Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ)

 - Class of 1966

Page 1 of 262

 

Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1966 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collectionPage 7, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection
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Page 10, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collectionPage 11, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection
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Page 14, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collectionPage 15, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection
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Page 8, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collectionPage 9, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection
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Page 12, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collectionPage 13, 1966 Edition, Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 262 of the 1966 volume:

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'QM fw ffl I XR t if ESQ t i a hund , R i 3' ' Q 3 ggml' Suggesting . . . y Working 5 to Remember Introduction Faculty .... School Life . . Sports ...... Extracurricular Underclassmen Seniors ..... Pluylng Enioyln M455 e hold in our hands the kalei- doscope of the future . . . with limitless vision . . . with power of truth and knowledge . . . we will have the ability to change the pat- terns of the world . . . Giving of himself . . . From Lewiston, Maine . . . to the University of Idaho . . . BS. in education . . . additional study at Bates College and the Uni- versity of Maine . . . to Westfield High School . . . a distinguished armed service record . . . 1942-1945 spent in Europe . . . First lieutenant National Guard . . . taught in Maine after WWII . . . arrived at WHS in 1953 . . . a teacher, counselor, motivating spirit . . . conveys a love for history . . . devoted to the demo- cratic ideals of a nation . . . US. History I, U.S. History II . . . proud father of three girls . . . a true down-easter . . . spends summers in the woods of Maine . . . assistant basketball coach 1958-1962 . . . cameraman for football games . . . has sponsored Sportsman's Club, Forum Club . . . H54-4-0 or Fight . . . Re- member the Alamo . . . a kind word . . . a Warm smile . . . anxious to help . . . recognizes the worth of an individual . . . for this devotion . . . We, the Class of '66, honor this man . . . for his dedicated service . . . his unselfish assistance . . . we thank him . . . and we Wish him continued success in the future . . . for he is truly a molder of men . . . vs if ,, . ,-' f Q 'xi 353, , gp Si., 1 by I 'W -1 i 933332 ybmywiv ,X Channeling W, 5 E if , mmm up Yiam 1 1 tl Y .541 , YQ L, ,-A i S QE 5 J kg Ai S . Q Il 'V ,wgwel 32 5 VE ' 1? -was Q Q w is 'Ma-W Q k A A , Www, W W , y k A 4' Y Y V if 4 '-A L . ,gr Q' 1 i 5 'limi sr - 'X-1 QQ, f Ss ' 1:12 5 W 121 if 3 Q ' 4 H N ' J 'N 1 Mmm WW M-: If f , A. fy! 13- if T11' '-'J V V 4 Ni News 1 is Q21 W 3? Egg C ' Q, 'N ' ll! ' W' 'W ' ' lli5iZE lR 2:1 ll :J gif: 'iw ? L f',il f Q l 15,3 f f f - F b- f l? IQS- ig 3 'I , V' s' 1 is 5 Av, I 2 ,S V ? Q , ' F! -f - ' l g gf P ?-N f A ' 8? 9 Q -In i 9 , c,fffgjf I X a I A WR'W' 12 ELM, i E y A QQN, M ' ff V' ': ' 1 N ' 222' ' V 'Ph dw , 'F www ' X -Q f , '. we ,n, A.., -VVM S . :5E9575 ?fifH -',, j' ,-- K - - Lim ' -,1 '5' 3 1 f - - Q , ,,ff'fY ,V 1 V N V,,, N V f ,,.5- ,giw f-' fu' 7:5 3 L 1. ' 1 g,,,,, f , ,mwrifr 4 : w X x Ng, '-Ze if ,,,,, X-WMS' NVNW 'I , ' ' ' Yi ,,,A W 7 . VL, A ' i ig r 'E ' 'Z 1 Y 2561. Q, 9 laying the foundation . . . Dr. S. N. Ewan, Jr .... Superintendent of Schools . . . HK? Dr. Robert L. Foose . . . Principal . . . , Dr. Foose . . . the guiding spirit . . . Broad backgrounds . . . extensive professional preparation . . . successful