Second Ward High School - Tiger Yearbook (Charlotte, NC)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 152
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1967 volume:
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1967 Published by the Senior Class of SECOND WARD SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL Charlotte, North Carolina The Celluloid Adventures Shirley Clay Peggy Lawrence Reynard Wright, Mai ion Tim Pitts Marion Pitts, Photography Editor Hazel Jackson LaVerne, Dorothy, Gloria, and Clara Regina Croslin, Marion Pitts, Gloria McClendon (center), Senior Editor Dorothy Wise, Clara Houston Hfe; {+■ ' Doretha Gloria Clara Clifton McClendon Houston 2 Dorothy Wise, Junior Editor Of A New Senior High School Loretta Young LaVerne Ardrey, Reynard Wright Gloria, Dorothy Wise, Dorothy Dunn, Clara, LaVerne, Reynard. Clara Houston PRODUCED BY THE 1966-67 TIGER YEARBOOK STAF Dorothy Dunn Gloria McClendon A Cast of Stars (Administration, Fadulty, ’ — Student B ly.) A Stellar S We are old. For forty-four years Second Ward High School has served the Charlotte com¬ munity as a combination junior and senior high school. We are young. When school doors opened for the 1966-67 school year, Second Ward opened its doors as a brand new senior high school. With cameras in hand, we have recorded many aspects of the experiences which accom¬ panied our new status. Share with us the ’’Cel¬ luloid Adventures of a New Senior High School. STARRING Mrs. Pecola Maxwell Our 1966-67 verbal Oscar is hereby presented to Mrs. Pecola Maxwell. The factors which dictate this choice are both numerous and imposing. They include a motivating example of high scholarship, effectively adapted to and diffused throughout her classroom contacts with her students. They include a breadth and sincerity of interests which are felt in many areas of the total school program. They include painstaking diligence and a genuine interest in the problems and promise of each student. They include a warm and stimulating personality in which humor, friendliness, and firmness of purpose are happily blended. For five and a half years she has exhibited these qualities and we sincerely wish for her and our alma mater a continuation of this fortunate association. 6 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR THE PRINCIPAL ' S MESSAGE We began the 1966-67 school year as a full-fledged senior high school (grades 10-12), facing many challenges. As the year progresses we are fortunately able to conclude that, for the most part, these challenges are being met. This year has brought changes in our student body with many new faces and I salute these students for accepting their responsibilities as Second Ward Tigers. I likewise salute the returning students for the friendliness and hospitality extended to the new students. Looking toward the future, I see the prospects of many good things for Second Ward. Among these are a new plant, new programs, increased student body, new activities—and we may eve n have a new name. I extend congratulations to the staff of the 1967 TIGER for the diligent work which was done to produce this yearbook. Specifically, I want to commend Miss Queen Green for her unrelenting dedication to the job as adviser to the staff. She worked long and hard to make this book a source of pride and joy to all of us who love Second Ward. As you examine these pages, I am sure you will conclude that Second Ward is a great school with a dedicated faculty and a wonderful student body. 7 ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR Mr. Robert E. Wood, Assistant Principal Executive Office Staff Miss Mary Wilks Miss Carolyn Anthony 8 Where is the king ' s crown? 9 You can’t outrun a photographer k , mm . FACULTY FLASH-BACKS FROM OUR ESEA SUMMER PROGRAM LIBRARY AND COUNSELING SERVICES Mrs. Myrtle Johnson, Library Assistant Mrs. Dorothy Crawford, Librarian Mrs. Rosena Gaines, Counselor ■ ' Mrs. Shirley Thomas Chairman Mrs. Pecolia Maxwel Mrs. Cecelia Wilson Miss Shirley Johnson Miss Mattie Hall 13 SOCIAL STUDIES DEPARTMENT Miss Isabel Reid h Green Miss Queen C. Mrs. Ruby Bradley, Chairman mi: iv Miss Alice Rhodes Mrs. Wahbirk Corley Mrs, Mildred Gilliard MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS Mrs. Alene McCorkle, Mathematics Mrs. Addie Nash, Science Mrs. Greta Moore, Science-Chairman F. Marion Jones, Science Mrs. Geneva Adams, Mathematics -Chairman George Anderson, Mathematics Louis Levi, Science BUSINESS AND Barry Price • Mrs. Helen Carpenter Mr. John Chambers. Chairman Vocations VOCATIONAL DEPARTMENTS James Woods Matthew Wingate Ernest Cohen wmm FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT 1 9 Mrs. Willia Carson HEALTH AND Mrs. Mary Alford Robert Montgomery Mrs. Gladys Anderson School Nurse Miss Mary Lawhorn PHYSICAL EDUCATION James Elliott W. T. Moten, Chairman DRIVER EDUCATION C. E. Wilson Rainey Floyd MEMBERS OF THE Harold Shuford FACULTY WHO ARE SECOND WARD GRADUATES SPECIAL EDUCATION Mrs. Ethel Alexander 27 MISS SECOND WARD Miss Second Ward, 1966-67 Doris Horton A queenly combination of beauty. . . , , Charm and poise. . . , , Stately presence. . . Thoughtful serenity. . First Vice-President STARS Second Vice-President La Verne Ardrey Baby-Cakes ' Plans to become a biochemist Corresponding Secretary Rebecca Hamilton Becky Ambition: Social worker Recording Secretary President Henry Wallace Penny A future research biologist Rodgery McClain Wezzer Hopes to be a journalist Treasurer Bruce Wright Kid A future electronics technician Joan Looper Little Bit Career plans: Social worker Reporter Doretha Clifton Dodie A future in Biochemistry Parliamentarian Scotty Hendricks Bear Split decision: Phychology or Music LINDA ALEXANDER Lin A future cosmetologist RAYMOND ALEXANDER Ray Boy Career plans: Civil engineering SARAH ANTHONY Puddin After graduation: A JOHNNY ARCHIE degree in nursing Arch Future plans: To coach football PATRICIA BANKS Touche In the future: Success MARY BAXTER as a writer Hopes to be an execu¬ tive secretary ALICE ALSTON Pudding Ambition: Secretarial career CAROLYN ARDREY Lynn Hopes to become a reg¬ istered nurse HENRIETTA BEASLEY Hen A future licensed prac¬ tical nurse PRISCILLA ANDERSON Kate Goal for the future: Social work VIRGINIA BAILEY Gin In the future: a nursing career FRANKIE BENSON Baby Face” Ambition: Secretary 26 JESTER BLACKMORE Peaches Goal for the future: Dental assistant CURTIS BROWN Snook Assuredly a commercial artist GERALDINE BYRD Byrd College major: Home Economics GRADY BOSWELL Head” One of our future social workers JUDY BROWN Dy Future plans: Still being considered JACQUELYN BYRD Jackie Career choices: Social work, nursing. JOHN BREWER J.B. Future Plans: Undecided WESLEY BROOKS Wes Future Plans: Undecided FRENTO BURTON Toe, Jr. A future in pro football. MARY BURTON Candy Career Plan: Registered nurse THOMAS CALDWELL Rat Future political scien¬ tist or psychiatrist DORIS CAMPBELL Feddie Ambition: Telephone operator 27 HARRY CANTY Westside Canty Would like to become a radio engineer MARY CAPLE Cap Future Plans: Indefinite SANDRA CARR Tootie” Ambition: Physical Education Teacher SHIRLEY CLAY Duck Future Plans: Ele¬ mentary Ed. Teacher WILLIE CLYBURN June Ambition: Graduation and a happy life BRENDA CATHEY Shorty Hopes to be a teacher HARRY CHAPPELL Butch Goal: Social Studies Teacher WILLIAM HILL CLOUD Willie Goal: Teacher or DIANE CLYBURN Di Career plan: Clerical position Doctor • PEER ' S AHEAD CAROL COFIELD Precious Hopes to become a novelist. Joseph Hall The moment for decision. Joseph Hall has received letters and catalogs from forty colleges and universities. The summer of 66 was spent at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H. 28 JOE COLE Coon” Ambition: To reach my goal MYRA COOPER Nunny” Wants to become a teacher National Merit Scholarship Finalists: Harry Ezell, LaVerne Ardrey, Joseph Hall DORETHA COVINGTON Reatha Future plans: Indefinite LARRY CRAWFORD Chip Plans for a career in journalism LEVON CULBREATH Lee Goal: A recording vocalist AARON CUNNINGHAM Tula Career plan: Pro Football GERALDINE CUNNINGHAM Little Bit After graduation: IBM training McArthur dalton Mack Future plans: Undecided ANNIE DAVIS Ann Ambition: IBM operator SANDRA DELAIN San A future executive secretary LARRY DAVIS Day Future Plans: Indefinite GORDON DIGSBY Moon-Creature A future as a composing vocalist Meet Shirley Hyatt, winner of the National Betty Crocker Search For Homemaker of Tomorrow Award. NATHANIEL DAVIS Nate Ambition: Undecided PRISCILLA DRAKE FORD Sie College major: Elementary Education BURNELL EDWARDS Burn Hopes to be a basketball coach BENJAMIN ELLISON Benny Career plans: Electronics technician OTIS DEAN O. F. Ambition: Undecided DOROTHY DUNN Dot A future Mathematician JOE EDWARDS Joe Ambition: Electronics engineer HAZEL ERWIN Win Future plans: Indefinite JANICE EVANS Red Ambition: Professional dancer CAROLYN FAULKNER Carol Plans to become a registered nurse JACQUELINE FOMAN Jackie Goal: CPA RICHARDINE FRAZIER Tippy A future beautician HARRY EZELL Light Horse After Graduation: Electrical engineering The attache case is no sham. As Senior Class President, Henry Wallace combines high executive ability with excellent scholas¬ tic performance. DOROTHY FUNCHES Dot Would like to become a nurse SHIRLEY FALLS Too-Sna Career Plans: Tailoring DONNIE FLEMING Dr. Big Moose A future electronics engineer SANDRA FORD San-San Practical nurse DENISE FUNDERBURKE Neecy Future Plans: Secretarial field 31 ELLEN GADDY Rabbit Hopes to become an elementary teacher DORIS GATEWOOD Dude Future plans: Indefinite JAMES GRAY Bro. Rabbit Plans a career in art LEON GARRETT Baby-head After graduation: Air Force career CHARLES GASKINS Gas A future barber ALBERT GASTON Albert Future plans: Indefinite FRANK GILES F. L.” Plans for the future: Undecided DIANE GILL Dee Plans to become a secretary CAROL GLENN Cal A future stenographer MARY GRAY Smiley Ambition: Social worker CAROLYN GRIER Chicken Goal-High speed typist HAROLD GRIER Bucky A future sociologist JOYCE GRIER Boot” Ambition: Cosmetologist THOMASINA GRIER Thomasina Future plans: Indefinite JAMES HAIR Jimmie Ambition: Undecided JOSEPH HALL Butch” A future happily married architect LINDA HARRIS Lin College major Medicine NANCY HARRIS Peaches A future telephone operator JOHN HAILEY ’John ELIJAH HACKETT Ambition: Undecided Little Jack Goal: Jet pilot JUDY HARRIS Judy ELIZABETH HARDEN Plans to become Liz pop singer Ambition: Airline stewardess RAYMOND HARRIS Ray Ambition: Undecided SYLVESTER HARRIS Bossman Career plans: Indefinite 33 SANDRA HARVELL Sandy Future plans: Indefinite HAZEL HARVEY Runt College major: Social work YVONNE HICKS Von Ambition: Elementary teacher SYLVESTER HICKSON West Goal: Leadership position DELORIS HILL Boot Plans to become a nurse LINDA HOLLEY Lin A future teacher BRENDA HINSON Bren Career plans: Secretary JEANETTE HINTON Jap Hopes to become a teacher CORA HOOD Cora Would like a dancing career MARY HOOD Mae Plans to become a bookkeeper GIRLS WILL GOSSIP, whether standing. . . 34 DORIS HORTON Dot Plans to become an executive secretary DIANNE HOSEY Dianne Future plans: Indefinite CLARA HOUSTON Woodgikines Career plans: IBM operator SHIRLEY HYATT Shire Ambition: Social worker HAZEL JACKSON HOWARD JOHNSON Howie Goal: Shoe repair shop owner ELIZABETH INGRAM Lib Ambition: A worthwhile goal Haze” A future seamstress Or sitting. JAMES JOHNSON, JR. Cannonball Ambition: Successful businessman JAMES JOHNSON J. J. Ambition: Auto mechanic 3b JAMES WILLIAM JOHNSON Two J. A future artist VERMELL JOHNSON Pee Wee Ambition: To be a nurse JAMES JONES QQQ Ambition: Undecided JERLINE JOHNSON Jerl Wants to become a dental assistant LEROY JOHNSON Leroy Future plans: Indefinite PATRICIA JOHNSON Pat Ambition: Elementary teacher WANDA JOHNSON Wanda Plans to become a social worker WARREN JOHNSON Wind De mon A future brick mason DOROTHY JONES Dottie Career plans: Secretary REBECCA JONES Poochie Ambition: General science teacher CAROLYN JORDAN Caro Would like to be a writer MARY JORDAN Mary A future hair stylist 36 NATALIE KENNEDY Nat College major: Biology JOAN KIRKPATRICK Jo- Goal: A college education TERRY KIRKPATRICK Terry Future plans: Indefinite SAMUEL LAND Sammie” Future: Undecided ATWOOD LATTER Flute Career plans: Cosmetology JACQUELINE LAWING Jack- Ambition: Music teacher PEGGY LAWRENCE Smiley- Ambition: IBM operator MARY LEACH Mary- After graduation: College WILLIE BELLE LEAKS Suder Plans to become a nurse KITTY KNUCKLES Cat- Plans to become a teacher SUSIE LAWING Leopard A hopeful artist ROBERTA LEGGETT Doll- Plans a career as an Army nurse 37 CAROLYN LEVELS Mickey Future plans: Indefinite RICHARD LEWIS Big Rich” College major: Physical Education MARY LIGHTSEY Sister Baby Ambition: Nurse EARLENE LINDSEY Earlene Ambition: Secretary BOBBY MASON Bobby Plans to become an electrician HAZEL MASSEY Haywood Ambition: Air Force career ROSA LEWIS Duck Ambition: Secretary JACKIE LIGE Jackie Boy Career plans: Pro basketball DONALD MACKEY Big Daddy D. A future musician ROBERT MARTIN Bert” Hopes to be a brick mason PATRICIA MASSEY Doodle Bug A future IBM operator WILLIE MASSEY Beau Jack Plans to be a tailor 38 RUTH MAXWELL Punchie