St Joseph Composite School - Blue and White Yearbook (Edmonton, Alberta Canada) - Class of 1968 Page 1 of 162
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ST. JOSEPH COMPOSITE HIGH SCHOOL Edmonton, Canada The students of St. Joseph Composite High School sincerely thank the administra¬ tors, teachers and staff and all those who have in any way contributed to the high level of education at St. Joseph. 1967 2067 To the GRADS Canada is 100 years old. Down through the corridors of time a century is but a thought. What is the role of one in¬ dividual in the shaping of his country’s destiny when one’s life span is less than a century? No matter how great or small an individual’s existence, he can, with all the knowledge acquired in school, with the abilities and talents developed in school and at work, with his hopes and prayers, make an impression in his world. Who is to say what is the future of each St. Joseph’s Graduate in the second hundred years of Canada’s existence? Through diligence and hard work each and every graduate will meet his responsibility to Canada, be it in the realm of politics, science, religion, industry, or commerce. The future is yours! . . Canada is yours! Canada’s position in the year 2067 rests in the hands of each and everyone of you. Good Luck! (J3est lAJidlied ft rotn tbe Irclibisb op The Most Rev. Anthony Jordan, O.M. I., D.D. Archbishop of Edmonton May God shower His favours and blessings to St. Joseph’s High School, to its Teacher’s Staff, all the students, and especially to those of Ukrainian origin. •j- Neil N. Savaryn, O.S.B.M., Ukrainian Bishop of Edmonton. 5 I appreciate the opportunity of offering congratulations to the 1968 Gra¬ duating Class of St. Joseph High School. During your years in this school, you have maintained high standards in both your academic and personal activities. I am quite sure that St. Joseph School, your parents, and your fellow students are proud of you. It is our hope that in the years that lie ahead, you will continue the same high standards. There is much to be done in our world to eradicate the evils of poverty, ignorance, suffering and hatred and you who have had many opportunities denied to others, must lead the way. To make the world a better place in which to live will not be an easy task, but we are firmly convinced that you will be able to do it. There is so much to be done and you, who have responsibilities, might make the words of Robert Frost, the poet, your goal: The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But l have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep.” H. A. McNeil Superintendent Edmonton Separate Schools During the past year Canada concluded her Centennial activities. It was a year of special programs, activities, tours and assemblies in which Canadians proved to the world their pride in our country. Many Canadians selected as their goal — to know Canada and their fellow Canadians better. The success of Expo ’67 was one indication of the strong feeling Canadians have for their country. Our own school life this year has been affected by a 50% increase in enrollment and the partial use of a new wing. Although our school was forced to operate for several months without a functioning P.A. and clock system, with the patient co-operation of students and staff we adjusted to the situation. We have had many visitors to our school, all of whom admire our facilities and comment on the friendliness and cour¬ tesy of our students. To the graduates, I wish you every success in the future. I would wish also that in this age of increased communication between religions and races you continue your concern for your fellowmen. For those students who are returning to St. Joseph I challenge you to make next year an even fuller more rewarding year than the past one. Good luck and God bless you all. M. Kuefler 7 SISTER M. FRANCIS MRS. M. DUNNIGAN ASSISTANT PRINCIPALS MR. BARLAGE MR. M. KOLTZ MR. A. FILEWYCH 8 MISS M. BIAMONTE English MR. C. BURKE Technical MISS C. CASSIDY Science HEADS MR. R. GIBBON Physical Education MRS. A PURA Business Education Other Department Heads are listed in their ow n areas MR. C. SOPCHYSHYN Student Activities MR. R. TUPPER Social Studies MR. R. ARNUSCH Mathematics MR. J. BOYCHUK MR. D. BROPHY Book Keeping MR. K. BRODIE Mathematics MISS N. BEALER Physical Education MR. W. BIANCHINI Physical Education MRS. F. BOWEN English, Literature REV. P. CONNELLY Latin, Math. BROTHER JOHN DEVINE Electronics MRS. j. DUNNIGAN Typing, Record Keeping MR. E. FIALA Appliance Service MISS H. HAPONIUK Food Service MR. J. HARACSI Drafting MR. J. HAUK Math., Physics MRS. V. HAWKINS Home Nursing MRS. A. HOGAN English MR. C. HUSEL English, Soc. St., Sociology MR. W. ILCHUK Industrial Arts MRS. V. JENKINS French MRS. M. JENNINGS Language, Soc. St. MISS V. KAPALKA Bookkeeping, Typing BROTHER T. KEELOR W elding MR. A. Z. KHAN Science, Alath. MR. K. LESNIAK Math., Science MRS. J. Mac ARTHUR Math., Soc. St. MRS. L. KIENE Shorthand, Typing MR. F. KOVACS Food Sen ’ice SISTER M. LAWRENCE Sociology, Soc. St. MR. R. LISTER Horticulture MRS. L. MACDONALD Soc. St. MR. R. KEHLING Industrial Arts MISS D. KORCHINSKI English, Television Co-Ordinator MR. L. LAMOTHE Biology It MR. D. MACKENZIE Soc. St., Economics MR. S. A. MASTALISH English MR. J. MARKS Business Organization, Merchandising SISTER M. MARTINA Fab. Dress MR. G. MATHIEU French MR. H. MACKINNON Drafting MISS N. O’BRIEN Typing, Office Practice MR. J. OLUK Food Service MR. L. PAGE Data-processing, Audio-visual MR. T. PASZEK English MRS. PATTERSON 14 SISTER M. PATRICA SISTER M. PATRICK Teacher-Lib. Latin, Literature MRS. A. POOHKAY French, Food Nutrition d im MR. R. PIERZCHAJLO Automotives MRS. P. POWELL Language, Drama MR. G. PRANSKY Science MR. D. RENNEBERG Science, Math. MR. J. RITTER Lithography MR. J. RIVET English, Drama MR. S. RUZYCKI Typing, Business Fundamentals MR. J. SALYZYN Math., Psychology MRS. K. VAN TUYL Language, Science, Typing MR. J. SCHILE Science MISS S. SAVICH Language, Phys. Ed. MR. J. F. SWAN English, Soc. St. MISS C. TATCHYN Ukrainian MR. G. VERRET Automotives MR. P. SHELLEY English MR. W. SOPCHYSHYN Typing, Bookkeeping, Law MR. D. TSCHOFEN Automotives MR. T. TYMO Phys. Ed., Science, Math. MR. G. WALSH Soc. St., Math. 15 MR. P. WINTON Electronics Commercial Art MISS M. PERRY MR. M. HERTZ Department Head MR. J. MARTINEAU MRS. M. J. TELFER Martin Luther King, Apostle of Non-Violence WASHINGTON — Almost from the moment when he erupted into the national consciousness as an apostle of non-violence, Dr. Martin Luther King brooded about the possibility of violent death. The Nobel Peace Prize winner had before him the example of his great mentor, Mohandas K. Gandhi, who died in India in 1948 at an assassin’s hand. Mr. King was stabbed in 1958 in a Harlem department store as he sat autographing copies of Stride Toward Freedom, the book that described his first great triumph as a civil rights leader — the boycott and sub¬ sequent integration of the Montgomery, Ala., bus system. MISSED HEART The blade, thrust into his chest by Izola Ware Curry, a 42-year-old Negro woman, just missed his heart. Dr. King spent three hours in an operating room and many days recovering. Even before that, at the height of the Montgomery struggle, persons unknown threw a bomb that did not detonate on the front porch of the King’s Montgomery home. By telephone, by letter, by at least four other failed attempts on his life, the threats came until it became quite natural to him to say, as he did in Albany, Ga., in 1962: It may get me crucified. I may even die. But I want it said, even if I die in the struggle, that ' he died to make men free.’ IMITATOR OF CHRIST Following the classic Christian way, Dr. King saw himself as an imitator of Christ and professed his willingness to follow in the footsteps of his Master, even if the path led ultimately to death on his own Calvary. As the civil rights movement became in¬ creasingly militant in 1966 and thereafter, and the shouts of Black Power displaced the strains of r We Shall Overcome, Dr. King scarcely wavered from his insistence that non-violent protest is the most effective weapon of an oppressed people.” Though his refusal to adapt his methods of protest towards courses advocated by more militant Negro spokesmen may have cost him some support among militants, a Michi¬ gan sociologist reported last fall that Dr. King was more popular and considered more effective than Stokely Carmichael among residents of riot-torn areas of Detroit. BRIDGE-BUILDING At the same time Dr. King remained probably the single most effective bridge between the nation’s increasingly estranged Negro and white communities. This power of bridge-building rose to two great climaxes during Dr. King’s career — the great outpouring of humanity that was the 1963 civil rights march on Washington, and the 1965 voters registration campaign in Selma, Ala., that culminated, in the trium¬ phant 5 0-mile Selma-to-Montgomery march. I have a dream,” said Dr. King on the torrid August day in Washington, that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: ' We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.’ CONTENT OF CHARACTER ' I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character . . . I have a dream that one day, on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves, and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down at the table of brotherhood.” Dr. King was a son of Georgia, a preacher’s boy. He was ordained to the Baptist ministry in 1948, when he was only 19, ia his fathers church, Ebenezer Baptist Church of Atlanta. As a youth, Dr. King s life was average and middle class, and since there were few economic worries, a usually happy time. But M. L., as his family and friends called him, early learned the facts of segregated life. TESTIMONIAL DINNER Dr. King was given a testimonial dinner in an Atlanta hotel that was attended by leading citizens, white and Negro, of his native Georgia and of the nation. The occasion wa to honor Dr. King for havine won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. Dr. King was summoned to Stockholm to receive his prize on Dec. 10, 1964, because he had provided his people with a powerful new weapon — non-violent protest — in their crusade for full American citizenship. In doing so, he captured the imagination and admiration of millions of people around the world. As Dr. King’s tame grew, he became an international hero. He was invited to the Ghana independence day celebrations. He toured Europe, Asia and South America, and in 1964, was granted an audience by Pope Paul VI, who pledged to support the Negro freedom movement. POTENT POLITICALLY It was perhaps inevitable that Dr. King and the freedom movement he led would become potent political forces by 1960. During the election campaign that year, after he wa jailed for speeding in a Georgia sit-in struggle, the late John F. Kennedy called Mrs. King to express his concern. Mr. Kennedy’s bro¬ ther and campaign manager, Robert, called the judge in the case to inquire about bail. Dr. King was released. In the view of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, his own Republican candidate for the presidency, Richard M. Nixon, made a costly strategic error by not also identifying himself with Dr. King. OWN ERRORS Dr. King himself made some serious strategic errors, according to some of his critics, who felt that in his new militancy after 1960, he jumped too far, too soon and with im¬ proper preparation. They referred to the freedom demonstrations in Albany, Ga., and in Birmingham Dr. King was also accused of mismanaging the civil rights onslaught on Birmingham, the most segregated of major Southern cities. Non-violent though his demonstrations were billed, violence of the ugliest sort erupted. Police used water hoses and vicious police dogs to quell Negro rioting. HEROIC STATURE Despite the violence, however, Dr. King continued to take on heroic stature in the eyes of Negroes and non-segregationist Am¬ ericans, who believed his non-violent Birming¬ ham crusade had been turned into tragedy by the segregationists. Martin Luther King Jr. was born Jan. 15, 1929, the first son and second child of his parents. He died April 4, 1968, the victim of an assassin with a gun, in Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. J. Kuleba §£ ? ' . ' 8 221 I ■ ?)$ JmmmM .1 j ir ' Jg | J M i %ti40 ' 9j5Wj5MCfWT ' lj: 79 Ai uvuf Mrs. M. Allan Pat King Sister Patricia ? K d Scwice ' Defuvttmwt Grade XII Graduating Class Grade XI Class Faculty and Staff (pictures unavailable) Mr. E. Bandura Mr. J. Klak Mrs. N. Workun Mrs. L. Ludlow Mrs. M. Baril Teacher Aid Teacher Aid Clerk, Food Service Cafeteria Help Cafeteria Help 19 j 1 ' ' rJ.