Somerset High School - Raider / Memoirs Yearbook (Somerset, MA)
- Class of 1977
Page 1 of 196
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1977 volume:
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1977 Man of the Year Frederick E. Newton Dear Mr. Newton, The class of 197 7 takes great pride in dedicating this book to you for a job well done. Your enthusiasm and determination to teach us the evils of using run-on sentences and fragments, have made your classes both informative and enjoyable. The skills you have taught us are invaluable, and your famous vocabulary tests will never be forgotten. We are extremely grateful for all you have taught us - not only about English, but also about life. With many thanks, The Class of 1977 2 The Old Look! V : ■ ' 1 nti !?S , j « • • i -SL y.+ j« ••• • • « • 1 • 1k .iHS V ' ; y ( V‘“;; ■■■-, ;:::: X ' tf SS • «••• 4 « • ■ • • • ■ • • ■ • Z •••• ••. • ••“t « • • • “ ’ X A if r J, «- • ' A jftalri ■ mw I m ' • ! Mill l| mm to ► You! You ' re the One You Are the Only Reason Mr. Francis Kilgrew — Superintendent We, the class of ’77, proudly pay tribute to Francis J. Kil¬ grew , Superintendent of Somer¬ set Public Schools since 1960. His dedication and high stand¬ ards have resulted in quality education for the citizens of Somerset. A graduate of Whit¬ man High School, Bridgewater State College, B. S. Ed., and Boston College, M.Ed., Mr. Kilgrew took advanced courses at both Brown and Harvard Uni¬ versities. He became principal of Pottersville Elementary School in 1930, and was appointed Somerset High School principal in 1946. By giving us his constant encouragement and support, he helped us to appreciate learn¬ ing, and to become better peo¬ ple for it. It is not with sorrow for the future, but with great pride from the past, that the graduating class of Somerset High School says thank you and good bye to Francis J. Kilgrew. MR. THOMAS DALEY ASSISTANT TO THE SUPERINTENDENT MR. EDWARD KAYLOR SECONDARY SCHOOL SUPERVISOR MR. SALVATORE PETRILLO VICE-PRINCIPAL MR. RICHARD MAHONEY VICE-PRINCIPAL MR. EDWARD SULLIVAN ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL Mr. Carl McDermott — Principal English MISS MARY JANE SULLIVAN MRS. PAULA SAROCKA MISS SHARON HAMLEN MRS. ALBERTA PERRY, DEAN OF WOMEN MR. PAUL MARCH AND MR. ROLAND MOSES MR. WILLIAM SULLIVAN, DEPT. HEAD MRS. FLORENCE TAYLOR mV | wi MISS ANNE SCANLON MR. NICHOLAS PEACHY MRS. JEAN NOWAK MR. ROBERT TAVARES n r fl i MR. FREDERICK NEWTON A ! V MR. HARVEY ALDEN 21 MR. JOHN DRISCOLL MR. CHARLES LEARY Social Studies MR. RICHARD SMITH MR. DONALD REBELLO MR. RICHARD BREZINSKI MISS ROXANNE FERREIRA MR. EDMOND GOULART m MR. JAMES HENRY MR. ROBERT CROUCH MISS PAULINE DUMONT MR. JOHN SOARES MR. PAUL McMANUS, DEPT. HEAD MR. ROBERT SOUZA •A MR. RAYMOND GAUDREAU MRS. MARY GEORGE MR. RAYMOND McDONALD MR. ALFRED ZAGORSKI MRS. IRMA MELLO MRS. CAROL KIDD MR. LAWRENCE THOMAS i£Rii MRS. BEVERLY CARON MR. THOMAS BURNS DEPT. HEAD MR. GERALD ST. ARMAND MR. JAY KELLY MRS. PAULA KELLY MR. PATRICK MERCIER MR. DONALD GRIFFIN MR. DAVID PEREIRA MR. JAMES SULLIVAN DEPT. HEAD MR. DONALD McNAMARA MR. ANTHONY NUNES MR. DAVID CHAUVETTE MR. GREGORY SQUILLANTE 26 MRS. MARILYN GAUDREAU MR. CHARLES JORDAN MR. BRIAN SULLIVAN TCT?r MRS. JOANNE SILVIA MR. RICHARD KRANES MR. GARY DREWNIAK MR. MILTON ROCHA MR. RICHARD BERNARDO MR. JOSEPH FINGLISS Physical Education MISS SHEILA FITZGERALD MR. KENNETH DAY MR. ALBERT ESTES, DEPT. HEAD MISS BERNADETTE MURPHY MR. WHITNEY MR. THEODORE PORODA 28 HORTON MR. MICHAEL POMERLEAU MISS KATHLEEN GOODWIN Business MR. RICHARD TETELBAUM MISS LORETTA NOWACKI MR. DOUGLAS RAPOSE MRS. JEAN SOUZA MR. JAMES TOWERS, DEPT. HEAD MR. HERVE LAVOIE 29 Industrial Arts 30 MR. WILLIAM MATTE, DEPT. HEAD MR. GORDEN HAGGERTY S- MR. PAUL AUDETTE MR. KAISER SHAHDAN MR. FRANCIS MURPHY MR. JOHN AZEVEDO MR. WILLIAM REED ■M MISS DORIS LOCICERO MR. WILLIAM BARRAR MISS GAIL RIVETZ DR. DAVID CUCINOTTA DIRECTOR OF READING Guidance MR. EDWARD SANDOMIERSKI, DEPT. HEAD Reading MRS. ANNA DANIELSON MR. DAVID MALLOY f J% Foreign Languages MISS GERTRUDE O’NEIL MR. EDWARD WARD, DEPT. HEAD MR. CHARLES LEVESQUE MRS. HAIDEE GIL DE JESUS MRS. CYNTHIA LAMOUREUX MRS. CECILE McNAMARA MISS ELIZABETH SOUZA 32 MR. GEORGE PONTES Health t? ? MRS. MARCIA SALMON MR. JOHN GRANT HEALTH COORDINATOR Librarian Audio-Visual Dir. Dress Making MR. PAUL BOUFFARD MRS. JEAN MITCHELL MR. DAVID KNECHT MRS. LINDA BOISELLE MISS GALE PYATT Cft. Supervisor Music MR. KIAH O’BRIEN III MR. BRUCE MAGGS MR. ROBERT PERRY DEPT HEAD MR. RICHARD WORTON MR. JAMES WHITE DEPT. HEAD MRS. AMY GOULART MR. DAVID ROBINSON ... mi |. -fH Cooperative Education MR. JOHN SILVIA SR. SPECIAL NEEDS MR. PAUL CORCORAN MAX-ED COORDINATOR Substitutes MISS PATRICIA MEDEIROS MR. ROBERT TAYLOR MR. LEO LaFLEUR MR. BARRY SULLIVAN Secretaries Nurses MRS. AUDREY BURHOE MRS. RAE SULLIVAN MRS. JUNE O’KEEFE MRS. MAUREEN DONAHUE _ MRS. IRENE MORGAN R.N. MRS. MILDRED BROUGH R.N. MRS. ANNE GAGNE MRS. BEATRICE CORREA MRS. PAULINE STILL MRS. MARY ELLEN CORCORAN MRS. MARY CURT i . I __ READIf P £.(jozak P J . cPf-tmzicicL Who we are, who we become, is determined by those who love us. cp-nn cpy uiaz No goal is too high if we climb with care and confidence. ’ ' Unknown Live today, for you will never know if there will be a tomorrow. ' ’ Unknown ISzznda Cj.. cPftmziclci 2 amzi cPfhnzicla As I see the sun rise and set I think of her and can ' t forget the love she brings to my heart, even when we are apart. For she shall blossom like a rose, live and grow to be quite old - Shannon. lames Almeida lP. cPftnzzida Pl icfizLtz cPftmdicla Tomorrow ' s gonna be a brighter day. 40 Jjita cJLtmziJa Remember me with smiles and laughter for that is how I will remember you. If you can only remember me with tears Then don’t remember me at all. JC on ui CL- f-nia ' ial Morning brings another sun tomorrow. To see the things that never come today. Neil Young CLuJ.itfi JLnJraJz For such is the unbroken cycle from the earth to the sky above that to give of love is to give of life, and in giving life, find love. S.A.J. { CCJina Jl. cJjizuJa J J axtsL d L . c fuyuito You have the world at your fingertips, No one can make it better than you. You have the world at your fingertips, See what you’ve done to the rain and the sun. So many changes have all just begun; to reap, I know you’re asleep: Wake up! Spirit (R. California) as [ g.. Bazik azuoza cantons S azzsiza daazis J3. H3a±fzin Too many people prefer success to happiness - not realizing that happiness is success. ' Thoreau ( LPstsz B att Soon as ' ll rolls around. You finally lay your burden down, Close your books, get out of your seat Down the halls and into the street . . . zLa IQazticfi If they were right, I ' d agree, it ' s them they know not me. Now there’s a way and I know that I have to go away. I know I have to go. Cat Stevens 42 Uyznnztli SzHancjzz c fnn zA [aXLe iSznf-aito Where there is no love There is no sense either. iSianda l3i£.n£ jLcUi on tea c j-. IB xuIj Love is a little more than wishful thinking on the part of those who’ve never known the absence of Wednesday, the closeness of clocks, the nearness of tomorrow. Rod McKuen cz jCan iBzznazdo Little he dreams who drinks life ' s pleasures. Chaucer { Jd au id O. !B £.ncz ” . . . There is no substitute for victory. We must win. General Douglas MacArthur 43 J anLzC 2 SiHrzau You shouldn’t have took more than you gave. Dave Mason L yznnztfi U . H3£afz£ij Class of 77, we did our best Hope we’ll be remembered like the rest. We did our best from day to day Our diploma, that ' s our pay! Accept me as I am, so I may learn what I can become. ’ ’ cS. 13 i(XLncjton If I can make a mark in time, I can say the mark is mine. ’ ’ Cat Stevens Many have I loved Many times been bitten Many times I ' ve gazed Along the open road. ' ’ 3(dCy cA. B onai WiUCiam cdfy. SCai± The best thing about the future is that it comes only one day at a time. ” 44 £OT iBootli Perhaps no person can be a poet or even can enjoy poetry, without a certain unsoundness of mind. Lord Macaulay cJ fanc.ij czQ. S oxAzn Forgive, Forget. Somehow, somewhere, someday, Things might change. d l . H3ozAsn Life is neither a good nor an evil; it is simply a place where good and evil exist. ' Seneca tiivaCdxi Gaxotjjn If you can ' t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with. Neil Young ona [A £ -■ . SoucfuixA The past is valuable as a guide post, But dangerous if used as a hitching post. ' ’ ” . . . For yesterday is but a memory And tomorrow is only a vision But today well lived makes every yesterday a memory of happiness And every tomorrow a vision of hope Look well, therefore, to this day! Anonymous dd onna. H3 t££ 2 I believe in the sun even when it is not shining. I believe in love even when I am alone. I believe in God even when he is silent. ' ' dSzod uz He is strong who conquers others; he who conquers himself is mighty. ' ’ Lao-tzu JW az tfia Hdzougfi If I should lose let me stand on the sidelines and cheer as the winners go by. Braley ' Jzffzzij dBzouitXa zd People hand in hand and honey land where hate’s a dream and love forever stands or is this a vision in my mind Stevie Wonder JW idton Udzouddazd 46 Jlincla c j-. B zoojd Cf.anidiL (lalnai ' ' We can make it happen. ' ' Chicago (.Cynthia dabxaL [j onna. zA . dainat We have not passed that subtle line between childhood and adulthood until we have stopped saying, It got lost, ’ ' and say, I lost it. Jb td Jdn LP. (1cuiozdtttL I’ve been smiling lately thinking about the good things to come, and I believe something good has begun. Cat Stevens Lt az£n c f. dalnat Quiet determination is his claim, to send him to the halls of fame. ’ ’ I do the very best I know how ... If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won ' t amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right would make no difference. Abraham Lincoln J Lxiz J2. Cafioon Qoannz czQ. (2am (201 When you make your mark in the world, watch out for the guys with erasers. zA [LcPl az [J?. CJjiA c2f. danto I sit beside my lonely fire, and pray for wisdom yet - for calmness to remember or courage to forget. Charles Hamilton Aide 2Patzicia cz f. da[i± Vision comes when I ' m alone, abandoned to imagination. £[iza(j£.tfi (2a7 ra[fio Do not follow where the path leads, rather go where there is no path and leave a trail. 