teaching experience . . . successful administra- tive experience . . . an awareness of the educational needs . . . keep abreast of current philosophy and practices in sec- ondary education . . . coordination . . . IBM scheduling . . . formulate recommendations and policies . . . Lesson plans M-Z are due in the office todayv . . . in-service training . . . understanding . . . Mid-year examinations should be sub- mitted to Miss Theurer . . . K-forms . . . memo from the desk of Robert L. Foose . . . workshops . I . green and white slips . . . initiate and direct curriculum studies . . . encour- age professional growth . . . for efficient organization . . . Charles Lehman . . . the arm of organization Louise Theurer . . . the arm of efficiency . . . Harold Thompson . . . the arm of supervision . . . Vincent F. Washville . . . get those applications in . . . Pointing the way Arthur A. Berne . . . come in for a confer- CIICC . . . Endless questions . . . determining needs and goals . . . CP., HE., or General . . . percentiles . . . class rank . . . test scores . . . recommenda- tions . . . 311-585 . . . CEEB . . . verbal 500, math 478 . . . US. Employment Bureau . . . careers in accounting, the Navy, veterinary medicine . . . schedules . . J IBM cards . . . orientation . . . 'clVlrs. Rhein's counselees will meet in . . . . . . Dr. Eugene Wilkins at College Night . . . trip to Wilfred Beauty Academy . . . sign up today . . . Lovejoy and Barron . . . The College Handbook . . . Union County Technical School . . . uCollege visitors this week . . . 7, . . . boards, merits, achieve- ments . . . job counselling . . . solutions . . . directions . . . Margaret K. Rhein . . . tran- scripts will be sent . . . l to cr rewarding future Lila O. Phipps . . . you intend to apply to . . . Edward F. Johnson . . . let's look at your record . . . Aaron G. Nierenburg . . sources of financial aid SOIUC V Past and present . . . linked by I Thomas J. Ryan . . . you peo- ple are too idealistic . . . Margaret B. Dietrich the importance of clear, concise writ- in g... Emily W. Kermath . . . the study of uni- versal man . . . Frank X. Scott . . . im- provement through ap plied knowledge . . . universal truth . . . Learning through interpretation . . . Caesar, Macbeth, Hamlet . . . the Oedipus Cycle . . . the tragic hero . . . thesis, state- ment of ipurpose, controlling idea . . . study guides . . . climax . . . conflict . . . characters come alive . . . Charles Darnay, John Proctor, 'Willie Loman . . . SRA . . . timed writing . . . Hemingway, Hawthorne, Hamilton . . . '4What is the significance of . . .? . . . iambic pentameter, rhymed couplets . . . Frost, Sandburg, e. e. Cummings.. . . notecards, outline, rough draft . . . no generalizations! be specific! . . . novels, short stories, plays, poems, essays . . . Sound and Sense . . . Thoreau and civil disobedience . . . comma splices, sentence fragments, dangling participles . . . refer to Strunk . . . Ibsen, Miller, Williams . . . Wuthering Heights, Iohn Browrfs Body, Canterbury Tales . . . 5 minute speeches . . . wfhe parts of the stage are . . . . . . speak slowly, clearly, concisely . . . depth reporting . . . inverted pyramid . . . comparative study of New York City newspapers . . . editorials, features, headlines . . . Can we come to a con- clusion?,, . . . the great thoughts of mankind . . . seeking . . . discovering . . . understanding . . . Mary E. Learish . . . tragic themes in western literature . . . Kevin D. Keane . . . a fan l W letter to O. E. Rolvaag . . . Thelma C. Taylor . . . the conflict is between man and society Brenda M. Flahault . . . analyze the character of Phineas . . . Mary Katsuleris . . . metaphor, simile, alliteration . . . Living language Robert H. Sanislow . . . the setting of this story Marjorie R. Trifon . . . you must come in for a conference . . . pulsating prose and poetry . . . Stuart J. Ross . . . itls a philosophi- cal question . . . Milton I. Luxemburg . . . intro- duction to Shakespeare . . . William E. Craycraft . . . the moral judg- ments in Macbeth . . . Susan Graybill . . . organization and clarity Symbolism . . . style Lorna L. MacDougal . . . ' the statement of purpose IS... Carol J. Nolde . . . the ele- ments of a short story . . . Jane H. Olmstead . . . a good topic sentence includes . . . Paula Sandefur . . . Word Power tonight . . . effect . . . tone . . . Anna L. White . . . enun- ciate each word . . . David J. Brown . . . de- veloping the skills of read- mg... Carol E. Brinser . . . project yourself into the role . . . W 1 ezflirf.-I -f .4 gk .V we Emil 4155434 Walter L. Clarkson . . . editorial analysis . . .Evelyn S. Charlton . . . organization of a news- paper . . . Interpret the past . . . Q Michelle A. Mathesius . . . relate this event to current affairs . . . '6We, the people of the United States . . .77 . . . Sons of Liberty . . . Samuel S. Loughridge . . . Alien and Sedition . . . Articles of Confederation . . . Washington's HOW hefels the point' ulfarewell Address . . . Marbury vs. Madison . Jackson and the folks ' ' ' bank . . . Lincoln-Douglas debates . . . reconstruction . . . Social Dar- winism . . . the robber barons . . . open door . . . populism, progres- sivism . . . muckrakers, mugwumps . . . strict accountability . . . Fourteen Points . . . uthe War to end all Warsl' . . . New Freedom, New Deal, New Frontier . . . NRA, CCC, AAA . . . Marx and Lenin . . . Truman Doctrine . . . Korean conflict . . . Viet Nam escalation . . . uln your heart you know he's right? . . . 6 June '44, 22 Novem- ber ,63 . . . Selma . . . social, political, economic . . . Leopold and Link . . . Canfield and Wilder . . . AMSCO . . . current affairs tests . . . facts . . . ideas . . . the past . . . the present . . . the future . . . ' A , . z , 4 A h P. L . . . Walter T. Jackson . . . the Wfinolfyhad m?,Zi,i3Y blad- basis of imperialism . . . der out I U ' D prepure for the future Rupert W. Miller . . . the wisdom of the founding fathers . . Harold B. Shill . . . the balance of power . . . ir. 124 , f ' Robert A. Aclriance stadter . . . Sally Gilbert . . . the right t vote . . . A -:nn according to Hof- Joseph Della Badia . . . from Louis XIV to Mahatma Gandhi . . . Gomer I. Lewis . . . the ton- nage of the Merrimac . . . Bridging times History, past and present . . . inde- pendence and liberation . . . Bolivar, San Martin, Nkrurnah, Kenyata . . . 95 theses . . . geopolitics . . . trips to the U.N .... Aztec, Inca, Mau-Mau, Sikh . . . the Reign of Terror . . . Bay p of Pigs . . . Ivan the Terrible . . . the l Ming Dynasty . . . the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks . . . America's place in the world community . . . Mao and Chiang . . . feudalism, pan-American- ism, internationalism . . . the Asia So- ciety's filmstrips and paperbacks . . . Locke, Crotius, Machiavelli . . . the Bourbons . . . national power . . . for-- eign relations . . . Americais responsi- bility . . . Roland Romano, .lr .... corner- stones of democracy . . . Michael T. English . . . Guayaquil is just south of . . . und cultures . . . Caesar, Cicero, Ovid, Virgil . . . Arma virum- que cano . . . prose composition . . . F or tonight translate at least 25 lines of . . . . . . scansion, oratory . . . Quo usque tandem, Cat- ilina . . . Allobroges, Argonauts, Aeneas . . . satirists and elegaic poets . . . crepe armbands and white lilies . . . due, clic, fac, fer . . . pas- sive periphrastic . . . 