-’v 5 m | 1 Hr pv H ' % 1 Hr ; ’ ’ ■ t ■ m J : i %’ ■ • •.;? -JfJ jh •Student din ion f redident’s Iflfji eS5a r Regretfully, another year draws to a climactic close and we can look back with a feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment. This year, in my opinion, school spirit almost reached its peak. The students enthusiastically attended the regular functions such as basketball, football and floor hockey games. Your support of other projects such as Lit, Klondike Days, Charity Drive, Lowney’s Contest, Year Play, Prom and dances was very gratifying. I wish to take this opportunity to thank the administrators, the teachers who helped us with our functions and the students for their co¬ operation which made my job so much easier. I sincerely hope that my efforts have met with your approval. SEBASTIEN R. ERATTIN President 21 Student JANET WIBER VICE-PRESIDENT IHOR BRODA TREASURER SHARON OPPELT GIRLS SPORTS CONVENOR OKSANA DMYTRUK DUANE SCHLERETH SOCIAL CONVENOR BOYS SPORTS CONVENOR MARIETTE CLOUTIER CLUB CO-ORDINATOR GAIL MONAGHAN SECRETARY LARISSA BLAWACKY PUBLICITY (Committee MARIETTE CLOUTIER MR. ZYP CO-EDITOR ARTIST Gene Dzugan Anne-Marie Klemen Trish Lemiski Gail Monaghan J err y Patan Typist Advertising Advertising Typist Judy Turchanak Janet Wiber Barbara Wigeland Terry Young Miss Tatchyn Advertising Advertising Volunteer 23 :-f£S ceuout . % „ virws , r 4 !§£.¥ HI - J gf- fiii Jjli £W m 1 if fji K II H ■L 1 I Iw I 9 1 1 | HK m ft I 3 1 ft | fl Bi «r j,’ 1, jjrJ • One-O-One Maguette of Centennial Fountain, designed by Lory Lukasewich, Com¬ mercial Art 32, to be unveiled in the 101st year of Confederation. The central theme of the design is based on the initials PX symbolizing Christ, the raison d’etre of the Separate System. A supporting design element is created through the use of the letters S.T. and J., signifying St. Joseph. The fountain base symbolizes the world: the world of work and the world of wisdom, in which St. Joseph High School has taken a prominent place. A firm stand in this world and an active communication with this world (symbolized by the water) makes St. Joseph the school we are proud to be associated with. G-r’sedu.sttes GJMAUUAIVJ OS Martha Backmeier 1. N.A.I.T., travel, marriage 2. English, Religion, loud mouth boys, mini-skirts, white socks on boys. 3. Cars, boys at the U of A parties, our gang, water skiing, food, sewing, snooker, money. 4. Being on the honor board, living with Alice for four months. 5. The Bookmark”. 6. Tis the season.Hod Ho! Ho! Stan Bastura 1. U of A Engineering. 2. Fat girls in mini-skirts 3. Drag racing, girls, skiing 4. Mr. Shelley’s class 5. Drag racing, skiing 6. Super Hot Jane Bereznicki 1. N.A.I.T., Dental Technol¬ ogy 2. Men drivers. 3. Dancing, parties, money 4. Skipping halfway through the period everyday in Miss K’s class. 5. Being the slowest typist after 3 years 6. Can I borrow a dime. Patrick Bernard 1. Architect, Drafting 2. Any item navy-blue noisey kids 3. Challenges such schooling, sports 4. Hootenany Exhibits 5. nil 6. Oh my gosh Sylvianne Berube 1. Become a doctor 2. Finks, rats, idiot sticks. 3. Fathers car, dances, con¬ vertibles 4. Brother John 5. President of Beaumont Student ' s Union 6. Drop on your head Diana Adams 1. To work with IBM Ma¬ chines, and to get my drivers license. 2. Noisy cars, bucket seats in the sports Fury, English 33. 3. Pizza, Chinese food, our” car, the gang. 4. Summer at Gull Lake, long weekends in Calgary. 5. Being on the honor board. 6. 1 excused you the second time I saw you — first time I didn’t know what you were. Lubko Atamanczuk 1. Commerce at U. of A. 2. Sloppy girls, with long hair, fat girls who wear mini-skirts, snobs. 3. Girls, hot cars, all kinds of sports. 4. Torturing the frosh, fight during the pie eating con¬ test, Mr. Shelley ' s English 30 class. 5. Playing football and vol¬ leyball and floor hockey. Larry Bantle 1. University, Astronautics. 2. Fat girls in mini-skirts, Chevrolet cars, discrimina¬ tion. 3. Drag racing, girls, floor hockey, girls, etc. 4. Trip to and from Ontario with a Centennial Youth Group. 5. Floor hockey. Hans Berger 1. To be successful 2. Volkswagons 3. Money, my own car 4. Football practice 5. Year Play, Jr. Football 6. You don’t say. Wally Bereziuk 1. N.A.I.T., save my first million study work with people. 2. The new wing, high cost of living, people who try to be something they are not. 3. J.S.’s party, expensive clothes spending money. 4. When its the first time for anything. 5. Past president of St. Basils U.C.Y. 6. Where’s the party. 30 Dorthea Bojchuk 1. To work with electronic computers, and eventually marriage. 2. Liars, promises which are not kept, jokes which are not funny. 3. Drag races, giant pyjamas, mustangs. 4. Two years in the Year Play, two months of sum¬ mer holidays. 5. Seventh period study, cof¬ fee at the Ventures. 6. Aw, Please? Francis Boogmans 1. Get out of grade 12, ob¬ tain Masters in Phys. Ed., travel around the world. 2. People who go out of their way to bug you, know it alls, show offs, Chinese food 3. Sports, girls, instrumental music, nice clothes, night out with the gang. 4. February 10 68, Dropping Latin 30, Destroying ob¬ structing objects. 5. Winning the city midget championship (K of C), best relay team St. Joe’s ever had. 6. It all depends Art Boulay 1. Commerce at U of A 2. Pesky 3. Gina, girls in mini-skirts, zombies 4 . 5. Room rep. in Grades 10 11 6. Nay brother nay. Luba Boyko 1. Study languages at the U of ' 1 ' , and travel around the world 2. Writing letters, my Math 20 class, stuck up people. 3. French 30 class, a double lunch in grade 12, pizza, toboganning, popcorn. 4. Mountain climbing in Jas¬ per, Expo 67, being in the Ukrainian Club. 5. Being on the honor board in grade 10 6. Ox Bozhe! Dave Bolander 1. Take computer sciences 2. Motorcycle riders, referees 3. Basketball, Floor hockey, Sports cars. 4. Ruffians Floor hockey team. 5. Most valuable junior b as¬ ketball player 6. Fine Enough Mario Bonanni 1. Good job, travel to Europe, play in C.F.L. 2. Having to work 3. Girls, cars, sports 4. Meeting Shirley 5. 1 year Junior 2 years Senior Football 6. Laura Borin 1. Secretary, travel to Europe next summer 2. English 33 in the 10th period, boys with long hair, listening to people argue. 3. Boys, money, expensive clothes 4. Having a Metropolitan Opera singer singing at my sisters wedding. 5. 6. I doubt it Larissa Blawacky 1 . 2 . Gene Bilyk 3 . 1. U of A Engineering 2. Girls who think they’re 4. what they’re not, Mont¬ real Canadiens, final 5. exams. 3. Girls, sports, cars that run, summer vacation. 4. private 5. Badminton term 6. B.A. in Political Science Sociology, travel around the world. Phys. Ed. 10 Pizza, Bill Cosby, Siamese Cats. Making it all the way in the 25 mile Oxfam walk. Publicity Chairman for Student’s Union Exec., Charity Drive, Folk Mass Choir, Ukrainian Club Treasurer. That’s about your speed. Maurice Boisvert 1. Become a good draftsman. 2. Generally homework. 3. Money and girls 4. 5. 6. Censored 31 Ronald CouII 1. To own and run the Chateau Lacombe 2. Parents and English class 3. Money, Girls, work, cars 4. The day I got the girl of my dream 5. Drinking on weekends, listening to records, dancing 6. If you can make it, break it Rose Cuzzetto 1. Complete grade 12 and move on to U. of A. on an Arts Specialty 2. No money for coffee 3. 4. Mountains and trees 5. Surviving Edmontons winter weather 6 . Ihor Broda 1. To become a Lawyer and to let the world know I exist. 2. People who talk a lot, but say and do nothing. 3. Humanus beingus (femin¬ ine species), all sports, good rood, having, fun. 4. My game winning touch¬ down against J.P. and win¬ ning 3 Sr. football games this season. 6. Get out Mary Coco 1. N.A.I.T., get married and go to Rome, have 4 children 2. Soccer, boys with long hair, getting up in the morning 3. Dancing, Italian records, sports, getting my hair done 4. Trip to Rome, my D.P. class, working at Belmont Drug Store 6. That’s Life. Valerie Cartmell 1. U of A, travel, and get rich 2. Greasy hair, short pants, to D.R. on the phone 3. Doublemint gum, toast and coffee, spending money. 4. Sue ' s tours to the centen¬ nial flame. 5. Cheerleading, skiing with¬ out falling. 6. You must be kidding ®r Maureen Clarke 1. Airline stewardess, sten¬ ographer, interior decora¬ tor 2. Debbie Bobson 3. Horseback riding, water skiing, commercial art 4. Trip to Prince George 5. My track meet crest 6. Wow. Don’t I? Luigi Coccimiglio 1. Business Administration at N.A.I.T. 2. Edmonton winter weather 3. Girls, business man, sports 4. Native land 5. Learn to speak English 6. There is always hope Pat Cancilla 1. Career in the business world 2. Prejudice and segregation 3. Italian food 4. Second day of school 5. 6. Censored Roberto Cicconi 1. Electronic Engineer 2. People that talk too much 3. Privacy 4. My coming to Canada. 5. 6. You can work less by doing it right the first time. Jerry Commandeur 1. N.A.I.T. Distributive Technology and career in advertising 2. Loud people, crowded places and rainy days 3. Egyptian Handicrafts, quiet meditating in a lonely room, popular music and playing guitar. 4. All of my last summer. 5. Learning to read music and finally getting to play something 6. Whad da think, ya think not 32 Emily Demkiw 1. Attend N.A.I.T. for Dis¬ tributive Technology, travel extensively. 2. White or bright-coloured socks for boys, fickle or phony friends. 3. Lake parties, pizzas, horses, people who like me. 4. Skipping and not being caught, Grad ’67, old gang at Pizza Joint. 6. ' 1 made it.” Cathy Devaney 1. Float down the Red River again. 2. Closed windows in French 30. 3. Freckles, red licorice. 4. Rollie Miles’ kiss. 5. Championship basketball team, Outstanding Female Athlete ' 67, Sr. Volleyball, Track Field. 6. Really.” Oksana Dmytruk 1. Varsity-Arts, to be a mature adult, to grow my hair long. 2. Harmony, headaches. 3. P.W., cooking, privacy, exercising, bike-riding, tennis, food, reading. 4. The day I stopped blush¬ ing. 5. Social convenor Student’s Union, Vice-Pres. Ukrain¬ ian Club. 6. MMM-Hmm” (as in Yes). Jacqueline Demers 1. Telephone operator or secretary. 2. Religion 30. 3. Pat Paulson for president. 4. Mrs. Dunnigan’s office. 5. Mighty Matthieu. 6. ”Sock-a-to-me-baby.” Norman Demers 1. To get my mechanic papers then Heavy Duty. 2. Student teachers. 3. Double lunch, music. 4. Mr. Sopchychyn ' s Math 12 class. 5. 1968 Year Play. Larry Desjardins 1. Attend N.A.I.T., take business administration, major in credit. 2. Ugly girls, gutless cars, people with lots of grease in their hair. 3. Beer, cute girls, cars, money, people that don ' t try to put up a false front. 4. Ballet in Lit ’68 drink¬ ing beer with Moe and the rest of the boys. 5. Track Field team, Sec- Treas. Aurora Youth Club. 6. Get off it.” Joanne Czartoryski 1. Become rich and famous or have an unusual career. 2. Being made a fool of. 3. Exotic foods, travel 5. Year book gr. 11 12, Mission Club (pres.) Grace Czech 1. X-Ray Technician, travel. 2. Boys with long, greasy hair, Mon. mornings, school buses, wearing glasses. 3. ’ Mustangs”, lively week¬ ends, free periods. 4. Walking 3 flights of stairs each morning for 2 years. 5. The Saints” at football games. 6. Hey!” Ugh.” Allan Dacyk 1. To abolish school, become the head of the Mafia or drop out of high school and become a teacher. 2. People who cheat at mar¬ bles, riding on buses, snobs who think that they are heaven sent. 3. Blowing my mind on gar¬ lic sausage. 4. The day I smashed a guitar while playing a Who song. Alice Dancause 1. Key-punch operator, travel to Mexico. 2. Religion classes, quiet cars, cream puffs, Martha’s red baby dolls. 3. Drummers, dancing, souped-up cars, donuts. 4. Being Martha’s step-sister for four months. 5. Working at Speedway Park. 6. Fall on your head.” 33 Dave Dorey 1. Winning a football championship and R.C. M.P. 2. Mr. Mackenzie, football injuries, school. 3- girls, football, music, dancing and spo rts in general. 4. Scoring a touchdown in my first game with the Sr. Football Team. Dennis Donahue 1. N.A.I.T. 2. The school. 4. Keg party. 5. Boot-legging. Denyse Douziech 1. To take Biological Sciences at N.A.I.T. and eventually be a success. 2. Cliques”, baggy nylons, exams, studying. 3. Long hair, holidays, sum¬ mer weather, travelling, cars. 4. Getting my drivers license, making it through high school, Miss Cassidy ' s Chem. classes. 5. Being on the volleyball team in gr. 10. Michelle Dostaler 1. Medical Secretary. 2. Being stepped on in crowded hails, people who think I ' m a midget, side burns. 3. Spending when I don ' t have any money, long hair on girls, boys who wear glasses, getting letters. 4. A wrap on the window in Data processing class. 6. Don’t have a bird.” Patricia Duda George Drohomirecki 1 . Dental Assistant at N.A.I 1. Attend U. of A. on a T. science program. 2. Eng. 33, 10th period, a 2. People who file their nails girl with a big mouth, in class. 3. Skiing, flying, money, 3. Photography, coin collect- warm climate. ing, hiking, mountain 4. Schuffle-board at S.U.B. climbing. 5. Room Rep. in Gr. 12, 4. Summer of ' 67. grad committee. 5. Reach For The Top, table 6. Are you out of your tennis. tree?” Jim Duffield 1. Get out of St. Joe ' s, travel around to different parts of the world, con¬ tinue my education. 2. Part of Greg’s party, go¬ ing down to the attendance office, going to 5th and 7th periods, girls who play the role. 3. Money, girls, kegs, floor hockey, other parts of Greg’s party. 