South Catholic High School - Canticle Yearbook (Hartford, CT)
- Class of 1975
Page 1 of 192
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1975 volume:
“
H6 eww ' ag? ,.1, gr CANTICLE J 5 ,SD South Catholic High School Hartford, Connecticut 06114 are wxth body, still and broadening and persons in new endeavcirs W., . 4 Q I Q ! E 1 nav ml ,fggmw I ef fu 321 'rf 'KL 452241 , fri! MWA? i a fK ' N Y I F CULTY Most Rev. John F. Whealon, D.D. J Archbishop of Hartford . , A- ... ,,.. -,, Mt- .f,.,1,.w-fw:w 'WW-HM 1'o ' S ':' ' 'B c , R 'R i fzfffreqx Rev. Henry C. Frascadore Assistant Superintendent Rev. Zi gford Kriss Principal B 1 I vvdl. Qi- .. , i a- , i K Ni Rev. James Fanelli Superintendent of Archdiocesan Schools To the Class of 75 ARCHBISHOP WHEALON,S visits to South made us aware of his sincere interest in our school- ing and hehted us realize the chal- lenges we will meet after gradu- ation, FATHER FANELLFS ejfort to sustain our schools exhibits his leadership and concern for Catho- lic education, FATHER FRASCADORE'S re- turn revives memories of his con- tinued inspiration. We remain grateful for his great spirit, wis- dom and friendship, FA THERS KRISS'S dedication to South, his rapport with the students and their parents will live in our memories. We are grateful for his support, cooperation and unrelenting willingness to listen to us. We respect him for his under- standing and timebf advice. Al- ways, he will hold a special place in our hearts, THE DEANS' encouragement, patience, and helpfulness to fur- ther our education through the broadening of our goals e v o k e our GRA TITUDE. K..- Sister Joan O,Connor, C.S.J. Sister Maureen Reardon, R S M Asst. Principal, Dean of Girls Asst. Principal, Dean of Boys Mr. Patrick McCue Dean of Boys Sister M. Leona Backus, O.S.F. Asst. Principal, Dean of Activities Sister Therese Marquis, 0,S,F, Sister M. Marguerite Dovidaitis, O.S.F. i H ,r., M Miss Shaileen Cassell Mrs. Jane Vivenzio Mr. Leonard Corto 01094 Sister Joan D'Amato, C.J.S Our guides . . . Our teachers. . . Our friends . . . Sister Nancy Ahern, C.S.J. Sister Marie Noreen Anglin, R.S.M., Mrs. Margaret Ward, Mr. Thomas Quinn i --6 M ' ' 48' is sk - +- Q Sister M. Louise Shap, O.S.F. Sister Elaine Betoncourt, C.S.J. And the kindness that you show will heLo us along the way . . . 9 Sister M. Ursula Venckus, O.S.F Sister Barbara Kowalski, R.S.M. 1 SlSICl' Pamela Michaels, R.S.M. Mr, Peter Maggnis any-.Eg . - , -if ,-fi.g,.1..' 1 if 1. 9 1 l t iii, VA I iam: , K W Mr. Robert DiBattisto , Sister Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, R.S.M. aria Nm ,X am., 4'k. Mrs. Loretta Dyson Miss Karen Grossman . XS , . ,fs - Mr. Philip Hoyxsrs Sister Mary O'Neill, R.S.M. f Mr. Roy Osborne Miss Anita Roche Sister Alta Lash, R.S.M. Mr. Ronald Tetreault gs nn Rev. Arthur Murphy Mr. James Shugrue Mrs. Lucy Gibson J Gbiyi ir! N Sister Linda Pepe, C.S..V.t GMU? WMP W i ,Mf M ti W gow Mrs. Dora-Lee Ober Sister Ann Rita O,Keefe, C.S.J. Mrs. Janet Wilson Mr Robert Ke Sister Alice Dickinson, R.S.M. xx , ., i in V' :fry ,,,.,k,-WW Q-of Mr. R. Leslie Childs Miss Marie Motto March ll, 1975 May She Rest in Peace R M R Mr. John Kiely l ds' , A ssss AWB-f3.'a ,f J s r f Mrs. Laurie Pisch E i Mr Jose h Reilly E y - P 3 A 3 V , J 'fa is k qvklgfg ,i l 1, I Mr. Frank Pisch Sister Ellenrita O'Brien, R.S.M. ff' won: . - 4 nun- . n am ana' aol' -na- ..nv0' llllkllOI -. . ...un wunfa. D Mrs. Margaret Berian, R.N. Mr. Joseph Patriss Mrs. Connie Porri Miss Loretta Magnello fnbu Miss Natalie Fleming Dr. William Stack 'Q I 9 fl. to rj Mrs. Anne Guerra Mrs. Marion Hanley Mrs. Jeanette Lenz Mrs. Phyllis DeMartino Mr. Leo Dionne Mr. David Mihrer Mr. John Sykes Mr. John Balesano Mr. Frank Castro Miss Mary O,Connell 15 , l 4 1 L, 2 fi 13, fe, VV. ,,.,, . wqgpe N I x l. ACTIVITIES ' ,,.-4? 4 54145161 A . il A' Sister Blanche points out new vocabulary on the bulletin board. Active LE CERCLE FRANCAIS members assemble for a picture. Several seniors are included here, SPANISH CLUB members anxiously await word about the proposed annual New York trip. lllhffl Enthusiastic students make up MU ALPHA THETA, the Math Honor Society that is comprised of seniors and several juniors. The successful MATH TEAM poses before leaving for their monthly meet. Contributing seniors are Phil Czapla, Tom Shugrue and Kevin Greaney. iq, iv i Morris Borea struggles with some mathematical problems. M , 3 OAK HILL SCHOOL VOLUNTEERS find great rewards in their frequent visits. Active seniors pictured above are: Dan Donohue, Debbie Karanian, Denise Doucette, and Julie Devanney. The newly formed ALLIED HEALTH CAREERS club expresses interest in all areas of medicine. Mrs. M. Berian, R.N., directs the program. 22 52 ia 7 J' . 1 V t nderclassmen visit the Buckley Convalescent Home regularly. NEWINGTON CHILDRENS HOME VISITORS stop for a picture before proceeding on their trip. i 'ft ,. Qt H J is 'edicated INSTRUCTORS OF THE HANDICAPPED meet to discuss future plans. President Dennis Mitchell and Vice-President Danny langiafico must be commended for their fine dedication to this work. tennis conducts a television interview with Bob Hauseman from H A R C. ALL-STATE CHORUS 1974-1975 includes QI. to nj: Thomas Maloney, Linda Stanley, Carol Liberator, Kathy O'Hare, Joel Spineti, Gerard Duclos, Josephine Annino, and Rachel Charette seated at the piano. SOUTH'S FOLK GROUP includes seniors Julianne Devanney Qleft, first rowj and Colleen Griffith fcenter, last rowj. Their participation in the morning and special liturgies inspires and ediiies the assembled members. GLEE CLUB OFFICERS - Jeff Kapler, vice-president, Wm. Morales, president, Josephine Annino and Jim Pappas, Sec., prepare to advertise the forth-coming concert. Missing John Wallace, treasurer. i L :r f ails K ,Sy-mm Q-is Q . -.-.,-2:'- 'F ' , Energetic spirited SWING CHOIR officers discuss plans for the Spring Concert and their own David Dyson is presently South's only pecial program. They are: Mary Quish, secretaryg Maria Garcia, treasurerg Joel Spineti, presidentg representative in the GH All-State Orchestra. Fom Neary, vice-president. '-5 wr: The GREATER HARTFORD YOUTH CHORALE has grown considerably over the years. ln this growth, there has been a noticeably increased representation from South. if , W 'Eff at ccinnggcfzcur HOSIAICQZ H14 ,fn M n Senior members of the NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY pose in South's auditorium. At the far ends are Kevin Curran, president, and Kathy O'Hare, secretary-vice president. Pictured are eight of Southis NATIONAL MERIT COMMENDED SCHOLARS. Missing: Caroline Skelley TUTORING, an undertaking of the NHS, is shown in action here. For the first time in the history of South do we have three NATIONAL MERIT FINALISTS. They are: Kevin Greaney, Lynn Paquette, and Kevin Curran. I'ATE OF CONNECTICUT SCHOLARS for the Class of'75 are registered at twenty-seven, South's best representation. DY' STATE REPRESENTATIVES in their junior year are: Tom Shugrue and Pat Hallisey. ia 1 it in wQa.:Q'e ,fm ll U is W K, lgfgdg NF MM, . , f ' ., .'ft..l-'Q . - 's T'-Ll' '-nf' e-.-ix fb ,T tiit eeit rw' lrflilfffm ..1..,. , r-,-,H , ,,,,. 111 V r..'f-A-:M z -L.. 1 Q..-. H -Jgjkili , U W 4' CTX, 'Tf..fM N 1 Qt MN 1t.. C ' mf? . TUTORS give up free periods to help students who have academic difficulties. 27 4. .. x...,.r . , e STUDENT COUNCIL EXECUTIVE BOARD members are seriously attentive to their president at a weekly meeting in the Activities Room rt. JAY MOLLEUR takes the front line as the assembled student body prepares for the annual MAGAZINE DRIVE. W 5 ilttr Q5 TOM and JOE DEL CIAMPO '77, se a I em to be pleased over the returns for the Overseas Aid collection. Back of the scenes work rs attacked by Steve and Honored rulers at the Queen of Hearts dance help Linda put away decorationsg Steve emcees at the Christmas Assemblyg Tom manages a successful Magazine Drive. The WSCH-TV 6 crew. under the direction of Mr. Joseph Patriss. produced successfully a number of interesting programs. Seniors Joseph Ciernewski and Joseph Ryan. having developed their own skills, assist underclassmen. THE MAYOR'S COMMISSION ON YOUTH members hurry to a meeting downtown. Jay Molleur and Joseph Ryan, with two year's experience, drive Carol Oleasz and hurry her to keep pace. Underclassmen Steve Zilora and Dave Dyson, lst and 2nd winners respectively, in the American Legion oratoricals compare notes. l 30 IBRARY AIDES proceed with their tasks having gained much from Sister Marie Noreen's structions and guidance. fm , 5 M k TRINITY COLLEGE STUDENTS - Kevin Curran, Lynn Paquette, and Anthony Luppino prove their abilities in their senior year.. -IE CHESS TEAM plans to keep a sharp eye on the moves. Seniors Ken Benoit and Phil :apla play vital roles in the game. TFICE PRACTICE senior girls complete their business tasks for the day. SENIOR TYPISTS pursue assignments seriously. Colleen Griffith directs the MODERN DANCE group's afternoon enrichment class. Her varied talents provided many enjoyable acts in talent shows: modern dance group, lrish steps dancing, and particularly the noted SENIOR BALLERINAS. Elaine Tata and Marcia Thrall research in the library for ski resort information. SKI CLUB members gather in the commons. Good weather conditions provided many trips this season. ENIOR MONITORS try to keep the stairways orderly under the direction of Joe Ryan. ,ws-4, 'HE PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB brought thrcamera alive at South under the direction of Mr. R. Kelly. 1 ww MMM Mr. Kiely complies with monitors' directions to stay to the right of the stairwell. 5 were Editors of The Form! talk over plans for the next issue. Seniors the right ofthe picture include Lynn Paquette, Tom Shugrue, Steve Lattan and Jeff Mortillaro. Below: Reporters Mary Cafazzo and Barbara Vallera also confer. THE CATHOLIC SCHOOL PRESS ASSOCIATION CONFERS THE RATING OF Pulnlifnfion of Dislir1rliur1ON THE PORTAL X 0 QXXWI' 501 SIMLIXSIIII Pmiss 455 N IN RECOGNITION OF MERIT AWARDS THE PORTAL the honor rating of Qmeaican tit: Pnrss Mhlillhh S 4550 I ssh WWW IN RECOGNITION OF MERIT AWARDS COSIVICS SUUIH CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL the honor rating of y amefzican , Fhe Cosmos staff members hope for another successful year with their magazine publication. Seated at the extreme left and right are senior :ditorial members: Sylvia LeClerc and Nancy Ryder. Their past achievements invite confidence of other members. lophomore Janet Bedard and junior Bob Stubbs shears? their Pam for this Yeaf,5 drama Students in this year's production, You Were Born On A Rotten Day, listen iroduction. attentively and seriously to the advice of their director, Mr. John Kiely. Canticle photographer, Phil Czapla peers over seniors in doorway. 'W' yrry, 15 , ,,..,, The editorial staff listen to the advice of moderator Sister M. Leona. Judy Buckle continues roficiet k' ff f Canticle page layouts are handled with exactness by a very precise Bob DiFiore. Kricia Rogala smiles wholeheartedly as the final deadline is reached. y p n mar mg o o page plans. Tom Zangari takes time and patience to select appropriate pictures. ' I gm 4 e ' I- f3u-. SECTION editors. Steve Lattanzio, Randy ,aVigne, Jeff Mortillaro and Luke Chilone select good ction pictures. M 1' CANTICLE TYPISTS, helpful and willing, help to bring about the meeting of deadlines. HIE SENIOR SKETCH COMMITTEE could scarcely believe that they had succeeded in the constructing and collecting of each senior's rsonal contribution to the yearbook. I I I ff BUSINESS STAFF members Teri Balut, Joanne Bouvier, Nella Salemi and Barbara Vallera delight over their receipts as reported by manager, Morris Borea, To MOTHERS CLUB OF SOUTH, to FATHERS CLUB OF SOUTH. that is, to our PARENTS, we are grateful for constant interest, concern, and support. Sister Blanche enjoys a pleasant chat with interested parents at a special conference. N--. N ' as-QM Q-,saw 4 fry MOTHERS CLUB OFFICERS, Mrs. Doris Marsh, Mrs. Kathryn Ryan, Mrs. Loretta Shaughnessy, and Mrs, Josephine Camilleri make final preparations for a buffet before the dance. FATHERS CLUB OFFICERS, Mr. Salvatore Camilleri, Mr. Louis Sanzaro, Mr. Robert French, Mr. Frank Shaughnessy, and Mr. William Eller pause before serious deliberation of plans for their multi-activities for South. 'Www I JW I Fw :wi S133 J ' xo ox Q.: 1OwOgQA JOQQZOQQ Q7OQOf Qdfbiegg NOJQO cf OQU OCC FX 'Q r iff' 5920003 p .p , Q4 QM , 1 wg fl 4 1 f J- g , ,,.. A w ' Q 1 M L 'Q .f : X N' - klii ivk gyj ki ,-- 1:2- 5- K. K .X L'LL - Ll', LL'. PORT Kwai MQ, Cool Hand Watson snares a pass from Indian Len Corto with his assistants Guy Carbone and Mike defender. Smith plot strategy for the Turkey Day game. The team huddles for pre-game prayer and final instructions from Head Coach Corto. 43 Mike Sanzaro bursts off tackle through gaping hole as Willie Morales and Jim Kehoe lead the charge. K Quarterback Scott Camilleri hands off to Joel Spineti as Jasper Watson and Alan Patterson lead the way. SENIORS take last stand against the EAGLES on THANKSGIVING DAY. Mike Sanzaro and out route Behind the blocks of Jeff Mortillaro and Mike Sanzaro, Jasper Watson rambles for a long gainer against NORTHWEST. r pass on a quick down I RICO FERMI. Alan Patterson and Joel Spineti converge to make a tackle against FERMI while Jasper Watson and Jeff Mortillaro look on. 45 REBELS OPPONENTS 60 St. Bernard 51 58 South Windsor 47 77 Windsor Locks 46 61 St. Paul 63 61 Hartford High 57 67 Bloomfield 50 61 South Windsor 63 68 St. Bernard 59 61 East Catholic 46 64 New Britain 52 58 Wethersfield 45 g 62 St. Paul 768 g 45 Xaviierifff Q is 4 B 48 65 Northwest Catholic 4 155 , 70 Sacred Heart 62 S 49 4 East Catholic 59 81 Bulkeley 58 57 New Britain 44 60 Xavier 51 71 Northwest Catholic 75 HARTFORD COUNTY CONFERENCE 55 St. Paul 63 62 Xavier 66 STATE TOURNANIENT 1 50 Rippowam 54 sCoREBoA n 1 wt' t7.aa tt,17litts1 ' H ,,.,, .1a,,, H ' 'O ' South's SENIOR POWER converges to bury an Owl as Steve Lattanzio goes up and over for a dazzling left hoop. I. 4 , as-if if tf, EL new 77 H if B ,.,..--- Center-forward-guard Randy LaVigne shows he can handle the ball with finesse in breaking to hoop' Senior Marty McBride busts through the hoope to lead the young Rebel squad to battle. if 6 K'A i eil. ,,. ,gun-v i ii 1 a 24 'EJ igg i 90. Xi- l I-5 0:11- 63 o T 6 fi ss tk '2Z?1f ' . -. ff ,x 3 4 Q 5 ' 'L 1 5 . 0 1 , 44 an X swr k 3 40 X 2 Q A: 5 1 1 it f 5 'fs-1 in . Q ' I my ,!, g?-uf x.V 4 ,A 'v. QU' Q? 9' -mx fu E S :enter Randy LaVigne wins another jump ball as he taps it to a waiting Steve Ayers. l 'Q 'Fha Mfz1W Forward Rich Reardon drives for 2 past three South defenders. 5 1 Rank Sumpter out-jumps the opposition for a key rebound. may Randy LaVigne displays midair acrobatics as he pulls up short ofa Bobcat defender on a super move. The Rebels unite in the pre-game huddle with last words of encouragement and the fight of the South tradition. Orlando Alvarez pumps up a big 2 over the Indian center for a Rebel cause Set-up guard John Basile looks for the open man as he maneuvers up court. k, ': 1 vlarty McBride nets a mellow', hoop as 3 helpless The Rebel cross remains a symbol of class and tradition. Jwls stand by in amazement. t We R 5 is M 32. in t iig V. i it psi W ... ............f , 1 I TRACK TEAM 1974-75: Front row fl. to r.J Pat Hallisey, Joe Logiudice, Brian Edwards, Jim Pappas, Jasper Watson and Kathy Smith. Second row: Greg Pignone, Bruno Passacantando, Rich Reardon, Brendan Hallisey, Tom Egan, A. J. DiStasio, Joe Fischetti, Tony Prete, Bob Wright, Frank Valente and Bruce Rheaume. A determined Joe Logiudice CROSS COUNTRY 1974-75: Front row U. to r.Q Pat Hallisey, Brian Edwards, Joe Logiudice, Kathy Smith. Second displays winning form. row: Mike Mascolo, Bob Stubbs, Rich Reardon, Brendan Hallisey, Coach Roy Osborne. Third row: Brian Bell Larry Morton, Tony Prete, Tom Egan. 54 if ETTERMEN 1974-75: Front row fl. to nj Jim Foster, Marcus Gorritti, Tom Neary, Bill Morales, Scott Camilleri, John Barry, John raig, Jim Kehoe. Second row: Joel Spineti, Sal Gallo, Joe Del Ciampo, Tom Diachenko, Frank Valente, Joe Horvath, John Corrigan, ourtney Crooks. Third row: Sebastian Bordonaro, Kevin Lauretti, Rich Reardon, Mark Treglia, Mike Mascolo, Kathy Smith, Luke hilone. Fourth row: Steve Lattanzio, Tony Luppino, Bruno Passacantando, Joe Logiudice, Brian Edwards, Bob Stubbs, Bob Brown, Jb Skau. Fifth row: Bob Flanigan, Paul Mercak, John Basile, Brendan Hallisey, Mike Statkus, Jess Madrak, Jeff Mortillaro, Sixth row: lt Hallisey and Randy LaVigne. EOLF TEAM 1974-75: U. to nj Tom Sullivan, Tom Shugrue, Bob Skau, Paul Mercak, Mike Stanulis and Bob Brown. 1974-1975 VARSITY CHEERLEADERS are fstanding in rearjz Joan Moran, Kathy Murphy, Elise McGurkin, Veronica Nesta, Maureen Murphy, Jeanne D'Onofriog fin centerj Michele Kostek, Mary Fitzgihbon, Mary Cufazzo behind white-vested Captains Andrea Dennis and Amantha Nybergg fin the frontj Chris Carbray. ,M -,--- ' -g VR ,d,gl1,Lg5y-eesfa-gg .-----'x...,. A... , ,, A ' .1-:ljiiiffff-I f A ' ,V ,, . ff. sa ' ' 1. . L V e . Elise gives her all at a football rally. Shivering in the cold, Jeanne and Andrea ' ' believe Weill beat them e'a'5'Y- Michele sparks up hope in support of the juniors. ! Q F Q 6 2 X W ,i W 'Q . fx, ig I Members of the 1974-75 GIRLS ATHLETIC CLUB participate in basketball, cheerleading, badminton and volleyball intramurals softball and Leader Corps. QL. to rj Seniors Pasqualina Matarazzo, Andrea Dennis, Mary Drolet, Joan Nelson, Sue Fischetti, Denise Doucette, Liz Fearon, Joan Nelson hits the Sue Poirier, Lisa Barrieau, Elaine Tata and Cindy Talarski participate in volley ball intramurals. happily during Fill! N085 ii - .Q EADER CORPS members U. to r.J Cheryl Zawadski, Joan Nelson, Cindy Elaine Tata and Sue Fischetti run for the birdie during Llarski, Sue Fischetti, Denise Doucette, Sue Poirier, Liz Fearon and Kathy Smith badminton intramurals. sist Mrs. Williams with underclassmen. Q 9 ENIOR LETTERWOM EN include: Joan Nelson, Cindy Talarski, Elaine Tata, Liz Fearon and Pasqualina Matarazzo. while MUD' Dfolel 100115 On Seniors Mary Drolet, Pasqualina Matarazzo, Elaine Tata, Sue Fischetti, Denise Doucette, Liz Fearon, Joan Nelson and imfamufals- Cindy Talarski are members of the badminton intramural program. if X ,S Hi H-i. f' m ls. 'iiii E 1uffr'2W 3'f .54 ,L iv wat-I L-uw. -1'-5 B!! if ur an 'X -Kp 2 wan! 111.5 sf ' it ng., Bm i YT fi my ,. , f E' 1 -Q 6 in 1-' 4- 9 3525 . Y. M, ,ff 7'-- '-: t f'T'rv+-f-1 L X? QW . f'f7?f?f ? 5Tf,q XM 1 -1 mzfL.fu,wL.: ,E 493159, J iiff, if flfff' rw? 2 fr rw, 3 , ,y:.T?7f 4-...,A... , -- rl fri 'VYVUM m,..,..,. . ,,, Q' . H , 'Www-rvfliff 'T V', llllllldillflfi fmzwfazffzfifx f E ICR Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out HUGO ADAMS My first year at South . . . A feeling of warmth and love . . . A whole atmosphere of togetherness . . . An interesting experience . . . 'to be or not to be' . .. ANITA L. ANGELONI Twinky tl ... Surbey ,. Platforms NO Let's skip you're cool oh, wow, wrong way espanol no more Empire scenes ducky HEE-HEE . . . stairway to heaven JOSEPHINE A. ANNINO Shocked expressions . .. unassuming surprise party at Casa Loma . . . I don't know . . . quiet? Not really! poofy moods . . . sec'y Glee Club . . . best friends . . , dead chickens . . , ALICIA M. ALZUGARAY Alice . . . Victor . . . taxi' . . . dances Maverick-Blue . . . Florida crazy Cubichee Soccer game ... Halo! HNB ... Who wants gum? . . . All right! i 'MTE' WILLIAM S. ANDUAGA NAVY The Juice .. ATHLETE likes to experiment 'C' ROBERT ANTOLINI Big Ant . . . Food . . . spaghetti and meatballs . . . fat . . . MRS. WILSON . . . How do you do this Math? . . . four years of silenoe . . . MARITSA BAKLAVAS Ritza Jan. 24, 1973 . .. PCDJ . .. Jes Deb. . . chump 32 . . . Pete SA 1956 Elly Cathi Clark Candy bar ...big white car ...jeep .. . soph yr. I wuv you really gotta go THERESA L. BALUT Teri . . . Bug eyes . . . always smiling another big boy . . . dumb blonde . . . Nel and Laurene cousins ,.. BANANA SUNSHINE . .. Berlin Tpke .. . Hi! first study! . . . Porsche . . . Bye-bye! ii 3? 'wh r,-anclltl' ELAINE J. BANSAVICH Little One RD the beach OH, NO! driving school colour my world ten ..: You can't put that one past me! . . . Saturday nights concerts .. . rea1ly?...Lab...dream... l LISA M. BARRIEAU Hey, Lees' . . . summers at Misquamicut . . . Sherman . . . Dazies . . . Oh, my God! . . . senumental lockers hey, Sher . . . front porch rap . . . hindu . . . Don,t cut your hair! . . . Today is but the dreams of yesterday come true . 