0 temporal 0 mores! . . . the wonder of antiquity . . . the language of Goethe . . . das cloppelte Berlin . . . pattern practices 3, 5, 6 . . . die werschwundene Ralcete . . . von Eichendorif, Hauptmann, Mann . . . Tyrolean hats and Lederhosen . . . Entschuldi- gen Sie mich, bitte, Frau Disbrow . . .U . . . Dieses Bild wurde . . f' . . . What? No boys in German IVV, . . . Beckmann and Don Car- los . . . piano and songs in 245 . . . Wagner, Durer, Brecht . . . discipline in study and sound . . . the percussive explosions of a language alive . . . Phyllis Winquist . . . Cicero! Oh, he was a doll Ottilie S. Disbrow . . . the castles along the Rhine Samuel H. Bunting . . . Omnes Gallia in tres partes divisa est . . . Understanding others Thomas La Costa . . . Como sigue . . . Cary C. Bicknell . . . the difference between ser and estar . . . Jacqueline Oliver . . . Do your Vamos a escribir . . . r Gloria N 5Com0 se dice en espai0l?v . . . verbs verbs verbs . . . El Camino Real, Espaia y Sa Cwzlzzaczon Dona Barbara . . . pregantas y respuestas . . archzrequetesu percolosomonumentalmente . . . dictations tapes La Leyenda de Xochiquetzalv . . . culture sheets Juana la Loca, Carlos V, Felipe II . . . VOCABULARY . . . Una Peluqueria Americana . . . To Dre m Madrid . . . Ah0ra, clasev . . . at Christmas, a pznata Raspa . . . Las Chiapanecasu, Cachita Valencia the garden of Spain . . . the Iberian temperament the Spanish culture . . . Vicedomini my poor, sweet children to better understand ourselves . . . Aileen D4 O'Leary . . . Votre gram- rnaire est affreuse . . . Linda G. Clark Ecoutez et repetez . . Donald J. Cucurello . . . no, no, it's white Wine with fish . . . Eleanor Young . . . Bravo! the tradition . . . The beauty of France . . . La Bretagne, Le Langue- doc, La Normandie . . . audio-lingual programs . . . Bastille Day . . . vocabulaire . . . les expressions idiomatiques . . . allons au laboratoire . . . Monday tape tests . . . Paris, city of lights . . . Dantes, M. Jourdain, M. Perrichon . . . Comprenez-11ous?,' . . . La Provence est une province . . . Les Dejarnac, Les Charpentier, Les farwier . . . Dumas, C-ide, Bal- zac Dale et Dale, Ecouter et Parler .. . Charles Martel, Charlemagne, Napoleon . . . What is a typical French meal?,, . . . cheese parties . . . native songs . . . le vin, les croissants, le can-can . . . the people . . . the land . . . the language . . . French ,,,, 5' Examining the theories is fa ' f,QQ,,f2' 'TTTT15 -, E fm 'A 'W ' Q 1 Z W wg? 1,-1 '11- ram l N. ,,,,. E: E M ,,,,...,,, Mm V NMIV --f ,,,.., . Dama Hill.. . . infatuation with numbers . . . A. Elisabeth Gromlich . . . sine, cosine, tan- gent, cotangent . . . Bart A. Ellis . . . this is always true, usually Lois E. Chew . . . the probability of a royal flush . . . challenging the calculations . . . Hypothesis, proof, conclusion . . . What is the proba- bility? . . . quadratics, arithmetic series, binomials . . . alternate interior angles . . . r X t : d . . . SMSG . . . perimeter, area, volume . . . the product of the roots equals cv . . . according to Dolciani . . . 30, 60, 90 . . . 1:2:Xf3 . . . hyperbolas, parabolas, ellipses . . . if the rate of the wind is ay . . . vertical angles are angles which . . . equations, graphs, asymptotes . . . V : Mgrzh . . . cones, cylinders, cubes . . . associative, commutative, distributive . . . let MX equal . . . the science of logic . . . Kathleen B. Stephens . . . all this cook- book math! . . . ,loan M. Cell . . . the sum of the angles equals 1800 . . . Leona L. Jensen . . . given angle A and side b, prove . . . Harvey F. Gerber . . . what do We mean by this . . . 27 Closing the gap Margaret J. Bjerklie . . . three points de- termine a plane ,. . . Brenda A. Johnson . . . a positive divided by a negative . . . Jean Ru sso...thelogofX... John E. Montag . . . the application of principles . . . cool between the known and unknown . . . Noel A. Taylor . . . the laws of mo- tion . . . Worms, frogs, sharks, cats . . . atoms, elements, compounds . . . pressure, light, mechanics . . . rocks, minerals . . . PSSC . . . Chem-Study . . . geology, meteorology . . . ideal gas . . . the ocean floor . . . chlorophyll, photosynthesis . . Who dropped the HCl? . . . 