forward into the light thus revealing his sturdy masculine features. But El Barons face was distorted with anger. I-lis side- kick Chico was reported held captive by an enemy agency. The enemy agency wanted the plan of El Barons custom-made, super-destructive, infallible cap pistol. The enemy agency's desire did not bother El Baron. In his mind, plans were already O the good agents always emerge victorious. Y Q- But this time the suspecting El Baron would not reach Chico, for the enemy agency had mali- cious doings intended for him. On the way to the place where he suspected the enemy agency to be located, El Baron met with a slight diversion in the shape of a woman. Naturally this woman wasn't an everyday type of female, she was an enemy agent named Lolita. Lolita wore on her finger the special deliciously indescribable, sleep-perfumed ring. One breath of the marvelous vapor and El Baron was in a deep sleep. Meanwhile, Chico, without El Barons aid, was trying to appear as if he were desperate to escape. Of course his first efforts at escape were in vain. But later, as the time grew right, he used his specially cut, razor-sharp, pointed front tooth to cut his bindings. Chico was purposely let escape. Unknown to El Baron, Chico was a double agent! i 9 . 'Q t f 'fillzllllj I -,,,.,,,i1.il forming by which he could save Chico. After all, i,',ff if lille! ill. 4 of Once free, Chico went in search of El Baron with the hope that he himself might acquire the much wanted plan for El Baroifs custom-made, super-destructive, infallible cap pistol. I-Ie found El Baron just awakening from his deep sleep. But by no tactful interrogation could he obtain the plan from El Baron. El Baron was be- coming suspicious. Chico knew then that to obtain the plan he must reveal to EZ Baron his double identity. I-le also knew that after obtaining the plan he would have to kill El Baron. So Chico turned to El Baron and said, El Baron, I am a double agent. I am after the plan for your custom-made, super-destructive, infallible cap pistol. Once I acquire it, I will kill you. P To this discourse El Baron replied, But of course, Chico. I understand. I can see how grieved you are to do this heinous crime. Thus Chico obtained the plan and killed El Baron. I-Ie reported to both agen- cies the details of the episode. Naturally each agency was given a slightly different version. Chico rose in position with both agencies until one day, while on a job, he met El Baron. Chico was sure that he had killed El Baron. El Baron stepped up to Chico and said, You see, Chico, I am not dead. I was wearing my super-deluxe, inpenetrable, insulated underwear. The plan you obtained was a phony. And now, Chico, I am going to shoot you with my custom-made, super- destructive, infallible cap pistol. BANG! MARTHA CHIGAS '67 The Question VVhat is love? What does this word mean? Is there any one word or Two words that can explain it? Does love just come to certain People, or does it come to everyone? Is there any way of knowing if Love has come to me? DONNA CoR1aooN '67 To D. VVhy do you continually Fight me? Everything I say, you twist around. Do you want me to be against you . . . Is it your subconscious that makes you do as you do? Am I too submissive - too agreeable? If so, I can change. Yet you yourself said, I will not change and become a hypocrite for those who think me wrong. Have I ever asked you to change or be someone else? Then why expect me to do as such .... Maybe you'ld like an enemy instead of a friend. If so, I'1l leave you - to yourself. SANDY SHUTON '67 QFH1LiY'kf1X A , EiGjQ1'uH'4i KEUQEHAX Jl?CPWQf V 'Ny Qmlccidlbksl, giffmf My fx WM mirvml ND vQgifQfM1w, , 'S f10fLf4?A2SZ. uuy, ' m Vaal jul PI I lllllmg no wifcmw ml 3311114 X ml.f 1fMf, Ex fi '1fTTi93Q7jl U. HRW KMA? Cmwfk QVYNMECG ff QM Haiku The blind drifting now to dissonant sounds of arbitrary colors. A sprig of ivy crawls slowly towards the horizon of a desert. Happy blind child focusing temporarily on infinity. i Once independent SHERI WICKWIRE '67 A raindrop slips warily Into a puddle. P KIM KIRCHMAIER '68 The Dive I jumped off the board. Whirling! Head up! Feet up! Wind in my ears. The water below was green, Now the sky - white Both were meeting my outstretched hands. Wet and cold - rush of motion - light above - green below A deep breath . . . Lonnna LACOUR '68 I Stand . . . watching on the wind with the grass and straw about my feet. The wind, it moves only those which want to be moved, only those which are soft and non-resistant. All others, it leaves in its shadow as mere passings in a life from the first small 'whirlpool to the long path across the open held . . . then the rest in the valley, where it remains only a breeze-a breeze thought of only by a child at play in the grass. DEBBIE GALE '67 The Trial A golden little mystery Stood by a small birch tree And wondered At a leaf, Plucked it, Pressed it to her cheek, And let it Flutter to the Faded grass. She then bent The sapling 'Til it too was In the ebbing grass, And let it go To see if it would Spring back. Only, For some reason, When the tree quivered, As if to recoil, She turned away And could not watch As the growing treeling Slowly returned A little bit weaker Than before. JANET KENDALL '67 X .J ggi QU F 5 N- fi, 'A 3 , la ,' 1. ' mf 'f 2 . Y. ff? In I. . I 2 we Ai I Al'-. -gf :Sw Q I' eyti-wivfg I Q v,.' xgr,g1M '4 I REQ VH 'Rf Fit isa - L ,- I . sw . A . -753 .rpm-3:-1 . Les Exercices At Chateau Mont-Choisi, about two weeks after school started, les exercices started too. My clear mother had written a very polite letter to Madame P. asking her to make sure I attended les exercices, not the required twice a week, but four times a week! When I found out about my mother's letter, my annoyance reached hysterical proportions. Alors, at 7:00 every morning, four times a week, I'd drag myself down to the basement. There a prancing little man awaited us. He was so nice to wake up to! He obviously enjoyed les classes d'exercices as much as we despised them. Half the girls stumbled into his gymnase, clothes all twisted over their pajamas, looking as disgruntled as rebellious demoiselles could. My roommates were just as outraged as I was about my getting up early every morning for this loathsome activity. If I could have skipped every morning I would have, but our little pudgy friend always took role. Of course, I managed to get out of the torture once a month. A friend would mumble indispose when he sang out my name. Naturally, I was always very truthful. Some of the girls managed to be indispose all year 'round. Our mincing instructor insisted on giving us about five different kinds of exercises to, as he put it, cultiver la buste. We would Cof course, with smiling faces and great vitalityl swing our arms in circles, frontwards and backwards, assum- ing all sorts of idiotic postures, With equal passion we performed les exercicesv for every part of the body. While we groaned and panted, he would march around the room cuddling his toy poodle, shouting, un, deux, trois, un, deux, trois, and on and on ad nauseum. As he spat out these numbers with a smirk on his face, we would labor like the Hbonnes lillettesw we were. Some of the bad fillettes, unlike me, would hide behind the piano or outside the doorway when he turned his back. I always resented those cowards. When they were discovered, I'd give a small snicker and gloat over their being driven back to slavery. KATHY SULLIVAN '67 The Road Taken A fact, Soon to be an artifact. We march along, Some together . . . Mostly alone. The land stays rigid We must curve our bodies . . . Our minds. We curve until ends meet . . . Meet in a circle. They meet and there are no more roads to explore No more points to make contact with. One smooth road . Already paved . . . With artifacts. MARTHA PARKINSON '68 Monologue CA classroom of ten or twelve seated students and a teacherg attention upon a standing flgure.D Center figure: You all will leam someday but it is already too late to save you. fCynically criticizingl You only mimic the words and thoughts before you . . . listening to and then breathing what you hear . . . The monotone baas of sheep . . . fmockingl baa, baa, baa, I With glorious convictionl I, the only real individual, now, charge you with yourdue punishment. K Moving to the head of the class, in a judicial tonei What I know you will half know, and then half enjoy, even understand less. I Drawing a horizontal line across the air! The significance of your lives is seen in the image of this line smothered by air. Un a confialing tonel I have questioned, judged and have found that I, in the glorious truth, go alone. I never followed the nature that is, but drew my own life of a line not prey to air. Clfxtends a chalk line across the blacklaoarall CTriu111pl1antlyl I made a new image and how clearly it shows. I, a champion of knowledge, have taught myself well. QMarching with high steps to the victory beat in the air the figure leaves and closes the door of the empty room.D PRUDY ALLEN '67 , ! K i ...J 1 ,...c. ,.., .....-M-eu' Tf u 4 , fi ,mf-M 'M '11 ' 1 . M ,-f: .a f!!!5i . h M , A pf' ' .- T li., . vi L 5 I ' , is 5 Q . Ytqy, ' ', A iii Q. V- , fr . Y lv 5 fi f .1 - . fi-32, ,. J . e- V s 'wh . -.ai-is , , , . f - -.27 , - ' ff! E ' TM., . - I , . gg Law' ,. 2 2. ,, - T A - -I. V h A QA , N -.1 lf' rg . W? 'Tx' V 4 X I' 4 T . , , N V 1 J '1 Y W .tjg,,fL2f.l.,M A i . . ' - 'ja ,I - ZH w H ' 1 . , . 1,4 , at , ,, I , , mt, ri X . 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All the half-starved calves swarm into the dining room, practically trampling the head cattle in their path. The worn-out chairs sag under the assorted weights of their occupants. A tidal wave of morning gossip Hoods the room and then breaks into private conversations. Scents of the noonday feed escape the kitchen via the swinging door. The food is distributed, and the har- monious sounds of munching mouths fill the air. Gradually the bites and grunts diminish and satished silence prevails. The feeding done, small parts of the herd disperse-first slowly, then gathering momentum-trampling their leaders again in a frantic dash to the empty box. . Joni LANDWEHR '68 Wl1o's Real Y I don't drink. I'm crazy. I've got the opportunity. A girl, who came to visit me last fall for two days, wrote to say that she had not seen as much liquor in New York all summer as she had seen those two nights in VVorcester. She thought it was disgusting the way the people in my town drink. It is. All her friends are on pot. A Do you know what I get high on? Country roads, the color orange, stars and the moon, The Mamas and Papas , skiing, sand and the waves. So why should I drink and see only a distorted glimpse of my addictions when I am near them. They all have one thing in common: beauty. The word beauty is like the word wonderful , they are both trite. There is nothing more wonderful than beauty. I could repeat that sentence over and over all day and mean it more every time I say it . . . and people would think I was crazy. I am. I don't drink-remember? JANET KENDALL '67 G-O-S-S-I-P Gossip is busybodies at work. Gossip is exaggerated ideas. Gossip is playing with people's feelings. Gossip is an afternoon p-astime. Gossip is rarely true. Gossip is for the birds, because the cats go after them. AMY WHITEHEAD '67 The Fray The doors of war burst open Ejecting the soldiers onto the field. Rush forward is the cry As the battleground is covered With bodies marching onward Against the hostile crowd. Never surrendering an inch of pavement To the enemy, striking blows everywhere No one is wounded mortally in this bloody battle They charge blindly into and with the enemy On its way to the station. LYDIA DESHLER '67 School Dances You're gathered in front of the piano. They are about twenty feet away, behind and around several chairs and tables. You fidget with your coat, gloves, rings, strands of hair drooping over your newly painted face Cwhich took you at least an hour to createD, the pearls hanging from your neck, and whatever else your clammy little hands could discover to preoccupy yourself with until that terrible and dreaded moment arrives. A few of the girls are clumped together, each stealing glances whenever possible and trying to decide who is the best looking boy there and then who will undoubtedly be her date. The stupid looking creep over there in the corner with the large glasses, with a nose to go with them, the greased down hair parted in the middle and, of course, the inevitable white socks, will obviously be yours for the entire night. But then you don't care whom you get, because you're IN LOVE with johnny. Only reason why you even came to this dance was that your good buddie wouldn't go unless you did, and she has done so much for you, it's the least you could do for her in return! All of a sudden you are awakened from your dream-world and your Johnny by someone calling out your name. Taking a deep breath and affecting a careless sigh, you march forward. Youlre introduced-not bad. The petty conversation begins with name, address, grade and so forth. As the dance and time progress, he seems to become more appealing. I-le's the kind of boy Mother and Daddy would just love. He comes from an excellent background, you know. Unexpectedly the lights are turned back on! You blush. Arm and arm you begin to move towards the pile of coats, now on the floor. No words are spoken. What can one possibly say? There is so much you want to say and so little time to say it all in. Gradually you make your way to the door, and the sight of the awful buses hits you. Maybe there will be a flat tire-or the gas has leaked out of the tanks-or is that a snow cloud forming right overhead about to smother you all in an unimaginable amount of snow? No such luck! Here come your chaperones. I-le promises to write, you promise to answer, immediately. The last embrace and then you float onto the bus and wave goodbye as the yellow blurb goes rolling out of the academy's gate. Suddenly comes a scream bellowing from your inner self-releasing emotions, frustrations, anxiety. You're really IN LOVE this time. There is no ques- tion about it. Plans have been made in regard to his weekend coming up in the near future, and then you'll be able to discuss more important matters: breaking the news to Mom and Dad, size of he ring, colleges you'll attend together, and whatever else people in love talk about. Johnny will have to understand. Anyway, you and Johnny were more or less just really good friends. Well, at least that's all you considered your relationship with him as. If he misinterpreted your feelings, that's his tough luck. Poor child, he'll recover in time. A At last, you're IN LOVE, true love. In love with someone you've been with for a grand total of two hours, with whom you've exchanged petty tidbits about trivial topics which neither concerned nor interested either of you. You know next to nothing about his background, beliefs, religion, likes, dislikes, moods and so forth. But there will be time to place all of these insignificant pieces into the intricate puzzle of LOVE SUE Bmccs '67 Closed World T N The whole world was hemmed in that morning. It had snowed heavily the night before. TA':MX :i 's The small timid animals shut themselves away from the rest of the world, crouching in their peep- holes. They would have used up too much energy if they had tried to push their way through their snow-I-illed entrances. They preferred to be shut in. And the people? The snow was piled up in front of their houses. It pushed against their doors, holding them inside with an awesome strength. They could not have escaped, at least not for a while. The people knew that they were closed in. They gave in to this idea, and simply sat behind drawn curtains. The houses themselves realized the predicament. The sky was gray and looked like a huge dome covering the earth. Yes, even the sky Cusually so vast and unlimitedl seemed to hang low, and close in the earth. This was one, big, smothered world, cut off, unaware of the wonders of space. PLACE DOWNEY '68 So Silent and Gay The world so silent and gay with wind pooling Hakes into whirls, blowing dust from the shelves onto which the feathers float COne cannot follow with unconcentrated eye the curved path of the one snowflake. D Why not go out - to travel endangeringly adventurously into this world so silent, 2335 mysteriously hazardous. MARTHA BAKER '67 1, A -'f 'A QQ ix ff .1 I ig? ' jfs yy, ,,7.1.ugf, .A,. y In ,M j 1, 'X i M,fA K F fly! f 5 Q . 1 pf ' W j lf From the Depths ,A 5 I ll yi 1 , fl f From the depths of slumbering sleep ii' ffl' I am thrust from unreality Q 4 fi 5 y By the piercing sound of the bell, Q 1. gl Which echoes down the corridor. i fkgpf Q 'if ffixfyf N The radio soothes my agitated soul. 'gt i ,f ,xii . I , 'fu QMJNM W ' I am restored to serene peace 1 V if By the overpowering drowsiness Q I -1 , -. 'Q Enclosing my world so completely f A df 5' l never hear . . . X N Q The tragedy of the world. Zh ff XX , p A M ,lx LYDIA DESHLER 67 Q r.- EX-jx xx W, its . -QE' ki -l.tr.ffXb! is if a Pa' Apres les Vacances Nobody laughs Everyone cries Now they are all equal All have something in common - A miserable tear. .Sliding backwards into the past Like idle fools, dreaming of days lost in time Instead of measuring the future With theiruown weight. v Nobody laughs, except one. Have you laughed alone? It's fun - basically - Watching the golden children of heaven and hell Weeping together In common interest, Everyone for himself. SANDY SHIPTON '67 I Watch . . . in wondering weariness those whirling circles which so long engulfed me in their thoughts. Tired of this washing, I lay to dry on the quiet shores . . . Short ripples, yet still they reel me. And in an attempt to laugh at this past horror which I alone have escaped, I cry in fear. For now in the ending of these circles they can only stop with no breaking off . . . No ending to say it is done . . . but just a slowing down of something I never began. DEBBIE GALE '67 Reincarnation Life is an hour-glass. The grains of sand are days That slip through the Tunnel of time. They land one by one Quickly, to form a pile. Years are soon made. Life is lived. Ioy and Sorrow Hatred and Love . . . And when there are no More grains to spend, The tunnel is silent, empty. But will there not be a Hand to turn the hour glass? To begin life once more .... GRETCHEN VALADE '67 Ambiguity a dog bone filled with nicotine ashes. the beauty of soot, hard silicone shell, crusted amphibious ideals weathered by salty tears of speed. red and blue sand, particles of people blurred by the foggy mist carried on the frothy white of the sea. a seagull's Hight is steady, co-existing with waves of thought transmitted upon the wing. webbed feet parent a strange child in ripples of designed words, crushed in natural rock granite collected, for its beauty is maimed with common peasantry. SHERI WICKWIRE '67 -Q 1 J x A A wi .JQABA 3.