Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 236

 

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



Page 6, 1969 Edition, Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1969 Edition, Rogers Hall School - Splinters Yearbook (Lowell, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 236 of the 1969 volume:

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I 1 I 1 1. 1-V ' I N . - I I I 1 'I -im I ' v ' I I I..'.':I I f I , ' ' 'I 'NBII 1 r 1 I -I . . 1 1 3, 1 f I'A .1.. 'ftp XI 56. I , f ' f 1. y 111-5, 1 .T1 ' 1 'L, 1- -111134 .f , . - . ' 1, 1'1.'II .I.I1f,' 3-' ' ' ' ,-T55 4 -51: 1 1 ' . . . ' 1 , 1 I I . ,jg 1 I .1 , I I I 1- I 1-IIIi.g.,, I . ' 1 1- 1 .P 'f f . . A .1 1. '15, gxk '11 algal.:-1H,.-. 1 1 11 11 11 Splinters Editor-in-Chief ALIDA MCILVAIN Literary Boarol PAMELA BELL ELIZABETH I-IOLIHAN ELIZABETH HALL LISA STRASBURG LYNNE TATIAN Business Boarol M ana ger-KAREN ANDERSON CYNTHIA BROX MARION EDDY SUSANNE JOHNSON ANIELIA ROWE LINDA JUSZCZAK ANNE WASHBURN Art Editor-BETSY NAUSS Staff DANIA DOREMUS MARILYN KEAST Art and Photography Contributors TRUDA BLOOM KRISTEN LAPE NANCY DEWEY MARTHA PIHL FRANCES GRYNKRAUT LISA STRASRURG JUDITH KNOWLES JOANNE SWEET Informal Photographers TRUDA BLOOM ESTELA ALVAREZ Faculty Literary Advisor Faculty Art Advisor MRS. DOROTHY A. WORSHAM MRS. DOROTHY I. PERLOFF 1 The Egyptian Child ...... Scratchboard ................ Stalemate .............. Ink Drawing ........ Shamar .............. dependability ........ Table of Contents Lisa Strasburg Marilyn Keast Susan Aubin Marilyn Keast Linda juszczak e. hall Photograph ........................................ Lisa Strasburg The Roots of Contemporary Violence Lie in Aflluence .................. Marion Eddy Collage ............................. Cinquain ......................... Search for Tomorrow ......... Pain .................... ........ Passage ................................. Betsy Nauss Amelia Rowe Lynne Tatian Kristen Lape Wendy Martin Scratchboard .......................................... Betsy N auss I was . . . and I shouldn't have been .... ....................... B arbara MacMannis The Sacrihce .................................... Elizabeth Hall Advice to Those on the Brink .............. Toni Pollak Plea a la Vis-Ed ...................... Pencil Drawing ....... A Flying Thing ...... Prophecy ................ Maxim .............. ....... Lynne Tatian Betsy Nauss IfVendy Martin Susan Aubin Deborah Pletscher Photograph ....... ...... T ruda Bloom Nativity ................ .... D eborah Evans Christmas Cheer ...... ......... A nn Hemingway Collage ...............,......... Communion .................... Craphically Speaking ................ A Thought ...................... ........ Projection ..................... Photograph ....... Painting ........ Lesson ........... Quest ................ Ink Drawing ......... You ................... A Trip ........... Watercolor .... ....... Someday ,....... Collage ...... Dehnition .......... Photograph ....... Kristen Lape Pamela Bell Elizabeth Hall Kathleen Sullivan Barbara Cray Lisa Strasburg Marilyn Keast Emily Gilbert .. tWendy Hansen Dania Doremus Kristen Lape Susan Aubin Frances Crynkraut Jody Blain Dania Doremus Nancy Dewey Lisa Strasburg 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34 35 36 37. 38 39. 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50-57. The Trap ............... Epitome of Life ......... Two Poems ................ Acryllic Painting ....... Surf ......................... Pen and Ink ...... The Beginning ...... Stones .... ............. Reverie ............ Photograph ......... Un Pmeve .......... L'Aube ........ Son Coeur .............. Desespoir .................... Once Ivory Infant ............ ....... Susan Aubin Ann Hemingway Lisa Strasburg Marilyn Keast Nicola Plimpton Betsy Nauss Alida Mclluain Susan Aubin Amelia Rowe Lisa Strasburg Ann Hemingway Elizabeth H olihan Alida Mcllvain Kitty Wick Pamela Bell Pen and Ink .......................................... Betsy Nauss Perched on the Palm of Boredom .... Lynne Tatian Old Friends ................. Nancy Dewey In the Eating Place .......... .......... D ania Doremus Violence ............. Collage ................ Space Odyssey ....... Photograph ......... City :,lil3 ....... Truth .................. Creative Paper ....... The Weary Days ...... The Drapes ........... Lily White ......... Flashback ............ Oil Painting ....... I-Ie ................... Dear Past and Painting ...... Creative Paper ....... Willie ................. Pen and Ink ....... Almost ............ Pen and Ink ....... Once Again ........ Moods ..................... Departure ................... When I Was Ten ........ Louisa Beppucci Dania Doremus Ann Hemingway Truda Bloom Wendy Martin Pamela Bell Martha Pihl ...........Kitty Wick Truda Bloom ..........Pamela Bell Anne Loring Marilyn Keast Susan Aubin Kristen Lape Judith Knowles Toni Pollak Nancy Dewey ,Elaine Sohier joanne Sweet Susan Torrey Alida Mcllvain Kristen Lape Susan Aubin Pen and Ink .................. ......... M arilyn Keast Photograph ........................ ........ L isa Strasburg Poem and Photographs Lisa Strasburg 1 f igf 'RX WWKQN Wwmwv XP f x N N , A . R f q Wig MQ SLK NR XX X Wx wk X X f X Xl + l1+S'fff X 'WX 1 N xx QQQ fLf fe Rx ,: wfffiix as Q, ,g L y - by X X , Q giiqixgg 331 WW W JD ji di Ni Swflxxjf SWWWMNWWWW , Jrw 1 V 1 1 . ffx K M 'IW 1 ' f -X, A Xl V X F . -I WN Q in W W9 V11 5 3 W Eff' r H N Stalemate The flowers dropped The leaves rotted The seeds had spread To cover the dead. SUE AUBIN '71 Rs. JN ffm .XX by e ,ce ff fm - Shamar The sand races across the street and leaves swirl until snagged in the skeleton of a bush. You breathe in short gasps and your wo-rld is smothered in a deep orangeg the stinging wind and withering heat attack you. In time an eerie calm settles and dust layers your World. Time has stopped and you are part of a monocromatic painting. LINDA Iuszczfxx '69 6 dependability where is it can i find it in the sky the sea the sun can i find it in my friend my love my enemy can i find it in my senses my body my mind once a flower bloomed patiently for the sun to bake away for the wind to push afar once i was loved but something new came something unknown to me once i knew myself but confusion overcame wrinkling my temples what is the design of dependability E. HALL '69 The Roots of Contemporary Violence Lie in Affluence I want to give my kids all the things we could never afford when I was growing up. Yes, and our parents seem to have accomplished their goal. Today's youth has or will soon have a car, acquires all the clothes he needs or wants, eats as much as he may or may not need, goes to the club or the beach where he signs the check with Dad's name, goes to the best school, and has an allowance that would pay for a yacht. Of course, he might decide to get a job, not to help his family, but to pay for a ski trip or the new '69 stereo tape for his car. lt's quite obvious that a good percentage of our generation is growing up in an atmosphere of affluence. Money is being handed to us on a real silver platter, and in the perverse nature of youth, many of us are literally running from money. Even those of us who have not gone to the extreme of joining a hippie community feel the inclination to wear old ragged clothes and to attempt to live in hovels built by our own hands. The object is to build a society where money isn't the main issueg instead, the individual and what he thinks are the focus. This individual includes people of all races, religions, and economic brackets. Each one professes to want to be able to stand up and call himself a man, to declare himself free of false, materialistic values. Unfortunately he often meets hostility in pursuing his way of life and comes to believe that he must fight hostility with hos- tility, that his philosophy of individual freedom can only be acknowledged through violent means. Perhaps one of the most ironic facts of this time in history is that those who are Hghting hardest for spiritual freedom are frequently those who have had the most wealth and opportunity. They are the ones who have had all the material- istic things they could ever want and now are reaching out through any means, violent or otherwise, to reestablish their values. MARION EDDY '69 P -T 1' VIL. ' 1!:PfVlJE'lI1l1llIIllIlQlll1Yl- -Ktwhlll Search for Tomorrow Assume happiness at least for a moment. Can'r do it? Well, then smile. Nothing to smile about? You say you've reached your millennium? So there's nothing left? Baffled? Of course you are. You've lived so much you've forgotten how to live. Keep forgetting how to live. You'll fast become your own ghoul. When are you going to temper yourself? Obstinate, aren't you? Conform to normality Stop trying to tune off and drop out. Give this world half a chance. Take a deep breath-some of the air is clean, just stop and smell it. You'll be surprised. You just may find a bit of happiness. Cinquain Machines Employed daily Replacing active men Unable to withstand pressure Breakdown. AMELIA ROWE '69 LYNNE TATIAN '69 9 Pain If you've tried to wander through my mind And the pain you could not see, then you may have been the one who brought this pain to me KRISTEN LAPE '70 Passage Silent messenger treading swiftly down rain swollen streets through the slashing storm and biting winds. I Watch him cross the street knowing it is the last. I hear the music of celestial harps, and a thousand galaxies swirl before my eyes. A mighty hand from heaven etched in fine lines of reality lifts him aloft amid the swirling ruins of the sky. WENDY MARTIN '69 I was. . . and I shouldn' t have been . . I was on the train going home for a weekend from school with two of rrfy friends. A sailor climbed into the train and sat down next to me. I was reading a book by James Baldwin, which he commented on. From then on there were scattered bits of introductory conversation. I-le told me he was just coming home to New York City after two years in Vietnam. This was my first meeting with someone who had fought in Vietnam. We talked about the fighting itself and the war in general. During the conversation I began to respect and admire this boy and to think about the fact that he was symbolic of thousands ofyoung' men of our generation. After a while I asked him if, when he found out he had to go to Vietnam, he had been scared. I-Ie told me that it was a mixture of being shocked and scared, and that the first night he was over there he had had to shoot a man not five feet tall. just before we were pulling into the station of my destination I told him how spoiled I felt compared to him: complaining about boarding school and thinking that during my two years there I have endured unbearable hardship . I am only three years younger than that boy. I did feel hard used . . . but I shouldn't haveg my meeting on the train taught me this fact. BUNNY MACMANNIS '70 The Sacrifice The crumb of bread was dropped upon the altar. I-Iurried feet mashed the particles into a hard small mass. pressurized and squelched-lost identity . . . An ant discovered the substance- a treasure of necessity. ELIZABETH I-IALL '69 11 Advice to Those on the Brink Preserve your sanity-Build a defense mechanism-Watch it, kid- HE wants you! Lunacy can creep up in those soft treading PF Flyers if you don't devise that protective barrier. The symptoms are obvious: paranoia, one-way conversations, and bliss in oblivion-all seek you out. Retaliatel Retort, if you've got the stamina. First, admit to yourself that a battle exists. Don't deceive yourself, acknowledge the challenge, face it! This major step taken, the next few are not as hard on your pride. Keep occupied. This shield won't dent and let those unrelated fantasies infil- trate. By becoming involved with those stable people around you, you have no time to lose control of the senses. Don't slip-HE's watching. Leave no time for the real subconscious to peer through the surface. Flank your soundness or lose it completely. There is no medium! The daily groove is retraced. The needle of existence begins to wear. Substitute a new needle. Extract yourself from that worn environment. A new kind of monotony will help, then again . . . but hesitation may prove fatal. Move quickly. Don't worry about the rear view. Don't turn back. HE will be following you. ToN1 POLLAK '69 A Plea A La Vis-Ed My thoughts are sordid . . . Evil lurks in my mind . . . a lucid reverie Black on white . . . superimposed . . . trepidation always malignant . . . no illumination . . . despicable. This is the zenith . . . we need light I plead to you . . . this is not a figment We exist . . . darkened. Search now . . . before we attend our own obsequies. LYNNE TAHAN '69 12 1 I If I i I Xl' 4, XNQQNQ ' if , Ng ff' fp ' Rx: 2 R ji. ,ff X ,-H f Xxx M' ' 'fu ,' + K J' ! E X , I All .sx . ff: A A j! ff X X lf' .N .. F 1 NV 70--i M WA I X l ,V V M -- N1 A 45 ' f mffwp 'W M,MN,r .R A, 'A , 5 KK if . A' wx ii Q I A, : A , , ' A Hwy xRxXXA, ,iii , wk, ' .1-L J, X ,,6:,'L'I',3'4i ' ' I I ff' ,rx 'Q f M. I. . If 1. fi, ,K if Q' VA fc' if 1,1111-:Q ' V Y ,AWQNW . V 'tw Y : '1 JT J In ' ' ' 'sit 1 X X ,XP ' ' uf A , '. P XX X fi v 53 f M0W,Q.......,f 'M A ' ' , ' X PX, Y- 1 .f f ,f s , x -. 5 ' . ,ff 5' I5 -V .f f ' Q X -x K H-iifif' if 4 ff ,W f,' f f Hi . 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V , I ,. n 'f-iff' , if frilly, XL' ,fi fp ' 1 A'A' ' 1 r f fr' ,fy - x' 7' me , -5 H M? ff x L AXE , H f Z' 2' . 2 ' x . kv --A.. ,ii ' . QF X if J 13 z f' x I X Tw. N. ,J NQLSS A Flying Thing Blood relations had become confused in the old man's memory. I-Ie wasn't sure if the woman was his greatniece or granddaughter. She called him Grandpa, but he didn't think so. She was holding a boy by the arm. Didn't you get the letter? she asked, It will be good for both of you, he'll be company. It's all right, the old man says. She looked at him, then bent to hug the boy. I-Ie turned rigid as a stake. Oh, Prob, she said, then drove off. Rob, the old man said. It was familiar. He realized, with pleasure, that it had been his own name once. I'm a problem, I'm bad, I'll scream! Scream, how loud is it? The boy opened his mouth. It is all right. Listen to this. It was a much better scream. You're a lot older than I, the boy said defensively. I-Iow old are you? Nine, the boy answered. I-Iow old are you? I-Ie stood for a while. Ninety-one. Who are you to me? the old man said. Somebody But the old man couldn't be fooled. Have you ever been anything besides yourself? I was a bug once but my mother stepped on me. Try to be a flying thing, free. An eagle? Perhaps, I'm a mallard, just taking off, climbing at a slant. I-low about hunters and guns? That is a risk that has to be, but -I'm always ahead of them, and they always miss. In his own youth he had been a stand-offer. Now at ninety odd years he began to see the error in it. Now he began to catch on. You're something to me all right. Come I want to show you something. I-Ie took the boy out to a furrowed field. With his finger he brought forth a sprouting seed. Eighty years of this and I still don't know what a seed is. But I know what I am to it. What, What are you to it? Bring the hoe. I'm not going to work here, the boy said. Of course you're not! What are you to the seed? the boy asked. Bring the hoe here, the old man said. They chopped weeds for the rest of the afternoon. I think I know, you are the seed guarderf' As dusk approached the old man shouldered his hoe. The milk rang out sharply against the bottom of the pail and the level mounted. 14 g. This is work, the old man said. They carried the milk to the pig troughs. I have cows to keep the barn alive. I don't want to pass a dead barn. Things know when they are Wanted, especially houses. Let's have a feast tonight. Later they went out on the stoop in the warm night. VVhat is the best time for flying? Just before you sleep. In his room the old man undressed slowly and blew out his lamp, and used his last bit of strength to pull the covers over himself. I-le had barely settled on the pond when stealthy steps could be heard. I-Ie ran on the water and rose. I-Ie felt the pellets puncture him. Now he saw the vanity of title and deed and was content. The man had not inherited the earth. The earth had inherited him. The earth inherits certain men. I-le fell into a furrowed field as he always knew he would. WENDY MARTIN '69 -a Prophecy Maxim I'm so fake I'm so afraid I don't give what I take I'm going to end up in that Funny freak parade . . . How about you- You comin' too? You think people live for you. You think people love for you. You'll realize someday that the World and the people in it Aren't existing just for you, But you for them. You either realize this fact, Or you'll perish from SUE AUBIN '71 Your own self-pity. DEB1 PLETSCHQER '69 15 Nativity The world was silent. Nothing Silence Breathings not heard The world was lit. Brightness A ball of yellow within the sky No sound . . . Stillness The world was aware. There was a sound. A OfY A whimper The world gave birth. A baby . . . In the loving arms of its mother. The world had sound. Something Breathings Whimpers of a new generation- The world . . . was alive. DEBBIE EVANS '72 16 Christmas Cheer JOY JOY JOY Rejoice in solemn airs for those pitied. Breathe the breath of happiness. Wage your war, oh Vietnam! Sing loud your praise to the earthys end. The world unites in peace, Its iniquities forgotten. 'Tis the season to be jolly. ANN HEMINGWAY '69 Communion Open the doors of perception And see before you the Exquisite, sensual form of The breathing Morrison. Wild Child gushes from his Demanding mouth and untamed Movements of his leathered body Flash through foreign Minds, continents many Thousands of miles away. I-Iis mind drifts back and Pronounces again: Africa! Remember, my beautiful beast? We were once there. The warning cry, do not forget. Remember and wallow in Your surging, unconquerable youth. The pain and rushing of the time. The bloodstreaked walls of Man.'s unforgivable crime. He is not allowed to throw away the dew That flowed through his veins As he crawled on the earth Scrounging for berries with the animals, They became one. The glorious communion in The morning of man and beast. Pelting through the hide The string of poison Burns so deep Into the skin, pale and thin Before any protection can be taken. PAMELA BELL '69 Graphically Speaking Why is it that it takes a picture to understand the theme? Is it a lack of intelli- gence, the lack of sensitivity or the lack of communication? Could it be the rush of society with its short cuts in everything to save time for . . . what? Might our interests be so specialized that other fields are incomprehensible? Are we all separate furrows of a field with saturated seeds incapable of maturation-flooded to death? Is there only one water route to our lives? Are the others washed away? Must it take a drought to dry us out and to make us live again? Is this drought the picture of hope? ELIZABETH HALL '69 A Thought We are all alone Though some are more aware of it than others. Each travels on a path that intersects many paths But no two ways run parallel for long To accept this truth is to accept life itself And to deny it is to be hurt at every parting. KATHY SULLIVAN '71 1 8 Projection I wish there was some far off place, that man could grasp at will. It would not be Utopia, for there will never be such a place as long as there is man. Nor would it be over the rainbow, for fairy tales are only for the imagination of children. My place, if there was such, would he a place where man could roam a vast and open plain. The map he charts would be his own. BARBARA GRAY '71 19555 . fqhfffz if - .V .-f.,.-4 -, -'4- I V . N if - ' sal' V . .f N . S- - .V ' 'Z 212, . - .Z .1 .A : Y. A -'43, V -,A -. I V .34 wx Hu N E.. 1- ,U A- A -5 . ' ' Q qgEEA ,J 1,1 v. 51,1-J r' ' uiquslgi' 5, . .-'ztirfk it 'e . - . - , . - ff, .A 4 A .,,, , . .- , - -. - F.. Simi'--' -V' ' ' V 'Nfl fa--. 'T' '-ff' 'fa 5' '3'i-339?'oiF!- JV fi' '2h7w4'7 S?'f -f ' '-: . . - I wi-rag .. 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'F-'3 l ghmslia 'V 'Z .N' ' 4 A ' -:, - -' ' 21 .tg -W-ve V. -f , ! ., .j' VP' ff.,-'sllfru -1 p'j' f. , ' - V 13 .fl H. orw '?: -,Vv1'? w 4f:5i5.Z!k.3V W '1' f.'ffi'f1,'fof' W V -' V .. 'P w '-f ' fa ':.?T ' . : 1.. . A I ,' ' ,Sign 1.20. ig . :Aida .' N915-1 :: ' Af' ' K ' .I ' V Q -?f3v':5 2?s'-'ffl-wE'! . P ' 'Qu-.QE-. gms.. Lesson A mind A body One attempts to have a human To draw one cannot Humans develop as a girl of two to my aging granny 50 365 days older May arrives making me older Than my passing year But I never feel it then Granny catches me in August Still . . . 