48 ina Cxitaxina Miles from nowhere, guess I’ll take my time, oh yeah, to reach there. Cat Stevens {Joinfill (D. (IcilblO It’s a long and dirty road. It’s a hard and heavy load, the people I need are not always good, some are Bad and some are Good Some have tried the best they could. Unknown U arnn Cavanaugh Be glad of life because it gives you the chance to lo-e and to play and to look up at the stars. Henry Van Dyke I mo U 9. Ck acn I Goodtimes, Badtimes, II You know I’ve had my share. Led Zepplin xancLi IP. (liiaxmitn dyntfiia dfiaim Don’t part with your illusions. V hen they are gone, you may still exist, but you have ceased to live. Mark Twain 49 H3onniz J2. (2fiz(jot PcudCk CKJZ± Do your part to add something new, to bring forth something that is needed, and to leave the world a little better because you were here briefly. Rabbi Machman of Bratzlav ! i 1 Cj.. dfiuzn 50 iS ' dTnacldttE (JoIf a lj May your hand be full always, if only with another hand. May your heart be empty only long enough to give you j cause to fill it up again with love. May your soul be lost by you only to be found by God. - Rod McKuen chiiian S. (Jofljdzt Let ' s not spend a moment wasting time cause we have far to go. Jim Croce ‘CPfillip. cA. dolLini. JW aziannz (Jozazizo Love comes close to wrecking all you have to give. God knows there’s so much to give. Frampton 51 Janies zA . doxzsia Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant with the weak and wrong. Sometime in your life you will have been all of these. St. Louis Globe J icfzast C W. doxxicjan The happiest poeple seem to be those who have no particular cause for being happy except they are so. omai oxznjs.au cd-fxL sns J 2 . do it a Youth is happy because it has the ability to see beauty. Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old. Frank Kafka tfiia doita. Take your time. Think a lot. Think of everything you ' ve got. For you will still be here tomorrow, but your dreams may not. Cat Stevens jy axtiji doita You have to swim with, not against, the tide of life. 52 22zlna (J.. dots. To thine own self be true, and it must follow, as the night the day. Thou canst not then be false to any man. William Shakespeare A licfuidL ( IV. (2za.ljbit.ii City in my head Utopia Heaven in my body Utopia Into the sky It rises now. ' Todd Rundgren Aiiczliaiif 22. doutuzUz Kindness is a language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. Mark Twain CUkiLL J?. Couto Sometimes I can laugh and cry and I can ' t remember why, but I still love these times gone by. James Taylor x o jin zJ . Jd aignauft I am not afraid of tomorrow for I have seen yesterday and love today.” William Allen White U atfi[z£n How soon time passes, That silent thief of youth - Go not happy days - For ending is our brief, Sweet play. Qon (2xoc(zztt j ax kX auid±on I’m happy to be living, happy that I was given a chance to see another day. Riot (dixi±iofj.fi x O. hi a(jLi In taking revenge, a man is but even with his enemy; but in passing it over, he is superior. Eurepides Xdoxak X. X avoi Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang there except those who sang best. Rustic Ideals 54 ff rd y ' - a y d Lc.(iazt c [. ' ' J zdoita Hung over, Red-eyed, Dog tired, it’s a long life, with a little wheel and it takes a lot of turns to get where you’re going. Charley Daniels c fntonz J onna Happiness is like jam . . . you can ' t spread even a little without getting some on yourself. 55 JW ariannz d orcjan There are only two things to aim for in life: First, to get what you want, and after that, to enjoy it. Only the wisest achieve the second. Logan Smith Jofin d. d oucztU I like speed, man, and everything’s cool. ’ ’ Me 56 {nth IP. E id zone, nza l licfzadL y . £±cob Jonathan muzy T uz There is no way to peace; The way is peace. A. J. Muste zAfozman £ny[arul The greatest achievement is not in never falling, but in rising after you fall. Vince Lombardi OocU i Jd uza.nA bz££u. Scka-J Do you feel like we do? Peter Frampton Uyatfitzzn S. aria The deepest feeling always shows itself in silence. Anonymous J 2 inAa aria And wasn ' t it me who said nothing good’s gonna last forever. Being myself means taking risks with myself, taking risks on new ways of behavior, so I can see how it is that I want to be. Hugh Prather Don ' t part with your illusions. When they are gone, you may still exist, but you have ceased to live. Mark Twain do[Un cA. D zxrzira Yes, there are two paths you can go by. But in the long run, there’s still time to change the road you ' re on. Led Zepplin 58 Without the way there is no going; Without the truth, there is no knowing; Without life there is no living. Thomas A. Kempis (fjlaiL Cs [. 3zzzzLza Long you live and high you fly and smiles you ' ll give and tears you ' ll cry. All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be. Pink Floyd fBeiytc . DuU I shall not pass this way again. Any good thing that I can do, or any kindness that I can show, let me do it now! Let me not defer it or neglect it. For I shall not pass this way again. Jlozi 3 £T ZELZO. Give me wide walls to build my house of life - the north shall be of love against the winds of fate; the south of tolerance that I may outreach hate; the east of faith, that rises clear and new each day; the west of hope, then e’en dies a glorious way. The threshold ' neath my feet shall be humility; the roof - the very sky itself. Infinity, give me wide walls to build my house of life. Anonymous 59 ia(iCL£.[. ozanA ’’You can take any road that you choose; Sometimes you win, and sometimes you lose. ' ’ Dave Mason zzAzzicH ' ' Aozczytz AJlJ Only a mediocre person is always at his best. ' ’ Somerset Maugham zAf. Aoztizz ’’Thinking is the hardest work there is which is the probable reason why so few engage in it. ” Henry Ford 60 Gyntfiia zA [. Things do not just happen in this world - They are brought on by yourself and others. lP. iai 20.X When this you see, remember me and bear me in your mind. Let all the world say what they may, speak of me as you find. Brian Jones l[(j£z£ (fjiaxcia iPauta Special joys and special places, Special friends together - The moments pass so quickly, But the memories are forever! G. W. Douglas (dynttiLa Winter, Spring, Summer or Fall, All you have to do is call, And I’ll be there, You ' ve got a friend. James Taylor A [a , iydbri (PlAooxtL) off All the flowers of today are in the seeds of tomorrow. ’ ’ Unknown zd Zl zzy[ (f oldlbzzq If you can find a path with no obstacles, it probably doesn’t lead anywhere. ’ ’ Frank A. Clark J auid (fdfotdzn Szian The chief wonder of education is that it does not ruin everybody concerned in it, teachers are taught. ' ' Henry Adams Sdtuazd zA {. It matters not how straight the gate, How charged with punishments the scroll, I am the master of my fate: I am the captain of my soul. Henley Uyatfiij (f ziffin ' ’ Do not let the past remind us of what we are now.” Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young Life is a beautiful thing to pass the time away with. Anonymous 62 Life is a long song, but the tune ends too short for us all. J. Tull J onna (fjzLm i One cannot conceive anything so strange and so implausible that it has not already been said by one philosopher or another. Descartes Cj.oPin (f zonljiLcfz A sail is like a noiseless wing to wrath me from distraction. Byron U atti[.z£.n zA [. czHcujyzzty But it ' s too hard for me to say good¬ bye, when I still believe the good things outweight the bad. Think of all the good times we had. - Cashman and West SA(XrazA c f. cJ-fazt Your friend is your needs answered. He is your field which you sow with love and reap with thanksgiving. Kahlil Gibran cAiazi 63 Szztt czHavcroztfi Let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not. ’ ’ Galatians 6:9 Jd ianz c zfzzt Love; but nothing can take the place of love. Love is the measure of life; only so far as we love do we really live. John Burroughs dfizzy f c f. cJ-fzaji Freedoms just another word for nothing left to lose, nothing, honey, if it ain’t free. Janis Joplin Jfzdiz zdfza i I will utter what I believe today If it should contradict all I said yesterday. ’ ' Wendell Phillips 64 ■cJ otjtjLn J 2 . Hoidzn Survey the path for your feet, and let all your ways be sure. Proverb [icfzauL cdiofitz ini Lznazd Sdivazd Cj.. c fujcjinion Here I go, into the unknown. What to expect, I cannot tell, I can only hope for the best. E.J.M. dazoLijn 2 - cdfoLt I . . . for he that is compelled in all things, the same is a slothful and not a wise servant. DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS 58:26 2 00 £21 X. M Sts(Jsn 2 Dtovjitz After a