-6? 'EFS , a br, . f ag., 1.51 , M ff? 9,5 ff xl Q Z ' if , - .f . ' N 45 1 Dinacola's Vision I am an old man with grey hairs and all my senses dulled, except my memory. I recall a blood-spattered battleground, repulsive with the stench of rotten flesh. Toylike black cannons loom in the backgroundg once destructive, now silent. In the air drifts the lingering gunsmoke and the gloom of approaching snow. Darkness will finally descend, but not forever - not yet. I am an old man living now in two worlds and perhaps forever. MARTHA CHIGAS '67 The Song The song can't you hear tvvining through the grasses boundless in our maze Reverberating over a slow surging sea seeking out the wretched broken bodies, diseased minds, rise Listen, the song In the wind there's a song in the wind mellow air echoing its wail haunting, summoning to follow It's a wind for Loneliness for those in search of heart of liberty of love An existence in the wind I cast naked to the touch images for someone to search Solo bird soaring across the sky a song in the wind of Love on the wing I hear it distantly droning inwardly with a promise there's a wind with a song of Love In the wind there's a song of wonder, of doubt, proclaiming you will be loved and your love will Live. BETH BULLOCK '68 Passage to Nihilism Words fall on sensitive flesh And adhere themselves to blistered veins, Driving the life blood blindly to a morbid purpose. Crimson rushes down, crushes, and destroys reason defended by the grasping tissue of the mind. Martyred by flames, Haunting firey flesh, Choking reason finds p-rofound purpose in living flesh. Veins explode again flooding the fire-tortured mind, And reason for destruction is drowned by a crimson enemy feeding the mind's fire. From the zenith to the nadir, flre's red smothers the fuel of reason, And cools, washes, and cleans the dead tissue. Red dries brown and seals as a cofhn, Hiding wounds with new Hesh and new purpose, oblivious to reason, indifferent to pain. The Bed Away Wet foam, rolling' over on its bed of sand, retreating, leaving a glossy sheet of shining pebbles, finds comfort in dissolving into warm green drops whi making an endless coverlet of water. PRUDY ALLEN '67 ch expand PLACE DOWNEY '68 .bl ' I WFP in ' The Bird A large, ominous spot is roughly outlined against the clear, placid blue of the sky. It remains stationary, perched high upon a limb of a tree. It begins to take some form as I approach, and I can see the brown-grey feathers spread across his body, varied only by a few splotches of white at the tips. His beady black eyes glare down hatefully upon me, and his sharp, Herce beak moves slightly as if being sharpened. I-le clings with his feet upon the tree, clawing the rough bark as he files his toenails into sharp points. Suddenly, with no warning, his wings spread out across the sky on either side of him, covering the world with his black ugliness. The sound of flapping wings thunders above me, and a blast of wind causes me to quaver as he soars away. NANCY SMITH '68 Meditation An insignificant mass of organic matter - filling a minute interval of that abstract theory of time with restless ponderings of what existence is really made of that should make it so prized - only to realize in the last few precious particles of life, that it is nothing more than the expectation of death. Stagnant Winter the roses are dead and lay beside the white sand where no green plant has ever grown and trees emerge from within a wave yellow leaves replace the dead roses at the bottom of an oak roses fear the frost and the frost fears the sun GAYLE DEBELL '67 and purple penguins waddle across the frozen earth burying the autumn leaves and beauty is not contained in the autumn leaves. dead to you? no! i'm not dead and you can't see me. SHERI Wrcxwnm '67 A bud On slender stem Did soak in drops of rain Cinquains And grew and blossomed into a Flower. Fathom The depths unseen Ease not the steady keel CHALLIS WALKER '67 Gawky young insurgents used as cannon fodder in the marshes of Vietnam, ensnared. Nor forsake the forgotten folk, And cease. LYDIA DESHLER '67 Myself with you away left as half when apart and halves are still nothing until made whole. MARTHA CHIGAS '67 DEBBIE GALE '67 Where Is Spring ? When the leaves softly abandon their trees, What are the trees left with? When flowers lose all their glorious sunshine and warmth, What remains? The trees have nothing except their bare limbs, outstretched and waiting. Only spring will end their loneliness. Flowers lose everything and droop their heads in sorrow. Only spring will make them stand erect, Bursting with beauty and life. Here I stand, listening to silent footsteps and Watching a small, faint figure slowly disappear. I am left empty and I, too, droop in sorrow. Where is Spring? GRETCHEN VALADE 67 'Mix Kg .Lt XX - Pg if W at ' 5 W W ufffivf T15 :'-- li ll X a K Q' ',yy A x N . il pawn . 5 Jil, I .xxifp .WL T 3 ,X . l t. X i , up X bf . x ' LMXMQ. a, M- ' L ' L Sea Impressions The soft grey haze rose slowly from the mottled brown cliffs. The shrill cry of a seagull was audible in the distance as the cool, briny, mist touched the shore with her bracing fingertips. The buoy rocked mildly and methodically in the stillness of the sea as the beacon from the lighthouse glimmered through the vagueness of the morning dawn. GAYLE DEBELL '67 Surrounded We were surrounded And no place to go Up - only Windows Down - only floors. The siren then blew And everyone hurried Straight as sticks To be counted. I. C. would be missing and the guard would be mad Her number was 83 And mine was 3 more. I took a deep breath And listened to all 6l..,72...82...84 VVhere was C.? There was a commotion And guards hurried out The first place to look Was the kitchen's back room just after they left Another guard appeared Carrying a note From the head R. N. The counting continued To everyone's amaze I. C. was excused No mark for her today. Finally it was finished And now to our work Of cutting down trees And chopping the wood. MANDY Cnocxnn 67 I If AqQV A in The Grecian Affair Vassilius lifted his stocky body from the I . F f'-1. new . v lil p pn, . . I pf M, M. Nj ... 1 ft f Egg lx lounge chair and dove into the pool. His black j F Q1 A curly hair and deeply tanned neck were barely 1 1 Q V visible from where I lay. The sun penetrated my ' 45 skin and made tiny beads of perspiration form on ., rny brow and between my fingers. Greece is hot Mx J: uppyy Q . Q 9 in the summer. ' I I mumbled something to Vassilius when he iv B- 'Wf, ,j?fI,f' returned, dribbling cold water on my back. Not Y, A . K I . 1 , wi ' understanding me, he inquired, Te? , but caught I ' A I himself and said, whoa f A Xe . W It's not important. Forget it, Bill. , ,,r, --ee -y fffix. H Vassilius liked to be called Bill. I preferred 5 T 'l.,- 1 to say Vassily: foreign names are always much ' is TM' more romantic. He both hated and admired Ameri- cans. American girls were rich and lazy in Vassily's opinion. I fancied myself, an American, neither rich nor lazy. On this note our relationship began. Vassily took Aristea, my Greek companion, and me to the beach in his fast black Volvo. His car had a beige and gray leather interior and American safety belts. Vassily was very proud of it. A copy of Playboy lay on the back Seat. We raced through the traffic of Athens southward to the sea- shore. He had his arm around me while we talked of America, he hoped that someday he might see San Francisco. Vassily spoke with a slight accent, and like all Greeks feigned not to comprehend fully what I said. Although I was sure he understood English perfectly, there was a certain mystery about Vas- sily. One was never sure of what he understood or thought. We frequently spoke in French or bro- ken Greek. He was stubbom and refused to let American cultu-re dominate him, yet, he was eager to meet Americans. Occasionally he and Aristea would exchange knowing looks. The beaches near Athens are beautiful. On the white sand are many brightly colored um- brellas with striped cabanas in the background. There is an intemational Havor that distinguishes the beaches from those of Southern Califomia. Moreover, the blueness of the Mediterranean cannot be duplicated. The men and women wear bikinis, speak many tongues, and laugh and live freely. Vassily and I found an orange umbrella while Aristea went for a swim. As Aristea emerged from the blue sea, I realized how truly Creek she looked. Her nose was straight in the fine Grecian style, her eyes and hair black. She was heavily proportioned through her shoulders and arms as are most of the women, they are born to heavy labor and childbearing. Her skin was richly bronzed. As she moved toward us, Vassily smiled. As we left Astir Beach, Vassily opened the door for me and indicated the back seat. I tried speaking to both Vassily and Aristea in French, but they paid little attention. We drove home si- lently. I was confused. I saw Aristea the next day, but did not see Vassilius for another week. When we finally did meet, he greeted me in Greek, shaking my hand. He turned and politely walked away. Then I knew. I was a stranger. Here everyone spoke Greek. CATHERINE COWLES '67 The Feast Trees, following each step made by the un- sure man, walking about in the untouched snow, among untouched people, wading into non-exis- tence for split moments, falling out as the curb goes beneath him. The little lady, with the white teeth and large smile swallows him up, and he falls once more to the bottom of her smile. And they all laugh at the ladies' club meeting the following week. DEBBrE GALE '67 Little Rogue little rogue hated little rogue loved only by the image of yourself diagnose ugliness give of yourself into the puzzle of hatred. silhouette your shadow, with that of the deceased, into a perpendicular hell stab the heaven with a black cross as you stand at the end of an avenue of forests, which stretches from the concrete floor of your cell. now a white man cut and bleeding because you asked for no more than a tendril of wheat what are you made of gray one? being a carving there must be worship. who has molded a person, corrupted? a loving God? if there be any intimacy can it not break through porous stalks? there is always a path of escape. no, sanguinary man the corn is green and minds are dank because the sun won't penetrate dandelion stalks blades of grass won't grow beneath a coffin of dying respect and no one listens to your plea because nature is deaf and dumb. SHERI WICKWIRE '67 I '1 Monday Anger wells inside me, gaining momentum. Waves of madness break suroino forward. 7 C D a mist of nigrescence covers me, and, -There is no health in us. Color splatters on my canvas brain in shapes: fade pyramids Vermillion cones sooty contours. A thought of refuge engulfs meg yes, -Blessed are the peacemakers. Relief steals over me, lulling my rage. Calm soothes the truant, kissing its teeth. The delinquent sleeps to awaken, -For thine is the kingdom. CATHER1NE Cowuss '67 JS Q - l , M , M155 Mi 34 Q v 'gg - f ' i la l ,ae 5, :,' Q 1 'fx -nf- TTT' V 4 A 9 ,,,,k13'!,Jg.g,M, ,,...::,5:,l,f,,,5,, , 31,-'EQESEKQQ-3f1::255f:.---A f . M312 ,w ny 'kv N155-H? w-www - ,, yah' A rw h., X .-2.-'4' - .1 xg., 455' f' 5.31.1 , . . ,..wH'Wl ' ,,-gCQ:.,.F:'M 'Y J 4 .' .gs-.fi 1-. -,l,'.:,,,4z:, . 4 ,mf ,.1 . , ,,-f- , ' f ff . . , 1 0 Wiz' . WA V 1 '13, .U X x y ' Y M91 -,Q , A fx 1,5'l,,, f , r. Wx .HP HF' ...W M V 1 ,W A ' ,'..g,,- ,xg'1af4 3: :fJ1f4Zw'f 5,1 gg, rl 4, V R. , A., .f.XyT'11 . uf.'4v,.Sl,. ,Al A ,1 , FV: Ku ,Qje Uk, , ,I . ff-,'-' . .1 WM . .fm- -'iff , ,QQQQ7 J 'i1e.,:w: , :Sign ,.4,45ifi'r N. '-H QF. ,Ax ,k ., . f'f'?f S.1I+f -ff. . :. ,ev W... . . 'M-ifglxag '- qbgaizil ,373 N ., ., +1 ,,,g.-95,1 , xfcs,-',:f44 f W 1' 9 .44 nm V .gg- ,Af .,. uc sd ff .gw:ff? ' ' ' -u . Lonely Race The boy wove down the dock accompanied by the sound of the choppy water slapping against the dock posts. Dazeclly he gazed at his boat across the harbor. He felt tense, pulled taught like a rope. I-le seethed inwardly because his sailing crew had decided they did not want to race that day. At the same time he wanted to cry. The anger drove him to spite and he was soon straining on the oars against the powerful beat of the waves. I-le was going to sail in the race even if he had no crew. The boy tacked out of the harbor. Once past the breakwater he realized how rough the sea actually was. The vast silt-colored ocean stretched out with no ending while silver crests broke from the mellow covered surface. Reflecting the sea, the sky shrouded most of the light. The sun shone slightly, a hazy ball of a lighter media of grey. The race began with the rolling thunder of the starting cannon. Once across the starting line the boats formed a nearly single line and the boy took his place in the middle. I-le who had previously felt the cold wind down his windbreaker began to feel steamingly hot. A sweat broke out over his body and his tanned face grew pale. The wind drove the breaking crests up the deck and the freezing water slid into the cockpit. The tiller pulled away and the boy used all his strength to hold it in line. .Still worse was the strain of the sheet. Repeatedly he grasped the rope with all his power but it would slowly slip from his hand. Finally he wound it around a cleat once to help intercept much of the pull. The wind was blowing a gale and the bow dipped deeply into the water. Floor boards and boat supplies floated around the cockpit and the boy's clothes were completely sodden. The sheet was now also wrapped around his lower arm and its tug drew blood. The red fluid dripped down his arm, trickled from his clenched fist and diffused into the separate ocean in the cockpit. His wet salty clothes rubbed irritatingly against his cold body. The salt stung his hands with piercing sharpness and he whimpered in pain. Each limb, muscle, and bone ached. The world spun around in blurred confusion. I-le groaned in agony under the unrelenting torture. At last as the boat ran at a broad reach, the bow plunged once too deeply and the boat became engulfed by water. The wooden craft scattered across the surface and the Water washed over the semi-floating hull. The boy gagged for breath, thrashing in the churning water. The roar of the crash boat cut through his panic. Rapidly the rescuers hauled his fever-stricken body from the water. BETH BuLLocx '68 6, .1A, y ,A ,V 4 Tourist Typical . Let us follow a ical tourist We shall begin with his disembarkmg from the plane and i f 1 i then follow as he begins his joumey through a p foreign land. So . . . Onward Christian Soldier! iig,li.4?Q,, Our twolegged friend is first distinguish- fi., E 41 ,mia Lg, f t K . ' Zi able by his snow-white tan and the sunglasses . 5 s W, ix perched on top of his head as he mills hopelessly 'ip J through the terminal, weighted down by unneces- I 'fi sary luggage, tennis rackets, guitars, sleeping bags, Fi and whatever else he could carry or get into the , ity suitcases without their being overweight. 