50 years apart apart in looks, mind But I teach, strengthen her Granny teaches, strengthens me I love her Though ahead she is I'll follow, catch her Reaching my terminus of life Born, learn, and die That's what it's all about. EMILY GILBERT '71 21 Sf fi gl jx e U M , .X gf Quest M y I please have a Q I SO E ff 'H Q, .. ' 1- . orry son- I , all . . . 5 si ld big . . bl LIC... beautiful . . . airy ' A alloon-I have always dreamed of hailing ne all mine and nobody else's- Ollt.. at WENDY HANSEN '71 ' I Ii x u fl-if i I . i nu il 'Q92,vv-5 y 22 You Within you there l see a spark, A distant one, but often glowing . . . It reaches me at silent times, And I catch it, knowing . . . now, it's mine . . . KRISTEN LAPE '70 A Trip Went to the zoo All the animals were in cages The zebra had black and white stripes The elephant was grey The sun was out And the sky blue But the bars were grey The bars were solid The bars weve The bars . . . SUE AUBIN '71 fa? ' 3 g ie if f , ca KL C. 'Ye 3, ,. viz wmv. ' -1 W . ..,4f in ' ,. tE'tm:f'e1..t 5 5- e - .rf -' C , Q L , . 3, is rl li lf' W .151 if AQ 3 2 - , 2 . 1 , Q 1 ' nfl 2 if Qi I i . YN Q , x X,,-- x p I 3 -. 5 : is fill, .Wy , R, E f n A -wx -W x ' , K3 -1 x , X H Q 'g 5 ! ' V L Q Set 4 bfi . 1 K E- WE, fray' S 5 5 3 if 1 , the ll I 'Q Ly, 23 E l .2 4 li 5 13 1 I 35 li i - i Q Z 1 1 . Eg WY 5 'Rf it .YJ V- V. Someday You say You understand Us. You once felt what We feel. Your lives are but a dream, Nothing else is real. Someday war clouds will cease to float in our heads, VVhat does it matter that a few are dead? You say money isn't everything You work because You're able How come We only see Daddy at the breakfast table? Someday war clouds will cease to Hoat in our heads, VVhat does it matter that a few are dead? Don't ever smoke, says I-Ie puffing His cigar. I know what's good for you, and I like what you are. But don't quit school, or take LSD You want a good example? Just follow me. Leave it to Us, just stay away. CThere were three more stranglings in Boston todayl We don't need you, We know what is right. CDid you hear about the riots in Detroit?D Someday war clouds will cease to Hoat in our heads, VVhat does it matter that a few are dead? It's a good thing we're fighting this war. COh LBJ. you're such a terrible bore.D We need more boys, send them in. Clf they're old enough to kill, aren't they men?D But you know that- Someday war clouds will cease to Hoat in our heads, VVhat does fit matter that a few are dead? IODY BLAIN 24 FV' E f! fN.l 5 X fi -4-pf li + 4. It's the game. VVhat does it mean? Beginning, JOY It s seasons Leamin gf years time Teaching, Die NANCY DEWEY 7l J J 45: ni' The Trap Alive I strive For something incomprehensible to myself. I lie and cry Never try to break the tie with which I cheat to make it I fake it. I run and I hide to get inside-not beneath it all up and away I fallg Underground is dark and gray I cannot stay I will not pay to get away from me. SUE AUBIN '71 27 Epitome of Life CDeathD The webs of time, recaptured in a moment, veil our sins, demolish our minds, obliterate our bodies . . . Cries from within grope for youth but the decayed soul no longer lives . . . fraught with fears and scared to death . . . ANN HEMINGWAY '69 Two Poems A multitude of words to convey a meaningg a congestion of minds to unite a mass of peopleg a conglomeration of patience, effort and understanding to abort a temporary conclusiong only one absence of cooperation to destroy . . . A silent season of death prevails upon the living. Night's harmonious shadow sways your callous mind in a sickening way as your numb pruny feet clench the wedged stained stone. Mind and body are distant almost separate units as your madness steers your direction on an uncertain course. The deafening stillness deadens your mutilated coniidence, while inhaling, the dilapidated fumes become increasingly suffocating The pathetic intensity of this bewildering circus of disaster and the overpoweringly, clutching loneliness of it all devours you in your inability to recapture your sense of life. LISA Srrmsnunc '69 28 'Sf ' fi, , I x 3 'If K , .fl rf,.- f 1 11,1 J' Q? I N . 1. K Y . .M,,'- '+ , .Hi .,, . z . J x '92, E' . .f 9' ' ', . YK vf ,Q Q N' ., - , A .:- , ,M 9 X 5 ' -. . iw I --5' S. ' cv- b A ' X rl T Q1 , E, ,N . , - -Pl 4, ,gf A f , V Fw: 4 vs . . - 'W - , , , L' f, Lg , Rf- ,LQ .K : .- ' i- :Y 'JUHW E' 5 1' ,751-av-'XTX-u ni 6 -5 Q ?- N ' if i?jsf4. . iff s 9 -L' 75 .WT V? 5 'F 1 -,4 , , U A X .ff gf Q, 5 'fs s V -N..,, 4 N 1 1 ,'. , ' fV,iH' X Q5 Y gym ,Z-g ,mf ,R ,' ' 2.4 1,7 A' ,Q wif-, ffm .i N wiv, FS W if M. K PPM X, ' I, I ff. f ff.: W. X V. . f - , V .Y -,158 4535. t,..:f,m- A U, J fA,:,fj xl : I . KJ! A N, ,iw . 3. f-,gr . - '- '--1 ' ' ' fi- ': , J' ' X Nm.43-:fJaZs3e'f,ef4!'we:-fvfu.. 'Q Q, ' f 4 A we - '.. , , - aw. , LL: -' Qi ' fffwa-.wr ,... ., 0 f 5 I I If Y v .Af' 2 , 5 1. , 1 9, .n ,f +7 ' 'f-PM g . Q 1 1 . I I. f,, .Ll 4 1 b x if 44 Surf Blue watefr turns white it claws, trying to reach To captune the beach. Surf pounds the land The sand falls prey .Swept frantically away. Wind then subsides Water laps the shore Placid once more. NICOLA PLIMPTON '69 ' L. lit v , ' , ,N el'-Y Q n X' hx X N - I 'Ura fi. , Q ' ' 54 '-,T ' I ll - f ,,4i' ' , Q . 1 J I- ' - vi 1 r 1 - , , '41 ' 1 1 -:SfQ1Q'5 iff? . ix Ai-N ' .gif 'RQ i :WNV Wim .1 ..Nx,,,'3tNxhAm X 'liihgiffsiwss ., 3? X 0' ASXNNYQRK XXV Y is y x ain t l mm Io, I f , 5 ' in ww , .L l ' 2' . a4,ff,ij',w27X x Y Z 1 r .cw-ff' fn 'f' , , wafldwmixih' w .1 U I ,3x QdsvvZ, y-03, 'vxyuv 30 1---ex N WF' 'RT 6' 1 K, u. X, 2 - X x..xA. ,- . -1 X The Beginning Cradled child in Mother's Womb Protected in silt-like Chambers Unhaunted by the Fountain rise of Richness. Glorious The child's eyes Cherished innocence Awaken thus. A birth renewed Life's patterned plan To live. ALIDA MCILVAHNT '69 Stones rose and rose of eyes staring pink into the water. reHections peek then shrink back into hiding. SUE AUBIN '71 Reverie Hypnotized by the snow falling outside my window, my mind sought the essence of Winter. Birds were straining to find shelter, trees with their sagging breasts and arms reached for the earth, mischievous boys struggled to climb the mountainous drifts, only succeeding in acquiring cold hands and Wet feet. But in my room, the penetrating thrill of summer caressed my thoughts, as I drifted alone. AMELIA ROWE '69 31 32 L lube La terre est cou verte de r0SeE I1 nj' a pas de soleil I1 ny a pas de ch Les Heurs Sont f L71Gr1Je aleur errnffes est ' A Sezyee cette heure Inalinale Namre est Cn paix Mais aftendez un Inwnenr! La lr-Hnqzzilitelse terlnjne . . . La tene de-vient secbe I1 ny a pas de June I1 ny a pas de fioid Les fleurs et Hnerbe Le tem ' elll' Se reveil ps 11 es: pa Lblzbe ' lent .s callhe am ve et Ie jour conzlnenc Hour fi HOLIHAN 59 Once Ivory Infant The infant fell from the ivory placenta Into the bamboo spikes of the awaiting terror And lurked in the blood and shattering screams Of the vicious darkness of East Fifty-ninth. The pain and suffering of the sordid crevices Swallowed him with trenchant, ensanguined jaws. He cried pitifully and his bones were dragged along The jagged mortar streets strewn with Broken glass and human spit. The frail little body badgered and Thrown from one cage to the next Never seeing the light of the morning Or the first Hakes that fall On damp old newspapers people have Carelessly stuffed in smelly And gorged tin cans. He was cold and wet and musty Lying in the cigarette butt laden gutter. The ivory placenta had lost him forever and I-Ie may never return to The human warmth and smoothness of it again. PAMELA BELL 34 - Old Friends VVhatever happens to old fri Some go away . . . But where? Still, they remain forever, Not in my presence but in I often relive moments of sitting, talking, comparin Perched on the Palm of Boredom . . Perched on the palm of boredom Where life is a meaningless game, They come in Hocks of ravaging hawks Seeking victims to tame. Timed and judged by their conquests of passionate, impulsive lives, Their worlds are ruptured-void of truth Yet each one denies. They offer each other comfort Through false methods and lies And deny that they are hungry For fruitful, meaningful lives. LYNNE TATIAN '69 ends? my mind. gr and asking, VVhy? . . . Times that have all gone . . Butlwhere? Now there is only wonder, A restlessness, a slight pain, And silence . . . NAN CY DEWEY '70 35 ln The Eating Place Alone I stand With my back to the ones Who are there Reaching out for Something that I know not. Like a drunk I sing and play With the words of Insanity, fear and hate leaping from me like a blazing sword to hurt and paralyze. In the eating place long lines of people come before me taking all of my mind leaving but just an empty dish. I starve and decay and die. DANIA DOREMUS '69 36 Violence My rights, my rights! Me I can get them only one way: Fight and protest. Fools give in and let it pass by . . . Give me what I deserve. It's unfair, unjust, un . . . good? You want it too- Come with me We shall go forward together if it takes all day. LOUISA REPPUCCI '71 f'i 4 UKWMFV W tty Space Odyssey Oh, Virgin Mind, Shake off your sins. Ugliness has bound them to thee. .Space your virtues and boundaries . . A dream of fanaticisms Unrealistically portrayed through the spectrums of time. Foresee the light of death . . Feel the ill wind! The mind now captured rests within itself. ANN HEMINGWAY '69 37 City 413 The world of minds lts passion, its pulse Of empty coats, ten cent cigars, and Street fed pigeons. Thin soled shoes Of old men with their cheap quarts of Wine, and young men with their empty Laughter, their scattered verse. Of street lights and light heads the Patrolman nipping in the alley and the Little girl from the Salvation Army Singing in the gutter. Of German sports cars and Italian food, Their friends many and their depressions And tears that fall to form the Rust on this, our suicide ring. Of our lovers and our haters and those Not yet known going out to the dark, few Freed of thought, to gather plastic flowers. WENDY MARUN '69 38 ei Xmow oios You wni nxobabiq nev non X xeggecx and xnonos annot X36 eqcgxesseo in w How ni Yom sxnining essen You Qlvssess soxnefhing Qnai e Ps beannini, now ating iiie in which gon bianket igoniseii P616 Cne one gon Xov e in sw eerness Yon know wxnax you axe iiving io: Pxnd Sinn meaning and 'naooiness in adn Qiebnng oxisqn oi nine You axe kind and genne Your fnosx ifnoonanx anci ioveig You know and Xive 56169 'Y o goniseii and odiexs No ynattei Cne cosx see 'Sne coiianse in iiiIeS enx ine togeixnet You Pino iq to cefn iragrnenxs basis io teaiime eives Yxoicen Bum you wanx Gnexn 'vnai C9631 ninst fnenci CnegnS 5 'nno meaning Soi may own Ywes ve no signifncance Pin Pot it wiii ina 1 Aoesnx e Cnet is Xi he seeke Xmowieog oneieo Picceox Cne o nnseiiisnisg ox Being s Big gon, Tnltii. 39 Y e-wiv Ps BELL The Weary Days Soiled were the hands that worked each day in cotton fleldsg Weary were the feet that trod the groundg Thin were the figures that plucked from stem to Stem, As the sun burned down on their brows. Loud were the shouts of the ruthless mastersg Proud were the tones in their voicesg The whip was their symbol and power their As the sun burned down on their brows. The workers all sang of freedomg The masters shouted work in refraing And on they worked in the heat of the day, As the sun burned down on their brows. 40 lor SY' KITTY WICK '70 The Drapes Is this the right door? Yes, I'm sure. Come on. Oooohl What a nice room. We go this way, I think. The drapes are beautiful. Daddy's on the third floor. Come on, Ma. I think purple adds a lot to a room, don't you? Ma, if you don't hurry, visiting hours will be over. I'cl like so-me drapes like this for the living room, I think. Why are you just standing there, Ma? Let's go. Yes, I think these would go very nicely in our living room. TRUDA BLOOM '69 Flashback As the fog rolled across the moor Lily White She's inside the Washing machine On the spin cycle after Wash-dry Flashing colors so fast from The box of detergent crystals. Clean and white Virginity pure She emerges-crashing From the Westinghouse. I could hear the sound of a closing car door. I was fleeing for my life. I knew I should have hidden the knife. I was but shouldn't have been running. A cliff came closer and I found myself jumping. I was and shouldn't have been Hying! ANNE LORING '71 41 PAMELA BELL '69 , He is something so closely far away the light of a star shining from eons last year's rain hit today my pen so weak and thoughtless tracing . . . rearranging in rhythmic patterns of time i choose one moment and dry cry . . . so he makes another, i Watch We pass . . . greens leave and browns fell yesterday it sunrained, my losses came and I-Ie gained? wearily i reach and heavily I-Ie falls ia child of innocence the oneness walls . . . purplepink smile, my lifetime road i dove but He missed the catch . . . again i love and we fail SUE AUBIN '71 Dear Past, I-low Well I have known your every breath and moved with your every step. In all the years I have known you I have often looked back in despair for advice. You must know me better than I. Now as I glance back at you I remember the days I have loved-What was so often future and now is past-I have dreaded losing it all. Things I have loved have moved, yet I can still look to you in remembrance of loving. Remember, Past, when we walked through the woods and we lost our minds search- ing for acoms to whistle with? And, Past, the beaches we have known, the sands that have known our warm feet so well? All I have ever known has been you-your windy years, your dancing moods, and your sunshine-warm. I am so much aware of your distance now, but even more of some unknown fu ture of which you will be a part . . . KRISTEN LAPE '70 43 Willie Hey, my yellow-skinned friend from across the sea, You pacilied the perplexities that disillusioned me, While inspecting your liberty which I so admire And your endless motion which I so desire. So my absentee friend, Willie Wong, Keep straight, kid, for it is I who am wrong. ToN1 POLLAK '69 Almost lane entered the dingy railroad station and ran quickly down the long winding stairway which led to the tracks. She tore past many curious faces, approached her track, and groaned as she saw the train steadily drawing away down the dim track. I-Ielplessness crept over her. Presently she heard rhythmic panting beside her. She spun around and there stood a boy who stared longingly in the direction of the now-missing train. ,lane meekly asked if his destination was anywhere near hers. The lean, dark boy merely grunted and continued to stare in the same direction. It would soon be evening and jane could not help feeling guilty about her stupidity. Wearily she turned and reentered the station. She heard the boy shuffle along behind her. Both slowly moved to a nearby bench where they sat sullen, sub- dued by frustration. Finally they spoke, briefly mentioning their families and schools. lane chatted easily, the boy said little. After a dreary two hours, another train bound for the same areas came rumbling up to the station. Their arms brushed as they hurried toward the track. The ride was a stuffy yet quite pleasant one. Jane continued to be the conversationalist while the boy stared out the large, grubby window. Jane finally gave up talking and decided to examine her companion. I-Ie was attractive, but he had that lost look which she knew often marked her own face. Does he lead the confused and troubled life I do? Does he know wh-at he wants for his future? These were the questions that cluttered her mind. She then looked away, and as she did she could see, in the window reflection, his head turn toward her, and she almost felt his penetrating look. She turned her head and their eyes met. Slow smiles began to lift the corners of their mouths. At this moment the train rolled into Oakville and jane took her bag in hand. You live here? mumbled the boy. Yes, said Jane. Don't you? Nope, next town. Their eyes met once more and then the train came to a dead halt. jane slowly descended the steps. .Soon she was shivering in the cold blanket of night. The train moved on down the dark track. ELAINE SOHIER '70 45 X-+..7+j 7h Tlia-pcfwna. f7Y Z'l4 5, Once Again if only everybody could be up at that early hour when the sun comes up so grace- fully, with its red and orange colors. I-low breath-taking it is since nobody has awakened and the animals are just beginning to stir. How peaceful and calm. The dew is still creeping through the grass like a spider in his shining web. All the night creatures are just settling down to take their turn in sleeping. Suddenly the big yellow sun is making its way across the sky. Children are coming out to play. The dew is gone and the green grass is blowing in the wind. Once again a new day has been born. SUSAN TORREY '71 46 Moods Slinking slippery strays Deluge of foggy foam .Smoky fumes Untuned lanterns Relight the gloom for sidewalk drifters. ALIDA MCILVAIN '69 Departure When we touch, so little time there is to be shared, that our few words often do tend to be strong and real. Strong, for within the time that we shall next meet, there must be a remembrance of strength in our touching. Finding it time to part, you gently brushed my silent face, and I, bearing a promise, smiled goodbye. I reached for you, still grasping for the strength of words to open unto you my thoughts. And so we both felt our needs . . . departure once more had revealed them. If we had never known this sense of loss what would we have missed? More than one could measure. Both of us sharing yet not . . . both of us touching, yet not . . . merely building in pieces . . . KRISTEN LAPE '70 47 When I Was Ten VVhen I was ten and I ran through new falling snow and though it was infinite there was a goal. VVhen I was ten the sun was mine and I smiled feeling its warmth . . . When I was ten I walked in summer puddles to feel the rain dripping from my hair into my face. VVhen I was ten I breathed the air to breathe and I was alive. VVhen I was ten the daffodils were yellow in spring and grass was green. The world was new and young and so was I. Today I feel so old like mold. SUE AUBIN '71 , 1 , . 1 , tr V .ff X A . 4 1 lv I ltfglirv 5 Ny ! k L L?Tiur.6-puff, 'L i- 2 Ail7,,b'4i',L'VfK Q . 311,52-S QQYQ. 3' will IM X m-We ' c tw 'ff-'if' f . Mg' Sif,s '7fl1lM:4fwfEgiCnSGf ,?.'?fq32fYg yr Q1 if X25- 'Tg.4i f jk, 1 .ffig 'f ISM ' sf U' rfC?i+,g may 9 hawk .M it A Z ffm I A W A , we- 't--P fev- X Q52 ef'-i:e,Ni-err rem 48 49 sq!- A Poem Rich webbed images of your enchanting tongue sift a vague dream into the cavities of my hungry mellow eyes I visualize a temperamental eternal solitude in spirit so human, as much so as truth allowsg yearning seeking the restoration of nature buried far beneath the infectious soil in protection against escape and recognition of its hidden existence. 50 As you see a suppressed horizon at your feet, ecstatic shadows like that of the memory of time, race, overlapping along my wall embodied in moss and Hoods of naked sky in massive colors, drop as a reflection of what you don't know. Fumbling in delight in the buoyant island of your mind permitting infatuation of illusion in your provided purified, disclosed sanitary play-yard. Aimlessly wandering . . . the sedate tune from the landrover long traveled, passed, complacent in a frame of tranquility in your sub-conscienceg each sequence passing in Waves as interludes of the coma. Ccontinuodb ,,...Il.I.....f.-.. ap .f! '71 .s.1 Wim... , 90 'Q' 'E+ Q, 'D he 4' I Imprinting distorted footprints on cracked, sun-drenched rock in the midst of barren entanglement-rotted bark and soggy lifeless leaves. Ingrown is an occasional mushroom in the hollow canyon of an unrooted wood similar to man's persisting ideals which also lack the balance that responds in coordination with common survival. '04 X, Q l Nici , 4, cf x. 'K ...J ,Navy Q31 x' in ix ws, Fountains of spray, untouched by civilization silhouettes in the paralyzing breeze falling repeatedly together into an exploiting pool to protect itself, as does man in civilization as a trap Ccontiuuedj 53 . .3,,,wv-- The foamed velvet filtered soot embedded in the inane crevices, is suctioned into the gravitating soi 54 3 U1 .,-5,,'75 v.,r w ,I -If f'ig'.'-,S rt. fr . f ' fi -Q J. Q ,a', k ll ' Q ' V 5 P z A .rag-,r.' , s.', ., ' vwfg L ,1 , 'I ln 59 'f ll : ' ,' K-, Mrn,vf1 f ' i , sg 6 13-1 A fl' ' 33' -8 1 . 1 ::3.:,f gf, ti., 3- f 3, Q Y in ti- gy? ' fi gf fi 'P' af - .11 1 if il- 1? -6304 is 4 5' - -. Ls: ,G .I . J Q as av 0 . -W if 3 I c. rs , 'Q A. x nggi, ,, 4 - f. ? 