264-WHS's perfumery . . . flame tests . . . observation of a burning candle . . . dissect- ing kits . . . microscopes, telescopes . . . ionic, covalent . . Norman G- Koury - - - itls 3 fare Variety Ol virtual, real . . . oleic acid and Avogadro's number . . . Cobblestone ' ' ' thermographs . . . 9999? error . . . probing . . . question- ing . . . to understand life . . . Leland H. Coslin . . . two glomps could equal three feet . . . Exploring the mysteries John S. Elder . . . what is the specific s gravity of . . . Roberta Kresch . . . and after five days you get beer . . . Paula A. Brewer . . . if I had one mole of NaCl . . . Dorothea Hoffman . . . observation and analysis of life itself .loseph F. Kursar . . . notice the chlorophyll in the euglena . . . Ingrid Hansel . . . the function of the xylem . . . Ann Harris . . . look for the par- enchyma cells . . . Clarence A. Jones Darwin said . . . Emotion . . . in sight and sound . . . Joel W. Greenwald . . . you're out of step . . . Genevieve R. Hill . . . don't pour the breath . . . Betty H. Schenck, Clara S. Grand- colas . . . texture, line, shape, and color . . . Edgar L. Wallace . . . you missed the corner! . . . Sight and sound . . . art exhibits . . . soprano, alto, tenor, bass . . . the 'g12 and '4l3,' . . . Woodwinds, strings, brass . . . surrealism . . . post-impression ism . . . pen and ink . . . scales, scales, scales . . . Where7s my rosin?,, . . . precision marching . . . ffuide ri ht! . . . '4Don,t ste back ouire on the an g P a Y top rowln . . . the finest of choral literature . . . balloon heads, primitive sculpture . . . caligraphy . . . the elements of good vocal technique . . . HOU Wisconsin . . . Beer Barrelv . . . andante, lento, allegra . . . the concerts . . . the tableux . . . re- sounding rhythm . . . the unity of song . . . the magnificence of art . . . creative insight . . Tomorrow's skills . . . learned today . . . 94- Leonard Kittner . . . the application of law . . . ,',, ' Fred Zakaluk . . . the assets have to equal the liabilities . . . Bookkeeping, steno, dictation . . . 'gli the party of the first part . . . H . . . interest, dividends, income, expenditures, profit . . . this is shorthand? . . . retail sales . . . invoices, memoranda, checkbooks . . . rhythmatic drills, speed sprints . . . the goal is accuracy . . . Quote the law that supports your answer . . . . . . office practice: filing, payroll procedure, telephon- ing, handling mail . . . government sales, contracts, insurance . . . what will attract the consumer? . . . ditto, calculating, mimeograph, adding machines . . . acquiring a poised ability for a job of tomorrow . . . Patricia A. Thomas . . . working for speed and accuracy . . . Laura M. Willard . . . training future office workers . . . ' af' The coordination . . . Blueprints, drawing boards . . . pins and needles . . . pots and pans . . . wire, sawdust, hammers, oil . . . c'Yes, but will it run?', . . . actual job conditions . . . cutting rough gems . . . nutrition: vitamins and minerals . . . Do we have to eat what we cook?,' . . . carburetors and carving . . . the T and I program: at school and at work . . . buttonholes, zippers, hemlines . . . the geometry, art, and practicality of drafting . . . lathe, drill press, air pump . . . visit to Bell Telephone Labs . . . scorched food and burnt fingers . . . Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow . . . capaci- tors, inductors, oscillators, transistors . . . the Plymouth Trouble Vincent C- Specht - - - Origin-3litY and Craftsman' Shooter Contest . . . safety on the job . . . creating . . . learning ship . . . skills . . . Robert Dorner . . . from tree to table Joseph B. Stokes . . . imagination in design . . . Bj arne K. Tonne- sen . . . the value of on-the-job train- ing . . . ,l V matt, .I .,, Wigmmimf i , l of knowledge and skill . . . l Carol Lee Weis . . . take five lbs. of choco- Louise H. Kosak . . . the national thimble test will be