1 K , In a secluded, but now crowded, corner of ' - the aeroport, are paper cups filled with some form ,,,,,,,,, of alcoholic liquid. After sampling several of these unique little tidbits, Tommy Tourist comes to the conclusion that this undoubtedly must be an exotic native creation. He begins to discuss the mysteri- ous, enchanting ingredients of this drink with a fellow bystander. VVhat our comrade does not know is that this exotic beverage has inevitably been imported from the States. At last a taxi is hailed and the tourist's vacation has officially begun. The sunglasses are readjusted and the driver of the cab is fired with numerous questions in regard to his native land. Once settled at a hotel, our tourist friend decides to emerge into the streets and add to the state of anarchy which already exists. With camera in hand and typical high-heeled, White P.F. Hyers and matching ventilated nylon socks, he struts up and down the narrow streets. Coming upon a native shop, he goes in and eventually comes out with a straw hat and a hideous native print shirt. If our friend is the adventurous and daring specimen of Typical Tourist, heill undoubtedly decide to rent a self-drive car Cbetter known to the natives as a sudden-death carl He'll definitely have to have a sports car and this will have to be a convertible and, by the time he returns this help- less piece of machinery, the muffler will be gone and the rest of the car will be suffering from an incurable disease known as body rot, acquired by being immersed in several feet of salt water. ' The night life of Tourist Typical tends to be rather long and 'overdone,' to say the least. The newcomers to a popular nightclub are always noticeable since they are the loudest in the audi- ence. VVhile on the dance Hoor, Tourist Typical is at first a bit awkward and unsure of himself, but gradually he learns the movements of the native dance and considers himself a veteran. I-Ie's always the last to leave, and on his way out manages to purchase all the M.C.'s latest and oldest albums . . . something for him to play during his next bridge game with the Smiths once he gets back home. The morals of Tourist Typical seem to take a considerable drop as soon as he is away from his native land and able to shut off all reality, He is easily persuaded into going over the hill to one of the quaint little native shows . . . time, 3:30 a.m. The vacation comes to an end and old T.T. is faced with a rude awakening. The taxi ride to the aeroport is somewhat reversed now. Our friend seems to be telling the driver about his island. He is still weighted down with luggage, except now it's about twenty pounds more: things for the kids, neighbors, dog, boss and so forth. A mad dash is made and the duty-free quart of liquor is bought and neatly and inconspicu- ously placed among the wet bathing suits wrapped in a straw bag. The major topic of conversation is usually in regard to the weather that he is leaving and the weather that he will shortly face. The long, tedious walk to the plane begins and, before boarding the big bird, a last sweeping glance is stolen, a wild attempt to Ht the past two weeks' escapades into a six-second look, The sunglasses are again readjusted over a Noxema-covered nose. Tourist Typical is home- ward bound. SUE BRIGGS '67 ALAN ROD : ALAN: Bon : ALAN Ron : ALAN Ron : ALAN ROD : The Mourn After Having trouble, Big Brother? I let her drive last night. One thing I like about you, B.B., you really know how to handle your women. I've never gone through anything like it before. Beal rough, eh I-Ierkie? Transmission blown, a Hat, wheels out of alignment . . . Expensive date! I can't afford her anymore. Wise deduction. Nothing's as expensive as a woman. Iom LANDWEHR '68 I Now Pronounce You House and Spouse Beneath a pointless tree of fingered strands hudclle paper dolls of non-entity. Dolls of glad-wrap and birthday paper who watch the wind whistle and carry them to their places of disbelief Dolls with staring eyes of emptiness who ,hunger for relief from painted lips and gaily colored dresses and permanent puff hair . But they sigh and dance merrily on to the tune of man. DEBBIE GALE '67 ff ' -ir 'WMIW' lj L I9 ,ELA if . ,.,..,J , X .lv mi The Saturday Night Supper .1l iIr.T WMA. f N , I, History was being made and the flllE 'l . ill!! ' child was there in the center of the Hutch- .- X-X My 'Wm' Q, ville Communal Activity Gathering. All '- . those little wimps running around were , his direct associates in the intricate plans '- -' 4 3' of childhood deceit. The knee-highs pro- ceeded to saw half-way through the legs , of the after-dinner bridge tables and to HZ fill alternate sugar bowls with salt. 1 The white sale packages were vVl',. confiscated and that didn't matter for it's XXX the thought that counts. The wide-eyed . . Dilemma 1 M X C children of the Far East will survive on the goodness contained in souls. It was fate that an alcoholic keg and match fell in the baby grand and burned a score of burlap diaper bags. The music was reduced to a crude form of uninhibited expression, which echoed the character and passion of the drag and dairy farmers. The fiddle played a solo titled He Only Lives VVho ,Enjoys Life as another bottle of home distilled liquor was thrown over someone's shoulder into the fireplace. Arms were locked in a simultaneous plea for a fertile, rainy season. So1nebody's fur was matted with tomato soup and so well blended with the bearskin wall-to-wall carpeting that the guest list was checked to see if any of the senior citizens had croaked during the course of the festivities. But men don't worry about a heart failureg they are worried about the idea of a heart failure. All the toothless grins were excusing their in-laws for their short comings. A clumsy ox tripped over a Greek statue, which was semi-formulated from an original, used in last year's production of Antigone. And the background and foundation of social liberties was incorporated into alphabet soup, digested and released in verbal images at the head of the banquet table. A Smsnr Wrcxwnua '67 Twice Given I am cold, The mist hangs heavy about my eyes. I slip from day to night missing sun rays. and grope not in vain for the ragged root- my last chance. I grasp unsure- strength returns my feet steady. I lift my eyes and walk. The sun is warm on my face. LINDA LovEjoY '67 SPLINTERS NORTH EAST OFFSET Inc his 1 Wg N T 260 BILLERICA ROAD - ROUTE IZ9 CHELMSFORD, MASSACHUSETTS 0l824 Telephone 454-779I Area Code 6I7 SPLINTERS WESTERN LUMBER 0-0. 2745 Tidelcmds Avenue, Post Office Box H Nafional City, California 92050 Phone 474-3341 QPLHN TFRS M GUM. . H4 8' GMM jimtzen. -fr-fglfg 51111-Cz lig- 6001:-I COCA COLA C0 L ll M BLMIGIIARD GIIARTERED SERVICE, I-IIB. owned and operated by ALVIN T. FRENCH T k b SPLINTERS Best Wishes to the Class of '67 THUMAS F. 00RRO0N, LTD. IIISURAIIGE 7 THE PLAZA, LOCUST VALLEY, N.Y. C5165 676-2200 Buckland Prinfing Co. Lowell, Mass. Wigs by 7 joziefa 45 Merrimack Street Tel. 458-6331 SPLINTERS 1O0 Years of Quality and Service PRINOE'S Stationers - Booksellers - Gifts Typewriters - Greeting Cards 96-104-108 MERRIMACK ST. LOWELL, MASS SQ - ' -i ' l . . -.tg-9g.y5gp 1 .., . l s my wg' Q, J , . X W Q1 '1 - -, ' ry 9-E-1-idgzilfl Ll , X 5 -TCZZY 1 fl f 'l 1 f til' - tif? E X fi-2015, SPMIISIII CLUB '61 if Compliments of POST OFFICE BELVIDERE WINE GO., ING. LOCKSMITH A. M. IEKNAVORIAN Compliments of Compliments of Compliments of EASTERN SERVICE CO. Tl'IE SGUTT JEWELRY 00. 60 Merrimack St. Frigidare Sales 8. Service corner of Central St. 238 Sh' S. LOWELL, MASS. aw t LOWELL, MASS. CPhone GL 3-3979D SPLINTERS Portraits by B E N R l MO Friends together can make a little world, warm with love and delight, and nothing makes so close a bond as the gilt of a Beautiful Portrait OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER, ROGERS HALL CLASS OF I967 FOR APPOINTMENT CALL STUDIO 38 CHURCH STREET PArl:viow 9-4232 WINCHESTER, MASS. SPLINTERS ALBERT RICHARDS CO., Inc. A rreled, H 'Sunlighr A 1 L14 Y 1 SOLD AT MCKITIRICK HARDWARE C0. Plumbing, Heating, Farm Supplies 60 Fletcher Street LOWELL, MASS H HIGHLAND LAUHDRY SUHSHIHE GLEAHERS Same day service when requested SPLINTERS FRIENDLY IGE CREAM SHOP of Lowell CENTRAL SHOPPING PLAZA KEEP ACQUAINTED 452-8727 WE WOULD LIKE TO CARE FOR YOUR INSURANCE Study it. Plug any gaps. Watch over it. And keep you up-to-date. Ours is a total service--for the individual, business, or both. All lines including life. Fred. C. Church SL Company Insurance since 1865 Lowell, Chelmsford, Littleton in ANDOVER the Smart 86 Flagg Agency Compliments of LEF'l'Y'S DRIVE-IN 600 Rogers St. on Rt. 38 Lowell, Mass. 452-8375 Pizza - Torpedoes - Hamburgs - Clams - Dogs Take Out Service Table Service SPLINTERS PHONE 475-4821 OLDE ANDOVER VILLAGE 031212 Qgillage giflninzr 5111133 93 MAIN STREET, ANDOVER, MASS. 01810 CLINTON E. RICHARDSON YOU CAN DEPENO ON fda'- FOR CLEANING 5 IAST MEIRIMACK STREET. LOWELL, MASS. Morons - AUTOMATIC Tmmsmxssxon Bruucss BLACKSTOCK GARAGE Experienced Repairing Tel. CL 2-4871 572 Rogers St. Lowell, Mass. Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of BAIN pest control service ' . Y' 9 0 h MAIN OFFICE: 20 HURD STREET - ' LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS 01852 LOWELL GAS COM PANY SERVING COMMUNITY AND INDUSTRY E6 'Gi SPLINTERS YOUNG IRS. SHOP feature fashions YOUNG, LIVELY Moving . . . To The Beat of the Moment BON MARCHE 153 MERRIMACK ST., LOWELL 1. Comp zments of the Compliments of HOLIDAY III PARADISE DONUTS INTERVALE, NEW HAMPSHIRE One hundred twenty-six years MT a prescription store SPRING WATER CO., INC. F- and E- BAILEY 31 C0- Prescription Specialists Steadman St. LOWELL, MASS. 79 Merrimack St. 19 john St. Tel. 459-9041 Lowell, Mass. ? S,- 'S X2 .fav 5 .N 4. V-.N . W.,-.m..f. D45-xv.-1.14,-.14-'m..Mw.'xJ-1x'- 1 - -Qpf v 'X V, ' '. ., , .f V - Q , ,ff , ., .-,- A 1 .Wfv,,'. Q . n v.-'Q ' ,,,. 'H 3 v . ' -un' ' ' an f '-r-'f - ww 'Wg' ff f --0 'S ,V . . . ,, - f'p'r'yP f' U i - , I - ,.,f1.,f 'falff -'- , ,,l, g 7.1 ,X-,:,. ,-, -Y .--.4 1-:if-,.2'6,',.- gf 1 , xmgu -4 .. '- , 4 rf , ' ,, ,, ,U ,npr --,zpw .Mg rj nf .- , u,1,.g 4.1, 1, ,Dt .f ,, , U, , ' V' 2-,V U, ' .,,1.,---fl-lm., : A 51, 1.,.,,',':v.,j1 - W .:f,,jA 1-1, 1,3--,,f. .f,.,,:.!Al, .,,' V- -,fy-5 51,,:,,W'v45,,,1,,.,,, 5 ,I A35 ,ul 3 4- P.-,r.,.l,y5,-,im .,,?L,y'1.f.,,r5,...: ,:,,j,, gi,:,',1,, A: I . - :,,5,,.k5- 'V . ... J gg - 1. .' N ... . - 5- ga, fmlfigmf' , 91w4fi':'1.s'.m?.i33..11f'N'.I.gh-,mz.z .3er-5' -,,-'uf -if 3 ?f1':f'ii3?:15??'e-Fi.'f 3Z2.:,6wf3 .,1-fMf2- --G,nw2.fAnv.xf.,11:vgrrgfa+iiwad ?qktiglgfjg ' 4 -' ,rf , ' 'w .'ii'?'.. , ...H ,T ' Lv sl, T 5 4, , , v A , 3 id 1 4 if X sg, 2: 1?395f'-'il' -4:9.v:Gf'SH7 . T6 'Lf' 1 QE, ' -n- w,g.., 2 .vxgsf ' W ft Tgiiz? - iff QQ -' 4' ww, h :-iw, 5 - 1: 3 Q .Q 1 1 .mf V ' ' . .qw-v.,'. . -, .9 lf. ,W vi' Az' 'Valk 3 - ., .fM'Y?- , A ,LVN iff fcfgff - qvip' ' If: A if . , viii: -b , 4 , 4 Q , , 1-,nm ,-..,. fb , e-, ' iwff, ' 'FF G, Ei - f ' ',,, X 42 ' ' '.' 1' fi 'fi L Y' . v :YJ , , . I lvl A d ,. , , k Y L ' '--.. 2- .--3, . - , Q' , . K 1 K wg:-, , . V 1, f - . .-nv , ,.. 1 -,462 V, ' X ' z-x 3.52 -5-gf? h'Z'f. 5x5'- -.'g.'-'1.Q- ,,:,f.,-.V-r, yi. . L I , ,, , 4:-' ,M .. ,. fe f -' ' 2 , 4 J' wg N ' sw 1 . SPLINTERS Q. . ff: -V 1' ff' 77 we Z.. M ef: QQ. 7 A S1 eff- 4 1 V ie '7e 'e 1 ,S X 1 f 1 ask 1 ...1., . , 2:9 1 dn LQ Y, 7 . . -fl' 1 A 1:3 L51 Je- X241 ' fdugodxeazi 7 0 Q Q r-11 5 C' fZll7L. Zda-wlauz. and fdfufy-' fa -I Compliments of MATTHEW MILMI - Designer and Maker of Fine jewelry - Bld 1 387 WASHINGTON ST Rm. 317 Washington g. Llberty 2-3117 BOSTON 8, MASS. xg! 1 1 J - J0l'lllST0lI'S BAKERY 295 Westford St. 3 i O E 'f X g l , . , al 4 LOWELL, MASS. THE W -NGGITIVQS Compliments of E. A. WILSCN C0 700 Broadway Lowell, Massachusetts FUELS SPLINTERS Compliments of BROX'S DAIRIES STANLEY C. MARSDEN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR , 43 Livingston Ave. GLenvicw 2-4482 Lowell Heafing 8: Cooling Equipmeni' L - Fuels - D. T. SULLIVAN CO., INC. non GORHAM sr. TEL. sn. uasr SPLINTERS Compliments of an --D n S S M: ro 'QB' fe 5 . .nllllllllnt ' 393' an Meammcx smse1,u.oweu.,MAss. Compliments of DIAMQND TAXI BRADT BAKERY, INC. BAKERS OPT FINE CRACKERS 128 warren Sf. Smce 1833 Lowell, Mass. Whiting St. Lowell, Mass. UNITED RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT 297 CENTRAL ST. LOWELL, MASS af f-- 'f af ,. . Xxx 12 J I A I s I, . X A . f I : f 1 f i J i V H H J- . .3 ' .X , OAI JD! '35-Q' iihgif N- QQ Q? SPLINTERS Compliments of - RUSSELI. LUMBER 00. RIVERSIDE POTA'l'0 SERVIGE, ING. Compliments of A FRIENU X J . Q 81 it g il N, 2 VV7' X U m ' ' W .m -m mm A M isa N fiffif 1 ' 5 Q Q 5' t P' 4 Y A I i isvfz V. I it Q. Y i 5 V A Q 533 m m m f m m ' m 3 ' iff m 5 mmm.iCmiWQgQ'5fn2b,fsmmm, wmQi,QQ9,vrE2iffefrezfQf 11we1i.f9s, f'FEfF?f.SfE5QQ'2 SPLINTERS I- O1A.oU.. f lui Egonna Chance 3 vs 4 'R L , fe 5 as 23, SQOOWXQYCS ffeefeii, xiii Q Q i 1, H I gf t A N33 H X zffi X X562 21' fav is f MMM! r I, '5 f A X751 S 'fin A we ,W 'x J 3 yn 0'CONNOR 8 Hlll HARDWARE 460 Lawrence Street LOWELL, MASS of aAuMom snos.. mc. GEN E'S HI GRADE Where Television and Appliances are a specialt . . , ICE not just a sid:elAline 39 Kearney Sq. opposite the P.O. 455-5656 EHUHIEH-EHIHN EUMPHNV SPLINTERS Z V IA .ia f Zffff? ' M - -4 ' Bafqfmwcj 6j4NDlc2j 449 -.Jilapleton dive., Suffield Conn. 15B Soutlnjvlain Street, Wst Harwrd Cbnn. For Better Health Eat More Fish . . H ARE OG D E B A T E W -' 0 f ' Wholesale and Retail Af C L U B Fmzsu Fxsn, Oysrzns, CLAMS, LOBSTERS, ETC. 461 Lawrence St. LOWELL, MASS. Ig? i--f Dial 2-35 71 Compliments of PUTNAM 8. SON 207 MARKET ST. LOWELL, MASS JANE TOOHER Sports Clolhes, Inc. 598 COLUMBIA RD. DORCHESTER, MASS. GEURGE F. FISHER, INC SPLINTERS Compliments of Town House Motel Compliments of A FRIEND ' X ' sum :mmf ' If! l1 Q ix C i6 m QI V I W , -l -'ilfiflksA SPLINTERS E. C. Pearson Painfing Co., Inc. Harold A. Linstad, Prop. Interior Decorators and Painting Contractors IMPORTED and DOMESTIC PAINTS OILS, VARNISHI-:s WALLPAPERS AND ENAMI-:Ls 90 HAMPSHIRE STREET LOWELI., MASS 'EVERYONE'S FORD DEALER LOWELL Compliments of DRS. WILLIAM R. PEPIN, SR. and W. REID PEPIN SPLINTERS QKMWM A. A. SMITH 6. CO.. INC. Est. 1906 Authorized Dealers Olivetti Underwood Sales 0 Service 0 Rentals 34 Central Street LOWELL, MASS Good Lufl K GL 7-7481 5 S fr 'si SPLINTERS INN S H E R A T O N ROLLING GREEN MOTOR INN o GIFT SHOP o 100 BEAUTIFUL GUEST ROOMS o INDOOR AND OUTDOOR POOLS o DINING ROOINI FEATURING A FRIDAY NIGHT BUFFET o COCKTAIL LOUNGE ICT. 133 and 93, ANDOVER TEL. 475-5400 if Li F X xx LI 5 Q Q, . ' cj E10 I I I g A 6 : af Aw R 414, -g gp WIQHIIW' X593 SPLINTERS Compliments of THE STUDENT COUNCIL mom. cnswzu. WOQD-ABBOTT CO. Established 1872 Diamond Merchants and jewelers 4,13 75 MERRIMACK STREET LOWELL, MASS Vfifli THE BARROWS TRAVEL Qu' Sf SERVICE, INC. 1 WJ 4?-if 420 I-Iildreth Building 45 Merrimack st. LOWELL, MASS ' 459-9319 SPLINTERS Best Wishes from the x ff- W ap, T K , V' 4 fx! N - 5 'ff' xxx Wi'X in Compliments of A FRIEND SPLINTERS Get It At Parkway Prescripfion Pharmacy JAM1-:s J. QUEENAN, Reg. Ph. 309 ROGERS ST. - LOVVELL, MASS. Free Delivery Phone GL 4-4831 ofeflfvofzfs' FURNITURE ' RUG5 846. IBB! LOWELL'S LARGEST furniture store for 80 years JOSEPH E. STAVELEY Plumbing and Heating STEAM, GAS A WATER sYs'rEMs Residence Westford Road Shop Chelmsford 490 Chelmsford St. Dial 2-3741 Lowell, Mass. SPLINTERS 146644 66562, 7m if- xg, 3 45 f' N as ei' A cf 513. ?s fe ' W 9 w wg' b Q 9 O Q E3 p T Q f 2 QQ Q .v Q' 4, 2 w E fo Q 0 il fs 4' 4 hs? ss. s 2 Q6 'S 3 U1 fe B 4' 1' ., in fo ff' 5' -, ,CI ,f gl' Q Q g, I 7. U 'O S' P3 6 w 5 'gb B C4 u .lf f- 7 jg? Q 3X : Q as Q3 5 1 iq an Z Q S 8 an :E , . B ed in m I O O Qi I 3 U.: 1 A C? 2 -J in -gg U 5-4 GJ Q3 -:E 'E S3 Q 391, ...L-I 62090 ? '90, Q25 'ig Q93 2 V 96, Q. Q Q Q 'Z Cf Q pc. 83 ' 35 C4 '33 532 'g fo .2 Q96 E .3 L0 '93, E 2, 'f 'Q' ' 2 5' 0 Q 'Qi X23 Q- Sf X9 fx 'O Q 9 133 16 5' Q 'O 3 2 fs Q5 fv fb 0 Z u' LD GQ A QD A y r 1 . ,,.i,'ffff , ,myi3: 'lf Mem i n -iT ,- Fff, 1 L'n- Uri ' . Tm ,0 ,f -, . ',.- . . fjwlj'-4 h x 'I' ' ' x i'1?? 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X XX.,- XX X1' , ,X 1 C2,XXXXX11Xf., X1 XX X XX 1 X '11 1 , , X ,.X,. - ., ,XX 1 wwf 1,1-, - l flow I 1 A ,2 X' ' - SC L'-' W' - Rr, ' X-.jf X . , 1- . 1 1 A ' L ,, LXXXX-XX1XXX X .Xb W J QQ' J . - I ,Us X,11:,X, X 1- X , , . . , X 1 .,, X 1 1 nfl 71 1 X 1, 1X,,,, ' ,- 1 1 1 4 N f X 1 , 1 ........:, XLT' V' HHN' ...L ,Nz ,, v X. Q ,,., K 'd ' 1 I VVVV 1 f Lli 'gitixslftrzx r f E 2 ' ,' ,, 'Q k ' Q V i ,, ,Una -4 xx f .f . ' fn' I X W 2, I'-hi - V :iv :'V wat 4 29'xn AN Q. X-lvlh wxx. Splinters Rogan Hal! Sfbool Lowell, Massachusetts ,sz xx If ., , 3 le 7 '- f , 1+ f Y Q. I 'O 3 1 I X mv, Ivy' 1 ,pw if sf y B, 't' ., N. - .z X 5 1 v g M wet' E? 9 Q K F Q, 1' if life 12 Sv? 'L 5 in 'rf lc ,ilifl .Y ci, zgw ., X .. x ,h 4 -M Q e 75? Y. lygi ' x f' N xv' A1 ,xv 5 +4 F X I i , w.p six f Zn K' 32 X, fi +4 E 'a cu S .3 P xy 5 O ll? C3 cv: Q 5 Q fi E -Q5 'as 3 QQ E E 'U S: c5'5 GJ. 'U .L3 cd P ejov, Gretchen V O A cd 'U .E P-I H-K QJ .-C1 -'13 U-1 CU -C1 +4 l-I CYS C.. -O6 'El U ua - 2 'J O v-l EI 0 CCI fi' F-L1 Prudence Allen. ,-7. r-4 QD CQ . E2 1-4 5 Ga. O 4-J arv Bar Hill Fd. as 12 -Cl QJ 3: -CJ E o 'T' w. E QC x f. 3-4 GJ A-.' F .2 E .-CI U UD. 2 3 O U QD C1 'Q OJ 'E CU U Q. CU .E T: CID CI OJ .2 .-CI '65 M H. 0.9 ii O If-4 U C CTI 'zz is M. DO .99 QE Gai 215, GJ mm WQJ UGG SSS ,fi-.fc ii Q.-C1 553 4-I .5245 ESQ wi. HCD U,--1 GB No WDC SPY! SE 'ro 'S 2 3 QD FD cu .-CI 'C-7 cd 2 n 1-1 'Ts 'cs Ken Janet G-,A 'E an ,-C2 CU 1-4 .3 CD Q 'Q E CQ cv Q cu F11 Px as U Welch HC ri er, Cathe .Q 8 3 Lu -E P5 I-I-l 5 E an CD Q -'53 'U SP-. p-I Q.. cu OD F-4 c E CUC Val S CG he .ts .Q I-' 1-I o E D-1 cs 'U VVickw1re, 1 CI aw v-l v--1 v-1 -1-1 H GJ -C1 UD Q. .r: CU I .-2 Ta F: co Q H. as v-54 cvs CQ N I , SPLINTERS Editor-in--Chief PRUDENCE .ALLEN Literary Board MARTHA CHIGAS DEBORAIi GALE CATHERIN'E COWLES JANET KENDALL LYDIA DESHLER SHERILL WICTKWIRE Business Board Manager--CIAIALLIS VVALKER MARTHA BAKER SANDRA HALL MARIAN CROCKER SANDRA SHIPTON AMY WHITEHEAD Art and Photography Editor--GAYLE DEBELL MARTHA FISHER LYNDA PRYOR Faculty Literary Advisor Faculty Art Advisor MRS. BANKS S. VVORSHAM MRS. JOHN PERLOFF MLW L A f 74' EDITORIAL The problems created by the complexities of modern living must be resolved. We are quickly becoming the members of society responsible for the task of providing a humanitarian solution to the twentieth century enigma. The unbridged gaps caused by man's intricate psyche, scientific achievement, and diverse ideologies require greater communication among men, protection from fears of total destruction, and removal of prejudices. The acuteness of our responsibility is evident in the revolutionary spirit of our generation. We have shaken olf much of the stifling influence of Victorianism, and we have witnessed the evolution of a drive for freedom of expression and for destruction of superficial barriers between peoples. This is the motivation behind such movements as the Boston Common be-in and love-in this year. The spirit of such a seemingly superficial movement has been converted into positive action by many youths joining organizations like the Peace Corps or Creat Society programs. Such youth- ful gestures, sometimes held suspect by the older generation, hold the answer to the world dilemma-an answer fundamental to Christianity and explored by such authors as E. M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, and Alan Paton: uni- versal love or, at least, universal tolerance. This solution has hope of adop- tion if we too can begin to respond to the responsibilities of correcting social problems and do not fall into apathy. C We must fill the gaps with our own spirit, with an open mind sensitive to the needs around us. VVe can not waste a spirit with misdirected visions of ourselves. We can not fail to communicate by isolating ourselves in a narrow, valueless world like that of Arthur Millers VVillie Loman. Ours is a free atmosphere welcoming doers, demonstrators, and innovators prepared for a new life and responsible, thinking. Mlss I-IILDRED RAMSAY HEADRIISTRESS OF ROGERS HAI.L TO THE MEMBERS OF THE SENIOR CLASS I have never forgotten the Words of my commencement speaker at Smith College, though the identity of the man himself elucles me. Perhaps when my name has begun to slip your memory, you too will retain the echo of these Words: We have given you a tlzousanol horsesg it is for you to put the riders tlzereon. Q MRS. JOHN PERLOFF fs 5 f' . k , 8' 'fb Y , fm -W ffzi i x i l H 1 l I l u Y ,L 'Q ii v ll ii I w Il U l l l 4 1 Q 1 l l 5 il DEDICATION To you, Mrs. Perloff, who has instilled in us a love of the true and the imaginary, inspired us with creative energy, and braved our traumas with sympathy, we give devoted and sincere thanks. VV e have dedicated ourselves to following your example of growth in the search for greater understand- ing in fine art and in the art of living. Thus, We dedicate a product of our efforts to you-Mrs. P.