1 ,1 li r, wh. 'af If , J- ' ' ' f' g ym in h A Qf 'f 3A 5 V - . A' .I s v -n 'X 153-918 V --,M 'ff 'Q , 2 - , ur fx il- uv, -Q. 'UQ' 'im The timeless hours drift with eternity as interrelated past and future dissolve into recurring motionless recreation Ccontvinum-dl 55 411285 The stick in your hand is released into the small body of discolored sea. Disiigured reflections in striped colors and amoeba shapes inevitably deplete memories of submitting yourself to subordinate constraints of nature . . . The facetious realism has destroyed the sentiment. Cry, yes: then bellow into laughter, sure one! Thrust your content mind into the maze of curiosity and changeg to be carried out to sea. 'Tis more adequate to pretend you are what you haven't quite reached. Once reached you no longer have the feeling of what you were striving to become. LISA STRASBURG '69 56 ii pil. N. vu. Q!! 'fi-' SPLINTERS NORTH EAST OFFSET Inc vqgv awww, 260 BILLERICA ROAD - ROUTE I29 CHELMSFORD, MASSACHUSETTS 0I824 Telephone 454-779I Area Code 6I7 58 Compliments of CONANT'S GRQCERY SPLINTERS : -4- 1 1.- 3 - :Q fig ' if - ' is 4 B0ne'eSS Roast SP n9 Chicken gomng Feast XX Sheraton Rolling Green Motor Inn Jct. Interstate 93 and Rte. 133 355 5535 5533 ,,: :.:A4A- H A H nhhl, T Al'ldOV9f f Call 475-5400 ' A A : Q'1l Function Facilities - up to 750 People COCA-COLA CO. Lowell, Mass. BLIIIGIIIIID GIIIRTEREII SEIWIOE, I-IG. owned and operated by ALVIN T. FRENCH Tewksbury 60 -, 0' g Qu: n XS. 5 - L- 5,3 o Y SPLINTERS 4 gxfgrnn I n 5 40 Perry Sjcreejc Lowell, Mossochuseffs CTYEICPLIOFIC Area COCJE Buckland Printing Co. Lowell, Mass. WIGS by 7 JO 5 2 6 IK-.OHUWILL 45 Merrimack Street Tcl. 458-6331 61 SPLINTERS ' 1OO Years of Quality and Service PRINOE'S Stationers - Booksellers - Gifts Typewriters - Greeting Cards 96-104-108 MERRIMACK ST. LOWELL, MASS 'SL :ii A Compliments of K, 4 lrggls-Q-2123 1 ' 7... t THE SGDTT JEWELRY 00 0 t o .lllzdtywf f X If ll 60 Merrimack St. 41-G y S' img corner of Central St. LOWELL, MASS. 21 . l.L,1fL'C'9'4QiA1 A SPANISH CLUB '69 S I Compliments of Compliments of BELVIDERE WINE GU., llc. LOCKSMITI-I A. M. JEKNAVORIAN LUWELL WINDOW SHADE 62 SPLINTERS Compliments of Beehe Blakeley 81 Forbes Insurance Agency Inc. 28 STATE STREET, BOSTGN, MASS. 523-8l40 1.5,- fgfannecl .ynaurance profecfion Ccwuahy Warilze jire gondd ...gi- MARCUS G. BEEBE WINSOR H. BEEBE I.. THOMAS RAND 29A Chestnut St., Boston 258 Chestnut St., Lynnfield Center 7 Hunt Road, Lexington 523-4807 334-4084 862-6953 63 SPLINTERS WE WOULD LIKE TO CARE FOR YOUR INSURANCE Study it. Plug any gaps. Watch over it. Anal 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 85 Flagg Agency Y I I SOLD AT MCKITTRICK HARDWARE C0. Plumbing, Heating, Farm Supplies 60 Fletcher Street LOWELL, MASS Art Supplies - Yarn - Cards - Toys SUNSHINE CLEANERS THE MINUTE SHG? 49 Kearney Square Donna M' Brown and Pauline M. Miller 157 Andover St. Tel. 862-0991 - Same day service when requested - 47 Waltham Street, Lexington, Mass. 64 SPLINTERS Hw'B REALTY UURP. P. o. Box 1243 READING, PENN. 19603 STANLEY C. MARSDEN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 43 Livingston Ave. GLenview 2-4482 Lowell Heaiing 8: Cooling Equipmeni - Fuels - D. T. SULLIVAN CO.. INC. uouz som-MM sr. TEL. GL 4-7857 Compliments of LEFTY'S DRIVE-IN 600 Rogers St. on Rt. 38 Lowell, Mass. 452-8375 Pizza - Torpodoes - Hamburg: - Clams - Dogs Take Out Service Table Service 65 SPLINTERS YOU CAN OEPEND ON 9102? CLEANING 5 EAST MERRIMACK STREET, LOWELL, MASS. Morons - Aurowmc TRANSMISSION Buns BLAC KSTOCK GARAGE Experienced Repairing LOWELL GAS COMPANY SERVING coMMuNrrY S72 Rogers St. Lowell, Mass. 'x. V 61-L 'Up 1 Miwhfvf V'+We: 'WXQ TLWQTJQT' if JUIIIISTUIVS BIKERY amine i7 295 Westford St. . - 'WB . -X LOWELL, MASS. ':'mS'f'W A , W0 66 ea QQ 67 Z SPLINTERS I YOUNG IRS. SHOP feature fashions YOUNG, LIVELY Moving . . . To The Beat of the Moment BON MARCHE 153 MEP.R11x1ACK ST., LOWELL Cinema, Inc. A PRESCRIPTION STORE SINCE 840 MT. PLEASANT SPRING WATER co., mc. 'fQ2 ? P5 Steadman St. LOWELL, MASS. Tel. 459-9041 68 n -5 W 5 2 5 E G wwf- N ' i-1 ' f 1' ! i L x 'N mJ'j::LV ':'7 1f' ' .. 'Y' ' - - N ew rv 14- V J ' -': F, , f' ,-i1'iv'1'1- ' ' 3 . Q . ' ,. ' V-' n. 134 ': 4-lv-'-:ff-'K-vw ' iw-'ff - wif:--'ff-Sm . fix- . :Y2.--351947 --19 -mrzmwavw.,1ww-1ww?i?n153-:?w1' - - , SWT' ,I I 'NF' 'I' ' - Yr, .V ..a,. Q 1 , ' -2 6 ', p. 4 ,. uw, , '-?,ff 4 Q- . ,.,,s,,, , N YA '... ', rl, ' V 'V ,r 1 1 1 'Y C ' Q 1 '4 Pig Y . 'u.,:,,'u ?P V. 1 ' .175-'WL la A Q , q M -vs, -v H ' I, 3,523 ' 1 1 SPLINTERS vi ifaha 64' I. - - iv 60.41. J - v l 'M' I ,fbff A ' E7 ,Q - I I I qvi- X -- I A I A ' I vt w ' I. '5 In UQ 5 b xl yko - fwuuh ,J QQ,-5 5 C-X 14.71, zumuw. ui fwiy- rn A 7 tc' Compliments of Office 454-7971 Res. 256-0382 E. C. PEARSON PAINTING Co. 215 RIVERNECK ROAD CHELMSFORD, MASS. 01824 INTERIOR DECORATORS PAINTING CONTRACTORS 70 Compliment: of E. A. WILSCN CO 700 Broadway Lowell, Massachusetts FUELS SPLINTERS Compliments of BROX'S IIAIRIES STANLEY C. MARSDEN ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 43 Livingston Ave. GLcnview 2-4482 Lowell Healing 8: Cooling Equipmeni - Fuels - D. T. SULLIVAN CO.. INC. lolz GORHAM ST. TEL. GL 4-7857 72 SPLINTERS DEMERS PLATE GLASS CO. OF LOWELL GLASS AND MIRRORS OF ALL KINDS ENT R AG S FO Sauna OVERHEAD TYPE DOORS 54 CHURCH STREET, Lowsu, MAssAcHusErrs 01853 GEORGE'S TEXTILE CO. FABRICS FROM AMERlCA'S FINEST MILLS C-RICH FRUIT JUICES, Inc. 1040 GORHAM ST. LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS NEW ENGLAND FIRE EQUIPMENT COMPANY -SALES AND SERVICE- 63 LANE ST. LOVVELL, MASS Telephone GL 2-3779 DIAMOND TAXI 128 Warren St. Lowell, Mass. jsffkz Cfab 617-57 .. 'T . I ,jfs ..., X f 5' Lfff N f '77lf f A ' -I IIIIITEII RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT 297 CENTRAL ST. LOWELL, MASS K I 111 -1--, f f , , ew if Q ' gg x 2 xx 43. p ' Q usa X 515, ' . if N ya 1 ' 4 w N O i X SPLINTERS ussell Lumber Company YARD MILL AND OFFICE MEADOWCROFT ST. TEL. 459-9336 LOWELL, MASS. oleff oak FURNlTURl'RU05 846. IBBB LOWELIJS LARGEST furniture store for 82, years JUIIN A. IIUTGHINSSUN 81 SUN -- Building Contractors -- Cabinet Work - Ceramic Tile - Stained Glass 280 Fainnount Street, Lowell Tel. 452-1956 Compliments of JAMES F. BRINE, INC. Jmsimmx Gfllzlefic Oufnffers GL uns. WILLIAM R. PEPIN, sk. GMPMZ SW QM and W. .J',en'x - Onmn'x Spar! Gfoffzes 29 Brattle Street, Hawlrd Square TR 6-4218 - Cambridge, Mus. 75 SPLINTERS jd E f f ,..- L , F Jianrw. Cha-me . ,Q yn 4a:u.Sou.r'S ' ' ?..!v,Y-X Leg 5 ruling... - ' S-em m2 S 5 - 755 'I f 'X ' Jmu? ' 1i'eXKff I X. C 'f.'5'- fb ? 4 E f 4:5 4 O y -A 1 -904 'tts A ' X57 AVXX , X iQ X-N fx E ie fre, +A.fr . . fi , . ' ff, Y - .. 1 x 0'CONNOR 6. Hlll HARDWARE 460 Lawrence Street LOWELL, MASS M 6 Q Qliikyg Compliments of iggzlxaz- I: GENE'S HI GRADE ICE CREAM X . 1 xi .I , I ,rw 1,645 'N .f: I 'l ' ' . - A Q W- . ' -1, -'X :.'i 4-gywwl 1 A 5 .-I, 'A -fr' '. 1-.55 .- , , x K ' 1 1 ' P5 ' 1 - I 1,5 I ' -. . ' 1 ! -I. 1 s'. -L 'ik , , . if ' I SIT ' ffl' .,,'- 1,- , , , b , f- - N 'ft' EUUHIIH-EIIIHN EHMPHNY SPLINTERS Tel. 452-477I DoL1glas 81 Company, lnc. SLATE, GRAVEL, TILE AND METAL ROOFING CORNICE AND SKYLIGHT WORK I47 Rock Street Lowell, Mass. 0l85l4 For Better Health Eat More Fish 0 DEBATE w.J.HoARE ' Wholesale and Retail J C B Fnnsn Fxsn, Ovsnans, CLAMS, Lonsrsns, ETC. 461 Lawrence St. LOWELL, MASS. Dial 2-3571 Compliments of PUTNAM 8 SON 207 MARKET ST. LOWELL, MASS Compliments of lllf l0WEll FRUIT lfll. 78 SPLINTERS Compfimenfa of 2 C Edflel' W 0 CJLFQJ Serving Uuer 30 Communifiea .7lzrou9Aouf 31.0 WerrimacL vaffeg 79 SPLINTERS Food for the Hungry Drink for the Thirsty Rest for the Weary TUWN IITUUSE MUTUR INN Specializing in personalized service to groups of up to seventy people BANQUETS - MEETINGS - SHOWERS - WEDDINGS Compliments of noNAl.nsoN's 75 MERRIMACK STREET LOWELL 80 SPLINTERS Compliments of Jada ' ,7ac 81 I SPLINTERS Riding Club A. A. SMITH 6. C0.. INC. Est. 1906 Authorized Dealers Olivetti Underwood Sales 0 Service 0 Rentals 34 Central Street LOWELL, MASS. GL 7-7481 JOSEPH E. STAVELEY Plumbing and Heating srum, cAs ai wxnan sYs'rsMs Residence Westford Road Shop Chelmsford 490 Chelmsford St. Dial 2-3741 Lowell, Mass. 82 S SPLINTERS JANE TO0HER Sports Clothes, Inc. 598 COLUMBIA RD. DORCHESTER, MASS Compliments of AG HARDWARE SUPPLY PARADISE DONUTS C0-f 'NC- 776 LAKEVIEW AVENUE LOWELL, MASS. 01850 GAUMONT BROS-. INC. 'Where Television and Appliances are a speciai? . . , SHEET METAL WORKERS not just a si e'line EDWARD KELLY Co. Industrial and Commercial 39 Kearney Sq. 116 FLETCHER STREET T o a 458 B313 LOWE'-L. MASS opposite the P.O. 455-5656 Compliments of MATTHEW llllll - Designer and Maker of Fine jewelry - Rm. 317 washington mag. 387 WASHINGTON ST Llberty 2-3117 BOSTON S, MASS. 83 SPLINTERS The Photography Club WOOD-ABBOTT CO. Extablished 1872 Diamond Merchants and jewelers 75 MERRIMACK STREET LOWELL. MASS Compliments of THE BARROWS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. THE STUDENT COUNCIl 420Hf1dfe:hBuf1d1ng 45 Merrimack St. LOWELL, MASS. 459-9319 84' SPLINTERS Best VVisl1es from the Compliments of ASA BARTLETT PRESS , L, I f - ! gg f F xii? Compliments of EASTERN SERVICE co. BARRYS PASTRY SHUP 434 CENTRAL ST. LOWELL, MASS TEL. 452-1519 Frigidare Salts In Scrvicc WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY CAKES 238 Shaw St. LOWELL, MASS. CPhone GL 3-39791 cmpzfmem of The Junior Class 85 SPLINTERS Get It At Parkway Prescriprion Pharmacy JAM!-:s j. QUEENAN, Reg. Ph. 309 ROGERS ST. - LOVVELL, MASS. Free Delivery Phone GL 4-4831 Compliments of Kava Cheerleaders LOCKE AND NATIONAL POWER LAWN MOWERS PEERLESS SNOW PLOWS jiepluzn HQJLQC3 Ka., gnr. 625 MAIN STREET IROUTE 383 WILMINGTON. MASSACHUSETTS 658-6160 PHONE 475-4821 owe ANDOVER VILLAGE QBID2 Qgillage gfflnfner 5111131 F I DILIVIIY ' ANDOVIR. LAWRINCI. NO. ANDQVII 93 MAIN STREET, ANDOVER, MASS. 01810 CLINTON E. RICHARDSON 86 SPLINTERS C mpliments of Compliments of MBERT RICHARDS CO.. Inc. ANDOVER BOOK STORE c plimentsof The Senior Class 87 SPLINTERS 776-461 1 I I - PHOTOGRAPHERS - 286 BROADWAY, WINTER HILL SOMERVILLE, MASSACHUSETTS 02145 88 A Friend .W :Z N X b f-5,1 .wg 1 QEMAXX X Xl XXX't.X,X,X , . X . ,.,, ,. A N3 cf X X' ,' .-2-,X. , , 4- 175- XQXXX . fhzkhn ' :gf . - , , 1 ., . 4 X -' - I X X X , j, 9 4 KV. 'vnX,!fffy.l Q4 Q' -. ,. ' -'J 1.-g---if ' 4- .. 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S Q P : - K P io- k ' I Q Y , V ' Y ' ' -' v v 4 . K' 'f. ' ' 'mp - -an-Y ' Av ML ' --A J. , ,. ' ,- -H 1 -'rf QS-Q ' 1' , 9 . my uQ v- J ?g it 1, vw- Lb, 4 J, , . . ,, 'X ii 1. 4 ,. A if I f L A' ap' V I .1 f ff W ,.: .-Q-'-,fr 'av ie uv' ' af ' N. - 5,5 X 'wgggrw , if ,, . ...Y-X-w 31 R ,, 'f L if x I, - Y ,l,Q,V- I, . .IAQ ft -Z ,,' ,rt l, 'fi gf--1 ' 'Q in. TQ. . I 1 I - s ,, , .150 x ,tl .Y 5 ll -X. F941 A?'Q'?3V 45? - ' A K wi- cf, : f . F , , ,V H ' ' ' - :.1,.. 10 , Y 7? 3 3, rv 1 X ? f I ' ' V . -- ' f 2 go Q 'a , Q11 'Za-V V if x ww' I . - Q 21, 2 ' , ' 1 D , V ' E':Lfi1s , o w Q' , fu 1, . , a 1 V X 1 'ffg - X 2 1 A Q ' 9 7' V ,Q , . vf A v Q f 3 N A 1 I f 3 A ivy' 1 1 'S 2 Q A1 Q 7 Slahnters Rogan I-Ia!! School owell, Massachusetts ' is f ,wer 5-'. -Q a' 44 K , . i ,haiatoikyogl f iz: l ri ,, Q? , . A 5 , ' 1 z, I., 1 Xw'+Q4'N,f,- A ' ' x 'Thr-A , on 5 K . 1 Em X i 'M'-'--. CLASS OF 1969 A fN T5 'U -zz .913 Dr .Q D MJ X O L-I CQ .fs .-C1 4-3 C1 6 E .E -Ei E GJ E 'E FL L3 E O D3 as CES :E Ts I .-CI 4-I ,B GJ .fs Ei CE. O 4-r OD Zinn, Susan Ellin .-C! cvs 1-4 0 .-D cu Q 5 First Ro Q5 .-C1 .99 I-1 CB C2 C2 nlfer Foster, Ioha Ien Ju szczak, da .E v-I Z5 Z cu UD on C2 as F-1 nson, Joh DDC Suza entl, -o 'ez Q2 1-4 rn.. XJ E I 6 5 N E ss, Nau orah Pletscher, Lynne Tatian, Betsy -D ES IM. eu 2 O D-4 Keast, Toni Malilyn CD.. 3 o nd F3 T Am artin, M P 'U Cl OJ E Q.. w: Susan Brow Q DG 'S 'S o O cu CD N Eddy arion pton, M .E E B o .2 Z I1 an 71-I CU M tn. :J E 0.9 F-1 O Q .2 c: cet Q G. O Po s: :1 CU nl Q CG P-'1 jg CD Hz' GJ v-1 CU .E 6-3 -2 1-4 .:: U .S cd D Fa 530 : Q6 798 QCCD EA? Sm wild 'QE ,gm Esb fwg :WD-1 QCD me +33 gm Q45 523 33 mf .Eg E131 ILT-1 Q . 55 I-4 gig QE CCI '-Q: -C .Q I-1 PAMELA BELL ELIZABETH HALL CYNTHIA BROX SUZANNE JOHNSON LINDA IUSZCZAK SPLINTERS Editor-in-Chief ALIDA MCILVAIN Literary Board ELIZABETH I-IOLIHAN LISA STRASBURG LYNNE TATIAN Business Board Mdndgef-KAREN ANDERSON MARION EDDY AMELIA ROWE ANNE WASHBURN Art Editor-BETSY NAUSS Stag DANIA DOREMUS MARILYN KEAST Informal Photographers TRUDA BLOOM ESTELA ALVAREZ Faculty Literary Advisor Faculty Art Advisor MRS. DOROTHY A. WORSHAM MRS. DOROTHY I. PERLOFF I' EDITORIAL Wisdoin grows as man steps from secure knowledge into the insecure unknown. The ultimate act of faith then is proved when man is able to face the unexplored region, defending with his wisdom and pursuing with his reason. The struggle for intelligent faith is guided only by his wisdom, and thus are discovered points of value in the midst of vast confusion. Once the fact of the impossibility of absolute certainty is realized the way of wisdom becomes the recognition of degrees of probability. Within wisdom is found the clarity for living. Clearmindedness, rever- ence and rationality are the furnishings of reason. The ambition for man to live in a more perfect and harmonious society can be achieved only through truth and wisdom. Materialistic wealth often represses this ambition, yet if used reasonably this wealth may become an addition of privilege and an advantage for further enlightenment. The mind of man must be fed knowledge as must his heart absorb the gifts of knowledge: sensitivity and hope for everlasting life. Through struc- tured education and experience, the mind is able to capture infinite ideals and probabilities, while it deciphers a clearer vision of the meaning of life. In broadening his mind man must improve his methods of inquiry in order to perceive the difference between what is and what is desired. Thus man's heart and mind must work together as an entity to establish the whole con- ception of truth. VV hen man's need for wisdom surpasses that of bodily desire, then he is ready to step forward into another area of our small worlds to help to widen the horizon of those who see and to seek to open the minds of the blind to life's richness and wisdom . . . Miss HILDRED RAMSAY HEADMISTRESS OF ROGERS I-IALL TO THE MEMBERS DF THE SENIOR CLASS Only a year ago, at this very time, We mourned the tragic death of another Kennedy, Robert. In his eulogy for his brother, Senator Ted Kennedy said that he hoped his brother would be remembered as a good and decent man who saw wrong and tried to right it. This is also my hope for the class of '69-that you will become good and decent women who will see wrong and try to right it in a good and decent way. MRS. LOUISE WHITTEN STATEN DEDICATION Mrs. Staten, in our daily trips to the ofhce to ask hoth petty and important details, you have always had an answer for us. You have impressed upon us the significance of details. Through your Witty comments you have inHuenced us with good judgement as well as good taste. Though our World may 'lnot he the vvay it used to he, we hope you will rememher us as kindly as We will remember you. Qs?- 336 ,.-KA X.. . W mvsn.w..,,.,, ,summons Q M. ! 'ki -mf-'rw fm f.. fl B VVILLIAIVI HBILLH SIGMAN H 4.,. II L -Imran dr. if -- IN APPRECIATION Bill, you have always been there to heIp us when we needed assistance-he it Chauffeuring, refereeing, doing er- rands, working around the grounds and on dances, eoIIeCting ads for Splinters and, of course, conducting the festivities at Singing Beach. We eouId not mention all that you have done in the past years through your CeaseIess toihng. We will never forget your dehghtful stories and wonderful heart. Qur purpose is to cultivate in the largest possible number of our future citizens an appreciation of botb tbe responsi- bilities anal the benehts which come to them because they are Americans and are free. AMES BRYANT CONANT ' Q X NNN , , E , I3+Wm ,M EI 'III .i: I V I , I! X 'If IE! ui. ' :E III X ' ' IQIWI I I3 W' X ai' I N ggi I,': X ' I . Eff ,I I X I 'gif I ' ' x 'Z 5 I ? I X .msfwfw XY I xIII IQISSSSQ XW ' ., 112- mx X 1 II! NTQ 5S5NN v ls X O'- L, I 'I-IIIIIIIIIIIIM ii XY N II'II5J.I.IImmIII,If:z'Is1I 1mHW xxx I -em-S5 - I M U mf .Q , I. --EI IIIII I I f I' X I f2II1IfI1IIz:IIII. X ,II if :X ' assi! E' ' X um .II .Ig 5 ' ,III'I, III 7 M I . will I I ,II ' MI 4 I I ' III I 5 - I II I E' .III . ,' Q , I EI 'x N 2 . 2 E, ' 2 nliiiifi 5 I E I I I I 3 IIIIII Y Wlgillll ! ' -A .1 I FZIE I ki I 'W I II - - - 'S ay ,JI IVV. X5 I ' S 5 I- ' 42+ I ---- -I 4.4 I . it-ii Q . XNSJWX '- I- -nm-, V V -F Q I ' ,U -I , N, f N A A 11 ' , I Q was I -.4 ISR , .--glfzyggn, :-ii ,ax 4 4 N 4 A1 In I. V '14, 'P 'Z v, PX I XXNI 'Xi -T zf ,III.IIIIIZgW ,mvrw I, ,W W?J, ,f X - 16, 645' 5 'V I 5, Ax I ' -- V f In 4' V I .,- X n Alf I V I' ih- l ff If, ff .,,:g.11mmJI11zmlmmn Ek I f L ' y . I :-- ,f X X, , , ,I X x ily xvff-15 7 l ff , 1,2 S 5 XXX: ff , , -'ff f fff Xie fi1fgQNI Jw I -III 1' FI! X .- T. - I, If QY74 , 1 K . W I in I K7 ly' ,fx - IU, I I X '- li V V K ' N R A I AL57 ,f2IVf Iftgiff2IQf+2ESi:4QIff2f fS7XfXQxI 1w'f IM 4'I'I In' f-...Q 'I gl I ' ' W XX '- I -I 'L MII IN. .wr 3' I +.,,-.Mc I ' . ' ' 1 ll, - -- - 1 1 ur, 'Y N .' . ,Y-I fix f 1.54-sb - ' , I, . . I KI I II I I I 4, ' A QL Ii- I - II Y f I ? 3- A? . . , ' - :I , sf X-.375 1 .I X 5 ,-1: .1 -,r -E K X I f ',', .1 A if fi, -vs ff .44 A .V V i +.5' ksxi ' Z if I I , IIIII ' I I A 4 I , . , . - If.. i-J , ,Zi - V - W , V 1 ' I l.A - N,- I MISS DOROTHY LEBUTT PIANO, IVIUSIC APPRECIATION AND CLEE CLUB S MISS KATHLEEN DAY ACADEMIC SECRETARY, HISTORY MRS. PATRICIA MALONE IWATHEIWATICS MISS SUSAN BAMFORD ENGLISH MISS DOROTHY PHELPS MISS DORIS ALEXANDER LATIN, FRENCH AND IXIATHEINIATICS ANCIENT HISTORY MRS. M. SARGENT HOUSENIOTHER MRS. B. CROSBIE DIETICIAN MRS. A. JONES HOUSENIOTHER MRS. LOUISE STATEN NIRS. DORIS PHINNEY SECRETARY FINANCIAL SECRETARY D zi- MMM I I ffwfifvnffid' .. Q1 K -e V?-Y MRS. PAMELA HOFFER FRENCH MRS. JUDITH .SADOWSKI BIOLOGY, CHEMISTRY, GENERAL SCIENCE MISS CAROL BOWES PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND PHYSIOLOGY MRS. DOROTHY PERLOFF MRS. DOROTHY A. WORSHAM ART AND HISTORY OF ART ENGLISH AND DRAMATICS X 'Eff x 1 3 ,l 1 ' ' I J J 4- f ,LA . 1 ' .' A ..- .vin V' ' .xggi I 1. . ,j . S i Y fi I l 115- I sh ca I f 1 NS x -Qld' . us S U! 65 .- A 'TE -. Y' x 'S ?, - wwf, L 1' L In 5-:E J N r f If ,,.,- I, A -I - '- X s ,, I, , MRS. FRANCES JONES MISS MARY JOHANNA PERKINS MISS ANNE DORLAND PULLINC ALUMNAE SECRETARY HISTORY AND CURRENT EVENTS SPANISH MRS. BARBARA BREWER MRS. NINA LATOUR NURSE SHCRTHAND AND TYPINC 425335 ME... , pa Brands lunch, what else? si A r c i . ,. .,,. , x v v xi A 1 . emv-Maxam if :...wf Oh, for a one-way tichet to New Hampshire . . . Q. ff ' . I L A. is 2 ' ,pztiiffe iv? 5 Oh! How awful! l A9 Now is that being a ,qoool citizen? .1' t ' Z ' rn cer atn y a wznner 3 ust wait till you get to college Wouloln't Caesar he mad for me? It certainly is mucho frio! ,yfw I, .Ss ' S M ,,,e 1 -M , Who says I'1n the official chaperone? Now, girls, when I was on the tearn at Smith . . . ' r '-ww 1.4 V, 1 ,-f ,.- 1.2 W .f,51,.m, ,,,,,, 1, ' . 1, N 5 w.- f- , '..,: r uvlvfxfi 2 . '-1 .U- '.f '. I ,3.- 'V' 1, 1 . . ! 4 . MJ-U. e M. ,v Y . X, ,Hu ' ' A ,-,Q ., I.. . nw x , 1.- .'-' 1. . M, 1:-,U I.. ':. -Z .WH-1. . f'f'i 4f .. N, .Q- .., I. ,U .f., . 1 . :fi I 1. '-. ' ' .... ,U ., . -A, .. -Nu, I. J, . 415, Vg .. xl.. ad, M.-' H. . W, , 1. . mg. N.. af' C ' N., :AZN In ,w K ' , Av. l,,.. .y,n '. Q. 'wljfc 'g ,, ' . 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V , Qxx X , ! M W Z.'-K. X X ' 9- 1 f g U - X ' Xa V ,fu M1 mx, 331.-X A I , V V ,V , VK limi XR X 'X V - V V X x K I V Nfl N , X , JH 'K ,.- H mswlm 'X X xNX3 1 Xxx! 3 X XX X1 , X X . QSX . X fx V VI Nb ' fs 3' ' N VIVX' f f X ' 'X mv' V' 1 u X 1 M V V X VVVQ A -- V VVVV ,, V v' f I ' ' A- 'f , A V ' . A,-A 7 v TX . :'.,f,','. , , Y . li , ,l' ,ui-X Q: X . R t Y x 4,4-'Q' mm ,N NV - 1 N' Q X ' . Q fl f '5-tif. .... ...J.y... S.. , V V . K V ' W5 V V,f,Q2Vf X' N5 V V X - X V n f , .,l4.Q,J.,f ' - 1-tg f ' nvigwug ' X v V - 2 V. v Ni Vf-R- ' n f - V ' , K ' v N I A '4 V ' N5-'iizkg ' YQ--:,4,Q:Exx33. V ' 1 ' V ' I , - f 1 V f R24--Kzrxxx V 4 . V p K f V, V. A V 'Tim-., X ' . gi f ' X ' V ' Q,,cf:. X ' X V 5 S X P . 41f5Eb.,- x W I, ' 3 Yfaiggpf- '3'VA, ky , V Nl ' 4. U VRQH A . f' 4 4 ' V N: 5157! 