4. Greg’s party, peanut butter sandwiches, the light show Sandra Dukewich 1. Legal secretary then later a housewife. 2. Girls who smoke, my stupid mistakes, boys with long hair. 3. Pete, his Morris, long, long hair on girls. 4 . A certain week-end in Banff. 5. Passing English. 6. Oh, for Pete’s sake!” Doug Dunnigan 1. University graduate de¬ gree. 2. Questionaires, Charles de Gaulle, bad T.V. com¬ mercials, seeing Toronto Maple Finks win. 3. Shakespeare, Latin prose, chess, swimming, Toronto Maple Finks being out of the playoffs. 4. Expo. 6. Bah, Humbug!” Bob Dulaba 1. To be an electronics tech nician. 2. Monday mornings, cars that break down. 3. One special girl, cars, music, sports. 34 Gene Dzugan 1. Enter U of A, travel around the world. 2. Olives, homework, getting up Monday morning. 3. Cars, girls, money. 4. T.M.’s party last fall. 5. T.M.’s party. Virginia Esposito 1. To work for a while, then travel to Italy and to get married. 2. Waking up in the morn¬ ing, people who don’t mind their own business. 3. Soccer, combing out hair, shopping for new clothes. 4. April 29, 1967? June 14, 1967? 5. Passing book-keeping 10 20 . 6. Che Vita?” Miles Willy Foreman 1. To graduate and proceed to higher education and travel. 2. Mouthy teachers, finks. 3. Sue, parties, pool (with Minn. Fats), basketball games. 4. Passing French 10, ballet at Lit Night. 5. First trumpet, leading our school trip at basketball games. 6. Toolie-o.” Suzanne Gagne 1. Plan to become an Air Stewardess. 2. People staring at me. 3. Adrien, summer, food clothes, being called Bernie. 4. Last Christmas Eve. 5. Passing Book-keeping. 6. Son-of-a-gun.” Andrew Epler 1. To obtain a doctorate in either electrical engineer¬ ing or physics, to get a Queen’s commission in the armed forces. 2. The way the country is run, indecisive teachers. 3. Warm, sunny weather, travelling 5. Vice-Pres. of T.V. Club in ’65-66, member of Science Club ' 65-66, member of Rifle Team for four years. Margaret Gallagher 1. University, travel. 2. Getting up, muddy side¬ walks. 3. Fur, assemblies, holidays. 4. Sept. ’65. 5. Honor board, Reach For The Top.” Wanda Filipionek 1. To work with I.B.M. machines. 2. Getting a run in a brand new pair of nylons early in the morning, Math. 3. Greg Klein, swimming, reading, graduating this year, dining lounges. 4. Free periods. Leo Fedoriw 1. Faculty of Physical Ed. at U of A. 2. Losing at pool, conceited people, having to fill out a grad form, drinking shampoo. 3. Motorcycles, swimming, fishing, hunting, shooting the bull. 4. When I was a kid I drank half a bottle of shampoo. 5. I don’t want to brag about them. 6. Do unto others, before they do unto you.” Sarah Fiorotto 1. Attend University and enter Education, travel to Europe. 2. Snobby selfish people, attending Social Studies in the 1st period of the morning. 3. Sports, preferably in win¬ ter, tennis and now skiing. 4. A wonderful weekend in Jasper, coffee during the 4th period with Chris un¬ til we got caught. Sebasti Frattin 1. U of A Education, Mana¬ ger of some kind and make money. 2. Getting a flat tire on a date, getting beat in floor hockey, losing in any sport, sick Italian jokes. 3. Football, food, cars, girls, just fooling around. 4. Borrowing” a Centennial Flag, Sr. Football, being drafted by the Italian Army. 35 Glen Gerun 1. Heavy Duty Diesel, mil¬ lionaire. 2. ’56 Monarch, getting up in the morning. 3. A Mayerthorpe lass and a good pay cheque. 4. Baseball champs, 2nd best in hockey. 5. Can ' t think of any but there ' s a few. 6. Just plain old English.” Tom Ganger 1. N.A.I.T. for 2 years, con¬ tinue with the hood Servicing business. 2. Term papers, weekend homework. 3. Travelling, dances, going to the lake. 4. Frosh — getting giving. 5. Basketball, bowling, work¬ ing on my car, hockey, swimming. 6. Oh yea.” Lionel Girard 1. Engineer or technician. 2. Math, colds, English teachers. 3. Cars, skiing, girls, dan¬ cing. 4. Frosh dance. 5. The Y”. 6. Just what I thought!” Helen Green 1. Education at U of A. 2. Pat. 3. Riding, talking, going to the hospital, teasing Pat. 4. Making my first dollar as a witch” in the Muk-Luk Mardi Gras Parade. 5 Ye Old Jugband, Klon¬ dike Kate 67 68, Year Play 66 67, Ukrainian Club, passing Ukrainian 10 20 . 6. What’s the matter . . . don ' t be silly.” Marcel Gravelle 1. Electronic Technology. 2. Long dresses. 3. Short dresses. 4. I’ll never tell. 5. Being on the honor roll. 6. You’re just a punk kid, you don’t mean nothing to me.” Helen Handheld 1. Going to work in under¬ developed countries, learn¬ ing different languages, working in an office. 2. Horses, boys with long hair. 3. Sports, Driving beautiful cars, roller skating, parties, comedy shows, dancing, riding go-carts. 4. Winning a $500.00 watch, my school days in my home town. 5. Being secretary-treasurer of Student ' s Union in Beaumont. 6. You ' re kidding!” Pat Garvin 1. Pass Eng. 30, Doctor ' s degree in Electronical Engineering, spell Sir- man ' s 1st name correctly. 2. Pushing Eoremsky’s car to the gas station every wk., people who get everything without working for it. 3. Restoring old cars (’35- ’45 Fords), water skiing, long car trips, listening to Herb Alpert. 4. My 1st car all the tri¬ bulations leading up to the time it finally ran. Joe Girard 1. To be a heavy duty mech¬ anic. 2. Boys with long hair. 3. Girls, cars, money. 4. My first lemon (car). 5. Army camps when I was in the army cadets. 6. A sure thing.” Kasper Halwa 1. Agriculture, studying the behavior of people. 2. Attending school in Spring, losing money. 3. Skiing, cars, money. 4. Many long skiing trips. 5. Camping travelling. 6. He ' s a good mark” and Very Interesting”. Thomas Hay 1. Electronics Technician at N.A.I.T. 2. Groups of giggling girls, sick cars. 3. Music, travelling, food, swimming, skating. 4. My first home-built stereo. 6. Fathead.” Jeannette Hinkley 1. Visit Mexico and work in an office. 2. Snobs, people who are late. 3. All sports, music, food. Joe Hipfner 1. Airforce. 2. Girls who say one thing and mean another. 3. Fast cars, girls and lots of money. 4. The pie-eating contest when I hit Mrs. Patterson. 5. Riviera and gliding at Cooking Lake glider club. 6. Why certainly, never.” Linda Horejsi 1. To get out of gr. 12 be¬ fore my little brother does. 2. Running 440” in the 880” in Track and Field. 3. Sports and everything to do with them. 4. The Street Picture”. 5. Athletic pin (’66-’67), volleyball team, city champs in table tennis (’68), fencing, girls floor hockey team. Oleh Izio 1. Eventually to attend uni¬ versity, to surprise every¬ one by becoming a success. 2. Going swimming with my clothes on. 3. Bucking around on the floor at school dances, drag racing, dancing, every sport you can think of. 4. My first year in high school.. 5. Room Rep. (67-68). 6. Don’t be silly, snakes don’t have arm pits.” Albert Hemery 1. Degrees in Law and Economics, possibly I’ll go into politics. 2. Increasing irresponsibility in the Student Body, Charity Drives in which teachers are abused in slave auctions. 3. Student co-operation in projects like the Concern- In. 5. T.V. Club, Room Rep. in Grade 11. Jacques Paul Henault 1. Study Law at U. of A., work towards degree: B.A. L.L.B. 2. Edsels, being asked to fill 3. Peanuts” comic strip, Mercedes Benz-3005 LB. 4. Building my first snow fort. 5. Passing kindergarten with honors. 6. C’est la vie!” Joe Elickey 1. Civil Tech, at N.A.I.T., afterwards travel. 2. People who forget their deodorant. 3. Anderson’s beard, girls, beer, in that order. 4. Ballet in Lit of ’68, play¬ ing drum at basketball games. 5. Sr. Football, volleyball, Track Field, wrestling, intramurals. 6. What?” Vera Eluhlewych 1. B. of Sc. in Nursing U. of A., to see the world. 2. People who are always moody, onions. 3. Getting good marks in difficult subjects, cars. 4. Summer of ’67. 5. Piano, getting 1st Class Honors in harmony and form, Plast (Ukrainain Youth Assoc.) 6. Oh Phooey!’ Barry Jackowich 1. lo apprentice for a char¬ tered accountant or go to university, to play hockey. 2. Losing the CHED (hockey), people who are always getting injured (like myself), French, dumb blondes. 3. Professional Bluegrass music, being tall. 4. Hubbles Beach, graduat¬ ing last year, playing monopoly overnight at the Pizza Joint. JoAnne Jamnik 1. Nursing, part-time danc¬ ing, completing my milk cap dress. 2. Cruel people, sprained toes, waiting. 3. Animals, exotic foods, entertaining, Lemon gin, blue jeans, travel. 4. Irene’s peanut butter sandwiches. 5. Lit Nights, floor hockey, drama gr. 11, Wizard of Mod Groll. 6. Oh yeah?” 37 Donald Juneau 1. University degree, to be good at whatever I try, to get married. 2. SnobDisn girls, fluorinated water, cold weather in summer, rats”. 3. 1 Hot” cars, curling and other sports, femininity, good jokes. 4. Driving my brother’s new car. 5. Executive member of Beaumont’s Student’s Union, player on a win¬ ning curling team. Mary Kerr 1. Enter the Business world. 2. Greasy hair, baggy pants, 1:00 a.m. curlew. 3. Dancing, pizza, and the green bomb. 4. Christmas Holidays ’67, spring atternoon at Mea- aowlark. 5. Junior achievement, choir. 6. ' Sure babe.” Lynn Kimenius 1. Ferry Mason ' s legal sten- orgapher. 2. Bucket seats, flat tires, quiet boys. 3. Super sports, Saturday niglits, driving lessons on Sunday afternoons. 4. Duck hunting in Novem¬ ber. 5. Getting learners permit. 6 . Dale Kinshella 1. N.A.I.T. Food Service. 2. Washing dishes with the dishwasher when it isn’t working. 3. Anybody who likes me. 4. Banff expeditions with Imperial Oil. 5. The tombstone in Jasper. 6. My name’s Dale. How my doing so far. Duane Kinshella 1. To become a welder and travel before I get too old. 2. People who worry too much. 3. Open-minded people, girls, music, sports, Pat Byrns, being young. 4. December 24, 1967, (D.A.) 5. Weight lifting club. 6. Blow your touk.” Veronica Kirkpatrick 1. Go to night classes at N. A.I.T., travel, own a car. 2. Trying to sleep when a teacher is talking. Eng¬ lish 10th period. 3. Boys, driving a car, lunch periods, our gang”. 4. Bookkeeping grade X in 10th period. 5. Being on the Honor Board twice trying for a third. 6. Right”. Kenneth Kish 1. Aircraft maintenance. 2. Questionaires. 3. Cars. 4. 6. If first you fail, try, try, try again. Fred Jobin 1. Full-fledged accountant. 2. Incompetent waiters at the Ale House. 3. Occasional binge (drunk). 4. My first introduction to alcohol. 5. When I joined the A.A. 6. We all have to go some¬ time so why not with whiskey?” Greg Junck 1. Handle a Kenworth along with the best of them. 2. Conceited women, Mon¬ day mornings, scooters, a night with nothing to do. 3. Mini-skirts, yodeling, tinker with cars, the bur¬ gers at Triple X, boxing. 4. The inside of Mr. Bar- luge’s office. 5. Football at Mac., floor hockey, Phys. Ed. 30 in general. Elsie Kaminski 1. That’s a good question. 2. Monday morning, roast pork, sloppy people. 3. Ukrainian VC ' eddings, pay day, cats. 4. Stalf New Year’s party at Royal Glenora Club. 6. Welt any ways! Gee I w ' ish it was Friday. 38 •4X Anne-Marie Klemem 1 . 3. 3. 6 . Education at U. of A. and eventually get my driver ' s license. In-crowd, insincere people, Alberta ' s sub-artic weatner. Bridge-mix, Bill Crosby, weekends, Christmas, Easter holidays. Miss Cassidy’s chem. class. Grade 10 volleyball team, fencing club, Yearbook staff. You’re kidding! Odel Kliparchuk 1. Europe this summer, then to become a teacher. 2. ZITS and getting up early. 3. Guys with beards, water- sking, generally all sports. 4. Summer vacation to Pen- tiction and Montana last year. 5. Cheerleading for 3 years, highest mark in skin- diving class, getting down novice run at Banff in one piece. 6. I don’t have one. Ron Kmiech Karen Klukus 1. To travel. 2. English 10th period, boys with long hair. 3. Money, boys, a warm climate. 4. 5. Making the honor board for the first and last time. 6. No shots” Terry Koculya 1. To get my mechanics papers. 2. Unreasonable teachers. 3. Girls, mini-skirts. 4. Jasper ’67. 5. 6. Don’t blow your cool. 1. Dental technology at N. A.I.T. 2. Teachers who pull their authority and people who talk too much. 3. Sports, music, 7th period study! 4. Climbing a mt. in B.C. in 3 hour and climbing down the same mt. in 20 minutes. 5. Year Play 1968, junior football 68, K of C hockey. Dianne Kohel 1. To get my R.N. 2. Two-faced, snobby people. 3. Stuffed animals, onion rings. 4. Mr. Lamothe ' s rides every morning, frosh dance, my birthday party at Sharon’s. 5. Being chosen room rep. 6. Oh you guys! Paul Kolodej 1. U. of A. Medicine, specialize-cardiology, sur¬ gical research. 5. Five months ago i was living in Czechoslovakia where, I won, several times various competitions in Physics, Mathematics, olympiades, music festi¬ vals for my country and Europe. 6. It is never too late to start. Nadia Kotylak Gerald Kowalchuk 1. U. of A. for B.Sc. 2. Grade 12 departmentals, people who keep asking why ? why ? 3. Most sports, coin collect¬ ing, out-door living, travelling. 4. Spending the summer in Europe. 