Future plans: Airline stewardess DAISY McILWAINE Birdie Ambition: Secretary BETTY MILLS Betty Plans to become a tailor gloria McClendon Glow worm SANFRA McCATHORINE Ambition: Secretary San Goals: Degree in nursing; marriage certificate DAVID McKINNEY Dave Future plans: Indefinite ISSAC MILLER Deke Ambition: Brick mason MOSES MITCHELL Moe” Future plans: Undecided JUDY MONROE Judy Ambition: Nurse BARBARA McCOY Bob Future: Nurse or social worker JAMES MILLER Festus Plans a future as a coach ELLA MONTGOMERY Ell A future singer 39 PAULINE MOORE Pauline College major: Elementary education ROBERT MOORE Mookee Plans to become a lawyer THERESA MOORE Pie Career plans: Social worker JACQUELINE NEWMAN Jackie Career Plans: Veterinary science MAXINE MORRIS Max Plans to become a clerical worker ALICE MURRAY Shorty Career plans: Nurse SHIRLEY NEELEY Shirl Ambition: Elementary teacher JOE O’ FAIRE Joe Future plans: indefinite 40 DOROTHY O ' LEARY Dot A future nurse JERRY PARKER Adams Ambition: To teach theology MARGARET PARTLOW Margaret Ambition: Undecided RUBY PEARSON Slim Ambition: Vista Volunteer DARCELLA PETERSON Key College Major: Dietetics JOHN PETTIS Slim Plans to become an electrician JEANETTE PINCKNEY Pig Ambition: Social worker BEATRICE POLK Cootenany Future plans: Typing teacher MARION PITTS Tim Ambition: Machine operator MARY LIGHTSEY has consistently shown rare artistic ability. ' Last summer she attended the Governor ' s School in Winston-Salem. WILLIE PORTER Bill” Future Plans: Undecided THOMAS PRICE T. J. Future plans: Indefinite JOHN POWERS J - J Ambition: Jet mechanic DELORES ROBBINS Loisie Future plans: Career in business BARNEY REED Slim Ambition: Lab technician JAMES RUSH Jitt Plans to join the Air Force EUGENE REID Jean Future fashion designer JOSEPHINE RUSHING Jo-Jo Ambition: Practical nurse GEORGE REID Sonny Future plans: Auto mechanic MARY SANDERS Sister Career plans: Barbering There was pride enough, and the entire Second Ward family shared it. THOMAS CALDWELL, President of the North Carolina Association of Student Councils, receives his official gavel. RONALD SANDERS Tray Plans to become a disc jockey 42 MELVIN SHIRLEY Red Career plans: Professional Band musician HENRY SHROPSHIRE Swop Plans to become a professional football player PATRICIA SMITH Trish Plans a future in social work JAMES SIMMONS Jim Plans are indefinite PEGGY SMITH Short Stuff” Hopes to be a secretary RUBY SIMMONS Sister Goal: Secretary REGINALD SPENCER Reggie Career plans: Basketball coach JEANETTE SMITH Jeanette” Career plans: Teacher GERALDINE SPRINGS Gerri Ambition: Nurse These two, FRENTO BURTON and HENRY SHROPSHIRE, represented Second Ward in the 1966 Shrine Bowl game. Here, they take intermis¬ sion at The Little Foxes.” JANIE SPRINGS Lou Ambition: Social worker 43 BESSIE STEVENSON Bessie Ambition: Hair stylist JAMES TEETER Teet Ambition: Physical education teacher ELEANOR STOWE Red June” Hopes to be a professional singer JAMES TATE Furman Plans a career in biological research GENORISE TEAL Norise Future plans: Indefinite DELORES THOMPSON Ba-Ba College major: Elementary Education JOSEPH THOMPSON Joe Plans to become an auto body repairman SARAH THOMPSON Sarah” A future nurse THERESA THOMPSON Theresa Future pians: Indefinite CHARLES THORN Billy Ambition: To become a brick mason EARNESTINE TILLMAN Tine Ambition: Nurse MARY WALKER Mary Ambition: Undecided 44 ANDY WALLACE Swine Future plans: Indefinite GERALD WALLACE Pepper” Ambition: Medical technologist JANICE WEATHERS Jan JEANETTE WALTON A future nurse Geannie After graduation: College BETTY WELCH Conch Hopes to be a registered nurse JAMES WELCH Finley A future electrician PAMELA WALLACE Pam Plans to become a typist MARY WEATHERS Mary Future plans: Indefinite CAROLYN WHITE Weedy Plans to be a secretary SHIRLEY WALLACE Sister Goal: Nurse SHERRY WEATHERS Bonnie Career plans: IBM operator MABLE WHITE Mable Future plans: Undecided 45 HAZEL WILKERSON Zel Hopes to become a nurse ROSA WILSON Ree Ambition: To become a secretary JAMES WITHERSPOON Raye Block After Graduation: U. S. Army CLEVELAND WILLIAMS Happy Jack To become a brick mason GILDA WILLIAMS Elmore Future career: Dental hygienist HENRY WALLACE We remember Henry as a president whose sense of humor worked wonders; whose leadership and scholarship earned our respect. ELEANOR WORLEY Worley Plans for future: Undecided REGINALD WRIGHT Ray Hopes to become an architect LARRY WILLIAMS Nard Career plans: Aviation HELEN WITHERSPOON Helen Plans: IBM; business teacher WILLIAM WOODARD Pop Ambition: To be a draftsman i 46 CYNTHIA YOUNG Simp After graduation: College MARY YOUNG Boy LORETTA YOUNG Hopes to be a nurse Lo Ambition: Elementary teacher WILLIAM YOUNG Net Ambition: To go to college WILLIAM YOUNGBLOOD Blood” Ambition: T be a barber Counting Backwards From the Twelfth Grade to the First Grade FIRST ROW: Dorothy Funches, Gloria McClendon, Ella Montgomery. SECOND ROW: Frank Holmes, Leon Garrett; THIRD ROW: Clara Houston, Carolyn Levels, Wanda Johnson. STANDING: Mary Lightsey, John Pettis. SENIOR LEON SIDNEY ALEXANDER 720 East Ninth Street To lift me up, you must be on higher grounds. LINDA ALEXANDER 708 South Davidson Street Never wait until tomorrow to do what you can today. Chorus; Red Cross; Y-Teens RAYMOND ALEXANDER 321 Gene Avenue Anything worth having is worth working for. Esquires; Football; Honor Society; Band; Orchestra; All Mecklenburg County Tackle; Honorable mention, State Drama Festival; Perfect Attendance Certificate ALICE ALSTON 2627 Baltimore Avenue Knowledge is a treasure, but practice is the key to it. Student Council; Red Cross; Y-Teens; NHA; Commercial Co-eds; Cheerleader PRISCILLA JEANETTE ANDERSON 641 Watts Street Life is like a footprint in the sand; with each step forward an impression is left behind. Creative Dancing; Senior Chorus SARAH LOUISE ANTHONY 1214 South Caldwell Street Though change is inevitable, change for the better is a full-time job. Chorus; Y-Teens JOHNNY RAYMOND ARCHIE 2133 Horne Drive Strive for the best and you shall obtain the best. Baseball; Football; Basketball CAROLYN ANN ARDREY 300 Ramona Avenue Nothing less than the best. Honor Society; Student Council; Y-Teens; FTA; FHA; Drama Club; Les Socialettes Social Club LAVERNE ARDREY 617 Royal Court Don ' t place success before happiness; if one finds happiness, success will surely come! Yearbook Staff; 2nd Vice-president senior class; 2nd Vice-president Student Council; Student Council public relations committee; Les Socialettes Social Club; Honor Society; French Club; NCCJ; Senior Chorus; FSA; Y- Teens; Girls Ensemble VIRGINIA BAILEY 838 Belmont Avenue Good, better, best; never let it rest ' til your good is better, and your better, best. Senior Chorus; Girls Ensemble; Vice-presi¬ dent of 12-4 THOMAS PORTER CALDWELL 115 North Irwin Avenue Trust not a living soul and walk carefully among the dead. Football; Basketball; Drama Club; NCCJ; Mecklenburg Youth Council; Student Council; Chorus; Esquire Club DORIS JEAN CAMPBELL 400 Cherry Street To do right, is to go far. DECA Club Let your conscience be your guide. Chorus MARY CAPLE 1444 South Church Street No one is mediocre who has good sense and good sentiments. SANDRA VON EZETTE CARR 415 Eli Street There is no easy method of learning difficult things. President, VICA; Drama Club BRENDA SENELLA CATHEY 2452 Remus Road Wise men always know more than they tell but fools tell more than they know. Herald Staff; Student Council; Public Rela¬ tions Committee HARRY LEE CHAPPELL 3717 Marvin Road It ' s better to be honest and fail than to cheat and succeed. Football; Basketball; Baseball; Student Coun¬ cil A. SHIRLEY CLAY 524 West Seventh Street The sure way to miss success is to miss the opportunity; strike while the iron is hot. Yearbook Staff; Chorus; Girls ' Ensemble; Y-Teens DORETHA CLIFTON 417 Andrill Terrace Better is a man who walks in his integrity, than a man who is reserved in speech and is a fool. Les Socialette Club; Cheerleader; Student Council; Red Cross; Yearbook Committee; Drama Club; Honor Society; Orchestra. WILLIAM HILL CLOUD 1109 South Caldwell Street A word and a stone let go cannot be recalled. FTA; French Club; Basketball DIANE CLARK CLYBURN 2931 Morning Drive It is not what you say; it is how you say it. DECA; Family Living Club WILLIE CLYBURN 928 North Caldwell Street Much may be known of a man ' s character by what excites his laughter. CAROL 1 1ADORA COFIELD 131 Eas Liddell Street One ' s i 1 ge lies in his goals. Second Ward Playmakers; Industrial Coop¬ erative club; VICA Club JOE WILLIE COLE 1503 McCall Street Do unto others as you want them to do unto you. MYRA LOUISE COOPER 2105 Rozzells Ferry Road The best preparation for tomorrow ' s work is to do your work as well as you can today. Herald News Editor; Dance Group A SENIOR CLASS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE SESSION HARRY LOUIS CANTY 336 Ramona Avenue DIRECTORY DORETHA COVINGTON 625 Baldwin Avenue Dare to believe in yourself—and act accord¬ ingly. LARRY CRAWFORD 800 East Eighteenth Street Every cloud has its silver lining. Student Council; Esquire Club; Herald Staff LEVON CULBREATH 1615 North Davidson Street Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. AARON CUNNINGHAM 1115 North Myers Street Never be a dropout. Drill Team; Stunt Team GERALDINE CUNNINGHAM 3111 Zircon Street, Apt. 1 If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him. An invest¬ ment in knowledge always plays the best in¬ terest. McARTHUR DALTON 810 East First Street No man really becomes a fool until he stops asking questions. ANNIE BELLE DAVIS 117 West Bland Street The gem cannot be polished without friction, nor a man perfected without trials. Red Cross; Student Council; Social Commit¬ tee SANDRA LEE DELAIN 221 North Irwin Avenue, Apt 2 Life is like a footstep in the sand; with each step forward an impression is left behind. Red Cross; 11th grade homeroom vice pres¬ ident; Band; Student Council; Y-Teens LARRY DAVIS 1011 Pitcher Street There are many paths to the top of the moun¬ tain, but the view is always the same. NATHANIEL DAVIS 305 West Dunbar Street A determination to succeed is the only way to succeed. OTIS FRANK DEAN 127 East Liddell Street The secret of happiness is not in doing what one likes, but in liking what one has to do. GORDON DIGSBY 1501 Wilmore Drive First plan a future; then strive toward it. Health-Safety Committee; Chorus; DE Club PRISCILLA HORTENSE DRAKE FORD 319 West Palmer Street A single day among the learned lasts longer than the life of the ignorant. Honor society; Les Socialettes; Y-Teens President; Honor Society; FTA Reporter; Student Council; Parliamentarian, Junior Class; FHA; Citizenship award and French award DOROTHY LEE DUNN 328 Skyland Avenue Faith is a lamp in the hands of men. If it is never lighted, the world is seldom aware that they have passed. National Honor Society; Y-Teens; Science Club; NCCJ; Senior Chorus; French Club; Student Council Treasurer; Certificate of merit in mathematics; Represented Second Ward in data processing course; Les Social¬ ettes; Girls Ensemble BURNELL EDWARDS 929 East Vance Street Try to be the best in everything you do in life. Football; Basketball JOE EDWARDS 201 North Irwin Avenue Something that is worth doing is worth doing well. Hi-Y; FSA; Red Cross BENJAMIN ELLISION 613 Royal Court The great pleasure in life is doing what peo¬ ple say you cannot do. ICT; Senior Chorus; Homeroom Officer; Es¬ quire Social Club HAZEL ERWIN 1516 South Church Street Adventure is not outside a man; it is within. JANICE HARRIET EVANS 3606 Jonquil Street Determination knows no defeat. Cheerleader; Student Council; Y-Teens; Na¬ tional Junior Honor Society; Dramatics Club HARRY EZELL, JR. 520 North Myers Street He who knows not, and knows not that he knows not is a fool; and he who knows not and thinks that he knows but knows not should be pitied; and he who knows not and knows that he knows not is a wise man. French Club, Science Club; Esquire Club; Student Council; Honor Society President; Hi-Y; Certificates of merit; Mathematics, World History, French; Participant in Na¬ tional Science Foundation project SHIRLEY MAE FALLS 937 North Davidson Street Sail on the ship of ambition, and land on the shore of success. Chorus CAROLYN HARRIET FAULKNER 1000 Seigle Avenue Don ' t put off for tomorrow what you can do today, for tomorrow may never come. DONNIE LEWIS FLEMING 1214 Avery Lane Don ' t ask what others can do for you; ask what you can do for yourself. Posing takes practice and the Student Lounge is the perfect spot. JACQUELINE DELAINE FOMAN 2526 Abelwood Road Every man ' s success lies in his accomplish¬ ments. Orchestra; National Honor Society; Student Council; Science Club; Les Socialettes; Cer¬ tificates of merit: Band, Orchestra: Stu¬ dent Council, Junior Marshal, 1966 SANDRA MELVINA FORD 615 Miller Street Don ' t put off for tomorrow what you can do today. ICT Club RICHARDINE FRAZIER 349 Skyland Avenue Prepare today for a better tomorrow. FHA Club DOROTHY MAE FUNCHES 521 East Seventeenth Street If you want to, you can. Dramatics Club; Senior Chorus DENISE ELIZABETH FUNDERBURK 114 North Smallwood Place Hard work and determination make a good combination. Y-Teen