1 . Y f - ' Xx 1 , ' The years that the class of 1969 have spent at Rogers Hall have given us a foundation of relative stability. As we face the present trend of student unrest, we feel that this foundation has prepared us to commence with strength. We have experienced life in a secure and conservative atmo- sphere, in which we have developed a strong interest in fairness, in truth and in other people. With these qualities, we are ready to continue life with courage and purposeful- ness. -BETTY HALL SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Cynthia Brox CViCe-Prcsiclent Elizabeth Hall CPreSiclentD ESTELA MARIA TERESA ALVAREZ 85-ll Avon Street lamaica, New York ELMIRA COLLEGE Peace with friends . . . bearing others' af- Hictions . . . parks full of flowers . . . Alida, the debil's gonna get you! . . . who's the phone for? . . . Wonder Where Craig is . . . Mount Washington? . . . Cracking feet . . . D'em dry bones! . . . dead flowers- they're sooo beautiful! . . . H And he that bringeth the sun into the heart of the any gum? , , , the DR, Way , , , Y0u're day, lives in the midst Of 10179 - - -U so undemocratic! . . . SOAMEDAY . . . morning glory at four A.M .... I just love her! . . . a little lost face, Shirley . . . night owls . . . who's superstitous? . . . strange study habits . . . You dirty old man! . . . stubborn will! . . . never a good- KAVA Club bye - - 1 Hockey 3, 4 rr r Volleyball 2, 3, 4 CCaptainD Class Vice-President 3 Proctor 3 Honor Roll 3 Neatness Award 2, 3 Debate Club 4 Spanish Club l, 2 CVice-PresidentD, 3 CVice-Presidentb, 4 CPresidentD Splinters Photographer 4 Photography Club 4 CSecretaryD Founders Day 3 Music Appreciation 2 Cl-lonorable Mentionl l 4 Cl-lonorable Mentionl KAREN ANDERSON 39 Daniels Street Lowell, Massachusetts A MUHLENBERG COLLEGE Bon Marche . . . but did you like it? . . . well bye . . . tough . . . poor babe . . . cup of coffee and a piece of pie . . . just thought l'd drop in . . . devoted day- student . . . you know . . . chemistry . . . Anderson and Brox's Luncheonette and Dragstrip . . . We-ll, it's been swell . . . Serenity and joyfulness are the sun under which everything thrives. CAE Club Honor Boll 1, 2, 3, 4 Current Events l CHonorable Mentionl, 2 Music Appreciation 1 CHonorable MentionD, 3 The Columns 2, 3 Clixchange Editorl Splinters Business Board Manager 4 Dramatics 2 CHonorable Mentiofnb, 3, 4 CHonorable MentionD Dramatics Club 2, 3, 4 French Club 4 Red Cross Senior Life Saving 2 Volleyball 2, 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 CCaptainD Hockey 2, 3, 4 Softball 3, 4 Glee Club 2, 3, 4 Swim Team Manager 4 R. H. Award 4 Music Appreciation Award 4 Underhill Honor 4 PAMELA VIRGINIA BELL 83 Beacon Street Marblehead, Massachusetts Petite . . .baby chickens . . . light footed . . . dig it . . . bread . . . Anna . . . medical H . . U H weekends . . . if only she knew how to Lzherty of thought 15 the lzfe of the soul. Ski . ' . backs ' . . Posture award for the KAVA Club Ski Club The Columns 2, 3 CEditorD Photography Club 3 Dramatics I, 2, 3, 4 Drarnatics Club 2, 3 CVice-PresidentD, 4 World Affairs Council 4 CSecretaryD Water Ballet I French Club 2, 3, 4 Founders Day 3 Splinters Literary Board 4 Hockey 4 My straightest girl . . . playing in the ghetto . . . Mama Berdalini . . . U.V.M. . . . ski- doo artist . . . , ,555 TRUDA ANNE BLOOM 27 Dewey Street Lawrence, Massachusetts BOSTON UNIVERSITY BLOOM ROOAM . . . psychodrama trauma . . . oh, those goldy locks . . . I CANT explain it! . . . group discussion . . . calam- ity, chaos and confusion . . . Cycorbit exploitation . . . Cats, Cats, and more C-ats . . . freedom will NEVER come . . . of course, I'll know my lines . . . my look of innocence gets me places . . . A man without ceremony has need of great merit in its place. KAVA Club Photography Club 3, 4 CVice-Presidentj Splinters Photographer 4 Dramatics 3 Cl-lonorable Mentionl 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Dramatics Club 3, 4 French Club 4 Dramatics Award 4 SUSAN WILSON BRGWN The Knolls Williamstown, Massachusetts MOUNT VERNON IUNIOR COLLEGE The gym . . . to the woods! . . . Leilerts U . u ' i I and Spring . . . second Hoor-end room It 13 worthzer of man to rzse zn laughter above life I v 0 Oh, Brownie! . 1 u Wellesley g . I Janie than to bewail in ity . . . any more bubble gum? . . . unsuspect- ing innocence . . . but watch Steve Mc- Queen! . . . in the windmills of your mind. CAE Club Spanish Club . Hockey C2ncl teamD 3, 4 Volleyball C2ncl teamD 3, 4 Basketball C2ncl teaml 3, 4 Softball 2, 3 World Affairs Council CTreasurerD Music Appreciation 4 Cl-lonorable Mention CYNTHIA ANNE BROX 192 North Lowell Street Methuen, Massachusetts MAEYMOUNT COLLEGE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE SENIOR CLASS Mother of Pearl . . . party time . . . chocoe late milk and cake . . . CTO . . . another college acceptance . . . apples . . . Charlie ...I' l lh'1d... '-1.1, SO bealilltizguloliedi Exam hgppngof I BrO A jest, a laughing word, often decides the highest Taxi Service . . . 2:20 visits . . . Keith matters' Academy forever . . . split? . . . solid . . . quee-ah . . . CAE Club Music Appreciation Award 2 Library Committee 3 World Affairs Council 4 CPresidentD Dramatics 1, 2, 3 4 CI-Ionorable Mentionl Dramatics Club 3, 4 Splinters Business Board 4 French Club 4 Hockey Manager 4 SZLZLQ, o. Diligence is the mother of good luck. KAVA Club Dramatics Club 2, 3, 4 CPresidentD Dramatics 2, 3, 4 CHonorable Mentionl Founder's Day 3 r Hockey 4 CSecond TeamD Water Ballet 4 Splinters Art Board 4 Spanish Club 4 World Affairs Council 4 Debate Club 3 Honorary R. H. Award 4 DANIA SWIFT DOREMUS South Road Harwinton, Connecticut BOURNEMOUTH COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF KAVA CLUB No, no, that's the Oslnominotal . . . Lis- ten, honey bunch! . . . wake me up . . . harmonica . . . she's the INEURIORAT- INC type . . . Hey Sam! . . . Don't be a wise guy! . . . Kite Days . . . I DONT BELIEVE WE'RE DOING THIS . . . Don't SCARE mel . . . confused . . . all- year hayfever . . . tact . . . Whirlpool of thoughts . . . Well, I'll be a monkey's uncle . . . floor chambermaid . . . MARIGN EDDY 20 Edbert Drive New Britain, Connecticut KATHERINE CIBBS Merry . . . Nurse Marion . . . this sweater's for . . . the Vineyard . . . oh NOOO! . . . How does this look? . . . Hay, Morlan Midgets Won again! . . . all right, LADIES, this is how it's going to be! . . . floppy hats . . . bathroom reentrances . . . 5 A.M. and STILL typing? . . . l'm not KIDDING . . . Another project? . . . Someday maybe . . . Madame Librarian . . . :Zg .l., ,,i, 4 M 4'3f-V. my , V 5 . ,n - 4- A W-ri M 5.13: , 4 - mu HSM. xlibs A t Q as xx, . , L F 55? .,, , , I 4 1 H Since thou art not sure of az minute, throw not away an hour. CAE Club Dramatics 2 CHonorable MentionD, 3, 4 Dramatics Club 2, 3 CVice-Presiden.tD, 4 Clee Club 2, 3 CVice-Presidentl, 4 R. H. Negatives 3, 4 CLeaderD Music Appreciation 2 CHonorable MentionD, 4 CHonorable Mentionj Student Council 4 Founders Day 3 Volleyball 4 C2nd teaml Hockey 3 C2nd teamb, 4 Basketball 3, 4 C2nd teamj Softball 3, 4 Honor Roll 3 Class President 3 Splinters Business Board 4 Senior Luncheon Literary Board 3 llNOtl7,i11g can bring you peace lout yoursel KAVA Club Spanish Club 3, 4 CVice-Presidentb Cheerleader 1, 2, 3, 4 Volleyball 3 C2.nd team Captainl, 4 Basketball 4 C2nd teamj Ski Club 4 Field Hockey 3, 4 C2nd teamD Pather's Day Committee I Music Appreciation 4 CHonorable MentionD R. H. Award 4 Parsons Honor 4 SUSAN WILLIAMS ELLINGTGN 424 Ccampo Drive Pacific Palisades, California CAZENOVIA COLLEGE It's about that time . . . Malibu . . . The Hotel . . . Bosstown-yeh! . . . My COOD friend, Wayne . . . hit ,me again . . . food? Where? . . . I'm sooo fat . . . How am I supposed to know Where L.A. is? . . . just a follower . . . in the closet. JENNIFER MARIE EosTEE 80 State Street Ellsworth, Maine WHEATON COLLEGE lust follow the bouncing body! . . . You're in WCVE Foster, and you know it . . . the in crowd . . . Bubble gum, anyone? . . . Jimmy, Danny AND Wayfne Baby . . . Forget it. l'm going to bed! . . . and I hope this bed lasts through the year, Tashl . . . Confucious say . . . Bowdoin . . . only P more days! . . . and never forget the Spring of '68l Obey that impulse CAE Club French Club 4 Ski Club 3 Proctor 4 Cheerleading 3, 4 Breakfast Club 4 CVice-Presidentl Honor Boll 3, 4 The Columns 3 CAE Nominating Committee 3 Clee Club 3, 4 Commencement Play 3 Volleyball Manager 4 Wish not so much to live long, as to live well. KAVA Club Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4 Swimming Team 3 Water Ballet 4 Red Cross Iunior Life Saving 2 Neatness Award 3 Splinters Literary Board 4 The Columns CcrEditor 3 A Class President 1, 4 Senior Luncheon Literary Committee 3 Proctor 3 Dramatics 2, 3 CHonorable Mentionl, 4 Dramatics Club 2, 3, 4 Debate Club 3, 4 Ski Club 1, 2 Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Photography Club 4 Honor Roll 4 Helen Hill Award 4 Dramatics Award 4 ELIZABETH MORRISON HALL 345 Nahant Road Nahant, Massachusetts SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF THE SENIOR CLASS Hi, Love! . . . Cive me a B . . . Florida . . . another hoppy prom? . . . Beautiful . . . won't you play a simple melody . . . I didn't know she polished apples, let alone eat them! . . . l don't care, everybody's going crazy . . . ad-libber . . . nannynoo- noo . . . spontaneous inventions! the abom- inable brain . . . SURE . . . why not? frustrated? Never! . . . sleep? OR study . . . everyday is a new day . . . keep smiling! yeah . . . unique . . . Tilton? VVHERE! . . . Laughing is good for the digestion . . . Lobster Mobster . . . ANN TROWBRIDCE HEMINCWAY 81 Clenbrook Drive Cheshire, Connecticut BRADFORD JUNIOR COLLEGE VICE-PRESIDENT OF KAVA CLUB Sophia Peruzi . . . LlQUEFYl . . . l3ru . . . we were sitting on Ginger l3aker's lap . . . feed me, I,I'1'1 hungry . . . Cestapo . . tomato Hght with Mighty Mal . . . RAUNCHY . . . Perrelli is the one . . . Crackerjacks of Lowell . . . Pink Chablis . . . Ah, one, two this is our gig . . . the grass is greener in New Haven . . . we got stuck up in the closet and coulcln't get down . . . soulfully yours . . 4 4 . '1 -N, , ik 4' Q I x sk-Qt xi is it 4' R 'K S9 And forget not that the earth olelights to feel your hare feet and the winds long to play with Your hair. KAVA Club Photography Club 3, 4 The Columns 2, 3 CPhotography Editorl Music Appreciation 3 CHonorable lVIentionD, 4 CHonorable lVlentionD Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Dramatics 2, 3, 4 CHonorable MentionD Dramatics Club 3, 4 Softball 2, 3, 4 Hockey 2, 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Octet 4 Founder's Day R. H. Award 4 5 Live, love and be happy. CAE Club French Club 4 Splinters Literary Board 4 Tutoring 4 Stage Manager 3 ELIZABETH WINSOR I-IOLII-IAN 68 Salem Street Andover, Massachusetts UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO Souped-up VW . . . Souped-up kid . . . Monday is my day OFF! . . . WILDCAT U.S.A .... P.A .... local taxi . . but I'Ve gained 15 lbs .... I dOn't believe this class! ...Frost and Tip . . . far away. . .for independence . . . SUZANNE JOHNSON Dingleton Road Greenwich, Connecticut INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS VIOE-PRESIDENT OF CAE CLUB You bet your sweet bippy . . . Papp-agallo girl . . . Mrs. Brewer, would you believe I'rn sick again . . . well, girls . . . Iohn- skunk, please get OH the floor . . . Mary- land Andover . . . Drooper . . . Also Charlie . . . Boston sprees . . . you name it and l've got it . . . Florida Freckles . . . forever spraying . . . Sun Country . . . I find the great thing in this world is not so much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving. CAE Club Class President 2 Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Octet 4 Photography Club 3, 4 CPresidentD Dramatics 2 Dramatics Club 4 Splinters Business Board 4 Founders Day 3 Ski Club 3, 4 Volleyball 3 Basketball 4 CCaptainD Cheerleader 3, 4 Hockey 3 CCaptainD, 4 Softball 3, 4 R. H. Award 3, 4 Strong and content, I travel the open road. CAE Club Honor Boll 3, 4 Dramatics 3, 4 CHonorable MentionD Dramatics Club 4 French Club 4 Riding Club 4 Water Ballet 4 Splinters Business Hockey 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Softball 3, 4 Cheerleader 3, 4 Founders Day 3 Board 4 Photography Club 4 B. H. Award 4 Music Appreciation 4 CHonorable MentionD LINDA JOY IUSZCZAK cfo Aramco Box 4511516 Dhahran, Saudi Arabia SKIDMORE COLLEGE Silly goose . . . it's all in the book . . . at home . . . where? . . . TRAVEL . . . Oh, JOY . . . Saudi . . . lVl8clVl Peanuts . . . neat? . . . What's it like? . . . Catholic boarding school product . . . hates snow . . . splurge . . . I'm a dear little white rose . . . chemistry, maybe . . . acting? . . . but I learned it that way . . . 1 z 13 MARILYN ANN KEAST 45 Three Ponds Road Wayland, Massachusetts CENTENARY COLLEGE Fon WOMEN Lizard . . . BUDDY! WHO DO YOU THINK YOU AH? . . . long weekends . . . turn off the lights, someone's at the window . . . get the gun! . . . Excedrine No. 9 . . . OOOH! Doesn't that make you mad? . . . Lisa, WHERE ARE YOU? . . . Had it up to here . . . I'n1 asleep! . . . Up to date Rate . . . Doesn't matter how stle . . . do you wanna know what's for dinner! . . . bottomless pit . . . Middlesex has the nicest boys . . . tt f , .M if For I am full of matter, the spirit within coifistmineth me. KAVA Club Dramatics 3 CHonorable MentionD, 4 CHonorable M.entionD Music Appreciation 3 CHonorable MentionD Photography Club 3, 4 World Affairs Council 4 Spanish Club 4 Splinters Art Board 4 Hockey 2 C2nd teamD, 3, 4 Swimming Team 3, 4- Water Ballet 4 Founder's Day 3 Basketball 3 C2nd teamD, 4 CCaptainD Softball 3, 4 Riding Club, Co-President 4 R. H. Award 3, 4 Senior Luncheon Art Board 3 Breakfast Club 4 Art Club 4 CPresidentD The Columns Staff 3 Debate Club 4 Art Appreciation 4 CHonorable MentionD Art Prize 4 'WL The soul of a journey is liberty, perfect liberty, to think, feel, olo just as one pleases. KAVA Club Cheerleading 3 Volleyball 4 CManagerD Spanish Club 4 Commencement Play 3 ROBIN ANN LaFOLEY Liberty Square Road Boxboro, Massachusetts Eddie . . . I got to get out of here! . . . Ed? . . . KIM . . . Creasers in Acton? Never! . . . It's parents' weekend at La- Foley's! or could it be Kim's? . . . Cive us a little whistle, Rob . . . Ah, so Robin, Chink . . . El Burro . . . The extra long va- cation did me good . . . Mirror, mirror, on the wall who's the the skinniest of them all? . . . smokin' at the local boiler room brought about a smoke out. IAN LAUNDON Sache1n's l-leacl Cuilforcl, Connecticut UNIVERSITY OF PERUGIA 'l3 ...Vt lillgiejuggingliar . . leigh, Iithate LetbetzchHbecome all that he was created capable food . . . iightfoofed . . . Finally 8 SISTER! of mg- Boston overnights . . . Nassau . . . can't I play a girl? . . . KAVA Club French Club 4 Photography Club 4 Riding Club 4 CCoPresidentD Hockey 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Dramatics Club 4 Dramatics 2 Cl-Ionorable lVlentiofnD, 3, 4 CHRISTINA LEFFERTS 292 Washington Boulevard Springfield, Massachusetts APPALACHIAN STATE COLLEGE I-lev, mush-we're going to Alaska . . An honest mans the noblest work of God. 1 - - - d - U u ' I7 CAE Club Pi. H. Award 3, 4 Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Dramatics Club 4 Photography Club 3, 4 Spanish Club 3, 4 Cheerleading 3, 4 CAE Song 4 Junior Life Saving 2 Senior Life Saving 4 Christmas Chorus 4 Water ballet 4 Andover Dance Committee 3 Field Hockey 3, 4 Volleyball 2, 3 CCaptainD, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Softball 3 Swim Team 3, 4 Tennis 3 Badminton 4 Field Day Team 3 Athletic Award 4 os senior ring is epressmg m so dizzy . . . R. Chamberlain . . . Come in . . . We renamed it the Smokie . . . older friends . . . 1g,r' A ,. ,'l ,.,, WENDY MARTIN 72 North Street Crafton, Massachusetts CoLBY JUNIOR COLLEGE Den . . . THE Mother . . . Newport . . . be back in a Hash . . . my parents love lack, too . . . VVhat will l do with two rings? . . . Grafton accent . . . Ianis juice . . . THE ESCAPE . . . telephone . . . King of the Swing and the jacked-up CTO . . . ., Q. A 1 A sl 5 gs But you, child of space, you relentless in rest, you shall not be trapped nor tamed. KAVA Club Glee Club 3, 4 Dramatics 3 Dramatics Club 4 Ski Club 3 Founders Day 3 Volleyball 4 Hockey 3, 4 Waterballet 4 Basketball 3, 4 Softball 4 ALIDA BAIRD MCILVAIN 1109 Beech Road Rosemont, Pennsylvania CONVERSE COLLEGE EDITOR OF Splinters Picklemack . . . hour showers . . . who, me? NEVER! . . . grin and bear ith . . . It's NOT going to bother me . . . always trying . . . mine is Peanuts' philosophy . . . I'm not a coward: only partly . . . the ITCI-I . . . got to get that duck . . . deter- Reading makesa full man-Meditation aprofound mination and pride , , , LEAVE, PM man-Discourse a clear man. MEDITATINC! . . . why hurry, they'll wait . . . If l were king of the forest . . . Cinifer is coming! . . . silent ecstacy of home . . . CAE Club 3 iw 3' if ,gf A Class Vice-President 2 'fi ,gf Clee Club 2, 3 il 3 Dramatics Club 4 Cctet 3, 4 Photography Club 3, 4 y Hockey 2 CCaptainD, 3, 4 i. Volleyball 2, 3 C2nd teaml A Swimming Team 2 2353 ' Cheerleader 2, 3, 4 Ski Club 2, 4 Founder's Day 3 Basketball 4 Proctor 3, 4 Senior Luncheon Literary Board 3 R. H. Award 4 BETSY ANNE NAUSS 84 Creenacres Avenue Scarsdale, New York CENTENARY COLLEGE EOE WOMEN Who me? . . . Sometimes I feel like more of a burden to you . . . Scaresdale . . . hid- den key . . . giggles . . . PLEASE . . . Girly ffff the MPP? me does the tree 0 11 e license-when? . . . athletics . . . I will flowery never take a train again . . . worry wart . . . hearty milk maid . . . CAE Club Splintefs Art Editor 4 Art Prize, undergraduate 3 Ski Club 3, 4 CPresidentD French Club 4 Water 'Ballet 4 Founder's Day 3 Pm. H. Award 3, 4 Hockey 3, 4 CCaptainD Volleyball 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Softball 3, 4 Swimming team 3, 4 Athletic Award 4 CI-Ionorabl Art Prize 4 Art Apppreciation Award 4 I-lonorgRoll 4 e- Mentionl t, fly' A sensitive flower in a garden grew. CAE Club The Columns 2, 3 Dramatics 3 Cl-lonorable MentionD, 4 CI-lonorable Mentionj Music Appreciation 3 CHonorable 4 Clionorable MentionD Clee Club 2, 3, 4 CPresidentD Student Council 3 Octet 4 Cheerleader 2, 3 CI-leadl, 4 Basketball 2 Ski Club 3 Founder's Day 3 Red Cross 2 Waiter Ballet 3, 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Debate Club 3, 4 French Club 4 MentionD, DEBORAH PLETSCHER 1647 Cratiot Street Saginaw, Michigan YVESTMINSTEP. CHOIR COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF CAE CLUB Saginaw . . . how long do you think it will be by Christmas? Tilton . . . flat . . . I miss fights with Isabel . . . tonsils . . . Miss Purity is getting corrupted . . . I can't wait to get out of this place . . . CLARK! N NICOLA TOWNSEND PLIMPTON Old Sudbury Road Lincoln, Massachusetts COLBY JUNIOR COLLEGE Nicky and Niki . . . Stratton ski trips . . . Vermont for the nth time . . . I sit in the back and croak in the morning . . . four years is enough . . . beautiful hair . . . cot- tage cheese and ketchup? . . . Lowell to Lincoln in 15 minutes? . . . threeeday weekends . . . When love came frst to the earth, the spring spread roselauois to receive him. CAE Club President of Day Students 4 Student Council 4 Pi. H. Award 3 Proctor 4 Spanish Club 3 Hockey 1, 2, 3 CCaptainD, 4 Softball 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1 C2nd teamb, 2, 3, 4 Volleyball 1 C2nd teamD, 2, 3, 4 Tennis 3 Music Appreciation 4 Clrlonorable lVlentionD It's the spirit which we bring to the fight that decides the issue. It is morale that wins the victory. CAE Club Clee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Student Council 3, 4 CP'residentD Neatness Award l, 2, 3 Dramatics 2, 3 Cl-lonorable lVlentionD, 4 CI-lonorable lVlentiOnD Debate Club 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Photography Club 4 Softball 2, 3 Hockey 2, 3, 4 R. H. Award 3, 4 Spanish Club 3, 4 TONI MAPIIANNE POLLAK 63 Atlantic Avenue Boston, Massachusetts BOSTON UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT COUNCIL The Hying nun . . .Oh, Say! . . . big Mom- ma . . . Italian . . . Steve . . . Bucknell . . . Suburbia . . . Hre hydrants . . . Bostonian day leaves . . . Stinkah . . . Swish, Swish . . . What camera? . . . only seventeen . . . Robes by Dior . . . Friar Tuck . . . Tonette . . . hesitant visiting . . . 'ff M i E A42 l AMELIA lVlABIOBlE BOWE 1418 Rose Virginia Road ii l ENDICOTT UNIOP. COLLEGE ,.-4'f57'Q'ff1lw wffifi if 55621, ,ff , :JN , Q I is , V A ,gli :J J. - ,' 45 5' f :fx 1' 'ff 'fb ' V' ,Q it ru H S , Ly h Q N, A . . Z ,.' ifk J K. 4 Z'- ' ' ' 'fi' ' . P 1 if ' , i ff 4 . . uf, jg-. Beading, Pennsylvania ' f f, . . 