1558? JOHN J. BARRV Hey, Bare . . . hickey . . . cemetery A walking legend Miller . . . Yield? New Year's '74 . . . rowdy . . . retard the Ridge . . . full moon TT Gang . . . l 3 ! l 'U 56 lil NICHOLAS J. BATTAGLIO, JR. It does not matter what you are thought to be, but what you are. T-Bird .. . NJBJR .. . weekends at the beach UBAT the Office . . . MICHAEL F. BASILE Hey, Fly . . . You got a study now?. Sundays at the beach the Ridge Who's that girl? . . . top heavy on Clash Day bow1-a- rama . . . Let's hit MACS . . . did he really hit me? GEORGE J. BEAUPRE JAMES T. BEAUPRE The Cape . . . Hattie massacre .. The Cape . . . Ragged Mountain ELP . .. the Corner .. . Bud .. . Hindu .. . Farmington River 105.9 FM . .. the Reservoir .. . .. . Reservoir . .. Jumbo Produce Ginals . . . party . . . camping . . . . . . Allagash . . . Maine . . . Toni's schlitz . . . Bzzzzzz . . . hang Camping . . . around the corner . . . PETER F. BEGIN i Fired-up .. . the Tower Can't .. . get enough of the funky stuff ...IB...KoolandtheGang... love the one you're with . . . Skin Tight Loose Booty Michelob DEBORAH A. BELL Deb April 29 Bob Nose . . . The Bonneville . . . Ritzo . . . SAS . . . Cwik . . . Peppermint Kid ... stuckup . .. COB8zT ... clutz nookies Mr. M Jes . . . the beach . . . chicken hands DONNA M. BELL KENNETH A. BENOIT MITCHELL A. BIELENDA DB . . . quiet . . . smiles . . , Kenny . . . Benny Kenoit . . . Bumt-out . . . likes beer . . . catch ll!l7!73 . . . stairway to heaven streaker . . . Mr. Medi-Mart .. . a buzz . . . baseball and basketball . . . ya' I know . . . ticket stubs . . . chess . . . Jerry West . . . Sicilian . . . Carbonels Restaurant . . . pennies . . . babes . . . Are you . . . defense . . . Hey-Bro . . . NAVY kidding me? . . . you liar . . . M0l111laiI1 M611 . . . NOIV . . . many memories . . . ANNE'I'I'E T. BILODEAU Nettie cherry nunny is mun gauffres HARC Canada grape soda with ice NCH gutter rat whey solids Yes fish Pinto 'taxi' . . . Do chickens have lips? JAMES B. BIRGE Jim Red Cubby Connecticut Dragway get there before 8 p.m. .. . Ring Day bumout . . . Suzuki .. . Red lights behind me again . . . RH .. . Traveling down That Winding Road . V EV. Q J sal ' - Q ei V T , AH . ,N Vi' I pf W if x ,B f , f' SU Y gr J' 111, X, r ' t N v '-ct ,N V L X5 is ,f ,f T' Q1 I, I' yy' 4' ff Xl I' bl. WEN My CW M 522 W xt-' 'A X,,, Maxx qi . JL iff' V xy P -Qv .figsstv XA 62 MORRIS R. BOREA Money? . . . DARTS DUCK . . . SHE'S CHOKING' . . . Doc? . . . Chicago . . . Mercury FLASH ... Question 6 ... SCREAMING EAGLES-Goat- MVP-TEA CUP . . . Bucks-Bosox- Whalers . . . Trinity? if., M JOANNE G. BOUVIER Jo . . . Bobbsey Twins . . . laugh it up . . . tickles . . . What's up, kid? That voice always laughing smiles kooky or nutty - take your pick Ter's errand girl . . . happy. NANCY A. BOWEN I'm so embarrassed . . . Granby WIA Martin Ring Big Blue . . . The Ridge . .. Ugly Colour My World . . . Turtle Dale March 9 Eegie . . . Beegie . . . 20 questions? WANDA BRANDE Loves New York better than Hartford Sheik of Araby college gal jolly Talent Night star tutor with us, away from us . . . DEBRA A. BRANIGAN Debbie . . . Jamie . . . June 9, 1972 hey, stuckup Sears What will the future hold? . . . smile . . . beach 'summers' . . . love . . . LUMS . . . Nella . . . great friends! . . . cats . . . Child.Lit Z PAULE'I'I'E M. BRIDEAU Alle loves chocolate very helpful in Accounting II .. . going deaf. . . too smart . . . quiet . . . always hungry . . . You're kidding mel' Did you get a letter? . . . USAF S 69 - L eo ff' on Lven V ds, lt Exam S ' ,ff 49- ' gli A, R no Ulf' A . V dt' cf lk W9 C-,tiki tx De x g, . , ' ll, K y...a',f1i X X-,gpg 1 U -- of-yr ,4,..,.w- U17 X N Quay' Cyglxvhl GK JJG5 XWQ .J 6. ,CL flag ' fledxex - l0vx 1' C155 k atlas' . Lk , ' 0 omlil X! t Ak lf!! , X X Y xx? tx-R415 lx' 2 z M J5 1- elim KL Q . ef it we QDQLM ROBERT H. BROWN Screaming eagles putty-MVP truck Rocky there? Goody gardens . .. What a view! play the pro takin' it in! No. l man Browns Francais . . . Conundrum??? TANYA A. BROWN Elliott We've only just begun 32 Blue Uniform detentions . . . er . . . Mousey . . . 103 . . . Oreo . . . Mommy Sharon . .. really ... D-Y-A-N-N-E ... I'm hungry 2nd period study 0-'OA Come on, people, now smile on your brother ,rf IUDITH A. BUCKLEY CATHY M. BURKE Peachy 10 . . . HSC snooze .. . burp . .. Tree Beard 'the guys Certs .. . cookie . .. Point C .. . in the band! lookin' good . . . dentyne . . . uull . . . Chicago . . . fudge Casa Loma . . . dances? . . . Ubu-Roi . . . blushing . . . smiles help! . .. yea, Bowl-o-Rama . . . I know where the key is . . . ridin' round . . . cuz we're GOOD diets ... wow! ... Special K .. . ... dream on! jude! THERESA I. BROWN X Terry . . . Little Vega . . . tan .. . Summertime blues . . . Rockyneck . . . DAVID'S Beachboys . , . Goodwin . . . goodness! crisp! chipos! . . . movies . . . tweedybird ...camping . .. , V' ROLANDE M. BRUNELLE Rollie 'see ja later' all the time? . . . Chewy Cherry Cough Drops . .. Lemon Chiffon Ice Cream Always quiet except in homeroom smiling . . . boring studies . . . MARY V. BYSTROWSKI Hey! There's my car! . . . Al Snow? kneesocks with toes? Blue . .. quiet . . . always giggling ... You're a pain! ... BANANA bubble gum ... chocolate fudge ice cream .. . Yum . . . thumbs ... cold hands ... cheerleader pool psyche ...spurt ...choom Mair... donut holes . . . the gang . . . ,,,..a-...,,,,f DONNA L. CARPENTER Grant City Hi, everyone! nut . . . Goodwin Park . . . Bubbles . . . burnt out . . . What a goof! . .. bummer . .. LB Love that music! . . . Nov. 9 . . . 'x w7 0? W-..d RONALD P. CARRIER Magazine '75 The crypt great pumpkin . ., Chemistry major? slim Jim Jr Phalanges', No sir! Chicken soup did you study? on time roofing Crisco Kid MICHELE T. CALBI SCOTT T. CAMILLERI cks Shel Tim Zifief Scam 41:12 Cuda ' ' dirk . . . Missing 3 buSCS . - - P.O.W, .. . E.S. What bridge? . . . where is there a dance? . . . long- water coach . ., EAST 14-13 , , , train runnin, . .. '69 Mustang The Bus . . . CF's cramps Dl1lOl'l COTICCYIS . . . UCOl'1l'l Wl1'lC lgcker f00m bfawlg I , , HOP along ...blushing . .. ... Fink Heart's Club. .. attic . .. if 'ir ... Q-.gms Q 2 S 1' .vw Everybody get together, try to love one another now 71 .,, .n .. X. , 1 Y, 6. .... Q ::Wz,,,,f-'K JOSEPH M. CASASANTA Joseph Michael Casasanta . . . Firebird . . . September 9, 1973 . ,. PAT . . . Little Women ...Tin Man...JustU N ME...wrong room . . . First study . . . VICTOR CHIARIZIA Vic The cape Keep on truckin, morning cruises . . . blasted . . . the res . . . Boogie . . . The Natch . . . D-100 . . . Van's dyno-mo-hum . . . someday . . . MARGARET CERALDI CYNTHIA S. CERRA Twinky . . . itl . , . Mac Davis , , , Cowbells another diet? . . . Frank Gufby George Pizza? Zappa Emerson, Lake, Empire .. . Hilo . .. Danny '72 Palmer -- - WHY - - . High, high, ,. . Drive thru Newington high! Incense .. . working for the Colour My World Chicago! city Tinny Driver Ed he-he . . . Donlt give yourself an BOYS - . . MB . . . up... '69 alF ' vpvnf' -SX mi LUKE A. CHILONE JOSEPH W. CIERNIEWSKI Big L . . . Luke C . . . Good Hey, Pollack! . . . Let's go play morning! .. . Hey Bloke . .. 375 some pinball . . . catch a drag .. . . . . Luker . . . Look at the cow . . . pamime imellectualg parttime No, you drive .. . Ridge LC cynic Do you know why you . . . convertible . . . Cool hand . . . are here, Joe? , , , How's the bench . . . MICHAEL COLEMAN Mich . . . Let's hit Macs . . . Sundays . . . at the beach . . . 466 Mustang down the pike . . . Stop 8z Shop gang . . . missed practice again . . . H0w's the W-K' EE transmission . . . Ha! DANIEL M. CONASHEVICK Danny . . . dreaming . . . goalie . . . St. Bemard's lawn . . . dent driving on ...hair beach rush The Ridge sail sun . . . buzz . . . wander . . . bump MARK P. CONCATELLI STEPHEN H. COOK NANCY M. CORREA CONGO . . . Chefs Salad? , , , Cookie . . . kick save and a beauty BHUCI - . - Alice . . . b21IS . . . Brillo Booze ANYONE? the Ridge Cemetery crutches Bella Lugos rain AVERY . . . Shannon's Daughter- Grand Prix Harv . . . hockey . . . - - - EI1g1iSh HOVCIS - . . BlaCk in-law . . . Parties people .. . 1 . . . New Year's Eve . . . jeep Magic .. . Grand Guignal .. . NANCY ... Beth ... 20 ...EJ...JD,.. Skipping assemblies poet questions . . . AVON FRESH negative Shoes . . . stage . .. APPLES . . . 1 Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out MARY-ANN T. CORRIGAN Farmers in crime Trinity Campus mysterious phantom ape man cats Corky Mrs. Kirby cloud graham crackers a window seat Cape Cod telephone auditorium PATRICIA M. CORTESA Pat, when are you going to grow? Bad company burnt out . . . buzz Tree Beard . . . big brown eyes . . . are you high? .. . The guys in the band ridin' round . . . dream on! . .. STEPHEN T. COSTELLO Cos . . . Lippy . . . Hindus at West Hill Andre . . . Attic Massacre . . . The Pond Cedar Hill . .. What a shot . .. O.K. Tom . . . The Ridge ... ll ...New Year's Eve . .. DIANE C. CRAFA Craf Ugly Captain Martin Walks with J.W. Mel's birthday come with me . . . Hindu . . . The Ridge Heart to heart talks . . . WLA . . . NB. New Yearis Eve Lumus TJ Turd JOHN O. CRAIG Craig 64 . . . Mich clique . . . Hindu Football Captain What massacre? Salt and Pepper . . . ridge . . . Buzzie . . . cemetery . . . camping . .. munchies . .. parties.. .zag... KEITH W. CROSBY Hocky Cap Candy Nilan street Mt. Washington parties . . . attic, Massacre . . . car trouble . . , Toyota . . . Cedar Hill . . . cork and jug . . . People's Forest . . . Barkhamstead . . . i 5 JANET M. CROTEAU 922 . . . Come again . . . Grants City . . . Which one . . . I can't see it . . . Another grinder . . . truckers A worm Air Force Whoa . . . JOHN T. CUNNINGHAM Slick Dick . . . 69 Grand Prix . . . 88 Stop 8: shop . . . The Ridge . . . Sailing Mopar . . . Pike . . . Hoop . .. Dodge van . .. Hockey You Slob Alaska cemetery . . . Banshee! . . . KEVIN P. CURRAN DiPinna . . . massacre member . . . Ridge getting out at 8:40 . . . Mich Clique Whose gum is this? . . . Yes . . . Hindu. Kid Curran's .. . prunes . . . Purgantt. camping at 23 . . . Oglethorpe . . . CCK. MARIE ANN CUSANO Cusy . .. the store . . . foxy lady . . , I did it again . . . distant lover- SW R-587 itls Friday Kimmie . . . big deal . . . changing blouses . . . Smiley . . . when will I see you again? . . . ,pa ,fr - .4 .-I E I 1 PHILIP A. CZAPLA Phil . .. take my picture. Phil! Whafs hap, Zap . ,. Math nut W-H-A-T7 Photographer Flash! Flash! DEBORAH L. DANDURAND ANDREA B DENNIS Debbie . . . Rocco's Place R3-Ildy 344 N V ll Rello . , . Rag , , , Colgur My Going to New York Whats in World . . . week with Chic lhC box Growing up talks E351 BeaCh-E,a51 Guys , h , with Sharon Being there for Peter's Matt forever J R the IS! lflflmg YOU are Billy . . . 20! . . . Hey, Margolis! CVC thlflg PATRICIA A. DEPAOLIS Little one Baby Doll mouse Weth. High 82 Oliver 6 July 30, l973 If an' truly Monkey loves Ricky So very hard to gon ...Junior Prom . . . ILY CHERYL A. DcROCHER COOKIES never ir1 a hurry . . . Friday nights . . . you'll see', Old Orchard Beach 'bye- bye', Neil Young Grand Funk . . . Oh, wowln . . . let's dance . . . See ya . . . VERNON L. DERBABIAN Big VH VD What is it? . . . Tell it like it is . . . Good one ...Pontiac...doittoit...ACE . . . What's happening . . . hungry . . . Food . . . DIANE L. DeROSA Crosby Stills, Nash and Young uSmilcs,' . .. I can't stand it! ...Catch abuzz...Hi, Hon... good driver? . . . Stairway to Heaven . . . summer concerts ,. . DV...Spacy... JULIANNE DEVANNEY Stalling cars You're kidding . . . Burns Security Guard . . . Oh, wow! Jonathan Livingston Seagull falling Spanish Classes how embarrassing . . . Burning Memories . . . lk l ki: M11 1.. ef. Y F-.1 Y' , ll: tif 't , if .NIA L fx. -.1 Nfl. l Jlyf xi 2 f ti' iff ,..r , Uv, 4 ., LOs5,x.4 J M5 'f x l ,J-, A K-P' f -i .,, . 40 A, X fw ,,-tl , . lift, .3 4 tdwu X Xa . 4- 4 I . x fi -T L.. -1 AV f If ,- .1 Vlilyvgiw AI v .,-1 .Af 4 4 u K ' i l ffm! A 5 , . l v'Xf l 1 E , lx .. ,s 5 1 if , MW . you f Afwraaeatwb' ROBERT W. DiFIORE . . . Big Red's basketball MARK J. DiGIROLAMO ANTHONY J. DiLORENZO Dedg . . . Mr, Quiet . . . water The man . . . Truckin' on down skiing Puritan Bake Shop South Street Hey, Tony, the white blur basketball . . . give what's in the trunk? . .. Sal and me a wrench . , . away, at last! the boys . . . Can a Mercedes Benz really burn rubber? . . . Rocky Ridge . . . -.QQJ SUSAN L. DiGIACOMO 'gDif . . . Boston Celtics . . Sue , . , Oh, my goodness , . . 123 World Champs . . . Yankees .. . . , , camping , , , Maine . , . The crowbar . . . Chicago . . . stritz . . . Camaro , , , C'm0f1, laugh , , Free . .. Elton John Whalers What! partym' Wait Q11 I me, argue? Al drop dead tell ya , H Big . ,, Fig Mama Pacci . . . freaked me out 'E' DANIEL F. DONAHUE Danny . . . the Ridge . . . Think snow! AM G... Hindu,..ELP Concert . . . Fired up . . . going bowling . . . Kent Falls camping Ginas' ...The Cape... Live for the weekends . . . Party JEANNE M. D'ONOFRIO T.J. , . . Martin . . . MEL's birthday the gang: MEL DC KT point NB Whatis cooking? ...WLA . .. LUMS ... l missing 3 buses the Ridge . . . Heart to heart talks . . . Chillie DIANE L. DOYON Bubbles pumpkin NCH smile singing one of the guys took 9 years, but . . . we care . . . cry and laugh . . . physics, studies . . . Let's be friends . . . children . . . '- t f DENISE B. DOUCETTE CATHERINE M. DOWD Dee ... Canadian N, Cathi - with an i Get this! strawberries Bear roller Gimme a break hiccups in skating Froggie Oh, that steno Steve Awareness nose! . . . Nova Scotia . . . Colour team - -- Oflen SCCI1 with AK CJ My World purple 84 geen or PB I'll be your friend till Sunsets . . . Bugs 8: Vettes . . . the end - - - Nurse? MARY T. DROLET How's it go, again? Bert The Marx Brothers tuna fish at midnight get to a baseball game on time May ll retreats . . . scenic tours of Montville . . . 4 .- Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out GERARD M. DUCLOS Ehhh! Whatsha trying to say Too much vibrato Music room Mingler DJDuke and his commercials Be cool, now . . . Ehhh! ,fr .1-N SUZANNE M. ELLER Suzie . . . Twins . .. Ya big queer Smelly May 6 New memories . . . Roscoe . . . the jet Wild World dupa Cwikla ... Jes ... nookies ... Rit1a...Callme...ILYRC... THOMAS .l. FAENZA Fenze . . . Newspaper drive . . . Bam . . . dead calculator . . . You know I love Math . . . Celtics . . . Bruins , . . finding combinations to other lockers . . . FRANCIS N. DUMAS Frank . . . thanks to my Math teacher . . . for nickname College-Tech . . . Work? . . . yes, Paul's TV WEO freaked out on hockey . . . Canadiens . . , x . i ufflf sinjyykg Nts BRIAN P. EDWARDS Schultz E.B. Hip checks . . , Marv Albert - kick, save, and a beauty . . . Bob, are you trying? . . . golf shirts to school . . . OBONE 7:40 a.m. sports OK, Jose... Mets. I , THOMAS FAIENZA Little Tiger . . . 3 years . . . June 9 My little puppy Kim . . . Saturday in the park . . , Summer of '72 . . . Singing the cove . . . I. Bohemiens trouble . . . Je vous aime bien . . . MJ? ELIZABETH E. FEARON Basketball . .. 22 or 24 New York Nicks Fingers McDonalds . .. Twiddle, dee, dum What's on a Big Mac? Philadelphia Kung Fu I honestly love you . . . Volkswagen JOHN P. FENTON Buffy . .. the Ridge . .. Banchees ... Senior boys . . . 68 Malibu... Just riding around . . . McDonalds . . . Graduation . . . Good-bye, South, I'll miss you! . .. Class of '75 : NO. l. ,ff f ' NORA T. FEARON Hey, Babe, I honestly love you . . . horseback riding. . . Twiddle, dee, Manny .. . I believe in music .. . 45 Switzerland . . . Colour My World . . . McDonalds . . . Sunsets ...Bug...QSC if y .gs SUZANNE M, FISCHETTI Sue ... Always in a hurry ... HNB quiz today . . . Charleston GAC that's good tennis . .. dancing . . . swimming . . . you're kidding . . . road runner ...catlover... 513' . fm., fi? MARY C. FITZGIBBON Peach fweep tiying jello moods when she's tired Mair ... Fruit loops ... cheerleader . . . Give me a break! . . . Abdowls . . . Chinese firedrill . . . lollipops . . . DONALD M. FORTIN Scho0l?? . . . Where's my next class? Intramural hockey .. . basketball football late again! scho0l's out . . . now . . . learning comes hard . . . BARBARA A. FRAZIER Bo-Bo . .. Cretella's college? . . . catch ya . . . later . . . summer of '74 'right here' goody! Bryant . . . CNG . . . seriously . . . Southbury . . . smile! 5 Q ji J . gigs F53 M ff l f ,, yr, ,,,:gfwfW,fJ 'E IWXI v v , H . , ,W ,J ,Vl,, ,W L, 2 ,, . ,, .1 ,t : fm' V g f ,, WWW: 2 2 W V ' 5 U E 2 l'-- if i l Z E is W W 1 Q 1 .rww 'TFL u, uh we-ww - A ww: e -i-'QL H'!a1amww- ,, ,ew Wmmwwr Nm msfswi M ffrf -We WE-,ja w. P i'bR?wa..w B N K 'Wiki P N W N 1, t V ' ,IV 2 ' '. 'li 2 'ii i , I I fail ra 1 5 ' ,,,, . , I- .,,. , E .. l ' -P . W., ' ' ' 'ff' i V? WENDY S. FLAHERTY MICHAEL R. FLANIGAN SALVATORE FONTANA Wen Paul crisp now Baltimore Orioles McDonalds Berlin Turnpike Bowl-O- wait . .. cruisin in Vega's Silas Deane Dragwag . , , this Rama , .. Conn. Dragway . . . Rocky Neck 'right here' bites what a relic '71 kafiile judge Rocky Hill ignorant . . . stitch . . , David's . . . Grand Prix . . . '62 Caddy . , . . . . Peanut . . . Jim Carty. goodness . . . trunks . . . camping Hughes Bros . . . late . . . Pontiacs ,,,29th,,, ...dances... fm X .N , t 'ST Q, 4 C S i 82 f, My PATRICIA J. FRENCH PAUI-A M- GAROFOLO Tricia . . . all happy . . . really! . . . Garf . . . stairway to Heaven . . . Mafc'5 girl . . . Bryant weekend HCY, little glfll . . . special ED . . . I I l where ya I . l Oh, Comg DOIl,l call me . . . . .. I Qn! , . . S0111-hbufy - . I keep dOH,l believe ll. . . . uSOIl'1Cday Smiling ' U . we'll be together . . . Hb-s- . 83 ffl 5' if NORMAN J. GAUDET Senior privileges . . . top down? ... Let's go cruisin' ... convertible hustle Cedar Hill . . , pinball . . . boys' room . . , meeting place? . . . We want 3 hockey team! f? 5' , r Hx w 1 0 A' tm lk V T. u 'Yi I 'X phil QM .' wi' ygxf' , YQ Q 3 at Q 5. it 2 I ,, I M i I ,Y Rip' +45 3 ' l A ,df , X ,J ,if 'fi V Writ V 1' N if mffg' J' :,lVAipfl' ff J, 3' VW 4 U! lg Jit'9,fFff'MaA reef W ft at it iir,' e ,Self i' fQ i ,lt EIL if Alfie q 5 l l I Y It Y. H' ' v ROBERT N. GENDRON Norm . . . Bob's art supply . . . yes never in math bush! party What's wrong with my laugh? . . . Sunday basketball , . . ' Hindu's . . . New York . . Macedonia . . . A ANETTE GIONFRIDO Take me to the ocean . . . gathering seashells . . . smiling is a prayer lilly-f . ,uf at tif as Wtlwfl it i f C-If' Q vii LW' WA Pu MV Diuwlgld v U 1 NPV, rw V nb lf a Q,-Y KAREN M. GRANATO TIMOTHY W. GRANT D011y,' , , A 'fHey, leggsu . i D Dear Tim . . . tiger . . . chicken legs Abby: Highways of my life grey hair late Slips ...YAC...The store Bump Michele Cemetery Long City Thg Lake HGH it Train Runnin' Hollywood together . . . In a bottle . . . I'll Orange Pinto ' - - knock you out . . , DINGBAT 1 i MARCUS I. GORRITTI Stoneman . . . 220 Club president How long till Thanksgiving? . . . attic massacre . . . I don't know Did you punch in yet? . . . the hunt PATRICIA A. GRADY Danny's little girl Grad SAS Olivia . . . Herbie . . . smile it helpsg I mean Betty, right? . . . October 14 . . . Bucket seat Riviera Charlie tea D.L. forever , . . ' Hgh .l'Y. KEVIN M. GREANEY Math team MVP . . . homework in homeroom . . . what happened to the Red Sox? . . . again . . . Greenjeans . . . quiet ANITA M. GRECO Mel's birthday the Ridge open mouth insert foot pass the apple . . . Elton John . . . going to California DFD Hindu Sunday,s in Sherman 'QKh.,,,,. COLLEEN MARIE GRIFFITH Col . . . Irish . . . pink socks and pink shoes . . . Chicago . . . smiles . . . senior ballerinas? . . . dancing . . . always running . . . Eli's coming .. . Rockette . . . shine on PATRICK J. HALLISEY Cross Country . . . PJ .. . Say, hey, PK Paco PK Win hockey winds-up-shoots-its high Rm. 214 before CC golfing before meets ten for ten . . . are you crazy? H' ' ,,,,,,,,m, 1 ' ' we ..r f w wk . .. ,s ,Mwfff , ...WI Q.. 1zf.,...,,.,f . , ,, .-4,1 I 1 , ff sw fn ,, DENISE C. HAMANN JV Cheerleading . . . Bengee's girl Nov. 20 . . . Camaro . . . Levi jeans . . . Red barn . . . side streets . . . SAS . . . Ham . . . always eatin' . . . legal, me? . . . You've got to keep smilin, . . . Tfyzlkl-w A . rllegiflnfzgq Ik y 7ZcZ4rF -4 ef 'M-4.4-ai . .TLQ 1-W' uw 070 fl-1714 lc- axivl- 'M SHARON M. HARRINGTON I 'I 5 A lx, Harri . . . the beginning . . . poems c e I ur ...campC...A1ex... Sfeet rf!!! 4 a what? . . . question 4 or 10? . . . 71 , love .. . long walks . .. long talks bad g ...my Mr. P. us forever... +AvLlfQ, P ROSANNE M. HENNESSEY East beach . . . Pride of Cucamonga .. . panama red shaboo Inn crazy-eyes Little feet . . . Clapton in the rain . . . Torpedos . . . Home-grown love has no pride . . . patches . . . JOAN M. HUSSEY You're my idol . . . Wone . . . silly mood crushing twinkies fudge .. . Kerry is a boy? .. . Freshman basketball . , . You're a page? I got a car tobaggoning . . . Joni CHARLENE H. .IASINSKI Jaz . . . My big bear . . . Love is . . . The 3 Musketeers . . . Ya know? . . . Chem lab 'accidents with Di . . . Chicago . . . Just you and me Why me? Charl O JOHN S. JUSTO What is it? . . . Johnny Angel ... Jerry Lewis ... Kung-Fu ... party . . . senior ballerina . . Studebaker . . . hot lips . . lemonade Joe toes Give me the Big Beef' . . . af PHILIP J. KABILUS Sailing on Long Island Sound . . . bug off jogging camping ten mile bike rides puns . . . test tubes in Chemistry . . . GEOFFREY M. KAPLER Jeff . . . the Ridge . . . outdoor Cool . . . YES . . . camping at 23 G-man Hindu organizer . . . attic Massacre . . . Mich Clique Cape Cod Wanna jam, Tom? . . . Happy New Year DEBORAH A. KARANIAN Quiet and shy? . . . no-no-nov .. . Groucho Chico Harpo Zeppo . . . Where's my next class? . . . Abdow's Say's he's gonna kidnap me! . . . What next? . . . ALLISON E. KARKOS Allie . . . Tony's . . , you're kidding I hear a car coming Smiley Letls go to Mac's . . . Cindy? . . . Barkhamstead? . . . Red Delta 88 . . . Cathi? . . . Good luck always! . . . sf . .I 6 1. it JAMES J. KEHOE Kee How about a ride? cold . . . Who talks too much? . . . Carbone's dishpan hands .. . 4180 . .. keyhole . . . ho-key . . . the Ridge . . . stupid! . . . Hey, baby . . . Yankee Clipper 1-c 1'1t?' CYNTHIA H. KENNEDY Cindy... Stop 8: Shop . . . people . . . Did you talk to my cousin? . . . MacDonalds . . . Allison . . . red GTO . . . Oh, come on, smile' . . . I'm tired . . . Peyton Place . . . :ab ' RITA M. KOVA Cape Cod Summers . . . Dylan . . . one Big Boy . . . Hi, JB, DK, and KC the trip up Hi, Gugi Hindu Hi, Nan ring the bell and run . . . Guess where I'm going? . . . RICHARD M. KRAWIEC Let's go hoppin' . . . Watch out for that Lincoln . . . No brakes . . . How's your big toes? . . . Soak 'em VP . . . smoke some cradads . . . Morris' mailbox . . . CHRISTOPHER J. KIELY Life is an adventure: if you do not live it that way, there's no use in living New England Four Wheelers . . . water skiing . . . Bud ...Popov... STEPHEN KINDL Steve SSS Cromwell Kid Nice mouth chocolate pudding G-Man Tenors Sister Steve VW Do you know what I mean? . . . DANIEL J. KUDUK ECONOLINE . . . Dan . . . Music the trip up really got it! STEPHEN J. KUDUK Why not .. . Cuda .. . van trucks ... Brandy's ... FM ... David Bowie . . . Frank Zappa . . . people life enjoy always LAURENE B. LAPORTE Where's Teri? . . . Berlin Tpke . . . My cousin Nell . . . China Grove I've got to go to work Loggins and Messina Concert .. . where's the car . . . Pigeon-toed . . . Sunday room STEPHEN C. LATTANZIO Steve . .. 