Club ELLEN RUTH GADDY Route 5, Box 1063-L Strive for the best in life. FTA; Student Council; Spanish Club; DECA Club; FHA THOMAS LEE GADDY Route 5, Box 1063-L Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Football LEON BOYD GARRETT 320B Fannie Circle Silence is more musical than any song. Football CHARLES GASKINS 614 East Eleventh Street Success is more easily said than made. Chorus ALBERT GASTON 614 East Eleventh Street Scenes from our Senior Tea The struggle of today is not altogether for today--it is for a vast future also. DORIS GATEWOOD 415 Fairwood Avenue The great art in life lies less in solving problems than in discovering the problems to be solved. FRANK LEE GILES 3739 Sargeant Drive Be prepared. DIANE YVONNE GILL 1323 Independence Boulevard, Apt 1 No matter what your lot in life may be, build something on it. CAROL LINDA GLENN 1912 North Harrill Street Education has for its object the formation of character. Drama Club; Red Cross JAMES DOUGLAS GRAY 825 McArthur Street Love them all. MARY FRANCES GRAY 1104 Elm Street Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. DECA; NHA; Dramatics Club CAROLYN DELORIS GRIER 618 Miller Street Do unto others as you would have them to do unto you. HAROLD E. GRIER 325 East Liberty Street Strive for the best and the good will never be lacking. JOYCE LAVERN GRIER 1514 South Manson Street Achieve what you have set out to achieve. THOMASINA GRIER 1712 North Caldwell Street No man really becomes a fool until he stops asking questions. ELIJAH JACKSON HACKETT 1517 Luther Street If at first you don ' t succeed--try, try again. JOHN HAILEY 508 North Myers Street A good place to nnd helping hands is at the end of your arm. JAMES EDWARD HAIR 2212 Booker Avenue Live a little; learn a little. Football; Drama JOSEPH HALL 914 North Caldwell Street Be kind to the ones you meet on your way up; they ' re the same ones you meet on your way down. National Honor Society; FTA; FSA; French Club; Football and Track; Esquire Club; Hi- Y; Student Council; National Merit Scholar¬ ship Finalist FRED HAMES 115 North Clarkson Street Give unto others as you want them to give unto you. Student Council Health and Safety Committee; Baseball REBECCA LOUISE HAMILTON 1828 Oaklawn Avenue, Apt. 2 Good things come to those who wait. Student Council; Red Cross; NCCJ; FTA; Na¬ tional Junior Honor Society; National Honor Society; Honor Roll; Yearbook Staff; Les Socialette Social Club ELIZABETH HARDEN 609 West Cama Street Be nice to those you meet on the way up, for they are the ones you meet on your way down. Student Council; Drama Club JUDY HARRIS 120 North Sycamore Street Counting time is not so important as making time count. Dramatics Club LINDA KAY HARRIS 1628 Umstead Street Notby age but by capacity is wisdom attained. Knowledge in youth is wisdom in age. Honor Society; French Club NANCY REID HARRIS 119 House Lane Good, better, best; never let it rest. Let this be your maxim for success. 50 RAYMOND HARRIS 1028 North Church Street A word and a stone let go cannot be recalled. SYLVESTER PATRICK HARRIS 1242 North Allen Street The eyes believe themselves; the ears be¬ lieve other people. VICA Club SANDRA HARVELL 2121 Rozzell Ferry Road Time is so powerful it is given t o us only in small doses. HAZEL PEARL HARVEY 1704 North Harrill Street Act the way you would like to be, and soon you will be the way you act. Family Living Club SCOTTY HENDRICKS 1409 Tudor Place Strive toward greater things for a brighter future. Esquire Social Club; Hi-Y; Orchestra; Chair¬ man Student Council; Public Relations Com¬ mittee; Football; Second Ward Stage Band; Rotations Orchestra; Charlotte Symphony Youth Orchestra; Letter in Football; Certi¬ ficate in Music; Recommended for Gover¬ nor ' s School YVONNE GWENDOLYN HICKS 428 Remount Road Life is like a looking glass; you get out of it what you put in. SYLVESTER EDWARD HICKSON 1117 South Independence Boulevard Be nice because all we have in this old world is each other. Basketball. DELORIS HILL 1625 Sumter Avenue Aim for the higher things in life, let the sky be your limit. Y-Teens; VICA BRENDA OLIVIA HINSON 1332 Oaklawn Avenue Be kind to the people you meet on the way up, because they are the same people you ' ll meet on your way down. Red Cross; Commercial Co-eds; Future Teachers of America; Orchestra; Y-Teens; Student Council; Dramatics Scenes from our Senior Tea JEANETTE HINTON 140 Jasper Street A winner never quits, and a quitter never wins. LINDA REA HOLLEY 3229 Seymour Drive It ' s better to be small and shine than to be large and cast a shadow. Commercial Co-eds Club; Family Living; Y-Teens JOHN FRANKLIN HOLMES 2716 Remington Street Be respectful and you will get respect. CORA LEE HOOD 422 Billingsley Road Be kind to people on the way up, because they are the same people you met on the way down. Y-Teen; Family Living Club MARY EDNA HOOD 422 Billingsley Road There ' s a path lying beyond the river, follow it and you will succeed. NHA; Journalism; 4-H; Chorus DORIS HORTON 1238 North Allen Street The wiseman hides his wisdom; the fooldis- olays his foolishness. Member of Student Council; Member of Jun¬ ior Achievement; Miss Second Ward 1966-67 school year DIANNE HOSEY 802 South Alexander Street Faith is nothing but spiritualized imagination. CLARA M. HOUSTON 2612 Senior Drive Strive for the best things in life. President of Homeroom; Student Council; General Welfare Committee; Majorette; Cor¬ responding Secretary Junior Class; Corre¬ sponding Secretary of Red Cross; Member of Yearbook Staff SHIRLEY ANN HYATT 2706 South Tryon Street Never say I can’t do, but always say I can do. NHA; National Honor Society ELIAZBETH INGRAM 1126 Sugar Creek Road That nation is worthless that will not venture all for its honor. Red Cross; Typing Certificate; Bible HAZEL MARIE JACKSON 1406 Bluff Street, 1 The great pleasure in life is doing what peo¬ ple say you cannot do. Yearbook staff; Y-Teens; Journialism; Re¬ porter; Red Cross THOMAS ALEXANDER JACKSON 2009 Grier Avenue Things worthwhile are deserving of time. Vice-president of Hi-Y; Treasurer of the French Club; Member of Student Council; Recording Secretary of the Esquires; Pres¬ ident of homeroom; Science Club Member HOWARD BERNARD JOHNSON 405 South Long Street 3 It is so nice to be nicer when you know you are nice. Basketball; Baseball; Hi-Y JAMES JOHNSON, JR. 1500 Baxter Street Success for tomorrow depends on the efforts made today. School Band; Saint Paul Youth Choir; Esquire Social Club; Former NHS; French Club JAMES RONALD JOHNSON 3506 Ellington Street Do it now not later. Baseball; YMCA; Member of the Health and Safety Committee; AMC; Hi-Y JAMES WILLIAM JOHNSON 623 Waco Street If at first you do not succeed--try, try again. JERLINE DELOIS JOHNSON 1816 North Brevard Street Don ' t put off for tomorrow what you can do today. Senior Chorus; Red Cross LEROY JOHNSON 314 South Cedar Street May we strive harder for a better and brighter future. Red Cross representative 51 PATRICIA ANN JOHNSON 418 Benjamin Avenue Strive not only to succeed, but also to excel. Les Socialettes Social Club; Honor Society; Student Council; Y-teens; FTA; Junior Achievement; FHA; Drama Club; Junior Mar¬ shal Award; Citizenship Certificate; French Award VERMELL JOHNSON 1213 Jefferson Street The good guys always win. WANDA DELORIS JOHNSON 315 Benjamin Avenue Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. WARREN JOHNSON 708 East Eighteenth Street Life is like a bank; what you put into it is what you get out of it. Track; Football; Chorus DOROTHY JOANN JONES 1012 West Fourth Street Life is like a footprint in the sand: For every step you make there ' s an impression left behind. Creative dance group; Secretary of VICA; Twelfth grade homeroom president; Student Council; Pom Pon Girl; Chorus JAMES FRANKLIN JONES 1803 Main Street Through the creative work of today the tra¬ dition of tomorrow is built. MARION JONES 1001 North Davidson Street If at first you don ' t succeed, try again. Chorus REBECCA LEE JONES 220 South Fox Street The early bird catches the worm. Orchestra; French Club; Second Ward Play- makers Jeanette Walton SENIOR ROSA MAE JONES 551 East Boundard Street It ' s better to have an education and not need it, than to need an education and not have it. CAROLYN JORDAN 307 South Independence Boulevard The pen is mightier than the sword. Student Council; Health and Safety Committee MARY L. JORDAN 1804 Luther Street It ' s nice to be important but it ' s much more important to be nice. Vocational Club; Dramatic Club; Red Cross NATALIE VAN KENNEDY 1533 Washington Avenue This time like all times is a very good one if we but know what to do with it. Orchestra; NCCJ: FSA; National Honor So¬ ciety; Les Socialettes Social Club; Le Circle Francais JOAN KIRKPATRICK 3703 Marvin Road Set your goals and strive to reach them. DECA; Y-teens; FHA; Designer of the Stu¬ dent Council emblem TERRY KIRKPATRICK 1614 Billingsley Road Through the creative work of today, the tra¬ dition of tomorrow is built. KITTY MONTEZ KNUCKLES 3616 Jonquil Street Success is a goal to be achieved through de¬ termination, education and hard work. Y-Teens; Public Relations Committee; Dra¬ matics; Chorus SAMUEL EDWARD LAND 426 North McDowell Street I don ' t want to be with the rest. I want to be the best. ATWOOD LATTER 1728 West Trade Street Strive toward higher goals. JACQULINE PAULETTE LAWING 1929 Baxter Street Don ' t be a drop-out; keep hanging on. Dance Group SUSIE LAWING 1929 Baxter Street Education today; a better tomorrow. Member of Public Relations Committee; Family Life Club; Vice president of homeroom PEGGIE JEAN LAWRENCE 513 Waco Street Always endeavor to make the best better. Y-Teen; Chorus; Journalism Staff MARY HELEN LEACH 421 Seldon Drive Always look up to the ladder of success. French Club; Cheerleader; Assistant Cor¬ responding Secretary of Homeroom; JA Mem¬ ber; Chorus 52 WILLIE BELLE LEAKS 1304 Siegle Avenue Too many young people itch for what they want without scratching for it. Y-teens ROBERTA JO ANN LEGGETT 2113 Gibbs Street Why pretend, when you know you ' ll just be what you are and nothing more. Member of ICT CAROLYN CHRISTINE LEVELS 605 East Fifth Street Every man for himself and God for us all. Cheerleader; Band; Student Council; National Jr. Honor Society President; Homeroom President - 10th Grade First Vice President of Homeroom - 12th Grade; Attended Special Interests and Talents Summer Program RICHARD ARTHUR LEWIS, JR. 2210 RosyIn Avenue Believe all that you see, and half of what you hear and strive for the higher virtues in life. Esquire Club; President of Homeroom; Mem¬ ber Student Council Executive Board; Mem¬ ber of the Band; Senior Class Executive Board; Basketball Trainer ROSA ANNA LEWIS 147 West Palmer Street Never leave off for tomorrow what can be done today. Y-teens; FHA; Girls track team; Chorus JACKIE ANDRA LIGE 3501 Burkland Drive You must learn in order to reach your goal. ICT Club; Baseball; Track; Family Living Club; Journalism Club MARY LOUISE LIGHTSEY 228 North Summit Avenue Time and patience conquer all. French Clui; Student Council; Majorette; Governor ' s School; Scholastic Art Awards EARLENE LINDSEY 410 Cleveland Court Behavior is the mirror in which everyone shows his image. NORMAN E. LONG 1315 Statesville Avenue Together we stand; divided we fall. Varsity Basketball JOAN SHARONITA LOOPER 926 North Davidson Street Life is what you make it. Red Cross; Drama Club; Les Socialettes Social Club; DONALD RAY MACKEY 408 Cherry Street You have but one life; live like a king. Band; Rotations; Stage Band; Football ROBERT LAWRENCE MARTIN 915 Lent Lane The human being who lives only for himself, finally reaps nothing but unhappiness. Football; Baseball We were happy when students of the forme DIRECTORY BOBBY ROCHELL MASON 223 North McDowell Street You can make it if you try. Red Cross; FFA; Library Club; Perfect Attendance; Industrial Arts Certificate. HAZEL JUANITA MASSEY 217 Gene Avenue It is nice to be important, but it is most im¬ portant to be nice. Y-Teens; Family Living Club PATRICIA ANN MASSEY 3342 Griffith Street Happy is the man that findeth wisdom and the man that getteth understanding. DECA WILLIE MASSEY 519 Cama Street Better to leave than to be left. Health and Safety; Hi-Y; YMCA; VICA SHERLIE MATHIS 307 West Vance Street The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who can ' t read. DE Club RUTH ELAINE MAXWELL 709 East Eighth Street Let learning be cherished where liberty has arisen. Red Cross; Student Council; Y-Teens; Les Socialettes Social Club; Science Club; FTA SANFRA CARMELITA McCATHARINE Route 8, Box 366-E Anything worth having is worth waiting for. Chorus RODGERY McCLAIN 274 Piedmont Courts It is better to be small and shine, than to be great and cast a small shadow. Statistician; sports editor; Senior Class Re¬ porter; Esquire Club; Senior Chorus GLORIA DEAN McCLENDON 1328 East Fourth Street Barney Reid One of the greatest puzzles in life is how a fool and his money got together in the first place. National Junior Honor Society; Student Coun¬ cil; NCCJ; FHA President; FTA Vice-Pres¬ ident; Junior Achievement; Junior Editor of Yearbook BARBARA JOAN McCOY 1028 Roddey Avenue, Apt 1 Be kind