search so painful, so long, the real painful search has yet to become. [J onna zAi axis. U ing Thought is deeper than speech, feeling deeper than all thought. Cranch st u±±aunzs J- atTLcia cztf-. ij You can’t always get what you want, but if you try sometimes you just might find you get what you need. sf o(jsTt U u(j[in Each mind has its own method. ' ' IPamsta c f. J2a[i(jszts For long you live and high you fly. Smiles you’ll give and tears you’ll cry. All you touch and all you see Is all your life will ever be. ” Pink Floyd 66 (D. -J?antj[aii. ”If you listen very hard the tune will come to you at last. When all are one and one is all to be a rock and not a roll.” Led Zepplin ,■ 1 ozi± J (. Jlauois. There is no wrong side or right side. No misery in being loved, only in not loving. I learned these truths myself to tell them to you now, As you go sailing through the sun on your way toward life. Rod McKuen J . (2[aiz JlcLzaxo Some people never show or tell others how they really feel and only lose out in the end. You’re in this world but once, make it the way you wish never regretting or wanting any more or less. Yes d aijmonA Jlauois. Come here dear boy, have a cigar, you ' re gonna go far, fly high, you’re never gonna die, your make it if you try, they’re gonna love you. Pink Floyd Uyazzn JlsAo ux The sky is clearing and the night has cried enough. The sun, he comes, the world to soften up. Rejoice, rejoice, we have no choice but to carry on. Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young Stta 2 dlzcjautt As he thinketh in his heart, so is he. The Bible 23.7 a%ct J zonaxci No man is an island, said poet John Donne. I believe every man is an island but there are no limits to the bridges or harbors one can build. ' ' Roy C. Cook You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today. And then one day you find ten years have got behind you. No one told you when to run, you missed the starting gun. ' ’ Pink Floyd Accept me as I am, so I can learn what I can become. ' ’ 68 dPabiLcia cdf. J2irna Do not go where the path leads, Rather go where there is no path, and leave a trail. dfixiitofiller cdf. Xofi £1 Learning makes a good man better and an old man worse. Thomas Fuller, Gnomlogia Udauid (J.. Ho(i £1 JIoujs, All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen. Emerson cddonnis. tdl lacritcfiLz The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn. Ralph Waldo Emerson 69 Caxot zfizaaE. We need to have people who mean something to us, people to whom we can turn knowing that being with them is coming home. ' ’ Anonymous J.odiz Jl. zA {aicjU£± Uyatfiy cztf-. zA [ azaiaxi tu Thirty spokes share the wheels hub; It is the center hole that makes it useful, shape clay into a vessel; It is the space within that makes it useful. Cut doors and windows for a room; It is the holes which make it useful. Therefore, profit comes from what is there; Usefulness from what is not there. Lao Tsu, Tao Te Ching dQzian zA [az±cUn Szian zAJ clzLe. zSu±an dl {a,z±(ia[[ Time is; Too slow for those who wait, Too swift for those who fear,Too long for those who grieve, But for those who love, time is not. Harry Van Dyke 70 ”1 expect to pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do or any kindness I can show to any fellow creatures, let me do it now . . . for 1 shall not pass this way again. cSu±an J2. zA atto Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant with the weak and the wrong. Sometime in life you will have been all of these. Bob Goddard Su£. £P. zA au ' iE.ttL If you can not understand my silences, You will not understand my words. D(atH zzinz . . . afterwards, Baby child sipped a heartful of ocean . . . spat out the waste and walked upon the New Day. Jimi Hendrix (2axo[ czty. zJl aynaxA To a friend ' s house the road is never long. Dutch Proverb cSazafi ally We never know how high we are Till we are asked to rise - And then if we are true to plan Our statures touch the skies.’ ’ Emily Dickinson d Lcfiaz.l Q. J ! ecIelzo± llPabiicia J . A l d£Lzo± A smile is a curve that can set a lot of things straight. ' ’ Jo Petty zflonald d. zA [zd.£LZo± Not from the Grand Old Master ' s Not from the Bard’s subline Whose distant footsteps echo Through the corridors of time. ' ' HBzian 1 {eIIo 72 J[ . ML Life” Life goes on without you, the many memories you left behind, the kind thought left here in my mind, but the Love you gave me I’ll never forget, nor, will I ever regret. Me c {. zJ iLrulo nca How many a year has passed and gone, And many a gamble has been lost and won; And many a road taken by many a friend, And each one I ' ve never seen again. Bob Dylan In his younger days a man dreams of possessing the heart of the woman whom he loves; later, the feeling that he possesses the heart of a woman may be enough to make him fall in love with her. ” Proust People see things that are and say ' Why? ' But I dream things that never were and ask ’Why not’? Shaw MJuu£C. ML Be self-confident, self-reliant, and if you don’t make it, you will have known you have done your best. General Douglas MacArthur .oflFL d j . It is too common for those who have unjustly suffered pain to inflict it likewise in their turn with the same injustice. Samuel Johnson 73 J2yrmz cPf. P ! oxan Kiss today goodbye and point me toward tomorrow. ’ ' M. Hamlisch C ' Zzzotyn S. J o±!izx It matters not what you are thought to be, but what you are. ’ ’ Publius Sysus Piafiaxd d. P f u H n Sudden call shouldn ' t take away the started memory all in all. The journey takes you all the way, As apart from any reality that you ' ve seen or known. Yes dP. Life is a far too important thing to talk seriously about. ' ’ Orson Wells dP. py utdn jn ax (z W. zA [uxf2pLy . . . and it’s only the giving that makes you what you are. Ian Anderson 74 (2!i£.xjj[ c f. O ' Bxizn Time moves fast, Good times move too fast. zA [ic(iaE.[ J. dVoLzt zA![. O ' BxUn Remember th is also, and be well persuaded of its truth: The future is not in the hands of fate, but in ours. Jules Jusserand T - M (2o[[s.s,n czrf-. O ' Szizn It was a long and winding road that led us to where we are. Don’t stop here. It still is a long and winding road.’ ' (2CaLx£, zA {. A clAexxu To love is to be cherished To cherish is to be loved. Those are the few but very great elements of life And they are the main reasons for my existence. Lar U z(jin zA [. 3 zizn 0[i(jz.Lza . . . Just when you ' ve become a memory of the past and faded away, I see your face and think of all that we had; Now was it so bad, Oh it makes me wonder . . . Bread [d cujid cdf. Gtiuzcia ’’With every mistake we must surely be learning. ’ ' Beatles Svancjztina zA {. OHivzLxa As you think, so you do; as you do, so you are. To be right, think right. ' ’ J. Gustav White U Lm Gtiuziza The secret of contentment is knowing how to enjoy what you have. ' ’ Jo Petty Jl ' inAa QUi luziza Time Is Time is too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice, But for those who love, time is Eternity. ' ’ Henry Van Dyke 76 ■zStzfifi £72 ( 0[i(jzLia People live from day to day but they do not count the time, they don’t see their days slipping by and neither do I. James Taylor Ok omai ( [Lvdiza See men on keen eternity, Parting often times. Steppenwolf c j-Can J?. Ottuizz Take a straight and stronger course to the corner of your life. Yes Joanns. [L(jzz There’ll come a day when you realize loving someone counts more than anything else. ' ' Anonymous cJ f- OudUtU Not by the sun’s arithmetic or my own can I make the days go fast enough. Yet there are those who beg God daily for an extra hour. 1 wish for them not solitude, no time apart from what they love, and let them have their extra hour. ” Rod McKuen £tz JE.n z[icfz 77 D znnztli 2 (PainE You can tell more about a person by what he says about others than by what others say about him. ’ ' Leo Aikman z ona[ci cz f. Pacjuzttz J auid LpaHmsx Of all the tests, the one at the end of this road should score the most, make memories to be cherished, not regretted. ' ' c dViatioCai c f. Lpannoni Great hopes make great men. Fuller Q- lPacjULn Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. 78 Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream of things that never were, and say why not.” George Bernard Shaw May we never speak to deceive, not listen to betray.” zA [Lc(2az[ . 