422 . . . Veep . . . Lance Youive got to be kidding me . . . quick wit . . . Fred Astaire . . . DG MARY T. LABANT FERNAND J. LAGUEUX Always in a hurry and late Likes to play basketball likes one of the Grandma's beach to shine his car nbeing with bum rowdy first study in the one I love', being happy the Caf. . . loves summer . . . . . . working. .. We Wm Wg f 'N ... . mv 'Zia RANDALL J. LaVIGNE Pandy Nov. ll Vermont: we've been to the mountaintop 1-112 to 13144 Rookie to Vet State Champs ' 316 holding hands in the halls and everything is you . . . ...JJ PATRICIA A. LEARY Joe . . . September 9, 1973 LUV Ridgecrest Circle Red . .. little woman .. . locket . . . SAS . . . Firebird . . . just you 'n me . . . promises . . . hopes . . . dreams . . . A4 .M f .. A vp DIANE M. LEVESQUE Woody . . . what a hunk . . . Bumps . . . Empire Pals . . . where's Mary? . . . Avenue . . . TT another diet! ... unemployment forever . . . Yeh ... Big mouth ... Loggins 8: Messina . . . TR6 'Q .vm . I , a .Ay , 6 ,.,, Ji' .ap ft SYLVIA L. LECLERC Sly Syl .. . lollipops . .. Bananas 8: strawberries . . . puppydogs . . . you are not my type! ...Jelly . .. Cape Cod .. . Fiat chauffeur . .. did you get your letter yet? sailing . . . DAVID A. LOCK Big John . . . Pool . . . Gear head Have one on me Bowl-O- Rama .. . cafe study wars .. . racing on the Berlin Tpke . . . ballerina . . . JOSEPH A. LOGUIDICE Joe CC loaded umbrella .NOK PK l2:l0... ole Jose . . . Bag of maggots . . . plowhorse to star . .. the Ridge John Z OTR Joe B Finish sometime today, Joe . . . ANTHONY J. LUPPINO T . . . baseball . . . canoes . . . golf .. . You left your lights on,' Get a job . . . Trinity . . . Get with the program' . . . iii MARY ELLEN LURATE CARMEN J. MACCA Mel . .. l7th birthday . .. Bubbles 455 Red Skylark . . . likes that . . . wanna race? . . . Martin . . . calculus course . . . Milviana . . . Ridge . . . crazy . . . little green Rialto . . . the toast is buming! sprout... LUMS ... Abie ... The gang Melli, DC JD KT 91 . . . ankle socks NANCY M. MALONEY Pumpkin Deb Crisp Funky . . . Band . . . Encounter . . . Monkey Ang O.J. Motor Mouth ... Just me ...Falcon ... We've onlyjust begun . . . Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out Reaching out THOMAS K. MALUN EY Kolenkov Massacre Member Zig Munchies . . . cemetery . . . Party . . . Mich. clique . . . Purgantt Yes Caf Chorus Seals 8: Crofts ID OZ kingers . . . the Ridge . . . DANIEL T. MANGIAFICO Fico the Ridge party Southbury . . . summers . . . TT Gang Wedgy Caveman streaker . . . detention , . . buzz . . . ' Pres. Sr. Mary Good ' ' friends . .. Glad I came to South KIM A. MANIKAS Taco 81 Tootsie 3 years June 9 Romance alone again the Godfather precious and few . . . little meatball . . . VFW . . . Perche . . . file 4. 1 1 'i'f:.. , .... ., . fi. 1+ .,..,...., ,: K .nfl yin ' .i.'i, I - iii.-7195 i .s... iis..i 5 g g ..fi LINDA M. MANTELLO DIANE M. MARCINOW California . . . P8zG . . . Friday Life began in the swamps . . . Hal nights TV music bug Woe Dare goings-on at G.P. AC . . . Pizza . . . Tomorrowis . . . Tennis, anyone? . . . suitcase- dream the Rolling Stones sized bag gauze shirts Livin'n lovin' . . . windy . . . where is he? . . . balletomane . . . Ti Amo . . . dreams . . . future . . . Elton John .fax -f .fri ae. , I .. 1 i fix' R .x Xk R ard' 'DG x Nguw-.- G --1 ,. 9 S 41,5 4 PHILIP E. MASSE God, life, peace, happiness love Diana Beauty . . . friends bear ... Peanut ... John . Gearheads , . . Conn Dragway . . . Berlin Tpke . . . racing cars . . Hemi power . . . Chrysler .rg A, Q S sg, 25 'EI ,fl 1,e 4.- PASQUALINA MATARAZZO Lina . .. short 'n cute . .. always in the bathroom . .. wonder why Ya got any? Bzzzz basketball star cut it out all ears Haunted House call me tonite . . . THOMAS E. MAY Edsels . .. American Graffiti .. . P8cG . . . Saybrook. . . the 50's . .. Charley's Aunt . . . WW II planes . . . Tippy . . . Edsels . . . MARTIN B. MCBRIDE ,, Hi, kids . . . I don't believe it's out gonna miss you, Mr. McCue . . . Mr. Osborne? . . . Me a.nd Bay 331 Let's goto the park ...thelongway...bumtout... where now? . . . , M-ff X! EL !Myi.,f ,7L are M-fb ZrLiiff,.c, W Cffwffd KL ra wa A + rdf . L,-if f P Ak' W fn iq -V 4,3 g! ,eJ7rl.,L. I up l , 43414 if AVA' -fmhalgff f' y JL YXLJ galil if ,Ki fa Qfcilgfl Ci c'Qf1+ Q1 ll :Z f'T+4,iaJ64fb :e:rM'iZfL,f -,J ,,,. J 3 ELISE M. MCGURKIN Y , A Peach Elsay Pickles I'm 'fi 5' SO embarrassed Oh! I get it! cheerleader . . . Cocoa if- Mi 'ei Krispies Just loovely Georgette Ho-k the gang , . . 'iff' , WL if SHARON L. McKOY January 31 . . . ANDY, I like him! you are a good man, Charlie Brown . . . Willie 6 years . . . Rm. 217 wee wee Bright eyes Precious and few DM60 ...Terry... if' LINDA B. MICHALIK Mich? Another Dance what a tan! . .. Concerts .. . Birthday surprises . . . College Happenings . . . Wethersfield . . . follow that car . . , . . . After Dark . . . '71 Montego Q .ffl R. JAY MOLLEUR At any rate .. . Prez . .. Elton John . . . Philly . . . That woman . . . Hallelujah Chorus . . . What's the R for? Proclamations Cape Cod . . . Glee Club naps . . . DENNIS J. MITCHELL Run for fun . .. what is rain but the tears of the gods? beach opera .. . Massacre member be bold and mighty powers will come unto thee IOH Psyched I7:3:53,5QEfffE?Elf35gii55fiifffffif'flEiif5fEEYi,1!,gE,,, .,i,,. J I J:fW4Wv yfsZ?2lif:,. 'I . llle att, ttrr A A I I yey f H af WILLIAM MORALES Football . . . 374 . . . Grandpa . . . Oh, wow! . . . MICK clique . . . what is it? . . . Caf chorus-HM . . . Who is it this week? . . . Willie J . . . OK, Tom . . .Track .. . .S sl IA 4575 'FM is 1 S Y. Q Hs' i If li ll if X -at, f' Jmliaabe g. 25 t fj.,g.' x Q, 1 i J W 1,5 it AV -: K Yi- 1....g-f , ku Rfk! 1 Yweww, ,muh JEFFREY J. MORTILLARO Mort... 44:21 ,.. QB? . . . scooter pies typing think about it' . . . butch haircut . . . turtle license? Hey, Cockaroach! . .. the Twins . . . the nubs . . . C.H. WILLIAM J. MULLIN Billy . . . late . . . gentle, soft- spoken parties . .. Reservoir The Hindus Big Bill BZZZZZ . . . O HERMINE MOURADIAN Herm . . . my hair , . . nursing .. . Armenian . . . another job . . . you make me feel brand new . . . Flute . . . I'm still growing!!! . . . The Bus Stop PR Park Street KATHY J. MURPHY MURF . . . Strawberry . , . MIKE Kashu twin our gang The Cellar . . . Barkhamsted . . . tea knee Caf Mabel Quart . .. I mean, hey! . . . point . . . SAS til, X, 54 Ll 1- MAUREEN E. MURPHY MF-ll-When will I see you again? .. . KOOL still hungry .. . Dillon Excuse me, officer . . . skin tight . . . The Store . . . Maxbaby MURF goof What're ya tryin' to say? 5' F -- - - I get by with a little heb fiom myfriends, I 'm gonna try with a little help fam my friends . . . DOMINIC D. MURZIN Dom . . . Circulation, may I help you?,' . . . What can you do? . . . Not much Give me a breakv . . . Music . . . friends . . . Blue Duster . . . it stalls . . .C GAIL M. MUSGRAVE Don Oh, wow! EM's My love . . . Kentucky Fried Chicken anyone? . . . George's . . . Meet me at the stairs . . . what can I say? . . . Hold everything . . . Keep in line , J V' 'V ,if ,lil , U ,ri fa , i ijt? y ,fit l F 1 I limi Q it-I , -fl! H I I M ,4 I WM e I ,mx J !V,-Q Ii A J AV F it 'Wi l M I if A , , , Hwy Q nl sz M' e it in 1 , 1 7, it I wi 3' ,lt .I 1' wi 2 w rl A H ,rV, xy, ti' Of Us 1' it if t I' 'H L ' if' l l l. ,f if s H ft it A , lv ' M . Lf, I I ,iv aff'Q,t fx H yt N ty mi it ,wit L 5 eftt t .d-,Lia V Q lim i F ,P ' 5,-. at 'll 'I yy jx I1 THOMAS W. NEARY JOAN M. NELSON ' ff , I , l' it F Ly, - ji,'fThe Massacre , , . 4:53 , , . Oh, Loves sports . . . stupids . . . No , 'K if it If l ' wow! Yes Concerts Hey, ? on varsity always ready I E :ik Joel, wanna jam? . . . good vibes to listen . . . wrong exit . . . pick a M it X it yr J I as . . . Chiquita . . . DO IT IN A leaf Cheryl . . . Roe, Murph, W ite i gwlj' I A' DATSUN . . . Cedar Hill . . . Ronk . . . Guaranteed lasties . . . ' F it Cheese pixies . . . Purgantt . . . ED Pizza . . . J xp mfit,Q,'s V Aa I , U t aw' 1 VERONICA E. NESTA Ronk MP Marty Colour My World . . . oh, yea . . I gotta get away . . . What if? No. 32 Dec. 15, 1973 mom . . . Want me to leave Michele? ELIZABETH A. NEWTON Fig Martin Fish Tell me something good Granby ... Porsche ... Who's Big? ... Happy Man . .. The trip up and down . . . Jane . . . Summer Breeze . . . -ft.- .+ ELOISE A. NOLAN Gotta go ta work M 8x M-ies Serge feeding the ducks late again . . . Elasqueeze . . . Manth, ya sleepin, over tonight? . . . Groucho, Chico, Harpo, Zeppo . . . an ELAINE M. NORBUT Eli . . . Burger . . . Ken . . . Grand Funk . . . far-out . . . Tom Collins Mnight gallery' . . . Hawaii, here I am . . . sociology FOREVER! . . . Ms. Junior Attendance collector THERESA M. NUNES Teri . . . music . . . Ponderosa . . . Dylan . . . Beatles . . . bummer . . . Harrison . . . summer concerts . . . Hi! how's it going? . . . Forever and goodbye . . . 97 GEORGE NOLET BAY . . . Help Police . . . look out for the house . . . Maybe someday I'll . . . I'll meet you there . . . seven o'clock Northwest with Kenny... I didn't do it... 340 X .X -Q C AX 4 , ego if ,Toi as-1 QQ ,X A Qs' -' Q1 im ri A fx rf ,, 5,15 - Q9 W R'1,f?1! X l ' Ji 'M' ' 'l fi .x 1 V X f f . .l .J K 1 1 it 1 .x'!fV't9! A XL il, , -V 53 ' L QW , X y f' '.Wff, -X qw . ,Xi X xx! .J .ua-1 Vfq -.ar LAWRENCE F. PACE West Hill Pond . . . Just leave me alone... 4-7233 ...Another book!! . . . Reading books for English . . . Good-bye . . . mmf W-was-all SALVATORE PAGLIARELLO Camaro 8: Duster . . . May 31 . . . VW Bomb . . . Berlin Dragway . . . Duel Exhaust . . . Miller . . . Maybe Ballerina Junior Skip Day ...Sal and the Boys... N to - ut 1 Q f f. w..,,.,, ,4 W V ILM AMANTHA L. NYBERG Manth . . . Jeff-Oct. 5 . .. EL-PIG ... OUT ... I mean right Betty? ', . . Cheerleading . . . Tea ... BBB ... Michele-WA-WA . . . Diet Herby Lab B-FP l need a ride . . . Max ROBERT N. O'CONNOR Black Point A.B.C. Plumbing Boats Waterskiing Just give me my diploma Valiant . . . Don't bother me', . .. lf 'ii ??132!i!'m!'Y W -ffnzff 1 X ' ef y l A lliy oollyi A r o.-ww i'l5 t o iii A 'A s'1 Qqgtsllywi Wag: 23? r fn!AMAjf!2l: 4.0, .-:il 1 M,fjgrfi af' I .2W'4if,fVf'5Ki1! ' 'c MW Et 4 , -ef 'wil ggiaiiiw x. f,,' ' ?',,fQ'Le7 ' 413259: ,543 4 431 gf wapgg-fffrf 6 .S+ t ifffwx 14' QM L yi' V W Enya!! 1 Ag Q 47 ,, 1 ggi? if M .fy 'W 1 if t , 'els gi ' gf ' Ea tl iii Q at KATHLEEN A. O'HARE baby blue eyes . . . How come your face is all red? . . . My contact! the car stalled . . . Long- Playing Peachamis best . . . fainting the van . . . the pencil Ys. Q 63 Q E5 ,... ,, W , , . at es -r!' s so M - 521:51 'I' W'i.. V .I gf by 98 YW: KIM G. PALOWSKI Kimmie . . . Hey Cutie . . . Can't Get Enough . . . Squeaky ... Rock the Boat pats The Store squirt Mr. M . . . When wil1Iseeyouagain?...P8cS... cusy . . . MARIA S. PANTANO P81 G's Shy? Italian Elton John's harmony finally got my license . . . Gone with the Wind friendly travel .. . Hi Hola . . . Sunshine . . . I it JAMES N. PAPPAS Jim 332 Joanne itch! ... cemetery ... ll!l5!73 ... I.L.Y. Christmas Eve ... Sweetheart . . . Chapman Beach promise me and POP FRAN...FJMP... 'li' ,IV LYNN A. PAQUETTE peach oooh THAT wave ... my favorite song . ,. come on you guys . . . chili . . . Steak 'n Brew . . . Accidents After four years?! . . . Sugar Pops . . . the gang MICHAEL P. PARENT Mike . . . loves the country . . . stereo buff . . . World's slowest typist an orange Porsche Album collector . . . on a diet? . . . hopes to live in Canada someday I Z. ,. 'S, N-x 4 wwf fl an We will fi K 6 ilm SANDRA L. PIZZOFERRATO Pitz Me1's Birthday Hindu Stop on a dime, get two nickels back Sherman What a bummer Talk's at Karen's laughing till it hurts ...takeiteasy... DAVID A. PLIS WAIOUH Pocket Telephone At the farm The Banana Farm squeeker seeker MICHELE PARROTTA ELAINE M. PARTRIDGE ALAN R. PATTERSON Calm cool I had a vision Peach hi love Fonzie Cedar Hill Gran Torino . , , sensible , , , Skiing . , , chin , , , fan cruising . . . movies . , . QT H30 Hockey 7 . . . Rockey Ridge I'm starved . . . He's missing out baby . . . don't tight the feeling . . . Buzz Burn-out . . . Texaco . . . . .. what's your problem? .. . jeans .. . Are you crazy? . . . the Schlitz Attic Massacre . .. Harp make it with you . .. VN SJF gang hokay honchon .. . Hindu Piter-Pater , . . . . . DM Frosted Flakes Colorado Vans ! new v r 5 . SUSAN M. POIRIER Do you know where there's a dip in the road? . . . camaro . . . Rocky Pt . . . cut it out Friends? .. , Brothers . . . Firecrackers'?!! . . . Ice throwing on the highway?! . . . Sunshine . . . 75 MICHAEL A. POLISKI Bwana . . . 63 Rambler Classic , . . the Times . . . Tennis anytime I'll do it tomorrow Mac pool playing apprentice I'll win this year STEPHEN B. PRUCNAL Crazy Wow Ahhh Ohhh Ops Tennis wrong . . . bang . . . moose weird . . . hunter...ski...yeah...rah... rally ouch stamp kick runjump at last .. Ji J MARY KATHERINE QUISI-I Squish . .. Southbury . . . canoeing good old Avery . .. late again . . . I can't,-I-have- drumcorps Indian Neck sunbums . . . laughing DONALD E. RATTE Hike...and...Party...and... Buzz and ... Track ... Intramural . . . Hockey Rafting . . . Drenched . . . I'll Roll I 44h lax , , f r JAY M. RAY What is it? .. . Where's my next class? . . . New Yea.r's Eve '74 . . . Late slips for study? 62 mere Dillion That 3 day weekend . . Buzzzz . . . Trinity . . . What a goof. if GARY C. RINDFLEISCH Sox Rooter . , . Sleeping in Alg. 2. Marx-Bros Fan . . . seldom serious. Cat Stevens . . . l'Uncle Pat RobinH0od x MELODY ANN RAYTA Lui Sunshine Shop Rite Are X r, you standing on your knees bl, ,Four inch heels T.R. , N ewington . . . M.D .... Tears . . . Friendship . . . Smile! u - W V W K .. Xu K XL . If xx 1 XY' rx xx gf v F K J, V1 Y .V Lf G L T ,i lib V' XL? s Q' fiyx' ivy X ri ii ' V X' X A K xx X V ' 1 '. 4 , Heels' X xv y l Tl , , 1 KATHLEEN M. ROARKE Party . . . Florida . . . Tiny- Dancer. Gooiing . . . W-H . . . Ali's Kenny Could-Be- Tense I've-Got-To-Be-Me .. . Mr. Pisch . .. Mr. Kiely . . . JJ ... Mr. House . Quick ... Thank-You . . . KRICIA E. ROGALA TES ... John-Boy ... dogs ... square . . . NC3527-curb-finders . . . cry, laugh. Clam Box . . . making cookies notes honking horns . . . deadlines . . . smile callme...gottago... IRIS N. ROSA Junior A Salion oh no! Friday Night Riding around Herm . . . trip chem test . . . homework . . . no more . . . Phone Calls dances Music Hall can't babysit . . . 4-W ,f f ' JOSEPH G. RYAN Skiing Stowe, VT You Wanna. get HITT' . . . Beach Boys ... Yankees WAISSY ... Mustang Mac's Okay Gang ! Go for it! Kroc NANCY L. RYDER Farmers in crime cosmos NLAR roving reporter . . . Cape Cod ... Ring Ding ... seat climbing in the auditorium . . . 4:30 a.m. Deodorant . . . Trinity College . . . art. . . rainbow . .. . V A fl l . ' fill , ffl! Kiwi! fiwiifibl- ffl' Uwi wif: l, I ,aa I lift . , . J I fl .Lili fy! If lflyw is I .1 if .M I, mwfi f fl I, f7,fi,.iLI it . liii 'f j . 'iw' il' ' A fvlflilll f 5 Kali' xiii! .fr, - ,M ' V I frail Iggy 1 pg' 4 fi,V!5f iz: ii 'fi I 'li iw I L. I ' J I I. my,-5' , 4 p N.: .u 'I , 3. fi eg xi Alwvgitifl. lim- g , , f 569 I' Q I T M :A ' Qzff x Z i 4? 'hv SEBASTIANA ANN SALEMI Nella . . . Teri . . . Laurene . . . Berlin Tpke. . . . Friends . . . SMILES Movies What's the matter Jeep? Bella cousins . . . super-chicken. Debbie ...LOVE...country...JB... kai MICHAEL A. SANZARO Sanz . . . 22 . . . Miami Hurricanes . . . MK . . . Crash the Junior Parties ... Mike ... The Ridge Clepto in the gym onto the pros? Wanna go ride CS Who me? Friars askher... .Z , ww A .Nt QV' O0 g 6, , Ot if 4' HQ 1029 igiifajfwj , g L, 1? btfMW55'la .60 '25 , 600, dill W W Mr V fQVIMdM'i- i r J iw M47 I .A avr .Sb 1 .a Mwfhe, 4' Wm DEBORAH A. SAUCIER E.e.e.e. Mickey Mouse Suacy U.S.A. . . . The nuttier the better Mayra . . . sweets . . . How Queer... July 20 Maine dances pretzels driving around . . . Friday . . . Tom TERRANCE R. SAUNDERS Jordan Lane Extension The pike .. . Dish Nose .. . Fast Cars Drinkers Cedar Hill The Green Shene . .. Budweiser Rowdy Stop 8z Shop .. McDonalds THOMAS P. SHUGRUE Sure Shot Shugure . . . Sully and I never Beaten . . . on Goody's backside . . . D.D .... Physics Lab Studies I was in the Activities Room broadcasting nut . . . Chicago rf' DOREEN SIMAO Alfred CBabeJ . . . Santos . . . parxs golden locket . . . Vega . , . carnation August 10 . . . Teddy Bear 2 years graduation . . . school . . . work . . . Annie's Song. . . Sgt .... Mae . . . Dreams WT ROBERT T. SKAU Little Bob . .. Last period studies Yankees . . . Sports . . . Golf Team Lynx 12:30 starting time see you on the first tee ,D I fl, , in J ' CAROLINE T. SKELLEY in 'V,, W WZ UL 1 ' Skel...Twin...Sub..,SAS... ' ' ,guy tm Moif Tea . . . Shedrivesme . . . - 9' ' K 'L' 'E X' K Af' Yago Baby Ronk L f J, l, O 'A 1' Phonecalls . . . The Cellar . . . A ' -1 ,f I Party Our Gang Food V iv' ' 'I ' W '14, Diets . . . I Mean, Hey C 'w if I DAVID B. SMILGYS Hockey! . . . Burlingame . . . The REC YES Misquamicut Pool S 8z S Trinity Chicago . .. BUD . . . Beaches . .. Derby Camping The Red Banana . . . Mustang 'N-.1 JOEL D. SPINETI Massacre Member . . . YES Concert Mr. Kirby . . . HARC . . . Purgantt ELP . . . Hey Tom, when we gonna jam? Run for Fun', . .. NCH Sleeper Four on a horse? Oglethorpe .33 Y, If een 3. CATHY C. STABILER Staib ... Hawaii! ... Dave ... Hindu Folly brook bump . . . Freshman . . . canoeing . . . Skiing Today I See the importance of my friend Today I see the wonder behind my loves . 4184 0 e r:.::ri J fi , ' ,-jf I y. if LINDA M. STANLEY Stash .. . Non-stop music . . . Angel . . . FAIRFIELD . . . I-Iershey's kisses . . . tea with lemon short hair Shoes- Reoords . . . I LUV U 2 Sec'y One inch in any direction . . . SEBASTIAN J. STEVENS Subby . . . MC . . . down the cellar MAC Party... Burnt out . . . skipped another day missed . . . Always in the John . . . Got a Countryl' . . . Grindershop . . . Mr Hu., I' KATHLEEN STONEBURN ER Stoney . . . Crazy Chic . . . You have to get used to her . . . Don't worry Fangs? Glasses? What a goof. VO Late again . .. Frankenstein S'74 P.P. ...N.B .... DP .... Tiny THOMAS A. SULLIVAN Sull . . . Howja don .. . Thomas A. . . . The Bus . . . cedar hill . . . Hindu's Massacre Member . . . The Ridge ... I.O.H. ... New Year . . . Jeep . . . Retarded Dances . . . THOMAS E. SULLIVAN rlly KR GolfTeam lugrue and I have never been aten on the back side Tea 1p Hockey Team . . . Thomas E . New York . . . N Rangers . . . .ysics after school . . . BERNADETTE A. SWEENEY Star light Star bright .. . first star I see tonight . . . Wish I may . . . Wish I might . . . get the wish I wish tonight . .. Stary stary night. Class of '75 reunion CHRISTOPHER J. SWEENEY Banshee , . . The Lead Foot . . . 23 . . . The 455 King . . . The Ranger Van . . . Bobbieeeeeeeeee . . . The infinitely distinctive Wippo , if V V' 'Jigga X1 , f' A Fi fM41M 1 ,M QL, ,f ' I my ' , si, 65 , s V., V ' MM. of wtf. I I it Uv N . 0,4 gpg! 1 af 0, F .. . .Ma J' L fr' I Y Wm., .Q,., H-sf , xii , V, CA, I -I ff, ., X KAREN A. TABARA -, 1 Engl? ,, Q -J face! fn +R.-W hicken . . . Mel's birthday . . . inn Martin Salt and Cl' WLA Cool Breeze :pp i .NB Ridge Hindu eart to Heart Talks Hey itie Wanna Dance Happy Smile. , W, oi? ROBERT J. TAKSAR 1 Plymouth Glee Club +2.. Dylan . . . Banshee . . . 107 ,fp , I Y 1 W- , , If . 'ffff f' x,,L 5 i V 7 KIG, I' .J ' ff . t X f 3 X CYNTHIA M. TALARSKI SKI . . . Zingo . . . Rocky and Curly Weekends at the beach . . . Horseback riding OH MABELINE Save me a seat basketball bum Life at the morgue . . . 'Qtr 35. LA. LS- GENE G. TARDIF Cross Country . . . Hang-gliding Who? . . . see you in Columbus summer concerts . . . WINTER CONCERTS! . . . Colorado . . . G. Fox . . . partying NM DARLENE V. TATE Dodie Tater daydreamer Swinger . . . California here I come ... cruzin ...smiles Spurlin . . . Hey ERNIE! ? ELAINE R. TATA Turtle . . . Girls Sports . . Tennis and Ski Bum Slow and Easyl' . . . Colorado . . Horses Soups On .. . Naturt Tripper James Taylor .. Take your time you're already late. MARCIA S. THRALL Hullo der YoYo Bobsej Twins Ski and Tennis Buf Sincere Smile Londol IRELAND Hey Marsh .. Giggles Pajamas at 7 .. Milwaukee . . . Horseback riding JAMES M. TORMEY 'ORM Devills Hopyard Lidge Dart Cold frosties Duke sports camping mokin' . . . hey what time is it . . . me sunrise Tucket .. . B.V.T. ld friends DENISE S. VALENTE arty . . . concerts . . . castaways - LD. Trinity's Balcony . . . Hey rnieu honorole-detentions . . . ummer of 74 V 1' . 'F' DAVID VALENTINO Val', . . . Elton College . . . parties . . . guitar Magazine Drive . . . Track .. . Study Hall Girls . . . life Ties?? . . . Skiing . . . cards BARBARA R. VALLERA THOMAS J. VAUGHAN Peach damp k-turn Babs Screaming Eagles Deerstalker the pink tutu sense of Vanucci Father Dunigan adventure South Players ten napkins please Whalers PJ Parties Seaspray Road finally Vauger Surfin U.S.A. The convertible Raisin Bran Putty Where's Joe? . . . sunshine . . . the gang R21mS.BuCkS.BruinS CARLINE D. VEILLEUX Martin What a hunk my sister's car . . . Beach Boys . . . Bowling Champ Sky Blue . .. my joy Palamin0's . . . Switzerland Here I come . . . Friends apple freak . . . Prom Night?'