5. Knights of Columbus Northern Alberta champ¬ ionship in March ’67. 6. All the world’s a stage and all its characters mere¬ ly players.” Richard Kolodynski 1. To be a good mechanic. 2. Mini-skirts on the wrong kind of people. 3. Drag racing, hunting, working on cars. 4. Vancouver last summer. 5. My first trophy at the drag races. 39 Luba Kuc 1. University (take some¬ thing), 2. Being called Kuba Luc”. Insincere people. (Year¬ book). 3. Skiing, tennis, football, and pigtails. 4. Always being late for Mr. Mathieu’s french class, being caught for speeding, giving blood. 5. Yearbook Editor, Prom Committee, fencing club, programmer, of Ukrainian club, folk mass group. Susan Kully 1. To be a commercial artist, and to get married. 2. Eggs, doing homework, boys with long greasy hair. 3. Ron, beards, mustangs, ice cream. 4. Rolling a car, weekend parties. 5. Getting 80% in English, having long hair. M urray Lambert 1. University’ degree in Science or Engineering. To make a million”? 2. Role players, people who don’t take a hint. 3. Toilet-paper unravelling tournament sponsored by Jug Band, cars, music. 4. Summer ’67. 5. Member of Cairo Pal- Udium Jug Band. 6. What ' s the matter? Ken Kozoway 1. Ski bum in the Mojave desert. Business admin¬ istration at the U. of B.C. 2. People who bum lunches. 3. Show water skiing, scuba diving, handball. 4. Mr. Shelley ' s English class, walking into his class with crutches. 5. Junior football. 6. What do you want a medal or the chest to pin it on. Eva Krim 1. Travel to Europe, parts of Canada. Work as a Tele¬ phone Consultant. 2. Hippies, Mini-skirts, straight long hair. 3. Convertibles swimming, reading. 4. Vacations in B.C. and of my mother and father. 5. Volleyball and basketball Irene Kucharyshyn 1. Attend U. of A. in the fall, (arts program). 2. I wish there were no lonely people in the world. 3. Art, people conversing, (fancy name for chatter- in g)- 4. Being a Centennial ex¬ change student in the summer of ’67, to Quebec. 5. Once upon a time I played a dwarf in Snow White” (Grade 3). 6. One more like that and you’re out. Gerry Larson 1. University or N.A.I.T. 2. Purple pants, Social 30, cowboy boots, playing goalie, stubborn people. 3. Floor hockey, coffee with Libby after school, danc¬ ing at sock hops. 4. Frosh days, Sirois party, giving Bob Stepchuk golden plunger” award. W. D. David Leeb 1. Owning a thunderbird, taking the right courses at the U. of A. 2. Not getting to use the cafeteria in the new wing. Having bigger people take away the chair you were saving. 3. Miss Cassidy’s chem. class, a certain girl with long blond hair. 4. My drawing on Locker No. 3261, watching certain people trying to pick a fight in the courtyard. Don Lecky 1. U. of A. Bachelor of Science. 2. French. 3. Most types of music, swimmiflg. 4. Stealing Ross Shep’s mas¬ cot. 5. F.x-leader of Cairo Pal¬ ladium Jug Band. Chris Lemiski 1. To pass grade 12 with a 60 or over average. Education U. of A. To learn to ski better. 2. Girls with thigh high skirts, long hair, ski tows, snobby people. 3. Skiing, travelling, football, fast cars, Sarah’s mustang. 4. Two wonderful trips to Jasper. Expo 67, not mis¬ sing one football game in ’67. 40 :ricia Losinsk Social servict at N.A.I.T. years from n Math 30, ha my piggy bar Ukrainian Sylvia Machniak pPP T 1. To become a bookkeeper. 2. People who ask too many worthless questions. 3. Travelling for pleasure, dancing music. dancing. I ■}, 6. Life is what you make Dan Magnan Moe Malloy 1. Go to U. of A. and be- 1. To eat, drink, and be come an Electronic merry for tomorrow I’ll engineer. fat and middle-aged. 2. Grubs and greasers. Lack 2. RESPONSIBILITY, of spirit in St. Joe’s wearing shoes, any kind activities. work. 3. Girls, tennis, floor hockey, 3. Exclusion slips, standin skiing. on my head, hiking an 5. Coming in second place in collecting junk. floor hockey last year, 4. Managing to stay in t social convenor of Youth school for 3 years (exc organization. for a few unexpected 6. Fizzue. sin one football game camps mien Mazurek H I. Training in secretaria technology at N.A.I. and travel. 2. Having to take the when the green boml won’t go. 4. Being escorted back school from an aften at Meadowlark. 5. Prom committee, part work at Johnson’s Walkers. 6. Oh . . . honestly. my Mazzuca Business administration at N.A.I.T. Carmela Mazzuca Homework, lectures from 1. Good job, travel, parents, gossip. 2. Boys with long hair ; Travelling, speeding, go- snobs. Karen McCoy 1. Get out of St. Joe’s, Inhal¬ ation therapist. 2. Boys with long greasy hair and tight pants. 3. Streaked hair. 4. Ladies at attendance office, late slips. 5. Cheerleading, room rep., grad ' 67. 6. Shut up, Missaien!. Mary McDonald 1. Computer programmer. 2. Cigars, dirty cars, dark little old country roads. 3. Boys! shopping, Vaux- halls, long hair, Toronto, 4. A certain boy from a cer¬ tain state at a certain sum¬ mer camp in a certain province. 5. Learning how to play chopsticks” on the piano. Susan Missiaen 1. To see the world. 2. Tow line at Jasper, phony people. 3. Bargains at Antoines, parties at the Centennial Flame. 4. Getting 100% in a Physics exam. 5. Cheerleading, being Foot¬ ball Queen, Lit convenor. 6. Dennis put my desk down. Gail Monaghan 1. Undecided. 2. Miss Cassidy coming early when I come late. 3. 1953 Ford Victorian with accessories. 4. My psychological disease that reoccured every Mon¬ day and disappeared every Friday for six weeks. 5. Students Union, Yearbook, Sep Hi-Lites, volleyball, table tennis. Sabina Michalkiewicz 1. Commercial artist. 2. Guys that think they are smart and irresistable. 3. Tall, dark, blue-eyed boys, swimming, painting, Chinese food. 4. Having a swell commercial art teacher. 5. T.V. club, Legion of Mary. 6. Ah huh.” Marian Miskiw 1. Go to N.A.I.T. and marry a millionaire. 2. Moths, red socks, walking home by myself. 3. Fast cars, music, N.N. baking, summer. 4. Dressing up for Klondike Daze ’67. 5. Passing all my grade 10 subjects. 6. Drop dead. Bertha Merilaen 1. Enter the field of interior design. 2. Phony people, hot dogs, white socks, greasy boys. 3. Being able to go to Rain¬ bow Friday night and having to go to work on Saturday mornings. 4. Expo 67, singing for a band, kids at the pizza joint. Ann Mercx 1. To be a social worker. 2. Cracking knuckles, up¬ tight schedules, or or¬ ganizations. 3. Little green apples”, horseback riding, puppy dogs, chocolate ice cream. 4. Summer ’67, Bethlehem. 5. Falling off a Shetland pony, Project Christopher. 6. pur-r-r-r!” Daniel Merrills 1. U. of A. Law. 2. Psychological blindness. 3. Getting away from it all, good friends, honesty. 4. Past summers. 5. Scouting, Britain, Montreal. 6. The most fatal disease of friendship is gradual decay or dislike, hourly increased by causes too slender for complaint, too numerous for removal. Henry J. Metera 1. Medicine at U. of A. 2. Short hair, homework, running out of gas on a date, being broke. 3. Jazz, beards, money, mini¬ skirts, making the most of nothing. 4. Spending a summer at the beach and loving it. 5. Senior football, relay team, passing a Chem. exam, hustling Lorraine. 43 ON 4 George Obst 1. To be rich and famous. 2. Vice-principals, physics. 3. Fords, steaks, Fridays. . Expulsion from A.B. . Rats”. Brian O ' Neill 1. N.A.I.T. 2. Competition. 3. Football, tennis, girls, librarians. 4. Beating Ross Shep J.P. in football. 5. Football grades 10 and 11. 6. Smile, it won’t kill ya! Patricia Onysyk 1. N.A.I.T. or straight to a secretarial job. 2. Teachers who can’t teach. 3. Vacations, bowling, walk¬ ing, Agatha Christie, books. 4. Finishing Phys. Ed. 10 5. Yearbook in grade 11. 6. Put off for tomorrow what you could do today. Bruna Pace 1. Work. 2. C.C.’s five minutes, people who don ' t mind their own business. 3. Walking in the park, pink and navy blue, Italian music, hamburgers. 4. The day I met C.C., dinner at Tita’s. 5. Passing Mr. Brophy’s Bookkeeping 10. 6. You never know. Fiore Pagliuso 1. Go to N.A.I.T., and visit my old country. 2. Chinese food, women drivers. 3. Good pizza, sports, fast cars. 4. Seeing the Rock of Gibraltar. 5. Winning the bowling trophy. 6. Welcome to my world. Nadia Moolyk 1. A successful secretary, travel. 2. Moody, miserable people, long haired boys, writing essays in English. 3. Pizzas, stuffed animals, Easter Buny”. 4. Religion 30 discussion class with Brother John. 5. St. Basil’s Queen Carnival, U.C.Y. Sodality, January 14. 6. Oh. You’re kidding. Irene Morhardt 1. U. of A. Education, to be happy and make others happy. 2. People who gossip with¬ out knowing the facts, beards and sideburns. 3. Ice cubes, cats, my room, stuffed animals, Bee Gees, onion rings. 4. Having a double lunch and 7th and 8th period studies. 6. Oh dear! Maureen O’Neill 1. ' Parlez en francais”, experience life instead of reading about it. 2. Crossing my skiis, dishes, springtime in January. 3. Sincere people, skiing, mountains, snow, horses, life, singing. 4. The Sin-Bin, commercial art 32. 5. Yearbooks 66-67, fall group. 6. FAN-t-a-s-tic! Oh that’s grand. Sharon Oppelt 1. Take recreation at Mount Royal College. 2. Snobby people, crash diets, money. 3. Modern Jazz, my friends, being in Mother Law¬ rences religion class. 4 . Receiving a corsage on Year Play night, Drama 30. 6. Is that right!!! Sharon Olinek 1. Distributive Technology at N.A.I.T. Go to New Zealand in 3 years. 2. Math and Science classes, loud girls. 3. Boys, dancing, clothes. 4. The good times at St. Mary’s. 5. Social convenor at St. Mary’s, Woodwards Teen council representative. 6. Amen. 44 Cecile Paul Karen Peters 1. Work in a travel agency. 1. Inhalation Therapy at 2. Homework, sausages. N.A.I.T. 3. Music, dances, food. 2. Smoky stuffed rooms. 4. My brother ' s wedding. 5. Winning a trophy for best 5. Catching the bouquet. rider in a bicycle contest. 6. Just a minute. 6. Better late than never. Joyce Petryshyn 1. Enter nursing field. 2. Hippies. 3. Country music, ' 67 Mount Calm. 4. Mountain climbing on coast of B.C. 5. Valentines Queen in Lron River. 6. Have you marked our exams yet, sir? Duane Pickle 1. Unfortunately returning to St. Joe’s. 2. Getting electrocuted. 3. Valiant stationwagons. 5. T.V. Club. 6. I’m broke. Henry Piktel 1. U. of A. 2. Floor hockey players with mauled sweat shirts. 3. Archeology, travelling, my ’68 Charger. 5. CYO treasurer. 6. Beep-beep. Lillian Pilip 1. To be a success and see the world. 2. Inconsiderate people. 3. People, having fun, spend¬ ing money. 4. Meeting Jerry. 5. Teen talk, modelling Grad ’67. Gerardo Pagnani 1. Phys. lid. degree, work on my soccer scholarship, be¬ come a professional soccer player. 2. Smoking, school and teachers who are always at my back. 3. Girls, sports, music. 4. Making first string Senior Basketball team in grade 5. 11, playing Senior Football Mary Pagnotta 1. To become a secretary and marry in the future. 2. People who don’t mind their own business. 3. Boys, music, pizza. Passed my subjects every year. without winning a game. 6. Oh, you’re kidding. Allan Paproski 1. Attain my Bachelor of Commerce degree. 2. People who smoke and drink because everyone else does it. 3. Jazz, popular music, ice cream. 4. First time I got the keys to my dad’s car. 5. Honor board in grade 11. 6. One of these days, but not today”. Maria Patricio 1. Enter the Faculty of Education. 2. Getting up early. 3. Meeting people, travelling, sports. 4. Meeting Robby Lane and the Disciples, Herman’s Hermits, the Who. 5. Legion of Mary, Hart Club, Sep Hi-Lites. 6. Do unto others as others do unto you. 45 Lina Pino 1. To be a stenographer. 2. Girls that use improper language. 3. Hamburgers, pink, formal dances. 5. Member of the Italian CYO. Cathy Powell 1. Respiratory technology at N.A.I.T. 2. People who act for your own good’’ and then louse everything up. 3. A blond boy, sewing, meeting people, writing letters. 4. Member of Sep’s mixed curling winning team ’66- 67. Anna Prete 1. Further education in accounting. 2. People who are not sociable. 3. Eating, accounting, serving people. 4. December 1 0. 6. I’ll never tell. Louise Prosky 1. Sarcastic people, long¬ haired boys. 2. Lunch hours, being in¬ quisitive. 3. First convertible ride. 4. Yearbook club. Margo Radcliffe 1. To become an airline stewardess. 2. People who have no sense of responsibility. 3. Playing the guitar, cars, horses, good books, friend¬ ly people. 4. Trip to Ontario. 5. Playing in the Northern Alberta Music Festival. Joseph Rao 1. U. of A. Engineering. 2. People who do not take advantage of an education. 3. Cars, Herb Alpert, Motor¬ cycles. 4. What favourite memory?? 5. Radio club. 6. They wouldn’t print mine. Don Rebus 1. To be serious. 4. I’ll never tell. 6. Yes I am. Terrance Reeve 1. To get my mechanics and diesel mechanics papers. 3. Cars, basketball. 4. Getting my first car. 6. You’re nuts.” Jerry Rhyason 1. Becoming a chef. 2. Theory. 3. Wrestling, swimming, bowling. 4. O’Leary High School wrestling team. 6. Why sure. Bernie Ricard 1. Commercial artist. 2. Being pushed around and people who don ' t under¬ stand me. 3. Driving my dad’s car, sketching, having fun with my friends. 