0- a ' iznt As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction is death. ” G. B. Shaw [J e(jozcl(i c j-. J- auao Just remember - when you think all is lost, the future remains. ” Bob Goddard ' J-ofm. c f-. ’’One thought includes all thought, in the sense that a grain of sand includes the universe. ' ’ S. T. Coleridge Lpa jao ”1 never dared be radical when young, for fear I wouldn’t be free when old. ” Robert Frost 79 U £nnztfi Q. iJ auao Strange how much you’ve got to know before you know how little you know. ' Duncan Stuart J axcjaxzt c f. lPouclo Do not follow where the path leads. Rather, go where there is no path, and leave a trail. U im Sky, be my depth; Wind, be my width and my height. ' ' Jonathan Livingston Seagull dfixiitirui J zxzLxa No day is over, If it makes a memory. Anonymous A {axij S. ' CPzxzixa Searching for beauty, I saw the morning. Looking for joy, I found no end. Searching for peace, I found the evening. Trying to help, I gained a friend. Betsey Clark 80 When you do something right No one remembers. When you do something wrong No one forgets. ” { Uimot(iij lP. dpEtit There are many roads to go, And they go by many names. They don’t all go the same way, But they get there all the same. I have a feeling that we’ll meet Someday where the roads come together. Up the way. difntfiia d. iJ- EXZLf People so seldom say I love you, and then it’s either too late or love goes. So when I tell you I love you, it doesn’t mean I know you’ll never go, only that I wish you didn’t have to « Lawrence Graig-Green CoO n dl . Look not mournfully into the past; It comes not back again. Wisely improve the present; It is thine. Longfellow dPabiLcia cdf. dpEZiy Don’t walk in front of me, I may not follow. Don’t walk behind me, I may not lead. Just walk beside me and be my friend. Albert Camus d tEVEn ddirriEtital I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided, and that is the lamp of experience. I know no way of judging the future but by the past. Patrick Henry 81 JfionzaiL iPontz There are only two things to aim for in life: First, to get what you want, and after that, to enjoy it. Only the wisest achieve the second. ’ ’ Logan Smith J fancy ' LPxayznzz It matters not what you were thought to be, but what you are. ' ’ Publus Syrus U z jin (f i. Q xoutx. I sat alone with my conscience In a place where times had ceased, And we talked of my former living In the land where the years increased. ” Carles William Stubbs Qlzzgoxij Qf. Quznta[ What on earth would a man do with himself if something did not stand in his way? H. G. Wells Qffioma± zA [. Quinn An event has happened, upon which it is difficult to speak and impossible to be silent. E. Burke JW axia Q afioia U znnztfi zf afio za And if it hurts, don’t let it get you down. Argent iPatiicia dpafio la. Qofin Qi. zf auiino _jCauxi cPf. Love is not something you can feel one day, and forget about the next. It is something to be shared with someone or something throughout a lifetime. L.A.R. Like the twilight in the road up ahead, They don’t see just where we ' re going. And all the secrets in the universe Whisper in our ears, and all the years will come and go and take us up, always u p. James Seals Why take life seriously? You ' ll never get out of it alive. 83 2w 9. It is not how much we have, But how much we enjoy, that makes happiness. ’ ' Unknown GazoC. J2. It ' s a long and winding road. Beatles 84 ( WiCCiam zA [. zJx u±±z[[ z ?Lc(uixA zA [. J ocjE, r i± If Christ who is the way Found the road rough, What can we expect if We follow in his footsteps? He didn’t give up; Why should we? Rick [Pau[ c f-. St. (f zinzain JXu a 2 2 an arczLyn Sant ’i r i£ d Lctia’ul ' c l. an 85 £[[zn cSznzaat It ' s nice to look back at the yesterdays and to remember the todays. But nicer to look ahead to the tomorrows in its hopes of happy days. Anonymous cz f. Stcblon. zz f. cSfzatzzz ' ' Time is but a burden of life. ’ ' Unknown IBr ndcin £XL !Z at T u IV. SiC jLa A man’s real possession is his memory; In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor. Alexander Smith i J . cSuiuin -zS zzfifia. ' ul Don ' t walk in front of me, I may not follow, Don ' t walk behind me, I may not lead, Just walk beside me, And be my friend. Albert Camus I’ll never be free ' Til I have seen the world and can say, ' I know who I am. ' Dawn C-[audio. cSiCua x o±£.mary zA [. il jia You who are on the road must have a code that you can live by, and so become yourself because the past is just a good-bye. Graham Nash ckjlcI cSnzitfi ( Wi[[iam J2. cSmitfi Youth has no boundaries, age has no grave. azij Si Lmon± (ICaLulia oaz ± May the road rise up to meet you, May the wind be always at your back, May the sunshine warm upon your face, And until we meet again, May God hold you in the palm of his hand. - An Old Irish Verse S tuazt .B. -zSotufi Happiness is a warm heart. cSomzzi I’m headed for a place called tomorrow, but I ' ve been on a road called today. 88 Although my life’s been good to me, there’s still so much to do; so many things my mind has never known. I’d like to raise a family, I ' d like to sail away, and dance across the mountains on the moon. Denver U CLij Jl. Jboutkvjcritti Coxo[ . S, ouia A friend is: - a push when you ' ve stopped - a word when you ' re lonely - a guide when you’re searching - a smile when you’re sad - a song when you’re glad. U(. cSouza A friend is one who knows all about you, and likes you anyway. ’ ’ Anonymous You ' ll understand people better if you look at them - no matter how old or impressive or important they may be, as if they were children. For most men never mature, they simply grow taller. Leo Rosten i PauL ij.[. J$ouza cSanAxa czdf. ouza It ' s good to have time alone; for dreaming dreams all our own. Jlozi czQ. tzSovjcLzn No bird soars too high if he soars with his own wings. Anonymous 3°n c.z zA! . Szoczyn±lzL A wise old owl sat on an oak; The more he saw the less he spoke; The less he spoke the more he heard; Why aren ' t we like that wise old bird. Edward Hersey .tichards zf o(jzzt zJ f- ‘zStaj-f-o’id A wave of the future is coming and there is no fighting it. Anne Lindbergh auzcz lPau[a JStLcfznzy Remember always that you have not only the right to be an individual, you have an obligation to be one. You can not make any useful contributions in life unless you do this. Eleanor Roosevelt 90 St £. j£ tuition Breathe, breathe in the air Don ' t be afraid to care. Leave, but don ' t leave me. Look around and choose your own ground. For long you live and high you fly And smiles you’ll give and tears you ' ll cry And all you touch and all you see Is all your life will ever be. Pink Floyd zA {auz££.n SufLi(jan There are no ugly loves, nor handsome prisons. Alexander Pope SLizatj tfi csQ. Sa[[i(jan You who are on the road must have a code that you can live by, and so, become yourself because the past is just a good-bye. Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young czNanctj If you love someone, set him free. If he comes back, he’s yours. If not, it was never meant to be. ' Jjjh.zjifi cSu[[i(jan I heard, I came, I saw, and I said the hell with it. c f. ' ZJcujaxzi You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. Gibran 91 uzfja CD a jaz£± Xianz X. DC EZZLECZ Love is a‘fiend, a fire, a heaven, a hell, where pleasure, pain, and sad repentance dwell. ' ’ Richard Barnfield The bunnies are a feeble folk, whose weakness is their strength. To shun a gun a bun will run to almost any length. ’ ' Oliver Herford Jlzon d. dJfzomfiion A true sport in every sense of the word. ' ’ Anonymous Uyazzn dJ(i Love all, trust a few, but do wrong to no one. ' ' U Ennzt(i czH- dJfiiljauCt Here ' s a meaning for my life A shelter from the storm. Yet I know I must be gone Before the light of dawn! Rush 92 (2o[in . { ZJfioxnton You can’t change the past, but you can ruin the present by worrying about the future. Johnson County News iJ CLLlC Uoxzzi Isn ' t life the perfect thing to pass the time away. ninz. ZJzuAsxiu But it ' s too hard for me to say goodbye, When I still believe the good things out-weigh the bad. Think of all the good times we ' ve had Cashman and West cjtyntfiony ( Va±concd[[oi Rivers belong where they can ramble, Eagles belong where they can fly. I ' ve got to be where my spirit can run free. Got to find my corner of the sky. Stephen Shultz 93 J2. Q ujzant Do not follow where the path leads; Rather, go where there is no path, and leave a trail. ' ' t A lic iazC l VaHacz The dim, dark sea, so like unto death that divides and yet unites mankind. ' ' Longfellow Sometimes I can laugh and cry, but I can’t remember why, but I still love those good times gone by. James Taylor !j3azzy WzLnitzin The language of tones belongs equally to all mankind, and melody is the absolute language in which the musician speaks in every heart. ' ’ Richard Wagner ll3azljara. Wi[fzin±on Yesterday is already a dream, And tomorrow is only a vision, But today well-lived, makes every yesterday a dream of happiness And every tomorrow, a vision of hope. Look to this day. Unknown WittzimuDn Music is the melody whose text is the world. Unknown 94 cf onalA cS. { I VoMfz Friendship is a word, very slight of which imprint makes the heart warm. Emerson Suicin aujzzucFia If you think you are in love. Set him free. If he returns, y ou know it was meant to be. Carole King (2fizi±tofifi£,z ( MV. MVoodi D. MVong Don’t walk in front of me, I may not follow. Don’t walk behind me, I may not lead. Just walk beside me and be my friend Albert Camus J Lcfiazfl cz f. 2vLTo[in±(zi . . . So on and on I go, the seconds tick the time out, there ' s so much left to know and I’m on the road to find out t Cat Stevens J fancij dV u.[%oonzy And though I oft ' have passed them by, A day shall come at last when I, Shall take the hidden path that runs, West of the moon, east of the sun. iaCz [attman ' Will I make it through th Breaking ties with old and Losing one just gains There is ' n SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Advisor: Mr. Edward Ward, Dave Bence, Pat Lima, Sarah McNally, Robin Daignault, Donna Grimes, Rob- bin Holden, Kathy Haggerty, Claudia Soares, Jeff Pavao, Tony Vasconcel- los, Mike Parent. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Advisor: Mr. John Silvia, First row: Louis Cabral, Lori Benevides, Julie Wolstenholme, Ellen Cuttle, Jim Slaby, Maureen Rosa. Second row: Jim Wood, Pat Mathews, Lisa Ginalski, Mary Mullen, Brenda Lopes. H j 1 ■ 1 J f! jJgfEj; id ■ B ■■ B„ JMI ■ % 1 HH bb- ■ | o kV SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Front row: Jane Fingliss, Kara Prazner, Lisa Thibault, Paula Castonguay, Judy Cote, Michelle Lussier. Second row: Advisor Miss Pat Medeiros, Bob Ready, Becky Carr, Liz Castro, Lori Bernardo, Sue Messier, Jeff Finucci. FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Front row: Steven Berg, Sue Slaby, Jeff Haggerty, Paula Soares, Chris Brough, Holly Anderson. Second row: Advisor Miss Mary Jane Sullivan, Richard Alpert, Michelle Truver, Lenny Camara, Michael Raposo. STUDENT COUNCIL Front row: Jeff Finucci, Monica Berube, Jane Perry, Novinda Lido, Cindy Levesque. Second row: Jeff Haggerty, Chris Brough, Debbie Canto, Jeff Pavao, Robin Daignault, Kathy Haggerty, Tony Vasconcellos, Claudia Soares, Mike Parent, Steven Berg, Michael Raposo. Third row: Lenny Camara, Paula Casonguay, Jane Fingliss, Sue Messier, Jim Wood, Jim Slaby, Lisa Ginalski, Mary Mullen, Anne Marciarille, Brenda Lopes, Pat Mathews, John Botelho, Mike Bedard, Kara Prayzner, and Advisor Mr. Ed Ward. STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE John Botelho, Tony Vasconcellos, Anne Marciarille, Mike Bedard, Deb¬ bie Canto. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Front row: Lynne Moran, Barbara Wil¬ kinson, Karen Cavenaugh, Elizabeth Carvalho, Debbie Pavao, Ed Gon¬ salves, Pat Raposa, Barry Weinstein, Debby Davol, Bernadette Coffey. Sec¬ ond row: Advisor: Miss Anne Scanlon, Paula Gautheir, David Robb, Colleen Phillips, Sue Mattos, Sue Sheppard, Mike Escobar, Rochele Ouellette, Kathy Marciarille. Third row: Steve Pimental, Joe Mendonca, Mike Mello, Ed Hart, Mike Zwolinski, Michael Couturier, Ken Pavao, Rick Leonard, Eric Bartsch. Fourth row: Jeff Mello, Brett Howarth, Ron Paquette, Jeff Neville, Steve Cadorette, Mic¬ helle Almeida, Bonnie MacRitchie, Mark Murphy. Missing is Debra Cote, Jane Farrissey, and Alan Olivier. DEBATE CLUB Front row: Martin Saklad, Sean Kel¬ ley, Robin Dennis, Jonathan Hodash, Jeff Laureanno. Second row: Tim Woods, Tracy Waksler, Doreen Hoff¬ man, Jocelyn Lemaire, Greg Kane. Third row: Advisor Mr. Charles Lev¬ esque, Kathy Marciarille, Robert Forczyk, Mike Escobar, Anne Marcia¬ rille, Pat Raposa. Missing is Dave Correia, Assistant Coach, Michael Raposo, David Lopes and David Shaef- fer. S.A.E. Front row: Pam Harrison, Karen DeMoura, Scott Sylvia, Jo-Anne Costa, Barbara Coutu. Second row: Advisor Miss Elizabeth Sousa, Stepha¬ nie Means, Stephanie Elias, Sue Rioux, Sue Gelerman, Patty Atte- berry, Lynn Holland. Third row: Joy Pickering, Eva Perreira, Beryl Field, Claudia Soares, Carol Makepeace, Cindy Gesner, Diane Ferron, Rose Ann Rogers. Missing is Robin Cook, Harriet Helfenbein, and Donna Correira. 100 MATH TEAM Front row: Bonnie MacRitchie, John Botelho. Second row: Ed Gelles, Scott Ramsden. Third row: Mike Escobar, Mike Bedard, Jon Emery. Fourth row: Advisor Mr. Gerald St. Armand, Deb¬ bie Chiclowski, Mike Cotourier, and Eric Gold. KEY CLUB Front row: Claudia Soares, Monica Berube, Michelle Beaulieu, Merryl Goldberg, Raymond Deslores, Carolyn Sousa. Second row: Jane Fingliss, Karen Thibault, Tony Oliveira, Charles Wilson, Scott Somers, Pat Lima, Cindy Cabral, Advisor Mr. Jim Towers. CHESS CLUB Fred Forczyk, Advisor Mr. David Per¬ eira, Randall Richard, and Bill Perron. Missing is Rick Rogers and Eric Deni¬ son. T BREEZE STAFF Front row: Lisa Ginalski, Jimmy Slaby, Lori Hopkins, Stephanie Elias, Leslie Cross, Brenda Lopes, Ellen Rod- riques, Beth Kublin. Second row: Nanci Mitchell, Alice Donahue, Sharon Van Brunt, Claudia Soares, Debbie Canto, Bonnie Chebot, Leanne Sinclair, Rick Rogers. Third row: Mer- ryl Goldberg, editor, Dawn Cook, Jimmy Mullins, Rick Leonard, David Robb, Robert Silvia, Scott Ramsden, Colleen Mihzer. Missing is Marge Chebot, Pam Harrison, Brenda Mac- Ritchie, David Still, Kathy Griffin, Charles Wilson, and Advisor Mr. Rob¬ ert Tavares. AUDIO-VISUAL AIDES Joe Pavao, Ed Soares, Bob Forczyk, Stuart Plasse, Stan Gold, Peter Pau- quette, John Hodash, Tony Oliveira, Ed Wong, Mrs. Maureen Donahue, and Advisor Mr. David Knecht. I I LIBRARY AIDES Front row: Advisor Mrs. Jean Mitchell, Pam Harrison, Jim Almeida, Karen Roberts, Pam Burhoe. Second row: Rob Silvia, Bill Brayton, Lauriejane Guer- raz, Teresa Sieczkowski, Cathy Bar- boza, Donna Chace. BUSINESS CO-OP Front row: Debbie Pavao, Doris Lavoie, Donna Breen, Ann Aguiar, Jody Marques, Gail Oliveira. Second row: Oswalda Borges, Vangie Oliveira, Beth Carvalho, Karen Ledoux, Sue Zawerucka, Gail Ferreira, Arlene Costa, Nancy Borden. DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION Joanne Campos, Cindy Cabral, Lori Ferreira, Anne Marie Benefeito, Doug Hill, Carol Sousa, Karen Thibault, Scott Somers, Paula Stickney, Stewart Solup, Michael Crabtree, Advisor Mr. Richard Tetelbaum. Missing is Ken Thibault. CO-OP Advisors: Mr. Paul Corcoran, Mr. Robert Taylor, Mr. Jeffrey Rothwell, and Mr. Leo Lafleur. Ski Club Advisor: Mr. Alfred Zagorski Case Rally Freshmen L ajil ff u rterlABiE Sophomores Seniors jJr J4 . $ j ■ k I bf 1 i 1 i 1j 1 Music 76-77 BRASSES First row: Kevin Medeiros, Troy Mitchell, Joey Wilkinson, Don Bouchard, Bruce Botelho, Fred Forczyk, Mark Goldberg, Carol Rothwell, Linda Stewart, Sheryl Waterman. Second row: Paul Magan, Paul Thibault, Therese Sieczkowski, Laurie Jane Guerrette, Marg Chebot, Merryl Goldberg (president), Rebecca Greenberg, Russell Hebert. Third row: Wheat Kelly, Judy Quinn, David Kay, Kathy Sullivan, Sandy Alvarez, Scott Sylvia, Brenda Smith, David Robb, Lisa Forczyk. Fourth row: (tubas) Wayne Shaker, Paul Chodkowski, Mark Watkinson, Ken McNulty. jfjfl ■ , • __ _ WOODWINDS First row: Sharon VanBrunt, Robena Kress, Donna Gabriel, Ann Depin, Pam Burhoe, Donna Robideaux, Colleen Murphy, Bonnie Chebot. Leanne Sinclair (Secretary). Paula Quental. Second row: Andy Santos. Robert Costa, David ri ques. “° n ; ° leen Brogan, Toni Ann Amaral. Lisa Carr, Sheila Rousseau, Gina Caron. Third row: Michael Alves Richard Habib (V.P ), Karen Rosen¬ berg Judy Sieczkowski (Secretary), Joanne Gardella, Robin Popzeznik, Judy Cavanaugh, Mane Mullensky, Celeste Bnsboise, Joan Clark, Carla Snindlewig, Randy Levesque, Susan Escobar, Liz Creamer, Mike Carter, Mary Gabriel, Roger Lcmelin. Fourth row: Tom Han, James Paradais, Robert Silvia, Doug Amarillo, Doug Bowers, John Lockett, Robert Ready, Marlene Mamn, Jocelyn Lemaire, Sue Lopes. Paul Ouellette, Jordan Medeiros, Roger Brisson, Chris Davis. 1 13 PERCUSSION First row: Debbie Kokska, Donna Parent, Pam Harrison, Lynn Sosnoskie, Roger Juesaume, Kim Dyl, Pauline Lavoie, Karen Kenyon, Therese Dionne. Second row: Bruce A. Maggs (assistant director), Donna King, Steve Sowa, Barry Weinstein, John Parker, Rick Leonard, Mike Tavares, Ed Pontes, Marcus Dyl, Robert Perry (director). Third row: Christine Oliveira, Corine St. Dennis, Tom Eagon, Tom Quinn, John Costa, Chris Forczyk, Diane Thibault. COLORGUARD Front row: Assistant Head Brenda Lopes, Melissa Carter, Jean Sosnoskie, Rochele Ouellette, Cheryl Morley, Ellen Cuttle, Kerri Magan, Lynne Moran, Carol Maynard, Susan Dailey, Head Jane Farrissey. Second row: Florinda Costa, Leslie Cross, Jean Forrester, Judy Matte, Jody Ashcroft, Linda Ferreira, Jamie Brown, Julie Wolstenholme, Stephanie Means, Jennifer Corcoran, Denise Parent. MAJORETTES Front row: Head Paula Gauthier, Assistant Head Pat Medeiros. Second row: Debbie Raposa, Denise Thibault, Jackie Emard. Third row: Stephanie Silvia, Jane Perry, Barbara Wilkinson. Leah Rebello, Sue Olivera, Pamela Laliberte, Karen Cabral. 115 FLAGTWIRLERS Head Cheryl O’Brien, Betsy Kozak, Brenda Rapoza, Lori Bene- vides, Liz Soares, Pat Riley, Liz Amaral, Liz Foley. GUNNERS Head Joyce Sroczynski, Debbie Canto, Kathy Faria, Lori Sowden, Nancy Prayzner, Colleen O ' Brien. Men ' s Chorus Women ' s Chorus 118 MADRIGAL From left to right: Stephane Means, Karen Kenyon, Kenny McNulty, Chris Forczyk, Tom Potter, Lisa Forczyk, Debby Davol, Fred Forczyk, Mark Watkinson, Bonnie Chobot, Stanley Gold, Carolyn Holt, Michele Parent. Orchestra 119 —-—---- — Jazz Band 7 -- Concert Band Concert Choir Symphonic Band Show Group I v ' • 1 1 : ;• M ' • $ Jj m mm 120 Ha market Dinner Theater On the nights of November 18, 19, and 20, Dinner Theatre III was presented at the Somerset High audi¬ torium. PAROLE, a moving drama, directed by Mr. Kiah O’Brien III, was a first for the Dinner The¬ atre workshop this year. The one act play starred Betsy Saab as Karin Straulseth, and Karl Chorlton who assumed the role of Karin’s younger brother Joey. The play also featured David Still as Joe Straulseth, Sr., Leslie Fletcher as Linda, the young¬ est daughter in the family, and Chris Woods as David. The role of Mrs. Bernice Lowell was con¬ vincingly portrayed by Marybeth Keyes and Ellen Rodriques played her daughter Cathy. THE BANKER’S DILEMMA,” under the direction of Miss Sharon Hamlen added a lighter side to the eve¬ ning. The cast of this lighthearted farce included Rick Habib as Banker Van Bludgeon, Lisa Forczyk as Dorothea Oz Dimpling, Jennifer Corcoran as Widder Pearl Twilly, and last but by no means least, Mark Watkinson as Norman. The students did a tremendous job with the dili¬ gent help of Mr. O ' Brien’s play production class, and are to be congratulated once again for their fine efforts. Field Hockey ROBBIN HOLDEN SARAH McNALLY . [ 1 , l. m m zy 1 j in jgfM i Li. - 1 I Mj ' - ■ . t fcrf ' PAM LALIBERTE DEBBIE COTE, ROBBIN HOLDEN, MARTHA BROUGH, BETTY FLANAGAN, PAM QUINN 124 Front row: Pam Laliberte, Sarah McNally, Tri-Captains Janine Trudeau, Martha Brough, and Robbin Hol¬ den, Mary Perreira, Debbie Cote. Second row: Sharon Aldrich, Sue