3? Crow . . . I've got wrinkles under me . . . Bowdoin . . . bikini . . . witch laugh . . . Pardon me! I'm sick . . . ask me if I care 0 . ' Toni the domknob I it,S reversible We know nothing of tmnorrowg our business is to . . . Mark Eden course did it . . . oh, ies be 3004 and WP? today , freezing, Worsham! , . . Don't be so dumb, Ann, you know it's all in the book . . . KAVA Club Clee Club 3, 4 Octet 3, 4 Splinters Business Board 4 Dramatics 3, 4 Cl-lonorable MentionD Dramatics Club 4 Volleyball 4 Hockey 4 Swimming 3 Spanish C-lub 4 Photography Club 4 To where heyonal these vozces there is peace. CAE Club Hockey 3, 4 Basketball 4 Volleyball 3, 4 Softball 2, 3, 4 Breakfast Club 4 CPresidentD JANE WELLS SELLER 789 Colrain Road Creenheld, Massachusetts VERNON COURT JUNIOR COLLEGE Zeller . . . I'd like to see lane ZELLER right after this please . . . Ceo-if . . . the Cape . . . Creen Camaro . . . Dad's Old Army jacket . . . Pork Chops and mashed potatoes . . . When am I goin' to Wash my hair? . . . Envied hair . . . to where there is a small hotel called Pine Manor! SUSAN KRUEGER SPRING 4 Elm Street Concord, Massachusetts CENTENARY COLLEGE EOR WOMEN It's been a rough road . . . Tufts . . . Scot- tie honey . . . Bermuda-VVhere else? . . . But, I couldn't get the homework . . . Yelps from the back of the room . . . just forget it . . . Ce N'est pas IUSTEUI . . . A terror on the tennis courts . . .I independ- ent . . . friendly to newcomers . . . Cool it! . . . beautiful clothes . . . Lefferrrts . . . I just don't believe it . . . Tuesday's lab day... -x ' H xx wif , I , I ,f '11 X Maxftf ffl-.lm '- 24 , ,, ,f 1ty','--i.1ii2'f,:y1,wi.f,,ig .aatfflf 4- x '- :3v1. s5':?f:: I 1 -It. f 11 v'w2 4 V, 3 If I A fool may talk but a wise man speaks CAE Club Pi. H. Award 3, 4 Music Appreciation 3 Cl-lonorable Mentionl Softball I, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 2 C2nd teamj, 3, 4 Hockey 3, 4 C2nd teaml Volleyball 2 C2nd teamD, 3, 4 Tennis 2, 3, 4 French Club 4 Founder's Day Team 3 Cheerleading l, 2 Badminton Award 4 Tennis Award 4 H . . . all these forms anal faces in a thousand relationships to each other, all helping each other, loving, hating and destroying each other anal he- corne newly horn . . . a passionate, painful example of all that is transitory. KAVA Club Hockey 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Clvlanagerb Volleyball 3 Softball 2, 3, 4 CCaptainD Clee Club 2, 3, 4 ' Octet 3, 4 Art Club 4 Riding Club 4 Photography Club 4 Dramatics Club 4 Splinters Literary Board 4 Literary Prize 3 CUndergradD Senior Luncheon Literary Board 3 Lowell Mental Health Center Worker 4 Founder's Day 3 Stage..lVIanager 4 Katherine VVhitten lVlacCay Literary Prize 4 ELISABETH LOCKRIDGE STRASBURG 6671 MacArthur Boulevard Washington, D. C. THE FRIENDS WORLD COLLEGE Mr. Cregory? . . . Wine and Roses . . . Indian Peet . . . into a vvofrld of the sub- conscious . . . I Ching . . . Psychiatric Ward-10 . . . elephants have right of way! . . . jingling pockets . . . loaded laun- dry bags . . . implements of destruction! . . . night flights . . . later or never . . . Complicated? Only slightly confused . . . two o'clock vibes . . . soft as a baby's bot- tom' '... the object of life . . . even more than that . . . a touch of tenderness in the mind's eye . . . shy but sly-yet the beauty of innocence . . . precious moments . . . and human relations . . . STELLA LYNNE TATIAN 57 Lexington Avenue Bradford, Massachusetts WHEELOCK COLLEGE Really, Miss Perkins! . . . kindergarten teacher . . . chatty . . . full of fun . . . never a silent moment for Tash . . . B.C.- Beware, I'm on my vvav...Will somebody please call me Lynne . . . future barroom pianist . . . a pair of skis, please, and '50 ft. of packed powder . . . Whatever happened to Tiny CTimD? . . . I-Iugh, you can't come in . . . . A .- ,Q . f Vai: ' 4 f si lr ' No one conquers who oloesn't ight. KAVA Club Splinters Literary Board 4 Proctor 4 Current Events 2 Cl-lonorable lVlentionD, 3 CPrizeD Tutoring 4 Senior Luncheon Committee Literary Board 4 Debate Club 3, 4 CVice-Presidentl Hockey 4 Chflanagerl Commencement Play 2, 3, 4 Dramatics 3, 4 CI-Ionorable Mentionj Latin Club 3 Spanish Club 4 Ski Club 2, 3 Field Day Team 3 Tilton Dance Committee 4 Christmas Chorus 2, 3, 4 World Affairs Council 4 is Compassion, the fairest associate of the heart. KAVA Club A Hockey l, 2, 3, 4 Clst teaml French Club 2, 3 CVice-PresidentD, 4 CPresiclentD Volleyball 1, 2, 3, 4 Clst teaml Spanish Club 4 Dramatics 3, 4 IOHANNA BUCKLAND TIGHE 23 Holyroocl Avenue Lowell, Massachusetts LOWELL STATE COLLEGE I.B.T .... Engravings of Peter never to be forgotten . . . U. Mass. baby . . . Oh, sure! . . . VVhippoorwill is where it's at . . . Races to the Pot . . . friendly 1... entering the Derby? Behind the couch, again? . . . frustrating History classes . . . future biolo- gist . . . Tootsie pops for all . . . ' 3- -783 'jr ANNE PARKER WASHBURN Bed Stone Hill Plainville, Connecticut CENTENARY COLLEGE Fon WOMEN TOWEL DAY . . . goggles . . . Cofnfucious Savsu . . food Saver. i i ffDOnft Walk Away He has aclzieveol success who has liveol well Bene . . . A funny thing happened While laughed Often and loved much? I was Working in the hospital . . . l'm not Iohnso-nl . . . the four-thirty run . . . KAVA Club Proctor 3 Student Council 4 Splinters Business Board 4 Dramatics 4 Latin Club 3 Cpresidentl, 4 French Club 4 World Affairs Council CVice-PresidentD 4 Cheerleader 2, 3 CCaptainD, 4 Volleyball 4 Softball 3 Hockey 3, 4 Basketball 3, 4 Founder's Day 3 Photography Club 4 'Victory belongs to the most perserveringf' CAE Club Class Vice-President 1 Music Appreciation 1 CI-lonorable Mentionb, 2, 3 Current Events 2 CHonorable Mentionl Tutoring 3 Tilton Dance Committee 2, 4 Andover Dance Committee 2, 3 Swim Team 3, 4 French Club 4 Father's Day Committee 3, 4 Proctor 2, 3, 4 Christmas Play 4 Clee Club 2, 3, 4 Music Appreciation Award 4 Neatness Award 4 DEBORAH ANN ZINN Rallwood Road Old Creenwich, Connecticut CENTENARY COLLEGE Fon WOMEN Mini bod . . . VVhy can't I find just one good one? . . . Rabbit . . . French lovers are the best . . . I'm going crazy . . . Which Rogers? . . . Homework, that's all we ever get . . . Antigua . . . SENIOR SONG - I969 Undergrads we are singing to you Thinking how sad it will be when we leave To go our way without your being there. Candles, memories always to share Day after day the worlcis made us aware Of our friendship and what it does mean to us. We've wandered through the days And we have had so many talks and laughs between usg But now we must go along and bear the tears That we know should turn to laughs. June third is so very eloseg Let us smile and wipe the tears For Weill meet again someday. Goodbye dear undergrads Goodbye dear undergrads EDDY AND HALL SEPTEMBER 18 21 OCTOBER 5 11 14 16 18 26 27 NOVEMBER I 2 5 15 17 23 24 26 27 DECEMBER 6 7 CALENDAR THE OPENING OE THE SCHOOL YEAR Getting into the groove again. SINGING BEACH Business and pleasure do mix. EXETER DANCE Roll call never sounded better. SENIORS TO .SEE HELEN HAYES IN The Showoff ANDOVER CELEBRITY SERIES - Tom Paxton SENIOR PICTURES Images of untouchedC?D innocence. HISTORICAL TRIPS A fascinating visit with our heritage. QUEENS GUARDS - BOSTON GARDEN Valuable lessons for the riding club PSAT'S A stinging realization that the road to college ain't tha SENIORS - CHARLES PLAYHOUSE Odets' Awake and Sing INITIATION Darwinian Philosophy - Survival of the fittest??? SENIOR SISTER CEREMONY And one by one the room became lighted with smiles. t easy. SECOND TEAM HOCKEY - CAE PARENTIS DAY FIRST TEAM HOCKEY - CAE BOSTON SYMPHONY ERENCH CLUB DINNER C'etait tres bon, yum, yum. PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT AT ABBOT Staring in awe at the Works of Dorothea Lang. FALL PLAYS ART GALLERY TRIP SENIORS - CHARLES PLAYHOUSE THE BACCHAE Happiness is going to see a play after you've read the book. lVIodern version of Dionysus Legend. STUDENT-FACULTY VOLLEYBALL GAME One way to breach the generation gap. THANKSGIVING VACATION Silent prayers of thanks to the Pilgrims. ANDOVER CELEBRITY SERIES SATS EOR SENIORS Ugh! ANDOVER CONCERT AND DANCE A welcome relief after a long Clay - Medley of Windy, Second-Hand Rose, A Man and a VVoman . . . 10 13 14 17 18 JANUA RY 7 15 17 18 20-24 27-30 30 FEBRUARY 7 14 15 21 22 23 28 MARCH 1 8 13 14 CALENDAR BOSTON SYMPHONY ERESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES Our Town - PRODUCED BY ARLINGTON FRIENDS OE THE DRAMA. SENIORS - LOEB DRAMA CENTER, HARVARD UNIVERSITY C1OLDSMITH'S She Stoops to Conquer Comedy and Satire a-plenty CHRISTMAS BANQUET CHRISTMAS PLAY - A Fabulous Tale With a sober thought to start off the new year. CHRISTMAS VACATION Everyone blinded by facial radiance RETURN PROM VACATION The show must go on . . . SECOND TEAM VOLLEYBALL - CAE FIRST TEAM VOLLEYBALL - CAE ANDOVER DANCE - SOPHOMORES AND IUNIORS Weird manifestations of the mind REVIEW WEEK EXAMS Lots of knowledge, a little know-how and a teeny bit o' bulll LONG WEEKEND At last!! SENIORS-Rozencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead An introduction to Hamlet ANDOVER CELEBRITY SERIES CLEE CLUB AT LAVVRENCE ACADEMY Expression through song SKI CLUB DINNER An occasion to celebrate the skiers delight, a Winter with snow plus, plus, plus . . . CLEE CLUB AND TILTON SCHOOL A song will outlive all sermons in the memory. ICE CAPADES Tintinnabulating on the ice JUNIOR DINNER IUNIORS - SAT'S DANCE AT ST. PAUL'S Strain the brain in the afternoon, bend the mind at night. BAKER'S DOZEN AND BROOKS SCHOOL DANCE HERE Yale and Brooks, not bad for one night. SPRINC PLAYS SPRINC VACATION AWakel The morning shines, and the fresh field calls us . . APRIL I 8 9 16 19 29 MAY 3 7 8 9 16-19 20 23 19-22 26-29 30 31 JUNE 1 2 3 CALENDAR RETURN FROM SPRING VACATION Spring fever running rarnpart. SECOND TEAM BASKETBALL - KAVA FIRST TEAM BASKETBALL - KAVA GREAT BOOKS DISCUSSION WITH EIGHT R.H. SENIORS AND EIGHT BROOKS SENIORS Co-educational thinking on Camus, The Stranger. FATHER'S DAY Like father, like daughter. SCIENCE MUSEUM TRIP IUNIORS - ACTS FOUNDERIS DAY A long awaited time to see old friends. TEA FOR SPLINTERS STAFF AT MRS. WORSHAM'S The social event of the year. BOSTON POPS - SENIORS AMERICAN HISTORY CLASS TO SUPERIOR COURT SPRING DANCE Midnight shout and revelry tipsy dance and jollityf' NORTH SHORE MUSIC TENT - The Taming of the Shrew Every man, as the saying is, can tame a Shrew but he that hath her. SHOWING OF SENIOR PROIECT - SLIDETAPE OF G0 Tell It O11 The flfoizntain by James Baldwin. SOFTBALL GAME - SWIMMING MEET - REVIEW WEEK The calm before the storm. EXAMS The Storm!!! SPELLING BEE SENIOR SISTER NIGHT SENIORS AT MISS RAMSAY'S HOUSE SINGING BEACH YVhere, oh where are the grand ole seniors? BACCALAUREATE SERMON A word to the wise is sufficient. MUSICALE SENIOR LUNCHEON CLASS DAY EXERCISES COMMENCEMENT PLAY - Mrs. McThing by MARY CHASE RECEPTION FOR SENIOR CLASS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES if I have such an expressive face. f ala... D0n't hit a inan when he's down, Miss Perkins! V111 lovable PROPHECY Twenty-five years have passed incredibly fast and the class of '69 has now reunited in a beautiful old castle tucked away in ltaly where Ian Laundon is living with her husband and eight charming bambinos. Ian still hasn't mastered the Italian lauguage but is doing a fantastic job running the castle in the medieval tradition. The class has been transported to ltaly by our famous socialite party girl, Cindy Brox, in an enormous chartered blimp. She is in charge of greeting all her former classmates along with Betty Hall. They are both busy serving Cindy's renowned brownies and chocolate milk. Betty certainly has followed through with her perfect services back homeg she is the new enthusiastic director of studies for Moody School and is an avid symphony goer. Along with contributing her APPLE-PCLISHED food and decora- tions to all good causes, she plans to open her own elegant fashion shop within the next year. With what little free time she finds, she is found l-IOPPINC down to Key Biscayne. It is a grape stomping party and everyone is found enjoying herself immensely in the great tub of grapes. Fortunately Linda Iuszczak, who is now one of the vvorld's leading sandal importers has shown up, having spent days traipsing across the desert on her camel, with sandals for everyone's tired feet. Her delay was due to her picking up scattered rubber bits from the last vvar. We notice a splash from the moat and see Marion Eddy trying to swim back to lVlartha's Vineyard having realized she forgot her knitting needles. Meanwhile we are browsing through her latest publica- tion of Notes of a Native V ineyardite that has now hit the height of the Best Seller List. The reunion is a most festive occasion and nearly everyone here is in fine health except for Amelia Rowe who has recently had a knee operation and is depressed because she can't get in and stamp on the grapes with her crutches. Amelia, freezing as usual, is wrapped in a blanket even though she has on her thermal under- wear. She has finally achieved her Ph.D. in Chemistry and is at Bowdoin teaching by the logical theory that everything is all in the book. Toni Pollak is standing by having returned from Boston Society and heading the Convent of the SDS. She has made an effective Mother Superior in spreading the good word and still saving people fig if ' Q. ' , y, ,. I i i if5..q 'f 4' ,.fg3gR4fi i .xl I 5- if ,,,.,... ' ...A--f I, zrgixgirx glar H We ..' 'f. felt: -4-. ,, 1 A ' '-f..1-1 I C'--sr Tlfzat's the beginning of the end. 'A Youd never know I'1n a inohsterl Kick the habit! PROPHECY from raids. She and Steve have bought out the Commodore Ballroom, since they have had so much invested in it through the years. It is now a thriving success. Wendy Martin got an old romance, Dicky, KINC OF THE SWING, to rev her up in his jacked up GTO via Vermont to the party, although she overslept, she made connections to the blimp successfully. She and Dennis have made a fortune with their new DENNY-CRIP products. Tatian was chosen to speak at this high occasion and had proven herself a fine character in having enlarged her vocabulary to an UNBELIEVABLE capacity. She will also provide music - a drum duet with her faithful lover, I-lugh. Tatian has taken over the advertising for Ernie Boch selling CREAM PUFFS. Laljoley has taken off from Bergdorf's on a fund raising tour as honorary chairman of the American Cancer Society. Robin is still single as she hasn't yet decided between Kim and Eddie. Jody Tighe has taken charge of Whippoorwill and if she ever stops HORSING AROUND, she may BREAK IN her green husband, Peter, to her overpopulated chicken farm. Estela Alvarez sends greetings with flowers and she regrets missing the occasion. Last word from Stella concerned her Up With Communism march in the Dominican Republic, lest democracy move in while she is away. She is vice-director of the Poster Parent Program and has attached an envelope to the Howers asking for fat contributions . . . to help support her cause. Totally void of U. S. MALE, Debbie Zinn has acquired a fluency in the French tongue, and is en- joying Le Paris Date-a-Mate Computer Program. It seems to have slipped out that Debbie is working as a top-notch underground spy for the SECRET police and is extremely advantageous to the Spy World. Via TWA, Ellington arrives late with the newest blond hair coloring. Apparently she had trouble figuring how to get off the L.A. freeway . . . A pick-up truck had to push her to the airport. Seller is planning a three o'clock walk to the store for old times sake . . . with Brown. Culley Queen lane now has acquired a PERMANENT tent to protect her from cold winter days. Debi Pletscher has become chief director of Carols Muscle Building Course in Saginaw, and runs a thrift shop clearing house for lost and found articles in her spare time. Her many years at Westminster seem to have contributed to her development, and she is n-ow giving concerts at the Newport Folk Festival. Lefferts has apparently decided that athletics was not her true vocation because she is here to model Christian Dior's latest creation. She is now running a mountain camp in Appalachia, she has invited us all' to attend her health spa to rehabilitate our sagging corpses. Marilyn Keast felt as pressured into this burdensome European voyage as she did the last. TIP-toeing through the tulips by way of Covernment Center Cwhere her father still worksl, she was married as planned in Trinity Church and had her little long-haired Tippies baptized there. She plans to give free tours of Boston. Jeff Poster bops out of the tub of grapes to show everyone her gold medal for her book Synchronized Bubblegum Chewing for Advanced Chewersf' Now that she has bought out Double Bubble and Swell, she has become a champion. K Ann Yodel Hemingway is here having just won a prize for her unique rock collection in the ghettos. She is now composing her second symphony under the pen name of Sophia Peruzzi and she has brought along pictures of her and Augie Perrelli playing stepball. She has also brought along her band with Cinger Baker and Bru, to contribute to the entertainment. Plimpton is here with Nick. She is running a farm in Vermont with a picturesque mountain in the back. Iody Tighe and Niki had a double wedding as planned. Sue Johnson is a Miami socialite and is often seen escorted by Rudi Ceinrich. She owns a branch of Pappagallo and offers a discount to those of us who would like to stock up on shoes. Or was that Washburn? Anne Washburn has been swimming in the tubs with her three inch goggles on, but occasionally surfaces to remind those residents of the second floor MacCay freakhouse that it's towel day. She has finally found a worthwhile occasion to wear her glamorous white heels since graduation twenty-five years ago. PROPHECY Betsy Nauss is here with full confidence having come directly from her one man art show. She seems to have had trouble making connections with the blimp for her motor bike in Bermuda had broken down and she had lost the key. Iuszczak is trying to persuade Betsy to join the Barnum and Bailey production to exhibit her talents of hand-walking. Of course, Spring has flashed in from the HEAD set of Concord with frolicking noises that attract wide attention, which reminds Foster to tell late arriver Ellington of the dramatic episode that occurred on the blimp. Spring was restless and stomped up to the pilot to complain about the Bye, Bye Birdiel' movie. At her return, having accomplished nothing, she found that Wendy had taken her window seat. In a rage of jealousy she grabbed Wendy's new fraternity pin, that Wendy just happened to be showing off, and was so fumed with HOT AIR that she rose to the top of the blimp, where she remained suspended and sulking for the remainder of the trip. We were all in a tizzy when we noticed that Spring had begun to jab holes in the blimp with her stolen pin and that we were slowly descending into the Mediterranean. But alas, relief was quick to come when Marion whipped out some adhesive tape from her First Aid Kit. Pam Bell ran to the rescue next and proceeded to scale the side of the blimp in her SPACED snow boots to patch the holes Spring was still poking, not realizing that she was multiplying the troubles. After taking the pin, Pam remained afloat to stand guard over Spring to prevent further attacks. Karen Anderson's prediction that we would arrive in TlPSY-top shape, safe and sound on the castle roof was quite accurate, despite our frantic doubts because of the incredible changing altitudes. Karen is now working in research for the Muhlenburg Museum. She is here today keeping a record of the varying colossal events of the day. These are to be added to the RH Archives. Dania Doremus has now been voted No. 1 citizen of her class for her complete knowledge of the PROBLEMS of Democracy. Miss Perkins would be so pleased if she knew. Dania decided that school in England was not her BAC and now has joined the circus as a lion tamer. As a side line, she opened a boarding house and has an extremely progressive vegetable garden. She tells everybody to come down and see her sometime. Truda Bloom is travelling from Boston Where she is madly directing at the Charles Playhouse. She grew panicky in fear that the blimp would not land safely and made a dramatic exit from it, landing her Bloom Photo Research Parachute in a clump of treetops where she is still stranded. Her playful class- mates are using her as their grape-throwing target. She is, however, assured of rescue of one sort or another. A telegram to Seller from Brown has just arrived, sending regrets about their walk to the store . . . but, Brown can't make it back from her post as Spanish interpreter for Castro in Cuba as a result of an- other hijacked Hight caused this time by a tobacco plantation owner. Holihan is a ski bum out West. She sent a letter by way of specially trained carrier pigeon from her tree house at the top of Aspen, informing us that we would have to do without her this round. We didn't REALLY expect her since it's Monday. She tells us that a few years ago she achieved her goal as lead role in a P. A. production. Unsuspected Alida Mcllvain is flouncing around the castle today, accompanied by Cinnifer Il, dis- guised as her real self. She, Pam Bell, and Lisa Strasburg are creating a seance in the thnone room. Alida has long since completed her Charles Schultz philosophy course and has taken over Cranny's COODIE Shoppe along the MAIN line, while on the SIDE line, she is a bovine milkmaid at Montgomery Farm. Lisa's arrival was by way of Emily, her elephant. She sneaked over the horizon and over the draw- bridge with some of her CORE workers as usual bringing up the rear. She is now head of all Peace Corps affairs in tropical Africa. Some of the more festive members are urging Lisa and Truda to take candid shots of this memorable reunion. Truda, however, is still a bit bruised from her morning in the trees. Pam, after finding her year at Katie Cibbs unharmonious to her intellectual and artistic talents, has become a Croupie, brazening the wilds in her orange Harry hearse. An echoed call is heard from the dungeon where we are informed the wine cellar is located . . . and dust settles as the last of the Class of '69 disappears down the winding staircase . . . PAM BELL, LISA STRASBERG, AND THE STAFF ' LI ' ,,,, Q13 vvlz' 15 1 ' . M 'Z' A '-f t , Q' Yfw Q 1 l :Hn x '+x'MW'A M A, Q. Y 'nf 'V Q X : ., . E ' SNAMA ' 'M -., -f' in -fx 15 K ,fr .M- N-I ,. ,.4. X Q I 2' . dw? , , I , ,, .fy 4 Kill MMM 524915 ., 4 g -' 2 E , ',,, Estela Alvarez Karen Analerson Pam Bell Trucla Bloom 'X J 1 3 1 .A xx , Sue Brown Cindy Brox Dania Dorenms Marion Eddy My M W m y My V! 1--1 Q Q X X E Ji Q Q , M . A ff M Suzy Ellington jeff Foster Betty Hall ff of 35 MM! 