---with appreciation. 7a Hppzedaldaa MRS. CHARLOTTE KNOWLES BENTLEY Mrs. Bentley, we know that every Rogers Hall girl, both past and present, would like to express gratitude to you for the sincere interest you have always shown in our education. It is for us, the class of '67, to speak to vou directlv and to tell you that we have missed you greatly and that we appreciate the energy, in and out of class as teacher and friend, that you devoted to us. A teacher affects eternity. H e can never tell where influence stops. -QHENRY BROOKS ADAMS ,K 'Eff 1 Q' , fr '- Q W.. lf? ,rf ' M 'fb 'X' ' Q 'v m L Z? . 'WR ' n 9-'z F ' 'A X 5 Q 'L f Ik , ' f ' 224 2gB -'haf-'9 Q 7 , r 13, Q 4. . ' , 1 f Z 2' 'x 7 .',. t f V N, Q' 'x 5311? T, fwig + 1'W1 :QsG f ' 5 , ' V V 5 ff L s yy! s 'I 'L' 1 x 1 .x : . XX s ' i ' , V W 5' - 5 A 7 ii fgqj 1 . X ,,.r- ' X Q C LJ UW ,.,, N W- X 10 1 I X 1 ,N ff jf-f Ai , A ii, X A MRS. CHARLOTIE KNOWLES BENTLEY 5 gu'Q,. ff ' - BIOLOGY AND CHEJNIISTRY , 1 1' 1 f s A 1 - . A , X E A X ff Miss ANNE DORLAND PULLING SPANISH AND FRENCH Av 25 MRS. NINA LATOUR Miss CAROL ROB1NsON MRS. FRANCES JONES SHORTHAND AND TYPING HISTORY, LIRRARIAN, ALUININAE SECRETARY ACADEBIIC SECRETARY 1.0, fx YQ r k,1, Q ,,z5 1 Q ' W MQ. Q A Ya wf3: ' A I I 5 , 1 Y gf i f i I Q , I MISS DOROTHY PHELPS LATIN, FRENCH AND ANCIENT HISTORY MISS DORIS ALEXANDER IVIATHEMATICS MISS DOROTHY A. LEBUTT PIANO, CLEE CLUB AND MUSIC APPRECIATION 5. pu L 'QQ ,JC-A MRS. LOUISE WHITTEN STATEN MRS. BARBARA CALHOUN MRS. MINNIE COLPITTS, RN SECRETARY FINANCIAL SECRETARY RESIDENT NURSE 1 if I f 'lf, . 'v. ff , ' .hy 'jfvff ' aw V' 5 I 1 yi' fi' If ,,' ,If v. gy - L, '14 ' gow, ,., XJ ' LN ' LJ ' - ', f Rf 5 Ak, ,lf 5 V .255 'V A Ex J ,f'ff gk ffif ' W . 3 , yv. ,Z A, ' ' -4 I If AJ MRS, M. SARGENT HOUSEMOTHER MRS. B. CROSBIE DIETICIAN MRS. A. JONES HOUSEMOTHER R R MISS JANET LANDIS MRS. PAMELA HOFFER MR. GEORGE CONGER ENGLISH FRENCH MATHEMATICS AND CHEMISTRY 2 ?KN'-fm, Mum We 1' 'ww I ' T35 ? f gui gy 5 .h,Af.gaa:W 1. ,i Q .W-w.1:3'f'51. I x 3 H, -,,', Lf: 1, R N A f 35, Q f, . an V 'B 8 ' Rf' I., Irvin-W. . 5, -gxwig it Qi QR 'K Q , A MISS CAROL BOWES MISS NANCY DION MRS. LOUISE DOWNES PHYSICAL EDUCATION HISTORY AND BIOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY CURRENT EVENTS fc? MRS. DOROTHY I. PERLOEE ART AND HISTORY OF ART MRS. DOROTHY A. WORSHAM ENGLISH AND DRAMATICS -assi if K La Cucaracha! Come out, come out wherever you are! Lovely day! Pretty, huh? VVe've COT to get out of this place! h I thought I saw cz pudoly tat . . . Do you see . . . what I see? tff.us.m Who dat when ah say 'Who dat? You see, there was this perfectly ordinary-looking clam . . . I've got ONE at home. lt sticks to your teethg not to your hands! I am the keeper of this inn The fu-ture enters into us in order to transform itself in us long before it happens. RAME11 MARIA RILKE X l ., I L' 1 I' , , qi V 7+- kgfd -' Q. ' , 255 ,-f . I ,v 1, ' 1 W uf I -1 n I 5 Y ' 0 -'SN ' -V- ff X ,. K, X hw, f ww f 1- ,yf ' M15 Qy , E , 'li U A W? I1.'.:f,11 ',!' .K xg -N , ' '-N85 4 fxu -f 1- X.-'..,,s, V . ze 'n' 4' n:2 '.'h1'f'A ' A A fl fb , I Af--' - X -, X f .- 1 51 as me The knowleclge comes . . The wisdom lingers . . . -TENNYSON Perhaps the most valuable outcome of an education is to have learned to accept the fact that a job must be done and to do it, whether pleasant or unpleasant. SANDY HALL rf f 'Z x Q75 Y I , . ,L 1 4 , , ,,..' ' SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Sandy Hall Vice-President Donna Corroon Prudence is the footprint CAE Club Hockey 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 2 C2nd teamD, 3, 4 Volleyball 2 C2nd teamD, 3, 4 Water Ballet 3, 4 Swimming 2, 3, 4 Cheerleading 1, 2, 3, 4 Clee Club 3, 4 Dramatics 4 , Debate Club 4 CpresidentD Instaumtion 2, 3 CEditorD Splinfers Literary 4 CEditorD Class President 1 Proctor 3, 4 Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, 4 Current Events Prize 3 Drarnatics Prize 4 Current Events Prize 4 RH Award 4 PRUDENCE JANE ALLEN Dutch Road PLD. 412 Fairview, Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE EDITOR OF SPLINTERS The US. Marines . . . the world her stage . Would of wisdom. Would . . . It's . . Boston in the fall C8353 you like to see our library? you believe . . .? . . . Danny Boy going to be an all-nighter . hap tic artist . . . and Prudy cooked . yoga and orange .juice . . . next year . ou know . 1 ..P.D.A.S. NR V'.h1 ' 'E iff! fi' a,f Q YK it MARTHA CASWELL BAKER 138 Brigham Hill Road North Crafton, Massachusetts UNIVERSITY OF LONDON Sleeper of the class . . . art Work on the desks . . . peculiar letters . . . untied shoe laces! Who cares . . . miandoli O to Andover . . . CrandolH? spends the n.. ,goino night at R. H. . . . Mards a u i 7th Period He who is of a calm and happy nature will hardly study hall-VVhat fun! , . . off to London . . . the Wright kind of boy . . . Pigeons in Boston .... Sky-walker earrings. c f feel the pressure of age. KAVA Club Clee Club 2, 3, 4 CPresidentD Ski Club 2, 3, 4 Dramatics Club 4 Octet 4 Senior Fair Committee 4 Fathers' Day Committee Proctor 4 Water Ballet Committee 2 Hockey 3 C2nd teamj, 4 Volleyball 4 C2nd teaml Basketball 3, 4 Softball 3, 4 Music Appreciation 4 CHonorable MentionD ,3,4 all-v ' You have alone it hy being yourselfg perhaps that is what lacing a friend means after all. KAVA Club Hockey 2, 3 C2nd teaml, 4 Volleyball 1, 2 C2nd teaml, 3, 4 Basketball 3 C2nd teaml, 4 Water Ballet 1, 2, 4 Softball 1 C2nd teaml, 2 Swimming CManagerD 3, 4 I Tennis Team 1, 2 Badminton Team 3 Ski Club 1 Cheerleading 3, 4 Prom Committee 4 R.H. Award 2, 4 HILLARY ANITA BARTON 658 Nimes Road Los Angeles, California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IN Los ANGELES Over the Hill . . . U. S. C. Nobody loves me . . . STUCK OIl'FI'C1'lCh . . . California Hillbilly . . . Nancy Nurse . . . Today is NOT my day. VVOMAN! Are peach, prune, alfalfa, or apricot intestines?? . . . Rabbit . . . Do you in magic? . . . Well excuse me! you a of his believe ooE1s JEAN BELL 26 Crescent Road Riverside, Connecticut MARJORY VVEBSTEP. JUNIOR COLLEGE Bones . . . Oh, give me a break! I was a lt's hetter to have loved anal lost than never to Rogers Hall Reject . . . FLIP . . . don't have loved at all. Hunk . . . physi! . . . I couldn't eat another thing. Sparrow . . . Portchester, New York ZIPPY DCOOHI! Sin City, U.S.A. Q s WM-dmv., -fr CAE CLUB .WJ ' Cheerleading 2, 3, 4 1' 'M Hockey 2 C2nd teamD, 3, 4 WZ Swimming 2, 3, 4 ,E Water Ballet 2, 3, 4 .L Basketball 2, 3 C2nd teamD, 4 ...M Baseball 2 C2nd teaml, 3, 4 Volleyball 3, 4 CCaptainD Tennis 3 g ' 'W Badminton 3, 4 WW Ski Club 3 R.H. Award 2, 3, 4 Dramatics 3, 4 Badminton Cup 4 xwi' To me the meanest flower that blows can give thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears. KAVA Club Volleyball 3 C2nd teaml, 4 Basketball 3, 4 CCaptainD Softball 3 C2nd teaml Field Hockey 3 C2nd teamD, 4 Cheerleading 3, 4 CCaptainD A Water Ballet 3, 4 CChairmanD Spanish Club 4 Rl-l. Award 3, 4 Music Appreciation 4 Clrlonorable MentionD SUSAN DICK BRIGGS Carefree Apts., Box iF48ll Cable Beach, Nassau, Bahamas KATHERINE GIBBS Let's make a run tonight . . . Mac called . . . was that 1 or 9 . . . will the cheer- leaders please meat, .... Sheri help me! . . . the hamsters died . . . catch ya later, much later . . . Silly Wabbit . . . I'm not going to sleep, I'm going to rest for 8 hours . . . Don't answer the door . . . I DID- ENTH . . . bet you any amount of money . . . inheritor of Buddha's stomach . . . TEA ROOM . . . kneel and pray . . . banana boat . . . B.C .... Eroll . . . MARTHA ANN CI-IIGAS 7 Andover Road Billerica, Massachusetts Couorrnn COLLEGE International traveler . . . the Mediter- ranean . . . Jeff . . . student driver in a hurry . . . 100 Words per minute . . . Look, no cavities . , . Show me the way to go home . . . the meringue maid . . . Si, Senorita . . . VVell, actually . . . Sha- lome . . . Life is like music, it must be composed lay ear feeling, and instinct, not by rule. CAE Club Clee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 French Club 2, 3, 4 Spanish Club 3, 4 CPresidentD lnstauration 1, 2, 3 Splinters Literary Board 4 Debate Club 4 Senior Luncheon Committee 1, 2 Red Cross Swimming Award 1, 2 Current Events 2 Cl-Ionorable MentionD, 3 C1-lonorable MentionD Junior Bookroom 3 CChairmanD Christmas Chorus 3, 4 Music Appreciation Prize 4 A little word in kindness spoken, a motion or a tear CAE Club Council 4 Proctor 3 Clee Club 3, 4 Hockey 3, 4 Badminton 3 4 Andover Dance Committee 3 Fathers' Day Committee 3 Christmas Chorus 3 Art contributor to Splinters 3, 4 DONNA ANN CGRROON Piping Proclc Road Locust Valley Long Island, New York GARLAND JUNIOR COLLEGE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SENIOR CLAsss Becoming domestic! , . . Ah, come on now . . . new clothes . . . Pappagallo shoes forever . . . phone calls home . . . Shala- mar every day . . . Could it be Franklin Marshall College . , . Please, Donna, open the store . . . Probert Coulet . . . 'Tm not going to that dance! . . . that laugh . . . funny girl. CATHERINE GRAHAM COWLES 332 Iroquois Avenue Creen Bay, Wisconsin NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY ' ' , L-, Nw: 1 f , ,- 'tm x 2 , - : ' i, rs,-1 P . , -ag: T: V Richie . . , more independence after mar- True worth is in being, not seeming riage . . . that's just not the way it is s.. got to stop eating . . . hey, come on, you guys . . . really? . . , Bowdoin weekends . . . Green Bay Packers. J! 1 , uf KAVA Club Clee Club l, 2, 3, 4 French Club 2, 3, 4 Debate Club 4 Basketball 4 C2nd teamD Instaumtionsl, 2, 3 Spliriters Literary Board 4 Swimming Team 2, 3, 4 Water Ballet 4 Dramatics Club 2, 3 Dramatics 1, 2, 3, 4 CI-lonorable MentionD Ski Club 2, 3 Honor Roll 1, 2, 3, 4 Senior Luncheon Committee 1, 3 CChairman Music Appreciation 1 CHonorable MentionD Current Events 3, 4 CHonorable MentionD Underhill Honor 4 Variety's the very spice of life that gives it all its flavour. KAVA Club Glee Club 2, 3, 4 French Club 4 Ski Club 3, 4 CPresidentD Proctor 3 lnstauration 2, 3 Splinters Business Board Hockey 2, 3, 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Basketball 2 C2nd teaml, 3, 4 Softball 2, 3 CCaptainD, 4 CCaptainD VVater Ballet Committee 3, 4 B.l-I. Award 3, 4 Christmas Chorus 4 MARIAN ELIZABETH CRGCKER 184 School Street Milton, Massachusetts BOSTON Bouvrs PRESIDENT OF KAVA Term paper due tomorrow! . . . Mandi Pandi . , . Harvard Crew . . . Rhod-Island Kuala Bear . . . always seeing Briggs at Duxbury? . . . 77,' at 4 . . . pop corn Mandy Rocker . . . Celtics lost, Oh NO! I don't like my picture taken, Danelle! . . . crooked face , . . it's crazying out- side . . . candy wreaths . . . GAYLE ALLISGN DeBELL ll Oriole Drive Andover, Mass. FLORIDA SOUTHERN COLLEGE This is the worst art history test . . . North Carolina, a s-u-t-h-e-r-n state? . . . kanga- roos , . . I will not take them down . . . good ole' Mrs. P .... they are so dis- organized . . . not Spanish table, tonight? HQ. x ' 'Hs Y' Let all things be done decently and in order CAE Club Spanish Club 4 Debate Club 4 Senior Luncheon Committee 3 Splinters 3, 4 CArt Editorl CAE Hockey Manager 4 Commencement Play 4 Proctor 4 Art Prize 4 Art Survey Award 4 Neatness Award 4 Special Award - Artistic Room 4 Certainty generally is illusion and repose is not the destiny of man. KAVA Club French Club 3, 4 Ski Club 4 Debate Club 4 Splinters 4 Cheerleading 4 Proctor 3, 4 Honor Roll 2, 4 Senior Luncheon Committee 3 Sec. for Foster Parents Plan 4 Ir. Bookroom Committee 3 A Head of Decorations Committee for Senior Fair 4 RH. Award 3, 4 Hockey 2 C2nd teamD, 3 C2nd teamD, 4 Volleyball 3 C2nd teaml, 4 CCaptainD Basketball 3, 4 Softball 3 C2nd teaml Swimming 3, 4 Water Ballet 3, 4 lr. Lifesaving 2 Music Appreciation 4 CI-lonorable Mentionl Current Events 4 CI-Ionorahle MentionD LYDIA I-IARTSHORNE DESI-ILER 7 Dunham Road Scarsdale, New York LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Deshl . . . foster parent . . . don't forget to Wake us up at 5:00 . . . fish . . .hay fever attacks . . . if you cut it, it takes the curls out . . . E-:MC2 . . . Spanish-are you kidding me . . . I'm not being rude . . . Mandy, the tiger fell down again . . . who said we cou1dn't wallpaper a bulletin board . . . sewing hats to match self-made dresses . . . the original snow bunny. K BARBIE THORPE FEATHER 443 Highbrood Avenue Pelham Manor, New York BRIARCLIFF COLLEGE Meet my friend Mary . . . up higher . . . what do you mean you can't SEE her? . . . tea pot competition. 'Tm FREEZINCI Harvard weekends coming up? . . . Cold hands-warm heart. No thanks, I'll just sit here on the radiator. Basketball games with Ernie . . , Pine Orchard. A cheerful face is not always smiling but at least serene. KAVA Club Proctor 4 Cwlee Club 3, 4 Dramatics Club 3, 4 Spanish Club 3, 4 Instauration 3 Hockey 4 Basketball 4 Swimming 4 Volleyball 4 Softball 3 C2nd teamD Cheerleading 3, 4 Badminton and Tennis Manager 4 RH. Award 4 MARTHA I-IARLOW FISHER 50 Drake Road Scarsdale, New York CENTENARY COLLEGE FOP. VVOMEN V ICE-PRESIDENT OF CAE CLUB Challis, hand ME the mop . . . Call me responsible . . . notes and more notes . . . SKAWZDALE . . . What did I get for Like the bee, we should make our industry our my b-day? . . . whistle as I sew . . . smile rzmuse1ne11t. as I knit . . . One-a-day Letters, Inc. . . . When the red, red ROBin comes . , . sun porch mania . . . Key, what key? . . . Calley-Ho and away we go . . . CAE Club I , , Class Vice-President 2 5' ' I Hockey 2, 3, 4 Ali '- Volleyball 2, 3, 4 , , 't f ,V'. lL'1 1 ' 'Z Basketball 2, 3, 4 Swimming Team 2, 3, 4 Water Ballet 3, 4 Cheerleading 3 CAE Spirit Ring 4 Student Council 3, 4 Student Marshall 3 Fathers' Day Committee 2, 3 Splinters Photography Manager 4 R.Il. Award 2, 3 Red Cross Swimming Award 2 EDITH PROCTOR FLETCHER 67 High Street Chelmsford, Massachusetts Hoon COLLEGE The beat of the 2:30 shuffle. Has a thing about smoke . . . U.N.H .... Nor- wich . . . silent-but deadly. Gym suits are expensive-might as well make use of them senior year. Drakes or bust . . . but first let's start the carl . . . Spread your goodness, baby! In character, in manners, in style, in all things the supreme excellence is simplicity. CAE Club French Club 3, 4 Clee Club 3, 4 Volleyball 4 C2nd teamD Sr. Lifesaving 4 Music Appreciation CHonorable Mentionl 4 W-il Cats and monkeys, monkeys and cats . . . all human life is here . . . mocking the air with colors idly spread. KAVA Club Field Hockey 3 C2nd teamD, 4 CCaptainD Softball 3 CCaptain of 2nd teamD VVater Ballet 3 Draniatics Club 4 Senior Luncheon Committee 3 Literary Committee 3 Instauration 3 Splinters Literary Board 4 Council Day Representative 4 Cups and Banners 4 Dramatics 3, 4 DEBORAH JUN E GALE 8 Copeland Avenue Reading, Massachusetts MOUNT IDA JUNIOR COLLEGE Rockport . . . cycle Inn lump . . . clouds . . . yellow bird to VVashington . . . Charlie Brown . . . I love fountains . . . no school on Fridays . . . I fell right in front of the instructor . . . domesticity? . . . I hate rub- ber bands . . . green stockings, yellow shoes . . . pipe . . . Richard's love story . . . history quizzes . . . T. T .... mustang . . . teeny bop music . . . would you believe that I just drove to school with the emergency on . . . LOUISE FISHER GODDEN 45 Sunset Rock Road Andover, Massachusetts GREEN MOUNTAIN JUNIOR COLLEGE Chronic sprain and a well-worn gym suit . . . would you like a ride to P.A.? . . . From Green Mountains blazing a STRAIGHT trail to New York . . . Gulp, gulp! . . . Give me the 'ol afternoon Free . . . absent? . wb K .A fr I-Ie who is firm in will moulds the world to him self. CAE Club s G1-ff Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Music Appreciation 1 CI-Ionorable Mentionl Spanish Club 3, 4 DANELLE DORGTHY HAHN lO4 Chester Avenue Carden City, New York MARJORIE VVEBSTER JUNIOR COLLEGE Isabell! . . . Is the store open . . . I don't really care . . . she doesn't like me . . . ski If it weren't for the optimist the pessimist would anyone . . . groovy . . . think I'1l get up 'never know how happy he wasnt . . . I've learned a lot about texture . . . KAVA Club Swimming Team 4 Water Ballet 4 Saturday's dozen . . . lVI8cMs . . . sub- marine with a screen door . . . lfVlfz0 has a New York accent? f' f W V .Im 32 1 7 Q 95159 -as N W .fs 'Z X. ' 1, .' ' ' V SANDRA ANN HALL 345 Nabant Road Nabant, Massachusetts MT. AUBURN HOSPITAL SoHooI. OF NURSING PRESIDENT OF THE SENIOR CLASS Tea but not Orange Pekoe . . . sea and For life goes not lvackwzzrd nor tarries with yester sand . . . babysitter supreme . . . stage day. manager blues . . . VlP's again and again . . . nurse for Cayle . . . gasoline hair- straightener . . . mobiles . . . the reader . . . Nggwv... , KAVA Club Clee Club 3, 4 Dramatics 3, 4 , Hockey 3 N Volleyball Manager 4 Splinters Business Board 4 Current Events 4 CHonorable MentionD Neatness Award 4 Special Award - artistic room 4 va. l, ! Each man can interpret only lay his own experi- ence. CAE Club Volleyball 3 C2nd teaml, 4 Basketball 3, 4 C2nd teamD Swim team 3, 4 Field Hockey 4 C2nd teaml Ski Club 4 