held . . . late . .. Robert Dello Russo . . . the mechanics of a car . William B. Hansel . . . building and communi- catin w,,.s,-.,...,,M. Aiding the development ,lohn H. Lay . . . the second line is the end zone . . . Victoria T. Melosi . . . pinny team gets a free hit . . . Touch football, speedball lacrosse play your posltlons . . . five laps around the fleld basketball warball shirts vs. skins . . yellow plnnles play full time eo tards and bare feet swino your partner co ed classes . . . A.A.H P E R Slt ups push ups pull ups . . . cold showers . parallel bars rings ropes march Rldflafd B Bfallmafl GHTY W Kehlef ing, drilling . . . sp ing ym pro ram leadership fel take a lap' lowship, cooperation splrlt and sportsmanship Joseph Locascio . . . pressure points, shock, artificial respira- tion . . . Evelyn Unkelbach Mary Hoffman . . . she lost forty points for gum . . of mind and body . . . Janet A. Connelly , ' k' t b - Valerla C. Barber . . fit02l1ceisll1g.0 ene next week We'll learn how to make beds . . . John Hayes . . . can I help you? . . . Alfreda Reese, Carolyn G. Mintel . . . look for it under 973.5 . . . . , , ,t ,,,, ,W .,,, H n . an-mann: 5 -...... ,... ... .M-: -V J .. ...-.. - 'G u.-'.- V .M -. 1...-.............. - N --..--.-......f.. Richard H. Zimmer, John D'Andrea . . . the theory . . . and application of safe clrivin . . . Providing . . . FIRST ROW: M. Rowley, E. Derby. SECOND ROW: R. Grander, A. Ellis, D. Bilden, I. Peterson, H. Brix, R. Haugen. Good morning, Westfield High School . . . Maxine Conk, ,lane Stone . . . help in an emergency . . . the necessary services . . . in s 1. ' -Q.: H 9 , z FIRST ROW: J. Novacky, C. Corduan, M. Del Monaco, J. Gaito, E. Bertlino, M. Costa, C. Constantino, C. Lozier. SECOND ROW: M. Sire, C. Bachert, B. Kuhlke, R. Smith, S. Manzo, J. Baldassarre, D. Ciraola. THIRD ROW: A. Ritter, A. Hood, A. Stimson, E. Terry, J. Taylor, A. Yarussi, J. Bangma. Tage E. Forssen . . . head John J. Novacky . . . cafe- custodian . . . teria supervisor . . FIRST ROW: F. DiMaio, A. Tapley. SECOND ROW: J. Yasenchak, E. Van Benschoten, S. Zeholla, T. Forssen Exploring -,-- lf 4 -- H- - - H , V K- ..A.Q...m.,,, ,w,E,.?,,f ,.,k x,x..5...,.w.-.Q V .W , .. , 1 , V , ww A M . ,Q M Y , ,, 'S uw A , 7 ' ' -r G, .ff , in m Q' X 4 fg K gf, W I 55,6 4. 'Q' K A M A fn 'D Y V A H sa. 5 V vt' , 1 . ' 1 V V X M R P -- K 'J 1 C43 , .. I . , 5 V1 ' 1 .. Q' 3 my N19 AV M, f .W f J 3 ,Gin 2' - X in , I W ' D Q A . 2- 1, f ? l X W 'K Q 'Hg E F o as . Q, 'Qi 3 W M is in ,F is 5 5 mf' 9 'Q fi A W I 3 , i Q I Q, f 5 ' ' N 95, ja 11 in U M W H ,dy I U 13 JA, WV W 'eg J' ff - ' , W , 2101 an If - , Q I , , - ,gn I us., 'M v ' .. in L x if .. vs1'N ,.: , 2 w - 4 W 5 I- V. , , if -Q. . ., ,S . 1 V .m . D W' -Q, C K4 VVV: an , V . Ei. r ji .A my sri . I , 1 Y, qi' 1, 8 :vkmq X N , M '21 A , . 22:11, W'Aw.,w .gg , N Wm., G M 'H 1+ A QM X W Qu MQW? 'W IE 3 a , W A .. S. '- - Q., If -A en- mme- ' , -g , 2 A . xp: - , , , , ' N . av wg, ' ww 5 ,g'V .V 4' - .- 4, X- - , V .. V ' 1- ., x. -, M ' -..-. ' -fm. - '4 , ,, -Q 'Y , , A.- V Q N r : '- --av -3.-Y . If . Q - ' ,j-,-..,. I - I V --ap ,fag , NX - xv w, .Q 4 Q - 3 K 5 it 8. - . -.-4 A H , H -1 '9 ' Q - sq' 15 ' i. . , --r.. ' x .' - ' ! -- n. ' 4 ' - , .Q ,f , . . ,,,. gsm 4 H . R A QQ - -Q , , ig V - . , , 4,4 .V A - , . , ' S.. ., - , 1 - K . 3-R ,. . , '-f X x , .A 4 - 5 ff- - , - -- .ga-K . . da it A, L Q , V , - Q, , 4, 4 2 1 f- , fzqmgies- .X D Sui., fs. i Q 'V' -V X W 1 nv QQ 4I s-X j, You forgot to brush your tongue this mornin Good morning, Miss Theurerw . . . sw-sms 0' g... And now I'll blind the opposition with my Bat ray . . Sophistication . . . who needs it . . . is E :- Q 1 U5 :r Q 1: 1: cn E. : cc: The Great Escape . . . 'Tor lo the days are hastening on . . . Senior carolers convey the Christmas spirit . . . 3 Personally, I'm an anarchist! . . . wllhe animal population of In- donesia isl' . . . International Relations' student Henry Salo- mon expounds . . . 