?? . . . ROBERT M. VINICKAS Sleepy Willard Stop and Shop What else can I say? Father Polock . . . Arizona . . . fi! ,yi , ,li J f- In 'X V.. t ' 1 ANDREA M. VITKUS RAYMOND P. VOISINE .www J. vv ALLACL I Big Tex . . . Cowgirl . . . Nature Ray . . . artist . . . Halloween party Really . . . Nose . . . Zorro . . . girl smile . . . Flower Child . .. . . . first prize . . . dream faces . . . Late Night Pop Tarts . . . Yankee-Freak . . . Friendly Manager? . . . Latin 4'2 . . . Juan . . . Frisbee Champ . . . Stairway. Do you fly to school? . . . The Cape :A has.-K ....safe va fx, ef v,t4,..'w.z.y' J, W why ffl? 'I i 7' U td i. T , un f+'QwfY 71? fi-A QA ' Q 'i1x.t,, ' Nh 53. , . cy . , y , J, .,. , at i M ,, b, kb I.. -'off wi .' Z' Qrgfix, LV- A , r ,'ii,,,.A V' '- . ' . .M ' . J -:- -W Q. .,1 W A-f: ' an 8 JASPER R. WATSON the Doctor . . . lockerroom DJ . . . king cut-up .. . 32242 .. .Watts ... Mr. Hustle? AWOL Who's next? ladies' man nuky-nuky lover Breeze ...MeandJohnnyZ... -we X JOANNE M. WHITMORE JP Whit honk! huh? Craf. you know? Jo 332 Nov. 15th cemetery Chrisfmas Eve dear. summer weekends at Chapman beach pennies forever promise jimmy TIMOTHY J. WALSH Yankees no 1 Rookie What's hap can't wait to get out My snake died S8LS ANDREW J. WASILEWKO I had fun at South I enjoy many perspectives of thought plenty of time to think . . . a new view of the world . . . a better outlook for the future . . . opening of new vista JUDITH A. WIELEBA why me? .. . i want a red pickup ... truck ... ACTION ... give him time bosco . . . he's my buddy . . . billy . . . I'm not telling . . . the taker . . . mark: partly truth ' partly fiction 'ff ,,,,,, ..,., Wm CATHY ANN WIGGINS Wiggy . . . Kraut . . . Blue Fiat... The Italians ... Tony ... Hercules' Son The Will . . . I0 cats . . . Puerto Rico Texas . . . traveler Partying .. . Tequila Sunrise . . . Oh Man . . . movie KARL F. YUNGK Elvis,' .. . The Solitary Man Don't ask me Ijust work here . . . Ole Swivel Hips . . . This is the best restaurant I ever ate in This space available for advertising JANET M. ZAKEWICZ Looking Down . . . At the end of the line . . . I never claimed to be nice JAKE . . . New Job Again 1 me ' s REGINA ZALEGOWSKI .X THOMAS Reg,' sunshine baby fish ... women-power ... Bunnyism,' . . . Gink. psycho . . . Big Z Zan Tom T .. . possessor of a suave personality. uses a picturesque vocabulary . . . 455 six cylinder . . . no detentions. just hasn't been caught . . . 75 . . . WEO. Love the beautiful, Seek out the true, Wish for the good, And the best do! 'P' s vs, ll3 ,E-f 5 -Nl mu.. E s WWW -N ,, 5 iww. ' j wc-1, :Q ff g , K v x W, + rw-fx f i I af 5 f i E Q. . - A x. N ' XM iw Q- QWMAW' M, N ,L M, Q A K 1 , 3- 1 A -1, :. M.: wg -W. - f'1d5!lKQi NN'Y:N'N' -1. ' ' , .. fy ' . 'T' s i g. N M M x-mv! x i K- A X egg 'x-,MM . f , wg M - M -f- . ...- .XSL ' ' Q -- -. ' .. -- ' 3 , ' ' . , '- 3 . ' 5 f 5 isl- II6 ,-'fy N1 4 , K I fx if ,Z aug I am made uncommon by the need to know you A happiness that is sought for ourselves alone can never be found. ig I , ,W A Q A a ,Q ' ,gg N' 1' l afkfi. l19 And to each other We will give each other's other. 120 at 5 W 2 2 2 Z ggi n ,ref-4' PJ 9 U2 Q U- V J Q0 R355- Q if ' 21 , 'JJ Ag ,Qi , W3 V 1 , 124 This is living, not to live unto oneself alone . . . l ir 125 ,f 15'55P:m if will K K :Vi ff ' if ,gr Q ' 1 Nsfnif My This one thing I do, g forgetting those things hich are behind and forth unto things yhioh are before d the 128 CLASS OF 1975 SUPPLEMENT SOUTH CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL Hartford, Connecticut The time is . . . And I've so much to say: As we go our separate ways, Don't ever forget these days. Four years of good times, my friend, With memories, donlt let them end. The time is . .. But I've still more to say: Soon we'll be miles apart, Each searching for a new start But whatever the future has in store, We'll remain friends forever I'm sure! The time is now. There's just a little more to say: Thanks for all you've given me A true friend you'll always be. Smile and don't let yourself cry, It's only So long' and not Good-bye The time is here . . . I've said what I want to say. - Dee Douoette B SEB LL Led by captain Randy LaVigne and seniors Kevin Greaney, Tony Lup- pino, Mike Sanzaro, and Jeff Mortil- laro, the Rebels stormed to the tourna- ments again this year. ALL-HCC this year were Randy and Tony. 2 ati? dmv QT, i i, 5 Xiifxv, if f f T 7 1 Z? M , f 4 BOYS' TRACK TEAM 1975 mx? -we S This year,s track team was led by seniors Joe Loguid- ice, Brian Edwards, Pat Hallisey, Jasper Watson, and Jim Pappas. Joe, Brian, and Pat also led the Cross Country team to the best season in the history of South Catholic. wr' GIRLS SOFTBALL TEAM 1975 v .- f 'WW 1 The girls softball team played a 12 game schedule this year. The final season record was 10 wins and 2 losses. The team qualified for the CIAC State Tournament and were ranked sixth in the state out of 23 teams. This was Southis finest season for girls softball. The four seniors on the team, Pasqualina Matarazzo, Joan Nelson, Elaine Tata, and Cindy Talarski, had an outstanding year. The experienced senior players and the unity among the team members were contributing factors to the successful season. l.l.... F-YW M . Sip Nh QCYOU WERE BO ROTTEN DA Y Z T fif- 5 as .4 W E EE iffy: I V AA f ' Z7 X G N VA i' W '31 V1 ww if QT 5 ,E , I ? ' if Mmmwm C 'O YEARBOGK PARTY - JUNE 5 3 K xx CLASS NIGHT - June 8 yay, WM' k Q l,5'Xa i5 g X iiv . .S sfifixfil 3 Qs CLASS OUTING - FRANK DAVIS RESORT- June 2 e 9-... S xi ' Y - fi:-. Q 'S ' if f -Www Ny . 1 .fx, ' E ':. ' 144, ff 1 'll 'QY31 .. , ff' ', a 5 x '11 Lvl'-f. ' ,-,gunna SENIOR PROM - GTHE COLONYM OF VERNON - May 30 im' 7f R fix K ,gg Z XE? sung 1 Quan 3 ? m-nqw ,vw M 2 1 1 Lf f W ff, 1 xg? . X is A 4' 0744 A 5? 'Z , ,, 5 I 'UZ - 4' - 'ft A fi-if THE 1975 CANTICLE STAFF CO-EDITORS Judy Buckley Bob DiFiore Kricia Rogala Tom Zangari BUSINESS STAFF 'I cri Balut Morris Borea Joanne Bouvier Nella Salemi Barbara Vallera SPOR TS EDITORS Luke Chilone Randy LaVigne Steve Lattanzio Mike Sanzaro Jeff Mortillaro M ODERA TOR Sister M. Leona We came with fear Not knowing Not realizing who we were. We studied with hope VWshing to know VWshing to realize who we were. We leave with joy Now knowing more Now realizing better who we are. Q0 C2 J ig? Q 32552 Q52 e K0 wsiizgg W CQ 95525 T gm Q5 is 'lbw Q6 ,CY it ul XX Q T J THE EDITORIAL STA FF Canticle '75 n 3 ,, to 1 , t 3, ,4g,,,Regiona1,C::nt:r 3, 3, 43 Gil'1manC Club, P.A,D.IQg' Intramiifals I, C2,C'3,'7 A A 5 4' gBagk,e,tbg11gt YMCA Scuba Dzverg At ' Cttt tCttCCCC C,,C 1 f fififxifl tntn li ntno if ' , t , g , t to J t tCC,,,Ctt f C fl C C CC C i tontt , C t tt nnntC i ' ' 7 tCCt,C ttto CCCC C ' ' f , , n t n , 1 ,CCt t f 4V A,VV,A 1,i .I V A V V . V VV V, to , F f , C fi t , n t 2 llQ l 21 3? Track Team It 29 Tum W' Si- 59555 iQgN'roL1N1,t,RosEt1T no nott V , t g il 3,44 tt , n l , t n V n Q Sogtiety 33 French Honor'Society Z3 C t ' 'L mVmV ' VV V V n ,VV V VC x f ,TK CC,CC,C,t n C tCCttn o 1 C, - , , h ,, , C n ji, 2g ,Chess Ch1b,3,,4,tBasketba11Vt15,gMeaE1C-Mgr, BAKLAVAS, MARITSA w ,,,n, tttt 1 fQfEjF ' ' 5 o Chgerle?Vdef,3V V, ,VAZ V V V V VVVVVV ,V-VA VV ,VVVVVVVV V K,VV VV,, V'VVVftVV,V',V,VV:V,',,VVVV VV C t C o t,,t V V ,V-k Vf., V.,V V. 'V Student C01w0i1CnRepfesenmw6C C19 3, ,Ring Day t Ctttt Dwi'atif1i,C0mfm1iZe E' 24 wi 4g The Ct Ct'f' ff. f n ,, , ' , staff' Ski 1'b4, ':'w wmeSS3C' ' tt,t, if C t f SC 01fif2,NatilfnaltH0110fttS0CiB?Yf?43, BANsAv1cH,ELA1NE J. if C 1RePfeS9H1a1iY?yCll:,tS31aSSnnSvCf?f4?y 2,C,4: 1Q0aFX5V 33 Le, cmze Francais 2, 3, Library Aide 2, Tutor - st. John's 1, 24 g 9?f?'f'f'f'? Cf 5 ll' 2, 34 CNe? '?5Y0n59h134F,t Track 1 2' The Hafgbfd comm 3' G. Fox .Q ca. 4. tt,,, t ootCC C ,H05P!5?1tL-34 Sy bramwvstnfssn smaff,3z,Tfwtt Cwfftwlefhbfwy V 5 C , tCoC 4ilSWing,Ch0itr 4:,IiQf BARR-IEAU, LISA MARIE C,tt,C,,,, Z Student Council Represgntative 45 Advisory Board 3g Ring Day'C :l C- -V V, f'CVfV Committee 3, Decorating Committee 2,35 Ski Club 45 Honors Choir 3, 4g Swing Choir 3, 4, Volleyball Intramurals 33 I. 0. H. 3, 4g Radioj Shack 3. Vt BIKRRTCVJOPTQQI J. V StudongQQ,5nu11Cil Representative 2, 4g Class President lg I. O. H, 35,41 Hmpiml 1, 2, Football 1, 2, 3g Baskelbalflg 3, Q33 Hockey Instructor 3, 4, Youth Hockoy Choir, 3, 4g Attic Massacre 33 Ballerinti tt.t,t tttt C ,ttt C t at 2 ir Racing 12: C21 R2wi1121iCC4n1,iltBfll'S ttt,, 13 t CCC, on . C BOREA, V',' Student Council Representa 2s f59WC1l L 22 Lam Club 1, 21 Svfaf Club 22 Folk Group Canticle-Business Man- 1 C C Newillgfbn Cthiidfaflk Tre'-75a1et + ,tt How ttt Hfickey24 '3a44:5P0Pp6 Sk0FCt4S tttt Commiiffif C32CB211Qfi4iH,44 ,ttt I C, C tttt 2 Youth R2d CfOSSCC 2 1 ',,,t. g A,,, V C tt. 'VA' 1 ,,,, ,,,.,L V , V, ' ' - C Hffx tt t ' t,,,t,t ' ttt, Ctt, 4? E245 Pami ,, C Ijfik ttC, iff! , n, kv! t BRANIGAN, DEBRA ANN Attendance Monitor 3: Youth Red Cross I, 23 Senior Breakfast Committee 33 Sears, BRIDEAU, PAU LETTE M. National Honor Society 3, 43 Business Honor Society 3, 43 The Portal, typist 3-business manager 43 Monitor 43 I.O.H. 3, 43 Volunteer Service 3, 43 Asst. Bkkpr Wetherell Corp. 3, 4. BROWN, ROBERT H. Le Cercle Francais I, 2, 33 I.O.H. 33 Basketball Intramurals l, 3, 43 Hockey Intramurals l, 2, 3, 43 Varsity Golf 2, 3, 43 Letterman 23 Stop dl Shop 3, 4. BROWN, THERESA I. Youth Red Cross I, 23 CYO Cheerleader l, 23 Mechanics Savings Bank 3, 4. BRUNELLE, ROLANDE M. Le Cercle Francais 2, 3, 43 Choralaires I3 Plimpton's 4. BUCKLEY, JUDITH A. State of Connecticut Scholarg National Honor Society 2, 3, 43 Latin Honor Society l, 23 French Honor Society I, 2, 33 Student Council Representative l, 2, 43 Class Vice-president 33 Le Cercle Francais I, 2, 33 Folk Group 1, 23 Drama-Business 3, 43 Monitor 43 The Canticle, Editorial Staffg Friendlyk 3, 4. BURKE, CATHY M. Spanish Honor Society 23 Youth Red Cross l, 23 Monitor 43 Decorating Committee 3, 43 St. Francis Hospital 43 Caldor's 3. BYSTROWSKI, MARY V. Spanish Club 2, 33 The Portal-Typist 43 Girls' Track Manager 2. CAFAZZO, MARY A. State of Connecticut Scholarg National Honor Society 2, 3, 43 Latin Honor Society 1, 23 French Honor Society 33 Latin Club 1, 23 Le Cercle Francais l, 2, 33 The Portal reporter 2, 3, 43 Cosmos 2, 33 The Canticle 43 Drama-Stage Manager 2, 3, 43 Cheerleader 43 GAC 43 Medi -Mart 4. CALBI, MICHELE T, French Honor Society 23 Student Council Representative 33 Monitor 43 Cheerleader I, 3, 4 Caltematey GAC I, 23 Tennis I3 Library Aide lg Southbury 3, 43 Hartford Hospital volunteer I, 23 Drama I3 I.O.H. 3, 43 Grantir 33 Lion Mills, Inc. 4. CAMILLERI, SCOTT J. I.O.H. 3, 45 Intramural Basketball-Hockey l, 2. 3, 43 Football I, 2, 3, 43 Baseball I, 2, 3, 43 Letterman 2, 3. 43 Swing Choir 43 Sage-Allen Co. CARPENTER DONNA L. CYO 1, 23 Granfs 3, 4. CARRIEILKONALD StucIe.r1t'Co'tincil,'Representative 2, 33 Monitor 43 Le Cercle Francais 231.333 Vtlglflllitrarnural Basketball-Hockey 2, 33 Volunteer Service 2, 3. CASASANTA, JOSEPH I Le Cercle Francais I, 23 Football 1, 23 Basketball I3 Intramural Hockey l, Karate 2, 3, 43 Shop-Rite 3, 4. CERALDL MARGARET Attendance l, Monitor 3. CERRA, CYNTHIA S. CYO I, 2, 33 City of Harjord 4. CHIARIZIA, VICTOR CYO I, 23 Football lg Intramural Hockey 2. CHILONE, LUKE A. Latin Club I, 23 I.O.H. 3, 43 Intramural Basketball-Hockey 2, 3, 43 Football 4. CIERNIEWSKI, JOSEPH W. APSL Latin Honor Society t, 23 Le Cercle Francais 1, 2, 33 AV- CCTV I, 2, 3, 4. COLEMAN, MICHAEL Intramural Hockey I, 2, 3, 43 Intramural Basketball 1, 2. 43 Football I, 3, 4. CONASHEVICK, DANIEL M. Intramural Hockey I, 2, 3, 43 Football I. CONCATELLI, MARK P. CYO 1, 2, 33 -St. Lawrence O'Toole Folk Group 2, 33 G. Fox QQ Co. COOK, STEPHEN I.O.H. 3,l43'Intramural Hockey I, 2, 3, 43 Ioe Hockey I, 2, 3, 43 Football l3,,Baseball 2. CORREA, NANCY M. Estelle Jones School of Ballet l, 2, 3, 43 Harford Public Library 3, 4. CORRIGAN, MARY ANN T. The Portal I3 Drama 3, 43 Volunteer Service l, 2, 33 Inventory group 2, 3. 3 . CORTESA, PATRICIA Monitor 43 Decorating Committee 43 Swim Team I3 Pizza Plus 33 St. Francis Hospital 4. COSTELLO, STEPHEN T. ' I.O.H. 3, 43 Football lg Baseball 33 Hockey 2, 3, 43 Hockey Intramurals 2, 3, 4g Youth Hockey Instructor 3, 4: Hartford Hospital 3, 4. J View M V, L H W I M A KKVVV In nw L, '--- ' - '-- f'f , ,...,, j 4 i .,,.. ,. ,, Q UL ,, Q,,,L1,,,A ,,Z,.1,,w53,gg,135555,g,5ggggA5w5ggELL:,wwLsmisifaizflss,-eww W, ,FQ ,,,, 2 .,LL.L,,V , 1 ,,,,,i:V ,,,,,,., A, ,,., v ' 1, L ,,x,,,g,,,,,LLLLL,mWV.,,,LL,,, .z,VLL,, 6 T N 1 1,,. ,,,L,,, ,.,,, ,,,,LM,L,,,,,.,, .s 5, -,ff L,,L1,,,,LV,,VL.V,,, Lx, Lfff Kim, Q :,QSQSEQREA,E,1:E2Eif5!E2 SELL!S5tfl1SEf5'ifi1:2IfiELIFEE,,1fiffifQffW'52?ff5ii Q W: ,,,,, ,, zt,, :..., izg, ,lapsW,,,4LQr3mg35ygfgV,!5g152,fi,'LffLaiffi2i:!,,H.1Q2V1:nee'mzfwifiiii?imE22WEf5i?7Z5,?Q?'5E2if3fiE5 Zillfil W, .Wm ,,.L,VV,,B,,M,LL,,,,,g,,5,-wML,5,,, L,,,LL,,,LW,LLLMV, LQVVVLLVV -QVVVV L-V,-VVVL-VVVLL-,W ,mf ,,W,,,, ,v -,L, LL,,,,L ,,mL, , , , L,,L,, ,L Q ,.,. 4 ,,,, ,,,. x,,,11 f ,,, ,,11-.,,1- .:Q-,',.,11:-,,': .,,Q-,,, ,,,',-- V ':,,,, L. ,,,.. ,.., ,,,.. ,,.. ,,,. , ,L ,,.. VV V V V V ,mf ,mfn,,VL,w-zfmewa-af1:Vw 6 ,B 9 ,,,, vfwfx-,mf X? f wf ,L we ,::nzwfQ5y,a,15Q,V'!S7im1f5i2:ifYb'f 111 Nfgwmw, ,,,.... ,,,...., v ',llfif.:T'11,,i,,'fl 1, -'WL-, ::1':wf:fi-fi? 2:',,HL2,537 ,i,!5f,V.A,i'f7 JV L V , V l , lf L ki V VV 4? fffffamufal V f V L f 5 f f LM ,f,7..,,5 .,,,,, ' 5, A if MW ML. Hafffofd Cvifs H0CkCY 1 ,v Vxf,.ff5,ww 5,1 , , ff: :ii fiVf?i2fffl7 I - K ' ,L J.z,,gLLLL,,,,,,LL,, L,,LL LL lewd! Rmi ff 4-V V V 444,y.g!n3,3,ug,,mmggmfv ,W :,,f:wf,,,,,55ft1gg?jf:E:'3:' f'25'ff:22i552if1'tV S'iYEt!iE!L2E, l22EE,L-2ZZn'12L,,iL ffliiffff ffif:5-9'fff57ff'1WW15 -f:7 f 5' fig: k ,w,L ,, iL5,M,g,,LLLLLL,5L,,LLWL,,,,53V,,- VVV,-VLL,VL,,,,V,LL,V,V, .,,. L,-,,,LLf,,V,,,LLL ,VV-v,,Lm-:,.LeVVVskVV-in-V'fVff--1--ff:-M ' -' - - V f 7 V,,k L,vV3,,,,,V5 . L ,L L, , L 95 fag, gferg? W f A Q +255-I' ' - ' ,mill Q fi? Va V, V ,,,,LLV 25 i Gfarz,zV's, 4.L L'-- Ili, 1 L V Lf Pfihffffg 4V , V 2V , 3V'4i i LmiH Hwd 34' 11 ,Track L VL, ,,, V,,,,LL VV Q 7 V Q,5f?'91f1ff Club 29 If Caffe F BaSk9'ba11'H0CkeY 1' L , V l ,LL,,,L VVVV Soffiefv 3,? 7PfCSidV?i1f41 QQ Seflfof? SQWY -Daw :2V 41 Haliowm Paffv lmfamufal V,, VOHBYMH L 24 VV ,,,, ,f5i2Z if i g,i s 1.BSQQQSQ,,i5l55fM4?,,ff255i?f112, Ln, Li, V ,,mn,,,,,,V LL,,VLLLVV V ,Lu,, ,, ,, L ,, ,, .,.. , ,,.,. , ,LL V,,V-LVV V --,f L, ,,,.,,,,,., ,,,,,L-,VVVLVV -V VV .V L VVV, -,VV- .VVV LL, A , , VVL ,V,,V,,VVL f-,ff , -,,. VL, ,L ,Vs,WV.LL,V,LLL-V,,,-.L-gps, H x, s ,,,.,,,, VLLQ, MARIE ANN JV ' iJ1 ' F l BuSMS i H0n0f lC0uf1f1v f1s BaSwba11 lv 2V SV u ' 7 A iffheefleadef fi 1, 2V 31 V i i L X ll MARY-AL1ce . L wfl If5fTfi,V7,f i'W Honor Society 23' 33 4g p V V .L 'Qf ' ll ' ' li lll' ' ' V ff '5 L 2' 3, 4 L0'H7 4' ,4Awf5'252IJ5E,!1'iflill:EIJESE'532555fE!l1!ii,?ii?E'r sfm,m,,,, L L ,V,,,,LLV,, LLL1,LLLLz,Lw,LV,,NfLVV V, ---- L, li ,, ,,,. ,, L , f 2f 4? 44 2,2 l n VVV V L f ',:h V fi - 5 V 1120 4 :Cf'f 3V 4- V V -f-2 :if -1f- Wfllkf'fwffilllif-S-11 V V ' l ,, i L ll l . 5 ,,X ., lQ l . l, , L f ,131 - - . WI' ', '5-h','. I ',, , ', b l.11, r 1:V Am.'k 'm h k 2 , . ,, Cercle Francais I, 25 Club 3, 43 I.O.H, 43 35 GAC l, 3, 4g Cheerleadpr 1, 3, 4. VDENISE BV V Qiatzonal Honor Society, 2, 3g4gVVzjfrench Honor Society Repxesentatiiggefo Library 4g The f--- ' L N - ,, L .V LL ,,,, LL ,,,, ,V 53,21 . 3 ,, VV 4, LV 1 ,LV, ' L , L V -' ,- VV V VV 1 ' V V L H V , V, f -- z ,mh,. - , Q, Ai97,,,,Ay was25523,,q22225zgg:gig25gf35z,'V1:gfiggggsemYgfgfme,2if:2ffi5?Ebg-Wi',,f21G':,wmG'm22fizfff ff'fls?Ms2Zi1W 22fwLss2f12V5522f 595ffi?f55?5'51Y?ff??5ifY? 1E:'fi-29 V K ' ' V 1'-' ' ' ' ., , , , ,, f VV1v'Vi'- ,,,- We, ' V ' 1 ,313 ' 2, 'I Fl 'V K V z, 'V 'S 'CVT 'V 'iflislhfll,-Vive, - - , f' 'M ixggiiHiig1,,iL2,QD0Wf-3, ' 'f 'L ' V . V ' ' , K V. -LV , .,. .. ,L .2555 ,L I KLL ,Q ,, .L KL , , L, ,, ,,,,LL, HO1wtLSQc1ety3- l4i YQUi11 Red Cross ' V f KVVV ,R Lf In , ,,V V5,W51v Vw,Q,VLm,,m,,,,,g,VLgg,L,,,VW.-,l s ,L,,,,,,,miEE,WgH i,eV,,f--f,LVW,xgmyf-LW-L2:1QLL:Vv, .- g ,gp 'H ' 7 I ' '1 'f f k A, + l 5 VVVVVVV f ' H 6 W 'b Z , L X iruwf 4g Ail1cdLHgq1th Le cefcze sem, 1naaraurai2 2Bad1ninfon-volleyball 3 DOYON, DIANA LEE Math League 3, 43 Corpus Christi Folk Group 2, 3, 43 Folk Group 2, 3, 43 Swing Choir 43 Choralaires 2, 33 CCD Instructor 2, 3, 43 Newington Children's Hospital 2, 3, 43 Cheerleader' I3 GAC I3 Medi-Mart 4. DROLET, MARY T. Senior Election Committee 43 Attendance Monitor 33 Monitor 43 Drama 43 Leader Corps 43 The Canricleg Basketball-Baseball 43 GAC 2, 3. 43 Intramural Volleyball 2, 3, 43 Mew-Mar! 4. DUCLOS, GERARD M. Student Council Representative I, 2, 3, 43 Drama 3, 43 Swing Choir l, 2, 3, 4g Honors Chorus 2. 3, 43 Greater Hanford Youth Chorale 2, 3. 43 Intramural Hockey 2, 3, 43 Football I, 2. DUMAS, FRANCIS N. Le Cercle Francais I, 2, 3. EDWARDS, BRIAN F. Latin Club I3 Spanish Club l, 2, 31 The Portal - reporter 3, 4: Intramural Basketball-Hockey I, 2. 3, 43 Cross Country Tri-captain 43 Indoor Track 3, 43 Football lg Track and Field 3, 43 Letterman 3, 4: Golf 23 GHO Caddy 2, 3, 43 Wetherslield CC Caddy l, 2, 3, 4. ELLER, SUZANNE M. Latin Honor Society l, 23 Latin Club l, 23 Le Cerele Francais l, 23 Cheerleader I3 Intramurals I, 23 GAC I3 Brewsters 4. FAENZA, THOMAS J. Latin Club 23 Football 33 Track 2, 33 Intramurals: Basketball- Hockey 2, 3, 4: Newspaper Drive Manager 4. FAIENZA, THOMAS Le Cercle Francais 3. FEARON, ELIZABETH E. St. Lawrence O'Toole Folk Group and CYO3 Softball l, 2, 3, 43 Basketball 2, 3, 43 Badminton I, 2, 3, 43 Volleyball I, 2, 3, 43 GAC l, 2, 3, 43 MacD0nald1v. FEARON, NORA T. Youth Red Cross I, 23 Folk Group l, 2, 3, 43 Oakhill Volunteer 33 Handicapped Olympics 23 GAC 33 MacDonald's 3, 4. FENTON, JOHN P. Ski Club l, 23 Football li Varsity Manager 23 Intramural Hockey- Basketball I, 2. FISHETTI. SUZANNE M. National Honor Society 2, 3, 43 Spanish Honor Society 2, 3, 43 Student Council Representative 43 Attendance Monitor 33 Monitor 43 I.O.H. 3, 4: GAC 2, 3, 43 Leader Corps 3, 4g Intramural Tennis I3 Intramural Badminton-Volleyball 43 The Canticleg Volunteer Service I, 2, 3, 4: Dancing I, 2, 3, 43 Harlford National Bank 3, 4. FITZGIBBON, MARY C. National Honor Society 2, 3, 43 Latin Honor Society I, 23 Spanish Honor Society 23 CCD Instructor 2, 3, 43 CYO Cheerleader Coach 33 Cheerleader 2, 3, 43 Swing Choir 43 Honors Choir 33 Greater Hartford Youth Chorale 43 Corpus Christi Folk Choir I, 2, 3, 43 Folk Group 2, 3. FLAHERTY, WENDY S. Student' Council Representative lg Cheerleader I3 CYO Cheerleader I, 23 Softball 23 Swimming-Diving 2, 33 Mechanics Savings Bank 2, 3, 4. FLANIGAN, MICHAEL R. Student Council Representative lg Spanish Club I, 2, 33 Hughes Bros. Garage 2, 3, 4. FONTANA, SALVATORE Football I3 Gear Landingg Racing Cars3 Karateg A. J: P. FORTIN, DONALD M. CYO l, 2, 3, 43 Southbury 3. 43 CYO Basketball: Warner dt Bailey. FRAZIER, BARBARA A. Student Council Representative I, 3g I.O.H. 3. 43 Volunteer Service 2, 3, 43 Swim Team I, 2, 33 Cheerleader I3 CYO Cheerleader I, 23 Swing Choir 4g Cretellak Bakery 2, 3, 4. FRENCH, PATRICIA J. Class Treasurer 33 Ring Day Committeeg Volunteer Service 2, 33 Hanford Regional Center 23 Forster Heights Pharmacy 3, 4. I GAROFOLO, PAULA M. Attendance Monitor 33 Cheerleader I3 GAC I. GAUDET, NORMAN J. Le'Cercle Francais 2, 33 Junior Achievement 43 Boys' Club 23 Folk Group 33 Football 2g Intramural Hockey-Basketball 3, 43 Hartford Lions Hockey I, 2, 3, 43 Stop dt Shop 3. GENDRON, ROBERT N. AV-CCTV I, 2, 3, 43 CYO3 I.O.H. 4g Gillman Club3 The Canticlej Football I, 23 Track 3, 43 Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4. GIONFRIDO, ANETTE CYO l, 23 Charter Oak Bank. GORRITFI, MARCUS I. Football I, 2, 3, 43 Track 43 Intramural Hockey and Basketball l, 2, 3, 4. GRADY, PATRICIA Attendance Monitor 2, 33 CYO Cheerleader3 Choralaires. GRANATO, KAREN M. Latin Club 13 Spanish Club I, 2, 33 Volunteer Service 23 YWCA 4: Intramurals 2g Choralaires 3. E, fu'asLL,4LL zeflsefff L4 ,,., LLLLLLLL --IV --v'v' L L' Wi L. 7M ', 'VL 'MW 1' 324 ',' ,, L L ,, -L L' 'L H 1 LL P 1 L. 1 3 1 L L LLLL , , L L L 44 4 v F '4 1 :1 i ' ' ff-- - LL ' ' W'W ii' L L EW L nn nw WLLLLLLLL L ' :L LLLLLLL L LL L ,i,,111-i 11- - ii L K ggi LL --K I 'Vf' , I L L ',,, L L L -L, gLL ,,,, ,,,,,,,, LLL ,,,, ,,,, LL L L N ,L V I L, L,,k LL VVVV QLLLL,LLLL,g,gy 'irr 1 ,,,. ,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, LL I'- ' K L L LL: .,I. ,,,, f' if' 'k'k 'b ' 5 ig' ,-W' ,,: 'fkr 'Kf f ff:f,, ':,,- ,,,,f L.: 1 ,,',ff ,,- ,f., ffrlr L L -,',' L- ---, .,,, ' L. W ' 'A L ,i',1- '1'- i ' L' -L L' - L20 L - '4f L - ' H ,,,, L ,,.. i,' '--i' I ' LL ' I -'1',, L1 LL ',-L -, i LLL ,:, LL 9 LLL LLL AL L5 ,,, ,,, I LL iiff ,,,', 1 LL L V'l'1 ' 'Lf' 1'i ,,, ,,,, L LIT'xf:z L LLL L ':'fg I '-':' izk ' ,' ' 1' ' h K ' kk ' Wk'k' W'k W ' U k ' K ': 'L ,mmm,,L, ,L A,,, ,,,L,,, .,.,, L ,,,,: ,,: L L ,,,.:i,,,,,,, L ,,:. .... ,,1,..,,.i,,,.L.1,, L ,,,L.J,,1.- ,-1l11,1: Lfizz L L,.g,: L L L ,1,,1i.,, LL L..,,, ..,, 1W, L.- ylgz lgz, L11,,: L L LLLLLLL, L,,,LLL,,LLL LLLL ,L,,,L,,.,L,, L ,,,, L L ,,LL ,,LL,LL L ,L,LLLL, L L L LL. LL,LLL ,,,, LLL-L.,,LL ,,,LL L L L ,,,,,., L L L S L .LLLL.L,, L LLLI ,,1L,,-.-,,LL L ,LLWILL L L ,:- LLL LL LLLL Le L12-Lffsizfszzz LLLLsLLL:: :rr Q -::fL:-: -'- LLL sLL:LLL:LLLLLfL f,:: ::: :-- L L ws'LeiLW22Lffm5Xfs22i2wL42we : wff,:wf, LLL ria J 121 ff' .1'L-' me zfsfvfwzfzszalfL:ezssfL!fLL1 ffLL:::LsaLL s :Lf:LLL1ffLLLLf:1 LLL ,L LLLLLLLLLVLLLLL LL Lg LL ,f:LL LL'LbL LLQLLL fff LLLLLLQLLLLLL L--: fif, if YW VLVL L .:--- WLL: J,f 2 LLLLLLL LL LL L ,W :Q L A .wg L f', M3 '55fQij'f5Ei,5g:ig'5 gL5wf1fsLu L12 552-fifagig y, 1 :IL ggLg :,L5L:ggL4q,Lgg:L3,J,4L1cLL5, 3-LLLLQL LLVLLLL VKLL L LL- LL fL 3tfYjg2'ggg25fsii,fgflszgfkgg'Mfifeailffii V ' ii2?sf5f5LL'L2Qi2iLffffif?f' iLL 'fLL:LfLLf 'LLLLLQ LLLLLLL EZ: Lf:LL L LI LL LLL -f'--' LLLLLL :LLf f7WfffWfil2L i LL??? LLLLi:' Liffilfff' l J lll'l'L ' fLLL L LLLLL LLLL LLLLL1- Y 'fLL il' ' L Vie L LL ' LL 'if L. . -I VL VVVL ' kkhkhkk ' K' 'Q L L LL, 1 LLL, L ' T ii L L 'L 3 QLPLLLL '4L:'LL SL L X'AL LLLLLLLLL - ' L f-L- A L L 'LLL L LLLL LL LLLL LLL L ' L' L-LL LL' LL LLLA-i' A'L L 4' L l L LLLLL LLLLL LLL .LLLLL VL 'LLLLL L QQLLL-Lf, L L 9 LL dy9FL9 ,L , V ,L OHQISLLLLLLLLLLL . , 'L '-L' 'L-- L Q L, A JWLLM. WEL, ,L v VLL,,,MLL,,L LLL, LLLLLL4LL,,LLLLLgfLLL ,LL,,s,L,g,LmL,L5LL L, .'