Cheerleading 3, 4 CCaptain'j Senior Luncheon Committee 3 Splinters 4 Clce Club 3, 4 Neatness Award 4 JANET MARGRETA KENDALL 61 Laurelwood Road Holden, Massaclmsetts ENDICOTT IUNIOR COLLEGE VVou1d you please explain that a little more . . . DAN the MAN . . . and psycho- logically . . . What's your problem? . . . rubber sandals . . . Cinderella must be tragic . . . Cud som haver . . . orange, orange, and maybe yellow . . . blueberry pies with oatmeal cookies . . . Frankly I clon't agree . . . grasshopper pie . . . four inch claws . . . QAM 35, 1 A were--pr. -- ifq. , , -3 'i 'r 4 all 1 - 1 I li Qi '-A LINDA FULLER LOVEIOY 2201 Lehigh Station Pioad Pittsford, New York MOUNT VERNON JUNIOR COLLEGE Talk much? Right Lovey! . . . If I don't get outta here this weekend, l'll go insane . . . SWIFTly! . . . Mirror, mirror on the wall . . . fraternity pins forever . . . Admit it, girls, I'm slcinnier than all of you. Finally a cheerleader! . . . Making senior friends. W1 Patience is cz tree is very sweet. KAVA Club Dramatics Club 4 Glee Club 3, 4 Spanish Club 4 Cheerleading 4 Music Appreciatio whose root is bitter but its fruit n 4 Cl-lonorable MentionD 'gix -4:-I--wdiiiiiil VALERIE ANN MORGAN IO Berkshire Drive Winchester, Massachusetts GREEN MOUNTAIN JUNIOR COLLEGE Blind dates! . . . yellow for St. Paul's? . . . cooking with Pryor late at night! . . . chief . . . Oh, right! . . . Valley Forge I cried because I had no slzoes until I met a man . . . That's close! . . . Come On . . . The wlzo lmd 110 feet. CAE Club Clee Club 4 Spanish Club 4 Hockey 4 Volleyball 4 Chlanagerl Dramatics 4 CAE-KAVA Fair Committee 4 Covernor Dummcr Dance Committee 4 African Hunter strikes again . . . restaur- ant at home . . . You went tO Florida? . . . Ugreasel' . . . collages!!! . . . Let's live for Today . . . that 1935 gym suit . . . LINDA LEE PRYOR IO Beacon Street Boston, Massachusetts G'REEN MOUNTAIN JUNIOR COLLEGE LP .... hot air passing thru the window lt is always right that a man should he alale to . . . I am going to marry a European . . . remler a reason for the faith that is with him. 0gunquitl?l . . . Onward, Christian soldiers...TOm...IOe...Erie... goose the loose moose. KAVA Club French Club 3, 4 CPresiclentD Clee Club 4 Octet 4 Ski Club 3 Splinters Art Board 4 CARGL ADAMS ROWLEY lO Meriam Street Lexington, Massachusetts GREEN MOUNTAIN JUNIOR COLLEGE E fs stair, A as Speech is great, but a wise silence is greater. Red pistachio nuts . . . just love history . . . come here, honey . . . sailing . . . Chris...LenOx...hey... KAVA Club Field Hockey 2 C2ncl teaml, 4 C2nd teamD Clee Club 2, 3, 4 French Club 3, 4 Ski Club 3, 4 Volleyball 3 C2nd teaml, 4 C2nd teamb Basketball 3 C2ncl teamD, 4 C2ncl teamD Softball 3 C2ncl teamD Water Ballet 4 Commencement Play 4 Senior Lifesaving 4 Pnl-l. Award 4 SANDRA SOUTHWELL SI-UPTON 953 West Street Pittsfield, Massachusetts UNIVERSITY OF DENVER The grass is always greener in New Ha- ven . . . actually, I could care less . . . The human race is in the best condition when it North to Iay's Bakery . . . Skiing . . . has the greatest degree of liberty. Denver . . . Yeah, right . . . driving to Oreonta . . . with Lovejoy . . . Contact . . . Thay Thweetie. KAVA Club WZ Softball 2 czna temp, 3, 4 Baketball 2, 3 C2nd teaml, 4 Volleyball 2 C2nd teaml, 3, 4 Field Hockey 2 C2nd teamj, 3, 4 Swimming 2 Water Ballet 2, 3, 4 4 f French Club 4 Ski Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Lifesaving 4 fi i '7 f',.,.,,, R.I-I. Award 2, 3, 4 1 Octet 4 Q!9Q ,Ei' Splinters Business Board 4 J ' Clee Club 2, 3, 4 'C Senior Lifesaving 4 tix 5 Current Events Award 4 li. 1 Parsons Honor 4 mv-'WY' KATHLEEN SULLIVAN Box 41405 Rancho Santa Fe, California PALOMAR JUNIOR COLLEGE A good laugh is sunshine in a house. My new horse . . . a real beauty . . . Para- KAVA Club French Club 3, 4 Spanish Club 4 Swimming Team 3, 4 Hockey Manager 4 Ski Club 3, 4 Water Ballet 3, 4 Commencement Play 4 Dramatics 4 troopers 101st! . . . guess what? . . . the senorita a ain . . . He , ou s, wait 8 Y Y g'-'Y for me! . . . CRETCHEN STEARNS VALADE 37 Willow Lane Crosse Point Farms, Michigan ALBION COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT COUNCIL Are you going to New York? . . . uh! . . . ya know . . . And he said he was going to call you sometime in May? . . . Want some pop? . . . Umm, I don't know . . . Brandeis burned? . . . dances with C.D.A. . . . hot tea burns . . . the pianO's out of tune . . . hand in demerits . . . MY WASTE BASKET WAS ON FIBEPF . . . what do you think? . . . lst cigarette in a bowling alley . . . I.D. Went down the drain . . . ,, Good sense is the body of poetic genius, fancy its drapery, motion its life and imagination the soul. KAVA Club Clee Club 2, 3 CVice-PresidentD, 4 Basketball 4 C2nd team Capt.D Softball 3 Hockey 4 C2nd teamD Dramatics 3, 4 Octet 3, 4 CHeadD Spanish Club 3, 4 Council 3, 4 CPresidentD KAVA Spirit Bing 4 Water Ballet Chairman 3 Class President 3 BH Negatives Clseaderl Music Appreciation 4 CI-Ionorable MentionD Helen Hill Award 4 Beauty is a pleasure regardecl as the quality of a thing. KAVA Club Class Vice President 2 Splinters Business Board Manager 4 Proctor 3, 4 Dramatics 1 Dramatics Club 4 Spanish Club 4 Softball Manager 3 Graduation Marshall 3 CHALLIS NELSGN WALKER 1508 South Shore Drive Erie, Pennsylvania CENTENARY COLLEGE Fon WOMEN Philadelphia . . . paper fleurs . . . Roses . . . Hope this sweater fits . . . Let me see . . . Rose Tea and a lemon . . . Cet out of here before we get demerits! . . . problems in P.O.D .... l3oston?? . . . Tennis, any- one? y Qc CATHERINE ELY WELCH 9 Lake Place Branford, Connecticut MARJORIE VVEBSTEP. JUNIOR COLLEGE VICE PRESIDENT OF KAVA EEL . . . New Haven . . . did you say he was still in grammar school . . . don't worry . . . I promise you . . . can I borrow . . . Don't mess with Bill . . . Does anyone have a mug? . . . do my hips show . . . Judy Collins . . . l'm really going to diet now . . . planters warts . . . the beach . . . . . . I wanna he free. . . . whats' a dri- ver's license? . . . Pond's cures alligator skin . . . have my bangs grown . . . wif!! S i wQ 13' as ,f 1 ,W wet ,, 52 .f .', X +, Alll 1 4 W, Q s I V ff. sg he 4 Q .1 -' ,. Sig, 'X It. E91 Q 1 ' - ,, .- qui ' 5 Y Q' 14' K Y ' ' The hlue's but a mist from the hreath of the wind, a tarnish that goes at the tcmch of a hand. KAVA Club Hockey 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 ' Softball 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3 CCaptainD Swimming 1, 2, 4 Basketball 4 C2nd teamD A Water Ballet 2, 4 Octet 4 Cheerleading 2, 3, 4 Class Vice-President 1 Senior Lifesaving 2 B.H. Award 4 4 determination-a purpose once faced. CAE Club Hockey 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 Volleyball l C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1 C2nd teaml, 2, 3, 4 Softball 1, 2, 3, 4 Water Ballet 2, 3, 4 Swim Team 2, 3, 4 Cheerleading 2, 3, 4 Spanish Club 4 Tennis Team 2 Music Appreciation 2, 3 Splinte-rs Business Board 4 Bl-I. Award 2, 3, 4 Neatness Award 4 'The difference between men is energy invincible, AMY-Jo WHITEI-IEAD 3259 Polo Drive Delray Beach, Florida GULF PARK JUNIOR COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF CAE I'm trying to sleep . . . under gamma rays ...Ah,yes,truelove...afibaday... kept the doctor away? . . . frappe cups and straws foaming in the Commons . . . boom, boom . . . I-low! do you make an Indian rug . . . million dollar mouth . . . I had a hamster for a roommate . . . SHERILL HOLDEN WICKWIRE RFD 4322 Locust Avenue Homer, New York BRADFORD JUNIOR COLLEGE A hand through a window is worth . . . disjointed year . . . bangs-bangs . . . coffee time? . . . Midnight phone calls . . . a rendezvous? . . . Briggs, the man's outside . . . It's just that sh,e's clumsy . . . Have you seen my . . . Pisano . . . Knapsack . . . Expository writing . . . burnt hair . . . Buddha Bowdoin . . . jug band . . . posters . . . Surrealism . . . A I will not follow where the path may lead, but I will go where there is no path, and I will leave a trail. CAE Club Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Dramatics 3, 4 Dramatics Club 4 lnstaaration 3 Splinters Literary Board 4 Honor Boll 2 Founder's Day Committee 4 Fathers' Day Entertainment 4 Commencement Play 4 Water Ballet CScriptD 4 Music Appreciation 2 CHonorable MentionD Ski Club 4 Prom Committee 4 CCcrheadD Stage Manager 3, 4 Softball 2 Swimming Team 2 Volleyball 4 C2nd teaml Basketball 4 Katharine VVhitten MacCay Literary Prize 4 A laugh is worth one hundred groans in any market. CAE Club Basketball 2 C2nd teaml, 4 Hockey 2 C2nd teaml, 3 C2nd teaml, 4 C2nd teamD Softball 1 C2nd teaml, 2, 3 C2nd teamD, 4 Swimming Team Manager 4 Volleyball 2 C2nd teamD, 3 C2ncl teaml, 4 Water Ballet 4 R.I'I. Award 4 DEBORAH ANNE WILSGN 1270 Andover Street North Tewksbury, Massachusetts VERNON COURT JUNIOR COLLEGE I wonder if I got a letter? . . . I'm starved! . . . LL society . . . basically shy . . . MacDonald's . . . ILL . . . just nerves . . . write me a note . . . Governor Dum- mer? . . . Champagne . . . cute, real cute . . . epilepsy . . . Ike . . . The Cray Mole- cule . . . Plimpton Boarding House . . . Can I borrow your . . . I'm in love with LOVE... CALENDAR SEPTEMBER 21 THE BEGINNING OF THE SCHOOL YEAR Footsteps leading on unknown paths of spiders'webs-adjusting the mind to the plans intertwined in the unexpected. 24 SINGING BEACH A faint whisper of a tangerine summer still lingering in the din of strange voices. 25 VESPERS People stretch the irregularities of their fingertips into the stage portray- ing life. OCTOBER 1 NEW HAMPTON DANCE Summer calloused feet are again narrowed by Pappagallos. 4 INITIATION Bathed in marshmallow, rice, coffee grinds, oatmeal, lotion and soapf-lakes and robed in a Roman Consulate bedspread 7 CAE AND KAVA DINNER Competing colors mellowed . . . pink and green. 8 SENIOR SISTER CEREMONY Lookng through crystal glasses at the friendship between the candle and the upside down flower. 12 SENIOR PICTURES stung by the splendor of a sudden thought. 15 ANDOVER DANCE Leaving no room for disbelief in social origin 16 VESPERS A trip through a projector into Brazilia. 21 ANDOVER CELEBRITY SERIES 22 ST. PAUL'S DANCE I sway from hence you tap in gentle rhythm . . .PPP 26 FREEDOM TRAIL Tracing freedom's cause upon the worn threads tying the museum to reality. 29 EXETER DANCE VValking upon invisible bridges into fields of rushes and milkweeds. NOVEMBER 5 PARENTS' WEEKEND Parents' organization formed to make the parents influential alumni FIRST TEAM HOCKEY - CAE 8 SECOND TEAM HOCKEY CAE 18 PARIS RIVE GAUCHE French folk songs were not inhibited by translation. 22 THANKSGIVING PLAYS The Still Alarm drove us to Mr. Flan1zery's Ocean. 23 THANKSGIVING VACATION Liberated hunter seeks turkey hiding in Northeastern smog. DECEMBER 3 SAT'S ANDOVER DANCE Frustrated script released in dissonant tone by the Glee Club. 11 1 3 1 5 JANUARY 3 11 13 14 16-20 21 23-27 26-29 FEBRUARY 5 10-12 1 1 17 18 MARCH 3 7 11 15 16 17 CHRISTMAS VESPERS SENIOR RING CEREMONY Sunday is the golden clasp that binds together the volumn of the year. CHRISTMAS PLAY Christmas in the Market Place. CHRISTMAS VACATION Leaving to plant seeds of remembrance in the hearts of the receiver. RETURN FROM VACATION Everything in the world can be endured except continued prosperity . . .P SECOND TEAM VOLLEYBALL - KAVA FIRST TEAM VOLLEYBALL - CAE ANDOVER DANCE Blotches of hallucinatory color replace simplified reality. REVIEW WEEK Basic concentrated effort to retaing more familiarly known as cramming. CAE DINNER Relieve the tension of monotonous studying. MID-YEAR EXAMS VVith ignorance spinning within our bodies, nature's winds carried us safely through a whirlpool of facts. LONG WEEKEND SENIOR SKI TRIP Had to resort to skiing on marshmallows and boiling snow. CHEERLEADING DINNER Clubs show their appreciation for the undying spirit. SKI WEEKEND Undying warmth glows in the semi-frostbitten faces of children. GOVERNOR DUMMER DANCE words, words, words . . f' LAWRENCE ACADEMY DANCE Glee Club. ANDOVER DANCE German club was momentarily formed to sponsor a dance. SKI TRIP Short sleeves, cotton knicker socks, suntan lotion and Ben Gay. FREE DAY The camel at the close of day kneels down upon a sandy plain to have his burden momentarily lifted to sleep again. TILTON DANCE Glee Club I MISS LEl3UTT'S PIANO RECITAL SPRING PLAYS - A xA7ORKSHOP OF ONE-ACT PLAYS The Farewell Supper led to Goodnight Caroline whose interest in The Case of the Crushed Petunias began on A Sunny Morning. SPRING VACATION Trees are no longer barren because mood has changed the seasong winter is a shifted image of a half-remembered face. APRIL 4 11 12 13 14 22 MAY 6 7 17 20 25 22-26 29-June JUNE 1 2 3 4 5 6 RETURN FROM VACATION You lean against a shadow on the door and say that this has all happened before. SECOND TEAM BASKETBALL - CAE TRIPS TO PLYMOUTH, CONCORD AND STURBRIDCE A look at colonial America from the mast of the Mayflower . . . FIRST TEAM BASKETBALL - KAVA ANDOVER DANCE Instead of toning down the music, the chaperones left the room. FATHERS' WEEKEND A look at the younger generationg rained-out baseball gameg water ballet gave us slipped discs, and entertainment including a ballet, jug band, Hello, Dolly, folk songs, and oh! you wonderful dad . . . SAT',S FOUNDER'S DAY Senior Fair, Alumnae meeting, Clee Club, freshmen repeated Hello, Dolly and the Water Ballet ended the day with two scenes. SVVIMMINC MEET - KAVA SENIOR PROM Here at the quiet limit of the world wearing a white Howerg dust would hear and beat to the music of an electric band. FRENCH CLUB AND SPANISH CLUB TEA A salute to a Spanish maiden and the poetry of the French. REVIEW WEEK Conscious studying . . . with half a mind on summer vacation. FINAL EXAMS A thought emerges from the conscious mind entering a territory of fresh awareness . . .P CAE AND KAVA DINNERS SENIOR SISTER - UNDERCRAD CEREMONY A hobo living for natural freedom leaves a grain of salt upon those people who have needed his Warmth. SINCINC BEACH Shout of what is no longer a tangerine mirage carries to distant chambers of familiar voices. BACCALAUREATE SERMON Outlining the signs of maturity. MUSICALE Clee Club Piano Concerto - Miss LeButt and Martha Chigas. SENIOR LUNCHEON CLASS DAY EXERCISES COMMENCEMENT PLAY The Mouse That Roared. RECEPTION FOR SENIOR CLASS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Now distinguishing only the silhouettes of yesterday, before our eyes the mirage of tomorrow . . . if ,. j 'E ,653 I , , W Q 5 5 N S, Pru Allen Marti Baker Hillary Barton Doris Bell it 1 vgxx 'sw A ie! ' ' , Q46 Y s i ! Sue Briggs Martha Chigas Cathy Cowles Donna Corroon ,P 5 i X S , W2 N M. . V 5 b ' QWWNYW' i K K E . J QW s- - . me-, ,. i ., F F owl-un x Q V.Q,,N 3 , W, - M W F ,fxgf Y . ' ' -4 B F Mandy CTOCICCT Gayle DeBell W L alia Deshler Barrie Feather fs ' Za ag 4... I E 1 ..,..-ev' -s . Vf'55?Zi, A if Muff Fisher Edie Fletcher Debbie Gale Louise Godclen ii gig? r -f ' aff 'M , 3' A U ' V 1532 f, .' 2 h Wxlf, P S12-1 : I Ei ' A pain. U L ' I S- 35.7-h yi 1 E 'h' 3 .. 4.- xxfg P 1 1 Q f X I I ' J ,. . , 5 Qi Ki Kendall 5 f 3 I J LQ Q gf ,f-ZZ. wr' ' . , Z- f W...- M fn ,......pv- Valerze Morvan Lmda Pryor Carol Rowley Kath Sullzvan Gretchen Valaale Challis YValker 'Y ix. 31. I QW 1 Amy Whztehead Sherz W1ck1v11e Debbie Hfzlson PROPHECY The year is 1987-an eventful year. The United States and Russia have reached a detente and are cooperating in the Held of space exploration. Already the Lunar Colonies and their leader Timothy Leary, jr. are beginning to show resistance to their taxation and a desire to become independent of the Earth. john-john, the young senator from Massachusetts, is the next heir to the presidential throne, succeeding his uncle Edward. The world is surging forward, but Rogers Hall has remained remarkably the same as it was in 1967. However, its alumnae have accomplished various and sundry tasks in world living. just the other day, I heard that Sheri Wickwire had become stuck on one of her pot-art murals in 1980 and has been hanging in the New York Museum of Natural History ever since. She has consequently developed a seven-year itch from lack of fingertip movement. Her closest confidante, Sue Briggs, has just returned from her recent European TRIP . . . and is now paddling from the Florida KEYS to Nassau in her slow Banana Boat carrying a MAC truck in the rear of the vessel. As I report to you from Rio de Janeiro, the night before Amy VVhitehead's fifth engagement party, I can't help noticing the activities of the class of '67, Challis Walker, who is doing the decorations for Amy's party, has created a temple out of tiny tea leaves and has covered the walls with Roses. The floor is covered with jim- mats upon which Amy is doing her nightly exercises in order to fit into her original white dress. .She is studying the famous Sullivan Slimming Steps. Kathy, herself, now weighs only 97 pounds! Gretchen Valade has been elected Chairman of the Chairman's Pick-up Committee, as she sweeps DIRT from room to room, singing, Un-e--Uu--Ah--Ah . . . Hillary Barton is selling peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to the decoration committee as Doris Bell butters-up her bread. Cathy Cowles writes her regrets and thank-you's. She is unable to attend the party due to a recent commitment-which she dare not break-at the Come-and-Get It Gourmet Rest Home. She thanks Miss VVhitehead for her sympathetic contribution of two pounds of black licorice, one R.H. pie, one tin of TriHe, three gallons of coffee ice cream, and just a little tiny bite of apple crisp-all pressed under glass. Louise Godden, I am sorry to say, is also unable to make the party. She recently was involved in an accident of an undetermined nature, the rescue squad could not find her when the SMOKE cleared. The hour of the party has arrived, 10:00 P.M., June 6, 1987-a memorable date for the class of '67. First to arrive is Prudence Allen. She has been forced to attend the party barefoot because the Germans have taken away her