Messier, Pam Quinn, Betty Flanagan, Rita Thilbault, Liz Mello, Gail Ward. Third row: Chris Torpey, Brenda MacRitchie, Marcy Schneider, Ally Johnson, Kara Prazner, Mary-Ellen Langfield. Fourth row: J.V. Coach Miss Nobrega, Pat Quinn, Becky Coady, Nancy Gendreau, Paula Messier, Carol Colbert, Sheila Rosseau, Varsity Coach Mrs. Milan. DEBBIE COTE, PAM QUINN JANINE TRUDEAU Pride best describes this year ' s 1976 girls Field Hockey team. After the team attended Mount Pocono Hockey Camp, under the new coaching staff of Mrs. Kathy Milan and Miss Ronnie Nobrega, the team was a combina¬ tion of high spirits, competitive skills, and the desire to be a winning team. The team, tri-captained by Martha Brough, Robbin Holden, and Janine Trudeau ended their season with a record of 10 wins, 2 losses, and 2 ties which enabled them to participate in the Southeastern Massachu¬ setts State Field Hockey Tournament. Fol¬ lowing the 3-2 win in the preliminary game, they were narrowly defeated in dou¬ ble over-time by a score of 1-0. Congratu¬ lations to the coaches and all the girls for a job well done. Volleyball The Somerset Blue Raider girls volleyball team finished in third place in the SMC Division II with a 6-6 won-loss record. The high spirited and very enthusiastic group was led by senior co-captains Cyndie Perry and Denise Mills. The first year Junior Varsity squad finished with a 9-3 record, good enough for a second place in Division II. The junior varsity most valuable player was sophomore Cheryl Frei¬ tas. Two Raiderettes were chosen for Division All Star honors. Denise Mills was chosen to the first team while junior Nancy Lafleur was picked for the second team. Other team awards went to Denise Mills for t he team MVP and Claudia Soares was awarded the coaches award symbolizing sportsmanship on the court. Front row: Kathy Haggerty, Claudia Soares, Donna Grimes, Co-Captains Cindy Perry and Denise Mills, Sue Sheppard, Brenda Almeida, Michelle Almeida. Second row: Randi Raposa, Kim Lyne, Cheryl Freitas, Nancy Lafleur, Maureen Rosa, Deidre Ironfield, Wendy Mills, and Coach Cathy Goodwin. t row: Janei Guenin. Lori Bernardo. Jean Hoyle. Michelle Lussier. Jane Bence. Jackie Boudreau. EliaeBoUkl. ay Mello. Kneeling: Robin Dennis. Jerry Gallant. Jim Kane, Ken Gallant. Bill Robitaille. Rick Almeida. Paul aer Dave Gauthier. Todd Emard. Standing: Eric Gartner. John Molloy, Terry Wnek, Co-Captain Ted Higgin- Glenn Gallant. Jerry Harris. Sheila Corcoran. Missing is Laurie Baskin and junior Co-Captain Clare Lussier. 1 J 1 1 ■ m m H A ■ Ml . mat lift SOCCER The Somerset Blue Raider Soccer team, in its first year of varsity competi¬ tion compiled an impressive 7-5-2 record in the Southeastern Massachusetts Division I play. The Raiders, coached by Mr. Whitney Horton got off to a slow start but finished the season strong by losing only two out of their last ten games. Junior Udy Kleinberger lead the team in scoring with 9 goals followed by sophomore Rick Fonseca with 6, and senior Joe Castro with 5 goals. As a team, Somerset outscored its opposition 28 goals to 24. Sophomore goaltender Ken Cordeiro turned in three shutouts and several other outstanding performances throughout the season. The Raider defense improved greatly as the season went on, allowing only seven goals in their final seven games. Tri-Captains Mike Corrigan, Bobby Stafford, and Joe Castro along with other seniors Jimmy Cabral, Lenny Hoseit, and Jon Crockett gave the team excellent leadership in its first year of varsity play. The Raiders were playing against several very experienced teams and yet were able to hold their own and look impressive in many of their games. Somerset came up with two superb performances, one against Division I champion, Diman, defeating them 3-0, and the other, being a hard fought tie against the Division champion Westport team, with a score of 2-2. If the first year for SHS varsity soccer is any indication of what is to come, Somerset will be in for some very good years in the future. Front row: Jon Crockett, Lenny Hoseit, Tri-Captain Joe Castro, Jim Cabral, Udy Kleinberger, Leonard Terry. Ken Cordeiro. Second row: Coach Whitney Horton. Bill LaPointe, Keith Cuci- notta, Richard Fonseca. Derek Tavares. Dan Shea. Chris Brough. Kyle Snell, Brad Morse, Greg Cabral. Kevin Cabral. Stan Senecal. Missing are Tri-Captains Mike Corrigan and Bob Stafford, Jeff Camara. Bill Driscoll. Steve Daley. Ralph Cross, and Jeff Me Ho. 131 Football 1976 Front row: Head Coach Ed Winslow, Jim Mullins, Brendan Shea, Mike Forand, Rick Mullen, Joe Sullivan, Co-Captain Steve Billington, Co-Captain George Brodeur, Steve Iowitz, Kevin Proulx, Chip Collins, Tom Farrand, Line Coach Bob Tavares. Second row: End Coach John Soares, Norm England, Andre Carvalho, Ken Levesque, Dave DeCosta, Jeff Costa, Brad Sullivan, Bob Trainer, Dave Peneira, Steve Oliveira, Don Perreira, Linebacker Coach John Azevedo. Third row: Mark Langfield, Peter Whalen, Joe Venafra, Nick Molloy, Steve Sherman, Peter Kerrigan, Matt Aspden, Jeff Hertz, Frank Sullivan. Fourth row: Ron Marcellus, Mike Heroux, Manny Carvalho, Jeff Cote, Jim LeCompte, Jim Lavigne, Gary Aldrich, Tim Hutt, Pat Mathews. Missing from the picture is Terry Holland and Trainer Mike Pomerleau. The 1976 football team, led by head coach Ed Winslow experienced their best season since 1971. They had an impressive 6 and 3 overall record in which they outscored their opponents 177-75. Throughout the course of the season the team was provided with excellent leadership by senior co-captains Steve Billington and George Brodeur. The team as a whole worked together. They had an excellent offensive line and their defense was responsible for holding their oppo¬ nents to a mere 8.3 points per game. The specialty teams in many cases turned the game around in the Raiders ' favor. In division two, the all-conference selections included Steve Billing¬ ton, George Brodeur, Norm England, Kevin Proulx, and Rick Mullen. In the past season, Coach Winslow ' s main goal was to restore a win¬ ning attitude. He did just that, and in doing so, gave the future ball players o f Somerset High School a more optimistic outlook towards the game of football. Co-Captain George 132 Seniors Offense First row: Tom Farrand, Rick Mullen, Co-Captains George Brodeur and Steve Billington, Kevin Proulx, Steve Ilowitz. Second row: Steve Oliveira, Brendan Shea, Chip Collins, Norm England, Jimmy Mullins, Mike Forand, and Joe Sullivan. First row: Rick Mullen, George Brodeur, Don Pereria, Andre Carvalho, Dave DeCosta, Ken Levesque, Ron Marcellus. Second row: Manny Carvalho, Norm Eng¬ land, Jimmy Mullins, Mike Forand, Steve Billington. Missing: Terry Holland. Defense First Row: Rick Mullen, Joe Venafra, Don Pereria, Kevin Proulx, Jeff Costa, Mike Heroux. Second Row: Steve Oliveira, Brendan Shea, Norm England, Bob Trainer, Dave Pereria, Steve Billington, Steve Sherman, Jim LeCompte. 133 Feathers Fly on Turkey Day Raiders Whip Cardinals, 21-6 ' 49ers Trophy Retired 1976-1977 Cheerleaders Front row: Janice Correia, Chris Perreira. Middle row: Betty Flanagan, Debbie Tavares, Bousquet, Robbin Holden, Betty Salmon. Kelly Bonas. Back row: Donna 1976-1977 Pep Squad Front row: Cheryl Benoit, Janine LeCompte, Dawn Croteau, Debbie Lopes, Sue O ' Neil, Tricia Zygeil, Margie Schwartz, Becky Carr. Back row: Michelle Ferreira, Cindy Gronbeck, Denise Roberge, Judy Britland, Lisa Thibault, Sue Heroux. a - — ' ■ 1976-1977 SHS Icemen The Somerset varsity ice hockey team finished another very successful season under Coach Souza with a 17-5-4 record. The Raiders were moved up into Division I where they performed better than expected, finishing fourth with a 5-3-3 record. The Raiders also qualified for the state post-sea¬ son tournament by way of having only three defeats in league play. For the second year in a row, the Raiders were led in scoring by Ron Marcellus with a total of 65 points. Senior captain Bob Stafford, who played very well throughout the season, finished second in scoring with 50 points. Rickey Stafford finished third with 38 points followed by Brian Paskowski with 37 points. Freddy Storch had another good year in the net and Russ Lavoie did a fine job in the backup position. The Raiders were the surprise team in the area this year. Many people had picked the young and inexperienced Raiders to finish last but Coach Souza ' s men shocked everyone by qualifying for the state tournament. Somerset was beaten by a tough Hull team in the preliminary round 7-1. The Raiders also fielded a junior varsity hockey team for the first time in history. Coached by Tom McDermott, the team finished its premiere year with a 6-6 record. With a very young varsity and a good J.V. team the future for Somerset hockey looks very good. ; RL pi lis wm m mm ■Hi! KMe MKmi Wm Am Ilti Captain Bob Stafford and Coach Bob Souza Front row: Mike Medeiros, Greg Cabral, Mark Kelleher, Fred Storch, Russell Lavoie, Wayne Ferreira, Tom Przystac, Dave Medei¬ ros. Second row: Scott Lynch, Brian Paskowski, Ken Cordeiro, Rick Stafford, Jim Wood, Kevin Snyder, Ron Marcellus, Captain Bob Stafford, and Coach Bob Souza. RON MARCELLUS KEVIN SNYDER CAPT. BOB STAFFORD RICK STAFFORD BRIAN PASKOWSKI GREG CABRAL Bob Stafford, Ron Marcellus, and Brian Paskowski H mm faea nm Kevin Snyder and Jimmy Wood r. AW«W V« pw IJ; AWAvl A av- w. mw | tv W i y v.o BKv.v |m mtrn wm s 140 Tom Przystac, Rick Stafford, and Dave Medeiros ■ WOT I I 4 I 14 Ml Wmq Ml i Htt BSSSl V.V ' XVVl® BM