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Page 110 text:
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T MISS KOPLIK AND 9-1 SEND GREETINGS 'DOUGLAS MACVITTIE: His ambition is to fly the first paper airplane. ARTHUR FREEDMAN: Intelligence and kindness has this boy got, anyone will say he's got quite a lot. RICHARD HIRSCH: Friends, Girls, Countrymen--lend me your homework. PHILIP LICHTENBERG: Absence makes the heart grow fonder, but this is ridiculous. MAYER MORY: He's not an example, he's a problem. RICHXRD MUNN: Work never killed l anyone, but Richie isn't taking any chances. U ,ALAN PERRY: Alan is smart and shows it, everyone but the teacher knows it. ELLIOT ROTHENBERG: A man'S home is his castle, El1iot's home is the section sheet. BERNARD ROZENBERG: The questions are easy, it's the answers T that are hard. RAYMOND SAFDIE: A promising student--always promising to I do better, YJAMES SANTANA: Be careful girls, 5 you might get hurt because 5 James Santana is such a flirt. MARK SCHATZKAMER: There's no - more mischievous boy on land or sea. PETER SCHWARTZ: Sweet as a piece of cake? QJOSEPH SPALDING: I got lOOZ A today: 4033 in Math, 3572. in A French, and 25? in English, ALAN STEINBERG: I dream of I Steiny with the shiny head, Famous last L 1 I GEORGE WARSHAW: words: Well um, well um, um. BRIAN WENGER: Like a snowflake, one in a million. ANSON WONG: Short and shy, a very nice guy. ISAAC ZIMMERMAN: Can't think of a line for a fella so fine. - q 1 J JOHN MILLS: I didn't come late, the bell rang HOWARD BLUM: Oh heaven, I did 371 LARRY ECKSTEIN: is so deep we WARREN FELDMAN: early. my gosh, oh my good, I got a His knowledge can't find it. Warren thinks he's cute, smart, and strong, let me tell ya kid, YOU ARE wRoNG!!!!!t! LORRAINE ANDERSON: Give me life, liberty, and the pursuit of BOYS!!! MARIE BOYD: just like a giraffe always stretching her neck when there's a test. GRACE FRANCO: When it Comes to dancing, Grace hits the top, she knows every dance from HPhilly to Slopn. BARBARA GRILL: Cute, popular, full of fun, admired and com- plimented by everyone. MADELEINE KUPERWAYS: She looks innocent, but we know better. MARSHA LANGHOLTZ: All her work she does very well, she's a girl who's mighty swell. LUCY LOPEZ: A lovable girl we all agree with a winning smile for all to SEE. MARGARET NASSIOS: When she hears Robert Goulet, she sits in a daze for the rest of the day. HELEN RATAFIA: Keen in studies, cheerful and gay, success will surely pave her way. ARLENE SHEIR: Could be an angeL could be a saint, could be quiet, but that she aint. SAUNDRIA STREET: Mrs. Friesners pet we know, we watch her as her marks do grow. DIANE WHITMAN: It is often thought and sometimes said that under all that hair there lies a head. HELEN RUSINIK: A nice girl we all like well, of whom we have no faults to tell??????? 108
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Page 109 text:
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MRS. NOWITZ AND CLASS 9SP3 SEND GREETINGS TO THE PIONEER LINDA GOLDMAN: Sweet of temper, good of heart, always willing to do her part. BETH GROSS: Beth is a proper noun proper up and proper down, feminine gender, cutest case, object of the masculine race. PHYLLIS GREENSPAN: A girl with a big hearty her faults are few and far apart. ELLEN KOURELAKOS: Give her a pen- cil and paper to startg she'll surely come up with a fine piece of art. LINDA LOVITZ: Like a thank-you note, short and sweet. ALISON MALONE: Quiet and shy, polite and demureg Alison's well-liked, you can be sure. HELENE MARENUS: Like a four-leaf clover, one in a million. ELLIOT MUNJACK: My son, the biologist. MARK PANELY: Be it a math prob- lem of which you're in doubt, Mark is the one who'll help you out. MARK SCHIFFMAN: Always on his TOESIEEISIZ HANK SHERMAN: Homework and Hank have no relation, just give him noise and recreation. LINDA MOSES: Rain, hail, sleet, snow, Linda's mouth is on the go. EVA OBARZANEK: All her work she does real well: she's a girl who's mighty swell. BETTY SCHARF: Like a box of HPost Toastiesn--just a little bit better. ROBERTA