'Q., , Holly Holilfzan Sue johnson Linala juszczak Marilyn Keast Robin LaFoZey Alicia Mcllvain i Toni Pollak Y' xwvfsil QE: :,x:::.V ,Q 3, . 11,11 Y , ix if 2 Jl'i'G,, 1' 'Y Ian Laundon Betsy N auss ek Q , ,,. I 5,5 h , , V - -:K 1 L , ,ff 1 -4 ' wp' I, war kygfii ., 4 Q, if ' A71 .u - 'f .Y-.ww-w .:--.W V 1 ' . ., . ' H+- -' ,, S - ' Amelia Rowe , ,, Mg., ,V , 'Y ' C '.'l, ,N 4, M . -4 ,.4 ,wf,...Js if ed' '15, 5 ?3gx 'Q' skciig raging, A, ,, N, JW,-1 X H V N235 5. 1 1--M Xrgf, fx 4,1 ,I A ' 4' N? Q V --af sn, Am, Tina Lefferts wan Debi Pletscher X115 ,4 Q f in 5 5 I Q A 1 ' , . , Q, its s , Mai- , , 12, V . g , as 3 eww in V' A , ' . In , U N64 3 ,,,,...wh H 5 S - 'SM 4,,.,,.-- ' 1 Maman V- -,v - vw. ,: -- -eww! X J v jane Seller wi' 1 .K-,.-, -q,,' .fe 4' ,glsiq -,. It N. I Q ' I ' f ' if giftb la. vu A nr- 5 l '. 1- rf. 4, . ffnm, MF 'R s .. rf.. f-,- 1 - S '+m'f1'2N . if J-V . J, r V .1 '11, Ufendy Martin Niki Plimpton Susie Spring X K , L, ' .. K - kv. ,,.,w vm An? Lise Strasburg Lynne Tatian jodi Tighe Anne Nfaslzbiariz Debbie Zinn CLASS WILL WE LEAVE: MISS RAMSAY a suitably scented mailman. MISS ALEXANDER a computer to solve Devra Kaufman's problems. MI.SS BAMEORD peeling up to the altar to the tune of Run-Around Sue. MISS BOWES physiologically speaking. MRS. BREWER the directorship of speech therapy at R.H. MRS. CRGSBIE stripping her gears on the way to the health club. MISS DAY all of the following equipment for her favorite pastime: a peri- scope with a left-right directional bar and automatic demerit calculator, a pair of P.I3.'s, and a whistle. MRS. I-IOEFER a dumb waiter for Bruno. MRS. A. JONES an exhaust fan. MRS. E. IONES the Nobel Prize for the newsiest newsletter. MISS LEBUTT a player piano that plays fifteen different movements of her favorite tune, C-I-IOPSTICKS. MRS. LATOUR as newly elected head of the C.I.A. MRS. MALONE a secret p assa geway to her classroom. MRS. MILLER a giant cookie jar to keep filled for RI-I occasions. MISS PAYNE uptight! MISS PERKINS a Hot-line to Washington. MRS. PERLOFF with a new lease on life. MISS PHELPS in a gold studded toga. MRS. PHINNEY supposedly alone in the oflice to eat her lunch. MISS PULLING wondering if it is the limit! MRS. SARGENT 6,283 bottles that have been setting in since Sept. MRS. SADOWSKI a new date-a-mate. MRS. STAT EN a Harley-Davidson for emergency runs to the railroad station. MRS. WORSHAM with the SPRING of '69! BILL a combination leather recliner and massage machine to be used Tuesday night, June 3rd, ROGER a Go-Cart with blades, so he can cut the grass in fourth gear. CLASS WILL NAWAKEN WORLD! we leave ESTELA ALVAREZ having a sinking spell on the doorstep of the Kremlin-en Espanol! KAREN ANDERSON leaves the Anderson-Iuszczak Papers to the next happy Chemistry couple. PAM BELL leaves the walls of MacCay still vibrating with midnight hysteria. TRUDA BLOOM leaves her room to the Photography Club and her long, straight black hair to the Dramatics Club Wig Box. SUE BROWN leaves in a puff of smoke. CINDY BROX leaves on her chocolate cow for the party at Iack's. DEE DOREMUS leaves dramatically. MARION EDDY leaves her spike heels to Margy Mink. SUZY ELLINCTON leaves still wondering where L.A. is. JEFF FOSTER leaves her escape routes to PAM TIKELLIS. BETTY HALL leaves her super-charged filing system to the front office. ANN HEMINCVVAY leaves for the Summertime Step-ball Championships in the Chettoes of New Haven. HOLLY HOLIHAN leaves on Wednesday since Tuesday is her day OEF! SUE IOHNSON leaves her medical record to BetteAnn Mack. LINDA IUSZCZAK leaves gaily singing her Arabian drinking songs off tune . . . but she learned them that way. MARILYN KEAST leaves at a gallop to organize LIFE drawing classes at the cemetery. ROBIN LAFOLEY leaves her impossible dream of becoming a day student to the Junior Class. JAN LAUNDON leaves with a code book in hand entitled, How to Respond to Italian Propositionsf' TINA LEEEERTS leaves in search of a regulation size gym. ALIDA MCILVAIN leaves for the first time on schedule. WENDY MARTIN leaves her vast collection of fraternity pins to LISA CATHERINE. BETSY NAUSS leaves her sunny smile to some gloomy cat. DEBI PLETSCHER leaves a complete and unabridged volume of complaints to ELLEN PECK. NIKI PLIMPTON leaves on the first Hight to Vermont after her last drag race with Spring. TONI POLLAK leaves in her friar's robe for the BIC U. chapel to solve more new problems. AMELIA ROWE leaves those Bowdoin Beasts for those Tufts Tigers. JANE SELLER leaves the Syrian bread bakery of greater Lowell sold out! SUSIE SPRINC happily leaves MRS. WORSHAM. LISA STRASBURC leaves her suitcase rack for other things. LYNNE TATIAN leaves HUGH VVORSHAM a key to the dormitory so he can cease clawing at the screen. IODY TICHE leaves at a stiff canter for U-Mass. ANN WVASHBURN leaves, thank heavens, on Towel Day!! DEBBIE ZINN leaves, ROCER, over and out!! LYNNE TATIAN AND THE STAFF Une more step and I'll shoot Mary lane brought us together. K Oh, Say! g Now just a cotton pickin' Here, as usual lies the mouse that roared. T Hello, Young Lovers! The Three Stages of Taping Go Tell It On The Mountain Hysteria Pain Madness 'l'W 7' L I-lerloie, Pleeze, Pleeze, come down from there! Oh Herbie, you fracture me . . . But I only said it's Towel day! Bosom Buddies Now it's my turn to look out the window ff' A , X s I She think's she's a dear little white rose I f-4 K' r L-, I. 5 . ,s o.i'x nr Hot Seat! if 1 : c l ll i 1 1 ' M. e ,, at Alidafs my BEST friend. I told my mother my health would he impaired . . . The love of the young for the young, that is the beginning of life. But the love of the olcl for the olol, that is the begin- ning of-of things longer. -1. K. JEROME 1 I P ' , 5.- , 1 .1 -,.,. . ,, - -, . ..,. 5.-V 1 ,. s A E ffl' n 14,12 A' X a 1 ll, . A Ni? . iizgzi, ,I QQ Z 'W 75 1 f 3Em5f ff ik QYQET? A ' f?Tff' 3230 fir' lf X 'ff CgZ?mZ QQ .1 X fu,Q!f,f 1 'f 1 'f gi' ,- 4 .f My V, if I 5 I A' . fa .r.' 7'3z1iE.f1, ff? ., W l, ' lg! if! f ,f ,fig Q .1 f' ' , .'-.' jg f ' 2 ' 255555555 ' ' 'ff 1 'fi mP'Wf, ' Aly ,fe 1 gf q l gm W4VfffkMZ 4 i::::!! Ein! , D ff ' if .X4 1 , ,tiff 1 X Q 7 If A. 4 f f -v' , 5 SE-:-111:-1-Q' --Q .-f. .E lui: IL il!! 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'A , , I , V , JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Martha Pihl Vice-President Pamela Tikellis FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS President Susan Whitney' Vice-President Deborah Evans SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS President Nancy Ingraham Vice-President Susan Anton A U7 -1-1 v-4 E P f. k r. OJ 3 on Q ob er, Sweet, Slimlnon, Lain LE o cn A LD 'B .2 Z 1-T cu CI u-4 Hoep as, n, Thom CI CU O U 2 AZ vi I-4 E Q ri E2 'cs .E v-I Ad.. U vu-1 P-1 1-1 CU E on .44 U on C1-4 S 1-5 Q CCI 'M u vs m G.. O +4 E' .f: CD H. cu O :If fi J-I C eu TU 473' cv I-I or' cv Q 'F'1 5 xy V7 -1-u 1-1 r-4 GJ 5. I-' A GJ c: CU TU G GJ I-4 D-4 XJ LE O-4 cn. .2 3 O s: M J :K CU 1-4 .x s: Ex LD Fx. .E E G. cu E MacMar1nis, Kauf 'cf r: .2 0.224 Q- O U -Zi S O a- LL SOPHOMORE CLASS , B1sset. ui an E cd E ' I-I CG.- .-D GJ UD Lormg, , Catherine, C5 .E CI 1-4 GJ -G U E UD VJ D cc nd VJ E .se Sb .E ws Q5 S M cn. Q9 .c on :s I Gray, airn, Torrey, Potter, .-D -H cs U-4 PM. S' cn.. C1 L2 F-4 cu D-4 fix 4-3 Cf' cu TU 22' cu 5-4 Dr' cn -9. P XJ 1: 2 s: QC Chermn B., van, 'I-1 :1 :J cn H. CD r-1 CD N s: E ob on GJ DQ fx 4-3 C2 cu TU 471' cv 1-4 Q-4 v am .E .2 CQ 8 Ingrah -E 'S 2 Ei cn FRESHMAN CLASS fi JJ C'- on T9 U7 cu F-4 D-4 Q Ch Vw an C -'Z 'E H. cu -Cs Q 4-1 ru P'4 U-4 5 5-3 C: 0.2 'U ' I-1 cn CD Pl Dr' ru o 5 Q cn C-' cn 5 I-Ill Fx. o cu M hltney A., Church, W t: Fron ui avi , D ens, Seward k: Rowley, Stev Bac Let me eat tn peace, or else . . . W Of Course 11111 Chic . . . Next stop - fourth floor Tea for two Anytime, anywhere, anyhow . . . Today - an actress, at Yesterday - a ballerina, If I only had three roommates Today is Sweet Charity day Tomorrow . . like these . . . I W -af-an .Y 'Q . tu jj N . Q I ck - V in 'fb '53 2-- qgx avg.: - na W' L Say that again . Coming back in is the REAL test! QM l Co-ed next year?! Of course it isn't catching . . . in Three blind mice b Spring is bustin' out all over Q, ll WP., . ,gg Fin Bee-00-tiful. Serenity un told 'YW 3 V' ll Well, Veruscka made it The short period of life is long enough for living well and honouralaly. -Clcnno I W4 513' gi, A . Z1 ' df'-Z ,f 'wha A r A Qf A ' 'iv X , Y' T' , ' ! D Y, A Q ff .Vasa 'ge' ffm ' 3 1, ' ., ., , 'en Uv Va! -5 ,K 2422 f '-iii? ' 1 X ., ,v Q.: - E- a 'f -f 2 xr QT A: 4213, 4914, 53.-if sg' ' , ' , if .Q ,gzayfg A -5 4 sg nay j 4 gjj- IA. - ' '93 N 041 93 'awe' 22 Fu- 5 . f ' Y . Law jg, I: J , I Y E , f X 'MN + WND X X ww . X GV V WED X .Y fh. H . I .A . V 1 ,. f 1- 1 . 1 I' , f ' , f mf 1,1 ff f ' ff X - IN.. 1 f lwulv rffi W N ,ll ' + ,Q N Jllvf , Q qs , . llfhlulmlull 'I ..ef,- 1 .1 J , V ,f X U ?- , li K 5 f4f X J X , . l H1 A : 5 . ' fi-f' lv 2 f 0 Q f Y X- ' - 4 f I ? 'N .1 Sl ' 1 GOVERNMENT T Q f is , , I , , STUDENT CouNc1L Seated: Miss Ramsay, Pollak CPresidentD, Thomas. Standing: Eddy, Washbum, Wick, Plimpton. STUDENT Pnocrons Seated: Miss Ramsay, Pollak CPresidentD, MacMannis Standing: Mink, Tatian, Knowles, Fairbairn, Torrey, Tikellis, Laing, Sohier, Johnson, Ingraham, Pihl, Mcllvain. Absent: Rowe, Zinn. PUBLICATIONS X-a SPLHVTERS Front: Iuszczak, Hall, Nauss CArt EditorD, Mcllvain CEditor-in- Chiefl Anderson CBusiness Managerl, Doremus. Second Row: Washburn, Strasburg, Alvarez, Bloom, Keast, Johnson Rear: Rowe, Brox, Tafian, Eddy. THE COLUMNS Front: Shipton, McCartin, .Sweet CEditorD, Anton. Second Row: Young, Saba. A MUSIC Q 1 E GLEE CLUB Front: Mink, Shipton, Stewart, Hemingway, McCartin, Knowles, Pihl CVice- PresidentD, Miss LeButt, Pletscher CPresidentD, Kaufman, Kacher, Hoar, Zinn, Eddy Second Row: Hall, Foster, Sweet, Torrey, Martin, Perkins, Whitney S., Catharine Peck, Slimmon, Gilbert, Winzeler, Anton, Tatian, Sullivan B. Third Row: Wick, Rowe, Keast, Ingraham, Pollak, Williams, Chernin, B., Sohier, Keck, Evans, Whitney A., Lefferts, Johnson, Dewey, Quinn, Curry, Potter. 7 7 THE GLEE CLUB - 1968-69 The Clee Club of Rogers Hall has always been one of the most active clubs in our school. It is the largest voluntary club and it offers both social and cultural advantages. The Clee Club for the 1968f69 season had a membership of some forty-five girls, who sang both pop tunes and classical music. The club has prospered under the direction of Miss Dorothy A. LeButt. Our first concert and engagement of the year was held for the entire school in the traditional manner with the Phillips Academy Band of Andover, under the direction of Mr. William Clift. The band itself gave a magnificent performance, but the highlight of the evening was, and has always been, a medley of tunes sung by the combined clubs. This year we sang three recent compositions, including Second Hand Rose, from the production Funny Girl, A Man and A Woman, from a movie of the same name, and VVindy, by a popular rock group, The Association. A dance followed the concert and music was pro- vided by a rhythm and blues band from Andover. Cur next concert was held some two months later with the Lawrence Academy Clee Club, at Law- rence. Following our short bus ride to Croton, we were escorted to the lounge where we met our dates. Fol- lowing our nervous introductions we filed into the auditorium for our concert rehearsal under the direction of Mr. Joseph Shepherd. The highlight of the performance was the joint number, The Road Not Taken, which is a poem by Robert Frost adapted for music by Randall Thompson. Our rehearsal of the number, Helen of Troy, added a humorous note. The light excerpt from the operetta featured soloists Amelia RICE Calias RoweD and her partner Bill Rice. Also featured was the performance of the R. H. Octet, better known as the R. H. Negatives. They received undivided attention for their interpretation of an old favor- ite, Sentimental Journey CBa, Ba, Ba BumlD f fi 11 Q?-if-5? MUSIC A dHI1CC followed the COr1CCTt and dinner With 21 Lawrence Academy rock group as entertainment for dancing or whatever they Call it! The sounds struck a sweet note with the girls and their dates, but sent the faculty members into a soundproof room! Exactly a week later the R. H. Clee Club were hostesses to the Tilton School Clee Club from Tilton, New Hff1IDPShiIC'- The gym WHS decorated With COlOIed strobe lights and resembled the local discotheque. We were all pleasantly entertained by The R. H. Negatives and The Tiltonaires, who fervently sang us some traditional Bowdoin College drinking songs. Their conductor was Mr. john MacMoran, who had come to R. H. for the first time and truly enjoyed himself, as we all did. The alumnae of R. H. have always been entertained by the Clee Club on Founders Day, Elizabeth Rogers' birthday, and this year was no exception. We sang nothing extravagant, but we offered a friendly welcome to the alumnae with Consider Yourself, from the Broadway production and Academy Award- winning movie, Oliver. R. H. NEGATWES Kneeling: Mink, Hemingway, Strasburg, Mcllvain. Standing: Pletscher, Rowe, Eddy Cleaderl Iohnson, Wick. The Negatives performed very well this year under the able leadership of Marion Eddy. The group has become a great asset at school dances and other af- fairs, especially with the added attraction of Amelia Rowe and her guitar. The high- light of the year was the appearance of their very fine stereo recording done at the Fassett Studio in Boston and sold to stu- dents and friends. FRENCH CLUB First Row: Kaufman, Foster, Shipton, Iuszezak. Second Row fseateoll: Mrs. Hoffer, I-lolihan, Washburn, Plimpton, Pletscher. Third Row: Wick CVice-Presidentl Tighe, CPresidentD, Drury, Mellick, Spring Perkins, Laing. Fourth Row: Nauss, Zinn, Sohier, Vallis, Brox, Anderson, Bloom, Laundon. SPANISH CLUB Back Row: Creen, Doremus, Thomas, Leilerts, Copeland, Tik- ellis, Tatian, Pollak, Rowe, Knowles. a e Front Row: Dewey, Alvarez CPresidentD, Keast, Ellington, CVice- Presidentl Plimpton, Pihl. 7 . . . ,. ,wb . E, 13, 1 , I' if , ...N . . Qu , 1 Q , V. gl HJ V, We i '53Iv:,5 , 'I .. l V rw , .43 L , .H U , I , , ' ' ' in ' ' ' wg 1 . 3 L' 1 , 41 1 t f 1 I I 1 1 3 m v . ' if LATIN CLUB Front: Laing, Ingraham CVice-PresiclentD, Anton CPresiclen1:D, Saba, Shipton. Standing: Tikellis, Potter, Thomas, Pletscher, Washburn, Knowles, VVhitney S. Not present: Miss Phelps, CAdvisorD. DEBATE CLUB Kneeling: Hall, Tikellis CPresiClentD, Saba. Standing: Pollak, Tatian CVice-Presidentl Pletscher, Keast. Not Present: Whitney A., Kaufman. , ,LM A SKI CLUB Kneeling: lVlaclVlannis, Laing, Loring, Dewey, Waterman, Bisset, Mcllvain, Russell Blain. Standing: Shipton, Mellick, Cray, Slimmon, Chernin B., Knowles CVice-Preside-ntD Nauss CPresidentD, Thomas, Washburn, Johnson, Davis, Chemin C. fm Swag nga . it g ig 1 Ill RIDING CLUB Left to Right: Shipton, Hoar, Ternplet, Sweet, Vallis, Chernin, Pletscher, Perkins, Tighe, Laundon CCoPresidentD, Keast CCoPresidentD, Potter. 1 . - l I '5 , . :rj J s l ff . ' v. f' ' .1 Q r,1 T o f 3 A - ll- .Z ' . ' 'V 1 X '51 if -NIU' f . , Nl l ' x ' ' 1 I ,. 1 rx N' 1 , fl, L? , Q- E r Tv? f ff. g , X xg nv X , 'll D, '13, J V ,, V N xy N' ' 'fxgxg 5 . . I, qzfl a ,F -- . 'fp f it W ,U r 'fy' , , df' , fl ,-I 1 I ,wiv V h xl -1' A, ' EI, V ., I- 4 . , Vg 1 N '- - ' xr , -- ., L fi L. f ', .J ,-.uf - f 1 ll.. 2- 7 'V f X 'K -ji? F ' '11?f 4... ' -mx so X of K fx A , ' 5 - W 4- .f Y ' . w. . , . V V , 1 . V ,E Q K .J A f. J ., -V 'I W -:w..' 15 I ' Q Wk: W 3 ,f ' N 'MJ t L .Q-'L' 4' x x - 'J-5 ' ' f n -fiiw 5 SQ ' ' 5 w, A -, I h -.ax ' ' 5 ' 'ii ff ' '- I-.' '5'fX1.l f f - ' 1 ' f- w ' 1 f wif? K E P u f, A f . .4 , xc , 1 . f I ,W X L IM S '- -. 'R ' .7 r S. f' ! V-ff ix VJ, V4 .A , u , Q, ...sm :uf , N ,fu fy , 1 Aff, if JA' A iq, X 4 -. 14 . :Ai 2: 45 1? It l . Q-u.A':1..aV' 5 , X: I . K 0' . V .J 1' k,-ht . Y I 32, 7 ,: 5-K1 .y!. 1,1 ,., .2 A .V . 1 .W :Ba , C, 2 L, S- K. .fa 4, 1, , .gf is ,rg 5, ,b,',5-,W, x l 5 0 a l 41 S ,4 1' 5 PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB Front Row: Hemingway, Sullivan B., Keast, Mcllvain, Strasburg. Second Row: Washburn, Iohnson CPresiclentD, Alvarez, I-loar, Bloom CVice- Presidentl Juszczak. Standing: Rowe, Hall, Lefferts, Pollak, Laundon, Torrey, Gray, Thomas, Dewey. ,ig 1 - 7'?fS- l1'v . f5rgWfltfiQeR?5 Q6 ART CLUB Standing: Mrs. Perloff CAclvisorD, Laundon, Keast CPresiclentD, Doremus, Perkins. Fairbairn, Evans, Seward. Kneeling: Hughes, Guynkraut, Nauss, Mcllvain, Church. BREAKFAST CLUB Left to Right: Seller CPresidentD, Foster CVice-PresidentD, Nauss, Pollak, Hall Iohnson, Keast, Hemingway. Nothing ever succeeds which exhuherant spirits have not helped to produce . . . -N11-3TzcHE . ff .I ., 7 X-.L .11 1 1,1 I , 3. , G .-,I 'L A .jx . '11f .k 11 .v . A ,W nf 12 f J X 4. A ' fi X. 3 , 5 A 4 .9 5 -9- 1 .X ..Z,,,u S bmi, -in V K f al 14- I. .14 5 1 7 1 . !- -f Qi Ziptiz, ' xii if ' g- X S , X- SR T ' Ei X , x L , X X x F, - 4, .f f, X ' I 5 1 9 P --4 l' f ef? WW Q r 4 5' 5? AWII. 70 :Q f X 'w4'fm. ,v . . , V X 'Jai MQW! WW - Q ,ang 1' wFf3 l3'!5 - 'H ' 1 3- FF .Q 1vw5b5?,? f51i.A Y ?' I . ., , 5 X' '31 ' ' W' wif' A' T f xxx. X X 2? 111 4 Q:w'f3gy4v.n Wu' f Q' 4? -W I , Q , ' A i x- itiigis: ' wasp W' .- XQ N W' X 2' mm x A x Ni N V-:six-mm ' ' K 1 f Q XX .N A x,-5. 'P NNW lg 0 'X N SX Nj--gi V V x i! 4, ,I x l X X QNXQ V - , -Y X, fx z MX A . X S 4 . xx- X 5 WN' X E x . is xg A A , u X Q X, '- - Xxx, ix N -,Q f' xi . 1 s g: ir -1 -Y x ,Z f KY, ff X 4 XX ix x I . X' - 4 ,ff X x , ffgigfi , , ,V xl ,X wh X fb- . ff' f - f X XX x' . f UW f x f-WNW XX , , X 0 xi , 24-,..xxMpkxX XQX bi N 4 ,f I , N V Xyxxmlixx .xN X X gg- Q V , I fl Q - I 4 ', , XX I K 'X 1?-ig-f , r ' . I K ' fl! , ' 'Wx X X A ' ff ' 'N . - , ' ' ,'?' If 1 4 ' ff! f ff' ' ' Ad b X . 1774 I 1 CLUB AE C TJ V7 Ch Z3 DC. ob .E CU f-I -6 U 3 :L ca.. CU QC ob 5: 21' Q- cn F. 5 O S-4 CQ GJ. Q x: CB ..r: 4-1 C5 U J -9. J. C8 N U N LD IJ PH C. CU v5 E-6 11, QLD '51-f DQS 51 fi! Occ LL41-4 NCD Q A 52.2 we Em od, NES E-.fe NCD ,Aff .EU 2.5 KCI .EU 34: QU U51 'gc L: LI-.U ron, Wlnzeler, An nn, 'S O1 Ch O an s-4 CD 'U C1 QC E.. L4 CQ uf 4-A B-4 OJ u-4 Q-4 CD L-I , Rowley, CI 'a .2 P11 U 2 cn. CI LE 1-4 CD D-4 1, .Ad cvs 2 O D-4 , Seward, U7 -v-1 Z CG P A Chern1n B. WI Second R0 1-I 0.5 v-4 -1 GJ CD v? 'U r--4 es, Nauss, Nie .Q OD :: I G. s: SU lc, Hansen, MCC ix Sullivan K., ITIOIL hurch, Sl1m U ob OO cu 1 f-a-4 3 CU M ter: 71 Row Ce 'S S- -w-r .Q E- S. E A. Peck. rx h1tney S., Whitney , W 1-4 .92 .