V,Vi® nmfUVtV ' 1 , OTXv ' r, W®l MMW Greg Cabral, Ken Cordeiro, and Mike Medeiros Wayne Ferreira, Scott Lynch, and Mark Kelleher Russ Lavoie and Fred Storch l K Girls Basketball Seekonk 60 Somerset 24 Attleboro 52 Somerset 43 Somerset 41 Case 16 Durfee 56 Somerset 24 Taunton 30 Somerset 21 Somerset 47 Westport 32 Somerset 35 Bishop Gerard 29 Durfee 83 Somerset 38 Somerset 35 Coyle 22 Somerset 39 Taunton 38 Somerset 41 Westport 35 Somerset 56 Bishop Gerard 36 Somerset 38 Case 35 Somerset 38 Attleboro 35 Somerset 37 Coyle 29 10-5 final record Congratulations to the team and their new coach, Nancy Paulhus, for a fine year. Front row: Gail Ward, Linda Borge, Janine Trudeau, Mary Pereira, Janet Raposa, Pat Pontes. Second row: Coach Nancy Paulhus, Cheryl Freitas, Sue Sheppard, Mary Ellen Langfield, She¬ lia Corcoran, Chris Torpey. Janine Trudeau I j ue Sheppard Sarah McNally I Basketball ' 76-77 Thompson, Chris Gendreau, Manny Carvalho, Bill Malloy. Second row: Coach Ray McDonald Front row: Mike Mello, Mike Parent, Leon Jeff Ferreira, Steve Pimental, Norman England, Michael Borden, David Bence Stephen Cadorette, Trainer Mike Pomerleau The Somerset Raider varsity basketball team finished the 1976-1977 season with an impres¬ sive 18-4 won-loss record. Somerset the defending co-champs of the SMC Division II finished in second place with an excellent 13-3 record. For the second year in a row, Coach Ray McDonald ' s hoopsters qualified for the post season state tournament. Somerset also played in a holiday season tournament for the first time in several years. The Raiders were crowned the first champions of the annual Tiger-Tip Off Tour¬ nament with a 59-50 victory over the host team, the Taunton Tigers. Junior Mike Borden was named the tournaments most valuable player and captain Dave Bence was named to the tour¬ nament all-star team along with Borden. After a shaky opening game with Case, the Raiders ran off five straight victories. During the month of January, Somerset had an impressive 7-1 record running off six more consecutive wins. Somerset finished the season off with a 74-48 romp over the same Case team that had given them so much trouble back in December. Coach McDonald was pleased with the team as they continually improved throughout the season. Mike Borden lead the team in scoring with a 17.3 points per game average, followed by Dave Bence with a 15 point average. Norm England, who gave the team the stability that it needed throughout the season, was the third Raider to finish in double figures with an 11.7 point average. Mike Parent was the team ' s ball handler and also the team’s defensive leader along with Steve Pimental. Whenever the Raiders needed a big defensive surge, Parent and Pimental could always be seen leading the way for Somerset. Although he didn ' t play much. Mike Mello made his presence felt. In the last two games of the season, Mike came off the bench to spark big rallies that eventually led to Raider victories. Steve Cadorette started the year off at forward and throughout the year Coach McDonald used Steve ' s offensive talents in key spots. Leon Thompson, the diminutive guard, was one of the fans favorite players. He only played in the final minutes of some games but whenever he got on the floor, he always turned in an exciting performance. The graduating seniors leave Somerset with pleasant memories of their playing days. It is hoped that they carry on the lessons of sportsmanship that were learned at SHS. Somerset 45 Case 44 Somerset 69 Canton 54 Somerset 59 Taunton 50 Somerset 61 Seekonk 51 Somerset 74 Falmouth 44 Connolly 59 Somerset 58 Somerset 77 D-Y 71 Somerset 79 Fairhaven 63 Somerset 78 Feehan 57 Somerset 74 ORR 71 Somerset 46 Coyle 41 Somerset 73 Falmo uth 49 Somerset 65 Seekonk 38 Somerset 67 Connolly 61 Fairhaven 54 Somerset 39 Somerset 64 D-Y 54 Somerset 66 Feehan 53 Wareham 65 Somerset .64 Somerset 66 Coyle 54 Somerset 83 ORR 740T Somerset 74 Case 48 144 Captain Dave Bence and Coach McDonald Junior Varsity Front row: Chuck Phillips, Brian Gollub, Richie Fonseca, Randy Cordeiro, Dan Salmon. Second row: Billy Kay, Skip Palmer, Ken Volcjak, Mark Mollo, Billy Sullivan, Paul Cadieux, Coach Larry Thomas. Winter Track Despite a 1-7 season record, the Winter Track team had some out¬ standing individual performances. Terry Wnek, Bill Robitaille, and Gerry Harris gave solid perform¬ ances in the running events, while George Brodeur and Bob Paradis faired well in the shot put. Jim Lavigne scored many points in the high jump and the whole team ' s dedication made every meet a close one. Front row: Steve Oliveira, Chris White, Kara Prayzner, Laura Farnham, Jon Crockett, Todd Emard, Martha Brough, Jerry Gallant. Second row: Co-captain Bob Paradis, Pat Quinn, Jeff Neville, Anne Ward, Jane Fingliss, Dave Berube, Clare Lussier, Eric Gartner, John Parker, Glen Gallant. Third row: Coach Sheila Fitzgerald, Lisa Coady, Jeff Haggerty, Michelle Lussier, Beth Abraham, Pat Berube, A1 Langlais, Chris Brough, Linda Rowe, Jean Sosnoskie, Sue Messier. Back row: Co-Captain George Brodeur, Coach Nick Peachy, Michelle Truver, Carolyn Sousa, Jim Lavigne, Terry Wnek, Dave Perreira, Bill Bris- well, Kathy Thibault, Bill Talbot, Nick Pannoni, Dave Banford, Gerry Harris, Bill Robitaille. Co-Captain George Brodeur Coach Nick Peachy Gymnastics The girls gymnastics team, led by Coaches Bill Barnicoat and Pat Haddad, was once again undefeated in their league and became District Champions. Although the Varsity squad consisted mainly of Freshman and Sophomores, they gave excellent performances led by Senior, Debbie Cote. Along with Debbie, the team achieved the state finals on the abilities of Judy Cote, Ally Johnston and the very promising and high-scoring Frosh duo of Jane Bence and Nancy Cote. Other consistent contributors to our outstanding squad were Nancy Lafleur, Erica Bolski, Jane Wilbur, Michelle Lemaire, Jean Hoyle, Paula Silva, and Lois Rego. It was a great year for a great team! Front row: Jane Wilbur, Paula Silva, Allison Johnston, Jane Bence, Judy Cote, Lois Rego. Back row: Nancy Cote, Debbie Cote (captain), Jean Hoyle, Michelle Lemaire, Nancy Lafleur, Erica Bolski. 150 % ▼w is. Ltoafl yp sl jjj 4 % T ”... All t hese faces have their moments, with lov¬ ers and friends I still can recall. I know I’ll often stop and think about them. In my life, I’ve loved them all . . . Beatles 153 Distributive Education Meet Your Recruiter U.S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION 281 South Main St. Fall River, Mass. Call SFC Ed Hubbell Phone 673-0482 The Choice Is Yours 1. Job, Skill Training Courses 2. Unit of Choice (Choose Where You Will Serve) 3. Training and Travel (Choose Your School and Overseas Area) 4. Combat Arms (Ranger-Special Forces) 5. Pilot (High School Grads) Many more options to choose from . . . Join the people who ' ve joined the Army. 155 Best Wishes Class of 77 LeCOMTE ' S ’’Old Fashioned Friendliness With Modern Service’’ 500 Wood Street Somerset, Mass. 02726 SLADES FERRY TRUST Somerset, Mass. Your Hometown Bank SLIDES TERRY TRUST CO. MEMBER FDIC SLADES FERRT AVE SOMERSET THE BANK THAT HELPS PEOPLE ' S CONVENIENT LOCATIONS COR COUNTT 4 SOUTH STS RTE ITS SOMERSET ( SWANSEA MALL ‘ SWANSEA ) S4 COUHTT ST 4 RIVERSIDE AVE.. SOMERSET COR LINDEN 4 LOCUST STS. FALL RIVER Best Wishes to the Class of 1977 RE-FLEK CORP. 109 Howe St. Fall River, Mass. STEVE ' S SPORTS DEN 143 Centre St. Middleboro, Mass, cz ornery el Jea chet tea ciatic n. “ ' Teaching is an art-an art so great and sc difficult to master that a nun or a woman can spend a long lire at lt y without realizing much more than his limitations and mistakes and his distance from the ideal . affiliate of. - v mta -x helping teachers teach EMPIRE MEN ' S SHOP, INC. 253 South Main Street - Fall River, Mass. 02721 Tel. 617-673-0322 MULLEN BROS. JEWELERS DALEY OIL CO 1119 County St. VERA ' S HOUSE OF FASHION SKI HOUSE 1241 Wilbur Ave 865 County St Somerset, Mass Somerset, Mass Congratulations to the Class of 1977 From SAVA ' S PIZZA O ' BRIEN AND JOHNSON, INC 2979 County St 190 Forbes Rd. Braintree, Mass Somerset, Mass Your Class Ring Company tv ? JraiiF Sr [ £ JB-A ll u A ii V v f flH nH Si n vpk ' Bi II ' V ?: .