to the people you meet on the way up they ' re the same people you meet on the way down. Student Council Treasurer; Cheerleader; Senior Band; National Honor Society; Y- Teens; FTA DAISY ROBERTA McILWAINE 822 South Church Street It is nice to be important, but more impor¬ tant to be nice. DAVID McKINNEY 629 Seigle Avenue What makes greatness is starting something that lives after you. This is what our great of today think and do. MARY WEATHERS McKINNEY 1013 2 North Allen Street It is only the ignorant who despise education. The Herald Staff ISAAC MILLER 428 North Brevard Street The secret of happiness is not in doing what one likes, but in liking what one has to do. Football JAMES CALVIN MILLER 428 North Brevard Street Learn all you can today so that you may be ready for tomorrow and be the best at it. Trainer - Basketball; Football; Dramatics Club; Perfect Attendance; Art Certificate BETTY ELIZABETH MILLS 1925 North Harrill Street One must be skillful to have skill. Dramatic Club MOSES MITCHELL 556 Brookhill Road The first proof of a well-ordered mind is to be able to pause and linger within itself. JUDY QUEENE MONROE 1651 Mauden Street Don ' t put off for tomorrow what you can do today. ELLA LEE MONTGOMERY 815 South Davidson Street 2 Whatever you do, do it as best you can. Chorus MARGIE MOORE 1601 Main Street The greatest pleasure in life is doing what others say you cannot do. PAULINE MAUD MOORE 242 Victoria Avenue Like all, love none, stay single and have fun. FHA Club ROBERT ANDREW MOORE 814 West Fifth Street, Apt 3 It ' s so nice to be nice. Track Team; Hi-Y; Casanova Club Officer THERESA MARGARET MOORE 617 South Davidson Street A good life is a conquest; not a bequest, it can ' t be given, it must be achieved. Yearbook Staff; Dramatics Club; National Honor Society; Les Socialettes; Y-Teens; Certificates of merit; Art, French; U.S. History MAXINE SHREEN MORRIS 1410 Main Street Determination knows no defeat. ALICE CORNELIA MURRAY 528 South Summit Avenue Drink Knowledge in the future. Family Living Club; NHA Club SHIRLEY ANN NEELY 916 West First Street May God grant me the serenity to accept the things that I cannot change. Red Cross; Y-Teens; Student Council; FHA JACQUELINE MAYNELLE NEWMAN 1101 Holland Avenue, Apt 1 Yesterday has gone, forget it; today is here use it; tomorrow is coming, plan for it. Family Living Club; Y-Teens; FHA JOE O ' FAIRE 2129-A Horne Drive Example is contagious behavior. DOROTHY ELIZABETH O ' LEARY 600 East Boundary Street Life is what you make it and nothing else. Creative Dance MELVIN LEROY OSBORNE 301 South Torrence Street Don ' t let yourself down because no one else will pick you up. Sanfra McCathorine and Annie Davis York Road Senior High School joined our class in 1966. ADDIE MAE OWINGS 3509 Burkland Drive 4 Keep climbing the ladder for success is at hand. Chorus; Girls Drill Team JERRY PARKER 624 North Smith Street The struggle of today is not altogether for today--it is for a vast future also. FTA MARGARET PARTLOW 704 Trotters Lande If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future. RUBY LEE PEARSON 1031 Congo Street Trust in God and check everybody else. V1CA Club; Family Living DARCELLE DENISE PETERSON 933 East Hill Street Take life easy for you are just beginning to understand it. VIC A; Senior Chorus; Y-Teens; Student Council JOHN LOUIS PETTIS 513 South Cecil Street Never stay in one place too long JEANETTA PINCKNEY 1301 North Davidson Street Time is so powerful it is given only in small doses. Dance Group MARION TIMOTHY PITTS 705 Seigle Avenue, Apt 141 A winner never quits and a quitter never wins. McCrorey Hi-Y President; Student Council; Homeroom President; Yearbook Staff Pho¬ tographer; Head trainer for football; Audio¬ visual aid; Student Council Committee Chair¬ man; Member of Senior Class Executive Committee BEATRICE POLK 3446 Griffith Street The decision you make, you live with tomor¬ row. Y-Teens; Chorus WILLIE JAMES PORTER 519 Arlington Avenue Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. VIC A JOHN WALTER POWERS 1416 Cleveland Avenue A fanatic is a fellow with such a large chip on his shoulder that it makes him lose his bal¬ ance. DECA; Track team THOMAS JAMES PRICE 621 East Tenth Street If at first you don ' t succeed--try, try again. Playmakers BARNEY LEWIS REID 424 Benjamin Avenue A word and a stone let go cannot be recalled. Family Living Club; Chorus EUGENE REID 341 Cemetery Avenue The past is gone, forget it; the present is here, use it wisely; the future is yet to come, prepare for it GEORGE NEAL REID 924 East Sixth Street Man is not the creature of circumstances; circumstances are the creatures of man DELORES McCRORY ROBBINS 2019 Rozzells Ferry Road Life is but a footprint in the sand; with every step forward an impression is left behind. Drama Club; Office Assistant; Managing Ed¬ itor-Herald JAMES CARSON RUSH 1021 East Brown Street Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Football; Chairman, Student Council Social Committee; Baseball; Secretary, Casanova Club JOSEPHINE RUSHING 1812 North McDowell Street A key of friendliness will open doors when other keys fail. Chorus HATTIE MAE SANDERS 3025 Rodman Street Strive for the better things in life. Never accept anything less. Y-Teens; Red Cross; Student Council; Girls Basketball team MARY ELIZABETH SANDERS 1922 1 2 West Trade Street Every footstep forward leaves a big impres¬ sion behind. Chorus; Girls ' Ensemble; NHA; Y-Teens RONALD EUGENE SANDERS 701 East Hill Street Make the best of your life; you have but one. Band n; Dramatics Club; Track OTIS MELVIN SHIRLEY 417 Eli Street A quitter never wins, and a winner never quits. Marching Band; Concert Band; Orchestra; Stage Band Honors Band (Mecklenburg Coun¬ ty) Western District Clinic of North Carolina HENRY DOUGLAS SHROPSHIRE 117 South Clarkson Street Language is the dress of thought, and every time we open our mouths, our minds are on parade. 54 SENIOR Football; Basketball; Track; Chorus; Student Council; Esquire Social Club; Junior Achieve¬ ment; Hi-Y; Chosen Boy of the Week by the Charlotte News; 1966 All-State Shrine Bowl team JAMES SIMMONS 2000 Aileen Drive If you would lift me up, you must be on higher ground RUBY NELL SIMMONS 1114 North Church Street Strive to do your best in whatever you pur¬ sue. Drama Club BUSTER SINCLAIR 315 West Vance Street The world is a wonderful place JEANETTE SMITH 507 East Tenth Street I will do my best to succeed at everything I undertake PATRICIA ANNE SMITH 510 East Bland Street, Apt 2 Keep your face always towards the sunshine, and the shadows will fall behind you. Herald Staff; National Junior Honor Society; National Honor Society PEGGY ANN SMITH 3225 Seymour Drive The present is here, use it; the past is gone, forget it; the future is coming, prepare for it. Glee Club; Y-Teens REGINALD LEMONT SPENCER 720 1 2 East Boundary Street Always try to be the best in everything you do. Football team; Basketball team Rebecca Hamilton and James Tate represented us on the City Council and Board of County Commissioners, respectively during Youth Appreciation week. Scotty Hendricks, member of Charlotte Symphony Youth Or¬ chestra GERALDINE SPRINGS 632 Seigle Avenue Dare to believe in yourself—and act accord¬ ingly. If you do, both your present and your future are secured. Junior Achievement; Y-Teens JAMES LOUISE SPRINGS 115 West 12th Street One may go wrong in many different direc¬ tions, but right in only one. Chorus; French Club; Y-Teens THOMAS EDWARD STERLING 2321 Bancroft Street Strive for perfection in everything you do. Senior Band; Senior Orchestra; FSA; Student Council Public Relations Committee; The Rotations BESSIE L. STEVENSON 1101 Belmont Avenue Good, better, best; never let it rest, until the good is better, and the better is best. Vocational Club ELEANOR LOUISE STOWE 628 East Hill Street Strive for the best in life and the best will come your way. Senior Y-Teens; Student Council; NHA; Sen¬ ior Chorus; Second Ward Playmakers JAMES VERNON TATE 1910 Baxter Street Success is a goal to be achieved through de¬ termination, education, and hard work. Football team; Student Council; FTA; Hi-Y; NCCJ; Esquire Social Club; FSA GENORISE TEAL 931 Grove Street The great pleasure in life is doing what peo¬ ple say you cannot do JAMES EDWARD TEETER 1508 Montgomery Street NONE PALME SINE LABORE: No Victory without labor. Football DIRECTORY DELORES ALBERTA THOMPSON 2724 North Davidson Street It is better to have education and not need it, than to need it and not have it. Red Cross; Chorus; Dance Group JOSEPH CHARLES THOMPSON 422 South Bruns Avenue Good, better, best; never let it rest until your good is better, and your better is your best SARAH ANN THOMPSON 715 South Torrence Street If at first you don ' t succeed--try, try again THERESA THOMPSON 1009 West Sixth Street The struggle of today is not altogether for today — it is for a vast future also CHARLES HASKLE THORN 1009 Greenleaf Avenue I have crossed the sea, but the ocean lies ahead ERNESTINE TILLMAN 817 East Sixteenth Street, Apt. 10 Ask and I shall have an answer; try and I shall succeed. FHA JOHN F. WALKER 143 West Palmer Street Your life is what you make it MARY WALKER 621 East Ninth Street Everything that looks to the future elevates human nature ANDY WALLACE 3131 Tross Street Do unto others as you would have them do unto you GERALD PETHEL WALLACE 1426 Orvis Street It is better to be a small flame and glow than to be a blinding fire and cast a shadow. Hi-Y Club; Homeroom Treasurer 12-2; French Club; Red Cross; NCCJ; 9th Grade French I Award; 10th Grade FrenchII Award; ' 11th Grade French in Award HENRY MARSHALL WALLACE 316 North Pine Street Do what you can and always more. 1st Vice President, Student Council; Presi¬ dent, Junior Class; Senior Class; National Honor Society; FSA. Certificates of Merit in Mathematics and Geometry PAMELA GAYNELLA WALL ACE 936 North Caldwell Street He who questions is a fool for a minute; he who does not question remains a fool forever. Y-Teens; Girls ' Glee Club; JA; Girls Drill Team SHIRLEY LEE WALLACE 231 Fannie Circle Knowledge is a treasure, but practice is the key to it. Drama Club; Chorus; Family Living JEANETTE WALTON 605 Royal Court Life is but a maze, but with education as a map and experience as a guide, success is within. Student Council; Red Cross; FTA; Y-Teens; National Honor Society; NHA; Drama Club; School Newspaper Staff; French Award; Cit¬ izenship Award JANIS YVONNE WEATHERS 504 North McDowell Street Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers. Know ledge in youth is wisdom in age. National Honor Society; French Club CHERRY YVONNE WEATHERS 656 Brookhill Road Not merely to exist, but to strive for better things in life. Member of Dance Group; Member of DE Club BETTY JEAN WELCH 539 Arlington Avenue While striving, strive for the best things in life JAMES FINLEY WELCH 803 South Brevard Street He who would climb a tree must grasp its branches-- not the blossoms. Esquire Club CAROLYN WHITE 1035 South Church Street May you live as long as you want and never want as long as you live. Newspaper Staff MABLE WHITE 3605 Marvin Road Do unto others as you would have them do unto you HAZEL WILKERSON 439 Billingsley Road Life is like a footprint in the sand; for every step you make there is an impression left behind. Y-Teens; Chorus CLEVELAND ALEXANDER WILLIAMS 207 South Bruns Avenue If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future GILDA LAVERNE WILLIAMS 629 South Independence Boulevard A friend is a person who knows all about you and likes you still. ICT Club; VICA LARRY BERNARD WILLIAMS 609 South Myers Street Hold on to what you ' ve got. Vice-president, Senior Chorus; Esquire So¬ cial Club; Football team; Track team 55 LARRY EUGENE WILSON 400 Bacon Avenue Every person who looks to the future ele¬ vates human nature ROSA MARIE WILSON 522 East Bland Street Thinking good thoughts and doing good things for a better and brighter future HELEN DELORES WITHERSPOON 2201 Gibbs Street The trouble with opportunity is that it often comes disguised as hard work. Y-Teens; Red Cross; Typing Certificate; Data Processing Certificate; Data Processing pen. JAMES RAYE WITHERSPOON 412 Woodvale Place Any age is the right age to start doing. Football; Student Council Welfare Committee; Hi-Y; Junior High Basketball. Trophy for MVP WILLIAM LESTER WOODARD 725 Seigle Avenue, 166 The most necessary task of civilization is to teach men how to think. Hi-Y; Basketball; Drawing ELEANOR WORLEY 2621 Baltimore Avenue Success usually is a plant of slow growth al¬ though its flowering may seem sudden BRUCE EDWARD WRIGHT 414 Rensselaer Avenue We judge ourselves by what we think we can do. Others judge us by what we have already done. Track; Football; Junior Class Reporter; Sen¬ ior Class Treasurer; Esquire Social Club; Student Council; Red Cross REYNARD ADONIS WRIGHT 903 East Boundary Street Life is like a footprint in the sand. For every step you make there ' s an impression left behind. Yearbook Staff; Vice-president 10-8; Esquire Club; Journalism; Hi-Y CYNTHIA YOUNG 2831 Zebulon Avenue The struggle of today is not altogether for today--it is for a vast future also. Newspaper staff; Les Socia lettes; band LORETTA YOUNG 533 Stegall Street Give to the world the best you have, and the best will come back to you. Y-Teens; Les Socialettes Social Club; Stu¬ dent Council; Journalism Staff; Junior A- chievement; Yearbook Staff; Homeroom President 11-5; Secretary, 12-4 Homeroom The sparkle and spirit of our senior members helped to make our cheering squad something to cheer about. MARY ELIZABETH YOUNG 323 Quincy Street In order to get something done correctly, do it yourself DECA WILLIAM YOUNG 431 East Sixth Street Adventure is not outside a man; it is within. Football; basketball WILLIAM RAY YOUNGBLOOD 927 East Tenth Street, Apt. 54 Always plan carefully for the future. Baseball; Basketball; Esquire Club; Vice- president of homeroom; Senior Chorus Dancing Dorothy Jones was very much a part of our Christmas Pageant. 