-CI O CD Q cu .c 8 2 U.. Center Fourrtlfz Row sm W W i 1 1 4 l I 1 r f 1 1 l i I l l I YR ' 315, 'T CAE OFFICERS Deborah Pletscher, President Suzanne Johnson, Vice-President B 'Il O -...J 'l't f1?-4: CLUB KAVA . NA 1 rx 5 4-J is 6 .CE O Q M :Z 9-' 5 OJ Q Q 412 L U CU M .fi L Q QC 6 Q CU Q CD Q-J m .Q Q CU C J- Q 55.2 M E 5P4 Q, 4-IKD mm: CTS Sci ulP4 an UG! LE? Quo GJ O,.T E15 -D-4 .2 - E5 GE EQ 3 Q -wx 24:4 lf? ., U Q.E QA My Q5 ,CG 2 ls w'U A1-1 GSU E 5 cog gan -gg' 49 4-J 3.9 C' Q.-CJ QQUJ F25 m E ob Q 'Q O v-I ob Q Q O P-f 6 N E O L P 5 OJ LD S-Q LD vi GJ r1'1 O m '? 1- E 1 6 Q C6 Q LI-I Q .5 CTS 'E 'a ui 5 'E 2 Q' 5:5 Q. Q 47 U Q . F-4 U E UALQFCE Q . R CUC: ,.1C,,,Q 5.2 A 1-4:5 Q Q Q ,omg 65 w'Q Qs-44C 125- rg? A Q H S 5 5 'awf- DF-,J 352 Q Q A25 'SAE- -+-AFGA 34316 Vim E30 DCQECC 3 PS EE? 3-23 uni' U1 v X , ., X bf- .e Li E .fs E ri 3 Q f. ui V9 E cv 'F' p-1 F4 -f-1 E1 Q5 . E as I2 'I-' ,J KAVA OFFICERS Dania Doremus, President Ann Hemingway, Vice-President CAE 2 - KAVA I CAE HOCKEY Sitting: Eddy, Pollack, Nauss CCaptainD, Iuszczak, Vallis. Standing: Brox CManagerD, Peck, Nields, Mcllvain, Slimmon, Plimpton, Johnson KAVA HOCKEY First Row: Loring, Watennan, Keast, Hemingway CCaptainD, Green, Shipton. Second Row: Martin, Rowe, Washburn, Knowles, Alvarez, Thomas, Tatian CMgr.D. HOCKEY Wax - T 5qs. , A 'Sf 1 'ja .s-5 se- it ,, ' V 'Bl 3 ,er- November 4 finally came after much anticipation and preparation for another competition between CAE and KAVA. The hockey game, full of intense cheers and bursting spirit, ended with tears and a CAE victory with the close score of 2-1. Until the first half, both teams held a tieing score, each of the goals made by Sue Johnson for CAE and Ellen Creen for KAVA. Einally in the end of the second half, Niki Plimpton rushed up the Held and scored CAE's winning goal. The game was followed by -a hockey banquet at which Dania Doremus presented Debi Pletscher with the hockey cup and the teams were presented with charms. Everyone was tired and happy after a strenuous day at Rogers Hall. SECOND VTEAIXIS CAE KAVA Anderson Mink Aubin Lindsay Begg Potter Bell Mellick Blain Russell Dewey Saba Brown Sohier Doremus S tewart Hoar Spring Ellington Strasburg Laing Zinn Hall VVilliams, E. Mack Laundon CAE 38 - KAVA 23 CAE VOLLEYBALL First Row: Iuszczak, Plimpton. Second Row: Seller, Vallis, Anderson. Third Row: Foster ClVIgr.D, Nauss, Spring, Pollak CCapt.D, Lefferts, Slimmon KAVA VOLLEYBALL Left to right: LaFoley CManagerD, Waterman, Knowles, Ellington, Martin Alvarez CCapt.D, Thomas, Hemingway, Green, Bloom. VOLLEYBALL You think yon've got troubles! The volleyball game began the winter season with another tense game. The screams became almost deafening in the gym as each club sang its team song and cheered. CAE finished the game with another victory of 38 to 23. Betsy Nauss scored eleven of CAE's points and Laura Waterman scored seven points for KAVA. Each team showed great skill and unity throughout the game, as they were backed by the spirit of their clubs. The season also included a hilarious student-faculty game. The faculty, dressed in midi blouses and bloomers and aided by an equally Well decked out cheering squad led by Miss LeButt, played the game with all kinds of innovations. Mrs. Sadowski's modern dance techniques gave an artistic tone to the proceedings, While Mrs. Perloff's arrival in a Wheelchair due to a back injury suffered in an intensive practice session lent a touch of pathos. - The final score in favor of the students was un- mentionable, but everyone agreed that the faculty were good sports and the game was great fun. SECOND TEAMS CAE 31 - KAVA 23 CAE KAVA Begg Mcllvain Copeland Shipton Brown Nields Drury Tatian Curry Peck Laundon Tikellis Eddy Pletscher Pihl Washburn Mink Sohier Rowe Young Is it mlm you want us to say? Leaning into it is the secret KAVA 29 - CAE 28 KAV A BASKETBALL Left to right: Thomas, Keast, Hemingway, Knowles, Green Loring, Strasburg CManagerD Absent: MacMannis. CAE BASKETBALL Left to right: Laing CMgr.D, Nauss, Spring, Pollak, Anderson CCapt.D, Lefferts, Iuszczak, Plimpton, Macllvain. BASKETBALL The CAE and KAVA first team began their exciting game at 2:45 Wednesday afternoon, April 9. From the beginning, both teams played with amazing skill. Iudy Knowles was KAVA's high scorer with 14 points to support their winning total of 29 points, closely followed by CAE with 28 points, 16 of which were made by Susie Spring. Each club was filled with fan- tastic spiiit, making this game the most successful this year. Where, oh where, has the little ball gone? SECOND TEAMS CAE 12 - KAVA 15 CAE KAVA Brown Mink Ellington Shipton Eddy Seller Keck Washburn Hughes Vallis Laundon Waterman Johnson Whitney, A. Martin VVilliams just get out of my wayl, BASKETBALL BANQU ET Following the basketball game was the banquet which was missed last year due to the celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Rogers Hall School. During dinner, songs were sung to the first teams and Sue lohnson presented Ann Hemingway with the basketball cup. During dessert, both clubs sang their club songs, later to be judged by the faculty for words, tune and spirit. CJAE Club's song Get Me to the Gym on Time by Sue Johnson and Tina Lefferts won the prize of lollipops. KAVA Club's song Three Silver Spoons by Betty Hall, Dania Doremus, and Marilyn Keast was also Very much appreciated. N if S fi SOFTBALL CAE 26 - KAVA 2I at 1' fffx tg r K 5115215 W l What a view! The softball game began at 3:00 on May 14. With Bill as our umpire the game had as usual many interesting calls without which Rogers l-lall softball would not be the same. Each club was filled with new spirit after the long winter season. The two teams each made exceptional plays and each member played equally well. With the aid of the picket fence, nearly every hit was a homerun. To those watching, any concept of a score was impossible yet CAE finally managed another victory. SOFTBALL TEAMS CAE KAVA Anderson Nields Bisset lVlaclVlannis Blain Plimp-ton Copeland Martin Brown Pollak Dewey Pihl Eddy Seller CCapt.D Drury Ship-ton Johnson Slimmon Ellington Strasburg CCapt.D Laing Spring Hemingway Thomas Lefferts Vallis Keast Watetrman Nauss McCann ClVlgr.D Knowles Rowe CMgr.D pn ' R AM' op 'M' ' ' ' ' W vat 'SMF' L- ex ' E l always TIP them . . . Strike four! CHEERLEADERS CAE CHEERLEADERS Front Row: Chernin, B., CMascotD, Nauss CCaptainD, McCann CMascotD Second Row: Iuszczak, Foster, Curry, Pletscher, johnson. Standing: Anton, Vallis, Mcllvain, Mack, Peck. KAVA CHEERLEADERS Front Row: Fairbairn, Dewey, Phil, Shipton, Templet, Knowles, Center: Tikellis, MacMannis. Rear: Ellington, Sweet CMascotD, Washburn. CAE IO6 - KAVA I03 CAE SWIM TEAM Nields, Curry, Nauss, Grynkraut, Wick, Anderson ClVlanagerD, Lefferts Hughes, Slimmon, luszczak, Zinn. KAVA SWIM TEABI First Row: Keast, Evans, Thomas CCaptainD. Second Row: Copeland, Pihl, Bissct, Dewey, Waterman, Hall, Hemingway, Tikellis CManagerD. WATER BALLET WATER BALLET Slimmons, Lefferts, Shipton, Martin, Evans, Spring, Thomas, Hoar, Keast, Doremus, Pletscher, Ingraham, Grynkraut, Hall, Iuszczak, Nauss. Stanoling: VVashburn, Anderson CManagersD This year's water ballet was a delight. The circus theme was carried out with authentic sound effects and bizarre costumes. Bill and Roger labored on the technical problems and rnanaged to construct an effective aerialist wire, on which Linda Iuszczak spiraled out into the pool, and a cage big enough for lengthy Debbie Evans to use as her lion's den. Dania Doremus was a hit as the lion tamer who ended up being shoved in the water by her faithless beast. The whole show was such a success on Father-Daughter Day that it was repeated for Founder's Day. Hats off to Miss Bowes and her hardworking crews. ' ,P .X V 1 flu? .- N . K . - - ,. Le 4 f , 4, 1 - 5 if 1 . ,4 , , f . l -B. up ,.,4 : , - I ' -0 - - f va-31BV.P'r, '-'. I 1 j ia.,,.'Fg?ls A - no ' -qu B W -.. .ua CUP WINNER - SUSAN SPRING CCAEI CAE BADMINTON Vallis, Spring, Mink CManagerD, Nields, Lefferts. KAVA BADMINTON Sitting: Tikellis, Shipton Kneeling: Pihl, Knowles Standing: Alvarez CMQDHLQCID CUP WINNER - SUSAN SPRING ICAEI 4?- SYYWYY warg: 3,x..f.42!ii, Ni? iiilfmsl, 'f5'3i 42 9 4 W. .. 353 S lift?- ?T?TF gaffatiizzfw Zffzfljfzjf '!'Y 2 '4'irQ 3 V151 ff fy: fffffj ffffgffff' aft ,1.1'-fl I o . ..,,,4. fl '4 'JflvL.xAf 4 4 1. mi an ,eff 'wg 1-'rf ,- 4 , 4 I, isf X4 f ?fX'f' , A , . X 7. ..,,. -fa-' +' J pi: 1-1-11- 1 Q 4lqfrv,',' ,ffxfffflea 4 ff vf ,vaf,., - ,.,, ,L new M vi, K uu- ff ,R Q - ff -ff We aaa... CAE TENNIS Seated: Mink CManagerD Standing: Spring, Laing, Lefferts, Nields. zf.7fJ2!G7f'. fylfffzf fury-5 ffm' 1 vi- 1' Ka 1 viyajhgf u 2 7878 ws--- 14--4 i -4 ' :- KAVA TENNIS Seated: Shipton, Knowles, Laundon. Standing: MacMannis, Alvarez CManagerD. 123573 AT RH WE HAVE Q , 4 M T N fy Y -... --f -un Tw., I ' J THE SPORTIN' LIFE 1 y an .-. . A, 9, 11-17 A - Mu., . lx ,,-,ight 1 H e was never less at leisure Than when at leisure CICERO ,, ., 5 C5 ' lt: ' ' f.: f 'L' l he 5155 ... wf?w , lg .4- 5, u w Wg i, , v f ,I Y -I r 1 ki f 1 fl l lv rl .1 u 'A . Vs I .v 4 2' 1 -I ? 4 2 A E 'f H V4 as ar - 4 . 4 .4 , . n n A -1 4 ' Q M. .J 1 - W , , it fly? !f,'1:' -Z 1 .L--T...3Qf: :QE , ,:. ' ' ffvlxg, px grf:, xN- ' U 'n.:, . I I ' 7x A .jf , My f, 1. m . 'H -Q .11 f -Q X A '.. ..... S E .gl 41 g u::,...,: E 5 L. 2' . 1 1 I 55 'lf..,,,'.., :Z ' n ':: ' , E 9 x lg In 5 ll f f I , - F.: . ' Il V , . X xeq, 4 . H um ' x ,. gn: I , . 0 - 4 in -,,,,l . 1 '.-I ,I K 'WAN g, 1 I ,,, 1- 3- . 'fl' ,xi f , .W .n -.. 1 ,. 9.1, ,o : ll - 1 ,.v,'j I1 BGR I ' E... K .1 I -mi .. .J XX .5 yy , 0 HZ' af 11' z ,GY ' I 1 ' l,,,: ,IU ,Xxx 3 . ii ,I 1 ' v I. .4 5 I , , . ,A .f X .... ,, qu' 1 X. 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M' f r y!! , - '- p . fwf 'lf Cl, . t I NNN f gs W jr' f3i22 . ' if A 1 W f Wig , ' xg - K pi- + x A A'A41 i5?i,fi'f f'5?3fffQU I' fl I' If ll.. .,'.-lgjgiffaf f5g7lij!:,Ql ' ' V Ig, ' A e' - f' -:.jf'1Qf'fjg-f . - X17 ' :.fgfiQi.2 , ffiffi f ,j R s wk f L ,'.f 1 'X XX iwg-'ig 7' if ' xx L X ff N ' A , , 4 ' I 1 , l 1 7, ,w Q Www 2 J Q XXWSS 1 f S WWHIMIR ywvw w A .. . ' - ,S X gf fy X gy, AE? X Q5 gl 'www XX B N umm Nl ...N xq xg N N ,xi Xi XY X xv X 4. . 1 - , , A 4 - .v -. wg :U X'-Ex sf:-J v + ,.,.,,. 'A lx - - ze I 29,3 P X l V I x , Y LA PARENTS' DAY R 1 x The weekend began Saturday, November 2, when CAE and KAVA opened their fair at 11:00. Lunch was held at 12:00 for the girls and their parents. During the luncheon the Octet made their first appearance singing a few of their new songs. After lunch, the Parents' Association had a meeting in the study hall while the first teams prepared for the oncoming hockey game. Ar 2-30 the game hegan and ended with CAE's victory of 2-1. VVhen all had left, the school seemed empty and relieved after the long, tense day. FALL PLAYS The fall plays on November 23, 1968, began with Susan Glaspell's well-known Trifles. In this atmospheric, almost tragic play a police investigator, Ian Laundon, and two neighbors, Marion Eddy and Nancy lngraham, are examining in the desolate farmhouse, the scene of a strangling. Held for the murder of her husband is Mrs. Wright, whom we nevermeet but whose cold, empty life we are made very much aware of by Mrs. l-lale and Mrs. Peters, well played by Betty l-lall and Debi Pletscher, who are also at the farm to gather a few things to take to Mrs. Wright in jail. The women, who often worry about triHes, discover the evidence, a strangled bird, obviously the one happy thing ing Mrs. Wright's life and the motivation for the murder of her husband. ln a moment of compassion for the mistreated woman, the two country women decide to suppress the evidence. The set, with its angular flats, was particularly effective in this play. Parade at Devil's Bridge, by Henri Gheon, is a kind of morality play but, as the stage manager Cwell played by Karen AndersonDsays, there really is no moral. Lynne Tatian was a wonderfully ma-levolent devil who pitted himself against Toni Pollak, ironically cast as Father Kado, who finally promised to give up the first soul to Cross the bridge so that the Devil would not continue to break it down. Lisa Laing, Father Kado's cat, saved the human souls by being the first one to cross the bridge. In fury at being outwitted, the Devil leaves forever while the old fisherman, well played by Mary Thomas, and his daughter, lodi Tighe, rejoice with the good priest over their victory. FALL PLAYS ,ff ,L 6 3. T kj 43?kx,zw f ' K wavy,-, -: aw ,, J J X fi 454 47 t The final play of the evening was the wonderful farce The Man in the Bowler Hat, by A. A. Milne. The Chief Villain and the Bad Man, excellently portrayed by Truda Bloom and Amelia Rowe, try to steal the Bajah's ruby from the Hero, Debbie Evans, who has hidden the ruby in a hat box in one of twenty London railroad stations. The Hero confuses the Villain who interrogates him by repeating the cycle of sta- tions, each one containing a ticket in a hat box for the next. The scene takes place in the home of Mary and Iohn, perfectly played by Kitty Wick and Cindy Brox, who until now have felt that nothing exciting ever happens to them. Kathleen McCartin, wearing a bowler hat, sits downstage with her back to the audience and turns out to be the director of the play we too are Watching. Truda's entrance to appropriate villain music and Debbie Evans' passionate embraces of the heroine, pertly played by Betty Sullivan, added much hilarity to the proceedings. .W ,W . ,, . . . , w :sf - L. wg- Q12 :ss f sf . ff if. X was, -is ti ' A 'N 'fm Qui? , L Q 4 I' 5 CHRISTMAS PLAY ,nw The Christmas play on December 17, 1968, was very well done especially con- sidering the Thanksgiving to Christmas flu epidemic, which had forced us to cancel Christmas Vespers. A Fabulous Tale by Richard F. Stockton is a most unusual rendition of th.e good vs. evil and the power of prayer themes. It is set in the slums of any city outside the opposing doors of the Salvation Army and a gambler's haven, a poolroom. Captain Amy, forcefully portrayed by Ellen Curry, prayed for enough potatoes to feed the poor people, such as the blind beggar realistically played by Louisa Reppucci. Iiffy Copeland, the proprietor of the poolhall and rival of Captain Amy, cared only for profit and the well-being of his favorite customers such as the silent man with all the money, humorously played by Betsy Slimmon. Linda Juszczak as the fashionable thrill-seeker Alicia and her bored fiance, Marilyn Keast, tease the blind beggar about his handicap, accusing him of fakingg they are a a reminder of the selfish and worldly. Then Captain Amy's prayer, an act of firm faith, is answered, potatoes fall from the sky, a technical effect requiring a lot of thought and skill on the part of the backstage rnasterminds. The blind beggar regains his sight after eating one of the potatoes that lands in his cup. But, of course, the world rejects the miracle. Ann Hemingway as the policeman added much humor by rushing in, discovering the mysterious substance on the ground, and ordering the unimpressed street cleaner, Truda Bloom, to sweep -away the potato-miracle. The Clee Club provided appropriate background music and some of the members were carollers in the street scene on stage. As so frequently happens the Christmas production proved to be one of the most effective of the year. SPRING PLAYS The first of the spring plays on March 13, 1969 was the final scene of The Heiress based on Henry Iames' Washington Square, which had been studied by the seniors in the fall. Though he had jilted her two years before, Morris, played by Truda Bloom, returned to pursuade the wealthy Catherine CBetty Halll to marry him. To his surprise she is willing to set forth that evening. Aunt Penniman's CToni PollakD romantic nature becomes excited since the relationship was spurred on by her doing. However, when Morris returns with p-ride of his success and a few belongings, QLouisa Reppuccil, who played the maid, bolted the door for Catherine. Catherine could be cruel since she had learned from masters. The Dramatics Club presented a Shaw one-act play, Poison, Passion and Fetrification, along with the other spring plays. Truda Bloom directed the madcap proceedings. Debbie Pletscher portrayed the glamorous Lady Fitztollemache caus- ing the conflict between her husband, Marion Eddy, and Adolphus, her lover, Karen Anderson. ln the chaos of the revengeful poisoning of Adolphus, the maid, played by Linda Juszczak, the landlord, CAnn l-lemingwayl the policeman CPam BellD, and the doctor CTina LeffertsD, all appear. The landlord at first concerned about the noise soon found himself more upset about his lime ceiling being torn down as an antidote for Adolphus. SPRING PLAYS In Motlzer's Day, by B. Priestly, Kitty Wick as a meek housewife exchanges roles with an aggressive woman, Lynn Tatian, in order to teach her family a lesson about taking advantage of her. The mother suddenly refuses to wait on her spoiled daughter, played by Marilyn Keast, and her demanding son, played by Iiffy Cope- land. When her husband, well played by Mary Thomas, learns of her new eight-hour Work day limit, he is thoroughly shocked and upset. The family, after a humorous discussion, understands and begins to appreciate their mother. Now satisfied, she exchanges roles once again with her helpful friend. The final play, Aria da Capo, by Edna St. Vincent Millay, illustrates the comedies and tragedies of life. Comedy can become tragedy as shown by the killings of Corydon CArnelia P1oweD and Thyrsis CLisa LaingD, who started out as friends. The World often ignores tragedies. Ellen Curry as Cothurnus, the Masque of Tragedy, directed this scene on stage. Columbine Clsinda juszczakD and Pierrot CDebbie EvansD act as clown-lovers to give the harlequinade effect. Their charm is overwhelming. Mrs. Perloff's set was particularly effective with its stark black and White decor and its smaller details such as a giant black flower and a huge artichoke. FOUNDER'S DAY Founders Day seems to be one of the few events of the year that almost every- one participates in preparing for, in one way or another. Most of the early arriving alumnae wandered around the Art and Photography rooms to judge the creative works, and around the dormitory to spot and admire their old rooms. At eleven, the Senior Fair became the main attraction for old and new: there was something of interest for everyone, from the usual food, to skirts, posters and candles. After a delightful luncheon and the annual alumnae business meeting, the next event was the annual water-ballet. This year's circus theme was enjoyed by all, with its amusing lion taming act and graceful aerialists' performance which was ignited by Linda Iuszczalcs soaring across the lit pool on a wire. FATHER-DAUGHTER DAY mfvwg L The weekend started out rather threatened with rain forcing the cookout and the softball game inside. The skies cleared and the fathers and daughters went off after a fine performance of the water-ballet which centered around a circus theme. lt was very well done and most comical. Everyone returned for dinner and the dance in the evening. The entertainment at the dance included a marvelous take-off on Laugh ln, separate skits, a song by Marion Eddy and the ever-flowering sweetness of the Octet. FATHER-DAUGHTER DAY 416 1 SPRINC-3 PROM AX .44 The spring dance was transferred back to the formal setting in the dining room this year, from lVIacGay's less-formal atmosphere of last year. lt was enlightened by a new taste that Pam Bell brought with her psychedelic band. Most of the mob arrived early Satur- day morning where they were promptly met by a bus that took th-em on a day's excursion to the beach at Betty I-lall's house. The dance seemed to deaden a bit when the seniors left for a midnight party at the Broxes home, where they were entertained at a roast beef dinner by a male folk-singer. Sunday morning was off to a slow start when the tired undergrads and the droopy-eyed seniors dragged in for an early breakfast at MacGay. After maximum confusion, the seniors tramped off again to the beach for a second Warm day in the rays, this time to Ianie Seller's house on the Cape, Where the main attraction was the boat and the refreshments. The big Weekend came to an end when the three cars with the exhausted beachcombers straggled up to MacGay- Wet, weak and weathered. sri' , i . V' 4 I ' A ' '11 M .5 n I X 5 , af ., r X .x . 'QF' f .-i 5-1 . p - THE GAY LIFE . is W, Y' ,Tm EW .H . -Q gn.. rg . 21' f -u YQ 1 .... ? 5 4 .PA I L. 3 ,X- PH'- 4 ak R X' , x 2 H v W If - l Q --1--. Nw. ' ?' if S f wwf-. If, t if I f. gg' A ' Y f Q ' a 5 A wi , 1 ' 1 uw, I Q A . . p , E57 -A su 5 -'if ff' W r I- - v 27 . E ,X in N ,f ', ! I .. .Y H il. 