shoes. Under one arm, Prudence is carrying her one-act play, entitled, Talk to Me, Bourbon, under her other, a diaper pail, on her back, a blonde 'papoose-she is smiling. Amy's fiance has just asked Danelle to dance. She responded immediately, I can'tg I can'tg I can't, and excused herself before the store closed, mumbling some- thing about the Wicked Witch. Carol Rowley, espionage agent to Amy's FORMER fiance, has come to the party unannounced in order to hide her true identity. Suddenly, I hear the familiar sound of pop-pop-pop . . . Mandy Crocker is arriving with her portable corn-popper. She is explaining to the GROUP that she left her job as playground director at Harvard just to come to the party. She left Lydia Deshler in charge as Foster Parent, all paid-up till August. Ki Kendall just flew in from New York. She is dressed in ORANGE set off against her RED face, complementing her WHITE legs, accentuating PINK knuckle nails, wearing her perpetual, profound rubber sandals, professing still that she is the only intelligent blonde at the party. PROPHECY MuHie Fisher has dual duties at Amy's party. When she is not sewing Rob Gollinses-her Deah specialty-she serves as special photographer to SPLINTEP1 her friends. Barrie Feather has come from the Land of Oz still towing her invisible friend, Mary, AND her hot water bottle. Barrie's invisible friend, Mary, has a friend Ernie, a seven-foot rabbit, who has brought a friend of a friend for a BLIND date for Valerie Morgan. Poor Valerie! I have just learned that Kathy Welch will not be able to come. She has just produced her third set of twins, which seems to be a family affliction. Gayle DeBell has just come hurrying in, a smile on her face, stepping lightly. She seems to be limping, I am told that last Wednesday she tripped over her FALL in the museum, of which she is a curator. Apparently Sandy Hall was the nurse on duty who splinted her split ends. Martha Ghigas was also planning to announce her engagement at Amy's party when her father did it for her. It appears that Martha has been betrothed to a Greek shipping magnate since birth, unknown, of course, to her. Donna Gorroon arrived a few minutes ago, dressed as beautifully as always, and she just happens to have with her the family album, including a recent addition in the traditional bathtub pose. All heads turn as Linda Pryor runs through. She has just left the hairdresser delighted with her new Twiggy cut, and as always, is on her way to the dentist ANYWAYS, in a week Pryor will leave for her annual visit to Florence in search of Ganey. Ladies and gentlemen, attention! The silver Bomb has just pulled in, and Miss Wilson enters the arena followed by her entourage of Andover, Exeter, Governor Dummer, and Groton graduates-all of whom have grown slightly paunchy . . . Beside her, walks Doris, ABROAD social secretary, taking all foreign calls. Doris left Hillary last night for a higher-p-aying job, with more fringe benefits. Hillary left the peanut butter and jelly business for another vacation in Florida. And in this corner, we have Martha Baker to provide the afternoon's entertain- ment. Marti is still trying to play the mandolin accompanied by her GLEEFUL voice and lilting laughter. L. Free Lovejoy, who spent hours in preparation for the party, is robed in a cherry-colored dress, making like Iames Brown. She flew in last night from Chicago to tell us all about her life as Miss September, and hopes to be a cover girl next year. Right now, Lovey is still making friends with the class of '67. The crowd hushes as the celebrated Miss Fletcher arrives. Edie is on her way to Washington to patent her ALL-Purpose Smoker's Delight. This remarkable gadget rolls, lights, smokes, and extinguishes cigarettes. It serves dually as an ash tray and a whisk broom, and holds soft or crush-pack packages. We, of course, wish her luck. Sandy Shipton and Debbie Gale have just DBOPPED IN a little late after a mere collision in mid-air, Debbie in her parachute, Sandy on her broomstick. I hope that they will be feeling in higher SPIRITS when we all meet again at Amy's next engagement party. CATHERINE Gowuas AND THE GROUP CLASS WILL WE LEAVE: MISS ALEXANDER chalk that won't wear off as the day wears on. MISS BOWES uconsequentlyn at a stand point. MRS. CALHOUN an organized office. MRS. COLPITTS a splintery tongue depresser and a passport to peace. MR. CONCER pacing out mystical hydro-carbons on the Hoor. MRS. CROSBY breakfast in bed. MISS DION an unbreakable diamond needle so she won't spoil her playing record. MRS. DOWNES a dozen frog brains. MRS. HOFFER with Christopher Robin and friends. MRS. A. IONES a lye detector. MRS. F. IONES a pointless umbrella and a year's supply of valentines. MIS.S LANDIS foot-warmers for the future. MRS. LATOUR with the '68 schedule of board meetings in N.Y. MISS LEBUTT an alarming Tuesday evening study hall. MANUEL AND BILL a peace pipe. MRS. PERLOFF shifting into new gears. I MISS PI-IELPS a new notebook to replace her Ancient one. MISS PULLINC waiting for the rest of the table. MISS RAMSAY a senior class that wakes up before December. MISS ROBINSON clammed up in Naples. MRS. SARCENT a cage for her second floor zoo. MRS. STATEN a periscope for the station wagon. MRS. WORSHAM a book of cancelled Bank statements. lon CLASS WILL PRUDENCE ALLEN leaves her shoes under the bed. MARTHA BAKER leaves the Cambridge mist for London fog. HILLARY BARTON leaves hunting Hughy Ducks and seeking out other wild life. DORIS BELL leaves Flipping for Sin City. SUE BRIGGS leaves her unbendable joints on the basketball courts. MARTHA CHIGAS leaves her Grecian bikini to the Art department for still life study. DONNA CORROON leaves her seventeen pair of Pappaggalo shoes to the needie Lorrie LaCour. CATHY COWLES leaves RICHLY enriched. MANDY CROCKER leaves to return in four years as the R.H. gym teacher. GAYLE DeBELL leaves to desert the Union for a hotter climate. LYDIA DESHLER leaves her math problems to Dear Alvlaie. BARRIE FEATHER leaves molting. MUFFIE FI.SHER leaves shuffling off to Buffalo on a deah hunt. EDIE FLETCHER leaves to join the HOODSIES. DEBBIE GALE leaves Roger and Out. LOUISE GODDEN leaves her smoking Car to Flip Holihan. DANELLE HAHN leaves her sense of texture in the art room. SANDY HALL leaves the senior meeting first, disguised as the mad scientist. KI KENDALL leaves her orange passion to her dear friends Chris and Charlie Brown. LINDA LOVEJOY leaves seeking the absolute. VALERIE MORGAN leaves as sharp as ever. LINDA PRYOR leaves her real live Alice in Wonderland doll to the French Club in memory of . . . CAROL ROVVLEY leaves to Chris-ten bigger and better things. SANDY SHIPTON leaves her broom stick stuck in a sitz mark. KATHY SULLIVAN leaves for the ranch vowing never to return to Dudesville. GRETCHEN VALADE leaves you-know , um , you-know to Kathy Beers. CHALLIS WALKER leaves her phone bills to the Better Business Bureau. KATHY WELCH leaves old beaus to her fine-Feathered friends. AMY BOOM-BOOM WI-IITEHEAD leaves T8rT for the next big bang. SHERI WICKWIRE leaves for the second time. DEBBIE WILSON leaves her wisdom teeth to Pam Bell and her accent to Cindy Brox. DEBBIE GALE AND THE STAFF A ,f63x,z'j , .k 'F' f 1- '1 1.5.1, wE6iE'f: -- .. ' '-'ai ' -L, f' In .- , e-,- if -,-,,,' -1 ' Y , ,.. , .f wi .A R.: '. 4 eff , Nm KST. F -' 115,90 f- . E Quang! 5' , ff Q v The heads of State-in repose You cannot demonstrate an emotion to prove an aspiration gi You pretend you're Frank 'vt Sugar gives me energy I've got a SECRET f ff' ,W si? H. wal 1' 33 if 5 They say my mouth is I wish I could pick it up worth a million and wring it out -MK 'AWK ll uf' And 1'll pretend ycm're Richie The cat in the hat v--h...s I I f' 3 mn, x Q-4 .bk i ,VCE She forgot to get the lemons! l'm a hockey sTAH! wi, af All right everyone, SING! The Cherry Phantom kv V' 1, 1 ,T K 4' 'fi 1' t 15... K W f 2 gi. 4 . Q What a thing is a 1nan . . . C'nfzon, let's sing Danny Boy- ? s x , ,W V tg is U yy H H Gnd som haver barnen kar . . . Come on Hill-Ilya is waiting To take off or not to take off . . . A ' .W s, 1 X. 21. l Q -- N. , ,sl -.-'- f iii! v it The man said to smile . . . We're ALWAYS cheerful when Five finger exercise we me Crunch - Crunch si wmv . - 'R' .- 29 x,'4':s s , Hb ,J Q syn! 1553- 1- Q f 1 s G I 4 K' Q' sighs 5, iywa s Exggvif, 5' 2 going to class miami Our daol has double trouhle Perhaps it's invisible Mary Affef' Six YCUVS at R-H-, Wlio's asking? i Let's hope Banks oloesn't you get this way come home . . . Wanna hear a funny? d le I say, shall we call an ambulance? ' - 1 'WI .tx Qi. 'Z r- Y' , K-. Z. Ig- W I , ' .a w -ap - E A . s ., -',, ' ' Kyla , ' n s T lv. '2 1 v gt sl. F Q 4- - 1 -. fx, i. 1 gum , ' . Q- IW! F iv' A f fc' , : 'L - 'N..x ' 51 - . -. Q AJ Ay 4. 4 xi!! .1 .u x . sf , .Inq A m. ' I fi 1 i ., ,nf 'W-me ,, 4 e ,, . ' 'H 4 . x -if a Good sets of good friends . . SENIOR SONG Tune: September in the Rain We lit your candles in the gym Remember, in September, unclergracls The time has passed so quickly yet VVe'll cherish every memory through the years. Though far apart your friendship will be with us, Your helpfulness in each and every way. The spring is here, to us itis still September, That September, unciergracis. The parting's sad but graCluation's here now. VV e hope that we have helped you in some Way. So now we leave you but always remember, That September, undergrads. -MARTHA ANN CHIGAS, '67 , . 1 2 -pf! .- I .' . 1' ' RE , , ,A ' Q ,s1 s - O 3 Q f 5 E ,li Q., ' X' 14' - x 1 . s 2, e 4 7. x 4 f l I . 4- E it Q . Y, if hr I: 5 ' V ' 3 N if 4 P a, fl f A '45 QE 135 I jf' wi-' jf ' 411' ,V full , ' .RAE 1 51 'AW QI 's' i 2 gf 'rs ' Hx' A ' -fx fi: ? , 'F . gr . U' Ab l Q X 54 MQ-? '? 99NN 3 . , ,A s 9' 3 1 ,If , 11 + -N 1: sae ' -.3 4 A - if 'Nw H ' 5 in 'ink I' fl 'Qx-M v'2,v ' , A tu! - jx Jvylb A ' 'ei Na V' 4 Jw ' V gg, ' 'V okgw. 3 - A 4 Xt 5 :X f i , . A 3, ,gf .ky K . d' f-W! Q I 19' Q 77 1 ,ii ' X 1 '. s ' .- 1. 16-5 5217 X, w . Sf, ' I iff it , v :Q A , Q RR V , :C T3 H.,- ,, 1 3 ,f - , . ' x-'Sift ' 143771-. 1 s ' ij., 'X ' X j- , ks 55? ' H ' 'H 'N V X I X ' N f .r 1 I if .A m A if .E , , ' A ,- '-Jaw x:-tim' If A V. X512-f fiwssffsiw aff 'J xx M A af 'f :fi , f ' Qi Rfk' M ., F32 V .f f M 'V A A SV A 1 it W - awk 3 ,Lis a if im ,g gi 0 YY ,, Z5-qs :Hs i 3, ,IQ Sh X 1 ,., A--V fy V .'Jf1Lf':4, ' sszgm + V -V V, -21 ., ,L-72a'5-F:5w'mV V , w' A '--.'W2F:x'-affV'fJi'f3t 4. , X-it arf f 1 A 6 as - A F- A 2 - A- Awfqig ?vy:,W:,,.4 , Q 1 .K I , , L 'L ' J ' -if ff- H W ' sf V V. Vs., fv - 1' MW VV We - :V W UNIOR CLASS OFFICERS - aw, - W: ,, x 1 ' 2 3 'M ' f' 13:5 . . V 5 X- V1CC'PICS1dCDt Charlotte Brohard ,V . . L W A ,fy Pres1dent Nancv Smlth yV7 fW CF w ' Zi ' at Vf V r s ' X-4. sw xg Wiz ,N -w , V , X , if-:ww W ' + 4 - F' Q - . ' A 7 -v -is-A A , -22 . 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'ff? .l5'X f '?7a,5VfiQJT5 ' X Wf5?'W.s -T1'A':An', ff '1?f.qef,.1 , my 'wi VY A-V wks- - -s..ifif2:sf V if - A f : X YK ' 'm f - , .-- . .51 'ff . 2-f f 'ww-f,,.' f V 'Q wr ,.s:wf,, - K ry ,S ' , Q v' f ws ' ww, W-..'. 'wmv-V141 . .5:,.,ff'm,.4,f 3 1 , 43 Q in new s? Q ,I 1, ,R , .Elms fi Wye ,L y vf. -.wr Apis,,,vl2,ls W m, j u S5 , V. .Ty Bmw, RE. ' ' S' 'G 4 - V If v '.7 H 11 'flffbfk-r'. XC ,.,:, ,jf ' V 5' Yf- '7f3Q-. V. '1 M ,V: .L TZ.-'?'1 2 ak . , In Nu 4 5 .AQ , if-Wm .M . ,W , ., , gy. AN, , Jwffxg, , ' , f - ' , ' '. -1 J sf V .f- 1 . Q. .gf 1 5,35 .vw Lea -.. ,,,' , t5efE22t?.f'445i?i1 :z -' wtffcfff-1 3' Q3-'. Q. SOPHOMORF CLASS OFFICERS Vice-President Alida Mcllvain President Suzanne Iohnson FRFSHMAN CLASS OFFICERS President Mary Thomas Vice-President Susan Shipton I 5 . 'A' ' wi, TVX .5 on CLASS I UN I es, DH I '6 O O 3 F54 U O 1-1 H. cu G-J .E S 5 tr-.7 C1 O LJ DO .E F1 if ca 'FE T5 I I-T -C1 9 5 'U C1 cu r--I L., OD ney, Plimpt r, Kin y, LaCou VC Parkmson, Har . -5 6-I : : I bb .5 TS QD N: -5. Downey, Tomsu. mer, E uf 32? CQ A E -3 S 3 P K! -:J 5-1 E o 5 H. .9 CU E 53. Q 5 6-I 5 -cr 'a 93. Q? .r: 3: 5 ffl? 42. CD5 2:1 53 55.20 35 Ji Z2 EE SA- 'EE mi 58 :CD LE , r: -8 Q '5 E-'cn 0 A ..c: CI CD 8 Qi' 1: PEE : Q W4 co Cf' 2 D-1 .E E1 ds 3 5 'U C QC E F4 m 5 O-I C cu TU 5 cu 1-I Dr' cu u 11 r v . E cv: 9 Z S rf ill C cu TU Z3 ea I-I Q-4 K,,l C1 o V2 .E O F5 'Cf 'U cs U C. o 'U C1 5 CV r--I ig.. 5' lak, Leif us, Pol H1 ol Row: Dore Thir FRESHMAN CLASS ri U CD Q-4 fi ii C GJ 73 QP4 an Cu F-4 Q-4 Q U7 cv E O A GJ Q as TQ cn GJ F-1 Dr' U -9. P Q 5 cn Shipton Tikellis, ted: CH S Us : P11 CU P ..r 2 Q.. E peland, Sweet, Te Co Pr! CJ QJ CQ Ln.. 'U v--4 . 9. r- Z bl Magg mon, , Slim CIIC Robin g: S 'Fl WS S E rn ,4 TTU my latest painting, what else? Allie - Allie - in - free . . . Goo-Goo! Get lost . . . We're GLEEful Well, I never said I was perfect i We use Colgate Quick! The rescue squad- Nlmmmmmmmmmmmm x ? 1 fit . Www LA Q I want my mother . . . Not even if I give you these? Your CARE package is on its I'lZ simply strangle her . . She thinks she's cool . . Y M,s,,,.,.v4 'f Las Ninas 5,9 M' V, 2 . .N -, w 3. f' r . V i, , Y - f 51 ,4 ,. V fi r 1 0 Loving cups are my style . . . as ee lg, ..n ,JJ -L 1 ff, V .1 ,gag 5 , ,,,. Y fgiggg-we ,Q ,f 1 -s f. ' Six, Domestic duties make me dreamy A Room With A View , I .wif But I'1n a growing girl. This settles it - l'1n NEVER Cute Couple. getting married. Some guys have all the luck. He's NOT the one. Sltlalzlft . Tricky, lmlft? Before He'll never tell! UNDERGRADUATE SONG Tune: Softly, as I leave you Softly, as you leave us, may we Thank you for your senior sister love and helping hand. Though you leave us softly, On your way to learning, We will follow you, and in, our hearts We all will say, Wish you Could stay. Even as you leave, Other friendships we will weave But may yours guide us ever on, Guide us ever on, guide us ever on . . -GEORGIA INNES, '68 4 . m ' V 1 X Q Q : '.'i -Iiq'.L'.Q5:.?:fLf5':i. - A . .Il Q- -u,.-4: '.,.f..q,gJ- V,',,,..N,-. . , ., . x ,' N0 by gyQ-,Qaqgta-45,3-gzh,'fiL.' f , f A . X -' ' , -,, 4314. .fx--1.3-:sw-y,' - -V - -- x . 'A. lfv:'. vW ' 'M' :fl v'1:wr'-f:i'f.4- ' ' if 'uri ,mhz K is fi Lx' i777 X x -- -. ' 1g.,f .,:,w , ,. V.-xy. ,.N-f,4,4x.,.-,--...Y x ,' 'lk ,v.:'',-',,.As,x-.1-,ily , f. f -.. - X AW, ,X x - fx 'xx -. x I X fig., ' .zfigg if-2 .rv- xmglaebfs N. ,511 rj. T-10 5 , - J ' zx.Jf 771 G , S . 5 Qkififf - Hi I f l -.f X r X ' -QM' V 4 f , I . sf- - 'L-tiff? -QNX an V 1 ' 'z - , ,A ' A ' f X- N , f , .L . if ' 551 qwffeifg f,Q! A ' vf , A ' if ,f Q if ggC .. as Q ':QiQvTRQ'- A xvE1'i.-.3 ,- ' J . f.,f.,y X' - ? il5i3f-21' , ' ' - ' VM .x if 4 ' f ' - 1 ' J , if 51 A . --+- ' . , QT. - 274 1 5, W1 ' sux ' Y 154937: I ffz is y GQ ' . . 5 - ' K , ' ' 6691, ' anger: CZ ' xt Vx ' hx ' ff' 7,3 . 0161! 1 . ,, - -wfs 44' ' N 460' Wfv llvi- i f-5 1 . ' 4 ' . ' Z' ' -- 4 Af. ' A ' ' ' '59 -' w , +-T. - - - A 1, ll-Tull, kbxht.. X 1 . A . 1 ui W . 1 f 5 . fs' - ' , ,s I A, K1 ':,p'--- ' Q6 ,V ' ffl- A -V L ' V x f I ' , - ' A . A A ' 5:-'2 fELf::f- 1'S ' X ' ' 'Q ' -fd-fif-rl'1 sf'7fxi.5E1:-ilfiflF Y ' I r Y ' -' ' I 'A. .:f-,i 'i:'Qg'2,f'.5 f' ' ., . ,I., , ' - :,. 'A 54' fr lc- fn-Lbffznghg-Q-C-52 ' ' ' ' 4 ' ' ' ' ' 1'f9i'?Q9P??i?lf??f47 f2353Ti5 GOVERNMENT STUDENT' COUNCIL Seated: Beers, Valade CPresidentD, Vilright Standing: Corroon, Miss Ramsay, Gale, Fisher STUDENT PnocToRs Kneeling Front: Deshler, Downey, Zinn, Feather, Hall B. Seated: Walker, Miss Ramsay, Kendall. Standing: Peck, DeBell, Wirmtcr, Smith, Baker, Brion, Bacon, Kirchmaier, Pollak Allen, Wamer, Paine. ' ' PUBLICATIONS 44. - .Wt L .fx SPLINTERS Seated: Ship-ton, DeBell CArt Editorl, Allen CEditor-in-ChiefD, Walker CBusiness Managerl, Kendall. Standing: Cale, Baker, Pryor, Wickwire, Deshler, Crocker, Fisher, VVhiteheacl, Chigas, Hall, Cowles. ll ll H THE COLUMNS Standing: Bell P., Hemingway, Hall B., Pletscher Seated Center: Beers, Brohard, Leoff. Seated Rear: Smith, Brion, Wright CEclitorD, DeBlois, Anderson. MUSIC gg:-in--vi GLEE CLUB First Row: .S. Hall, Wickwire, Valade, Gale, Eddy, Zinn, Innes, Fuller CVice- PresidentD, Miss LeButt, Baker CPresidentD, Downey, Shipton, Bullock, Lovejoy Beers, Allen, D'eBlois, A. Wilson. Second Row: E. Hall, Sweet, Chigas, Feather, Strasburg, Keast, Brion. Third Row: Hemingway, McKallagat, Slimmon, Brohard, Crocker. Fourth Row: Godden, Fletcher, Pryor, Harvey, Rowley, Johnson, Morgan, Cowles Pollak, Anderson, Bacon, Hahn. Fifth Row: Corroon, Kendall, Pletscher, Tatian, Mcllvain, Saunders, Wright, Kirch maier, Winter, Gadd. THE R. H. NEGATIVES Front: Lockwood, Valade Clseaderl, Innes. Second Row: Pryor, Shipton, Welch, Baker, VVright, Fuller CListenerD. FRENCH CLUB First Bow: Cowles, Tighe, Innes, Lanclwehr, Shipton, Chigas. Second Row: Rowley, Downey CVice-Presidentl, Mrs. I-loffer, Pryor CPresidentD, LaCour. Third Bow: Crocker, Brion, Sullivan, DeBlois, Harvey, Beers, Fletcher, Scannell, Deshler, P. Bell, A. Wilson, Leoff, E. Plimpton. S--.... SPANISH CLUB Sitting: Lovejoy, Briggs, Chigas CPresidentD, Miss Pulling, Alvarez CVice-Presidentb Parkinson, Walker, Fuller. Standing: Morgan, Valade, Feather, Wright, VVhitehead, Codden, Winter, DeBell Sullivan, Sutton. DEBATE CLUB Sitting: Cale CSecretaryD, Allen CPresiclentD. ' Standing: Deshler, Chigas, Leoff, DeBell, Cowles, Parkinson, Brion, Walker. SKI CLUB ' Kneeling: Thomas, Baker, Shepard, Shipton Su., Shipton Sa., Hall B., Rowley Sullivan. Standing: Bacon, VVickwirc, Kendall, Mcllvain, Keast, Tatian, LaCour, C-add Smith, Deshler, Broharcl, Lockwood. B B Seated Center: Crocker CPresidentD, Wright CVice-Presidentl. DRANIATICS First Row: Valade, Feather, VValker, Downey, LaCour, Lovejoy. Second Row: Scannell, Hall, Eddy, Harp, Parkinson. Third Row: Wright, DeBlois, Wilson, Wickwire, Bullock. Fourth Row: Doremus, Warner, Gale, Bell. I f Standing Left: Beers CPresidentDg Right: Landwehr CVice-Presidentb. i L I ..n...