5. Room Rep. (313) 6. Oh, come on! 46 Flora Ricioppo 1. Varsity, to be a success. 2. Lydia”, extreme individualists. 3. Music, people with real class. 4. Touring the Calgary Workshop Symphony Orchestra last summer. 6. Huh . . What are you talking about? I.orraine Riopel 1. To be rich and fat. 2. l c 54 music in the cafeteria 3. Dill pickles, Donna, short boys with bushy eyebrows. 4. Certain parties that never happened. 5. Acting in Parent’s Propose”. 6. Hi there, fat Carl. John Rolf 1. U.C.L.A., getting a private plane’s license. 2. Faster cars than mine. 3. Times when there aren’t any faster cars than mine. 6. Censored. Gary Rumley 1. To join the Royal Mount¬ ed Police. 2. Girls who wear too much eye shadow. 3. Fast cars, girls with long hair, fun in general. 4. First entering high school, meeting Linda. 6. Sock it to me! Dale Ringuette 1. Computer operator and a good drummer. 2. My study hall teacher. 3. Hot cars, drumming. 4. My first time on a drag strip. 5. Playing back-up on the drums in a recording studio. Armande Rivet 1. Work as a typist. 2. Having to take the bus every morning. 3. Third period typing class. 4. Ladies at attendance office. 5. Taking dancing lessons this winter. 6. Is that right. Boh Ritter I. IJ. of A. Faculty of Science. 3. Sports, wine, women, song. 4. Going across Canada last summer, floor hockey, tobogganning during Christmas. 5. Running relay at the Kins¬ man field house. 6. Let’s go wide-tracking. Deborah Robson 1. Data processing for C.N.R. 2. Photographers, Moe”, people who call me Deborah”. 3. Horseback riding, oil painting, Charles Dickens, sleeping. 4. Being locked in a bath¬ room for 1 hour before being found. 5. 880 yd. crests (track meet) and making the honor board. 6. But gee — I can’t swim! Marie Ralkeiser. 1. To be successful in what¬ ever I choose. 2. Theory class and phony people. 3. My best friends, down to earth people, only girl in Senior Foods Class. 5. Grad last year, hitch-hik¬ ing experiences. 6. Pack it. Tom Rumpel 1. To play football in University. 2. Noisey poker players. 3. Buttermilk and pickles. 4. That day at the lake. 5. Playing football for St. Joe’s clowns. 6. Make sure your brain is engaged before putting your mouth in gear. 47 Doris Savard 1. Work a year — then travel to Europe. 2. Mouthy roommates, beards. 3. Pizza and coffee, reading. 4. Summer vacation. 6. I didn ' t do nothing. Madeline Sabourin 1. Advertising art at S.A.I.T. 2. Helen, people who laugh at me when I just happen to be in a serious mood. 3. Music, singing, painting, having fun, teasing Helen, tobogganing”. 4 . Whipped cream fight in cafeteria, emergency en¬ trance at R.A.H. Jan. 14. 5. Jug Band ' 67, Lit night ' 67-68, singing for Klon¬ dike Daze. 6. You’re kidding! No!! Janice Sansom 1. U. of A., travel and to be skinny. 2. The fantastic activity fill¬ ed noon hours at St. Joe’s. 3. Watermelon, Dense people (for the benefit of my dense friends). 4. The Pizza Joint. 5. Cheerleading grades 11 12, room rep. 6. Who’s going to religion?? Duane Schlereth 1. To become a Math teacher with a class of beautiful girls while still young enough to enjoy it. 2. Cold weather, absent minded teachers. 4. A trip to Detroit for two games of the Stanley Cup playoffs. 5. Columbian Squires. 6. Don’t mess around. Jan Semkow 1. To try and understand life and make use of it. 2. People who criticize art and know almost nil about it, depressions. 3. Anything to do with art. 4. Barb’s homemade cast, bicycling summer 5 a.m., waking Zen up 6 a.m. 6. No! Yeah? Silvio Squazzin 1. U. of A. Engineering. 2. Pampered french poodles and monkeys. 3. Tennis, football, diving. 4. The easy life in grade 10 11 . 5. Table tennis team, debat¬ ing team. 6. There is no sweeter taste than that of revenge. Joan Shannon 1. To grow up. 3. Flights up north and a boy with blue sweaters. 5. Horse-back riding club. 6. Ch-ch-ch” Michael Sheptycki 1. U. of A. Engineering. 2. Necessary homework, 10th period Math class. 3. Staying on the honor board without really trying, holidays. 4. Staying on the honor board, leaving for summer holidays. 6. Most definitely. Roy Sheptycki 1. U. of A. Engineering. 2. People who take advantage of others. 3. Girls, sports, cars. 4. Summer ’67. 6. Bug off. Carol Sheremeta 1. Dental assistant, travel. 2. Boys who aren’t gentle¬ men. 3. Water skiing, sewing, 396 Caprice. 4. Skipping three times and being caught three times. 5. Treasurer of Archbishop MacDonald. 48 Stan Solikoski 1. Making Polish people the Master race again. 2. People tha t tell the truth right to your face, go between, mooches, know- it-alls. 3. Saturday night over at the lake with the boys, seeing Rumpel turn white. 4. Dropping Latin 30, meet¬ ing Dave Bolander — basketball floor hockey with him. Carol Sorokowsky 1. Dental assistant. 2. Getting up at 7 in the morning. 3. Garry, cars, sewing, tennis. 4. Two months holiday. 5. Missing school and get¬ ting away with it. Nicole Si 1. Make travel 3. Swimi 5. First •. JyM . .dH ' ,4 maM Ivan Stefanyk 1. To be happy and to break the world’s record for the oldest person alive. 2. Everything except my likes. 3. Everything but my dis¬ likes. 4. Attendance office. 5. Winning a cap pistol at a bingo at the advanced age of four. 6. Bull. Robert Stepchuk 1. Attend Eaculty of Med¬ icine at U. of A. Never smoke. 2. Cheaters, phonies, prima donnas, mobs. 3. Talking, certain girls, be¬ ing in good moods, all sports. 4. Ruffians, Epic Heart game, finding $20.00. 5. High triple and high average in bowling. 6. Dumb Larson. Howard Strauss 1. Faculty of Agriculture U. of A. 2. Monday mornings, grouchy people, boys with long hair and girls with short hair. 3. Swimming, flying, sky¬ diving. 4. Frosh week and having the shiniest shoes that week. 5. Winning trophies in 4-H club. Nadia Szram 1. U. of A. (eventually). 2. White socks on boys, Yvonne’s roll maps. 3. Irene Macur’s jokes, a night on the train with the girls. 4. Montreal ’67 with Dark One. 5. Finding my way out of Ottawa with Irene. 6. Hey wait a minute! I mean what. Olga Szwec 1. Travel, good job. 2. Having a fifth period class, mini-skirts. 3. Long hair on girls, country living. 4. Mr. Kuefler’s bookkeeping 10 class. 6. C’est la vie. Walter Szwender 1. Get into some field with the airlines one way or another. 2. Chickenman, junky cars. 3. Double lunches, hockey, records, bug classes. 4. The only guy in floor hockey to spear himself and almost get a penalty for it. John Tronchin 1. Manager for Woodward stores. 2. Working late nights for Woodwards. 3. Girls, food, Woodward Warehouse. 4. E.J.’s Appliance class. Ben Ubbing 1. Make it to the top. 2. Short hair. 3. Cars, girls, parties. 4. Second weekend during October ’67. 6. I see. Judy Turchanak 1. Radiology Technician. 2. Smart remarks about short hair. 3. Pizza, hockey, thinking over coffee, Chem. class. 4. High school years. 5. Sports council, room rep., Sep Hi-Lites, Yearbook, fencing, basketball. 6. Uncle Joe. Christine Vallette 1. Have my own apartmem and own a car. 2. People who overstay their welcome. 3. Dancing, blue eyes, sum¬ mer holidays. 4. 1968 Lit Nite (the ballet school). 5. Being on the honor board in grade 12. 6. Sorry, I lost my head. 50 Armand Vandal 1. Undecided. 2. Hot stuffy rooms. 3. All sports, quiet cars, Isabella. 4. The day Bink almost wiped out a student in wrestling match. 5. I broke up the match. 6. Hey George. Leona Verreau 1. To become a computer scientist, settle down. 2. Housework, being tired 3. Sleeping. 4. Expo ’67. 6. Big Deal. Bernadette Verstraete 1. B.Sc. in Nursing. 2. Gum-smacking people, long” short stories, de¬ partmental. 3. Mr. Shelley’s Eng. class, being alive, sports, long frilly gowns. 4. Coming to St. Joe’s in grade 10 and making friends. Richard Walker L University. 2 . Supervised classes and K (k ' h-it classes? ... I get a quadruple lunch! Diana Wasyk 1. To attend N.A.I.T. secretarial course. 2. People who jump to conclusions, vegetables. 3. Horseback riding, friendly people, bowling. 4. Getting to grade 12. 5. Grade 10 basketball team. 6. You gotta be kidding. Lynne Watt 1. To become an airline stewardess. 2. Unsocial people, indoor theatres. 3. Cars, dancing, happy r people, being alone. 4. Brother John and being left in my locker. 5. Being a blood donor. 6. Well, I guess. Maureen Welch 1. Make lots of money 2. People who drive like I do. 3. Swimming, dancing, travelling. 4. The night my brother came home from Yellow¬ knife. 5. Canora Teen Club. 6. Uh-uh. Judy Wacowich 1. Faculty of Education at the U. of A. 2. Rude people, psychedelic music, nothing to do. 3. Shakespeare, clothes, different types of music, bright colours. 4. Three years at O’Leary. 6. Is that right?? Catherine Washburn 1. To be a success in my career, to be happily married. 2. Boys with greasy mops and certain girls in mini-skirts. 3. Dancing, skating, the , colour pink. 4. Given the name Charlie” by V.D., surprise party, grad. ’67. 5. Being on the honour board. 6. You know. Donna Wasyk 1. To obtain a secretarial job. 2. Having a boring weekend, cliques. 3. Dogs, bowling, holidays. 4. Passing grades 10 and 11 without repeating subjects. 5. Grade 10 basketball team. 6. Don’t act so innocent. 51 Francis Whiskyjack 1. Attend N.A.I.T., become a professional artist. 2. Oysters, sea food, math, bookkeeping. 3. Sports, paintings, sketches, cooking. 4. The day I almost drowned. 5. R.C.S.C.C. Quadra — Pet¬ ty Officer first class, Knights of the Altar. 6. Geem-ma!” Sock it to me baby. Mike Whelan 1. Electrical technology, pilots license. 3. Flying, girls. 5. Hockey. George Woloszyn 1. To own a properous busi¬ ness, have a happy family in the future. 2. People who talk too much, improper table manners, squealers. 3. Skin diving, flying, din¬ ing, dancing, Miss Geral¬ dine Goruk. Going coy¬ ote hunting with Mr. Goruk. Janet Wiber 1. B.Sc. in Nursing at the U. of A., travel, speak fluent French. 2. Disorganization (esp. at S.U. meetings), smart re¬ marks about short hair on girls. 3. Hockey, onion rings, waterskiing, Quebec, listening to my French record. 4. Election campaign and dance ’67, Chem. 10 and 20, labs with L.B.; Expo. Peter Wild 1. A career in law enforce¬ ment or possibly govern¬ ment economics. 2. Locking my keys in the car with the engine still run¬ ning. 3. Fast cars, sports, a certain girl O.D. 4. A happy year with O.D. 5. Y.M.C.A. member. Jean Willis 1. Travel, work. 2. Boys with long hair and flashy clothes. 3. Food in general, teasing, having fun. 4. The day I left Smith school. 5. Curling. 6. Hunkie-dorie. Barbara Wigeland 1. U. of A. Bachelor of Science. 2. Having a 5th period class. 3. Shoes, purses, rings, sum¬ mer jobs. 4. My trip to Montreal and Expo ’67. 5. First year curling: first trophy. 6. You know what I mean ? ? Maureen Woodman 1. Leave Edmonton and travel. 2. Religion classes, social climbers. 3. Dancing and going to Zorba’s. 4. Pizza Joint, learning to drive. 5. Cheerleading for 2 years. 6. Are we going to Religion today, Margaret? Harry Woods 1. A year of Varsity. 2. Twiggy, hippies. 3. Long hair (girls only), fast cars, flying, lake dances. 4. Last summer. 6. Skip it. Barbara Woods 1. Commercial art at S.A. IT. 2. The colour blue, all forms of expressionalism in art and writing. 3. Winters when it fails to snow, buses 4 p.m. 4. Summer and bicycling on Jasper Avenue at 5:00 a.m., remodelling Cyn Byn. 5. Skiing. 6. Yeah man! 62 Marie Wozney 1. Part time career in interior design, housewife with many children. 2. Discriminating adults; any¬ thing standard-term rela¬ tive only to individuals concerned. 3. People who don’t like me . — they’re a challenge, psychology, philosophy. 4. Being told by someone what he honestly thought of me, pro’s — con’s. Terry Young 1. University. 2. The Wog, crowds. 3. Movies, mashed potatoes, coincidences. 5. Room Rep., Yearbook, Sep Hi-Lites, tennis, fencing club. 6. That’s jolly. Graydon Yaremko 1. N.A.I.T. Electronics, or University. 2. Homework, coming to school by bus. 3. Cars, money, sports. 4. St arting Physics 10 with a D” and ending with an H”. 5. Coming home with two trophies, curling. 6. You sausage. Ed Zak 1. Live a wild life (for a while), military college — pilot. 2. Going to the dentist, be¬ ing pushed around, getting a hair cut. 3. Hot cars, chocolate bars, badminton, track field, coin collecting, chess. 4. Going to St. Joe’s. 5. Badminton team. 6. Oh, brother. Peter Zapisocky 1. Graduate from N.A.I.T. in a Business course, pass Math 20. 2. The way my car burns oil, my girlfriends sister, get¬ ting kicked out of O’Leary. 3. The way my car doesn’t burn oil, a very special girl from O ' Leary. 4. My Golden Rolls Royce 55”, ’68 Valentine card. Margaret Zakotuk 1. To become queen of north country — Tuktayaktuk. 2. Snow in Tuktayaktuk. Danny Zanier 1. Take computers at N.A. I.T. 2. J.B. M.Z. Meri Zapisocky 1. Education U. of A. (English). 2. Being called normal, cheese. Neven Zoranic 1. To be a Healer. 2. Insincerity, ignorance. 3. Honesty, integrity, human dignity. 4. Coming to Canada and seeing it from coast to coast. 5. Assisting new immigrants to Canada. 