'S rx Q - 'ya 1 X T ' , , , v MJ. '. 'iv Y kk K 1, 1 v 1 X , I' I an k vi .f , ,fgq ,I . an -rg 4 Q A 1 2 I ' 'f lf rf' ' 5 ' if I Q' I k-ri A, ls-T, 'V 1 . 5 'A . X 1 Yi I 4 1 1 'R 1 Q if 3 1 34' L f , ' ss A 2? Q , A I Q x may f , Q ' r s 9 ' V. 5 L, vf. I ., J , ,-f: f X X ' :I . J. xl ' xi 4 -' ' M, -fx Y, 0 X K -. ' X ff -f lv ,A I. . 1 29 '4 ' P l ,J ,Ag COMMENCEMENT PLAY Our final play at commencement time was Mrs. McThing, by Mary Chase. This delightful fantasy-comedy revolves around I-loway Larue, a dual personality played professionally by Ann Hemingway, whose mother, played in Betty Hall's capable style, refuses to allow just any ragged child to associate with him. Linda juszczak, the persistent Mimi, wants to play with Howay, and she gets her mother, a witch called Mrs. McThing, to change Howay into a prim and proper .Stick at home while the real I-loway ends up on the other side of the tracks where Mimi can play with him. Mrs. Larue's friends, the Lewis sisters, played humorously by Kitty Wick, Debi Pletscher and Marilyn Keast, can't get over the wonderful change in Stick I-loway's behavior, however, Howay's nurse, played convincingly by Cynthia Brox, notices the change and causes Mrs. Larue to follow up on the mysterious phone calls she has been getting from some strange child. After scouring Skid Row Mrs. Larue finds the real I-loway in the Shantyland Pool Hall Lunchroom where he has joined the Schellenbach mob. The plot is complicated further by Mrs. McThing's making an- other stick and putting it in Mrs. Larue's place at Larue Towers so that she too has to stay with the mob. The gangster scenes were delightful. Poison Eddie Schellenbach, Dirty joe McGinnis, and the Stinker are caricatures of gangsters. Truda Bloom, Karen Ander- son and Toni Pollak did marvelous jobs recreating these characters down to specific mannerisms and articles of clothing. Other humorous additions to the play were Amelia Rowe as the chef who plays an imaginary piano and serves only people Whose names he likes, and Kathleen McCartin as Mrs. Schellenbach who appears occasionally to beat up her wayward son. The play draws to a climax when Mimi says that she knows a way to get every- one back to Larue Towers. C-uns won't do it but she will use one of her mother's tricks provided Mrs. Larue will continue to let her play with I-loway. The entire group, including the mob, arrive at Larue Towers where Mimi burns the stick charac- ters just in time for the police to arrive. The real Mrs. Larue saves the mob from the law and pairs them with the Hirtatious Lewis sisters who think they are collectors of silver, not thieves. The ugly witch, effectively played by Lynne Tatian, then appears to scold Mimi for siding with humans, but she returns once again as a beautiful witch to say goodbye and to leave Mimi with the Larues. a f COMMENCEMENT PLAY Now hear this . . . CAST OF Mrs. Howard V. Larue, Ill .... Elizabeth Hall Carrie .............,.......................... Cynthia Brox Sybil ........,.................. ...... L ouisa Reppucci Evva Lewis ......... ............ K athleen Wick Maude Lewis ...... ....... D eborah Pletscher Grace Lewis .... ............. M arilyn Keast Nelson .... ...................... G enevieve Copeland Howay ................................ Ann Hemingway Chef Uillsworthl ...... ........... Am ella Rowe Mary Thomas Virgil .................. A stage managers lot is not a happy one CHARACTERS Dirty Iloe McGinnis ............ Karen Anderson Stinlzer ........................................ Toni Pollalc Poison Eddie Schellenhach .... Trucla Bloom iVIrs. Schellenhach ..4....... Kathleen McCartin Nlimi ................... . .................. Linda luszczalc Policeman ............... ........ D eborah Evans Mrs. Mc-Fhing Ugly VV itch .............. ........ L ynn Tatian Beautiful Witch ....... TECHNICAL STAFF Ellen Curry Mrs. Dorothy Ann Worsham Scenery designed and executed hy ...... ............... lV Irs. Dorothy Perloff Director .................................................. assisted hy .............,............... Stage .Manager ....... Sound .................. Make-up .......... Costumes ...... ........ ........................................................................ Roger Collins Dania Doremus Nancy Dewey Christina Lefferts, Alida Mcllvain, Elisabeth Strasburg Io Anne Sweet, Suzanne Templet, Susan Whitney Hooker-Howe Company, Haverhill, Massachusetts '19-' I A fl vlty I I i l lr -4 V'-'Q uni W4 RH VARIED CURRICULUM Apple picking for polishing Public Speaking M eolitation Extrapolatin g Scholarly dissertation Q A il C onteinplation anal repose f l X' 5 Popular Mechanics SPRING H eadholalin g Exercising CLASS DAY AWARDS - I969 CLU B CU PS Hockey ...... ..... C AE Softball ......... ...... C AE Volleyball ....... .......... C AE Swimming ........ ..... C AE Basketball ....... ...... KA VA Badminton ....... ...... C AE Tennis ........... INDIVIDUAL AWARDS Badminton ................. ,,,,,, Tennis ........ ,,,, Posture .......................... ................... ...... RED CROSS LIFE SAVING - .SENIOR Christina Lefferts Amelia Rowe Ellen Peck Susan Shipton R. H. AWARDS CAE. Susan Spring . Susan Spring Elise Catharine Betsey Slimmon Mary Thomas Given 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 laallet, posture and neatness. CAE Betsey Slimmon Susan Spring Vanessa Vallis Karen Anderson .Suzanne Johnson Linda Iuszczak Christina Lefferts Alicla Mcllvain Betsy Nauss Nancy Nields Toni Pollak KAVA Susan Ellington Ann Hemingway Marilyn Keast luclith Knowles Martha Pihl Susan Shipton Mary Thomas Laura Waterman HONORARY R. H. AWARD ........ ...... D ania Doremus N EATNESS AWARDS Hall ........................ ................................ B arbara Cray MacCay ...... ........ E llen Peck - Deborah Zinn ANNOUNCEMENT OF CLUB OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR CAE KAVA President .................. Nancy Nields President ................ Mary Thomas Vice-President ........ Vanessa Vallis Vice-President ........ Susan Shipton Cheerleader .................. Ellen Peck Cheerleader ............ Nancy Dewey COMMENCEM ENT THE BAcoALAr1REArE At 10:45 a.m. Sunday the school met at All Souls Church for the Baccalaureate Service. The Reverend Thomas E. Dipko encouraged the members of the class of '69 to live in truth. His sermon most appropriately pointed out the problems that youth are being confronted with today. He asked the seniors to be true to their morals and ideals by which they were brought up. In short the familiar quotation, To thine own self be true, was the overall theme. Following the sermon the school was served delicious refreshments by the parish members. THE MUSICALE On Sunday at 3:30 the Clee Club and the Octet combined their efforts into the annual Musicale. It began with the Recessional by the Clee Club. The Clee Club sang No Man Is An lsland, Love Is Blue, and More Between these numbers the Octet performed Sunday Morning, and The Lonely Coat Herd. It was obvious that both groups had worked very hard, for the Musicale was a success. SENIOR LUNCHEON A luncheon honoring the senior class took place on Monday. It began with the girls at Miss LeButt's table singing various songs to the senior class. The poems and the gifts from the undergraduates were amusing and sometimes very appropriate. The girls were also given leather frames from Miss Ramsay and tiny replicas of MacCay. At the end Miss Ramsay presented the survivors of four years with beautiful carnations. CLASS DAY After the Senior Luncheon everybody filtered into the gymnasium. Miss Ramsay and Miss Bowes began by announcing the athletic awards after which the clubs sang their songs. Then the present -club heads announced the new ones. Most ably, Pamela Bell and Lynne Tatian read the Class Prophecy and the Class Will respectively. The activities ended with the walls still shaking from the hysterical laughter. GRADUATION The morning began with threatening skies and everyone had been plagued by the weatherman's reporting rain showers. Nevertheless, the sun managed to peek out occasionally. With 'or without the sun the radiant faces of the senior class made up for the overcast skies. The seniors proudly showed off their dresses for the first time at 9:30 at a reception for parents and friends and walked into the gymnasium at 10:00 for the last time to the tune of Pomp and Circumstancef' The Reverend Victor P. Scalise, a friend of Rogers Hall for many years, gave the address. He urged us to do our thing provided it possesses the qualities of perspective, compassion, and love for humanity. Mr. Scalise gave us courage to face the world with the proper attitude. Dr. David Latham, President of the Board of Trustees presented the long awaited for diplomas to the anxious seniors. Then, Elizabeth Hall, President of the Senior Class, presented the school with books for the library. Miss Ramsay accepted the gift and then proceeded with the school honors. The school song was then sung and the Benediction was given. The seniors marched out making an arc with their roses and sang When You Walk Through A Storm while the undergrads Went through. The seniors and the undergrads said good luck and goodbye. The undergrads were sad to see them go and the seniors weren't quite ready to believe that it was really all over. -531,4- ,gbg , -, A 1 , .- J, t um E 4 2- 'ul sw Ear , if . Q, v ' V' e ' 5. pg V., Mg , .M f 'Qi . 1 -- '-I. T ' I -. ng 'Q v jj-I -u f ,f 7 L- H A .. 5 f 47 J , ,-. Q 4x ' N K ..,v , if ,, 1' , 7 ' A 1 3 A X L .w,X,,,4 .- is AWARDS AND HONORS - I969 UNDERHILL HONOR - COLLEGE PREPARATORY Karen Anderson PARSONS HONOR - GENERAL COURSE Susan Ellington HONOR ROLL - AVERAGE 8596 OR ABOVE Karen Anderson Elizabeth Hall M. Pamela Saba Josephine Blain Linda luszczak Elaine Sohier Deborah Drury Barbara MacMannis Mary Thomas Jennifer Poster Betsy Nauss Pamela Tikellis HELEN HILL AWARD Elizabeth Hall ATHLETIC AWARD Christina Lefferts HONORABLE MENTION Betsy Nauss ART PRIZES Marilyn Keast - Betsy Nauss There are two awards this year, both of equal merit. They are being given to girls who are both creative and industrious. Each girl has contributed in a major way to either the Year Book or Splinters. DRAMATICS Elizabeth Hall For her steady effort to achieve that concentration known to actors as public solitude. Truda Bloom For her ability to contribute to a theatre which infects the audience with its noble ecstasy. Karen Anderson Cynthia Brox Dania Doremus- Ann Hemingway HONORABLE MENTION Linda luszczak Marilyn Keast Deborah Pletscherr Toni Pollak Amelia Rowe Lynne Tatian Mary Thomas Kathleen Wick MUSIC APPRECIATION Kamen Anderson - Deborah Zinn HONORABLE MENTION ,Estela Alviarez Susan Brown Marion Eddy .Susan Ellington Ann Hemingway Seniors ......... Linda luszczak Barbara MacMannis Maureen McCann Deborah Pletsch er Nicola Plimpton ART APPRECIATION Pamela Saba Mary Thomas Pamela Tikellis Ann Whitney Betsy Nauss Undergraduates France HONORABLE MENTION s Grynkraut Susan Aubin Anne Loring Marilyn Keast Catherine Begg Barbara Gray CURRENT EVENTS Senior ...................... Linda luszczak Undergraduate .......... Pamela Saba HONORABLE MENTION Deborah Drury - Raleigh Perkins KATHARINE WHITTEN MacGAY LITERARY PRIZES Seniors - Elizabeth Strasburg For the rich welabeol iinages of your enchanting tongue. Undergraduates - Susan Aubin In hopes that her lyrical sense will continue to grow. ALVAREZ, Estela, 85-11 Avon Street, Iamaica, New York ANDERSON, Karen, 39 Daniels Street, Lowell, Massachusetts ANTON, Susan, 3 Hemlock Drive, Chelmsford, Massachusetts AUBIN, Susan, Piney Point, Marion, Massachusetts BECC, Catherine, 580 Lakeland Avenue, Crosse Pointe, Michigan BELL, Pamela, 83 Beacon Street, Marblehead, Massachusetts BISSET, Sandra, 16 Wintonbury Road, Simsbury, Connecticut BLAIN, Josephine, 265 Vlfilliams Avenue, Crosse Pointe Farms, Michigan BLOGM, Truda, 27 Dewey Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts BROWN, Susan, The Kno-lls, Williamstown, Massachusetts BROX, Cynthia, 192 North Lowell Street, Methuen, Massachusetts CATHAR1NE, Elise, 1353 Park Lane, Pelham Manor, New York CHERNIN, Bette, 91 West Valley Road, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada CHERNIN, Gail, Churchill Street, Stephenville, Newfoundland, Canada. CHURCH, Robin, 8 Preston Drive, Barrington, Rhode lsland CLARK, Cynthia, 14 Wood Lane, Locust Valley, Long Island, New York COPELAND, Cenevieve, 4001 Lakeview Drive, Creenville, Delaware CURRY, Ellen, 1604 lames Road, Williamsport, Pennsylvania DAVIS, Iudith, 17 Flint Street, Salem, Massachusetts DEWEY, Nancy, 428 Salisbury Street, Holden, Massachusetts DOREMUS, Dania, South Road, Harwinton, Connecticut DRURY, Deborah, Spook Hollow Road, Far Hills, New Iersey EDDY, Marion, 20 Ebert Drive, New Britain, Connecticut ELLINCTON, Susan, 424 Ocampo Drive, Pacific Palisades, California EVANS, Deborah, 6 Robandy Road, Andover, Massachusetts FA1RBA1RN, Heather, 116 Edmunds Road, Vlflellesley Hills, Massachusetts FLETCHER, Elizabeth, 67 High Street, Chelmsford, Massachusetts FOSTER, jennifer, 80 State Street, Ellsworth, Maine CADD, Carol, 33 Stoner Drive, West Hartford, Connecticut CILBERT, Emily, 275 Booth Avenue, Englewood, New Iersey CRAY, Barbara, 20 Beech Tree Lane, Pelham Manor, New York CREEN, Ellen, 222 Plantation Road, Palm Beach, Florida CRYNKRAUT, Frances, 38 Cale Road, Swampscott, Massachusetts HALL, Elizabeth, 345 Nahant Road, Nahant, Massachusetts HEMINCWAY, Ann, 81 Clenbrook Drive, Cheshire, Connecticut HOAR, Amabel, Barretts Mill Road, Concord, Massachusetts HOEPFNER, Ioanne, 869 Sherman Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut HOLIHAN, Elizabeth, 68 Salem Street, Andover, Massachusetts HUGHES, Cecily, Crown Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut INCRAHAM, Nancy, 90 High Farms Road, West Hartford, Connecticut IUHNSON, Suzanne, Dingletown Road, Creenwich, Connecticut IUSZCZAK, Linda, cfo Aramco, Box 451516, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia KACHER, Cheryl, 112V2 Taplow Road, Baltimore, Maryland KAUFMAN, Devra, 18 Warwick Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts KEAST, Marilyn, 45 Three Ponds Road, Wayland, Massachusetts KECK, Erin, Cranite Creek Farm, 1150 Moraga Drive, Los Angeles, California KNOWLES, ludith, Cumberland Foreside, Portland, Maine LAFOLEY, Robin, Liberty Square Road, Boxboro, Massachusetts LAING, Elizabeth, Huclclebury Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut LAPE, Kristen, 132 Chadwick Street, Portland, Maine LAUNDON, lan, Sachem's Head, Guilford, Connecticut LEFPERTS, Christina, 292 Washington Boulevard, Springfield, Massachusetts LlNDSAY, Caren, 4393 Carter Road, Fairport, New York LORING, Anne, 140 Hart Street, Prides Crossing, Massachusetts MACK, Elizabeth, 119 Holyrood Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts MACMANNIS, Barbara, 11 Overbrook Lane, Darien, Connecticut MARTIN, Wendy, 72 North Street, Grafton, Massachusetts MCCANN, Maureen, 621 VVest Ferndale Road, VVayzata, Minnesota MCCARTIN, Kathleen, 181 Belmont Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts MolLVAlN, Alida, 1109 Beech Road, Rosemont, Pennslyvania MELLICK, Helen, Large Cross Roads, Far Hills, New lersey MINK, Margaret, Norfolk Road, Litchfield, Connecticut NAUSS, Betsy, 84 Greenacres Avenue, S-carsdale, New York NIELDS, Nancy, Monument Street, Concord, Massachusetts PECK, Ellen, Yellow Cote Road, Oyster Bay, New York PERKINS, Raleigh, 658 Black Rock Road, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania PIHL, Martha, 135 East 7th Street, Hinsdale, lllinois PLETSCHER, Deborah, 1647 Brockway Street, Saginaw, Michigan PLIMPTON, Nicola, Old Sudbury Road, Lincoln, Massachusetts POLLAK, Toni, 63 Atlantic Avenue, Apartment if5D, Boston, Massachusetts POTTER, Harriet, Argilla Road, lpswich, Massachusetts REPPUCCI, Louisa, 34 Clark Road, Lowell, Massachusetts ROWE, Amelia, 1418 Rose Virginia Road, Reading, Pennsylvania ROVVLEY, Kimberly, Spencer Brook Road, Concord, Massachusetts RUSSELL, Heather, Battle Avenue, Castine, Maine SABA, Pamela, 20 H-avilah Street, Lowell, Massachusetts SELLER, lane, 789 Colrain Road, Greenfield, Massachusetts SEWARD, Deborah, 48 Greenacres Avenue, Scarsdale, New York SHIPTON, Susan, 953 West Street, Pittsfield, Massachusetts SLIMMON, Betsy, 555 Hill Farm Road, Fairfield, Connecticut SOHIER, Elaine, 4507 Crest Lane, McLean, Virginia SPRING, Susan, 4 Elm Street, Concord, Massachusetts STEVENS, Dorothy, 47 Ridge Road, Concord, New Hampshire STRASBURG, Elizabeth, 6671 MacArthur Boulevard, Washington, D.C. SULLIVAN, Elizabeth, 76 Westford Street, Chelmsford, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, Kathleen, 14 West Hawley Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts SWEET, Io Anne, 494 North Main Street, Gloversville, New York TATIAN, Lynne, 57 Lexington Avenue, Bradford, Massachusetts TEMPLET, Suzanne, Dover Road, Box 35208, Guilford, Maine THOMAS, Mary, 109 Overhill Road, Baltimore, Maryland TIGHE, lohanna, 23 Holyrood Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts TlKELLlS, Pamela, 19 Perth Drive, Wilmington, Delaware TORREY, Susan, 7 Hilltop Road, Dover, Massachusetts VALLIS, Vanessa, 109 Lowell Street, Lynnfreld, Massachusetts WASHBURN, Anne, Red Stone Hill, Plainville, Connecticut WATERMAN, Laura, 99 Plat Rock Road, Easton, Connecticut WHITNEY, Ann, 2 Grace Court Alley, Brooklyn, New York WHITNEY, Susan, 2 Grace Court Alley, Brooklyn, New York WICK, Kathleen, 35 West Cedar Street, Boston, Massachusetts WILLIAMS, Beverly, 1219 Andover Street, North Tewksbury, Massachusetts WILLIAMS, Elizabeth, 1219 Andover Street, North Tewksbury, Massachusetts WILLIAMS, Deborah, 12 Wood Street, Concord, Massachusetts WINZELER, Barbara, 512 Oakwood Avenue, Bryan, Ohio ZINN, Deborah, Ballwood Road, Old Greenwich, Connecticut FACULTY RAMSAY, Miss Hildred, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts CROSBIE, Mrs. Barbara, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts JONES, Mrs. Frances, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts PAYNE, Miss Peggy, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts PERLOFF, Mrs. Dorothy, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts STATEN, Mrs. Louise, Rogers Hall, Lowell, Massachusetts ALEXANDER, Miss Doris, 117 Redfield Ave., cfo L. A. Naylor, Fayetteville, N. Y. BAMFORD, Miss Susan, 40 Woodland Road, Andover, Massachusetts BOWES, Miss Carol, 2 Tupel Road, Swampscott, Massachusetts BREWER, Mrs. Ralph, Plain Road, Nabnasset, Massachusetts DAY, Miss Kathleen, 39 North Billerica Road, Apartment 1726, Lowell, Massachusetts HOFFER, Mrs. Edward, 40 Jamaica VV ay, Apartment 419, Boston, Massachusetts JONES, Mrs. Agnes, 20 Fenwick Drive, Chelmsford, Massachusetts LeBUTT, Miss Dorothy, 144 Pine Street, Portland, Maine MALONE, Mrs. Thomas, 25 Alcott Street, Lowell, Massachusetts MILLER, Mrs. Ray, 28 Gerson Terrace, Lowell, Massachusetts LATOUR, Mrs. Edward, 202 Parkview Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts PERKINS, Miss Mary J., 7 Mayhew Street, Bristol, New Hampshire PHELPS, Miss Dorothy, 44 High Street, R.F.D., Norwell, Massachusetts PHINNEY, Mrs. Roland, 29 South Walker Street, Lowell, Massachusetts PULLING, Miss Anne, 17 Louisburg Square, Boston, Massachusetts SADOWSK1, Mrs. Judith, 45 George Road, Winchester, Massachusetts SARGENT, Mrs. Marjorie, Ogunquit, Maine SCALISE, Rev. Victor, 222 Liberty Street, Lowell, Massachusetts SWANN, Miss Grace, 61 Nesmith Street, Lowell, Massachusetts TALBOT, Mrs. Charles, 112 Clark Road, Lowell, Massachusetts WORSI-IAM, Mrs. Banks, Partridge Lane, Carlisle, Massachusetts PF A4 FF 56 X- X- X- X- BENTLEY, Mrs. Charlotte, 15 John Turco Dr., cfo VVilliam Thurlo, Walpole, Mass. BUIS, Miss Barbara, 58 Nanepashmet Street, Marblehead Neck, Massachusetts COLPITTS, Mrs. Stephen, 18 Winter Street, Plymouth, New Hampshire HABER, Miss Diane, 19 Euston Street, Brookline, Massachusetts HAYNES, Miss Mary, 2 Otis Place, Apartment 3R, Boston, Massachusetts GEISSLER, Mrs. Gary, 3241 Martha Curtis Drive, Alexandria, Virginia ROBINSON, Miss Carol, 2916 Bay Shore Drive, Fort Lauderdale Beach, Florida 'E .. 'Q f v,-eagwse,qrM12'9 K ww - M 1 ,4-W PT 'S -S. Annual art exhibit in 2' ' 1. If .1 5 133 .1 .1 ,Eva .5 -- . . :iv ggsxjgw Q Fzne Dzsplay k Q, V fa 0? vi.: ig if 1 'Y.,5 Go forth and do it .12 XN'-9 , XF 339' I J fig At last! 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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, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

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

1968

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

1973


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