SOLAR: A smiling face, cheerful and gayg always has a good word to say. SUZANNE STEINHAUER: Pretty as a picture and oh!! what a frame! BETTY WEINSTEIN: If Betty were across the sea, what good swimmers all the boys would be. KENNETH STOLLER: Kenny's cute and oh! what a flirt, he chases everything that wears a skirt. JEFFREY WENGER: Were everyone as helpful as he, what a nice world this would be. LINDA ALTIMANO: Cute and witty is this dameg sits and thinks of Johnny, her flame. SHIRLEY CARLE: WHO SAID BLONDES ARE DUMB? EILEEN DUNN: When she's around, you have a ballg she's a girl well-liked by all. SHARON FRANKFORT: When she was younger, she went for toysg now that she's older, she goes for boys. BONNIE ZIRIN: Law of three C's-- Clever, Charming, and Cute. MICHAEL CALMENSON: If laughs were dynamite, Michael would explode. RICHARD COCKRELL: At cracking jokes he can't be beatg a nicer guy you'll never meet. DAVID DROLLER: If marks were jokes, David would be a Ujack Benny.n DENNIS FINGER: Dennis the quiet kind, a nicer guy you'll never find. KENNETH GILSTEIN: Confucius say, HKenny's O.K.!E!n MARK GROSSMAN: He'll always be a good math student, he's a problem .......... solver. ALAN GUTTERMAN: The French can keep the Mona Lisa if they'll let us have Alan. RICHARD JANOWITZ: Of the fine characteristics that he does possess, the most outstanding is friendliness. MICHAEL MALIN: Never do today what you can put off until tomorrow. 1 O
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Page 111 text:
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CLASS 9-2 AND MRS. NUSSBAUM SEND GREETINGS TO THE PIONEER CAROLE DAVIS: One of the best first basemen we ever had. MICHELE GEMINO: Only her hair- dresser knows for sure. RONNI MEYERS: UBut, Dr. Einstein I disagreelu. LYNNE NG: A girl of a few mil- lion works--sweet and petite. BARBARA WASSERMAN: Sweet as sugar and just as refined. SARAJANE PREISLER: A firm be- liever in the four freedoms: especially SPEECH. JANE BERMAN: Someday Janie is going to own every pair of sneakers in Brooklyn. CP.S. She's well on her way to achieving itib ELLEN SILVERMAN: UBut Mr. Jackelow, I wasn't talking to Judy.H I BILLY HELKIN: An Al pencil- sharpener-fixer. CHRIS SCUDDER: A student who is quiet and good. Always acts like a gentleman should. HARVEY MARCUS: Leader of men: follower of women. RANDALL SMITH: Short, but so was Napoleon. FRANCIS STEIMER: Of the things he does possess, best of all is friendliness. JOSEPH TUTONE: If silence were golden, this boy would be poor. WILLIAM TRICANOWICZ: A nice, quiet boy sent to us with Israel's compliments. MARK LEVINE: A candidate for O. Henry's HRed-Headed League? JACK WEISSHAUT: Why should I care if I'm tall? Let the world look up at me! LARRY KLEINMAN: His homework pages he never dates: we can't say the same about girls. FRANK HAMBURGER: A contemporary of Rembrandt. DOUGLAS LEAVY: Like a teabag, always in hot water. ROCHELLE BARCAN: Her marks run like a fever: HIGH! SALLY BRONNER: Like a book, bound to please. HOWARD ROSE: Everyone likes him even though he doesn't get into mischief. JUDY KAPLAN: Judy is a very fine artist. She draws everybody's attention. LISA PLOTKIN: Her only goal in life is to get to Stafford- shire. WENDELL RUCKER: Girls or no girls, that is my problem! HARRIET HERMAN: It may be her eyes: it may be her hair. Whatever it is, HBoys Bewarein KAREN SIEGEL: I don't know what's going through her mind, but I can guess the gender. MARILYNN MESHEL: Nice blue eyes, pretty too: you never can tell what this blonde will do. DALIA PETERFREUND: Love thy neighbor, especially if he's cute. ANDREW SHAFTEL: Just like a box of Post Toasties, but only a lot better. STEPHEN PENZELL: He knows a hun- dred ways of passing a test without studying. STEVEN BERMAN: A dillar, a dol- lar, a darned good scholar. STEVEN BOLDISH: HI didn't Come late. The bell rang early.H WILLIAM FREUNDLICH: This fellow is very alert. Cto anything that wears a skirt.D GERALD GROCHOWSKY: NFriends, Romans, classmates, lend me your homework.H 109
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