56 SENIORS ON LOCATION ALMA MATER Dear Second Ward, our Alma Mater, We pledge ourselves to thee. We ' ll love you e ' er as onward we go If thou our guide will be. The thoughts that in our minds you leave Shall ever treasured be. Your noble deeds shall in us live, ' Til time shall end our praise. STAND-INS Claudette Cofield President Cecelia Garrett First Vice- President Treasurer Leroy Foster Parliamentarian Jeanette Adams Mary Alexander Reginald Alexander Roderick Alexander Norman Anthony Sandra Ardrey Izell Badger Gail Barber Tonia Barnes Brenda Beachem Clara Beatty Loretta Bell Frelin Bellamy Joyce Bess Benjamin Black Eddie Black Frances Blackmon Martha Blackmon Barbara Boulware Leroy Bowden Brenda Boyd Michael Brice Barbara Brown Irish Brown Johnnie Mae Brown Ola Mae Jrown Wendell Brown Wilma Brown Sarah Brunson James Burton Ancala Byars Nancy Byers Gail Carr Donnie Cauthen Stephen Chapman Jackie Clardy Ernest Coleman Aleatha Covington Marie Crawford Emma Cunningham Joyce Cureton Norris Dae Kay Frances Davidson Jannie Davis Elnora Dempsey Claude Dixon Charlie Douglas Benjamin Dozier Shirley Dozier Rosetta Drakeford Dianne Dublin Jeffrey Dunlap Argelene Dunn Alvera Ezell Christopher Faust Velma Forte Eugene Foster Curtis Franklin David Freeland Charles Funderburk Louvenia Funderburk Richard Funderburk Rosa Funderburk Wayne Funderburk Dorothy Gaines Gloria Gaither Charles Garris Calbie Gaston Phyllis Gaston Edna Gatewood Joseph Gibson Gloria Gilliard Mary Godbolt Purvis Gormley Lula Graham Peggy Graham George Greene Glertdcpra Gregg Donald Grier Sandra Grier Brenda Grissom Katie Haggins Evelyn Hamilton Annie Hancock Diane Hardin Carol Harris Lewis Harrison Sylvester Harrisoi Mary Hemphill Lillie Hill Pauline Hinton Betty Hoey Vickie Holley Michael Hoover Betty Horton Michael Hosey Betty Houston Bynum Howard Ernest Howell Donald Ingram Carolyn Ivey Curtis Jackson Janie Jackson Johnny Jackson Shelley Jackson Shirley Jackson Augustus Jones Willie Jones Barbara Jordan Patricia Jordan Ruby Kennedy Gwendolyn Kimble Janie Lancy Tommy Lisenby Rebecca Lockett Nancy Long Janie Lyles Almeta Mack Kenneth Manago Fair day Mangrum Richard Mangrum Paul Marion Charles Massey Evon Massey Floyd Massey Lawrence Massey John McBride Louis McClendon Barbara McFarlin Martha McMullen Theodore McVay Shirley Miller Irene Mitchell Barbara Moore Delores Moore Ronald Morris Cecil Morrow Samuel Morrow Sally Mungo Norma Nesbitt Mary Parson Johnny Pate Curtis Petty Joyce Phillips Leonard Pitts Robert Polk A1 Clayton Porter Marvin Porter Robert Price Louise Pugh Barbara Rainey Jerry Rann Arlene Ratliff Janet Rayfield Charles Reid Gwendolyn Reid Larry Reid Riccardo Reid Gary Richardson Mary Roberts Beverly Robinson Jerline Robinson Victor Robinson James Roseboro Marvin Sadler Geraldine Sanders Mary Sanders Mazella Sherrill Doris Simpson •Spencer Singleton Ada Smart Shirley Smart Willette Smith Bruce Spence Michael Springs Mozella Springs Shirley Springs Clarence Strain Marvin Stroud Lena Sturdivant Frank Sullivan Brenda Tate Veronica Taylor Curtis Teasley Theodore Teeter Barbara Thomas Annie Ruth Thompson Glendora Thompson Linda Thompson Hattie Truesdale Paracella Truesdale John Walker Cary Wallace Deborah Wallace Gwendolyn Wallace Essie Ware Ruth Watson Mary Weeks Gladys Welch Carletha White Johnny White Ruth Wilkerson Bobby Williams Cleo Williams Gloria Williams Howard Williams Jessie Williams Lawrence Williams Mandy Williams Clara Wilson Nevada Wilson Sandra Wilson Dorothy Wood Gwendolyn Woodard Gwendolyn Woods John Woods Charlene Wylie Marion Young Peggy Young Joyce Zimmerman EXTRAS Roosevelt Harrison President Deborah Jackson Corresponding Secretary Beverly Alexander James Alexander George Allen Shirley Alston Lula Anthony Ray Ardrey Sandra Ardrey Magnolia Bailey Polly Barber Lula Barksdale Alice Barrett Emogene Barrett Jerome Beachem Johnny Beachem Jean Carol Belk Melvin Bell Annie Benson Betty Billings Genola Blakeney Bernita Bogans Nellie Bowden Roy Bradey Beverly Brice Jennell Broadway Francine Brown James Brown Frankie Calloway Shirley Canty Barbara Caple Wanda Carey Betty Carson Helen Chappell Raymond Clinton Edna Cole Carolyn Coleman Deborah Corbett Victoria Cotton Anita Craig Thomasina Craig Calvin Crawford Linda Crawford Keith Crosby Regina Croslin Janice Crowder Donald Cureton Hattie Currie Alvania Dalton Johnnie Daniels Carolyn Davis Katie Davis Tommy Davis Robert Dean Evonne Deese Gennie Dennis Ruby Digsby Edmond Douglas Marshall Douglas James Dozier Ronald Dulin Lula Elmore Yvonne Falls Mattie Floyd Wilhelmenia Folks James Ford Bobby Fowlder Carl Fowler Earnestine Foxworth Catherine Funderbur. Carrie Gaines Cathy Gaither Alonzo Garris Vernell Gaskin Dorothy Giles Albert Gill Michael Gill Harold Gillespie Westo Gillespie Sadie Gilmore Dorothy Givens Brenda Glenn Verna Glenn Eddie Gray Anita Green Paulette Green Gloria Green Ruby Greene Brenda Grier Gregory Grier Vivian Grier Shirley Hailey Mary Hames Annie Hamilton Johnny Hamilton William Hammonds Betty Harris Clyde Harris James Harris Jacqueline Hart Sandra Hayes John Hemphill Harold Herndon Charles Hill David Hill Sandra Hoagland Clara Hood Rosa Hood Ruby Horton Mary Hosey Charles Howard Judy Howard Suverne Howard Moses Howell Carolyn Hubert Lizzie Hudson Lula Hudson Lawrence Huff Cynthia Hunter Hattie Hunter Evelyn Isom Marilyn Ivey Nathan Jackson Bessie Johnson Edward Johnson Francine Johnson George Johnson Johnny Johnson Leran Johnson Pansy Johnson Terry Johnson James Jones Joseph Jones Shirley Jones Belinda Jordan Bobbie Jordan Donald Jordan Theodore Kennedy JoAnn Kinard Bertha King Linda Knox Mary Knox Jacqueline Lattimore Carolyn Leach Carolyn Leake Jacqueline Leggett Albert Lewis Alonzo Lewis Danny Long Janice Looper Vivian Lotharp Jerry Lowery Shirley Lyles Kenneth Mackey Larry Martin Mary Massey Terry Massey Virginia Massey Michael Maxwell George Mayes Brenda Mayhew Randolph McCain Walter McClain Brenda McCorkle Myra McCorkle Annie McCoy 68 Leroy McCoy Phyllis McCoy Ida McCray Hazeline McCrory Shelia McCrory William McCullough Hazel McDonald Cecelia McDowell Belinda McKinney Bernard McKinney Herbert McKinney Curtis McKinstry Francine McLeod George McMurray Delores McQueen Mosetta McRae Willie Meadows Andrew Melton Willie Mickle Beulah Miller Brenda Miller Linda Miller Lynette Miller Ronald Miller Ruth Miller Clara Minter Linda Mitchell Mary Mitchell Phyllistine Mitchell Priscilla Mobley William Montgomery Carlos Moore Jerry Moore Wilbert Moore Stell Myers Levenia Nash Paul Neal Joseph Nesbitt Seritha Newman Marcelia Nolley Haywood Parker Loretta Patterson Willie Patton Avarisse Peterson Annie Pettis Patricia Platt Ethel Porter Melvin Porter Gloria Price Christine Pugh Earnestine Pugh John Putman Brenda Rann Dorothy Ray Adam Reeves John Reeves Danny Reid Cynthia Richardson Barbara Robinson Jerome Robinson Lurie Lee Rogers Roslyn Rogers Lillie Rollins mm mm ' lllfcd Louis Rorie James Ross Hattie Royal Alberta Sampson Howard Sanders Lena Sanders Rayford Seagers Johnny Shipp Sam Simpson Joseph Sinclair Alverna Smalls Angelina Smith Carolyn Smith Haskell Smith James Smith Betty Springs Deloris Staten Jimmy Staten Linda Staton Winford Steward Jackie Stitt Jacqueline Stitt Gloria Stout Thelma Sturdivant Sandra Taylor Doris Thompson Omegar Thompson Larry Tidwell Patricia Tillman Thomasena Tillman Laverna Truesdale Carl Turner Charles Walker Gwendolyn Walker Patsy Walker Robert Walker Shirley Walker Cedrick Wallace Larry Walton Fredrick Wardlow Carl Watson Grier Weddington Clifford Welch Tonie Westbrook Earlene White Georgia White Maggie White Velma Whiteside Deborah Williams Grady Williams Gregory Williams Linda Williams Michael Williams Patricia Williams Samuel Williams Alma Wilson Dorothy Wilson Phyllis Wise Linda Witherspoon Otis Woods Doretha Wortham Carolyn Wright Juanita Young 70 71 ly Living class, a ' Food Additives , is be shown. These Typing I students are in the process of typing manuscripts. La classe francais troisieme annee Geometry students give strict attention as a formal proof is explained and demonstrated. A trip back to the Middle Ages via film helps these World History students to absorb the culture of that period. Graphing of trigonometric functions and line representation of trigonometric functions. 72 In chemistry, we concentrate on titration. Bookkeeping: recording entries in a General Journal Going over the biology semester examination English IV: lesson in Medieval literature Till an hundred and ten of Robin Hood’s men They came marching all down the green hill. I The Cooperative Office Occupations Class was added to our curriculm this year. Ma¬ chines used: Selectric typewriters, rotary calculators, listing and non-listing machines, IBM key-punch. Subject areas include: clerical office work, Business English, shorthand and civil service examinations. They were discussing the Declaration of Independence when something occurred in the rear of the room. Perhaps it was a voice from the past. It could happen in a United States History class, you know. V : If you need advice concerning the technicalities of the stock market, or if you ' re scheduled for a job inter¬ view, ask any member of the Distributive Education II class. This is a reading group discuss¬ ing with their teacher a lesson on Man Reaching the Moon. They are engaged in discussing the challenges which living on the moon will present. The separation of volatile and non-volatile materials by distillation—Sounds like chemistry. ®5S® We happened in on a Family Living class project - Adventures with Parents. The ob¬ jective was to help youth to develop by appre¬ ciating contributions of parents to the home, school and community. Typing I lesson of the day — typing a business letter after learning the parts. They are seemingly too busy to watch the photog¬ rapher. Type on! Watch closely, World His¬ tory students. You ' ll ac¬ tually see the sad events unfold. A New Empire Declines Into Feudalism. La classe francais premier annee fl EA 0 IT MAKES Essies s « V ' VerV t MED ' E VAL SCENES Any resemblance between the bulletin board caption and the present inhabi¬ tants is purely coincidental. They ' re Journalism students viewing a film on newspaper layout. Office Practice Class - We predict with a reasonable degree of certainty that most office practitioners of the future will be GIRLS. 78 The newspaper is a source of informa¬ tion and entertainment in this English II Class. Next year they ' ll move up to Typing II. Super highways demand cars in good running shape. On the Advanced Biology scene: Con¬ fusion in the laboratory. ■; - ■ English II: Reading the short story Taking a gymnastic chance on parallel bars is one way of developing muscular coordination or ending up. . . ? You can almost hear the bragging before the ball hits the basket. Members of the clothing class realize that by constructing garments they can save or stretch the family dollar. 