6. Do not hinder if you can¬ not help. Edward Zumer 1. Medicine at the U. of A. 2. Teacher without a sense of humour and girls who never smile. 3. Montreal Canadians and Green Bay Packers. 4. 5. Learning how to write. 6. If at first you don’t suc¬ ceed, the-with it. Claudette Cloutier 1. To make a career in Tele¬ vision, to travel around the world. 3. Working in television, swimming, dancing. 4. Data processing, camping trip during the summer. 5. Chairman of the Senior Prom committee, President T.V. Club. 6. Hey, you guys! J Dave Batog 1. Go to N.A.I.T. 2. Some teachers, moochers. 3. Pool, cards, football, girls. 4. 5. C.Y.O. 6. Cool! Albert Boivert 1. Electronics at N.A.I.T. or U. of A. 2. Classes that start too early. 3. 4. Mr. Shelley ' s English 30. 5. 6. If at first you don’t succeed, give up. Pat Byrne 1. University — Interior Decorator. 2. Role players, talking on telephone. 3. Pretty girls, all sports. 4. Getting Love me two times ' ' on the guitar. 5. President of the C.W.L., winning high jump 1956. 6. Go back to Maggie. Helen Carrier 1. To live in Montreal. 2. Snobs, fat girls in mini¬ skirts. 3. Double lunch, spares, my best friend mouth”. 4. Grade 10, Expo ’67, Lit. 20 . 5. Getting to High School getting driver’s permit. 6. Ya man! Maudit” Robert Duval 1. I.B.M., travel in Europe. 2. Short hair on girls, bobby socks. 3. Building cars for Draging, skin diving. 4. Hitch hiking, Demolition Durby. 5. 6. Ain’t that just fantastic.” Dee Gallagher 1. Undecided. 2. Oysters. 3. Mankind. 4. 5. 6. Julius, oh boy! Might as well, can’t dance here!” Frank Gluwchynski 1. N.A.I.T. 2. Boys with long hair, that look like girls. 3. Weekends, holidays, Miss Cassidy’s Chem. class. 4. 5. Explain again? Again.” Morris Granfield 1. N.A.I.T., join Canadian Navy. 2. Falling on T.V. studio control room stairs, trip¬ ping over T.V. cables, exams. 3. Digital readout frequency counters, electronic equip¬ ment, good books. 4. Teacher’s and students at St. Joe’s and of St. of X. 5. T.V. Club camera opera¬ tor, radio club operator, ham radio. 54 6. For crying in the sink! Alan Horvat 1. Canadian Armed Forces, Air Force. 2. Filling out forms like this, smart guys in cars. 3. Math, driving, movies, food, money. 4. Spinning around on icy streets. 5. — 6 . — Lawrence Miskiw 1. Respiratory Technology at N.A.I.T. 2. Bad breath, cold class¬ rooms. 3. Music, hunting, swim¬ ming, turtles, sleeping, mountain air. 4. Watching people rolling down the stairs. 5. Mr. MacDonald’s Secret Service”, Social 20 class. 6 . — Charles Horoh 1. U. of A. Engineering. 2. Snobs. 3. Sports, parties. 4. The good old days. 5. — 6 . — Patricia Plurst 1. Receptionist in a large office. 2. Typing thirty, English. 3. New Year’s parties, smok¬ ing, boys with money and nice cars. 4. Dale (ha). 5. Track and Field in Elem¬ entary school. 6 . — Ernest Korenawski 1. Journeyman welder. 2. Homework. 3. Cars. 4. My double lunch. 5. Watching the Junior Saints in action. 6. Nuckle down, buckle down, do it, do it, do it. Marilyn MacDonald 1. Education at U. of A. 2. r Being back at St. Joe’s for only two subjects. 3. Good music. 4. Religion 20 with Miss Bernier. 5. — 6 . — Brian Newman 1. In time U. of A. 2. Rules. 3. Sharp clothes, old hopped up cars. 4. — 5. — 6. Hey! You ' re kiddin’. Peter Mwselaar 1. Dumbing. 2. School work. 3. — 4. Grade 11 at Vic. 5. — 6. It’s time to say Good Night Dick. (Good Night Dick). 55 Aric Paquin 1. Journeyman Electrician. 2. Questionnaires. 3. Motorcycles. 4. Winning Third in Junior Men’s foil in 1965. 5. — 6 . — Tony Petrone 1. Commerce or Education U. of A. 2 Cats. 3. Dogs. 4. — 5. Three years of basketball, three years of soccer. 6 . — Laurence Sirman 1. Electronics — N.A.I.T. or U. of A., pass Social Studies 30. 2. Ukrainian jokes, snobbish girls, crabby substitute teachers. 3. Girls with mini-skirts, money, cars, water-skiing. 4. Winning No. 8 in a poker game. 5. Floor hockey, passing Chem 30 and Physics 10 with honors. Will Nobis 1. Commercial Cooking at N.A.I.T., European Cuis¬ ine in later years. 2. Peeling potatoes with a paring knife. 3. European sports cars, Gimlets, kind and pretty girls. 4. Mr. Cameron ' s Lit., Language, and Religion 20 classes. 5. Graduating from Old MacDonald had a farm to Lennon-McCarthney com¬ positions on my 6-string. 6. When I feel like working, I lay down until I feel better. Carmelo Rago 1. Phys. Ed. Teacher, Travel. 2. Smart teachers. 3. Mature girls. 4. Grades 1 and 12. 5. - 6. Keep trying! Bob Wright 1. N.A.I.T. and to become something. 2. Mouthy girls, lunches from cafeteria. 3. Study periods, sleeping and eating Friday nights. 4. Having coffee every morn¬ ing at the Ventures. 5. Hunting, trying to curl, swimming. 6. Hey Pelkie, what have you got for lunch? Jerry Patan 1. N.A.I.T. Business Admin¬ istration. Make a million. Spend a million and die poor. 2. Greasy foods, Montreal Canadiens. 3. Ukrainian girls, Toronto Maple Leafs, parties. 4. Mr. Shelley’s Eng. class, throwing Mr. Gibbon in the showers. 5. Award in football — Most outstanding player” ' Soc. Convenor of Ukrain¬ ian Club. 6. Thems the hazzards. Jerry Stadnychuk 1. Join the Air Force. 2. Select groups in school. 3. Short skirts and winning floor hockey games. 4. My first big party at Mundare. 5. Grad. Committee, Jr. and Sr. Volleyball, Jr. Football. 6. Right here. 56 Chris Abramski Doug Anderson Linda Bandura Denis Bedard John Behiels Paul Benini John Benvenuto Joseph Bogatko Gayle Bougie Mike Bradley ne Breland Barbara Brost Maurice Bugnet Albert Cardamone Billy Cardinal Sherry Cholmak Rita Daniels Richard Deane Michael Drapeau Ernest Drvaric Jerry Dzenkiw William Edgerton Ronald Fayant Margaret Esch John Fitzsimmons Robert Freidt Maurice Gagnon Pasqualino Gatto Irene Gawlik Donald Goulet Louis Hauser Bohdan Hontaryk Barry Huber Paul Hudon Donald Hunt Caroline Kapler Dwayne Jiry Neil Kulchisky Freddy Kurylo Dennis Kowalchuk Robert Lee David Kennedy Philip Kinsnella Myron Letawsky Gordon L’Hirondelle James Kowalchuk David Lema 61 Lawrence Lukasewich Michael Maloney James McClellan Dennis Pelkie Ken Philbin Anita Pagliuso Don Philbin Andre Plcuffe Jim Poloway David Perron Gerald Orobko Wally Osietko Murray Prebusheski Theresa Radulski Dennis Romanyk Michael Roll Roger Royer Aurora Scozzafava Larry Senko John Stachmak Andrew Staszuk Bob Stefure Brian Strachan im Stypula Myles Tymchshyn Ronald Wasyk Terry Williams Robert Wiszniewsky Gale Zaroslak UWDERGRADS Maurice Arcand Robert Babin James Baker Christine Banas Leonard Belcourt Jack Benshop Kenneth Bentley Joseph Bernardo Randall Betker Ernest BiJ Meau Eugene Bilas Gilles Bourgeois Randolph Calahoo Lynn Carigan William Chaba Rachelle Chartrand Lorenzo Donato Janis Duguid Bruce Edwards Stuart Frazer Randolf Fritz Gino Fusco Jim Gross Anthony Gunn Dawn Hallet Jean Herniary 68 Lome Hittinger Ken Hopchin Richard Jiry A - - 1 W Darlene Kliparchuk Leonard Knight Rosemarie Kowalczyk Ague Krysztopowicz Ted Kulakowski Jeff Kutt Joanne Landry Lorraine LaPlante Sylvia LaPlante Diana Leder Michael Lipka Joan Macgillivray Ken Malyj Maria Marelli Kenny McBryan Barry McGeough Martin McLean Darlene Melenka Monte Munroe Ken Niblett Margaret Paul Sherry Proskow Joseph Robinson Donna Mae Rusk Ron Salzl H W k - m Sharon Schaab Judy Schweifler Ronald Smith Shirley Stefanyschyr Lillian Stefura Katheleen Symonds Gene Thachuk Raffaele Vecchio Gary Walden Eleanor Watt Norman Waunch Robert Wells Peter Wild Eugene Witow Maureen Woodman Larry Zak Ben Ziarko John Zubko |(tt iMentxJrg ©ur Jflri tnh ARTHUR D. BOULAY Art was about to write his high school finals when the call came to present himself for the final of finals. Our prayers go with him, as his friends and associates we know they are being heard. Many in the school knew him for many years as he was born in this city where he attended St. Vitals and St. Mark elementary and junior high schools before coming to St. Joseph. He was a good wholesome person who enjoyed the things he did to the fullest. He was an enthusias¬ tic sportsman from the observers stand, not so much a physical competitor, but as a team supporter. Art, as he was affectionately called by us, was a fine wholesome young man whose varied interests and friendly attitude made him a person who was liked by all. Those privileged to have known him realized al¬ ways that to walk and talk with him was to have a good companion. We treasure the memory of him, who was with us ever so short a time. Because his work here was done he left us, we feel a little better for having known him. May the Just God, who will see us all face to face, reward our friend and school mate with eternal happiness in the great beyond. 72 yj m Ki dm II _ — nf jy ' V 1 n ..s H - y PHOTO PHOTO PHOTO ALSOP, PAULETTE ANDERSON, GERALD ANTONUCCI, CARMINE ARIAL, ROSE-MARIE ATCHESON, THOMAS ATKINSON, HOWARD BACHAND, DONALD BACHAND, RICHARD BAGNALL, CAROLE BAKER, EDRA BAKER, MONTY BARD, SHIRLEY BARIL, LUCILLE BATT, GEORGE BAWOL, WALTER BEDARD, LAUREN BELANGER, BRIAN BELCOURT, KEITH BELISLE, DENNIS BENCHARSKY, JULIAN BENEDYCZAK, CHRIS BENNETT, LOIS BEREZNICKI, DONNA BERGEVIN, ARTHUR BERUBE, ELAINE BESSETTE, DON BIAMONTE, ANTHONY BIRMINGHAM, DON BISCHLER, JOHN BODNARCHUK, THERESA BOGATKO, DONALD BOISVERT, ANDRE BOISVERT, EMILE BOKALO, SOPHIE BOURGEOIS, DENNIS BOURQUE, CHARLES BOWES, KENNETH BRAULT, JACQUELINE BREWER, RONALD BRITTON, THERESA BRUCE, DONALD BRUENS, BENJAMEN BRYAN, DONALD BRYANT, LARRY BRYANT, PATRICIA BUNDERLA, ELIZABETH BUYSEN, WILLIAM CALLIHOO, ANDY 74 CAPRA, PAULA CARDAMONE, FRANCIS CARIGNAN CLAUDETTE CARIGNAN, IRENE CARWELL, HARRY CECCANO, GIANCARLO CENKNER, CHRISTINA CESARIO, FRANK CHAMPAGNE, CAROL CHARLTON, KATHLEEN CHAPOR, ELAINE CHERWONIAK, MARIE CHIMKO, EARL CHMILAR, PAUL CHOMLAK, VERA CHOMYN, STEVEN CICERO, ROSINA COLAK, ALICE CONLON, CECIL COOK, MARYANN CORDEIRO, MARIA CRERAR, COLLEEN CROSSLEY, GREGORY DAOUST, MADELEINE DAOUST, RONALD DAVIS, MARK DEAGLE, HAROLD DECOTEAU, DIANE DELLA MORA, LUCIANO DENNY, COLLEEN DESJARLAIS, JOHN DESPINS, JULIETTE DIAMOND, LINDA DICK, BARRY DOLHAGARAY, CATHY DOMBROSKI, ELAINE DONOHUE, TRUDY DUCHARME, ROBERT DUFFIELD, SHIRLEY DUNNE, JACK ERASMUS, ELIZABETH ESCH, ELIZABETH ESPOSITO, CARMELA EVENS, SHERRY EVARISTO, JOSEPH FALCON, DIANA FEIL, RICHARD FERLAND, DENIS 75 FILEVICH, JOHN FILICE, LUIGI EILICE, SAVERINO FIORE, GREGORY FOREMSKY, HELEN FOREMSKY, WALTER FORSTER, JUDY FOSS, ROBERT FOULDS, FRED FRASER, DANIEL FREELAND, BRIAN GABORAK,GERALD GAGNE, LOUIE GATTENS, GRAHAM GEE, RONALD GEIGER, MARILYN GELASCO, GREG GIBBONS, DEBRA GIES, FELICITAS GOBEIL, EVELYNE GODBOUT, JOANNE GODBOUT, SUZANNE GODSISZ, TED GOLLETZ, ABERHART GORDASHKO, FRANCES GOURDEAU, DANIEL GOURDEAU, PAULINE GREGOIRE, KENNETH GULL ION, DANIEL HALLAHAN, RONALD HALUSCHAK, CONSTANCE HANNA, DANIEL HANNA, DOROTHY HARRINGTON, TRUDY HERBERT, BERNARD HELFRICH, MARVIN HESSMAN, RAINER HEWKO, DAVID HNIT, JOHN HOLOWAYCHUNK, ELEANO HOOK, RONALD HOREJSI, DENNIS HORN, CHERYL HORN, MARSHA HOSACK, VERNON HOSTYN, HELEN HOSTYN, LEONARD HOULE, YVONNE 76 HUCULAK, LARRY HUCULAK, LAWRENCE HUCLJLAK, ROBERT HURST, DOUGLAS HUSKY, DENNIS ISABELLE, ALICE JACOBS, AUDREY JACOBS, GARY JAGGARD, TERRY JOHNSON, BRYAN JONES, BRIAN KABAN, BARBARA KACHMAR, LUBA KACHMARYK, ALICE KAPTY, DELMER KARASINSKI, DANA KASHTON, VIC KEDL, JOHN KELLER, ANDREW KENNEDY, MARY KENNEDY, YVONNE, KIRYCZUK, RICHARD KOHEL, GLEN KOSAKEWICH, MARCIA KOSLOWSKI, MARGARET KOWALSKI, GERALD KREKOSKI, NORMAN KREMZAR, ANTHONY KRUSE, BRIAN KRISIK, IRMA KUCHER, OREST KUCHER, SYLVIA KUEELER, THOMAS KUEFLER, WARREN KULEBA, DENNIS KUROWSKI, DONNA LAFLECHE, BERNARD LAFRAMBIOSE, BONNIE LAFRAMBIOSE, ROBERT LAHOLA, MYRON LAKE, MARJORIE LAMARRE, LYNN GUY LAMOUREUX, DANIELLE LAMOUREUX, LOUISE LAPLANTE, ADELE LAROCQUE, KEITH LARSON, BETH LAVALLEE, KENNETH PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO 77 LAVENDER, DARLENE LAVIGNE, ROGER LAVIOLETTE, SANDRA LAVOIE, CLEMENCE LECLAIR, MARSHA LEONARDIS, LOUIS LINKEWICH, SHIRLEY LITTLE, PAUL LYSENKO, OLGA LYSZCZYK, IRENE LYTTLE, ELLEN MACDONALD, HECTOR MACDONALD, JANICE MACRI, ROCCO MADDEN, RICHARD MAGNAN, GUY MAILLOUX, PAUL MAIO, MARIO MAKSYMIUK, BARRY MARASCHIN, NADIA MARCHAUN, MARCELLE MARCH1EL, MILAN MARKEVYCH, LUBOMYR MAROCCO, FRANK MARPLE, ART MARPLE, JOHN MARRAZZO, ROSA MARRELLO, LUIGI MARTEL, SHERRY MARTIN, GEORGE MARTIN, LUCIANA MATEMISZ, JOHN MATWICHUK, EMILY MATWIE, DAVID MAURO, FRANCESCHINA MCCURRY, REGINALD MCEWAN, JAMES MCEWAN, ROBERT MCFARLANE, EDMOND MCGUIGAN, PATRICK MCMASTER, ROBERT MENARD, KAREN MENDZAT, BARRY MERCIER, GILLES MERRIER, CECILE MEYER, GERALDINE MILLER, JOSEPH MISKEW, DONALD 78 MONTGOMERY, BONNIE MOOLYK, NICK MOSONYI, HERTA MOZDZENSKI, MIKE MULKA, RONNIE MURPHY, MAY MURYNKA, PAUL NEWHOUSE, BILL NEWMAN, SHIRLEY NEWTON, JACQUELINE NIEHAUS, LINDA NIMSICK, DANIEL NOBLE, MATTHEW NOLAN, ANN NOLET, YVONNE ODONNELL, MICHAEL ODRISCOLL, ROBERT OLSEN, PATRICA OPITZ, JOHN OPITZ, LINDA ORKUSZ, TERRY ORLANDO, EDITH OSLIE, ELEANOR OUELLETTE, MAY PAQUIN, CATHERINE PAZDER, HENRY PARROTTINO, JANE PAUL. MONTY PAVONE, DANTE PARADIS, RICHARD PERRAN, JAYNE PERRATON, NANCY PERRI, FRED PETERS, ERIK PERSI, ALEX PETERS, JOHN PETRYK, RONALD PHILLIPS, JOCELYNE