-L L: zLLLfL LLL LLL L -- LL L-'L Lf L -L LL L L , L:'L fra L -LL ffv LL: h L LLLL, L L, LLLLL L K ,Lf1- ' - L LL Q i' L LL t' -Lf K '-Hgh LL ' LLLLLLL LLLL LL LLLL LLLL LLLL-LL -L a I LLL LELTLL? A I LLL' ---L L LL Saemoe 3, 4g Skl Club 4g 1.0.1-I. 4g L .yy'LH-L:LLeLLzL:s2,figgQ51L LL Pi' 'L-L 1' fiT'?' LL L L. L L L r 'LLL LLLLL LL L LLLL L -L L LL'LL LLLL L L L L' ' ' 'LL LL L 5: L L L L gg 4 LLLLLLLL LL LLLI L L LLLL LLL L L-LL LL L L ' ' ' L L LL Hmm SOCMY 2, 'L-'LL ' L ' L LL C '1 LLLL LL LLLLLLLLL LLLL L t ouncl Representamgf,-aL LLaLtmLHonorL 'LL' L 'LL' L- L L' Country 2 Fzrsl LLLL LLL ' -LLL LLLL ' f ,,Vr I , L L LVLLL ,L,L LV L L izi L A L f L L L L L'LL LL'L ' L'1 LLLLL L' 3 4' Football 1 2- 'Track l 2 37 li,j2gL:'DgQq315g1i1zjnLgLLQgki lggee -'LL'- ,L,L 'L'- I L'L' LA'i , , , , LVL I ,V L L L L ' 55 LLL L 'E ,Lil K, Lfg,jgg L,'L L LLLL LLL-gLLL 1 'LL' ff'QfL -'L' -'LL' 3 jg - ' f' LLL'L 1 LL L LL L 'LL' L 1, 1, LLLLLLL LLL LLL LLIL r A S' LLh LLLL LLL L 'LLL LLLLL- LLL 'L 'L LLfL 'W I fffL ' LLLLL L LLLL 'LL' L LLLL :: 'f ' 41K':' L ' LLWQLLV LLL 'L'--L LLLL L'fL ' ' Fi, L LfI? ?:-WW L Q U 'L LL 4 Y Llbfa LLLL LL LIQSQEQL LL' ' L 3 ' L L ' L L 'L QZLQELQLL L LLLL ,L LwwLLLfLfLLffLnLLf1'5ZL:LLLLLLLLLLLLQQQLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLM1LLLLLL,,5LW9fL5LLALLLLMVLL LLLLLL ,LL LMLLLLLLLLLMLILLL .L::LLL.,I Lmiiww L.,,LLLL,, LLLLLL,WL,WLLLLLLLLLLMQLLLLLLLLLL LLLLLLLLLM,LLWLL-LLLLLLLLLLLLLLQQL sLg,2,fL2L a5L :wL:ZH5f, LL,LM,hgay1gg,, ,, LLL L LLLLLwL::L::LLL2fHeLaffLLLffLLLL5f'1'fLL.LwL-ifMMfLL1ffff9'522f1wfi LLLLLLLLL LLLLL 1 ::?hi ? L LLLLL LLLLLL LL.LLLLLLLLLLLLL L LLLLL LL L LLLLLLLL :LLL.LLL,LL,L, LLLLLLL. LLL, LLLLLL L. LLL-LL'-- W'1K:': ' i iiff: 'fK1'L LLLLLLLLL L LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL LLL LILLL LLLL L LLLLLL LLLLL LLLLLLL LLLL LLHLLLLL LL LLLLLLL LL f ' LLLLLLLL.L ff , ' T WVVV 'Ab' . f ' L if L K ' f LLL H L LLLLL f 44 , L 5 Q L LLLLL L-L f LLLL LLLL ' L ' L .LLLL L K W L LLLLL 5 ' 'f L S L : i:1:fi W L LLL' L s LLLL L L fs fw ?,L.J'j 1 LLL L LL LL .WL LLL L ,EL 1 -L 2 ,L 1 a ,L Q w Lg ua 14 H 'fE 'w H Hf 'Ll 4- L if L E- L 3 wx 5 'fsis 22591 ,L ,L LL , , L L F-L M HW nn lg? Q LL LLL E W HL -fLfL,,LLL.L' 15253653 fm E559 iw LLL! LLMLAL L' L52 LLQ Lf LQLAQLLLWQ :ffl'11tf:gLf'2.1'12LLLgL- L LLL- L L , , .1 LLLLLL QL ' LL LLLL 2 L LLLL L, A ' 4 L w LW VVIL K Lryyy , LLII L LLLL LmLwL,,L,S,,,,mL,,L,L,,,L ,,,mL L E,ML,LLLLLL,Lim,LLLL5,,tgLL,LLggg31ggg:5giaw LLLL aF.,LL LLLsL.LLLLLLLLQLL AfZafZ' QE. LL Weil' LL, L LL,fLfL L LiLLL1gL5LL4Ji'3Ll'lLLliLLLLLLL LLLL LLLPTLLLLLLL LJT'i1LL l'1LiiT l1'51'fQ i LLQLL, ag Q ,Q H L ,Lf Via, , M Q M E M , F B gh 3 E LL ,L 3 QW bmw QL, F, QM L L L ,L ,LLL E LLLL LLLLBLLLW ,QLLM,u,m,L,LL LLL g W R J E L H P ME fm, Y5 3 .wi xg 15 W A , X gp iq ,Em tifgjui Ln A 6 Lgjssv H 2 FM 1 W , f Ha ,L I L VL. LLLL LLLL LLLLLLLL L .LM LLL-LLLL-LLLLLLLLLLLLLL Lfaffmxgg LLLLLL L 5 Q E52 Q K fo f of QQ f , :,217ffiifimstiliiiiifiisii vw ifz K 143 22 ' ,, i-- ,,, MANGIAFICO, DANIEL 11 44 Cm Pfooidoof 2 42 Sfooooo f?f?fio1 1'S2Poffor Vice-pfesfdenf S, 4: Football 2, oooo 2,245 Voloofoof 222 222 2 1 ooooo i oooo ' b 22o o o ooooooo oo 222222 222Nofioo i' Hooofooooioo 2, 3, Hooof Sooiofy Q11 2122? Como F 2 W ii. ,, 2 gi, .L-sf --ffqffawfv F' EVff5?5i?? Fl : -'f:-:'11,- -- kL 'f: ', ,l 2 7 L, m 2 2 2 7 11 G- For 1 : 2 o l TH D4 Imiomufal Hookoy ' 10-H-23, 2 22 22 22 7 K 2 22o2o2 oo ., , 34 o222o ooo W 2 2 22 3,45 G- M2 2o o 'H' Soholof-' Noooool 2, 2 o oo I o Spanish Club 2, 3, 4: N 'i ' ' Skating I, 2, 3, 49 Medi Q2 National 57 2 ' oooo 2' ol Hooof L: 2 F'a C i5f LOB' 2' 4' . ' 222 o Hooof Somew 1 4: o LURATE' . service 1, 2, 3, 41 Monitor 4g Travelers 3: Arties Place 4. 2 E Noiloool 1, 24 MITCHELL DENNISJ o oooo President 3, 4: 44 Chofoo 31 All 22 Chorale 3' 42 of 2 5 44 o lo Smfe of '70 x???f2 r 5211547212 Council? oo Mfmimf Chafffmff Hartford i o 3, oo Yo'4'11 Work 2' 2 21 Voloiifoof Sooooo 2 42 19532 'ffook lf 2? Goodoof Lfbfofy 2, 2 22 o o 2f7 i? 2 f 2 o2 f2ff 2 2l ,fQQ 2 2 ,wo o o MORALES, WILLIAM I.0.H. 3, 4, Ring Day Committee 3, Swing Choir 3, 4, Folk Group 2, 3, All New England Choir 3, Drama 2, 3, 4, CHTC 3, 4, Football I, 3, 4, Track I. 2, 3, 41 Intramural Hockey 2, 3, 4, Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4, Carbone ls. MORTILLARO, JEFFREY J. State of Connecticut Scholar, National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Latin Honor Society I, 2, Spanish Honor Society 2, Student Council Representative I, 2, 3, 4, The Portal I, 2, 3, 4, Football I, 2, 3, 4, Baseball 2, 3, Intramural Baseball-Hockey 2, 3, 4. MOURADIAN, HERMINE Le Cercle Francais 2, 3, Spanish Club 2, Youth Red Cross 2, St. Peter's volunteer, Badminton, National Auto Parts. MURPHY, KATHY J. - Monitor 3, Decorating Committee 2, GAC I, 2, 3: Cheerleader I, 2, 3, 4, Avery Heights 3, Travelers Insurance 4. MURPHY, MAUREEN E. Volunteer Service 2, Choralaires I, 2, Cheerleader 1, 3, 4, Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4, Youth Centre 2, Travelers Insurance 33 Dr. H. P, Kolakowski DDS. 4. MURZIN, DOMINIC D. Junior Achievement 23 St. Luke's Folk Group I, 2, 3, 4, CYO I, 2, The Harybrd Times. MUSGRAVE, GAIL M. CYO, Emls Bake Shop, Kentuclcv Fried Chicken. NEARY, THOMAS W. Latin Club I, 2, F Le Cercle Francais l, 2, 3, Drama 3, 4, I.O.H. 3, 4, Ring Day Committee, Swing Choir 2, 3, Football I, 4, Track 2, Intramural Hockey-Basketball l, 2, 3, 4. NELSON, JOAN M. National Honor Society 2, 3, GAC 3, 4, Intramural Badminton- Volleyball 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 2, 3, 4, Softball 2, 3, 4, Intramural Bowling 3. NESTA, VERONICA National Business Honor Society 3, Student Council Representative I, Attendance Monitor 2, 3, Prom Committee 4, Cheerleader I, 2, 3, 4, Captain 3, GAC I, 2, 3, 4, G, Fox Youth Council, Travelers Insurance. NEWTON, ELIZABETH A. Avery Heights 3, 4. NOLAN, ELOISE A. Intramural Volleyball I, Softball I, Manager, Basketball, Manager I, Baseball Manager I. NOLET, GEORGE I.O.H. 4, Football I, 4, Track I, 2, Intramural Basketball-Hockey I, 3. NORBUT, ELAINE M, Attendance Monitor 3. NUNES, THERESA M. Spanish Honor Society 3. NYBERG, AMANTHA L. I National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Class Vice-president 2, Spanish Club l, 2, QUEEN of HEARTS candidate I - finalist 4, CYO Cheerleader I, Cheerleader I, 2, 3, 4, Medi-Mart 3, Harry Fleischefs Shoe Store 4. O'CONNOR, ROBERT N. Student Council Representative I, 2: Football I, Basketball I, 2. 0'HARE, KATHLEEN A. National Merit Commended Scholar, National Honor Society 2, 3, secretary 4, Latin Honor Society I, 2, Student Council Representative 3, alternate 4, Latin Club I, 2, French Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Le Cercle Francais l, 2, 3, 4, Incarnation Folk Group 2, 3, Peachams 3, 4. PACE, LAWRENCE F. Le Cercle Francais 2: CYO, Football I, 2, 3, Intramural Hockey I, I, 2, 4, Intramural Basketball I, 2, Hartford Stamp Co. 4. PAGLIARELLI, SALVATORE Allied Health Careers Club 4, Flag I, Track 2, Talent Night fSal and the Boysj 4. PIZZOFERRATO, SAN DRA L. Choralaires 2, 3, Travelers Insurance 4. PALOWSKI, KIM G. Le Cercle Francais 2, Decorating Committee 2, CYO Cheerleader I, 2, Choralaires 2, G. Fox di Co. fWest Farmsj 4. PANTANO, MARIA , Spanish Club 2, 3, 4, Spanish Honor Society 3, CYO I, 2, 3. PAPPAS, JAMES N. t 4 Le Cercle Francais 2, I.O.H. 3, 4, Volunteer Serivce 3, 4, Basketball I, Football 4, Track 3, 4, Intramural Hockey-Basketball 2, 3,.4, Letterman 3, 4. 7 PAQUETTE, LYNN ANN National Merit FINALISZ' State of Connecticut Scholan' National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, French Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Latin Honor Society l, 2, Math Honor Society 3, 4, Drama 3, 4, The Portal reporterand editor l, 2, 3, 4, Student Council Representative I, Tutor-retarded children l, Barry Square Bakery 3, 4. V '9 4' ., ff, fi: , ,.,,,, 6 , a,,Mz f ,I ' T 5- 71 2 ' I -5 g, ' - f, K , A , - 4,5:,.:f',gff'zf,fz, fwff,.,-111-2 H 1 1f.wf,,,wffff1:,,,-fi-Wm-,f,, .me..w1:m-szrwzw,eu,sm.semenwzf,s1,,f:sw:,ffizawfa--1xmffefew-1 'k ,+'-ive,--wf-zzrif,nsl,w1.saz,,::sfff'z:-mxwas'fpfm-uesw1.:'zx.1:av,fssssmffifw PARENT, MICHAEL P. l Swff fa' Cfmnffffwf Schafer: Nation?-1 Hoswr l , : Honor S0ciefy L 22 Ffewr HQwrl gsmief9 i f l A 3 i i IS2iii1f C1 i1bla 13 222' Le. Cerffe Fffwfff1fS142, 3: Ma1h Lws1w 1 : Maw l Hefghfs Phdfm11fy 2, 3S RW ,ii f i l E x l 2 A Day 3: PGP Club if f i f lf 2 PArrfrERsoNgi ALAN R. smaw Caunc115Rei3fmfauve ' L 32- 44 F0QIbf111 Li 2Q1 39 ?4: i BaS2ba1P 3, if '?2 :R0CkY PL1S,ViDAVfDK.'i,i Smwf The Pbffff1 L+4Q PhorQgfavhef 2, 3, H0m Drama-sragecrewl1 ,2gAv-CCW1,324 1 2 il 12 i -1 Wfm' W' G- c i i ? iff l k L 2 .1 i l P3 : A ,,AA, Business Staffg 41 POLM A. iS?-i Cl11b 4 2l F0?1fba11 12 Tennis 1 f if 37 li7 lv i? ETi 1 ?f7 1?fP fl 1:1 l PRUCNAL- STEPHAN Df l 2 P T Sk1 C1W f2r44 7?'m'1?S 3, Vilma? 394 ?4 Q1m C1Pb4 g 31,4,f1:x '.,- ,,,i 'h,, 12Z'l'Iiff ,,'g h f'i1 ggf ,:i'j3 'h:, k',, 1 Q 'k 1k'I'IA, ' 3mdem Counsrg1 Rep1feS6f11xm5fC L 2 z Laun Connell 1: Ski A H5329 . .,v'j',',1, ff,,- -1 .-', ,f f,k, ,V ,H , ,f - ,, fP21ifi' 3Q-L. 1A1f9i14W-QC Tv M91??t917l f 3 i - 'ii my Ai L' W7 H V. . ' L, - , . .',' 5 -',, El'',:'f,,'li:-milf' ' l5Wm53 ChG1' 44 ATWW Heigm5h 32 ft3'f ..1 4f1fQE1l 5f5fff 5f'75i2l54 ,,L LQf1i1ig' ,al :L i ff, 1?'f 2: fi L2f1 L: ' , if ,K - L ,K 4 ., ' . 1 zii l 2, 3 255'-3,r:4jrfg . : 345 .35 E ggfggg ffg,G?dhw , M V Vh :, V, V hm V L 1.h 51ii1i0f ?ii?hiCV9f1i???? 35 42 f40i Hf 2, 39 , ' A Finds, ,.V, 1 Baseball iC5!GQ!T1???5Cf iii? l B34fi1iUf0ii?B2SKQfbi1U i iiQ Q ff4 3 Q5f Sbftw- f2 l g i ! ? Q EQ , TERRANCE R. Shop 2, 3, 41, I VL I WLILV 7,L I V, I ,V.L F. 2Qf'32,E4g'Swi11g cho sr 3, 4g Gfeafef Hmfo ,,', Honors Chou' 1, 2, 3g All-Statqm .gqggfqigli 3' 4'i ':,, f1ff5f' f5if7lfg7f lS?4rQ i 0f Cvnnqfffwf HOHOKNWIY 'iliignqr Society I', 2g 3g COILIDCH Constitution 342 T ?iP0'ff11 Tum' 3, lndoclf 'Frfwk 3:5 l1 lmfamurals l SIMAO, DOREEN National Honor Society 2, 3, 4: Attendance Monitor 3, Danaher, Lewis dl Tamoney Law Firm. S NU, ROBERT T. L na business 4, Golf Team I, 2, 3, 4. SKELLEY, CAROLINE T. National Merit Commended Scholar, The Canticle - art, CYO Cheerleader 2, V V V .V ' V SMILGYS, DAVIDIBQV TTTV V -V 7 ,C Ski Club I, 2, 4, Football I, .Intramural Basketball I, 2, Hockey I, 2, 3, 4, H.A.H.A. 2, 3, SCA Hockey 2, 3, Stop az Shop 3, 4. SPINETI, JOEL D. Student Council Representative I, 2, I.O.H. 3, 4, Newington Children's Hospital 2, 3, 4, Greater Hartford Youth Chorale 3, Swing Choir 3, 4, Swing Choir president 4 Drama 3, 4, Football I, 2, 3, 4, Track I, 2, Intramurals I. 2, 3, 4. STABILER, CATHY C. Spanish Club I, 2, CYO I, 23 Choralaires I, 2, Honors Chorus I, 2, 3, Stop ai Shop 2, 3, Lux Bond Green dl Stevens 3, 4. STANLEY, LINDA M. Slate cy' Connecticut Scholar, National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Latin Honor Society I, 2, Student Council Representative I, 2 -secrelagz 4, Advisory Board 3, Latin Club I, 2, 3, Spanish Club I, 2, Swing Choir 4, Greater Hartford Youth Chorale 4, Choralaires I, 2, 3, 4, Folk Group I, 2, Track 1, 2, Gymnastics 2, Volunteer Service 2, 3. STEVENS, SEBASIIAYXI JL' ' Intramurals 3, 4. V STON EBURNER, KATHLEEN Newing Children's Hospital, CYO Corpus Christi I. SULLIVAN, THOMAS A. Football I, Basketball Intramurals I, 2, 3, Hockey Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4, Track 3, 4, I.O.H. 3, 4, Ridge Club 4. SULLIVAN, THOMAS E. Student Parish Organization 2, Usher 3, 4, Golf Team 2, 3, 4, Hockey-Basketball Intramurals 2, 3, 4. SWEENEY, BERNADETTE A. Choralaires I, 2, 3, 4, Swing Choir 4, Folk Group I, 2, 3, 4, St. Lawrence Folk Group I, 2, 3, 4, Volunteer Service 2, 3, Ski Club I, 2, 4, Spada dt Wnkles secretary 4. SWEENEY, CHRISTOPHER J., A y Football, Weight'liftingg.:SICii'C1Hbf. V Q TABARA, KAREN A. Le Cercle Francais 2, I.O.H. 3, 4, The Canticle 4, Oak Hill Volunteer 2, Intramurals Volleyball-Badminton I, 2, Avery Heights 3, Laurel Photographers 4. TAKSAR, ROBERT J. National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Spanish Club I, 2, Football 2, 3. TALARSKI, CYNTHIA M. Latin Clubl, Spanish Club Secretary 2, Oak Hill Volunteer 3, Basketball 1, V2,.3, 4, Softball 2, 3, 4, Intramurals: Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4, BadrnitttonV2, 3, 4, Bowling 3, Ski Club 4, Tennis 4, Leader Corps 23,45 Talarskiiv Funeral Home 3, 4. TARDIF, 'GENE G. Football I, Parish CYO 3. TATA, ELAINE R. Spanish Honor Society 2, 3: Chess Club 3: Photography Club 4, Ski Club 4, Spanish Club 2, 3, 4, St. Luke CYO, Bowling I, 2, 3, Badminton I, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 2, 3, 4, Basketball Intramurals I, 2, 3, 4, Volleyball I, 2, 3, 4, Softball I, 2, 3, 4, GAC l, 2, 3, 4, Leader Corps 4, Volunteer Service 3, 4. TATE, DARLENE V. Choralaires 2. THRALL, MARCIA S. National Honor Society l, 2, 3, 4, Spanish Honor Society 3, 4, Business Honor Society 3, Algebra Award I, The Portal - typist 3, 4, Spanish Club 2, 3, 4, Tennis 3, 4, Bowling I, 4, Volleyball 4, GAC I, 3, 4, Ski Club 4, YWCA 2, Choralaires 2, Hartford Hospital Volunteer 4. TORMEY, .JAMES M. Football I, 3, Basketball l, 2, Hockey Intramurals 2, 3, 4, Baseball Captain 2, Basketball Intramurals 3, 4. VALENTE, DENISE S. Spanish Club I, 2, Choralaires I, 2, I.O.H. 3, 4, Cheerleader l, 2, G, Fox dt Co., Welhersfield Manor Aide. VALENTINO, DAVID ' La Salette 3 years, National Honor Society 3, French Club 3, Class President 2, Ski Club I, 2, Basketball 2, 3, Baseball 2, 3, Cross Country I, 2, 3, Drama I, Yearbook 3, Hargbrd Hospital' Civic Center 4. I VALLERA, BARBARA R. National Honor Society 2, 3, 4, Latin Honor Society 1, 2, French Honor Society l, 2, Latin Council 2, Latin Club I, 2, Student Council Representative 3, 4, Advisory Board I, 2, The Canticle, The Portal Fgreporter 2, 3, 4, Drama 2, 3, 4, Folk Group I, Swing Choir .41 CCD iV', IhstrtictorV4,i Volunteer Service I, 2, 4, Forster Heights Phafvaa14t l 4 1 -.3 .ES AQ ii'59f'3x?:'s:'f1yf 4'f ,,Q+E11,: -fav, 1 2 f,-5 , ' L 1 -I v I.. '-vjf,5,jh1',fffVfe1 5' 3 f M' iszizfj . 1153?i1':,-sixizqgffgfzwFig, ' . , 1 'mp-QCUXX ..A . QQHIN nkPiCA21giiQfg3,f CRLQQS f . . i pigs' iiHiJlZl1,?'2h :if1..,.'1fL', Pk,, . ew, ,,,, 6:5 Bgufg-aft ,-,, ig W.ffdE Eegsifyiigri f gfif sAMM.y,gn ufi 4aLL gii,i3're A'5,,M,,, ygwfffy w qfc rx S QIW digmfjgzjifi fwgwigggkgghuggf l fplaursmj Faiggr-MH gamma? . ' ' ,. 11 51-I wzwffkf-'f-Dfw.. +W fF 'm LL', Wepkj 1 f f -, . If aid W5-1,3,.nj,gfe 'WJLJW asklsk ..,k ', k fg1fi'e,Qf'1 ' , A ' ewanmffvffggimgysf Mmm, .hbh f4t?jyfg,! v,igk4?H uboiga dwp ghw 1 f Hvmqm w,ffm fgi355,,gi,Qrgjf t2i5,5.'+uAg5gn . 'I 3'fLK,4'QL-iz' .,,i,fj,w? dzivxzjfmzlqgg? ' 1 , . +A,,:ff4p, 1,hZQ12' mW ', ' A l b2?gQf,w i W,M9V?m 'L,, 1 Msff fff g Jzgfqhjfgi , Wh gqfwlsiq ffm ,fr-wg ,fg:.w, ,,ff rr . fm, ff-fp W ,mga wg f.--Hsu! f:,.,Y,1,'-,gf-if ..ff Qbnmjmigya 1 f agygqlafhf-53 i5?g,,,w,,kqf!,,ffHf,An5,, 'ff--z f, u - wma- .--,- 1,,f,u4g2',f ,f.,55gz,1i1.'.:J g 1-fbfwggnipfff,-ig ug,.i1.w5ga5 pg:zy5g,ff'z-5:vg2zgQgnffffgffaegfw: r..-15',,,,f,.43',g'1vai gm, -, , z :a.,4-512216.55 A f ' mfw5waQ ,,g,fh1 ,wif fiyfjgigffigpf , , 1 ,i,14u,gALf,,2,,1 ,..,:,,,, f .,., ,..,. i 3H,fuf,,,f is-2f,,,f4,.,,--,gm ,W f E. :3,q,,gm5gZ5,,,,55 ,,,,f,5E?gW, E,m.,x,,,, g',.,5,1j,::,,p ,X big-v+,M!w'g,'L?w,E51,f9fge,:d, gg gg,,,,w-eiifff .,, :fQ.:j,4,,m:f,,f55.fL:,Qv1 E' dj, ,H:f A,j,me4i' f3,,q1 ! fvg5gw:,rg,,,5W25Z3W 5 H --K-' 351-etggy-'Mf',,, l h,g,,zf,,v55-ws-fm,.,,1,fW fa,55i,,!+ff5f,2:h LL,.' Agmwsqf5fW5,,.a,5 n ,gif ffHf:M3:1sffff 1 q gf f,3 ,F ii? G s -A-f2fffff fz,, yf LJw?gMf+Q7Hffj45,4j, .- e'g?5fg, f h1 rp'g ,g1-away , m ,2ijf-HW-g g wglfi 'gegrwjcjfwkgpfiy1+FyiA,:,,wf,1aif' I - Y b ,f11jg,w-11? V M, ..., , ,m.h ,,, h, , A ,m..,,. . , , , .,m . . . ,, ,, , ,,: ,,. ,. M, . . , ,, , ,,, ,, ,,., ,,.A mh AA ,,, , ,,, , , .m,., J, ,Z A , L4,.gL41f,.,fd,nlQaQ'Q,f5.+5m m,,543Eg, , ',wHM W ' . ,f4,,r,Qj'i,' Lf2f, 43ffZ !w 2 fifEffgJi52if54g3g!! 5? Ek? , ,, gig Awfggja 'fyjfxzgljygi -fif,1f, ewfmggw ,P ,tx 5,,,Q J,,zq., m -QW? 1z,1,rf1QggA 9,4 .gfezkyesfsfg ,i?g4:g5f,g 1 F 1 I fi'-7-w,:,,q,f,,,:f. 2. 5 vig' fwfg mfkj iawgyf, fgfizg f 54,1114 l gfmqgkm f 3 ngfqx-f5ff aQ2g2fW,,iZ,5f if fQrf,L-4fy.,r,,f2iy, 1gff W-fe4U,.+E,,,,j1f.,,,,Qf- ff3,fm,'f g:Lff,,4aa 4 - f2mgH1'zF-Jgzfgg , fimmffqyyiw b V w S?,,ffggVw,e1fwf dgffwgfgrjw ,qimsgzv fgiqz aijgm JW? m,Eg:15,i,LKE2f-,ada-.,,,,zQ kmg:1?i1:1'fw1ff,5' Gifwzgwgggvfydge L Hqjgfhw n Wk,,Y13,.3f-f,.fQw5 V Mhgir-mai, -A - ya'4w,fg,!f1 ,wfzigisJayggfdemfmmvrff- gi,igi ':'fcfi,a.,,,x,,..g ' fgwfmmffkfagia f a,,,:+fE,,.Mfj'ENf+2ff-fhmk if-Qyviffgwwxheqagimyr j,g,g?4,f,Ji,g,5g,3,jEZf,w,3w 1 'J A-1g,,g4q 5 325 413-3-f vfvfwv 5?'f'm,q,,..,fff'f,,w? 3 f ffmd Y Mes,,,i,,,,,.M,l,,,,+Lq,M,b,5f.,sf 1 -Ww.5 ww.,ffiQQ1E,.'ffa am, rf ,61i,,..wg-szg5g,g-15,1 ,mf4gNi,Hngdag2jf4- J.1ga,.im:f,M,4.,5,7w,v -- WL. wif gm fm Z 7 p!1,M ,gg A v w liglwi I ,QffvaggggfhffagfywyWT,a'm.w,,, ffm lf ,WM , J gf , .,--, W,,,,f...,flgmW,-Jig,A- W , MwfJ,if,fNfm.i' .'v.jgi:? , , 'f,. ,aw , ' 1m,m35fAw-nil, 2,251 ,Q,,,,A,,y,,p,p.' ., ',.,,,1i 1 ,5 . ff ggygif gffizigig 2 N,i,?x3,f,uUi iiggtwfgmaggzgiffngag ff,5,g2fq5,Hg,m34,j,,i,r,9,, 12,fQii,,1,u1, ,g1g,5 f 5. fwgiafqguggsggzf Fgfgwjglzfwyqgg gif Zvi-f-g,?5, H i - ,,m, Q Vigdpgmwgyiaf-J M wwf 1 mggkgfgfggijgg A3a,?,fJ,:5+,fj,w3fYgfg,g5!,q,5fVr,,f2 A ,5g2fgfQZ,f5mW A ff A .1 ,, ,. fg,..gjS-RffL4fwg3,:m,4 tag, 'glfikk 'g,5gl,,:if4.,lggg2fff5f,,f-A - 2g4g3,f1g5 f- H f gf ,ff'..ag,f,Vw.g,ifMifw,,1gy,,J56gHg,wf+iL-425. 'gyg...:!igmgfg+ bvyy . Q, Q-eff. mg wffggg ,gggvjj 555,13 -57, jffpwwyfm ffwfgifiw-1 ffgyglaimiifgid-fmgz wh ' gg -Aga -f L,q,gf1s..1,,,-',f,1g-4evf1,,f,m,z,ff,.f,+,,,+,w-Q , M, '-1 fff,ff,y4a4,!,fs1,Hg f?,,Zgg'3 re: 5 , , :- ,+ ,5gng?Qgg,g4?i5 53Lg?2gEah5Q5,4m:5L3Qf5554 lgjfmjgwgggjggiwfggm E L A L , , , ,gf ,,.,., ., .,, ,,,,, .3 ,,.,,,,,, .,,,. y,,Y5,i.1'B,J .g ,, , if ,W W, ,gk ,ag H., 5 kg, 5 .,,f,, ,. A f Qggizixgw f ffgfwdfjfmkgfgffwmgggfqfak i'ai-am i? ,wg3,!gAiq,5:n,5Wf5fhf ,gj fm 3 q,mg,,qffMZgyQEffZ ,ffQ,, 22 1 A 1 ' ' f:'rQf ffgg51wg4Mwy1g2QQw.11 - , ., imffggwl v 4..MQfrZ535.NnQ,1gjgf,gf pg2Q:1Z?M3fffM,wg,QfQfJ2::faiZt ,4 ,, ie yfw wi V g gp, .553 , A ,g ,,2fi?p,Qg-ggkggnffzqb -Aa., ?n,,4jKjFMLgW-542,54 k -rf u ,LnV,f1mg y 4 5,765 Y' 1 4 'amiagyfyglxgm i,,f 5Mm,gagei5g?-ffgg x I , f?Z3,93f,,5yj,:,Q5j h Q,,sw:S,,gf1ww': ,f-,Q ,, hz - 2 V- 5 im g V'z??!gf?z' ?ZiE2E ,Z M Q I A WVWV M 3, fi E 1 5 Z-2, 5 ,- 11 3 63, 4' i fg f d L , 54: gi ' Q gqw f gqzj 1 ffgi fm gi , klgig 5 gi 2 v ,!2,ZKkf5 V5-LA, QA , ,. fgf15 AiwFggg,7 4, gay :m g . fi g Inf Q SOUTH CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL STAFF Rev. Zigford Kriss, PRINCIPAL Sister M. Leona Backus. 0.S.F.. Dean of Activities, English, The Canticle Sister Nancy Ahan, C.S.J. Sister Elaine Betanoourt. C .S.J. Miss Siuilecn Camell Mr. Leslie Childs Mr. Leonard Corto Sister Joan D'Amato Mr. Robert J. DiBattisto Sister Alice Dickinson, R.S.M. Sister M. Marguerite Dovidaitis, OSF Sister Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, RSM. Miss Karen Grossman Mr. Philip House Mr. Robert Kelly Mr. John Kiely Sister Barbara Kowalski, R.S.M, Sister Alta Lash, RSM. Mrs. Francine Lynch Sister Therese Marquis, O.S.F. Mr. Peter Masonis Rev, William McCarthy Sister Jane Frances McGurkin, RSM. Mrs. Dale McKeever Sister Pamela Michaels. RSM. Rev, Arthur Murphy Mr. Patrick Murray Sister Christel Nolan, R,S.M. Sister Ellenrita O'Brim, R.S.M. Sister Ann Rita O'Keefe, C.SJ. Sister Mary O'Neill, R.S.M. Mr. Roy Osbome Sister Blanche Ouellette, R.S.M. Sister Linda Pepe, C.S.J. Mr. Frank Pisch Mrs. Laurie Piseh Sister M. Amadeus Ray, R.S.M. Mr. Joseph Reilly Mrs. Mary Roy Sister M. Louise Shap. O.S.F. Mr. James Shugrue Sister Rosclla Spellacy Mrs, Jane Vivenzio Mr. Ronald Tetreault Sister M. Ursula Venckus, OSF. Sister Jane Marie Wapinski, O.S.F, Mrs, Deborah Williams Mrs. Janet Wilson Mrs. Valerie Wolf GUIDANCE LIBRARIAN INSTRUCTIONAL CENTER CCTV, AUDIO-VISUAL CLERICAL STAFF HEALTH SERVICE and ALLIED HEALTHCLUB PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICE CAFETERIA FOOD SERVICE Mamrewawce S i Mr. Patrick McCue, Dean ot' Boys, Biology, Golf Coach Sister Joan O'Connor, Dean ot' Girls, Latin Sister Maureen Reardon, Dean of Studies, Math Core Curriculum. Reading Consultant. Needlecraft Head of Religion Department Humanities. Folk Group Music, All Choral Groups Science, Physical Education, Football Coach Moderator Class '76, French Spanish. Needlecraft Engineering Drawing. Mechanical Drawing Home Economics. Clothing Biology Head of English Department, Cosmos Spanish, Moderator Class of '76, Creative Stitchery English, Bookstore, JV Basketball-Baseball Coach Humanities, Photography English, The Players, Chess Club Head of Science Department English, Cheerleaders Mathematics Moderator Class '77, Humanities, French, Chapel Business, Business Law Humanities Social Studies Science, Freshman Cheerleaders, Moderator Gass '78 Mathematics, Environmental Studies Humanities English, Live Theater, The Phzyers, Ticket Manager Moderator Class '78, English, Reading Consultant Mathematics Head of Social Studies Department Mathematics, Moderator Class '75, IOH Social Studies, Cross Country-Track Coach Head of Modern Languages Department, Le Cerrle Francais Social Studies Biology English Head of Mathanatim Department, Math League Director of Athletics, Social Studies Art, Sculpturing Head of Business Department Mathematics English Spanish, Spanish Club Social Studies, Mayor's Youth Commission, Orators SPECIAL AREAS Spanish Business, Personal Type, The Portal Physical Education. All Girls' Sports Science, Mathematics Head ot' Latin Department Mr. John Midura, Mrs. Loretta Dyson, Miss Anita Roche Sister Marie Noreen Anglin, R.S.M. Mrs. Lucy Gibson, Mrs. Dora-Lee Ober Mr. Joseph Patriss Mr. Frank Castro. Business Manager Miss Mary 0'ConneIl, General Oliice Secretary Mrs. Connie Perri, General Ofhce Secretary Miss Natalie F leming, Guidance Department Secrpary Mrs. Margaret Ward, Library Assistant Dr, William Stack Mrs. Margaret Berian, R.N. r Mr. David S. Giacomo K - ' NAVIN BROTHERS, Mr. Joseph Navin K , , Yhyilk DeMartino, Mrs. Marian Hanley Anne Guerra, Mrs. Jeanette Lenz BUILDING SERVICE QF AMERICA, Mr. William O'Brien J ',.V ' L Dionne Custodial Superintendent q. Frankovits, Mr. John Belasano, :J David Milner. Mr. John Sykes I S Mr. Victor Pincince Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. . Nicholas J. Battaglio Louis Bilodeau Micheal Borea Robert Bouvier A. Joseph Cafazzo Salvatore J. Camilleri Ernie Carrier Mr. Mark Concatelli Miss Mary T. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. O'Connell Thomas H. Corrigan Francis DePasquale William Devanney Raymond Dyson Mr. and Mrs. Paul Benoit Mrs. Marian Berian Mr. and Mrs. Napolean Brideau Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Brown Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bystrowski Ms. S. Cassell Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Chilone Mr. Leonard J. Corto Mr. and Mrs. Donald DeRocher Mr. and Mrs. William Fischetti Mr. and Mrs. James F. Flaherty Sisters of St. Francis Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Frazier Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Gendron Mrs. Lucy Gibson Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Gray Miss Karen Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. DiFiore Mrs. F. X. Fenton Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Fitzgibbon Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Grady Reverend Zigford Kriss Mr. and Mrs. John P. Kehoe Mr. and Mrs. William P. Maloney Mr. John E. Midura Reverend Arthur J. Murphy Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Edward Paquette Mr. and Mrs. William Partridge OUR P TRO Mr. and Mrs. Francis Hamann Mr. and Mrs. John R. O'Ha1'e Mr. and Mrs. Philip House Sisters of Saint Joseph Mr. and Mrs. G. Kapler Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Kiely, Jr. Mrs. George LaPorte Mrs. Daniel Leary Mr, and Mrs. Emanuel Logiudice Mr. Peter Masonis Mr. and Mrs. W. F. May Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McCue Mr. and Mrs. Neil J. McKeever Sisters of Mercy Mr. and Mrs. Walter Michalik Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mortillaro GUR SPECIAL PATRONS Miss Anita Roche Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Rogala Dr. and Mrs. William D. Ryan Mrs. Sophie Rubas Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs JHW Paul Salemi James F. Shugrue William J. Stack . Joseph Tata Robert A. Vallera . Thomas Vaughan Mr. Karl Yungk Mr. and Mrs. Pat Zangari Miss Marie Motto Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. Musgrave Thomas Neary George R. Nelson Michael Norbut Augustine L. Pace Mrs. Lorraine Pagliarello Mr. and Mrs. Emilio Pizzoferrato Mr. and Mrs. William Quish Mrs. Mary Roy Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. James J. Shugrue Ralph E. Skau Edward J. Sullivan Ronald Tetreault John Vinickas Robert T. Walsh Craig Williams gg-W. 3. 5 BUSINESS P TRONS Cretella's Bakery, Inc. Foster Heights Pharmacy The George David Co. Livecchi's Pastry Shop Pagar Furniture Pandolfe Floor Covering, Inc. Ravioli Kitchen Rialto Drug Store Wynshaw's Bridal and Formal Shop 3- hkw'?... FRIE DS AND BOOSTER Debbie Abbruzese Danny D'Addeo Susan Aleksunes Sally D'Alessandro Joanne Arbuckle Edward Ames Jim Bono Evelyn Bouvier Louise Brideau Cindy Buckland Maura Buckley Liz Cesario Sylvia Champagne Rachel Charette Karen Childs Joe Ciccaglione Sue Ciecaglione Nancy Colavecchio Dori Corraocio Tony Corona Anne Cyr Clarissa Cross Marcia DaCosta Anthony DeLucco Rosanne DeMaio Lisa DiDonato Tammy DiMartino Val Downes Alice Dupont Steve D'Elia David Fogarty Cindy Garvey Kate Garvey Jean Gordon Evelyn Hemandez Diane Hicks Al Kalin Marybeth Keefe Michele Kostek Sue LaChance Philip Ledwith Diane Lessard Carol Lynn Liberatore Cindy Leone Mary Laffin Mary Pat Maffucci Maroelle Mailloux Linda Mantello Mary Marsh Rafael Martinez Lorraine Maxtutis Cindy Meyer Carol Michaud Tina Magliore Nancy Murtha Joan Moran Lucie Ochocki Karol Pepler R. Presulti Juliet Rodriguez Nick Romano Tim Roseen John Russo Rita Sevigny Joanna Sitnik Daimon Sforza Marilena Sforza Joanne Scavetta Mary Taksar Nancy Tho mas Gail Voisine Kathy Weaver Cheryl Zawadski pf-O52 EROREA I Nm DECORATIVE FLOORS P 8: G GRINDERS 81 PIZZA 'Q ill CERAMIC TILE IMPORTS NKLIN AVE HARTFO CALL TONY FAIENZA ROBERTO FAIENZA 506 FRA . RD, CONN. , JOSCPI1 Pamano - P'0P'lewf Phone 2460106 iiIir5ilExOqRi1IHOIOIisIV:' 061 I4 OPEN s:0hefiii1ii1l.Oje5?i3 MEN - WOMEN Let the Army help you with college. Last year, 90,000 young people like yourself earned college credits in the Army. They attended classes on post. They studied at nearby colleges and universities. And they took courses through our various correspondence pro- grams. And the Army paid for 7576 of their tuition costs. Our educational benefits are in addition to the job training you'll receive, the salary you'Il earn, and the travel opportunities you'll have. If you'd like to find out more about all the educational benefits the Army has to offer, call your local Army Representative. Call Army Opportumties 522-3224 Join the people who've joined the Army. An Equal Opportunity Employer INSURANCE REAL ESTATE ARTHUR A. WATSON CO. WATSON INSURANCE ASSOCIA TES, INC. ARTHUR A. WATSON REALTY 225 Spring Street Wethersfield, Conn. 06109 The Best to the Class of ,75 Best Wishes Of FARLEY - SULLIVAN Funeral Home I PHONE 529-2563 gunmn ze, . -pmuhvpatxo BOB and LOUISE 898 Silas Deane Highway WILDER Wethersfield, Conn. 06109 DE PASQUALE BAKERY Specialists in Spinach Pies 8z Pizza TEL. 246-0426 - 325-29 FRANKLIN AVE. HARTFORD, CONN., 06114 Congratulations from Class of '76 OFFICERS , Seated Cl. to r.J: Mary Beth Keefe, Vice-presidentg Kathy Smith THE CLASS OF 76 Secretary. Standing: Courtney Crooks, Presidentg Ken Goxzkowski Treasurer. Congratulations Class of '75 MIKE'S TYPE WRITER SER VICE 249-4065 Compliments of MARIO,S SHOE SER VICE 249-3884 js Z gf , 'fs I x X Z., ' -,XL 0 I 1 c, ,Q y, ,,. VXA X I I ., :IV Q ?-l f Iii--.L- IL 8. -. wgpm ,ATM git 5 QR W Eg , , 'tiff Iw i if tl 'Q Illia if l' ' , if Q H lm J f J I l- , , 7 Y- t ui ,. ,X ,, 1 x . tr ., ., - . tO Aw rw 49' I gg? t , ,, f I in L, 7 y , NK'-1' if 1 , if ' t 1,1 1 mf K i A f ' S-J' 'A ld people - NAVIN BROS. FOOD SERVICE INC. CSpecializing in School Lunch Programsj Catering for All Occasions 64 Outlook Avenue West Hartford, Connecticut 23 2-665 8 ACE HARDWARE CO. 394 New Britain Avenue , ' U Hartford 247-9704 caring, thinking, acting together make a gre.. -r Hartford Compliments THE TRA VELERS of ---- W HIDDEN VALLEY CAFE V ' T .f Cobey Rd. Rocky Hill L l 6688088 THE TRAVFLERS Parties ' weddings ' banquets I L showers ' picnics We're with you all the way HARTFORD NATIONAL BANKQQTBUST Ember F D I I' Buying or selling your home? For prompt professional service call COLLI dk WAGNER REALTORS 307 Franklin Ave. 249-5287 7 offices in Greater Hartford Area MAURO INSURANCE AGENCY EST. l9ll ll h Haan Tn Ham And Nui Neal Tian Tu hrrd And Vol Hure. INSURANCE L REM. ESTATE Y0llTllFUl UPERATURS SPECIAL Alllll EUVERMEE x B Q - , X E , a.a..t.a Atnu nun ru su. nm- . . : 1- nous nwuzns mucus: AT mzmmzu G ' - urn. neu: rouens, ur: a. hpululiu ACCIDDQT. Q-':-',',, ' 223-37 I 3 17 AIN sr. tcnrs noe: Nzw annum ui Av Ord Ylll Ylcl 145-1381 Webster Square Shoppunglplazac T i 828 O erlin, onn. e. '57O Berhn Turnpike at Jordan Lane fnext to Bradleesl Wethersheld,Conn.TeI.5117-OOOO OPEN EVEMNGS TILL 9 - SATURDAY TILL6 PHONE 666-2512 Compliments Of MOBRIDE WAYSIDE FURNITURE - CARPET CO. FURNITURE AND CARPET SPECIALISTS PHONE 666-2512 NEWINGTON, CONN. Se Habla Espafiol LANTIERI Travel AGENCY, INC. 342 FRANKLIN AVE. - HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT I2o3I 563-I1oO 249 SILAS DEANE HIGHWAY IREARI WETHERSFIELD, CONN 06109 06114 - TELEPHONE 527-6471 - TELEPHONE 527-6472 zecddddn ATTILIO CONSOLI TOURS ' CRUISES ' RESORTS P PRESIDENT AIR - LAND - SEA Z .sefwclce '7nc. AUTO RADIO DRIVE-IN SERVICE MOTOROLA aI ZENITH IF we CANT FIX IT NOBODY CAN CONGRATULATIONS CLASS of 1975 CONGRATULATIONS HLBOY RESTAURANT Come see us at THE HOUSE Childs, Kiely, Murray ke pltpayisliio ney C yOU 0 COMPLIMENTS , atunited Bank of 0 A First Connecticut Bancorp bank MR. AND MRS. WALTER 5 5 TAl4RSKI SAL. J. VALENTE Glauethizxn glint Glnntpztug 95 PRATT STREET Et bl shed 1898 HA RD. C N, 5 03 BEST WISHES from CLASS of ,77 OFFICERS Seated fl. to rj: Santo Buccheri, Vice-president Joan Buckley, Treasurer Standing: Mark Treglia, President Rose Interligi, Secretary THE BEST from the CLASS of '78 OFFICERS Seated Cl. to r.J: Anthony DeLuoco, President Cathy Corto, Vice-president Standing: Rita Sevigny, Secretary Jeff Boesch, Treasurer COMPLIMENTS ofa FRIEND -A. P. PARROTTA -MANAGEMENT CO. Professional Real Estate Management Service Commercial - Industrial - Residential AC. 203 2433 Main St. 529-1726 Rocky Hill, Conn. 529-1725 06067 Todays Army National trade. earn extra pay. help the l , Guardsmen are like Amerieak country and wmmunity. A l tirst Minutemen. Civilians. great opportunity tbr veterans. l Men and women ready to too. lt may be the most protect the good things ahottt important part-ttmejob in America. And you can he one America. olithem. You eztn learn tt Compliments of 269 FRANKLIN AVENUE, HARTFORD, CONN. .IIMMIE'S SERVICE STATION WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE For Quick Courteous Service 246-4456 PHONE 529-5743 GRADUATING CLASS OF 1975 Almost everyone in life has to work. You will find some are quite happy about it and are usually quite successful. Many others are constantly mis- erable and rarely achieve much in life. Since a major portion of your life will be spent at work, it would be well to know what it is all about, so that you can direct your life toward happiness and ac- complishments. People who are happy at their work usually have an excellent knowledge of their job. Due to this knowledge, they usually do an outstanding job and contribute a little bit more than the aver- age person. Their reward is personal satisfaction. This satisfaction is usually displayed as happiness and it inspires people to like them and to work well with them. It is therefore reasonable to understand that KNOWLEDGE, DOING A LITTLE MORE THAN THE NEXT PERSON, and THE ABIL- ITY TO GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE are the priceless ingredients of work that make people happy and successful. Experiment with these priceless ingredients . . . try them . . . find happiness and taste success. BUILDING SERVICE CORPORATION OF AMERICA WINE MERCHANTS 1 Congratulations urifurh Qlluh lgachage Stare E Q1 1 GD k -QB k 554 WETHERSFIELD AVENUE I 'Q EI HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ,, Q 'A mth Grunt Glnmpang 563-0774 .na PAUL SALEM: DUN Landscape Gardner 16 Crosshill Rd. Wethersfield, Conn. LAWN SERVICE SHRUBBERY WORK POWER ROLLING SNOW REMOVAL The LIGl Gh'tll BANK AND TRLJST CONAPANY Hartford Offices Located At 157 Main Street 632 Franklin Avenue MEMBER F.D.I.C. Real Estate with a personal Touch Arlene K. Schad Real Estate Broker 376 Fairfield Ave. 249-2277 Hartford, Connecticut 06114 Congratulations Congratulations from from SOUTH CATHOLIC FA THERS' CLUB SOUTH CATHOLIC MOTHERS' CLUB Lifels too short to waste. Get moving. Join the Navy. Join the Navy and get into electronics. Learn to work with machinery. Or build the basis for a career in communications. Or any of more than 70 different fields you may qualify for. All through Navy training. Get moving, Be Someone Special. Join the Navy. See your local Navy recruiter. He can tell you what you qualify for before you enlist. KENNETH J. STEADMAN SENIOR CHIEF NAVY COUNSELOR - U.S. NAVY INFORMATION TEAM 221 Asylum Street 25, I Hartford, Ct. IQ 527-6997 244-2600 We - ' CBT THE CONNECTICUT BANK AND TRUST COMPANY the bank that listens . . . NATIONWIDE MOVING SERVICE HBRIEH ll MOVING 9 STORAGE Est. 1917 MOVERS OF FINE FURNITURE CALIFORNIA AND FLORIDA SPECIALISTS HOME OFFICE 301 Murphy Rd. Hartford, Conn. Tel. 249-9377 Avery, Kretzmer, Olcott Inc. A - OK Testing Division A - OK Balancing Division E.S. WHITE Timing Devices Division lk Broad Brook Road - Enfield C 1, ms Tel: 749-7441 mf' me fHtfdJ 246-6551 of R. LeClerc, President P M C MASON CONTRACTORS 278-6198 CONGRATULATIONS Clars '75 from Compliments of KENNEDY'S DRIVING SCHOOL Compliments I .I cuzletg Forza 5I:IvINr35 POWER DRAULICS NIELSEN Compliments of RANDALUS FORMAL WEAR MECHANICS SA VINGS BANK of Hartford 450 Franklin Avenue Hartford, Connecticut ,.4 ,.. X ,Wi'?3- 2 N 5 A. . w if Q 355 1' s -41 'f' ,P ww ? 4+ r 5:31. v ,J w fm 71 .X , g,. N V' fair: fr 5. , X., . Ie e 3 f A 3 Qi B' wg a f 1 HERFF JONES YEARBOOKS usvrvssuna mwsfow vo sax woazcsvrvssunc an nm umaarsvza xifwri' V V WWW!slv-rwlkx. n ? SW ,. 1 '- V - '. ZWI-M1-' J , gm- '1w'iS,A .gf , SW 'IM v-GEL: W , ' ' L 'IVE' jg JL ' '1-1 vp WE vu it Aish , at . Y , .mzh 1 '1' ' I n e w 'HL'M7' M .1 2 , i ,N -mf f . N . . aruzlv The Uncle Sam Chronicles: 199 Years of the United States ofAmenca hc l nclc Sam Chronicles 1-lm- . . . ip 'W- 197b. as all of us know by now. marks the 200th ann.iversary of American independence. The philosopher-historian George Santayana warned that those of tis who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Another famous man said that while one may not always find truth in history. at least history is truth. by definition. Fortunately. it is not our task to argue the truth or falsehood of pronouncements like these. but merely to explore some of the back alleys of our past in search of...what'f Truth. beauty. meaning. the mysteries of life. ,- f- nv' .. Wt., ,,. K5 ii y jg., 'I4,g,XH!r, 1. na +1.41-Xa Xlini'xX:A i. lf: -il . ,E x f-,xx T. 'yt ' 7 :Q American history did not begin in 1776, of course. any more than Columbus discovered the place in 1492. Civilizations flourished 3 on both continents of the Western Hemisphere gr centuries before the Nina. the l'inta. and the Santa Nlaria sailed into the Caribbean. Leif Ericson showed tip around ltltltl and called the country Yinland. The first baby of European parentage was born in 1007. 'ind they eilled the kid Snorro Snorro and X his Viking parents did not stay long. 'L . Anierica w'is first used as a name in 15117. M alter the explorer -Xnierigo X espucci. Billiards it were introduced lo St. Augustine. Florida. in lfwbi, and pocket pool made it to River City. K lowa. in 1 1011. The first beer was brewed in Roanoke. Yirginia. in 1587. followed by popcorn in 1630. the sainc year that the first ral MMD salt works were built. lihe first recorded duel took place in lbll. and potatoes were A int ' rodttced to American soil the following year. llaryard college was established in 1636. and the first Swedes arrixcd in Delaware in 1635. Slavery was introduced at lainestown. Virginia in 16191 and the first corporation. the New York l-'ishing Conipany. was chartered in lbw, llic tiist known newspaper advertisement appeared in the Boston Nutt-t lmzzw' in 17111. and golf was flourishing by 1729. luly 4, 1776. Declaration of Independence signed. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. There is no indication that .lapanese fireworks were set off to commemorate the event. There was no school that day. since it was summer. 1776. First cocktail mixed. A customer asks Betsy Flanagan. a barmaid in Elmsford. New York. for a glass of cocktails, referring to a jar of tailfeathers kept behind the bar for decoration. Betsy obliges by garnishing his drink with a feather, which also becomes the first swizzle stick. 1776. First submarine. f1l7If'I'Iit'lllI Ttlrllr' is built by David Bushnell of Saybrook. Connecticut. and propelled by a hand-turned screw. The Turtle is used successfully to affix a bomb to Admiral Howe's flagship, Eagle. February 6, 1777. France becomes first nation to recognize United States. June, 1778. Secret Service organized. Z ,- l780. Firstslave emancipated. Elizabeth Freenian freed by trial at Barrington. Massachusetts. March 1, 1780. Pennsylvania passes a law calling for the gradual abolition of slavery. October 19, 1781. Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown. September 3, 1783. American independence formally recognized by England at the Peace of Versailles. October 6, 1783. Benjainin Hanks of Litchfield, lVlassachusetls takes out a patent on the first perpetual motion machine in the United States, July 17, 1784.Thirteenyear-old Fdward Warren makes the first balloon flight in America. lidward, who returns to earth safely, is ltickier than the balloons designer. Peter Carnes. who crashes one month later. September, 1784. .lames Ramsey invents the motor boat. .MS Q. ,gi f if A19 '37 4 1' I.. the indomitable American Spirit. the eternal veritiesi' Nlaybe. but you won't find those here. either. Keep looking somewhere else if you're interested. What we have for you is an America that is usually' forgotten. sometimes not even remembered. occasionally best left undisturbed beneath its rock. Your history books have given you the hopes. dreams. promises and realizations of America. For our Ztltlth birthday. we give yott a second look. And we give it to you one year early. ' - f'I. f' 1, ., f,. . , ,L, .. -. . ..: - 1785. Dr. John Greenwood introduces the first porcelain false teeth to America and the world. One of Greenwood's first customers is George Washington, October 26. 1785. George Washington imports first jackasses from Spain. 1787. Levi Hutchins invents the alarm clock. Once set. the time ofthe alarm cannot be changed. September 17, 1787. Constitution is signed. September 13. 1788. New York named capital of United States. April 30. 1789. George Washington inaugurated. John Adams is Vice President. Thomas Jefferson Secretary of State. Alexander Hamilton Secretary of Treasury. September 15, 1789. James Fenimore Cooper born. 1790. James Dearham becomes first black doctor. 1790. George Vancouver explores the Pacific Northwest coast. 1790. John Carroll is consecrated as Bishop of Baltimore. first Catholic bishop in the United States. 3 939 326 March 1. 1790. First census records 3.939.326 Americans. April 17. 1790. Beniamin Franklin dies. 1791. Washington. D.C. is platted. March 4. 1791. Vermont becomes a state. 1792. First Conscription Law passes. Every white male between 18 and 45 is ordered to enroll in the militia and to provide his own weapon and cartridges. No punishment is specified for non-compliance. The l'nclc Sam Chronicles ,R stti ' GJ: ,N L4 1 'tgy t 'Q Nu Bcniamin Frank turkey dinner in Philadelphii ' ig the eye tty letter: 'k ck' -di' '---ricsio .M L . . . .. . . :gt . t . 1 1 'c'z at We drank ' X 'r N 1 b tint ' d'scht rge ' g i' 'c ec 'i va tery. 'i 's yt e ' g Q- t ' rofligt r tts X of elec r' ' pow r' w A iericans. a custom that contintted unreyersed until 1973. The turkey was seryed well done 'z kee Doodle was writ en in l755 V' Dr. Richard Shuckburgh at Albany. New York. tp z down of stragg y '- -'Q , . z cr ' so ig was played at the surrender of Corny alli: at Yorktown. By the time of independence. N 'w York had t i' z ver of 'wmmerce.z t oo .1 a medical college: mustard was being manufactured in Philadelphia. and an inclined railway had been constructed in Lewiston. New York. Two days before independence. B7 7 XX I 72' .fl i '7 X! A. f Ne I 1- 'H ' X , I f X if-' 1 lin conducted the first electric 3 t t in l'4'7. ' n H X lltl cy is Xe' tb ille lor out dinner by the clctt l ck 5. to tsttd by the clcttrit tl tick. before a fire dled by the electrified bottle: when thc W- 1 lic lths of tll the famous electricians in 61 ln ltnd lloll md l-1 inte md Ci im my tr- J lol in electrified umpcts lcr fi tht 1 1 r ol uns from tht l ti fied l t lhi y ts th be mntn ol 7Uy-ars X X of p ite c tit ci ly . f' n .W , I Y m t by l ts tput I tcdct tls Lit the d 1 y s X f 2.X L tl h tml Ct lll1N sch l md , l i New .Jersey became the first colony to grant suffrage to women. Later New' Jersey rescinded the law. declaring in 1807 that only free. white male citizens could vote. April 9. 1792. First maeadam road between Philadelphia and Lancaster. April 16. 1792. First ehuckhole. May 17. 1792. New York Stock Exchange meets at the Merchants Coffee House. October 13. 1792. Architect James Hoban lays cornerstone for White House. June 20. 1793. Eli Whitney applies for a patent on the cotton gin. September 18. 1793. Cornerstone of Capitol layed. Architect is William Thornton. Capitol completed in 1830. June. 1798. Oliver Evans manufactures the first practical steam engine. December 14. 1799. George Washington dies. December 15. 1799. The Bill of Rights. the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution. is passed. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Century. The Uncle Sam Chronicles 'Ynwtrr 1799. Jonathan Grout invents and installs a 90-mile semaphore signal system between Boston and Marthas Vineyard. A message and reply took ten minutes, but Grout kept getting a busy signal. March 4, 1801. Thomas Jefferson becomes president. April 3, 1803. United States purchases Louisiana Territory from France for S15 million. May 14, 1804. Lewis and Clark leave St. Louis for the Pacific Coast. July 4th, 1804. Nathaniel Hawthorne born. 1807. First soda pop. Townsend Speakman, great grandfather of the Pepsi generation, adds fruit juice to soda water and sells it as medicine. ' i 1 February 27, 1807. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow born. August 7, 1807. Robert Fulton's steamboat Clermont makes its first run on the Hudson River. August 29, 1809. Oliver Wendell Holmes born. December 13, 1809. Dr. Ephraim,McDowell June 18, 1812. United States declares war on Great Britain. August 19, 1812. First woman marine, Ruth Streeter fought aboard the USS. Const1'tut1'on. If anybody knew she was a woman at that time, he wouldn't admit it. December 1, 1813. British forces burn the city of Buffalo. August 24, 1814. British burn Washington. D.C. and the White House. December 24, 1814. The Treaty of Ghent concludes the War of 1812. The United States Army recorded 531.622 enlistments, but some militiamen enlisted as many as ten times. There was a bonus for enlistment. it January 8, 1815. British defeated at New Orleans . The war had been over for more than three weeks but neither side had heard the news. March 4, 1817. James Monroe becomes fifth president. July 12, 1817. Henry David Thoreau born. November 25, 1817. Senaa Samma of Madras swallows a sword at Washington Hall. New York. manufactured for him by William Pye. May 21, 1819. The first bicycle is ridden in New York City. Two months later, the city bans them on sidewalks, streets, and in public places. August 2, 1819. Charles Guiee makes the first parachute jump. Ascending in a balloon. he plummets 300 feet before his umbrella-like chute opens, then is put in a holding pattern by the l-aGuardiatower but is blown four miles out of New York. performs the first abdominal operation on Mrs. Jane Todd. She was 45 and lived to be 78. 1811. An anonymous taxpayer returns S5 to the government. which he said he had defrauded. In 1916 the government received an anonymous payment of 554,923.15 ,bull 'ln its mythology is the true measure ofa nations strength For what is notional character if not the sum ofthe people s hopes and dreams failures and triumphs? What does it matter. really, lf Johnny Appleseed lived or did not live Today, inthe Collective mind of the American people he is every but as real ond V human as Teddy 1 t May 12, 1820. Florence Nightingale born. October.24, 1820. Spain cedes Florida to the United States. April 27, 1822. Ulysses S. Grant born. December 2, 1823. Monroe Doctrine closes the Americas to foreign colonization. 1824. Natural gas is used to illuminate Freedonia, New York. X January 19, 1825. Ezra Daggett and Thomas Kensett invent the tin can. 1826. The Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper is published. July 4, 1826. Thomas Jefferson dies. 1827. Harrison Gray Byar builds a two-mile telegraph system at Long Island City 65 years before Edison's patent. 1834. The New York Sun announces that an astronomer has sighted men on the moon. They are described as being four feet high and able to fly with their own wings. Shortly afterwards, the story was admitted to be a hoax. Circulation continued to increase after the admission. 1 1834. Friction matches are manufactured in Springfield, Massachusetts. November 30, 1835.Samuel Langhorne Clemens lMark Twainl born. as Roosevelt Charles Lindbergh, or X Donald Duck. lx 1836. Texas declares itself independent of Mexico. February 25, 1836. Samuel Colt invents 9 the revolver. April 16, 1836. Massachusetts passes the first child labor law. requiring all children to attend school at least three months a year. Six years later, children under 12 are prohibited from working more than ten hours a day. 1838. Pierre Maspero, a New Orleans saloonkeeper offers the country's first recorded free lunch. g A CE: Buck Rodgeflis' .llnrflzz Lnzlnfr King Dlll'-1' Crockett jim 77101770 .lllllllll-I' Appltawtftl joy Lollfg .Tarzan SlI1'Ifll?,1' Tunrplra Clmrlex Lfncllvergh Toni Stzivyez' Jolzn Glenn Dial: Trutjt' .lflllll Brown Z'- The Uncle Sam Chronicles Wllfl Bill Il1'c'kot'lr Tom Swift The Lone Ranger ul X-:i 'GN fu-J IWIN il .gn ,-A e- L, ,ann f tlwl' X 'VIE fl, f Q95 'P' fkgx yo, ,,4su. 'F 1839. First baseball game played at Cooperstown. New York. 1839. Charles Goodyear vulcanizes rubber. July 8, 1839. John D. Rockefeller born. 1840. 2.816 miles of railway are in operation in the United States. August 30, 1842. Congress levies a tax of 75 cents a pound on opium. It had previously been duty-free. N pal QL 47 f'W December, 1842. Dr. Crawford Williamson Long of Jefferson. Georgia. uses anesthesia in an operation, removing a tumor from the back of James M. Venable. The bill for the operation was 52.25, including 25 cents for the anesthetic. November 23, 1844. James Polk defeats Henry Clay for the Presidency by 170 electoral votes to 105. March 4, 1845. Texas is annexed, triggering the Mexican-American war. -1 Lilllf' fjlfflltlll Annie' .lean Harlow .ltmzkf Owenr Gilwson Girl Killa Sllllffll SIll!7L'l'lHCllI Rmlolpli 1 LIll'l1lI-Ill! Clurlr Gable Paul Bunyan Hnnzplzrey Bogart Guri' Cooper Nall Arno Irong Marcus Garvey Daniel Welmzez' Jolzn Paul .loner Rolverz E. Lee .1II'CkL',l' .House J4 z'll Rogerx Alllll-L' Owl. lay POCOIIOIIIZIX Sergeant York Lll.S',S'l'C' Azlcllr' .Jllnynltt Balm Rnfll lfzzcle Sanz Sanz Houston Ki! Carson Clzurlie C'ln1pl1'n Howrlv Doorli' Pecos Bill Dao r A l7 by Andrew Jtzz'lr.rorz Bllli' The Kid Bam' Boop John Henri' Clmrlft' Parker .1111 .Valnral Lozziii' f1I'l71.5ll'0IlAQ E l vlx Pl'L',3'lC'-1' Billv Jcfctn King Mnrzlwz Monroe Daniel Boone July 1, 1845. David Levi Yulee of Florida becomes the nation's first Jewish senator. June, 1846. Brigham Young and the Mormons leave Nauvoo City on their way to the Great Salt Lake. June 14, 1846. 49th Parallel is established as the boundary between Oregon Territory and Canada. December 28, 1846. Iowa becomes a state. 1847. The Mormons found Salt Lake City. February 11, 1847. Thomas Alva Edison born. March 3, 1847. Alexander Graham Bell born. 1848. Tom Hyer becomes the first American V boxing champion. 1848. The first chewing gum is manufactured by John Curtis on his Franklin stove. He called it The Stale QfMa1'ne Pure Spruce Gum. but it didn't sell. so he doubled his pleasure, doubled his fun and came out with some new flavors: LIAL'Ol'l'CG Lulu, Yankee Spruce. and 200 Lump Spruce. 1 ,W .W .. J ,., -Q .,,v,,.. ,vt W , W, - ,WA ...W . ..,,., . , xxxx my . W ww. .W ... ,,..,,,..,,E. ,l.,.,..: x,.,,,,,, .N 1 . v 1 it 1 Y , 'e ' 1: 'calf' , '- ,,, 3, at , .. . . ri-.whalesatrlch?tltiie1etgg.ggrglf, . - f 1 M , p, 5... it f y 1848. All or parts of Newxlvieitico, Texas, California, Utah, Arizoiiiiif frcim Mexico, January 24, 1848. James W. Marshallzdiscovers gdlqliat Sutter's Creek, Califortiia. eihwz . luly 19, 1848. Amelia Jenks Bloomer introduces first women's rights at Seneca Falls, New York. October 7, 1849. Edgar Allen Poe dies. 21, 1849. First recorded exhibition of a tattooed man, New York 1850. Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Leiter is published. September 9, 1850. a state. September, 1851. New York Times begins publication. P 1853. equal rights to women March 13, 1852. The first newspaper cartoon depicting Uncle 'Sam is published. K A March 20, 1854. The Republican Party is christened by Aldan'Earle Bovay July 25, 1854. Walter Hunt invents the paper collar. October 15, 1854. November 5, 1855. Eugene Debs born. November 28, 1856. 'Woodrow we 1857. Joseph C. Gayetty of New York merchandises the first commercial toilet for 500 sheets, it claims to assist in the prevention of piles. X 1859. George Huntington Hartford adds tea to hishide and leather business, first link in what was to become the largest supermarket chainlin the xgprld The Great Atlantic and Pacific' T5agtCprn.pany. 'or' the AGP, as we call February 14, 1859. Oregon becomesa state. ii A i riy' V' i V . i August 17, 1859. The first airmail is Crimea Ein. ropte from Lafayette. indiana. to New York in a balloon piloted by John Wise, W1'1Q'1'2.l'iiOU1 of hot air 27 miles southiof takeoff point. Wise later became the first aerial hofitltatidier. demonstrating a new form of warfare by tossing dynamite sticks out of a dirigiblei ' ' I 1860. The United States has 30.600 miles of railway tracks. November 6, 1860. Abraham Lincoln elected President. ' December 20, 1860. South Carolina secedes from the Union. - February 4, 1861. Eleven Southern states convencat the Congress of Montgomery under Jefferson Davis. February 5, 1861. Samuel D. Goodale patents thc first peepshow machine. naming it the Mutoscope. April 12, 1861. 75 year-old Edmond Ruffin fires the first shot in the 5' Civil War at Fort Sumter. South Carolina. June 18, 1861. The first flycasting contest. held at Utica. New York'. is won by George Lennebacker. 1862. The first organized football team is formed at Oneida. New York. They defeat every opponent from 1862 through 1865. and never allow an opposing team to cross their goal line. February 3, 1862. Thomas Alva Edison publishes a newspaper on a train and distributes it to towns between Port Huron and Detroit. Michigan. March 9, 1862. Monitor defeats Merr1'nzuc'. XO July 1, 1862. The first income IZIX is imposed. It is rescinded in 1872. September 22, 1862. The Emancipation Proclamation declares that slaves are to be free on January 1. 1863. February 17, 1864. The Hunley becomes the first submarine to sink a warship in combat. dispatching the U. SS. H1l.1ll1fJlIl'l' to a watery grave with a torpedo. The wave generated by the explosion swamps and sinks the submarine. killing its crew. The hand-cranked craft makes four miles an hour and has no provisions for air. The Hunley sinks four different times. killing its crew on each occasion. April 7, 1864. First camel race in America held at Agricultural Park in Sacramento. California. May 19, 1864. Nathaniel Hawthorne dies at 59. April 9, 1865. Robert E. Lee capitulates at Appomattox. April 14, 1865. Abraham Lincoln assassinated. September 25, 1865. Langdon W. Moore. the first of the big time bank robbers. sticks up a bank in Concord. Massachusetts. and escapes with 8310.000 November 2, 1865. Warren Harding born. 1866. Arthur Cummings introduces the curve ball to baseball. December 26, 1865. James H. Mason patents the coffee percolator. September 12, 1866. The first burlesque show. Black Crook . opens in New York and runs for 475 performances. 1867. William E. Lincoln of Providence, Rhode Island. patents the first moving picture projector. lune 20, 1867. William Seward purchases Alaska from Russia for 57.2 million. 1868. The Cincinnati Red Stockings become the first professional baseball club. 1868. P.D. Armour's meat packing house opens in Chicago. Brigham Young, s clothing, f February '24, enerjghv, I1 U ' ' as te and 51011 rlz - The Uncle Sam Chronicles center. Called Zioni?-5Edope5ativeQfMercantile Institution. it consists of four stores selling dry goods and carpets. next vear he puts all four underfthe same roof. creating the first discount supermarket. against'President Andrewillohnson. He was impeached by the House and acquitted in the Senate by one vote. 1869. Bret Harte publisheskkflieMOurca.r1.v of Poker Flaz. 10, 1869. Uhi0rlfPaCifieiapd Central Pacific Railroads meet at Promontory. Utah. , as aidonkey. i.'.ppL4....t.LA Hafperlv Weekfi' and artist Thomas Nast entitles it sand J.A. Bailey open The Greatest Show on Earth in Brooklyn. New York. deprivingga citizen his vote because of race. color or previous condition of servitude. his employees Saturday .afternoons-off. 1872. Aaron Montgomery Ward founds the first mail order house af Chicago. George Greenwood of Farmington. Maine. invents earmuffs. and reporter Alfred Ford attempt to fly across the Atlantic in a 300.000 'leaves Brooklyn. New York. and flies four hours until running into a storm Walsh and Charles M. Colton are married in a balloon over Cincinnati. Ohio. Term Panic first depicts the Republican as an elephant. Q 4 1 the first book written on a typewriter. 1 K ' 5 .FP-.f,a.i1f,4 af 5ZeZi5itZ'.., 1876. The National Baseball League is formed. M Q. 3 Bell invents the telephone while Thomas Alva Edison is ' MNA . L ,M Alf .. - uv-H' 1877. Winslow Homer paints The Colton-Pickers. ' f 1,72 4 -, rf i. .3 1 1, 1878. Emma M. Nutt is hired as a telephone operator. 1879. Mary Baker Eddy becomes pastor of a Church of Christ in Boston. May 28. 1879. Illinois prohibits the employment of women in coal mines. 1880. Former Civil War general Lou Wallace writes Ben Hur. 1880. The probation system is established in Boston. January 26. 1880. Douglas MacArthur born. March 10. 1880. The Salvation Army lands in New York City and holds services in front of Harryhills Gentlemen's Sporting Theatre where Uncle Tom's Cabinu is playing. July 2, 1881. President James Garfield is assassinated by Charles J. Guiteau a disappointed office seeker. Garfield is succeeded by Chester Arthur, the obscure. 1882. A ski club is formed at Berlin, New Hampshire. May, 1882. Chinese immigration is banned for ten years. Benjamin Franklin Keith opens the first Vaudeville show in Boston, called The Gaiety Museum. July 4. 1883. Buffalo Bill Cody opens his Wild West Show. 1884. Mark Twain publishes Huckleberzjv Finn. April 22, 1884. Thomas Stevens leaves San Francisco to bicycle around the world. May 8, 1884. Harry S. Truman born. 1885. A ten-story skyscraper designed by William Le Baron Jenney is completed in Chicago. 1885. Sylvanus F. Bowser of Fort Wayne, lndiana, manufactures the first gasoline pump and tank. The one-barrel contraption has marble valves. July 23, 1885. Ulysses S. Grant dies. November 11, 1885. George Patton born. 1886. Thomas Stevens rides into San Francisco after bicycling around the world. 1886. Carnegie publishes Triumphant Democracy. Marx publishes Das K apital. October 28. 1886. The Statue of Liberty, a gift of the French people, is unveiled, commemorating the 100th anniversary of American independence. May 1, 1887. The presidential succession law is enacted to provide for succession in the event of death or discharge from office of both the president and vice-president. May 11, 1888. Irving Berlin born. November 20. 1888. William L. Bundy patents the time clock. Ross of Germantown. Pennsylvania. is the first child to be kidnaped for ransom. The Uncle Sam Chronicles As a young nation. America didn't have all that much time for fads and crazes. since most of us were more concerned with mundane things like clearing fields, building cabins. farming, raising children and working. When people did get together for a little fun. well. there were always witch trials. or killing buffalo from the observation car of a transcontinental train. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were patrons of cock fighting. and by the mid-1800's phrenology became popular. Generally. however. there just wasn't very much to do. Leisuie industries didn't boom until the 40 hour work'week became widespread. Cycling was introduced in the 1860's. The first were unicycles known as Flying Yankee Wheels. They were popularized by gymnasts. but sales dropped when people began to discover that it took a gymnast to ride one. High-wheeled bicycles followed, and the taller a rider was. the bigger a front wheel he could straddle. Short men took up tricycles. By the turn of the century the bicycle's back wheel was the same size the front and bicycling became the first true fad. followed quickly by roller skating. and then roller polo. which was a kind of ice hockey on wheels. When the Civil War ended. fighting men brought home a wide assortment of diseases. and an insatiable demand for remedies and patent medicines. Cures were invented for liver ailment, falling hair. tuberculosis. flabbiness. impotency. indigestion. cancer, polio. and warts. You could order any of them from a wholesale house in Chicago or St. Louis, for 250 plus postage and handling. Two reasons for the popularity of these remedies were the most common ingredients: alcohol and opium. Even if people weren't actually cured. at least they didn't care so much. Trading Cards swept the nation in the mid- 1880's, depicting baseball players. politicians. and music hall performers. Playing cards were circulated with caricatures of political figures. and there were even trading cards that pictured patent medicines. Jazz music's journey up the Mississippi from New Orleans to Chicago is well chronicled. but by the turn of the Twentieth Century it was another indigenous musical form. Ragtime. that was sweeping the country. Nothing remotely as popular appeared on the musical scene until Bill Haley. Fats Domino. Chuck Berry and their friends blew open the 1950's. AFTER THE MDA? June, 1888. George Eastman patents and registers his Kodak No. 1, a camera which uses roll film and does not require a tripod or table for support. 1889. Elizabeth Cochrane. a reporter for the New York World using the name Nellie Bly. travels around the world in 72 days. February 22, 1889. The Territories of North Dakota, South Dakota. Montana and Wyoming are annexed. 1890. There are 125,000 miles of railroads in the United States. July 10, 1890. Wyoming becomes the first state to grant suffrage to women. August 6, 1890. William Kemmler. the convicted murderer of Matilda Ziegler. becomes the first man to be electrocuted. The electrocution takes place at Auburn Prison, New York. October 14, 1890. Dwight D. Eisenhower born. September 28, 1891. Herman Melville dies. 1892. James Naismith introduces basketball at the YMCA Training School in Springfield, Massachusetts. The peach basket employed retains its bottom so that the ball must be removed by hand after each successful goal. 1893. The New York World publishes the first comic strip, entitled Hogan's Alley. The first successful serial strip, f'The Yellow Kid, follows. May 10, 1893. Locomotive 999 of the New York Central attains a speed of more than 112 miles per hour. Summer, 1893. The Chicago World's Fair. June 9, 1893. Cole Porter born in Peru, Indiana. 1894. Colonel Royal Page Davidson creates the first military bicycle corps at Northwestern Military Academy. Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Sixteen cadets ride bicycles equipped with clips for carrying rifles. 1895. William George Morgan of the Holyoke. Massachusetts YMCA invents volleyball. May 6, 1896. Samuel Pierpont Langley's 26-pound, 16-foot airplane makes the first heavier-than-air propelled flight. Langley's airplane is powered by a one-horsepower steam engine. May 30, 1896. Henry Wells of Springfield. Massachusetts. driving a Duryea Motor Wagon strikes Evylyn Thomas. who is riding a bicycle. causing the first automobile accident. Wells is incarcerated overnight awaiting a report on Ms.Thomasis injuries. WEEK IS IDQNE The Uncle Sam Chronicles ln 1923. Joseph Babcock transliterated an ancient Chinese game and copyrighted it as Mah Jongg. Mah Jongg was a flash fad. The whole country played it for several months, then the bottom dropped out. leaving S2 million in unsalable Mah Jongg boards in the hands of retailers. The twin crazes of prohibition and bootlegging totally dominated the 1920's. engrossing the entire population. but with the onset of the Great Depression. hysterical frivolity took on unforeseen dimensions. Flagpole sitting became a national sport. and college students took to swallowing hundreds of live goldfish at a single sitting. While never as popular. phonograph record eating provided considerable diversion. Chain letters promising huge fortunes were circulated widely during the depression, and the whole country began playing miniature golf. World War II provided a sobering influence. The population put aside the frantic pursuits of the previous two decades and began saving string and aluminum foil, and blacking out huge cities at night. By the end of the war. America was ready for Frank Sinatra. the biggest heartthrob since Rudolph Valentino. Frankie faded. but was soon followed by Johnny Raye. Frankie Laine. Eddie Fisher. Julius LaRosa. Pat Boone. Elvis Presley. Ricky Nelson. Tom Jones. Johnny Cash, Robert Goulet and Alice Cooper. Fess Parker showed up in 1955 on Walt Disney's TV program as Davy Crockett, and caused every kid in the country to go out and buy a coonskin hat. These were worn while hula hooping. trampolining and go-karting. Comic books peaked in the l950's. and pogo sticks. stilts. and yoyos underwent semiannual revivals. Backyard bomb shelters heralded the 19605. a decade of political consciousness that was captioned by pithy bumper stickers of every persuasion, Frisbees were thrown everywhere. underground newspapers were published. and rock music became even more a part of everyday life. The 60's were years of unrest, assassinations. turmoil. riots and social change. They left America stunned, tired and ready for the 70's and the decades biggest fad: nostalgia for the remnants of every other decade of the century. The Bellmann Archive June 17, 1896. George Harpo and Frank Samuelson leave New York City in a rowboat. g ,vm-it - P' in Q P Q tu! ' ,Q .9'V?y1'F' T 7Tg?7' i , 9 l ' 5- i .fwsri 1. f f! A ff-x., , 1 FYI- - 1 - ,- PA, . 'f . gf 'W ga f -K Q' - W -' f t.. U sr- 4 'Z als--'ra -. .f T?: ' J... ws ' A s . is-as fiiefffif. so 0 luly 31, 1896. George Harpo and Frank Samuelson row their boat into the Scilly Islands offkthe coast of England. August 29, 1896. The chef of New York Chinatown leader Li Hung-Chang invents Chop Suey. 1897. T.S. Wheatcraft of Rush, Pennsylvania, introduces the vending machine. His machine dispenses hot, salted peanuts. April 24, 1898. The U.S.S. Maine is sunk in Cuba. War breaks out between the United States and Spain. May 1, 1898. The United States Heet sinks the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay, The Philippines. No American ships are damaged and no Americans are injured. July 1, 1898. 7,000 American troops. including the Rough Riders under Colonel Teddy Roosevelt, capture San Juan Hill. July 7, 1898. Hawaii is annexed. July 3, 1898. More of the Spanish fleet is destroyed off Cuba. American casualities: one killed. one wounded. December 10, 1898. Spain cedes Cuba. Puerto Rico, Guam and The Philippines to the United States. 