60 I Chemistry: Aprons, beakers and volatile substances. A World History Class CONCENTRATES. ENGLISH III They ' ve noted well the blackboard’s pro¬ nouncement of things to come. This is no time to play around. DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION I Classroom and apprenticeship exposure to the world of business. M = J The United States History Class was interested in comparing Presidential and Congressional reconstruction plans and discussing aspects of government. Can you walk a balance beam? This is the way you build an American bond wall. B2 The Family Living Classes have a close relationship with the home and the community. English II - Students, Lives of great men all remind us . . (Biography) The English III Class relives the days when the children of the neighborhood slyly chanted John loves Po-ca-hon-tas, John loves Po-ca-hon-tas. The Family Living Class invited William L. Jackson of Psychological Services to discuss the topic Heredity and Environment in Personality Development. Ladies, a bookkeeper is expected to be able to . . StudenttEouncil Chartered Qr ariizatiods Mr. Waddell administers the oath of office to LaVerne Ardrey, Henry Wallace, and Thomas Caldwell as Second- Vice President, First-Vice President and President, respectively. The newly-inducted President pledges his best efforts and appeals for loyal support. After a standing ovation, Mrs. Marjorie Bel¬ ton, our former Counselor, gave a stirring challenge for real leadership. Student Council members take the oath. TOYS FOR Airplanes - 4 Alphabet Blocks - 1 Busses - 1 Cars - 6 Dolls - 15 Doll Chairs - 1 Doll Outfits - 2 Fire Engines - 1 Footballs - 1 C Ijrisf sms Student Council General Welfare Committee The committee sponsors school booster projects such as pom pon, pennant and Valentine card sales; sends get well and sympathy cards. It co-sponsored the Toys for Tots program. TOTS TALLY Football Fields - 1 Games - 4 Gun and Holster Sets - 3 Handcuffs - 2 Hobby Horses - 1 Marble Packs - 1 Rifles - 4 Spinning Tops - 1 Stuffed Animals - 4 Target Pistol Sets - 1 Tea Sets - 10 Toy Soldier Squadrons - 1 Tractor Trucks - 9 Trains - 1 Vanity Sets - 2 Wagons - 1 Included among the programs and activities of the Public Relations Committee are the Installation Program, Second Semester Convocation Program, Student Council election and Student Council bulletin boards. It co-sponsored the Toys for Tots program. STUDENT COUNCIL PUBLIC RELATIONS COMMITTEE 89 STUDENT COUNCIL SAVINGS COMMITTEE To date the weekly savings stamp sales total is $202.60 STUDENT COUNCIL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The Miss Second Ward Pageant scheduled for April of ' 67 is being sponsored by the committee. This event will determine who will reign as the 1967-68 Miss Second Ward. im- STUDENT COUNCIL SOCIAL COMMITTEE It cannot be said that the social side is neglected. Ex¬ cerpts from the 1966-67 cal¬ endar included: Homecoming Ball: Harvest Ball; Ice Skating Party; The¬ ater party; Popular Music Concert; Bunny Hop. Super¬ vision of the Student Lounge is one of the committee ' s re¬ sponsibilities. The king and queen of the Harvest Ball, Martha McMullen and Frederick Wardlow Memento of fun and dancing at the Harvest Ball Barbara Boulware has something to dance Yes, a11 of this and more took P lace at the Homecoming Ball, about; she ' s just been crowned Miss Home¬ coming. STUDENT COUNCIL HEALTH AND SAFETY COMMITTEE It ' s apparent that a cleanliness rating is being duly recorded. Too late to wish that you had used that radiator brush. We call them Dust detectors , but they ' re one of the OFFICIAL in¬ spection teams. We were informed that they found a lonely wisp of dust above this bulletin board. The quarterly clean-up campaigns foster a keen but friendly spirit of rivalry be¬ tween homerooms. This, plus the well-scrubbed look that results, constitutes a valued school experience. Committee members also assume special duties on the grounds and in the buildings during lunch periods. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Some objectives of the National Honor Society— 1. To foster and encourage lofty standards of scholarship. 2. To instill in its members high qualities of character, leadership, and personality. 3. To serve as an incentive to all senior high school students that scholarship is most im¬ portant today in our ever-changing world. The four qualifications for membership are: Leadership Service Character Scholarship HIGH SCHOOL RED CROSS Vision of the Red Cross The future with its vast opportunity stretches before us. The great emblem that we love with its strong arms of faith, hope, love and service upon the white back¬ ground of peace, shall lift the people, not only of America, but of all the world, into a higher sense of our common human brotherhood, and our divine obligations. This is the vision of the Red Cross Mabel Thorp Boardman Founder of the National Volunteer Service American Red Cross s Rebecca Hamilton, Andy Wallace, and Clara Houston attended the banquet for foreign exchange students who are attending Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. 94 National Conference of Christians and Jews Plans for the annual Brotherhood Week program are being reviewed. LIBRARY CLUB Browsing, reading, learning; these are the recreational and intellectual pursuits which help members of the Library Club to develop and broaden their potentialities. r ea d o ! IT A F E MAKES If one can do a work of art that gives him real pleasure, he has discov¬ ered some semblance of what art is. If another person sees what he has created and professes to understand it, the artist has added to his personal enjoyment the ability to communicate. If many people see and under¬ stand, the scope of what an artist can do is un¬ limited. (Viktor Lowenfeld) Offstage: Making the costumes re¬ quires nimble fingers and a well-stocked sewing box. Playmakers on Stage You have to have sets and that means hammers, nails, and ladders to fall down. After seeing this, are you sorry that you apply your own make-up? ipr The Little Foxes 1966-67 Dramatic Production of the Second Ward Playmakers Avec grease paint Maidens of Bethlehem heard the shepherds ' amazing story. Through dance they pay homage to Mary. An appreciative audience of approximately eleven hundred witnessed this creative performance. THE SECOND WARD DANCE GROUP MUSIC AND The Christmas spirit came to Second Ward December 11, 1966. It was ushered in by the rich and disciplined voices of the combined chorus and choir. Through music and pageantry we journeyed once more along The Road to Bethlehem. Guards, shepherds, kings, sheep and within, the swaddled Babe 100 PAGEANTRY Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow Sweet Little Jesus Boy —Mac Gimsey Girls Ensemble Carol of the Bells -- Wihousky We Three Kings 101 GOLD KEY AWARDS Pauline Moore Winning Entries Winners viewing their work at North Carolina National Bank! Mary Lightsey Alford Ronson Curtis Brown Marvin Sadler Mary Weathers CERTIFICATE OF MERIT WINNERS Viewing the show at Charlotte-town Mall are: Mary Lightsey, Curtis Brown, Shirley Springs, Thomas Jackson, Gloria Ellis, Leroy Bowden, Jerome Robinson, Georgia Gant, James Miller, Susie Lawing, Samuel Jones, Eugene Reid, Bobby Mason. 103 CONCERT BAND Our concert and band is an integral part of the cultural life of our school and community. We present exhibits A, B, and C as evidence, photograph¬ ic records of its performance at Freedom Park during the Festival in the Park . What ' s a program without music? Here, the orchestra plays during Student Council installa¬ tion program. OUR ORCHESTRA FAMILY LIVING CLUB This year the club ' s proj¬ ect is focused on our cafeteria. Posters and information in relation to good eating habits and manners are always in evidence. Good Lunchroom manners A Guide to Good Eating FUTURE SCIENTISTS OF AMERICA (Current Students of Physics and Advanced Biology) LE CERCLE FRANCAIS The club regularly subscribes to The French Review , L ' Etoille , Bonjour , and La Vie . The current Events Quiz Club promotes, in a most exciting way, better understanding of the problems that confront the world, our nation, and our communities. Starvis, Sloane and Starvis, Inc. is coordinator for the current events program, the Raleigh News and Observer is the sponsor, and Mrs. R. R. Bradley is moderator and director. The club meets weekly and conducts team matches from a weekly 100-question script. The Club’s plans include class matches, inter-school competition, and state championship award. CURRENT EVENTS QUIZ CLUB M MBS Future Teachers of America Clubs of America Vocational Industrial y FUTURE HOMEMAKERS OF AMERICA On December 15 members of the club demon¬ strated thoughtfulness of others as well as home¬ making skills. Their visit to Dwiggins Rest Home was a busy one. They helped to bathe the patients, attacked cleaning chores energetically, artfully arranged Christmas decorations, and brought Christmas cheer to the shut-ins. DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION CLUBS OF AMERICA The club can boast of a busy and pro¬ ductive year. The important Sep¬ tember activity was a trip to the Mecklenburg County Fair where booths prepared by other DE clubs were of special interest. During December the club organized an eco¬ nomic survey designed to find out the feelings of Second Ward students about certain economic issues. 108 HI-Y THANKSGIVING (This project is CLUB BASKET DONATION CENSUS sponsored each year by the Hi-Y) Apples - 11 lbs. Baby food - 4 jars Bananas - 68 bunches Bread - 32 loaves Bread mixes - 4 boxes Cake mixes - 6 boxes Cakes - 2 Candy (bags) - 2 Canned goods - 633 Cereals - 39 cartons Cheese wafers - 1 box Collards - 18 bunches Cookies - 5 bags Dried beans peas - 10 lbs. Flour - 1 bag Gelatin desserts Pudding mixes - 27 cartons Bacon - 4 lbs. Butter - 1 1 2 lbs. Chickens - 6 Cocoa - 2 boxes Coffee - 1 lb. Cranberry Jelly - 1 can Dried Milk - 1 carton Grapefruit - 29 Grapes - 6 lbs. Instant breakfast mix - 1 pkg. Jelly - 19 jars Kool-Aid 6 pkgs. Lemons - 3 doz. Macaroni - 9 cartons Noodles - 2 bags Onions - 2 lbs. Oranges - 37 lbs. Pickles - 1 jar Potatoes - 10 lbs. Pumpkins - 6 Rice - 18 lbs. Salt - 9 cartons Sugar - 10 lbs. Eggs - 1 doz. Mayonnaise - 1 jar Mixed nuts - 2 lbs. Pork Chops - 2 lbs. Stew Meat - 2 lbs. Turkey - 63 lbs. Veal Stew - 2 lbs. The More We Get Together, Together . . . Rev. C. E. Quick delivers our Thanksgiving message We are viewing the West Charlotte Thespians ' production, The Sword and the Scroll” Calling all Suffragettes! All Mr. E. Vincent Suitt, Contract Relations Specialist, Graphic emphasis of Vocational boys assembly sounds a challenge to competency during Vocational Guidance Week Guidance Week Journalism students sell their product by means of a skit. Rah! Rah! - Better than class — Yah! Yah! REIGNING BEAUTIES Doris Horton, Miss Second Ward Barbara Boulware, Miss Spirit of Second Ward Escorted by Henry Wallace-Queen City Classic Game, 1966 Barbara Boulware. Miss Homecoming, 1966-67 is crowned by Co-captain Frento Burton. Miss Homecoming and her court SPIRIT BOOSTERS Something ' s happened, happening or about to happen, that ' s for sure. Jacqueline Byrd Doretha Clifton Thomasena Craig Janice Evans Shelley Jackson We think that a deliberate scheme to delude the camera is afoot. Carolyn Levels Janice Looper Barbara McCoy Maggie White Juanita Young Recent graduates of Cheerleader Charm School 112 Where the action is A Tiger just scored 1966 FIGHTING TIGERS Bruce Wright Halfback Henry Shropshire Frento Burton Quarterback End Raymond Alexander Lineman Ray received a serious knee injury during the game with Dudley High Season Record 3-7-0 WE THEY 2 Paisley 13 25 North Mecklenburg 59 6 West Mecklenburg 21 21 William Penn 14 0 Carver 6 20 Dudley 42 0 Atkins 12 8 West Charlotte 14 21 Independence 0 25 Olympic 6 Statistics Opponents Second Ward First Downs Rushing 97 102 First Downs Passing 63 65 First Downs Penalty 17 20 Total First Downs 177 187 Total Rushing Yards 1,072 1,756 Passes Attempted 123 182 Passes Completed 43 91 Total Pass Yards 922 1,166 Total Yards Gained 1,994 2,903 Punts 36- ■1,094 23-924 Penalties yds. 520 yds. 502 1 2 JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM Overall Record 1-1-1 TRANSITION From the Gridders To the Cagers VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM WE THEY 80 West Mecklenburg 72 73 Paisley 81 87 Catholic 70 38 Myers Park 65 58 North Mecklenburg 59 53 Independence 43 62 Catholic 47 61 Independence 37 56 West Charlotte 73 69 Carver 63 67 Atkins 49 52 Paisley 57 54 West Charlotte 61 54 Garinger 60 88 Olympic 51 79 Atkins 69 73 Carver 69 Co-Captains Reginald Spencer, William Young, Burnell Edwards I can jump higher, higher than you.” Junior V arsity Basketball Team One of these days the ball may refuse to come down. OUTMWHSTESN JV TOURWgY SemtflngB • ■ ' m« o ' . w ch HoHe « Second-seeded Second Ward l6 W Asbi y ' so a Mv erj ” rk i eliminated Garinger, 73-72 in overtime, in the Independence gym. Guard Jay Wise led the Wildraf scoring with 29 points in the game, which was tied 69-69 after four quarters. Bud Spears scored 72 points for the Tigers, including a bucket in the over¬ time. J. V. Basketball Record We They West Mecklenburg 48 37 Paisley 50 25 Catholic 57 48 Olympic 83 45 Myers Park 49 51 North Mecklenburg 54 62 Independence 73 53 Catholic 72 55 Independence 74 33 West Charlotte 69 68 Carver 58 41 Atkins 42 43 Paisley 71 37 West Charlotte 86 60 Garinger 55 47 Olympic 88 35 Atkins 63 37 Carver 43 35 Average per game 63.05 points 116 Charlotte Observer, February 22, 1967 TEAMS IN ACTION OUR 1967 TRACK STARS Schedule March 10 — Myers Park March 17 — Garinger March 22 — Myers Park April 4 — North Mecklenburg April 11 — Harding April 15 — Durham Relays April 21 — Queen City Relays May 4 — Conference Meet May 12 — Sectional Meet May 19 — State Meet Journalism students are a curious breed. O. R. Jackson, principal of Cameron High School, Nashville, Tennessee. tf£ FQS | j f t i lOOti! 119 These gentlemen participated in our Vocational Guidance Week Observance. M. D. Neely, Supervisor of eleven schools in Nashville, Tennessee. HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES J. Richmond Johnson, 1925 (Music) Principal Chair (Second Violin) Norwalk Symphony Orchestra, Norwalk, Connecticut Fred D. Alexander, 1926 (Public Affairs) Member of the City Council, Charlotte, N. C. Dr. Edward H. Brown, 1930 (Edu¬ cator) United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Washington, D. C. Dr. Emery L.Rann, Jr., 1930 (Med¬ icine) Practicing physician, Charlotte, North Carolina Mrs. Della Davison Sullins J. Richmond Johnson 120 Mrs. Dovey Johnson Roundtree, 1931 (Law) Practicing Attorney, Washington, D. C. Kelly Miller Alexander, 1932 (Mor¬ tician, Public Affairs) Charlotte, North Carolina Dr. J. Eugene Grigsby, Jr., 1934 (Art) Phoenix Union High School, Phoenix, Arizona 1966 HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES — . 9 i : AC ' , T. E. Wells and son; Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Grigsby, representing their son, J. Eugene Grigsby, Jr.; Mrs. Marie Steele, representing her sister, Mrs. Della Davison Sullins; Dr. and Mrs. Emery L. Rann; Eugene S. Potts Mrs. Della Davison Sullins, 1934 (Nursing) Clinical Specialist, Tuskegee, Alabama Dr. George E. Blackman, 1937 (Med¬ icine) Roswell Memorial Hospital, Buffalo, New York Theodore E. Wells, 1939 (Art) William P. Bancroft School, Wilmington, Delaware 121 Theodore E. Wells ESQUIRES FIRST ROW: Henry Wallace, James Johnson, Reynard Wright, Rodgery McClain, Benjamin Ellison, James Hair, Larry Crawford, Alexander Jackson, Larry WiUiams, Bruce Wright. SECOND ROW: Thomas Caldwell, Richard Lewis, Scotty Hendricks, Henry Shropshire, James Tate, Harry Ezell, Joseph Hall, WiHiam Youngblood. LES SOCIALETTES FIRST ROW: Jacqueline Foman, President, Doretha Clifton, Vice President, Dorothy Dunn, Treasurer. SECOND ROW: Barbara McCoy, Loretta Young, Chaplain, Priscilla Drakeford, Ruth Maxwell, LaVerne Ardrey, Secretary, Joan LoopGr, Parliamentarian, Rebecca Hamilton, Assistant Secretary. THIRD ROW: Carolyn Levels, Patricia Johnson, Natalie Kennedy. Not Pictured: Jean¬ ette Walton, Carolyn Ardrey, Theresa Moore, Patricia Smith, Cynthia Young. 122 JUNIORS AND SOPHOMORES ON LOCATION Cecelia Garrett and Dorothy Wise have the two top averages in the Junior Class. They are the 1967 Junior Marshals. Belinda Tolbert and Defoy Glenn at¬ tended Governor ' s School last sum¬ mer. (Dramatics) Three Juniors in a scene from The Little Foxes” A Tenth grade problem: The SAT Juanita Young and Alberta Floyd attend their first Homecoming Ball. The president and secretary of Homeroom 10-8 are taking a fruit basket to a homeroom member who is ill. 123 TOURS AND FIELD TRIPS The Family Living classes have taken a series of tours this year. Here, members of a Family Living class visit Pet Dairy. •3(f® The Music Appreciation class is opera-minded”. Their 1966- Well, opera lovers, you ' re on your way. 67 schedule includes Don Giovanni , Rigoletto and Annie Get Your Gun.” mt i The Office Practice class learns the telephone business from bottom to top. ern Bell tour) 124 (South- The Charlotte Observer building is a likely spot for the T ournalism class. Randolph Staten, 62 , linebacker and defensive guard for the New York Giants, rejoins the Tiger family at the 1966 Queen City Classic game. ALMA MATER REVISITED r n r, IN; A r !?i ; r ' A n r nrt Private Donald L. McVay, 65 Don returned taller, heavier and eager to talk about his army experiences. At present he is stationed at Fort Lee Virginia. Armed Forces Roll Call AIR FORCE James Clyde Clement 64 - Baltimore, Maryland William Short 66 - San Antonio, Texas ARMY Woodrow Clifton, 64 - Viet Nam Arvell Graham, 66 - Viet Nam Donald Lewis, 64 - Viet Nam Michael Pate, 65 - Viet Nam Colell Perry, 64” - Viet Nam Reginald Stitt, 66 - Fort Lee, Virginia Semester-break found Mack Foster, 66 , in the old familiar science lab. He is experi¬ encing the joys of a freshman at A and T College, Grpensboro, North Carolina. Richard Robbins, 64 , USAF Security Group in a land of snow - Alaska. 125 Jt£ TVt LZj fri CyyncrzL ' . 4 . ' n; jfrfidL- y?t scuyuri d rr%£yc$ru£ y cr- J fajL ' - £s yMJL PAGES FROM AN J-A j Z V L, HL - trtrk s Ch cLzrrJ ' V- j fr- LSlrr oS ihyhJi - Sirr cJ AxyY tjz cL d ' 6 £r 2 {Zri dfVUu- ' ?)C KV- d c- y -cy j yU y AAyitJ ESEA SCRAPBOOK ..Z - JlTryy i 6Ae z ' UJ ' e A A A. z=) 2y7 7yy C ty sVcrtr L ' G(yy y Zc yty s Zo sAAsV s£- 4 ' uJfZCAJ Cs yn J y ' . G ' J ry dL yt 1 ifeal .T nrf tfsruL rC Z (lGdldtt rLS • P rrv: : - srnz t£U ESEA lilliA V „ ' r % i ® 4pr T| 1 1 a %u j if 1 1 28 FILM FOOTAGE 129 COMMUNITY TIES Our School Committeemen have consistently lived up to the re¬ sponsibilities of their position. They love Second Ward and we love them! A third important key-Mrs. Carrie Brailey, PTA treasurer. Two important keys to the success of our PTA — Mrs. Mattie Caldwell, President; Mrs. Sarah Stevenson, Program Committee Chairman. The PTA sponsored Valentine Pageant and Dance was a combination of beautiful pageantry, fund raising, and FUN. JUNIOR ACHIEVER ET The wooden TIC-TAC-TOE board, displayed by Avarisse Peterson is a handy place to hang pot holders. Eugene Reid says Make these two products a ' must ' on your shopping list. The all-purpose FOOT STOOL makes hard-to-reach areas accessible. Use the IDIOT STICK for .... Products of Stool-O-Bank-O. A Sealco ' s CHIP OFF THE OLE BLOCK can be used as a paperweight or as a block to hold pictures. Doris Horton, exhibitor. 131 Gloria McClendon demonstrates MOON SHOT a tough and challenging game. 0-500-750-1000-try to get the ball in the 1000 socket. A Lunaco Product. JUNIOR ACHIEVER EXHIBITS Annie Benson, Trivco Sales Representative Shirley Smart: Florelco Deborah Jackson, Yvonne Deese Du-Po-Co A Word to Potential Customers Protect your tables by placing your pots and pans on WOODEN TRIVETS. Wire plastic fruit on them and hang them on your wall. A Trivco Prod¬ uct I CERAMIC QUAILS make beautiful decorations, es¬ pecially on end tables and dressers.” A product of Du-Po-Co Try Florelco ' s BAT WALKER when you feel the urge to walk on stilts. 132 They Deserve Our Special Tribute Our efficient Cafeteria Staff Our competent Custodial Staff PATRONS PARENTS OF SENIORS Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Alexander Mrs. Helen Alston Mrs. Hazeline Archie Mrs. Emma J. Badger Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Bailey Mrs. Emma Barber Mr. Sam Barber Mrs. Rosa Bellamy Mrs. Grady Boswell Mrs. Viola Brewer Mr. and Mrs. Zezell Brown Mrs. Juanitia Burton Mr. and Mrs. George Byrd, Sr. Mrs. Pearlie Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Cathey Mrs. Eliza M. Clems Mrs. Anna Cofield Mr. and Mrs. Warren Cole Mrs. Laurene Davis Mrs. Janie Digsby Mrs. Queen Drakeford Mrs. Helen Dunlap Mrs. Ada Bell Dunn Mrs. Ella Ellison Mrs. Rosa Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Foman Mrs. Hazeline Ford Mrs. Mamie Ford Mrs. Sadie Lee Funderburke Mrs. Ellen Gaddy Mrs. Louise Garrett Mr. and Mrs. Willie Gaskin Mrs. Mildred J. Gill Mr. and Mrs. John L. Glenn Mr. and Mrs. Claude Grier Mrs. Katie S. Grier Mrs. Marie Hackett Mrs. Cora Lee Hames Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Harden Mr. and Mrs. Wade Harvell Mrs. Pearl Harvey Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hinson Mrs. Willette Hinton Mrs. Mary Holley Mrs. Helen Holmes Mrs. Maggie Hood Mrs. Eva C. Houston Mrs. Elizabeth H. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jackson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Johnson Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Johnson Mrs. Ophelia B. Johnson Mrs. Mary Jones Mrs. Mary Jordan Mrs. Alvin Van Kennedy Mrs. Annie Lawrence Mr. James Lawrence Mr. John R. Leach Mrs. Lula Bell Leach Mr. and Mrs. William G. Leach Mrs. Katherine Leggett Mrs. Hazeline Lewis Mrs. Samuel Looper Mrs. Louisa Mahoney Mr. Mrs. Fred McCathorine Mrs. Inez McCoy Mrs. Carrie McClendon Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mills, Sr. Mrs. Elease Newman Mrs. Elizabeth Parker Mrs. Janie Pearson Mrs. Geneva Peay Mrs. Willie M. Pettis Mrs. Beatrice Polk Mrs. Pearl Powers Mrs. Annie Ratliff Mrs. Jewelee Reid Mrs. Ruth Rice Mrs. Vera Robinson Mrs. Carrie Sanders Mr. Luther Sanders Mrs. Janie Shirley Mr. and Mrs. George D. Simmons Mrs. Bernice Simpson Mrs. Janie Simpson Mr. and Mrs. Herman Springs Mrs. Jennie Mae Springs Mrs. Susie D. Stevenson Mrs. Lucille Thornwell Mrs. Georgia L. Walker Mrs. Mahalie R. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Walton, Sr. Mrs. Beatrice Welch Mrs. Ada Williams Mrs. Blanche Williams Mrs. Della Wise Mrs. Rosetta Witherspoon Mrs. Odessa R. Worley Mrs. Thelma Young Mrs. Frances Youngblood ALUMNI Mr. Arto R. Aaron ' 51 Mrs. Zack Alexander Mrs. Annette Ardrey ' 49 Miss Evelyn Blakeney ' 59 Miss Beatrice Bowser ' 64 Mr. Charles Brown ' 54 Miss Carolyn Caldwell ' 65 Miss Marilyn Caldwell ' 66 Mrs. Charles Camp The Woodson Carson, Jr. Family (Ollie Mae and June Charise) Miss Joyce Cherry ' 65 Mr. Thomas Clifton ' 63 Miss Wilhemenia Cofield ' 65 Mrs. Annie Massey Collins ' 51 Mr. Jesse Counts ' 47 Mrs. Annette Lewis Curry ' 62 Miss Mary Jane Curry ' 66 Miss Hattie Bell Dunn ' 66 Mr. Ronald P. Edge ' 51 Mr. Theodore Ellis ' 54 Mr. Pride Ferguson ' 24 Mrs. Vivian J. Ferguson ' 38 Mrs. Claudette A. Fetsco Mr. Lionel Foard ’56 Mrs. Josephine Cousart Foman ' 45 Miss Barbara Foman ' 64 Miss Juanita Foman ' 65 Mrs. Elizabeth Funderburk ' 60 Mr. William Funderburk ' 64 Mrs. Geraldine B. Gaddy ' 47 Miss Vernelle Gant ' 38 Mr. James Garrett ' 66 Mr. Leon Gill ' 65 Mr. William Gill ' 64 134 Mr. and Mrs. William Gill, Jr. ' 64 Mr. Andrew J. Gray ' 42 Mr. Eugene Grier ' 61 Mr. William Grier ' 47 Mr. Edison Dwight Gunter ' 66 Miss Willie Ann Hamilton ' 66 Miss Gwendolyn Harvey ' 65 Mrs. Cora Cannon Howard ' 59 Mrs. Jesse Frank Irby ' 47 Miss Eva Johnson ' 52 Mr. Alvin Van Kennedy ' 32 Miss Nancy Kirkpatrick ' 63 Mr. W. R. Lee ' 47 Miss Gillie Lewis ' 65 Mrs. J. B. Looper Mrs. Virginia Lucas ' 44 Miss Doris Mashaw ' 59 Mr. Earnest McClain, Jr. ' 62 Mrs. Mary McClain Mrs. Alene Stewart McCorkle ' 32 Mr. Ernest McCree ' 27 Mrs. Minnie Jackson McKee ’29 Miss Mary Altonelle McMillan ' 50 Miss Bettye Ann Miller ' 62 Mrs. Ardell W. Murphy ' 53 Mrs. Carrie Yeldell Murray ' 55 Dr. and Mrs. G. T. Nash III Mr. Robert Lee Newman, Jr. ' 66 Mrs. Flossie G. North ' 45 Mr. Jerome H. Oxner ' 33 Miss Dorothy Patterson ' 61 Miss Magdalene Pettis ' 65 Miss Patricia Pitts ' 65 Mr. Henry J. Poe, Jr. ' 33 Mrs. Willie Rainey ' 48 Mr. Charles W. Redfern ' 56 A 2 C Richard Lee Robbins ' 64 Mr. O ' Dell W. Robinson ' 44 Miss Kathleen Roseboro ' 58 Miss Linda Saunders ' 66 Mr. William W. Short ' 66 Miss Berma Smith ' 66 Mr. Johnny Stainback ' 58 Mr. Boby Stevenson ' 61 Mr. Thomas Stevenson ' 63 Mr. A. Voyd Stewart ' 30 Mr. Theodore G. Stewart ' 36 Mr. William Bruce Strong ' 56 Miss Edna Sullivan ' 66 Miss Mary Alice Wilks ' 66 Miss Adelaide J. Welch ' 60 Mr. Donald G. Williams ' 66 Mr. Fred Williams, Jr. ' 57 Miss Frances Williamson ' 64 Mrs. Cecila J. Wilson ' 26 Mrs. Margaret Gill Wright ' 50 Mrs. Earnestine Manns Yeldell ' 45 Mrs. Ethlene Young ' 59 OTHER DONORS Mr. David J. Abraham, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David J. Abraham, Sr. Mr. Paul Abraham Mrs. G. P. Adams Mr. Lenwood Adams Mrs. Virginia Adams Mrs. Eddieola Alexander Mrs. E. P. Alexander Mrs. Coringer R. Alford, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Allison Mr. Claude Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Essie Anderson Mr. George Anderson Mr. Howard Anderson Mr. James Anderson Mr. Ulysses Anderson Mr. W. H. Andrews Miss Carolyn Anthony Mrs. Rosetta Archie Mr. Earnest Austin Mrs. Carrie Bagley Mrs. Louise Bankhead Miss Lucille E. Batts Mrs. Raphael Baxter Mr. and Mrs. Lex D. Beaver Mrs. Minnie Bell Rev. R. L. Bell Mr. Joseph C. Belton Mrs. Lou P. Benson Mr. D. D. Birchfield Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Black Mr. H. B. Booth Mr. William H. Booth Miss Ruby Boozer Mr. Fi’ed Bradford Mrs. Ruby Reeder Bradley Mr. Ira Brewer, Jr. Mrs. Ira Brewer Rev. and Mrs. J. C. Brewer Mrs. Tommie Briggs Mr. Jesse Brown Mr. and Mrs. Tommie Brown Miss E. A. Byers Mr. C. B. Cameron Mrs. Bessie Cann Mr. Randolph Cantey Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Caple Mrs. Helen Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Carson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Price Cathey Mr. and Mrs. John C. Chambers Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Chappell Mr. and Mrs. Jessie A. Choice Mrs. Elma Clancy Mr. James A. Clarke Mr. J. A. Clinton Mr. and Mrs. William S. Clorme Miss Doris Clyburn Mrs. Vineatha P. Clyburn Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Donnelle Cooper Miss Deborah L. Corbett Mr. Odessa Coastler Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Corley Mrs. Susie Covington Rev. and Mrs. Columbus Crawford Mr. and Mrs. William P. Crawford Mrs. Curlie Cromwell Mrs. Audrey P. Croslin Mrs. Sarah Crawder Mrs. Henela Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Cunningham Mrs. Rosa Mae Cureton Mr. John Curry Mr. Raynond Cureton Mr. Allen Dargins Miss Mary Davis Mrs. Mildred Baxter Davis Mr. Oliver J. Davis Mrs. Virginia G. Davis Mr. Will Davis 135 Rev. and Mrs. Willie Davis, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Deese Rev. and Mrs. C. E. Dewberry Mr. Preston Dewberry Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Dorsey Mrs. Zelma R. Draine Mrs. Almeta Drakeford Mrs. Catherine Dulin Mrs. Mary Duncan Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Elliot Mr. Elliot Edwards, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Edwards, Sr. Mr. Eugene Edwards Mr. Leonard Edwards Mr. Ulysses Elder Mrs. Ella M. Ellison Mr. H. B. Ely, Jr. Mrs. Mary L. Ervin Mr. Otis Ervin Miss Elsie Favors Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Flagg Mrs. Mason Fleming Rusty Floyd Mr. H. E. Foxx Mrs. M. K. Foxx Mrs. Albert Franklin Mrs. Rosena H. Gaines Mrs. Carrie Ford Gaither Mr. Kerry Garrett Miss Diane Yvonne Gill Mrs. Jessie L. Gill Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Gilliard, Jr. Mrs. Dallas Good Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Graham Mrs. J. P. Green Miss Gueen C. Green Mr. and Mrs. Howard Grier, Jr. Mr. Mathais Grier Mrs. Mozella Grier Mrs. Eliza Griffin Mrs. Hattie Guinyard Miss Aza Lee Gunter Mrs. Al ma Hair Miss Linda Hairston Miss Mattie M. Hall Mrs. Essie Handley Mr. Lawrence Handley Mr. Oscar Hare Mr. Oscar Harold Mr. Isiah Harrison Mr. George Hart Miss Odessa Harvell Mr. Galveston Hay good Mr. and Mrs. Archie Haywood Mrs. Joyce Henderson Mrs. Annie M. Herron Mrs. Mattie Mae Herron Mrs. Elizabeth J. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Hill Mrs. Robert J. Hill Mr. N. S. Hinton Mrs. W. M. Hoffman Mr. James Holly, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George Hoover Mr. William Howard, Jr. Mrs. Mary Hudson Mr. Willie Hughes Mrs. Nora Lee Inman Mrs. Mary Irvin Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Jackson, Sr. Mrs. Marion D. Jacobs Mrs. Susie Jamerson Mrs. Amanda Johnson Mrs. Bessie Johnson Mrs. Esther Johnson Mrs. Esther Johnson Mrs. Ethel M. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. James A. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. James B. Johnson Miss Jerline D. Johnson ' 67 Mr. Mark P. Johnson Mr. Micheal Johnson Mrs. Sallie Mae Johnson Miss Shirley A. Johnson Mrs. Barbara Vaniuer Jones Mr. F. Marion Jones Mrs. Lettie Jones Miss Carolyn Jordan ' 67 Miss Patricia Ann Johnson ' 67 Mr. and Mrs. Tony C. Jordan Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Kee Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Keller Rev. and Mrs. N. E. Kerry Mr. and Mrs. Jacques D. Kibler, HI Mrs. Annie Knox Mrs. Eva Knox Mrs. N. R. Krider Mrs. Mar gar eta Latta Miss Mary H. Lawhorn Mr. Eugene Leach Mrs. Cora Leach Mrs. Isabell Leak Mr. Robert Lee, Sr. Mr. John S. LeGette Miss A. M. LeGrand Mr. Louis E. Levi Mrs. Mary Lewis Miss Bessie Little Mrs. Marion Vandiver Long Mr. William Looper Mr. Green Lucky, Jr. Mrs. Auleder Lumpkin Mr. and Mrs. John Mack Mr. Cherry Malfus Martinizing One Hour Cleaners Mrs. Elizabeth Massey Mrs. Ethel Massey Mr. Harvey Massey, Sr. Mr. Nathaniel Massey Mr. and Mrs. Earl K. Maxwell Mrs. Georgia K. Maxwell Mrs. Thelma L. Mayberry Mr. A. J. McArver Mrs. Louise McCaskill Mrs. M. S. McCaskill Mr. Claude McCaskill Mr. Claude McClain Miss Constance McClain Mr. Earnest McClain, Sr. Mrs. Minnie Bell McClellan Mr. Willie McClellan Miss Gloria McClendon ' 67 Mr. Paris McCorkle Mrs. Evell McCrory Mrs. Annie E. McDonald Mrs. Nora McDowell Mr. James McGill Mr. and Mrs. Amos Mcllwaine Mr. Marshall Lee Mcllwaine Mr. Oscar Mcllwaine 136 Mr. Rey C. Mcllwaine Mr. and Mrs. Rueben McKissick Mrs. Ruth E. McLean Mrs. Margaret Miller Rev. Robert Miller Mrs. Cora Mills Miss Sarah Mingo Mr. John E. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Montgomery Mr. Will Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. John H. Moore Mrs. Claudia Morgan Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Moten Mr. Lee Munford Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Mungo Mrs. Betty Jean Murray Mr. Tony Murray Mrs. Jane Neal Mrs. Lucille Neal Mr. Horace Nicholas Mr. Willie Niles Mr. Robert Norman Dr. Will W. Orr Mrs. Ann Parker Mr. and Mrs. Iversan Patterson Mrs. Mary Payne Mrs. Lucretia Perry Miss Patrick Perry Mr. and Mrs. Rufus G. Pettis Mr. Authur Phifer Mrs. Mary Phifer Mrs. Henry J. Poe, Jr. Mrs. Cora Pogan Mrs. Esther Poole Mrs. Evelyn Porter Mr. Torrence Powell Miss Virginia Praileau Mr. Barry Price Mrs. Elizabeth Pruitt Mrs. Haldreu Pryar Rev. Mrs. C. E. Quick Mrs. Annie Reeves Miss Isabel H. Reid Dr. Mrs. J. Calvin Reid Mr. Thomas M. Reid Mrs. Ximena H. Reid Miss A. R. Rhodes Mr. Nathaniel Rhyne, Jr. Mrs. Mavis Richardson Mr. Willie Rivers Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts Mr. C. B. Robinson Mr. Mrs. John D. Robinson Mr. Rodney V. Robinson Mrs. Addie Rogers Mr. Raymond Rorie Mr. Albert Roseboro, Jr. Mr. Larry Rowell Dr. Mrs. A. J. Ryan Rev. George W. Saddler Rev. Mrs. Russell J. Shipman Mr. Mrs. Sam Seigle Mr. Samuel E. Seigle Mr. Harold Shuford Mrs. Edward Sigal Mr. Mrs. Robert J. Simelton, Jr. Mr. Jacob E. Simms Mrs. Vera Simms Mrs. Bernice Simpson Mrs. Bessie Simpson Mrs. Lillian Singleton Mr. Pernell Sings Miss Bernice E. Sloan Mr. Mrs. Charles N. Smalls Mrs. Betty Smith Miss Helen Smith Mr. Leonard Smith Mrs. Marie Smith Mrs. Loretta E. Stanley Mrs. Thomasina W. Staten Mrs. Laura D. Staton Mrs. Christine Steele Mrs. Marie D. Steele Mrs. Sarah Stevenson Mrs. Dorothy P. Stinson Mrs. Betty Stakes Mr. Mrs. J. H. Stakes Mr. Edward Sturdivant Mr. Mrs. O. A. Sullivan Mr. Mrs. Scott Sullivan Mrs. Odessa Surratt Mrs. Pernell Switzer Mrs. Emma Tanner Mrs. Laura Thomas Mrs. S. T. Thomas Mr. A. H. Thompson Mrs. Lenora Thompson Mr. H. C. Threatt Mrs. Alice Tillman Mr. David Tillman Mr. Mrs. Wailon N. Timmons Mrs. Naomi Trumble Mr. Mrs. Norton Turner Rev. Smith Turner, III Mrs. Lydia Tyson Mrs. Katie Vance Mr. E. E. Waddell Mr. Mrs. E. E. Waddell Mrs. Ethel L. Walker Mr. Curtis Wallace Jane Wallace Mrs. Lonnie Belle Wallace Mr. Mrs. Samuel Walton, Jr. Mrs. Robert Ware Mr. Mrs. James Washington Mr. Bobby Watts Mr. Cleveland Welch Mr. Lawrence Welch Rev. S. V. Wells Mr. James Weston Mrs. Doris White Mrs. Elizabeth White Mrs. Jeanette White Professor K. R. White Mr. Theodore White, Sr. Mr. Fred Wiley Mrs. Alexander Williams Dr. Mrs. A. J. Williams Mrs. Geneva Williams Mr. Vance Williams Miss Annie Willingham Mr. Mrs. Clarence E. Wilson Mrs. Doreatha Wilson Mr. M. Earl Wingate Mr. Robert Witherspoon Mr. Robert E. Wood Mrs. Corine Woods Mr. James H. Woods Mrs. Berthenia Wrencher Mrs. Annie Young Mrs. Betty Young 137 Puzzled about your future? THERE’S A GREAT ONE WITH SOUTHERN BELL SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH COMPANY Compliments of ALEXANDER FUNERAL HOME BAKIS COFFEE SHOP 1949 East Seventh Street Charlotte, North Carolina CLEANWAY CLEANERS University Park Shopping Center Charlotte, North Carolina 392-2560 Mr. and Mrs. A. Bakis Owners and Operators One Day Service Free Moth Proofing and Storage We give F. S. Gold Stamps” Compliments of W G 1 V GRIER ' S GROCERY TOPS ON YOUR DIAL 434 State Street Charlotte, North Carolina NIGHT AND DAY Cicero A. Grier, Proprietor CONDER’S 829-833 West Trade Street CONGRATULATIONS TO DENISE FROM IRA ALEXANDER CONGRATULATIONS, KITTY FROM MOTHER Charlotte, North Carolina 28202 Telephone - 375-9156 YOUR FLAG HEAD QUARTERS Compliments of Compliments of AMERICAN BUSY BEE MARKET DRY CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY 319 East Morehead Street 505 Beatties Ford Road Charlotte, North Carolina 28208 3205 Plaza Road, Branch Office 5032 Pineville Road, Branch Office Compliments of UNITED ECONOMY CLUB J. Appling, President J. Vanfield, V. President M. Richardson, Secretary W. Dail, Treasurer D. Caldwell, Business Manager Compliments of PEARSON’S 120 East TRADE Street Charlotte, North Carolina BEST WISHES MRS. BETTYE McCARROLL Compliments of McKISSICK ' S SHOE SHOP 1404 Beatties Ford Road Mr. Reuben McKissick, Proprietor GULF DEALER JAKE MOORE’S GULF SERVICE STANLEY’S SUPER DRUG S ' ORE Gulf Tires Batteries 4474 Randolph Road Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone - 366-5321 1949 East Seventh Street Charlotte, North Carolina BELK’S SERVING CHARLOTTE AND THE CAROLINAS FOR OVER 72 YEARS 4 SEASONS CLEANERS LAUNDRY 4314 The Plaza 3001 Shamrock Drive Telephones: 376-1807 536-1185 Phone 333-6448 NEW YORK CLEANER AND HATTERS One Hour Cleaning and Shoe Repairing 217 West Trade Street Charlotte, North Carolina Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Stern STERNTEX, INC. Compliments of MARVIN’S SODA SHOP AND GROCERY 1108 Belmont Avenue Open Seven Days a Week Two locations - Free Delivery - To Serve You Better BIDDLEVILLE PHARMACY Store Hours Daily - 9 a. m. - 10 p.m. Sunday - 12 p.m. - 9 p.m. 1023 Beatties Ford Road DALEBROOK PHARMACY 2509 Beatties Ford Road Compliments of CHEF BILL SALADS SALADS OF DISTINCTION PAUL’S ECONO-WASH 1943 East Seventh Street Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone - 332-9569 NORTHWESTERN PRINTING COMPANY ’’Where Only the Best Printing is Good Enough” 1403 Beatties Ford Road Charlotte, North Carolina 28208 A. M. Houston Owner and Operator CAROLINA’S LARGEST DEALER LA POINTE 531 East Trade Street Tel. 332-3131 Opposite The Courthouse CHEVROLET HEADQUARTERS SINCE 1925 VOICE THEORY PIANO DIAMIA E. CROSLIN Compliments of DAVID W. WHITE, DBA Southgate Brokerage Co. Post Office Box 1747 Tel. 333-7769 Charlotte, North Carolina MUSIC STUDIO Guest Appearances Recitals Studio: 2506 Beatties Ford Road Dalebrook Professional Building Phone 392-9051 Res. 375-8504 WE SELL QUALITY PRODUCTS: - Carpets - Frigidaire Built-In Equipment - Nutone Music Intercoms and Hoods - Youngtown Kitchen Cabinets - Lighting Fixtures TWIN STATES DISTRIBUTING COMPANY SMITH’S ATLANTIC 1200 South Graham Street 376-2761 1740 West Trade Street 375-9250 Compliments of SIDNEY E. SMITH, PROPRIETOR MECHANIC ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES DR. EMERY L. RANN INSPECTION STATION CAROLINA TRANSFER STORAGE CO. Your ALLIED Mover CHARLOTTE GASTONIA Office 392-8500 Home 333-4940 THE WIG-ARAMA Styling and Cleaning Service Clement Morris, Jr. 1518 Beatties Ford Rd. Manager Charlotte, N.C. 28208 LUNSFORD GROCERY 125 North Irwin Avenue Charlotte, North Carolina Open: 7 a.m. - 9 p.m. Daily FRESH MEATS AND VEGETABLES FREE DELIVERY SERVICE Compliments of W. F. KELSEY Representative of Metal Arts MAGIC CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY 2711 Monroe Road Charlotte, North Carolina Compliments of SECOND WARD P.T.A 0 ONE DAY SERVICE M. Caldwell, Pres. I. Kirkpatrick, Sec. W. Adams, V. Pres. R. Baxter, Ass’t. Sec. NO EXTRA CHARGE CHARLOTTE FISH AND OYSTER COMPANY, INC. Compliments of A DEAR AUNT Wholesale Fish, Oysters, Crabs, Scallops, Shrimp MRS. MITCHELL HYDE POST OFFICE BOX 357 CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA 28201 Compliments of CC ' .UMBIA CAR CORPORATION 220 Dalton Avenue Charlotte, North Carolina Fargo Electric Cars - Scorpion Sail Boats 127 North Sycamore Street Treat Yourself To the Best OAKLAWN BARBER SHOP Ladies’ and Children’s Work is a Specialty 919 Oaklawn Avenue - Charlotte, N. C. 375-9655 Walter B. Taylor, Sr., Proprietor Barbers: Roosevelt Neal, Olanda Carr and William Moore CONGRATULATIONS The Senior Class selected the solicitation of yearbook ads and patrons as its special project. BESSIE STEVENSON of homeroom 12-1 is an example of what a determined senior can do. To date she has reported $83.00. Courtesy of AMERICAN BEAUTY FLORIST, INC. THE FURNITURE MART Flowers for all Occasions Formals for Rent 301 East Trade Street Charlotte, North Carolina 1506 South Boulevard Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone - 334-0861 Telephones: 333-4177 and 332-2367 Nights, Sundays and Holidays - 525-2450 DOMESTIC LAUNDRY J. R. Harris, Manager ’’Charlotte’s Finest Laundry” 811 South McDowell Street Charlotte, North Carolina Dial - 333-7113 - ini m tiffins wmrm SUPER MARKETS, me. HOME OF GOOD FOOD REBEL ROOM RESTAURANT 2416 Freedom Drive Charlotte, North Carolina Compliments of Laron’s Carryj Out PHONE 376-3723 OR 375-9316 1127 PEERAM STREET GRIER FUNERAL SERVICE INCORPORATED 2310 Statesville Avenue Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone 332-7109 704 Walkup Avenue Monroe, North Carolina Telephone 283-5423 PLATES 14 Chicken.$ Fish. Bar-B-Q . Hamburger Steak .... Shrimp . Chicken Liver. Oysters — V 2 Fry .... Flounder Fillet . Scallops . .85 .85 .85 .85 1.10 .98 1.25 1.10 .98 LARGE BOXES 1 2 Chicken. Fish .i. Bar-B-Q .... 1.55 and Two Steaks . Shrimp . Chicken Liver . Oysters. Flounder Fillet . Sea Food . 1.55 1.55 2.50 1.55 2.15 1.95 2.45 2.15 1.65 Congratulations to the Graduates of T 67 From THE PORTERS Mrs. Willie Brannon Porter Mrs Mattie Porter Caldwell, 43 Mrs. Doris Porter Young, 46 Mr. Kenneth M. Porter, 47 PUCKETTS SUPER MARKET Mr. Charles Porter, 49 SNO-WHITE 1309 Oaklawn Avenue Cleaners and Launderers -t- Charlotte, North Carolina Main Plant - 901 East Fourth Street Phone 375-7509 Henry C. Puckett, Mgr. BUTLER SEA FOOD 919 South McDowell Street Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone - 375-4408 1ANETTE WALTON of homeroom 12-4 another example of senior spirit in action. She has reported $53.00 in s and patrons. Phone - 333-8885 ART FLOWER SHOP Member - First Union Charge Plan Member - North Carolina National Bank Americard Charge Plan Phone - 332-7114 Representative - Roy Perry DAVIS AND ELDER SERVICE STATION 2317 Statesville Avenue Charlotte, North Carolina Telephone - 377-9372 Congratulations To KITTY From: MR. AND MRS. B. ROBINSON Congratulations to KITTY From: CHARLES E. TIMMERS
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