-I fx n. :, x ko. ,Ju Af' XXX fi . x True disputants are like true Sportsman, their whole delight is in the jmrsuit. -ALEXANDER Pops 'H VT ' -, NW ,'5.: 5'f33'7 '9Wwr'f' ' vf wf- W '-www L ' .U ,xiN,v,iL5 , ..fl7Q-1' ' Wf F-1 4 '-2 kg- :- X 'Q I' 1-.ff I ' - . -' ' 4 1 . .V .A A , ,M , 'X U v 5-S x n BU, qs vim J-X QW' -., . ' 5 ., , . n 1 Y. E' . ,iv . Atv V HQ? 12 K Q-7 ' 0 fi 1 --L , INV- A , 2 4 f' Q '. -- 1 X f' gn- L Q 1' N K I L! ,xx e' , t X 'S X af 1 lf 1 Q N xxxmsg? I 4 xr Qu X W AK 'MXRVA 'a Q 2:34 '- x W f AT555 CLUB CAE ob n, Sprin W Bro epard, ..c: C13 . m. GJ CI cz P11 S. 'U -U I-I-1 E. .E N ci S A C5 : 0 CQ A. U CD D-1 3 '-cr s: :J C6 cn H. 2 F-I OJ UD ..r CU on ,S R M U E Fc. .+: E UD -'2 2 Q D Ln. 2 .2 Z 2 O QC 'O-A VJ -3: U-4 A C1 GJ 'U 'U O CD :- Ch 5? Z cu P 5 ..:: U 4-I A as EF. J .25 '5 cr: wg C!! Chig lite, ard, Robine 'S H CQ an Morga mon, d, Bacon, Beers, Anderson, Slim 'U CU U X.. 2 no Z E Plimpton Second R ri 2 QC v- Scannell '-7.2 0-Wo 56 E2 P55 gm me .eg EH N sim C5 .. +365 '5::: 353 SE 2:- jx C. 55 SE go OE U.. SLS Q-o-x -HS ECB' U. QS mf 'Et EE P-'r-L. S. Leffert Pletscher, 5 CQ as Q VVickwire, Wilson A., F-7. -4 CU 'U on, Ken lltt ter: .S Row Cen v-'i' -A Wx -1-r U-4 CAE OFFICERS Muff Fisher, Vice-President Amy-Jo Whitehead, President A , 55,1 uv .WML CLUB KAVA Na VN si o 'U C 'J :cz n-1 of u, Walker, Leoff, Doremus, Gal S Tom Wav, on .E E CU E W, no .oo CI DQ cf .2 I-4 CD Prvor, : Keast, Tatian, ond Row C .9- E9 O A Ja' .DO S cd 'Tu I 5 CD .E .M F-I C5 ra., S O0 CO S' f: 'D O U CU -1 C. 9. P-4 cd CQ 5 6 CD D UJCIJ 55 9.2 .edw .::.E U52 ,Lu Q40- 525 CU my 'U A GJ 5.4: ?i.9.0 OE-' UQ,- -C. gas mn. FE .. QE 'A .QT-5 CU EP mr 3:1 mu.. Se +3 2 Q-4 5 E- .ft TJ vs P ney, Strasburg, Dow Od, c 3 Q4 u O n-1 H. an .-Q J-I as 9-9 U-4 ow: Shipton, Su., ter Third R BVI C .2 U U CQ an va :z N I H. CD A4 ec CQ G. -CI CB 1 H-1 if cu 3 Kirchmaier, S or u: U 'T' 5 O U E. ter Fourth Row: Thomas, Win S cu U k .AMW 4 KAVA OFFICERS Mandy Crocker, President Cathy Welch, Vice-President CAE 6 - KAVA I CAE HOCKEY Kneeling: Anderson, Morgan, Allen, Bell D., Whiteherad, Fisher. Standing: Pollak, Peck, Plimpton N., Mcllvain CChptainD, Bullock, Sutton, Corroon DeBell CManagerD. KAVA HOCKEY Front: Welch CCaptainD. First Row: Tighe, Shipton Sa., Alvarez, Thomas, Deshler, Crocker. Second Bow: Feather, Briggs, LaCour, Baker, Wright, Barton, Sullivan Chflanagerb. HOCKEY GAMES In the first part of the game both teams were evenly matched. CAE broke through KAVA's defense to make the first goal. CAE made four more goals during the rest of the first half. KAVA took the ball right down to make a goal at the beginning of the second half. This act strengthened KAVA's defense, and CAE got only one more goal the rest of the game. The spirit of the crowd of parents and students stayed strong even after the score of 6-1 in CAE's favor was announced. CAE's spirit was due to the fact that CAE had not received the Hockey Cup in three years. KAVA's spirit showed that KAVA wanted to keep her undefeated title. After the game the parents, team members, and cheerleaders crowded into the dining room for ice cream and for the distribution of the charms. This day marked the beginning of a new RH traditiong the hockey banquet will be replaced by the Parents' Day Activities. ZND TEAMS CCAE 1 - KAVA OD CAE KAVA Beers Nields Brion Leoff DeBlois Plimpton, L. Cale CCaptainD Paine Cadd Scannell Hall E, Rowley Kendall Seller Hemingway Shipton, Susan Kinney Smith Hunt Templet Landwehr Wilson CCaptainD Keast Valade McKallagat DeBell ClVIanage1'D Laundon Wright Sullivan ClVIanagerD ,wt , 7 . fn NN-,,..,4f4--d ' X .,,.,..A--1-+f ' Xu Xi CAE 35 - KAVA 24 CAE VOLLEYBALL Standing: Wilson D., Lefferts, Kendall, Plimpton N., Bullock, Pollalc, Vallis, Allen Morgan CManagerD. ' Front: Whitehead, Bell CCaptainD, Fisher. KAVA VOLLEYBALL Front: Deshler CCaptainj. Second Row: Crocker, Shipton Sa. Third Bow: Hall S. CManagerD, LaCour, Laundon, Hemingway. Fourth Row: Feather, Briggs, Maggy, Tighe, Barton. VOLLEYBALL GAMES The coin was tossed to determine who was going to serve first in the second team game. KAVA was the first server to start a fascinating game. The score was 28-22 for KAVA. The first team game was played after the second team game, unlike the hockey game. Doris Bell, CAE's captain, won the toss up between her and Lydia Deshler, KAVA's captain. KAVA was the server in the game again. Tina Lefferts was high scorer for CAE, l-lillery Barton for KAVA. The final score was 35-24 in CAE's favor. 2ND TEAMS CAE KAVA Anderson Alvarez Bacon Baker DeBlois Downey Fletcher CCaptainD Fuller Mcllvain Leoff Plimpton E. Rowley Saunders Tomsu Spring Winter Wickwire Wright CCaptainD Wilson A. Hall S. CManagerD Morgan CManagerD iiz,rg:!wi:fEy wsffff Oops-a-daisy Wanna make a het I'1n the Champ? And then she swallowed the hall . . . BASKETBALL GAMES After trying both methods of playing basketball this year, CAE and KAVA decided to play the game using the traditional two-court method. ln the second team game Vanessa Vallis and Gretchen Valade were the high scorers for their team, and the score was 23-10 in CAE's favor. The first team game was much closer in score than was the second team game. KAVA won by a margin of one point with the score of 14-13. KAVA's song was selected as the better of the two songs sung by the clubs at the banquet that night. ZND TEAMS CAE KAVA Bacon Cowles Kendall Hemingway Kinney CCaptainD Rowley Lefferts Thomas Pollak Tomsu Spring Valade CCaptainD Vallis Welch Wilson A. VVinter Pletscher CManagerD , Downey CManagerD Q75 So I'm getting ready to cheer . . . Maybe if we got down on our knees After-game Night Life RAINED OUT CAE SOFTBALL First Row: Kinney, Bell D., Whitehead QCaptainD,A Vallis, Spring, Allen. Second Bow: Plirnpton N., Wilson D., Bullock, Kendall, Wickwire, Pollalc, Brown Seller, Fisher CAhsentD. anagerD Rear: Bacon CM . KAVA SOFTBALL First Row: Hunt, Shipton Sa., Hemingway, Strasburg, Crocker Cflaptainl, Wash- burn, Rowley. Second Row: Maggy, Deshler, Kirchmaier, Briggs, Baker, Welch, LaCour, Wright, Cowles CManagerD. SOFTBALL GAME M I.et's use these instead . . . Dance to the Sungoal In the true sense of the phrase we had a winter-in-spring term. The basket- ball games, as well as the snows and cold winds, came after the vacation. This un- natural weather prevented the practices for softball. May looked hopeful for sun- bums and the full use of the fields, but since April had the snows of winter, May had the showers. There were about four practices in which the clubs selected their members of the teams. There was to be only one large softball team to play in one game this year. Unfortunately the rain, not the game, was forecasted that day and the next, the last two days of review week. That news brought an undefeated soft- ball season for CAE and KAVA to an abrupt end. 53 I ll just keep it on for next year's game . . . On a sunny day I alon't fool around CUP WINNER - DORIS BELL KCAEI Q CAE BADMINTON Spring, Bell D., Harvey CManagerD, Kinney, VVarner KAVA BADMINTON Valade, Briggs, Feather CManagerD, LaCour, Maggy 'lit-1-i,-. CUP WINNER - SUSAN SHIPTON KKAVAI 4- iff,- U3 I if ' 4 Ill? arm 3214 A' ? ' .,,.,f' L CAE TENNIS Wickwire, Vallis, Harvey CManagerD, Spring, Fisher. A -' .' E543 KAVA TENNIS Briggs, Barton, Shipton Sa., Shipton, Su., Feather CManagerD Q32- KAVA 65 - CAE 52 . CAE SWIMMING Seated: Allen, Whitehead, Mack, Kinney, Bell D. Standing: Mcllvain, Warner, Nields, Kendall, Fisher, Wilson D. CManagerD KAVA SWIMMING Seated: Kirchmaiefr, Hahn, Maggy, Wright, Deshler, Beck Standing: Feather, Copeland, Sullivan, Cowles, Welch, Barton CManagerD. CAE CHEERLEADERS Front: Jodi Landwehr Cmascotl Kneeling: Allen, Kendall QCaptainD, Bell D., Whitehead. Rear: Vallis, Plimpton L., WiQson D., Mcllvain, Fisher, Peck, Pletscher. KAVA CHEERLEADERS Left ffront to rearl: Shipton Su., Shipton Sa., Ellington S., Lovejoy, Deshler, Welch Sweet Cmascotl Right Cfront to rearl: Feather, Barton, Briggs, VVashburn, Wright, LaCour. Wlzen men are riglztly occupiecl, their amusement gr O'WS out of their work as the color petal out ofa fruitful flower. -IOHN RUSKIN ..xN x 1 G fvs.1vWT .,-.Ms xv 94' W' , ..-4 .., 'Glo -Q M4 YV!-' , :,1'gm,,' C TV HW H U UE S PARENTS' DAY vs ll l Saturday, November 5, 1966 contained a new kind of excitement for Rogers Hall. The Students and families enjoyed an eventful day. Cae and Kava had worked for the first time as a team in making handcrafts for the fair, which was held in the basement of lVlacGay. The bake sale, paper- mache articles, Christmas decorations, R.I-I. cookbooks, aprons, raffles, cards, and paintings all made tremendous profits for the Cae and Kava Clubsg the proceeds went to the Kava ring die and Cae banner. The R. H. Negatives performed for the first time this year to make the buffet lunch more enjoyable. Following lunch, the Parent-Teachers Association had its first meeting. The remainder of the afternoon included the hockey game and the presentation of the cup to the winning team. Compliments were given to both clubs by the enthusiastic parents on the magnificent game and spirited cheerleading. This day marked a successful experiment which may have started an annual event in the history of Rogers Hall. FALL PLAYS it L ' - .. , J, ' ff I, .- 'rw Mrs. Worsham and her talented casts presented two one-act plays on Saturday evening, November 19 at 8:00. The Hrst of these was a farce, The Still Alarm by George S. Kaufman. Ian Laundon and Deborah Gale made fine gentlemen of the 1940's who casually experienced a hotel fire with two rather unusual firemen, played by Kate DeBlois and Mandy Crocker. Lorrie LaCour played a prompt and eilicient young bellboy. Alqlqlqlqlqln-,Int . 'U 1 1 -1 1 H -1 1 '1 'a . I 1liulrq,-l,1,,.il- ' 1 ' ,,y?l'i5'arCfinucrta'arcoauiu - : The second play, Mr. Flannery's Ocean by John Lewis Carlino was humorously done with an undercurrent of seriousness prevailing. Sherrill Wamer portrayed the Hamboyant old Irishman, Flannery, with great skill. Beth Bullock and Jody Land- wehr played newlyweds, whose honeymoon problems added much humor. Sherill Wickwire made a line Cockney maid-tart. Catherine Cowles as the hotel manager and Victoria Harp as an invalid lady did good jobs with difficult middle-aged roles. As children, Prudence Allen and Place Downey in their 20's beach attire made wonderful additions to a well done play. A last minute contribution to the atmosphere of the play was made by Kathy Sullivan who sat under a beach umbrella and painted mad watercolorsg Everyone agreed that Kathy displayed a hidden talent for pantomine. CHRISTMAS PLAY Christmas in the Market Place by Eric Crozier represented this year's inter- pretation of the holiday spirit. The story of the Nativity narrated by Old Melchior, Karen Anderson, from ancient manuscripts began the gypsy revival of Christmas Eve. Colomba, Betty Hall, exhibited her versatility in the portrayal of several, varied char- acters vvho welcome the Messiah or remain convincingly skeptical of a Savior's coming. Ioey and Maria, Kathy Beers and Valerie Morgan, played the allegorical roles of Ioseph and Mary by producing various props from an ingenuous gypsy Wagon that dominated the play's scenery. Energy and agility accompanied the role of Bruno, Marion Eddy, while she danced and glided across the stage as angel or shepherd. The tone of a play within a play drew the audience to a more personal level with the girls on the stage. When the Nativity play ended with the final curtain, the image of dancing gypsies played on. CHRISTMAS VESPERS On Sunday, December ll, the traditional Christmas Vespers service was held. The program was conducted by Gretchen Valade, president of the Student Council, who commenced by reading from the Bible. This year there was a deviation from the usual program in that the French IV class acted out a revised Christmas verson of Winnie the Pooh. After this fine ver- sion Was completed, Kathleen Kiley, Carol Cadd, Christina Wright, Danelle Hahn and Pamela Bell read their themes about the senses of Christmas. Following the readings, The Spanish and French Clubs each sang some lovely carols. The Clee Club and the Octet also sang some of their seasonal selections. The climactic point of the ceremony was reached when Miss Ramsay presented to the seniors their rings. The program was concluded when everyone sang Oh, Come All Ye Faithful . SPRlNG PLAYS This spring Mrs. Worsham paced, yelled, and pulled her twiggy hair out - the traumas involved in producing four one-act masterpieces. Another experiment with the R. H. theatre-in-the-round was done for three of these plays. The Case of the Crushed Petunias by Tennessee VVilliams was a light satire on New England propriety symbolized by the shopkeeper, Miss Dorothy Simple, portrayed by Pru Allen, who was sold on EMANCIPATION by the all-American salesman, Kathy Beers. Adding humor to the production were Doris Bell as a police- man and Betty Hall as Mrs. Dull. Also done was the R. H. interpretation of Schnitzler's The Farewell Supper, a humorous episode about the end of love. Sherri Vvarner and Cathy Cowles battled for the oysters, the wine, and the upper hand, while Marion Eddy looked on in amused tolerance. Toni Pollak made an ePHcient, eyebrow-raising waiter. SPRING PLAYS The popular A Sunny Morning, written by Quintero, was done on the Hoor using only the simplest scenery and props. The mood of the play was transmitted to the audience soley by the subtle humor of the situation of former lovers meeting again in old age. The old couple were effectively portrayed by Kate DeBlois and Gretchen Valade. Ann Hemingway and Lorrie LaCour did fine jobs as their servants. sf A The only play done on stage in one of the year's most attractive sets was the farcical Goodnight Caroline by Conrad Seiler. The absurd characters played by Jodi Landwehr as a spoiled wife and Isabella Kinney as a soft-hearted thief moved the audience from the realities to the fantasies of modern living. Ian Laundon as the distraught husband and Amy Wilson as a slipshod maid added greatly to the fun. COMMENCEMENT PLAY On Monday evening, June Sth, Rogers Hall presented The Mouse That Roared, a two act comedy adapted by Christopher Sergel from the book by Leonard Wibber- ley. VVhen the sale of their only export is jeopardized, a tiny European duchy is triumphantly led to accidental victory over the United States by its beautiful young sovereign played very well by Catherine Cowles. Katharine Beers superbly portrayed Tully Bascom, a backwoodsman, placed in charge of the Penwickian forces sent explicitly to lose the war, in order for the duchy to achieve rehabilitation in true United States style. The forces capture Professor Kokintz, cleverly played by Kate DeBlois and the professor's Q-bomb. The Grand Fenwick soldiers presented a comic contrast to the seriousness of the United States President and its General Snippet, played efficiently by Karen Anderson and lan Laundon. Prudy Allen as U. S. Secretary of State, badly in need of tranquilizers, and Sherri VVarner and Isabel Kinney as embattled Penwickian diplomats added greatly to the fun. The set, designed by Mrs. Perloff had many delightful and colorful features based on a red, white, and blue motif. Mr. Conger and his chemistry class created a surrealist laboratory that drew a round of applause. The play's theme - the idea of achieving peace by placing nuclear weapons in the keeping of a tiny twentyn - is particularly apropos in this time of international strife over Vietnam and the Middle East. CAST or CHARACTERS Cin order of appearanceD Tully Bascorn ..... ........................................................ ,lane ................. .... ........... .... Mary ..... .... Fran ........................................................ ......................... .......... Pam ................................................................................................ .. Katharine Beers Pamela Bell Cynthia Brox Toni Pollak Elizabeth Bullock The above four girls also appear as Columbia University students Ann .................................................................................................... Place Downey Count Mountjoy ....... David Benter ............. Page ............................... Gloriana the Twelfth ...... Norma ........................... Helen ......................... Mr. Beston ...... Miss johnson ......... Elizabeth Hall Professor Kokintz ...... ........ Mrs. Reiner ........... ..... . .. General Snippet ........ Wac jill ................. Wac Debbie ........... President of U.S. ..... . Sherrill Warner Isabella Kinney Ann Hemingway Catherine Cowles Deborah Gale Lorraine LaCour .. Prudence Allen Katherine DeBlois Kathleen Sullivan jan Laundon Sherill Wickwire Jodi Landwehr . .. Karen Anderson Announcer ........................... ................................................. ....... C y 'nthia Mack Tom Mulligan ...................................................................................... Marion Eddy Soldiers of Grand Fenwick .... Gayle DeBell, Katharine Harvey, Suzanne Johnson Cynthia Mack, Carol Rowley, Lynne Tatian Will Tatum ....... .................. , .......................................... M arion Eddy Miss Wilkins ...... .............. ............................................................... A m y VVilson Mrs. Bascom ................................................................................ Deborah Pletscher SCENES: The Duchy of Grand Fenwick A lab at Columbia University Washington, D.C. F FATHER-DAUGHTER DAY On April 22nd the fathers arrived for the traditional day of activities with their daughters. Due to poor weather, the usual barbecue and softball game were re- placed by a luncheon in MacGay and relay races in the gym. It was rather doubtful if the fathers would survive some of the strenuous races. The conclusion of the afternoon's activities was the program of the Water Ballet. After this, the fathers and daughters spent a few hours relaxing for the evening's dinner and dance. A buffet supper was followed by a dance during which the fathers were en- tertained by skits acted out by their darling daughters. These included musical and comical scenes ranging from an original version of Oh, You Wonderful Dad! to a comical ballet act. After the skits the dancing recommenced. The fathers appeared quite uncoor- dinated as they tried to keep up with their daughters' newest dance steps but they did admirably. The Fathers' Day event ended with tired but happy fathers and daughters. iii - WATER BALLET f 1, I 1 Seated: Briggs, Allen, Bell D., Fisher, Wilson D., Peck, Shipton Su., Fuller, Tikellis, Maggy, Rowley, Shipton Sa. Standing: Barton, VVhitehead, Shepard, Bacon, Kirchmaier, Hahn, Welch, Deshler, Pletscher, Sullivan, Cowles, Thomas CManagerD. One of the highpoints of the Fathers' Day event was the VVater Ballet. In a sequence of four scenes and a grand finale, the theme of The New Generation was very well executed. The program was distinguished by original costumes and swim- ming feats. The skillful swimmers enjoyed performing for their non-critical audience and the Water Ballet was a highly successful event. Chatting Poolside Cl-link! FOUNDER'S DAY By noontime May 6, most of the alumnae arrived for their reunion at Rogers Hall. The day started with the opening of the Senior Fair in lVlacGay. The Fair consisted of numerous interesting articles as well as the usual bakery products. After the Fair the alumnae went to a luncheon at which The Octet sang and was later joined by the guests in singing the school song. The alumnae meeting was held after the luncheon during which time the girls babysat for the children and enjoyed the Fair. The climax of the day was the entertainment in the gym. The Clee Club sang some of its selections after which one of the skits from Fathers' Day was performed. Everyone moved to the poolroom for a scene from the VVater Ballet which was very well executed. The alumnae left with the impression that Rogers Hall was just as they had left it and looked forward to their next reunion. Y0u're looking swell, Dolly . . . PROM The senior prom merged into a full weekend this year. For the first time, a few of the boys arrived Friday night for a gathering at MacGay, which was high- lighted by Bob Lasher of Noble and Cree-nough with his folk music. More of the quests arrived Saturday morning for walks in the park and games of softball, lacrosse, and tennis. Lunch at MacGay was followed by a movie. The evening's activities began as couples crossed the bridge onto the dance Hoor throwing coins in the goldfish-filled pond below. The room was gay with movement as soon as the popular Nobody Special band from Governor Dummer Academy began to play. Later in the evening all attention was focused on the R. H. Negatives who left us trying to figure out their finale. Fortunately for all, the weather remained beautiful all weekend. The under- grads enjoyed the sunshine on Sunday by relaxing around the fireplace with a steak sandwich brunch. The seniors and their friends also took full advantage of the sun by spending an enjoyable day at the home of Valerie Morgan in Winchester. W4 Cheese . . . We are certainly groovy But my mother wouZdn't let me out... Everythingk coming up roses . . CLASS DAY AWARDS I967 CLUB CUPS Hockey ........ ....... C AE Swimming ..... ...... K AVA Volleyball ........ ........... C AE Badminton ..... ........ C AE Basketball ............................ KAVA Tennis ........ ..... K AVA INDIVIDUAL AWARD.S Badminton .................. ............. D oris Bell Tennis ............. ..... S usan Shiptop Posture Cup .................... ......... K atharine Beers RED CROSS LIFE SAVING JUNIOR LIFE SAVING SENIOR LJIFE SAVING Elizabeth Hall Karen Anderson Carol Rowley Christina Lefferts Edith Fletcher Sandra Shipton Deborah Pletscher Fay Sutton R. H. AVVARDS . . . Civen to those who have earned a total of seventy or more points in one year. Points are given for athletic ability, sportsmanship, captains, managers, water ballet, posture and neatness. CAE KAVA Prudence Allen Vanessa Vallis Hillary Barton Barrie Feather Doris Bell Amy-Io VVhitehead Susan Briggs Lorraine LaCour .lanet Kendall Deborah Wilson Marian Crocker Carol Rowley Lydia Deshler Sandra .Shipton Catherine Welch NEATN ESS AWARDS Hall ...................... ....................... E stela Alvarez - Toni Pollak lVlacCay ....... ........ C harlotte Brohard - Laura Lockwood First Floor ....... ................... C ayle DeBell - Sandra Hall Second Floor .................................. Janet Kendall - Amy-Io Whitehead ANNOUNCEMENT OF CLUB OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR CAE KAVA President ............ Katherine DeBlois President ................ Elizabeth Fuller Vice-President ............ Amy Wilson Vice-President .. Kathryn Kirchmaier Cheerleader ........ Deborah Pletscher Cheerleader .......... Anne Washburn COMMENCEM ENT Commencement activities began on Sunday morning, Iune 4, at a baccalaureate service at All Souls Church. The Reverend Ioseph Simone gave the graduates an inspiring farewell sermon. After the service a lovely reception was given in the parish hall for the seniors and their parents. MUSICrXI-E A musicale given on Sunday afternoon by the Glee Club under the direction of Miss Dorothy LeButt featured songs by Mozart, Thompson, and Rodgers. A high- light of the program was a folk song written by Gretchen Valade. In addition, Martha Chigas and Miss LeButt gave Schumann's Piano Concerto in A Minor an outstanding rendition. SENIOR LUNCHEON On Monday, the Senior Luncheon was a festive affair. The place cards were clever replicas of the columns and the humorous verses and gifts prepared for each senior by the undergrads added greatly to the fun. CLASS DAY Class Day exercises were held for the first time in the gym, a cooler, more spacious atmosphere. After the athletic awards, all club officers for 67-68 were announced. The Will and Prophecy, read by Debbie Gale and Cathy Cowles respectively, were greeted enthusiastically. The program closed on a nostalgic note, the singing of the undergraduate song and the senior song. GRADUATION - Graduation morning dawned, ideally sunny and beautiful. At 9:00 the seniors gathered on the front lawn to have their last group picture taken. Against the vibrant greens of the grounds their lovely white dresses and coral roses made a sparkling contrast. At 9:30 the reception line formed and the seniors graciously greeted their friends and relations. At 10:00 the telling sound of Pomp and Circumstance floated from the gymnasium as first the undergraduates, then the faculty, and finally the seniors marched in. The exercises began with Dr. David Latham, president of the Board of Trustees, who greeted everyone and made us aware of his deep interest in our educa- tions. He then introduced the Very Reverend Charles H. Buck, Ir. of St. Paul's Cathedral, Boston, who gave the commencement address. Rev. Buck told a true story of five Polynesian boys who survived shipwreck for fifteen months by wisely using three things available to them: what nature had provided, what former inhabi- tants had left, and what their simple faith afforded them. He advised the seniors of their need to rely on nature, their fellowman, and God. After Dr. Latham had conferred the diplomas, Miss Ramsay spoke briefly to the class and then awarded the school honors to deserving students. Sandra Hall presented the class gift, a loudspeaker system to the gym, used for the fiirst time at the commencement play and these closing exercises. Finally, the recessional began and the seniors formed the traditional floral arc under which the undergraduates passed. Goodbyes rang across the yard and thus the long awaited morning ended. -QM! AWARDS AND HONORS 1967 UNDERHILL HONOR -- COLLEGE PREPARATORY Catherine Cowles PARSONS HONOR - GENERAL COURSE Sandra Shipton HONOR ROLL - AVERAGE 85W OR ABOVE Prudence Allen Charlotte Brohard Place Downey Karen Anderson Catherine Cowles Nancy Nields Lindsay Bacon Lydia Deshler Cynthia Tomsu HELEN HILL AWARD Gretchen Valade ATHLETIC AWARD Doris Bell ART PRIZE Gayle DeBell ART SURVEY AWARDS Senior ...... Gayle DeBell Undergraduate .... Sherrill Warner DRAMATICS Prudence Allen Who, as Hamlet directs, suits the action to the-word, the word to the action. I'IONORABI.E MENTION for Moments of Greatness during the Vear. Karen Anderson Katherine DeBlOis 'Ian Laundon Katharine Beers Marion Eddy Gretchen Valade Catherine Cowles Isabella Kinney .Sherrill Warne-r Jodi Landwehr MUSIC APPRECIATION Martha Chigas Cynthia Brox HONORABLE MENTION Estela Alvarez Katherine DeBlOis Fay Sutton Karen Anderson Lydia Deshler Gretchen Valade Martha Baker Marion Eddy Sherill Wickwirie Susan Briggs Edith Fletcher Deborah Zinn Linda Lovejoy Susan Spring CURRENT EVENTS Seniors ...... Prudence Allen Undergraduate ............ Amy Wilson Sandra Shipton HONORABLE MENTION Karen Anderson Lydia Deshler Lynne Tatian Catherine Cowles Elizabeth Fuller Deborah Zinn KATHARINE VVHITT EN MacGAY LITERARY PRIZES Seniors .................. Sherill Wickwire. . . Whose thoughts come in ripples of designed words. Undergraduates .... Elizabeth Bullock... For whom there will always he a song in the wind. ALLEN, Prudence, R.D. 42, Fairview, Pennsylvania ALVAREZ, Estela, 85-11 Avon Street, jamaica, New York ANDERSON, Karen, 39 Daniels Street, Lowell, Massachusetts BACON, Lindsay, 1127 Ranlield Lane, Flint, Michigan BAKER, Martha, 138 Brigham Hill Road, North Crafton, Massachusetts BARON, Hillary, 658 Nimes Road, Los Angeles, California BECK, Sandra, 4 Rustic Drive, Cohasset, Massachusetts BEERS, Katharine, 214 Southdown Road, Huntington, Long Island, New York BELL, Doris, 26 Crescent Road, Riverside, Connecticut. BELL, Pamela, 83 Beacon Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts BRICCS, Susan, Carefree Apts., Box 44811, Cable Beach, Nassau, Bahama Islands BRION, Donna, Skunks Misery Road, Locust Valley, Long Island, New York BROHARD, Charlotte, 73 Weeks Avenue, Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York BROX, Cynthia, 192 North Lowell Street, Methuen, Massachusetts BROWN, Susan, 56 Monadnock Road, VVellesley Hills, Massachusetts BULLOCK, Elizabeth, P. O. Box 4243, lohnsonville, South Carolina CHICAS, Martha, 7 Andover Road, Billerica, Massachusetts COPELAND, Cenevieve, R.D. 41, Box 4448, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania CORROON, Donna, Piping Rock Road, Locust Valley, Long Island, New York COWLES, Catherine, 332 Iroquois Avenue, Creen Bay, Wisconsin CROCKER, Marian, 184 .School Street, Milton, Massachusetts DEBELL, Cayle, 11 Oriole Drive, Andover, Massachusetts DEBLOIS, Katherine, Fairhaven Hill, Concord, Massachusetts DESHLER, Lydia, 7 Dunham Road, Scarsdale, New York DOREMUS, Dania, South Road, Harwinton, Connecticut DOWNEY, Place, 3476 Jackson Street, San Francisco, California EDDY, Marion, 20 Edbert Drive, New Britain, Connecticut ELLINCTON, Katherine, 424 Ocampo Drive, Pacific Palisades, California ELLINCTON, Susan, 424 Ocampo Drive, Pacific Palisades, California FEATHER, Barrie, 443 Highbrook Avenue, Pelham Manor, New York FISHER, Martha, 50 Drake Road, Scarsdale, New York FLETCHER, Edith, 67 High Street, Chelmsford, Massachusetts FULLER, Elizabeth, 511 Mapleton Avenue, Suffield, Connecticut CADD, Carol, 33 Stoner Drive, VVest Hartford, Connecticut CALE, Deborah, 8 Copeland Avenue, Reading, Massachusetts CODDEN, Louise, 45 Sunset Rock Road, Andover, Massachusetts HAHN, Danelle, 104 Chester Avenue, Carden City, Long Island, New York HALL, Elizabeth, 345 Nahant Road, Nahant, Massachusetts HALL, Sandra, 345 Nahant Road, Nahant, Massachusetts HARP, Victoria, 28 Maple Street, P. O. Box 4856, Hanover, New Hampshire HARVEY, Katharine, 2025 Cratiot Avenue, Saginaw, Michigan HEMINCWAY, Ann, 81 Clenbrook Drive, Cheshire, Connecticut HOLIHAN, Felicity, 68 Salem Street, Andover, Massachusetts HUNT, Meredith, 270 jerusalem Road, Cohasset, Massachusetts INNES, Ceorgia, 93 Edwards Lane, Atherton, California JOHNSON, Suzanne, Hillside Road, Greenwich, Connecticut KEAST, Marilyn, 45 Three Ponds Road, VVayland, Massachusetts KENDALL, Janet, 61 Laurelwood Road, Holden, Massachusetts KINNEY, Isabella, 401 Summer Street, Manchester, Massachusetts KIRCHMAIER, Kathryn, 28683 East River Road, Perrysburg, Ohio LAC-OUR, Lorraine, 15 Hillside Road, New London, Connecticut LANDWEHR, Jodi, 98 South Division, Holland, Michigan LAUNDON, Ian, Sachem's Head, Guilford, Connecticut LEFFERTS Christina, 292 VVashington Boulevard, Springfield, Massachusetts LEOFF, Francine, 11 George Street, Andover, Massachusetts LOCKWOOD, Laura, 79 Eastway, Mount Kisco, New York LOVEJOY, Linda, 2201 Lehigh Station Road, Pittsford, New York MACK, Cynthia, 178 Seven Bridge Road, Chappaqua, New York MAGGY, Leslie, I7 Marlo Court, Walnut Creek, California MCILVAIN, Alida, 1109 Beech Road, Rosemont, Pennsylvania MCKALLAGAT, Lee, 135 Academy Road, North Andover, Massachusetts MORGAN, Valerie, 10 Berkshire Drive, VVinchester, Massachusetts NIELDS, Nancy, Monument Street, Concord, Massachusetts PAINE, Beverly, 13 Bayberry Lane, Exeter, New Hampshire PARKINSON, Martha, Keveney Lane, Yarmouth, Massachusetts PECK, Ellen, Yellow Cote Road, Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York PLETSCHER, Deborah, 1647 Brockway Street, Saginaw, Michigan PLIMPTON, Eliza, Old Sudbury Road, South Lincoln, Massachusetts PLIMPTON, Nicola, Old Sudbury Road, South Lincoln, Massachusetts POLLAK, Toni, 63 Atlantic Avenue, Apt. 5D, Boston, Massachusetts PRYOR, Linda, 101 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts ROWLEY, Carol, 10 Meriam Street, Lexington, Massachusetts SAUNDERS, Colleen, 589 Mountain Avenue, North Caldwell, New jersey SCANNELL, Claire, 131 Holyrood Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts SELLER, Iane, 789 Colrain Road, Greenfield, Massachusetts SHEPARD, Katharine, 125 Hillside Road, Kensington, Connecticut SHIPTON, Sandra, 953 VVest Street, Pittsfield, Massachusetts SHIPTON, Susan, 953 West Street, Pittsfield, Massachusetts SLIMMON, Betsey, 555 Hill Farm Road, Fairfield, Connecticut SMITH, Nancy, Manley Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts SPRING, Susan, 4 Elm Street, Concord, Massachusetts STRASBURG, Elizabeth, 6671 MacArthur Boulevard, Washington, D.C. SULLIVAN, Kathleen, Box 135405, Rancho Santa Fe, California SUTTON, Fay, Cousins Island, Yarmouth, Maine SWEET, lo Anne, 494 North Main Street, Gloversville, New York TATIAN, Lynne, 57 Lexington Avenue, Bradford, Massachusetts TEMPLET, Suzanne, Dover Road, Box 11208, Guilford, Maine THOMAS, Mary, 109 Overhill Road, Baltimore, Maryland TIGHE, Johanna, 23 Holyrood Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts TIKELLIS, Pamela, 19 Perth Drive, Wilmington, Delaware TOMSU, Cynthia, 3180 Gratiot Avenue, Port Huron, Michigan VALADE, Gretchen, 37 Willoyx' Lane, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan VALLIS, Vanessa, 109 Lowell Street, Lynnheld, Massachusetts WALKER, Challis, 1508 South Shore Drive, Erie, Pennsylvania WARNER, Sherrill, 33 Cove Circle, Marion, Massachusetts WASHBURN, Anne, Red Stone Hill, Plainville, Connecticut VVELC1-1, Catherine, 9 Lake Place, Brandford, Connecticut WHITEHEAD, Amy-Jo, 3259 Polo Drive, Delray Beach, Florida WICKWIRE, Sherill, Locust Avenue, Homer, New York WILSON, Amy, 7 Prospect Street, Willamstown, Massachusetts WILSON, Deborah, 1270 Andover Street, T ewksbury, Massachusetts WILLS, Susan, 37 Coolidge Avenue, Lexington, Massachusetts WINTER, Katharine, 60 South Main Street, Suffield, Connecticut WRICHT, Christina, Croton School, Croton, Massachusetts ZINN, Deborah, Ballwood Road, Old Creenwich, Connecticut FACULTY RAMSAY, Miss Hildred, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts MACCAY, Mrs. Katharine, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts IONES, Mrs. Howard, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts STATEN, Mrs. Louise, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts CROSBIE, Mrs. Barbara, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts ALEXANDER, Miss Doris, cfo L. D. Alexander, R.D., Box -45229 Constantia, N.Y. BENTLEY, Mrs. Charlotte, 15 lohn Turco Dr., cfo Wm. Thurlow, Walpole, Mass. BOWE.S, Miss Carol, 2 Tupelo Road, Swampscott, Massachusetts CALHOUN, Mrs. Barbara 7 Chestnut Street, Chelmsford, Massachusetts COLPITTS, Mrs. Stephen, 18 Vlfinter Street, Plymouth, New Hampshire CONCER, Rev. Ceorge M., R.E.D. iil, Trapelo Road, Lincoln, Massachusetts DION, Miss Nancy, 59 Orchardview Street, West Springfield, Massachusetts DOWNES, Mrs. Louise, St. Anne's Rectory, Merrimack St., Lowell, Massachusetts IONES, Mrs. Agnes C., 20 Fenwick Drive, Chelmsford, Massachusetts LANDI.S, Miss Ianet, 2244 Hobson Road, Lancaster, Pennsylvania LATOUR, Mrs. Edward, 202 Parkview Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts LEBUTT, Miss Dorothy, 144 Pine Street, Portland, Maine MILLER, Mrs. Ray, 28 Cerson Terrace, Lowell, Massachusetts PERLOEF, Mrs. John, 162 Linmoor Terrace, Lexington, Massachusetts PHELPS, Miss Dorothy, High Street, R.1:.D., Norwell, Massachusetts PULLING, Miss Anne, 17 Louisburg Square, Boston, lNIassachusetts ROBINSON, Miss Carol, 73 Raven Road, Lowell, Massachusetts SARGENT, Mrs. Marjorie, Ogunquit, Maine SCALISE, Rev. Victor, 222 Liberty Street, Lowell, Massachusetts SWAN, Miss Crace, 61 Nesmith Street, Lowell, Massachusetts TALBOT, Mrs. Charles, 112 Clark Road, Lowell, Massachusetts WORSHAM, Mrs. Banks, Partridge Lane, Carlisle, Massachusetts :FX-Pl-XX-PFAL55 IRISH, Miss Elizabeth, 396 East Merrimack Street, Lowell, Massachusetts MACK, Mr. Harold, 105 Pleasant Street, Ayer, Massachusetts MICHEL, Mrs. Leopold, Wadden Court, Marblehead, Massachusetts NESSLACE, Miss Ann, 36 Pondfield Road West, Bronxville, New York NICHOLS, Miss Betty, 11600 East 16th Avenue, Aurora, Colorado PASSMORE, Mrs. Clarence, Belfast Road, Camden, Maine WHITE, Mrs. George H., 5 Elmer Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts ,A ,z Ayn' , 4, a1'2-f ff , ' AJ sf' ' f 1 , ,r ' ll' . ,, , Q, , .Y ., 1 I 'ig' 'A FOND MEMORIES FOND FAREWELLS 1 4 'QQ' !'1'- I' J 'gm ' s 4 N1 M .S .hgif 1 91' 'r x y. 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Suggestions in the Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) collection:

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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