1900. First automat opens in New York City. 1900. The Otis Elevator Company of New York City displays the first escalator at the Paris Exposition. 1900. Motorcycle patented. I March 13, 1901. Benjamin Harrison dies. September 6, 1901. President William McKinley is shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo. McKinley dies on September 14 and is succeeded by Teddy Roosevelt. The Uncle Sam Chronicles September 12, 1901. King Camp Gillette organizes a company for the manufacture of safety razors. In 1903 he sells 51 razors. October 24, 1901. A.E. Taylor becomes the first man to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. November 16, 1901. A.C. Bostwich drives 60 miles per hour at Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn. December 5, 1901. Walt Disney born. December 16, 1901. Margaret Mead born. August 25, 1902. An Arabic daily newspaper, Al-Hoda is published in Philadelphia. 1903. New York Stock Exchange built. 1903. The Great Train Robbery is the first motion picture with a plot. lune 18, 1903. E.P. Fetch and Marcus Krarup leave San Francisco in a one-cylinder Packard. August 21, 1903. E.P, Fetch and Marcus Krarup arrive in New York City. December 16, 1903. The Majestic Theatre in New York employs usherettes. December 17, 1903. Orville Wright pilots a 745-pound airplane 852 feet in 59 seconds. Average speed is 31 miles an hour. January 9, 1904. George Balanchine born. May 4, 1904. Work begins on the Panama Canal. December 27, 1904. Marlene Dietrich born. 1906. Upton Sinclair's The Jungle exposes conditions in the Chicago stockyards and meat-packing plants. April 14, 1906. Teddy Roosevelt coins the term muckraker to describe Sinclair and his fellow crusading writers. April 18-19, 1906. San Francisco earthquake and fire kill 452. June 30, 1906. Pure Food and Drug Act passes. it it 7 !- . 4 1' t i wif October 11, 1906. The San Francisco School Board orders segregation of all Japanese, Chinese and Korean children into separate Oriental schools. 1907. There are 236,900 miles of railroads in operation in the United States. 1907. A.L.R. Locke is the first black Rhodes Scholar. 1907. Electric washing machine marketed is Chicago. January 23, 1907. Charles Curtis of Kansas is the first native American to serve in the Senate. March 9, 1907. lndiana enacts legalization of sterilization. 'YJ Not all the.se famous women play musical instrument. 'l 17 I. Marianne Mooi'e is considered the leading 5 4 woman poet. 2. Dorothea Dix awakened America to the plight ofthe mentally ill. 3. Amelia Earhart 5 i X A flew the Atlantic alone in 1932. 4- Louisa llflay Alcott 2 12 wrote Little Women. 5. Georgia OKeefe is a 3 H S leading abstract painter 6 llflaiia Mitchell D discoteicd a comet and was the lust woman 7 Lidia Marta Child was a miter who championed the abolztionist cause 8 Margaret Clapp won a Pulitzer Prize and was president of Wellesley I, 9 ' 1 A 4 2. A , '. - ' -I ' I ' D 3' elected Academy Sciences D Q 4 v , , . , . I A. l U I 7 College. 9. Eleanor Roosevelt was chairwoman of 1908. A lollipop manufacturing machine. capable of manufacturing 40 lollipops per second. is produced by the Racine Confectionaries Machinery Company. The manufacturer claims that the machine makes more lollipops in one week than can be sold in one year. 1908. .lack Johnson becomes the first black world boxing champion. 1908. Teddy Roosevelt sends The Great White Fleet around the world. July 8, 1908. Nelson Rockefeller born. 1 Ka UN Hitman Riglzts C!1lIll711'.S'.X'I-O11 from 1946-53. 10. Sofozirner Tlatlz was ti selfleclueatetl orator wlzo worked farblaelx freedonz in tlie 19111 Centurv. I1. Slzlrlewi' Cliisliolnz was tlie fiiirt black woman in CO114Lf1'U.X'.X' and to ran for preriilent. 12. Jane Addams 11JllIlL16 fl' Hull House, tlze first social .settlement in Ameriea. 13. Clara Barton ?.l'1LIb1l-.YIZCL1 Ilze International Real Croir. 14. Elizabeth Cacli' .Stanton organized tlie ,first Women fi' Riglitx Coni'ention in 1848. 15. Margaret Chase Smith from Maine became one ofthe most vrominent RepulJliean.v in tlze Senate. 16. Clare Booth Luce had careers' as Congre.s'.vwoman. August. 1908. Dr. Henry Herbert Goddard. director of the New Jersey Training School for Fccble-Minded Boys and Girls. introduces the first intelligence test. August 27. 1908. Lyndon Johnson born. November 3, 1908. William Howard Taft defeats William Jennings Bryan for President by 321 electoral votes to 162. 1909. Frank Lloyd Wright designs the Robie House. Chicago. 1909. Child actress Gladys Smith is transmogrified into Mary Pickford under the tutelage of D.W. Griffiths. N.. I i . x t t - N , I N ww, X 4 ' 1 l . .W --, ,, ' ...h , . l M, 1 if 'l5? W',f' an Xt M ' W . f 1 . If uf l711l'1'l1'l'1.lI1I1. tzntlrtmistalotz 17. Di.x'ie Lee Raj' ix a melnlrer ofthe Atoniit' 1111lL'1'IQ-l' C'on11r11'.x'x'1'o11. 18. Gertrucle Stein wax one of' tl1e most fanzoux' literari' fiiezirex of'tl1e 1ll2fIx. 19. Pearl 1111111 won a Nobel Prize fi1rl.ite1'at11l'e in I'l.?rY. 20. Margaret Sanger was failed in 1910 for opening Arnerieafx' first llirtlz Control t'linit'. 21. Altllil' Lyon founclecl tlte at1'i'a11eecl female .tL'Hl1IltI1i1' at 1111. llolvolce. .Mt1.x'.rt1e11llxettx. 22. .Miltlretl Babe Dl'C11'1li.S'l111 lvrolce -1 Oli'mpie l'L'L'U1'L1.X' in 19.12 tII1l!'j7l'1l'1Ic'll against the Brooklvn Datlgers, 23. Margaret Mead is it leading 211111 eenttiri' antliropologixt. 24. 1Tl'CI1IC'6'.X' Perlfinx was Frtirtlflin Roo.x'ei'eltls' ' I E The Uncle Sam Chronicles January 1. 1909. Barry Goldwater born. February 9. 1909. The first anti-narcotic law is passed in response to fears that as many as 1591. of the American population are hooked on opium-based medicines. 1910. The Rotary Club is organized. 1910. The first pinball machine is manufactured in Detroit. 1910. Mr. Wilson observatory installs a 100-inch reflecting telescope. February 8. 1910. The Boy Scouts of America are chartered in Washington. DC. Be Prepared. April 21, 1910. Samuel Langhorne Clemens tlV1ark Twainl dies. August 13, 1910. Florence Nightingale dies. November 8, 1910. W.lVl. Frost of Spokane. Washington. invents the insect electrocutor. 1135 ,., J. T Q Q? ax :. 2 1 Seeretari' of'Lalmr and the first woman to serve in a cabinet. 25. Helen Keller overcame blindness nncl clettfizexx to become a leading 63XSl1'l'l..YI, lL'l'Il11'U1' and eclueator, 26. Edna St. Vincent .Millay wav a leading American poet. 21 Margaret Fuller wax a tranxeentlentalist leader and autlzor. 28. lfluri' Ca.x'.xatt wax' tlie 171O.X'I famous American i11If'1l'L'.Y.9l'Oll1.X'ff7fllA1l1L'1'. 29. Plz-i'lli.x' Wheatley was a hlaelc poet of' tlze 18111 eentutjv. 30. Harriet Beeelter Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin. 31. Suxan B. Antlzony was tlie early feminist movenzentlx' first ana' greatest activi.i't. 1111-1 l1k'lCS1ll1lcll1'UIllL'lUS May 27. 1911. Hnlvert 11lll11DhfCy horn. 1912. i'harles1':1tl1e protlnees the first nevv sreel. 1912. Tl1e Girls Scouts LIHK1 The Canipfire Girls are el1artere1l, 1912. Casiinir 1'iLll1C1K tliseoxers vitamins. February 16. 1913. lfith .1111e11t1n1ent to the Constitution authorizes the income tax. January 9. 1913. Riehartl Nixon horn. March 4. 1913. Woodroxt Wilson lI1LiL1gLlI'illCtl. October 1. 1913. A I11Ul1LlI11CTl1 to a seagnll is tletlieatetl in Salt Lake City. lftqth. December 21. 1913. The first crosswortl pnflle appears i11 the Nevv York World. August 15. 1914. 1J11I1lll11Ll Canal opened. October 28. 1914. Jonas Salk horn, February 2. 1917. lliplornatie relatio11s .1re SCVCFCL1XfNl1l1C1C1'111L1I'ty. April 6. 1917. Congress tleelares xv ar UI1f1Cl'1111l111f. Huy 29. 1917. .lohn Fitngerakl lsennetly lworn. 1918. llie Xelloxv 1..lg11llS11111'tKl1lCL'kl to Nevv York Citfs traffic signals. llie first xellon light is 141111 by Hector Ronnlatlla. .1 llronx x'LlNlsC1l111l1xC1'. on his XXL15 to tl1e World Series. 1anuary8. 1918. Mississippi is the first state to ratify the prohibition anientlnient lo 111C L'onstitt1tion. November 7. 1918. Billy Gr11l1an1 l1orn. November 11. 1918. Armistice of Worltl War 1 signed. 1919. 1l.L. Mencken publishes Hn' ,'1lH1'l'It'tlII l1lllALfl1tI!lJt'. lunuary 4. 1919. Teddy Roosevelt clies. September 2. 1919. Cornrnttnist Party ol Anieriea organized, V December 11. 1919. A l11Ul1L1111CI1l lo 11 holl tveevil is tletlieated in Enterprise. -Xla11an1.1. July 26. 1919. limit, Sel111el'ferol Sea Gate. Nevy York l11ll1TlL's 1.1. George Burgess of the Arrny Air Corps in .Ill airplane. 1111- lwritle 111111 3 groomarein 1 ITC plztne. the niinister i11 111111111611 V1-l1C' ceremony is lwroattlt-ast 111 ratlio to a grandstantl l1eIo11. lt is not reeortletl whether the l1ri11e tosses her lwonqttet 1.111111 tl1e cockpit. lanuary. 1920. Prol11l11tio11 l1eeon1es effective. August 26. 1920. lil1e Wonian Suffrage AI11Cl1L1l11Cl11 to the f'onstit11tio11 heroines Lau. D9C6m1J9f 10. 1920. Nolvel 1,1'll,L' for Peace avvardecl to Wootlrovs Wilson. 1922. Sinclair Lewis pnl1lisl1es lftlftftlll. Jannary 24. 1922. ills. Nelson patents 111C hvkznm Pun luly. 1922. Tl1e first tnlve 1101111 atlvertising si-tn appears in New York. August 1. 1922. Alewaritlet 111111111111 Bell tlies. 1923. Trzm' IITZTQLUIHL' is l5lll5llNl1Ckl lvy 11CI1Fy1..l1CC. BLACK S N The All T im1 January 7. 1923. The llaltimore Sim exposes the reign of terror of the Ku Klux Klan in Morehouse Parish. Louisiana. yy here despite eyidence of torture and murder of marked yictims. a grand iury refused to bring an indictment. Estimated Klan membership is as high as 5 million: by 19.10 it has declined to 9.0011 August 2. 1923. Warren G. llarding dies mysteriously in San l'rancisco on his return from Alaska. limbolism is listed as the causc of death, Harding is succeeded by Calvin Coolidge. Keep Cool. May 4. 1924. Calvin Coolidge signs hill excluding all Japanese immigration and limiting immigration from other countries. 1925. The .Veiv Yorlwr begins publication. 1925. F. Scott Fitzgeralds Hit' Cirtful fitzftlrrt is published by Scribner and Sons. luly 10-21. 1925. John Scopes, a Tennessee schoolteacher. is tried and convicted for teaching evolution in public school, Prosecutor is William .Jennings Bryan and defense attorney is Clarence Darrow. 1926. Ramon Nayarro stars in Ben Hur: John Barrymore appears as D!JI1.ll1AIIl.' Rudolph Valentino dies. November 12. 1926. First aerial bombardment on United States soil, During a feud between riyal bootleggers, an airplane drops three bombs on the farmhouse of Charles Birger in Williamson County. Illinois. The bombs fail to explode, 1927. 'l'l1v!u:: .Striger with Al Jolson is the first popular sound film. Summer. 1927. Babe Ruth hits 60 home runs. August 2, 1927. Calvin Coolidge tells the press in Rapid City. South Dakota. 1 do not choose to run for President in 1928.9 lhcl nclc Sam Cihroniclcs August 23. 1927. Nicolo Sacco and Ilartolonieo Vanzetti executed, 1928. Walt Disneys Mickey Mouse appears in theatres. January 1. 1928. An air-conditioned office building opens in San Antonio. Texas. June 26. 1928. Alfred IT, Smith, Uemocratic governor of New York, becomes the first Catholic presidential nominee. October 14, 1928. Cora Dennison and James Fowlkes of Kansas City, Missouri are married on television. 1929. William Faulkner publishes The Sozzritl and the l'i1lli1'.' Ernest Hemingway publishes A lftrrwt-all In Arnit, Thomas Wolfe publishes Look llomtfwtml !1lI!Lft'f. January 13. 1929. The first talking picture in Esperanto is made by Paramount. September S. 1929. The firstffly-it yourself airplane seryice is begun. October 29, 1929. Stock Market crashes. Imerican Fab Fwy 6 'f5 Q,...-'59 . f-42? 5: 5 w Y vt 459 W ,A 3.1 , v Av W Q, L .L,.,9Q. Fw ' uf xx Q x lf. W it as ' X3 K gf 4, N A il J Y, rn 5' an K mx., Nw, 6 M R 1 xx x Y, A r' f fs I r g January, 1935. Flea circus opens in New York. Admission is SOC. March 4, 1937. German dirigible Von Hindenberg explodes at Lakehurst. New Jersey. March 26, 1937. The Popeye Monument is unveiled in Crystal City. Texas. May 15, 1937. Clarence Saunders opens the Keedoozle Store in Memphis. Tennessee. The customer inserts a notched rod into a keyhole besidethe desired item. the mechanism records the purchase, collects the correct funds. wraps and delivers the package. Keedoozle is a contraction of Key does it all. S'sP..S?0- im-a . a 3 0 1948. Jackson Pollock exhibits Composition No. I. June 8, 1948. J.E. Rudder is the first black commissioned officer in the United States Marines. November 2, 1948. Harry S. Truman defeats Thomas Dewey. The Chicago Tribune prints a headline reading Dewey Defeats Truman. 1951. J.D. Salinger publishes Catcher in the Rye. 1951.Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburr' appear in John Huston's The African Queen. November 4, 1952. Dwight D. Eisenhower defeats Adlai Stevenson for the presidency. Vice-president is Richard Nixon. 1953. B'wam1 Devil is the first 3-dimensional movie. 1939. Clark Gable stars as Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind. 1940. Ernest Hemingway publishes For Whom the Bell Tolls. Eugene O'Neill writes Long Daylr Journey into Night, which is not produced until 1956. August 25, 1940. Ann Hayward and Arno Rudolphi are married while suspended on the parachute ride at the New York World's Fair. The Reverend Homer Tomlinson is also suspended by parachute, along with the best man. the maid of honor. and four musicians. 7 July 27, 1953. Korean War ends with armistice signing at Panmunjom. 1953-54. Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin conducts a series of hearings into Communist subversion of government and American life. Eisenhower denounces McCarthy on June 14, 1953. On December 2, 1954, the Senate condemns McCarthy by a vote of 67-22. 1955. Alan Freed, a New York disc jockey, popularizes the term Rock 'n' Roll. He combines two Bill Haley song titles: Rock Around the Clock and Shake, Rattle and Roll. Chuck Berry records Maybelline Elvis Presley records Milk Cow Boogie Blues for Sun Records in Nashville. December 1, 1955. Black bus boycotts begin in Montgomery. Alabama. x 5 The Uncle Sam Chronicles 1941. Orson Welles directs, produces and stars in Citizen Kane. The Marx Brothers appear in their last movie, The Big Store. 1941. The 'Manhattan Project' of research into the atomic bomb begins in Los Angeles and Chicago. December 7, 1941. Japanese airplanes attack Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and destroy much of the Pacific Fleet. December 8, 1941. The United States declares war on Japan. 1942. The Alaska Highway opens between Dawson Creek and Fairbanks. lfx 5 2 m .ai 5 li 5. N E 2 sg +2552 Bag!! ECE-E3 NS:-,912 Sheba:-E :FAN-K. NNQFQN 42233K Bases . QEQEI U:'-:Nl 'Maia Lumbar., KNWZVVEQN 5 N: November 6, 1956. Eisenhower defeats Stevenson. 1957. Jack Kerouac publishes On the Road. 1957. Chuck Berry records Rock and Roll Music : Elvis Presley records All Shook Up. 1957. Herb Caen, a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle coins the term beatnik . September, 1957. Governor Orval M. Faubus uses the Arkansas National Guard to prevent integration of the Little Rock school system. A Federal District Court subsequently issues an injunction barring him from obstructing black students' entry. February 2, 1960. Blacks begin sit-ins at segregated lunch counters in Southern states. May 1, 1960. American U-2 spy plane piloted by Gary Powers is shot down over Russia. The Uncle Sam Chronicles SELLERS sh 'YW ' sf. '19 X 1-34559 sl y 1776 Common Sense Thomas Paine 1913 Pollyanna Eleanor Porter 1777 Paradise Lost Iohn Milton 1914 Penrod Booth Tarkington 1787 The Task William Cowper 1921 The Sheik Ediqh Hull 1788 The Federalist Alexander Hamilton, et al. 1926 Topper Thorne Smith 1794 AUl0bi08l'BPhY Beniamin Franklin 1929 Magnificent Obsession Lloyd C. Douglas 1800 Life of Washington Parson Weems 1931 The Good Earth Pearl S. Buck 1309 HiSf0l'Y Of New Y0l'k W8Shi1'1gt0I1 Irving 1935 Case of the Counterfeit Eye Erie Stanley Gardner 1815 Waverly Sir Walter scott 1936 Huw to win Friends 1819 Sketch Book Washington IYVUIS and Influence People Dale Carnegie Ipiiaeoirtgeplljggjrlslliglb Iggsixisgijmore Cooper 1936 Cone With the Wind Margaret Mitchell 1837 Twice-Told Tales Nathaniel Hawthorne 193? The Grapes of Wrath lohn Slembeck 1840 Two Years Before the Mast Richard H, Dana, Ir. 1942 The Robe I Ll0yd C... Douglas 1841 Essays Ralph Waldo Emerson 1943 A Tree Grows in Brooklyn Betty Smith I8-15 The Raven and Other Poems Edgar Allen Poe 1945 The Egg and I , Betty MacDonald 1850 The Scarlet Letter Nathaniel Hawthorne 1951 From Here to Eiemlty Iames limes , 1851 Moby Dick Herman Melville 1953 The'S1lver Chalice Thomas Costain 1852 Uncle Tom's Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe 1955 Marlow? Morningstar Hermanyvouk 1855 Leaves of Grass Walt Whitman 1959 Exodus Leon Uris 1867 Ragged Dick Horatio Alger. yr' 1960 Advise and Consent Allen Drury 1869 Innocents Abroad Mark Twain 19b2 Ship of Fools Katherine Anne Porter 1870 The Luck of Roaring Camp Bret Harte 1964 The Spy who Came .1876 Tom Sawyer Mark Twain in From the Cold lohn Le Carre 1880 Ben-Hur Lew Wallace 1965 The Source lames A. Michener 1885 Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain 1966 Valley of the Dolls Jacqueline Susann 1890 Black Beauty Anna Sewell 1968 Airport Arthur Hailey 1895 The Red Badge of Courage Stephen Crane 1969 Portnoy's Complaint Philip Roth 1904 The Sea Wolf lack London 1970 Love Story Erich Segal 1912 Riders of the Purple Sage Zane Grey 1972 Ionathan Livingston Seagull Richard .Bach TDP Movie Grnssers The Godfather 1972 The Sound of Music 1955 Gone With the Wind 1939 The Graduate 1988 Hen Hur 1959 The Ten Commandments 1957 Doctor Zhivago 1935 Airport 1970 Mary Popp 1954 My Fair Lady 1964 r c A 1l'A 5 , ., kara ' November 8, 1960. John Fitzgerald Kennedy of Massachusetts defeats Richard Nixon for the presidency. March 1, 1961. John F. Kennedy establishes the Peace Corps. May 5, 1961. Alan Shepard completes the first American sub-orbital space flight. March 2, 1962. Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors scores 100 points in a professional basketball -game. 1962. Peter O'Toole and Omar Sharif star in David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia. October 24, 1962. United States blockades Cuba. November 7, 1962. Eleanor Roosevelt dies. 1963. John Updike publishes The Centaur. May 15, 1963. Gordon Cooper orbits the earth 22 times. August 28, 1963. 300,000 blacks and civil rights supporters march in Washington, D.C. Martin Luther King tells the throng I have a dream. November 22, 1963. John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas by Lee Harvey Oswald during a parade. Kennedy is succeeded by Lyndon Johnson. November 24, 1963. Lee Harvey Oswald is shot and killed by Jack Ruby. April 5, 1964. Douglas MacArthur dies. August 2, 1964. An American destroyer is attacked off the coast of North Vietnam. U.S. aircraft attack North Vietnamese bases. 1964. Peter Sellers stars in the title role of Stanley Kubrick's Doctor Strangelove, a character modeled after Richard Nixon's future Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger. September 20, 1964. Herbert Hoover dies. October 15, 1964. Cole Porter dies. February 21, 1965. Malcolm X is assassinated in New York. March 21. 1965. 4000 Civil Rights workers march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, to present black grievances, May 25, 1965. Cassius Clay, later known as Muhammad Ali, knocks out Sonny Liston in the first round of their heavyweight championship bout at Lewiston, Maine. July 6, 1965. Lyndon Johnson authorizes Medicare. March 31, 1968. Lyndon Johnson announces I shall not seek and I shall not accept the nomination of my party for another term of office as President. April 4, 1968. Martin Luther King is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. June 5, 1968. Robert F. Kennedy, campaigning for president, is assassinated in Los Angeles, California hours after winning the California Democratic Presidential primary. October 20, 1968. Jacqueline Kennedy. the widow of president John F. Kennedy, marries Greek ship tycoon Aristotle Onassis. November 5, 1968. Richard Nixon defeats Hubert Humphrey for the presidency. December 24, 1968. Apollo 8 begins first of ten orbits around the moon. January 20, 1969. Richard Nixon inaugurated. March 28, 1969. Dwight Eisenhower dies. July, 1969. 400,000 rock music fans jam Woodstock, New York for three days of peace and music. July 20, 1969. Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Arm- strong becomes the first earthman to set foot on the moon. He is joined by fellow astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. May 4, 1970. Four Kent State University students killed by Ohio National Guard during anti-war demonstrations. June 17, 1972. Seven Republican operatives under E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, burglarize Democratic headquarters in the Watergate Apartments, Washington, D,C. .November 7, 1972. Richard Nixon defeats George McGovern for the presidency. Nixon carries 49 states, McGovern only Massachusetts. April 30, 1973. Nixon staff members John Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman, implicated in the Watergate break'in, resign. Presidential counsel John Dean is fired. October 10,1973. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew pleads guilty to income tax evasion and resigns from office. He is succeeded by Gerald Ford, House Republican leader. . 1 args' , ' V 212 wk .. L,,KVr:VV .. ff a 0 v x M Q 'S ,. v L K I kk, if QW 'W z -5 H Z -L ,mf f411A' AA , , ,,,, iih w 9 -K VK:'ff ,I-xr ' 1 . ,V ' k 74:5-Il: 44: 1 , 15: x. L, wdiilzsrigziaw
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.