■ • J wM A i i(f BL u . rBii v ' i k At n mi S X. J gk F yjjk JJ gi 4 t ' Compliments of VENUS de MILO RESTAURANT 75 Gar Highway Swansea, Mass. FURNITURE VILLAGE MY LADY ' S HAIR STYLIST 1622 Gar Highway Somerset, Mass. The artistic touch that means so much. Phone - 678-0236 Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of ' 77 RUSTIC PUB Rte. 6 S wansta, Mass. Much, Much Success 296 Buffington St. Somerset, Mass. SOMERSET CREDIT UNION KOPPER KETTLE 1001 County St 630 Pleasant St Somerset, Mass Somerset, Mass SOMERSET RACQUET CLUB J.J. AND V. CONSTRUCTION Lee ' s River Ave 718 Gar Highway Swansea, Mass SOMERSET PAINT — WALLPAPER — HARDWARE — 1004 County St. Somerset, Mass. i SOMERSET MANUFACTURING FERNANDES SUPERMARKETS 978 County St. Rte. 6 Somerset and ANOTHER WORLD Rte. 6, Somerset Plaza Somerset, Mass. First Quality Namebrands, Misses and Juniors, Fashions at Everyday Savings of 50-70% - No Seconds or Irregulars Master Charge BankAmericard Somerset, Mass. Rte. 138, Somerset NARRAGANSETT SCHOOL OF GYMNASTICS CROPPER FLORIST 169 Ocean Grove Avenue Swansea, Mass. Flowers for All Occasions! Dial 678-5689 Fall River, Mass. GEORGE B. LOCKHART INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 1168 County St. Somerset, Mass. Phone - 678-5102 SWANSEA LIQUORS, INC. d b a BIG D LIQUORS 579 GAR Highway K-Mart Shopping Center Swansea, Mass. MR. CARL’S BARBER SALON 1176 County St. Somerset, Mass. SHERWIN WILLIAMS CO. Slades Ferry Ave. Somerset, Mass. PHOEBE’S RESTAURANT 1026 County St. Somerset, Mass. MOTEL SOMERSET 537 Riverside Ave. Somerset, Mass. RIVERSIDE ART SHOP 1292 Riverside Ave. Somerset, Mass. TELEPHONE ANSWERING EXCHANGE 287 Buffington St. Somerset, Mass. SAWYER ' S CAMPUS SHOPS 149 South Main St. Fall River, Mass. CLOTHES PIN Country Corner, Rte. 6 Swansea, Mass. DAVE APPEL’S TIRE 325 Bedford St. Fall River, Mass. LEE ' S RIVER LODGE 1692 GAR Highway Somerset, Mass. BURGER KING 883 GAR Highway Somerset, Mass. ALAN AMARAL, ATTORNEY AT LAW 1041 County St. Somerset, Mass. SPECTATOR 780 County St. Somerset, Mass. KARTEN’S JEWELERS Swansea Mall Swansea, Mass. PAUL’S PIZZA CHEF 1224 Wilbur Ave. Somerset, Mass. ST. ANNE’S CREDIT UNION 286 Oliver St. Fall River, Mass. FAMOUS PIZZA Somerset Plaza, Rte. 6 Somerset, Mass. SOMERSET SPEED EQUIPMENT CO. 1190 GAR Highway Somerset, Mass. D’ARRUDA’S GENERAL STORE 1185 Read St. Somerset, Mass. RIP OFFS CORP. Rte. 6 Somerset, Mass. MURRY KUSINITZ INSURANCE AGENCY 17 Second Street Fall River, Mass. COCHRANE INSURANCE 1162 GAR Highway Swansea, Mass. i 1977 Raider Staff Yearbook Advisor Mr. Richard LaMothe, Co-Editor-in-Chief Lynne Moran, and Publisher ' s Representative Mr. Arnie Lohman. 166 Co-Editor in Chief Jane Farrissey. Jimmy Mullins - Sports Copy Editor. -v fltw l TA ' Y I AkAAiU ' ■■■■■ v k. m H HaM ■ — ■ v • • ■ wmw . « m« w. i « ; U v 1 I {1|4 Si •f o imTi Jfr r y:: i { l Tmm • • tH wi si 1 - K • ' Nancy Prayzner and Nancy Mulrooney - Case Rally and Advertiz¬ ing sales. w mTuTTI RI Elise Bolski, Laurie Baskin, Ted Higginson, and Mike Corrigan Sports Section. :w. Miami • ' NOOU LO i ‘.Ml ■ •„ v m ■ Carol Makepeace and Debbie Canto - Activities Section. -Jr Sfc 1 w m ••‘•a:. :u V m H f 2 . -r y [ Rick Leonard, Jeff Mello, and David Robb - Artwork and Advertiz¬ ing sales. Debbie Davol, Merryl Goldberg (section ed.) and Bonnie Chebot Music Section. 167 -.JpNfr AW Jr iL- , a;-; . I l BM --■ ’- w -y :, „ VflaP ' . ■ - . ? (SisWf!f W- m • - W2 In . s s pgr «5P 1 • $V : - ' 5 • X‘At. ' W- :- ' ' ■, i - ' BP ■ ; or - ' i v - ., ■ ' J • ' ?f •..- ' . . 4 ,! « • .1 ;■• . rv. ■ ' ' : V 0£ TJou aXE a afiitd of tfzE uniozriE, no [es.± tfian tfiE —S a z ±tazs. .; : . Tjou tiafJE a ziyfzt to Ute (zeze. c fnd urfiEtfiEZ oz not it i± ctzaz to you, fo cLoufjt tfiE univEZ±E is. unfotdiny as, it s,fzou[d. Jfizz fozE, (je at fiEacE aritfz O fod, vahatEVEZ you aoncEiu . cdfim to tJE. cdfnd ivfiatEfjEZ youz [afrozs, and atomizations,, On tfiE noi±y confusion of CifE, fzEEfi fiEacE aritfz youz s.ouL y ttfz atC its, s.fiam, dzudyEzy, and UnofzEn dzEams, •• ' ■ •: mm Mia - :C r . r;. 2PK MAX EHRMANN - -i r 1927 by Max Ehimann All rights reserved. Copyright renewed 1954 by Bertha K. Ehimann Reprinted by permission Robert L. Bell, Melrose, Mass., 02176 m. jg ZvTV ■vdaSQ fa’ Wife ' «•••? a ., j « •. 2 . r -w- „-r V ? i ' AtS fj ' djMulmask ,.! - ' S: v:v wv ,,, fc( ■ : r?y5iSsEr rV - CM ‘ fc ' ' 4 : : ' -f. The Matchmaker ' l 1 1 f i ' I c • 9 1 1 4 F-. ;1 .• V ■ $!£, l vTv.fi lr| 1 m « 2 ' v. 1 Baseball Captained by seniors Mike Parent and Bobby Grime, the boy ' s varsity baseball team finished with an 8-12 won-loss record. Competing in the S.M.C. Division I, the Raiders were not involved in the pennant race, but throughout the season, they were a team to be reckoned with. Two Raiders were chosen for the S.M.C. Division I all star team. They were seniors Jim Mullins and Norm England. Both Mullins and England finished the season with .362 batting averages, with England hitting four homeruns, along with twenty R.B.I.’s. Bob Grime finished his second successful varsity cam¬ paign with a solid .318 and Brendan Shea ended with a steady .286. Don Pereira had a good year behind the plate and also chipped in a .261 batting average. Co- capt. Mike Parent held the team together with his steady play in both the field and at the plate. Jeff Gas¬ per helped all with some sparkling catches in the out¬ field and some clutch hitting. Front row: Jim Mullins, Tom Ponte, Jeff Gasper, Co-captains Bob Grime and Mik Parent, Kevin Proulx, Brendan Shea, Norm England, Chris Connor. Back row Coach Jim Sullivan, Randy Cordeiro, Denny Pereira, Keith Cucinotta, Brad Sulli van, Billy Kay, Mike Heroux, Jeff Costa, Kenny Cordeiro, Steve Sherman, Do Pereira, Jim Cabral, student manager Bill Cowan. Softball This year’s girl’s varsity softball team finished it’s season with an impressive second place in the S.M.C. Division II behind champion Durfee. Coached by Mrs. Mary Jane Keyes, the young and inexperienced Raider- ettes came up with a very surprising 9-3 won-loss record. Because of their youth, many people felt the team would not prosper as they did. The girls hung together, however, and showed what a little Raider spirit can do. Next year’s team, which is to be co-cap- First row. Tim Hurt, Ken Paine, Bob Stafford, Bob Paradis, George Brodeur, Ted Higginson, Jon Crockett, Steve Billington, John Molloy. Second row: Coach Richard Kranes, Jim Judge, Bill Mal¬ loy, Jerry Harris, Jim Goyer, Jim Wood, Jim Lavigne, Dave Pereira, Glen Gallant, Coach Fran Brough. Third row: Dave Gauthier, Dave Bamford, Pat Matthews, Chris Brough, Chris White, Eric Gartner, Terry Wnek, Chris Sowden, Bill Talbot, Doug Shaker. Fourth row: Mike Texeira, Todd Emard, Bill Cuttle, Bill Driscoll, Greg Hordern, Steve Souza, Paul Gartner, Mike Almeida, Gerry Gallant, Peter Langfield, Alain Duberval. Boy ' s Track First row: Tri-captains Martha Brough, Claire Lussier, Elaine Levesque. Second row: Pam O’Neil, Sue Rioux, Viv Proulx, Becky Coady, Jayne Fingliss, Kara Prayzner, Jean Sosnoskie, Sharon Aid- rich. Third row: Corine St. Dennis, Trish Quinn, Pat Reily, Lori Bernardo, Judy Cote, Janet Guer- tin, Diane Therrien, Heidi Snell, Lisa Coady. Fourth row: Ellen Cuttle, Nancy Pavao, Carolyn Carreiro, Ally Johnson, Laura Farnhum, Anne Ward, Carol Colbert, Erin Toolin, Lois Rego. Fifth row: Coach Sheila Fitzgerald, Beth Abraham, Sue Messier, Michelle Lussier, Linda Rowe, Jackie Bodreau, Jean Hoyle, Betty Salmon, Mary Ellen Langfield, Coach David Ozug. Girl ' s Track SOMERSET Golf The Somerset Raider varsity golf team finished sixth overall in statewide team competition this year. Coach Paul Corcoran ' s linksmen captured the lofty state team ranking in a state championship match held in May. Seniors Mike Corrigan, Alan Olivier, and Greg Quental were the mainstays in this year ' s squad which, for the third year in a row, captured the S.M.C. league title. Juniors Bob Finne, Jerry Silvia, and Peter Boardman also played important roles in many of the Raider vic¬ tories this year. With three seniors leaving the squad, next year’s team will have to work hard to match the accomplish¬ ments of this year’s squad. However, the Somerset Jun¬ ior Varsity golf program is coming along fine, and should produce many fine golfers in the upcoming sea¬ sons. Front row: Jerry Silvia, Bob Finne, Peter Boardman. Back row: Coach Paul Corcoran, Scott Lynch, Greg Quental, Alan Olivier, Mike Corrigan, Dan Salmon. Senior Golfers T— Tennis In his first year at the helm of the varsity tennis team, Coach John Driscoll led his team to a fifth place finish in the S.M.C. Division I East with a 6-8 woji-loss record. Despite a lack of depth and experience, the team was able to hold its own against some of the finer teams in the area. Captain Dave Silvia moved up to first singles this year and finished with a 7-8 record. Mike Tavares and Arthur Carvalho were the second and third singles players, and the first doubles team was made up of Brendan McNally and Ken Voljak, who also preformed admirably. The second doubles tandem of senior Joey Wilkinson and Bill Sargent had an impressive 9-3 record against their competition. As the younger players gain more experience, Coach Driscoll’s team should have some exciting matches in the years to come. Front row: Ed Wong, Rick Alpert, Arthur Carvalho, Steve Voljak, David Mur¬ phy, Rick Fisher. Back row: Ted Kyriakakis, Joey Wilkinson, Brendan McNally, Ken Voljak, Bill Sargent, Captain Dave Silvia, Mike Tavares, Coach John Driscoll. aS Junior-Senior Prom May 25,1977 Queen Gabriele Blattman with her attendants Betty Flanagan and Liz Soares 4 Life — so they say Is but a game and They let it slip away Love — like the Autumn sun Should be dying but It ' s only just begun . . . 1 ft : § ■V 1 ' 1 1 •A i • A ' 2 cS 4 ' ' 7 t 1 jPwP r i Senior Breakfast 1 80 Graduation June 5,1977 Xmas 6 h,[ fas S !°77 i 13 . W M’ dA ' ben you fiart from your j-rLa.nct, you yrieoe not ; ot tbat urbiicbi you boue nzo±t in bim may be cbearer in fzc± absence, ai tbe mountain to tbie cbimber Li dearer from tbe fztaLn. UbatziL t-di-bran 187 FEITELBURG INSURANCE AGENCY BURNS INCORPO RATED Strength When You Need It” 165 Rodman St. Fall River, Mass, Phone 675-0387 154 N. Main St. , Fall River 833 County St. , Somerset 814 G.A.R. Highway, Swansea Phone 676-1971 COMMUNITY CLEANSERS 1049 County St. Somerset, Mass. SOMERSET UPHOLSTERERS 1287 Wilbur Ave. Somerset, Mass. BRIDGEMAN LUMBER 927 County St. Somerset, Mass. DURFEE-BUFFINTON INSURANCE 377 Second St. Fall River, Mass. MAGONI’S 681 Riverside Ave Somerset, Mass. SOMERSET AUTO PARTS 109 Hawthorne Ave. Somerset, Mass. CENTRE SHOE STORE 1166 County St. Somerset, Mass. HQ ■H
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