PINO, ITALO PIRO, LINDA PISESKY, BRENDA POLLARD, CHARLENE PONTIERI, TONY POSTERARO, SAM POTVIN, STUART PRODORUTTI, MAXIMIL PROSKOW, PATRICA PROSKUNIK, BETTY 79 PHOTO PHOTO PHOTO PHOTO PRUNER, MARGUERITE PUNDYK, EUGENE PURCELL, MARY PYZYK, IRENE QUINN, BARRY RASKO, DONALD RAYPOLD, HAROLD REJC, RAYMOND RETZLOFF, CONSTANCE RICHARD, DALE RIVET, ELIZABETH RIVET, NORMAND RODRIGUE, EVELYN ROLHEISER, DES ROMANYSHYN, MARY ROUSSEAU, ROSE ROY, MARJORIE SADOROSZNEY, DENNIS SALANCZYJ, IRENE SAMSON, DENNIS SANDERSON, JOSEPH SCANGA, ISABELLA SCARPELLI, MARIA SCHREIBER, DANNY SCHRIVER, SANDRA SCI BAN, NEIL SCOTT, PAMELA SEMASHKEWICH, CARL SENYK, ORSET SENYK, WALTER SHALAGAN, RICHARD SINN, MARGARET ANNE SKIDNOOK, JUDY SLINKO, STELLA SNOZYK, NADIA SPADAFORA, EDWARD STACK, DANNY S. STADNYCHUK, HELEN STANISHEWSAY, MARY STARNAUD, JOAN STAYURA, SHARON STECYK, EUGENE STEFANIUK, CORNELL STOCKI, CHESTER STOCKL, GORDON STRANDLIE, LINDA STYPULA, BOB SWAILE, RALPH 80 SWICK, MATILDA SZTENDERA, BOHDAN SZYJKA, HALYNA TAILLEFER, DENNIS TAPPAUF, KARL TAUSCHER, JOHN TEMPLEMAN, THOMAS TESSIER, ROBERT THEROUX, HELEN TORCHIA, RHONDA TOSCZAK, SANDRA TRAHAN, MARY TROTTIER, MARY TURNER, GLENDA TYRKALO, PAULINE ULRICH, ELAINE VALLETTE, JOANNE VAN LESST, WALTER VAN VOORST, PETER VANNIEUWENHUYZE, BI VANNIEUWENHUYZE, PE VICENTE, FRANCISCO VIG, STEVEN WARAWA, DOUGLAS WAY, RANDALL WENGER, LINDA WIECEK, EDWARD WILKIE, WAYNE WOJNO, BARBARA WOLFS, HENRIETTE YARKIE, WARREN ZADUNAYSKI, PETER ZAKOTUK, GEORGE ZAPRAWA, FRANK ZAZULAK, CLARENCE ZUMBO, DEMETRIO ZURAWICZ, STANLY 81 7 ■jPSSl k 1 ip pro RKHpl] MISoif .. fj ' ■ NO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO NO PHOTO PHOTO NO PHOTO NO PHOTO ACHTEMICHUK, GARRY ALLEN, BRENT AMELIO, ANTONIA ANASTACIO, MARIA ANDREWS, JOHN ANDROS, EDWARD ANTONUCCI, VINCENT ANTOSKI, JOYCE ARNAULT, JOYCE BAHNUIK, BOHDAN BARAN, LINDA MARIE BARBOSA, MARIA E. BARBOSA, MARIA R. BARIL, MARILYN BARTESKI, JIM BASARAB, SLAWA BATOG, JUNE BAUER, RAYMOND BAZINET, CLEMENT BEAULIEU, RAYMOND BELCOURT, GLADYS BELCOURT, PHYLLIS BENINI, BILLY BENNER, ALAN BENOIT, GARRY BENOIT, PHYLLIS BERNARD, ARLENE BERNARD, LYSE BERNARD, MARYANNE BERNARDO, EMMA BERNARDO, ROSE BILODEAU, ALBERT MIRCH, MICHAEL BODY, BARRY BORUSZCAK, BOHDAN BOUSKA, DEBORAH BOYCHUK, TARAS BOYKO, ANNE BOYKO, LESIA BRAUSEN, CONNIE BREAULT, ROBERT BRENNEIS, MERLE BRIGLIO, PETRUZZA BROCHU, MAURICE BYER, DOUGLAS CAPUTO, JOHN CARDINAL, ALLEN CARDINAL, BARBARA 84 CARDINAL, SHIRLEY CARIGNAN, JOHN CASAVANT, RICHARD CASCIARO, VINCENT CASOVAN, DAVID CAVANAGH, PATRICK CHIARELLO, JOE CHICHAK, VALERIE CHICHAK, VERNON CHMELYK, VERA CHOMIAK, JOHN CHORNOWOL, ADRIAN CHRZANOWSKI, LEO CLARKE, CHARMAINE CLARKE, GERALDINE CLOUSTON, GREGORY COCCIMIGLIO, FRANCO COCKS, ROBERTA CONROY, GREGORY CONSTANTIN, DENISE CONSTANTIN, FRANCOI COULL, ROBERT CREDGEUR, ALFRED CZAJA, IRENE CZARNECKI, EDWARD CZECH, GEORGE DACIUK, LORRAINE DANIELE, MICHELINA DAOUST, JOHN DAOUST, LYNN JANE DAVIS, WILLIAM DAWYD, MICHAEL DECOTEAU, EDWARD DEGRACE, PATRICK DELORME, JAMES DELUCA, ANNA DE LUCA, MARIO DELUCA, PETER DEMKIW, MYRON DEPRETTO, MERINA DE PRATO, RENATA DERKATZ, VICTOR DERSCH, MARGARETE DESANTIS, MARY DESJARLAIS, DWAYNE DIEDERICH, THOMAS DRAGINDA, ROSS DRIBNENKY, VIVIAN 85 DUBOIS, LAWRENCE DUBY, NICK DUMONT, DONALD DUMONT, RICHARD DUROCHER, GEORGE DUROCHER, JOAN DYCK, ALISON EBERTZ, LOUISE EGO, JACQUELINE ELLIOT, MARGARET ELNISKI, JOHN ENGEL, DOROTHY ERASMUS, FRANCIS FARRELL, SHAUN FARRELL, TIMOTHY FEDOROWICZ, HENRY FINLEY, KATHRYN FIORILLO, PHILIP FLETT, MARY FRAIETTA, JOHN FRANCIS, DOROTHY FREDERICK, ED FROLAND, JANICE FRUNCHAK, BARRY FUCCARO, LINDA GALLACE, TONY GALLAGHER, MAUREEN GAMBLER, KENNETH GARANT, JOCELYNE GAUVREAU, LINDA GIBBONS, PATRICIA GIORDANO, LINA GIROUX, NORMAN GLADUE, MABEL GOLAN, WALTER GOW, WENDY GRAH, MARY GRAHAM, LORRAINE GREGORY, DANIEL GRENIER, MARIE GRENIER, SHIRLEY GRUBICH, MADELINE GRZESIAK, HELENE GUERTIN, EDMOND GUINDON, VICTOR GULLION, GARY GUSTAFFSON, LINDA GUY, RAYMOND 86 HALL, GARY HAMEL, LINDA HEMERY, MARIANNE HERN, JIM HERNON, JOHN HESS, STANLEY HOLIK, DONNA HOLMES, CYNTHIA HOPE, WILLIAM HORBAY, DONNA HUBER, LOUISE HUHLEWYCH, LUBOW HUNDZA, ROXANNE HUNT, LINDA HURLY, GLORIA ILESIC, EMIL ISABELLE, LUCIEN JAKSITZ, JOHN JAKUBOWSKI, HENRY JERAT, EVA JODOIN, CLAUDETTE JOHNSON, MARGARET JONES, BARBARA JURCZAK, CHRISTINE KALYNSKY, MARY KANIUK, GLORIA KAPLER, ALVIN KAZIMIERZ, CS KENDRICK, DENNETH KIMMERLY, JOHN KIRKHAM, LINDA KLEIN, RUBY KLUTHE, BRIAN KMIECH, MARY KNAPPE, VERONICA KOK, MARGARITA KOMARNICKI, AUGUST KOMASARA, JEAN KOOTENAY, CAMILLE KOS, MORRIS KOSTICK, GARRY KOZORIZ, ANNE KOZORIZ, MARY KRAFT, STEVEN KREKOSKI, KENNETH KREMIN, BRENDA KROPINISKI, FRED KUPIS, ELIZABETH PHOTO PHOTO PHOTO V A KUZMA, GEORGE EABRIE, CLAUDE LAFLEUR, GRAHAM LAMARCHE, PHILIP LAMOUREUX, MICHELE LANDRY, COLETTE LAPLANTE, GLORIA LAROSE, KENNETH LARSON, BRENT LAVIOLETTE, MARY LAVIOLETTE, JIM LEFEBVRE, MARIE LEIBEL, JANET LENNIE, ALICE LESZCZYNCKI, RICHARD LETAIN, CHARLOTTE LITTLECHILD, ARTHUR LITTLECHILD, BEATRICE LORENTE, LINDA LOSIAK, SOFIE LOYIE, BRUCE LUCIUK, GEORGE LYONS, RONALD MACDONALD, MARGARET MACHINSKI, JAMES MACHNIAK, MARIA MAGLIOCCI, SERGIO MALTROTTO, LUIGI MALYJ, MARLENE MANDZIAK, HELEN MANNA, JOSEPH MANNA, LUCY MANTELLO, MICHAEL MARASCHIN, FERNANDA MARIC, ALOJZ MARR, RONALD MARRAZZO, EDA MARRAZZO, RITA MARRAZZO, TONY MARTIN, THERESA MARTYNKIW, BOHDAN MASLOWSKI, ROBERT MATHURIN, NORMA MATRAS, IRENE MATRAS, ROSS MAZURYK, SYLVIA MCCAFFERY, KEN MCDONALD, DOUGLAS 88 MCDONALD, KENNETH MCDONALD, VINCENT MCGEEHAM, CHARLES MCGILLICUDDY, TIM MCGINNIS, DEAN MERCIER, ARMAND MOOSUK, GAIL MORIN, LEONARD MORIN, LINDA MORIN, NANCY ANN MOROZ, OREST MOYSA, JUDITH MULDERS, JOHN MURSKY, ELSIE MUSTUS, SYLVESTER MYSHAK, SHARON NAKONECZNY, JO ANNE NASPINI, OLVIAN NAWROCKI, HELEN NEELAND, BRIAN NEELAND, DON NEVILLE, MAUREEN NIMCHUK, JANET NOZACK, EARDLIN OKANE, DONALD OLESKAS, EDWARD OLLENBERGER, SANDRA OLSZEWSKI, STANLEY ONEILL, CHARLES ONYSKIW, VERONICA OSINCHUK, ROMAN OUELETTE, ARMAND OUELLETTE, LINDA OUELLETTE, ROSE ANN OZUBKO, CHRISTOPHER PACHES, DAVID PALKA, HELENA PAPROSKI, ELOISE PARADIS, BARBARA PARADIS, GERALD PARROTTINA, ROSA PATRICIO, JOSEPH PAVLIK, HELEN PEARSON, GEOFFREY PETERS, DAVID PETTIGREW, ROBERT PICHE, LINDA PICHE, THOMAS 89 PHOTO PHOTO PINO, GENE PLAMONDON, BRUCE POITRAS, JANETTE POLICELLA, LUCA POROCHIWNYK, AUDREY POSHTAR, RICHARD POTVIN, LEONNA PRANSZKA, MARGARET PRESCOTT, CAROLE PREVOST, LEON PRIMEAU, LESLEY PRODORUTTI, GIULIO PRUSS, ELMER PSHONIAK, LUBA PUCHYR, STEPHANE RACE, BRENDA RADOMSKY, JUNE RAO, LINA RASKO, BARBARA REESICK, MICHAEL RENAUD, CLAUDE RICHARD, SHARON RITTER, JAMES RIVA CAMBRIN, JOHN RIVET, MARTHE ROLES, MARCEL ROMANIUK, DENNIS ROMANO, CLAUDIO RUSK, PATRICK RUZYCKI, MARIE RYBAK, SUSAN SAMSON, LINDA SANTAROSSA, LINDA SAPORITA, MARIA SAWCHUK, MARIAN SAYERS, GLEN SCHLANDER, BRIAN SCHLERETH, PRISCILL SCHUBERT, LOUIS SEDMAK, VINCENT SGUAZZIN, RENATA SHAL AGAN, GAIL SICHKARYK, LLOYD SIKIC, RADOJKA SIRMAN, HALE SIRMAN, WILFRED SIROIS, GEOFFRY SKOWRONSKI, JOHN 90 SLINKO, ZYGMUNT SLOBODIAN, KAREN SMITH, GORDON SOKULSKI, ROBERT SONNLEITNER, TONY SOULIERE, MICHAEL SPERLING, THOMAS SPOREK, CHRIS SPRINGER, ROSEMARIE STEFURE, RANDALL STEFURE, RUSSELL STECMAN, CLIFF STEINHAUER, MARYJAN STGERMAIN, STANLEY ST. GERMAIN, PEARL STPIERRE, ANDRE SYLVESTRE, BERNARD SZEL, AGNES SZEL, MARCELLA SZYBICKYJ, EMILY THIBODEAU, LEN THOMPSON, ANITA THOMPSON, LINDA TOM, DELORES TRACH, DAVID TRISKA, ERIC TRISKA, WALTER TROTTIER, BEVERLY TURCHANAK, ANN TURCIN, GEORGE TWOREK, CHRISTINE TYMOCZKO, HELEN USSYK, GARRY VALLETTE, GARY VANDAL, LORRAINE VEELEN, VAN VELICHKO, JUDY VELTRI, FRANCESCA VELTRI, ROBERT VENDEL, JOHN VONA, MARIE WALKER, FREDERICK WARAWA, LESIA WENGRYNIUK, RONALD WHIPPLE, MELISSA WHITFIELD, SUSAN WIBER, GREGORY WIDGIZ, CHARLOTTE 91 WRONEL, HALINA WYCHOPEN, EMILY WYNNYK, JAMES WIECEK, TEODOR WIGGER, BERNARD WILLIAMS, WENDY WILLISTON, JEANNE WOLANSKY, CHRISTOPHER NO YANUSHAK, OLEA PHOTO YAREMKO, CONRAD YU, JOHN YURKOSKI, GERALD YUZYK, DENNETH ZARSKY, CAROL ZIOBER, DENNIS 92 SPECIAL ANDERSON, MARLENE ANHILL, DANNY BACHAND, SUZANNE BEAUREGARD, MARILYN BECKE, DENISE BERNARDO, CARMELA BIEGANEK, DOR BIELECH, ERNESTO BIGGELAAR, RENE BOISVERT, EVELYN BOISVERT, LEONARD BOISVERT, RICHARD BOSSE, LAWRENCE BOURGUIGNON, DARRELL BOYCE, STEVEN BREEN, PADDY BRISARD, YVONNE BROCHU, LORNE BRUNO, ROY BRUYERE, EDMOND BUDZISLYN, STEVE CAIRNS, RICK CAMPBELL, BERNIE CAPUTO, ANGELA CARDINAL, VIRGINIA CARREIRO, MARY CASAK, DON CHAMPAGNE, LUCILLE COLAVGELO, AUTOVETTA CONSTANTIN, DENIS CONTANT, JOSEPH CORDEIRO, LUCY CORMACH, RON COTE, PAUL CUNNINGHAM, CLAYTON CUNNINGHAM, DARLENE CUNNINGHAM, JOYCE CUSIC, BARRY DAVIDSON, SHANNON DEINES, DONNA DELAND, DWAYNE DEMERS, WAYNE DERRI, CONCETTA DESANTIS, TONY DESNOYERS, LEO DOUCET, OMER DOUCET, RENE DUPE, DOREEN DUPUIS, JOSEPH FEHR, DENNIS FIDDLER, ELWIN FILICE, FYDIA FINLEY, MIKE FORCADE, LAURA FOURNIER, HENRY FOURNIER, RENE FRANCO, ANGELINA FRASER, RUTH FREITAS, TONY GABLE, DOLORES GAGNON, LEE GAINES, JAMES GARNEAU, THERESA GERVAIN, RICHARD GIRARD, GUY GIROUX, ALBERT GLANDUE, DOROTHY GOUMONT, CECILE HANDFIELD, ROGER HARRIS, RAY HARRIS, SYLVIA HAUCK, DAVID HEBDEN, BRYAN HEEMERYCK, ROBERT HERMARY, ALFRED JABLONSKI, BRENDA JERACE, KATHERINE JOHNSON, SHIRLEY KAY, JIM KIRKHAM, DAVID KORNASIEWICZ ,MARY KROLE, MARIO KUEFLER, DUANE KULIKOWSKI, MARK LAFRENIERE, LINDA LANDRY, GARRY LAVOIE, NORMAN LAVOIE, PAULETTE LE BLANC, SUSAN LEE, BRUCE LITTLECHIN, ALLAN LONGMORE, ALLAN LOSINSKI, JUDY LYTTLE, CECILE MACDONALD, ANDREW MACDONALD, MIKE MACHNIAK, SOPHIE MAHE, MARIE-ROSE MALONEY, DAVID MANFRED, MAZUR MARTEL, NOELLA MAUGHAN, RAYMOND MCDONALD, JOHN MCGEOUGH, JIM MENARD, ELISABETH MERRIER, RITA MILLS, BERNADETTE MITCHELL, ALBERT MORAN, JOHN MORIN, HARRY MOYEN, BERT MUISELAAR, BOB MUISELAAR, ERIK NACCARATO, MARIO NADON, HELEN NIMCAN, GARY O’BRIEN, CHERYL O’FLAHERTY, COLLEEN OLSZEWSKI, GEORGE ORCHUK, RICHARD OSADCHUK, RON OSTAPCZULK, FRANK PADLECKI, JUDY PAGNOTTA, PETER PALL, ALLAN PICHE, BARBARA PINTER, ANN PLANT, LOUISE POITRAS, MARY PORFON, SYLVIA POTVIN, ROD PROSKOW, STAN PUCCI, LINA PUCCI, TULLIO PUDLOWSKI, SHIRLEY RICHARDS, ALDA RIEDERER, HERMANN RIOPEL, GEORGE RIZZUTO, PATRICK ROBERTSON, JAN ROTA, ANNA ROUFOSSE, KEN ROUX, JANICE SAGERT, LARRY SALVATORE, CARROZZA SARRASIN, LEO SCARPELLI, FRANCO SHEPHARD, FLORENCE SINCLAIR, DONALD SKOREIKO, CAROL SLAUNWHITE, KEN SMITH, DON SMITH, MELVIN SMITH, TERRY SOUCIE, LARRY SOUSA, STELLA ST. GERMAIN, AUDREY SYDOR, GARRY TAMES, NELLY TAYLOR, JACK TETZ, DEBBIE TRACE, JOHN TURCO, MARY TURK, ZLATKO WASCHUK, SHARON WEST, PATTI WHITE, MILES WHITFORD, WALLY WILKINSON, GARRY WILLIAMS, ERNIE WILLIAMSON, BALINDA WOJCIECHOWSKI, MARVIN WOLSEGGER, FRANCIS WORDELL, MIKE WORSLEY, DEBBY WOZNIAK, JOHN YELLOWFEET, DAVE ZAUSCHER, JERRY ZURAWELL, DONALD 98 A cti vities a Klondike Mike Contest raise Emily Frumbers Klondike Queens Saloon And tell my mother didn’t cry. I think I’m going to be sick. Welcome to Grandma’s blood-tea party, Lights out. t ij J rjeJr , ick D urren rru ans ' lated Id4 J Tiei f ' - tr’K.up f ' h High School St. fc ye OLD MEAT AWARD POULTRY a GAME AWARD PASTRY AWARD mmm ■ • m ■ ' . I rttS Art Show V ' J Ifll l Thanks to Mr. Gibbon, Mrs. Hawkins, Mr. Hauk, Mr. Bianncini, and Mr. Verret. The Staff Christmas Party was a great success and Santa, the kiddies and teachers had a grand time. mosnc •SiSiiii ' ' a II .■ ' VMS • « f mt 11 I % ' jl GRAD COMMITTEE Jerry Stadnychuk Francis Boogmans Claudette Cloutier, Chairwoman Janet Wiber long hours of preparation faiaduatitot Dcittce 6$ resulted in a smashing affair jfimtna OPEN Hustle!! Hustle!! Watch Alike, you’re going over, Victory again tuJ u ImL l whs . til m 4 l jt no? look trl ? I wonder?” y a 2 ytbi , 2 r de °dori L; Mfj JF • jp « i r 1 tip 1 ■ s Sep Hi-Lites - Marcella Szel, Rose-Marie Arial, Sister iM. Patrick, Lesia Waraiva, Anne Boyko. — Gail Monaghan, Vera Chmelyk, Marie Cherwoniak, Debbie Bouska, Chris Tworek, Slawa Basarab. — Irene Salanczyj, Elaine Chapor, Don Bruce (Editor), Irene Lyszczyk (Co-Editor), Mar¬ garet Sinn. Pat McGuigan. Missing G.A.P. Back Row, L. to R. — Sister M. Patrick, Don Bruce, Bob Foss, Terry Orkusz (Editor). Front Row — Pam Scott (Co-Editor), Margaret Sinn, Barbara Wojno, Pauline Trykalo w,, W ♦ i I ' VS . . ® ' £ f d W lig v 4 Kj 21 T Wifl jyl f ay Front Row — Jerry Palan, Oksana Dmytruk, Ibor Broda, Larissa Blauracky, Gene Dzougan. Back Row — Sue Rybak, Bohdan Bahniuk, Emily Shibitsky, Luba Kuc, Helen Tymoczko, Luba Boyko, Donna Horbay, Clawa Basarab. Curling Club Front Row — Barbara Paradis, Margaret Elliot, Linda Piche, Cathy Powell, Theresa Bodnarchuk. Second Row — Ross Draginda, Helen Hostyn, Daniel Lamoisreaux, Con Yaremko, Jerry Paradis, Jerry Anderson. Back Row — Jerry Rhyson, C. Husel, Leo Chizanow- ski, Lome Hiltinger. Charity Drive Committee Front Row — Claudette Cloutier, Janet - Wiber, Mariette Cloutier. Ukrainian Club % T.V. Club Front Row — Barry Menozat, John Yu, Pat Gibbons, Claudette Cloutier, Dan Fraser. Second Row — Albert Hemery, Warren Kuefler, Gerry Anderson, Hale Sirman, Bohdan Bahniuk. Third Row — Gordon Smith, Fred Walker, Ron Marr, Morris Granfield. Modelling Club Front Row — Vera Chmelyk, Suzanne Bachnard, Renata de Parto. Second Row — Louise Lamoureaux, Sherry Evans, Lina Giordano, Pricilla Schlereth, Alice Kolac, Jacky Newton, Colleen Carere. Third Row — Irene Morhardt, Irene Czaja, Barbara Rasko, Linda Hamel, Judy Moysa, Sharon Oppelt, ( President). Fourth Row — Gloria Hurly, Lorraine Graham, Lorie Dacyk, Antonia Amelio, Dorothy Francis, Annie Boyko. Fencing Club Front Row — Bob Wells, Rose Marie Springer, Margaret Sinn, Greg Conroy. Back Row — Barbara Wojno, Margo Radcliffe, Betty Proskunik, Ann Turchanak, Leslie Primero. Front Left R. Gibbon (coach), Pat Garvin, Ken Niblett, to Right ferry Patan, Ihor Broda, Alex Per si, Tom Rumple, ]. Haracsi (Manager). Second Mario Bonnani, foe Hickey, Stan Solikoski, Row Tony P on tier i, Duane Schlereth, Charlie Ceccano, Dave Kutt, Francis Boogmans, Denis Taillefeur. Third Dave Dorey, Brian O ' Neill, Lnbko Ataman- Row Fourth Row Missing czuk, Vince Antonucci, Henry Metera. Rick Shalagan, Sebastian Frattin, Bob Huculak. Gerry Larson (Equipment Manager), Mike Bradley, Walter Foremsky, Frank Morocco, fohn Matemisz, Billy Cardinal, Sam Posteraro, Bob Step chick (General Manager). R. Campbell (Assistant Coach) The St. Joseph Senior Saints had a fairly successful season. They won three games and lost three. The Saints showed a much improved defense this year, 67 points against compared to last year ' s 201 points, they also led the league in passing. Stan Solikoski and Tom Rumple were chosen as the two outstanding individuals for the year. There was a vast improve¬ ment in team play and some individuals improved a great deal and showed their good football talent. 126 front C. Sopchyshyn (coach), John Fraietta, Greg Roto Conroy, Frank Cesario, Randy Way, Dave Casoran, D. Renneberg (Assistant Coach). Second Pat Cavanagh, Jim Stypula, Frank Vicente, Row Jerry Stadnychuk, Mike Mozdzenski, Norm Giroux, Bruce Edwards. Third John Elniski, Barry Frunchak, Juliati Benchar- Row ski, Jim Barteski, Larry Huckalack, Mario Marazzo, Alan Benner. Fourth Hector MacDonald, Garry Achtemichuk, Adri- Row an Chornowal, Ken Podlubny, Ernie Williams, Stuart Potvin. Fifth Ray Rudanec, Paid Chmilar, Bill Davies, Hans Row Burger, Ken LaRose. Missing W.O.P. Bianchini (Assistant Coach), Dennis Romanick, John Riva-Cambrin, Mike Souliere. After starting the 1967 season with a complete team of rookies, the Junior Football Saints achieved the reputation of being one of the hardest tackl¬ ing teams in the league. With many veterans returning, the 1968 version of the Junior Football Saints will attempt to regain their traditional win¬ ning ways by pummelling their opponents into the gridiron turf. Front Row — Ihor Broda, C. Sopchyshyn (coach), Wayne Breland, Alex Persi. Senior Centre Ron — Murray Prebushewski, Stan Solikoski. Back Row — Orset Moroz, Jim Duffield, Jerry Stadnychuk, Giancarlo Ceccano, Ken LaRose. Front Row — John Riva-Cambrin, Tullio Pucci, Sam Posteraro. Centre Row — Pat Cavanagh, Dennis Romanick, Vince Antonucci. Back Row — Roland Daoust, Gerry Gaborak, Tony Pontieri, ]. Hank (coach), John Chomiak, Luigi Maltrotto, Chris Wolansky. SENIOR and JUNIOR BOYS ' VOLLEYBALL SENIOR and JUNIOR GIRLS ' VOLLEYBALL N. Bealer (coach) Front Row (kneeling) — Janice Froland, Barbara Senior Rasko, Linda Horejsi, Sharon Oppelt, Lillian Stejlire. Back Row — Mary Grab, Barbara Cardinal, Luciana Martin, Jatiet Wiber, Leona Verreau, Maureen Mal¬ loy, Alary Romanyshyn. Front Row — Vera Chmelyk, Mary Grab, Lena Giordano, El vise Paproski. Back Row — Colleen O Flaherty, Linda Kirkham, Charlotte Widgiz, Rosemarie Springer, C. Tatchyn (coach), Helena Palka, Charmaine Clarke. Missing — Irene Czaja. Junior CHEERLEADING FLOOR HOCKEY Floor Hockey Left to Right — Mike Whelan, Dan Magnan, Stan Solikoski, Dave Bolander, ferry Stadnychuk, Bob Stepchuk, Henry Metera (kneeling). Left to Right — Linda Horesci, fanet Wiber, Lillian Stefure, Mariette Cloutier, Joanne Jamnik, Cathy Devaney. 1967-68 was an extremely successful, al¬ though a bit disappointing, year. The Junior Saints went throughout the year undefeated but lost the final championship game. Left to Right: 14 - Frank Morocco, 12 - Roland Daust, 24 - Larry Huculak, 22 - Luigi Maltrotto, 11 - Dennis Romanick, 23 - Tom Sperling, 21 - Tony Pontieri, 15 - Alex Persi, 5 - Edward Spadafora, 13 - Pat Cavanagh, 4 - Sam Posteraro, Coach - W. Bianchini. BASKETBALL SENIOR GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM Left to Right, Back Row — Elizabeth Bunderela, Eliza¬ beth Esch, Elizabeth Erasmus (dropped from squad), Lillian Stef lire, Luciania Martin, and Cathy Dcvancy. Front Row — N. Bealcr (coach), Gail Shalagan (dropped from squad) f Lina Giordano, Jane Nimchuk, and Maureen Malloy, Linda Opitz (manager), with mascot. The senior girls team had a league record second to none this year. They finished at the top of their league, without a single loss. No other girls team in Edmonton possessed such a record. Due to unfortu¬ nate and unavoidable circumstances, St. Joe girls were defeated in the playoffs. All in all, however, a good showing and a good season. 130 Ihor Broda, St. Joe’s intermediate entry in the high and triple jump at the Provincial finals in Calgary, June 1, 1968. Peter Niewenhyze, St. Joe’s junior high jumper in the Provincial finals, June 1, 1968. Cathy Devaney, St. Joe s senior sprint entry in the Provincial track and field finals in Calgary, June 1 , 1968 . TRACK and FIELD 1 1 W ilBR ireP il: ,! TABLE TENNIS CLUBS i jm ' nfll a Jv fo A i -v ■ 2 % 1 f , Q WRESTLING WEIGHTLIFTING GYMNASTIC BADMINTON CLUBS TAWK SUPERFINE : Text, Cm POSEIDON OPAQUE : Text.Cov, ARTEMIS CORTLEA NAVAJO Distingu -A.cl ' vertising ' PATRONS Public Drugs 11229 Jasper Avenue Service Drugs 11213 Jasper Avenue McBain Camera Specialty Ltd. H. F. Swafield 10531-116 Street R. E. Tupper Mrs. Alice Poohkay Mr. A. Barlage Louis Lamothe Miss Perry R. E. Watson 11012-107 Avenfle Jerome Hauk Miss Nancy Bealer Mr. M. Klotz Miss C. Tatchyn Mrs. Pura Pat O’Neal Library Staff Mrs. Patterson Mrs. J. MacDonald Mr. Zyp General Office Staff Dr. J. J. Lipinski Ventures Restaurant 10707-109 Street Mr. M. Kuefler James Salyzyn 12120-52 Avenue Mr. Thomas Dr. D. MacIntyre 308 Birks Bldg. Armstrong Drugs Ltd. 10217-97 Street 135 CONTINUED SUCCESS to THE GRADS of 68 ' FROM HEALY FORD BEST WISHES GRADS ' 68 PURITY DAIRY WISHING YOU LUCK! Compliments of St. Joe ' s FOOD SERVICE GOOD LUCK GRADUATES FROM Student’s Union ST. JOSEPH COMPOSITE HIGH SCHOOL 136 COMPLIMENTS of C. W. BOON £r Company Limited 10178 - 106th Street Edmonton — Alberta SAINT JOSEPH COMPOSITE Phone 424-8157 HIGH SCHOOL Carrying a complete line of chocolate bars, T.V. CLUB potato chips and cheezies Cigarettes, Cigars and Tobacco. CONGRATULATIONS COMPLIMENTS GRADS 1 6 7 — 1 6 8 of ALBERTA BOOK NOVELTY LTD. MERCHANDIZING CLASS CALGARY, ALBERTA OF SAINT JOE ' S BEST WISHES TO THE GRADUATES SILVERWOOD DAIRIES LIMITED PHONE 422-5151, EDMONTON COMPLIMENTS of OLD DUTCH FOODS Best Wishes GOOD LUCK GRADS ' 68 from ROYALITE OIL COMPANY HOTEL EQUIPMENT LIMITED AND SUPPLY COMPANY, LTD. 137 HflUSSfLL FOOD EQUIPMENT LIMITED E SSr ,Everything For Modern Food KT Service LUT® PHONE CHINA, GLASSWARE CUTLERY Top National Equipment Lines— Quest, Champion, Sweden, Etc. Custom Stainless Steel Fixtures by Quest CURRENT COMPLETE CATALOGUES 5 % Cash Carry 424-0796 10225 106 ST. EDMONTON Leasing Low Interest Financing Planning Engineering Service PARTS, STOCK SKILLED SERVICE DEPARTMENTS Make RUSSELL your logical One-Stop Supply House WOODWARD S TEEN N’TWENTY AND STAG FASHION COUNCILS SAY . . . Keep an eye on . . . TEEN FASHIONS . . . They’re Smart! 3 Great Stores To Serve You • DOWNTOWN • WESTMOUNT • NORTHGATE Best Wishes to the Grads CONNELLY-McKINLEY Ltd. FUNERAL DIRECTORS 10007 - 109th Street EDMONTON - ALBERTA 138 Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted, Contact Lenses Dr. Peter A. Starko Dr. Al A. Starko Dr. Joseph J. Starko OPTOMETRISTS Main - 230 Tegler Bldg. Ph. 422-1248 West-End - 11816 - 124 St. Ph. 454-2344 SUPPLIERS OP SPECIALIZED EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS 0 Audio Visual Materials • Letraset Graphic Art Materials • Drafting Machines Furniture • Leroy Lettering Devices Accessories • Slide Rules for every application w Drawing Survey Instruments W Photogrammctric Equipment • Graphic Charting Media NORDRAFT Reprographics Ltd. PH. 424-5136 10652 - 101 ST. Cosmetics By: REVLON MAX FACTOR CLAIROL BRAUT JADE EAST NUMERO UNO SCHOOL SUPPLIES MODELS TOYS SUB POST OFFICE COUTTS CARDS Knowledge of Pharmacy is the unseen ingredient in every prescription park annex pharmacy ltd. 5809-118 AVE. - EDMONTON Phone 477-6622 Dependable Service ... Quality Products ’ consumeRs ' WELDIN6 SUPPLIES LTD. 9810-62 avenue, edmonton, alta. phone ltS9-73 l - area code 1+03 Distributor For Welding Products PARADISE MOTEL Shuswap Lake District — Sicamous B.C. Located: Junction Trans-Canada 97A to Vancouver Units: Single — Double — Kitchenettes — T.V. — Pool Playground For Children Reservations: Box 100, Edmonton, Alberta Telephone 836-2525 — 424-5495 Owner: A. Solikoski Compliments of . . . MODERN PRESS LTD. P.O. Box 3524, STH. D Phones 455-6672 - 455-3479 Edmonton — Alberta Printers — Lithographers — Book Binders Compliments of . . . LUCKY STRIKE BOWL Compliments of . . . NORTH STAR SPORTING GOODS LTD. 139 St. Joseph High School ...Students Burger KingDrive-lns...F 00 d A WINNING COMBINATION EVERYTIME Take It From The Col. It ' s finger lickin ' good Take a Break From Homework! Sit back. Take a deep breath. Hold it. Relax. Good. Now you can rest and read The Journal. To be well informed on what ' s happening in today ' s world, you have to read something else besides textbooks. Like The Journal ' s Teen Page on Fridays, for instance. It carries stories of special interest to you, with school news from your teen corres¬ pondents and regular features like Dance Date and Teen Top Ten. There are lots of other interesting features in The Journal all week long. Check the headlines and news stories to keep up with the latest happenings. You ' ll find you ' re better informed when classwork calls for background knowledge of world events. So relax and read . . . largest circulation of any daily between TORONTO and VANCOUVER PICTURE FRAMING We are Edmonton ' s largest dealer in picture framing PICTURES FRAMED BY EXPERTS Complete line of ART SUPPLIES PRINTS - WATERCOLOURS - OILS Grumbacher Windsor Newton Talens Reeves Main Showroom 10317 Jasper Ave. 422-6439 Branch Store Factory 9611 111 Ave. 422-0576 BURLINGTON ART SHOP LTD. Many years before Confederation, traders and adventurers of the Hudson’s Bay Company helped to shape the history of Canada through exploration and settlement. Since the establishment of the Bay’s first department stores—Winnipeg in 1881 and Edmonton in 1890— the Bay has progressed with the country. Today, 100 years after Confederation, the Bay still serves Canadians in its continuing tradition of quality. Your satisfaction is assured when you shop at the Bay. ay L _ ! S1 —T frE7 = Your investor • owned gas utility serving Albertans since 1923 Compliments of... Your Neighbourhood Safeway Store It is with a great deal of pleasure that we (The Staff and Manage¬ ment) of A W Drive-Ins sponsor this space. We have had the privilege of serving many of you, and are proud to be a part of these memories of your school days. The pages of this book are a dedication to your way of life for the past several years. In today’s world, with the methods of communi¬ cation and scientific knowledge now achieved, we have been compelled to live closer with people of other nations. No longer should man iso¬ late himself, nor should any loyal Canadian boy or girl be content with doing the minimum. It is our sincere hope that you never lose faith in yourself or others, and through education may we find better ways of using the abundance of things the Creator has given our great Nation, that we might continue to be proud to call ourselves Canadians. A W MANAGEMENT (EDMONTON) LTD. Where the Good Food Is 142 1968 • A (Cyf (Q-racluah asfter ealre HIGH SCHOOL FILM SERIES High School Film Series 10120 - 156 Street — EDMONTON, ALBERTA Phone 489-1455 Northland Drilling £r Construction Co. Ltd. R.R. 1, South Edmonton Phone 469-1438 or 399-5230 Exploration Drilling Services’ Looking for an interesting career after high school? Find out now what the Bank of Montreal can offer you if you are willing to work and learn. Our interesting booklet The Future with a Future outlines the absorbing jobs and better opportunities in a career in banking. To obtain your free copy write to Personnel Manager, Bank of Montreal, 140 Eighth Ave. West, Calgary, Alta. There is no obligation, except to yourself. 144 6 Lisgar Street, Toronto 3, Ontario LITHO IN CANADA BY YEARBOOK HOUSE m t I 1
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1968, pg 85
1968, pg 10
1968, pg 102
1968, pg 131
1968, pg 93
1968, pg 146
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