'gBut Jeri, it all goes back to Mr. Shin . . . English V . . . many great works on the same theme . . . ff Exploration and communication K h Hlfioger, we have your bearing X 1' 5 . . . Come in on runway 79535, escargots . . . vin rose . . les gourmets frangais' . . La Dulce Vida . . . Y K Experiments in precision . . . i Mind if I add an egg? Did you weigh the paper first? . . . 46 ,W I Filet of squalus acanthias ,, ,af ' H. f and dexterity I think you're out of gas . . . Slinky simulated sound waves . L. All this for a toothpick! A moment of re- laxation . . . Developing . . . Tpying C-1-a-X-X . . . G 9 Q ck. 4' What do we do when it wakes up? . . . home nursing students learn to make hos- pital heds . . . in KH' 'Wim :YV .,,:, mm' Now lift the other leg . . . ll 77 a better Nle game: volleyball: : dress informal . . . Synchronized groans . . . . Q time Tepee of the Great White Father . . . They're not kidding when they say they print everything . . . Who needs atmosphere? . . . It's what happens . . . 'Wav' If Hand picked study hall . . . ' When you just want to get away from it all . . . Faster than a speeding bullet . . . Alan Teeple sets new sprint record down WHS corridors . . . People ore the some l ky I - . ,We Hustler Carraro shows his American brother Ed Jamieson the Italian tech- nique . . . Chantelle and Bessie . . . it's a small World . . . Wlly can't I write it in Italian? . . . the world over . . . 'Tian y 0 u beat t h o s e Westfield girls? . . . Walter and Bessie . . . the Italian spirit . . . the Philippine sunshine . . . l'Can you beat that Westfield team? . . . valuable soccer player . . . competitive swimmer . . . broadening views of interna- tional life, WHS hosts AFS,ers from surrounding towns . . . brief acquaintances at the Junior Class tea . . . the AFS Masquerade Ball-our contribution to world peace . . . Tour de la France, Schitzlebaum, la Raspa, a Roman ritual . . . global talent . . . building a bridge of friendship . . . In Italy one eats leisurelyf, The noblest Roman of them all . . . Ketchum, Waterhouse lead . . . Blast off . . . 3:30, October 29 . . . Debbie and John light the fire . . . rain can't stop us this time . . . green cheese . . . class spirit with stomach aches . . . wheelbarrow race . . Judy splashes down early . . . Walter and his apple pie . . . cold hands, cold faces . . . balloon tossing and Wet slacks . . . rope burns . . . the victorious first floor . . . re-entry into gym phase . . . cookies and coke . . . hootenanny with Ken and Jeff . . . low flying saucers . . . medals for outstanding per- formance . . . eight leftover pies for 31 . . . thanks to Miss Dietrich and the senior faculty . . . mission accomplished . . . MQW Race to the Moon Musk and Mime opens Mystery, intrigue, romance . . . the Victorian society . . . Ellen Wildman instigates the conflict . . . Marry if you will, but marry in your own classi' . . . Pat Parker, the timid sister Caroline . . . Dr. John Sully, played by Ken Russo, saves the day for the newlyweds . . . long heavy dresses and thick stage make-up . . . the pleasure of lines learned, props found, and scenery made on time . . . the menacing Double Door . . . precarious family relations . . . the troubled romance of Sally Bauer and Ken Morris . . . fMike Ward plays a dapper detective . . . Leroy Carmichael directs backstage confusion . . . The pearl necklace . . . Shirley Crane, Betty Felch, and Karen Hufnagel contribute committee efforts . . . dress rehearsal and a dinner for tired actors and crew . . . a happy ending . . . a well-deserved bow . . . Open it . . . I'll kill you if'I have ton . . . I try not! But since you locked me in there that day l 4of ' ian! L'Hey, there7s a dress-- just like yoursln . . Lund of u thousand dances Annual Beauty . . . ,66 out does itself with Snow Queen Stephanie Stapp . . . Dancing the night away . . . A snow storm ushers in the Mid-Winter Ball . . . papered walls and a parachute-covered ceiling create the atmosphere of a ballroom . . . halloting for the Snow Queen . . . a satin throne awaits the winner . . . Kirk Nurock and his band introduce a new style of music . . . shades of Johnny Mathis and Andy Williams . . . continuous refreshments . . . the ceremony be- gins at ten o'clock . . . anxious moments until Andy brings the results . . . Harvey Gerber crowns Snow Queen Stephanie Stapp . . . Marsha Smith, Marcy Taylor, Robyn Sutley, Gail Houston compliment the queen . . . a continuation of the atmosphere . . . the excitement and brilliance of the storm . . . The champagne music-makers? Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum . . . 59 '66 Senior Play . . . W . 'LI think I shall never speak steadily againf, L' 'Y l sz ' Mt, , 4, W 1-5913 . . Black despair and black arts . . . Stan McGroarty and Ginnie Harnett lead the senior cast . . . Christopher Fry's Lady's Not for Burning, a portrait of medieval England . . . Robyn Sutley's play-reading 'committee makes the choice . . . the stubborn greasepaint . . . committees play an important part in the production . . . student directors aid Miss Brinser . . . the class of '66 sets a 32500-P record . . . Louis Rothbard is high salesman . . . tender N love scenes and poetic soliloquies . . . Mac lV.lcCaulley's uangelv . . . Bill Fead and Larry Doyle, backbones of the community . . . Dennis Mellin and uC0me 011, Mathew, WC'I'C going Marc Seligman engage in sibling rivalry . . . Lucy Wachter is their distraught to teach You to fly? ' ' ' mother . . . Charlie Reber's unforgettable debut . . . Janet Brandsma and Jon Retzlaff form part of a lover's triangle . . . a successful production . . . BraVol', for '66 Thespiansl ll . . . The final bow 0 I demand to be hanged Q . '4You're an unappetizing young man with a tongue too big for your brainsf, . . . 4 For God's sake, shall we laugh?,' 4'With a grip like that you should be The houselights dim . . . the spotlight '4We've got trouble in River City . . . Sing- ing Hoosiers from Indiana U .... out for wrestling? . . . You'll wonder where the yellow wentn . . . Ur. Ricardi discusses dental health . . . goes on . . . Donovan in concert . . . sponsored by the National Honor Society . . . purpose-scholarship fund . . . frantic Wednes- day afternoon phone calls end at 5:45 . . . news of the Brit- ish replacement for Ian and Sylvia travels fast . . . songs over the P.A. system . . . Cousin Brucie spreads the word . . . fog doesn't prevent a crowd . . . frenzied rush for tickets at the door . . . 100 turned away . . . wllhe magician sparkles in satin and velvetv . . . tales of Guinevere and The Little Tin Soldierv . . . a new version of '5Colours . . . settings in Hemstead, Sunny Cooge Street, Los Angeles, and Camelot . . . Shawn Phillips brings a sitar . . . and an Indian conception of time . . . images of candy-color, seagulls, and willow trees weave a spell on the audience . . . Have a good time from now onv . . . wfhe water carried him . . . to many far- off landsv . . . 'Pm goin, to try for the sun . . c'We sang and cracked the sky with laughter . . . Full steam . . . But Ginger, you promised it wouldn't ram! . .. All' this just to cover an exit sign? ?i ,-.,.,s .LU I .1 Westfield g a r d e n s stripped bare . . . XL. SX ii' ' ' ' XQSmi'!'ooowSN3':Ko?f7MoN:ii'C?o:oo Dixie Queen docks . . . WHS gym, May 7th . . . Captains Stephens, Schenck, and Crandcolas bring her safely to port after months of preparation . . . Chairman Ginger Monks, rain fails to dampen en- thusiasm . . . long White gloves, tuxedos . . , corsages blossom in atmosphere of Old New Orleans . . . Bourbon Street, Pirates Alley, Vieux Carre . . . grill- work festooned with Spanish moss . . . the glamour of a paddle-wheel showboat . . . mint juleps and les pralines under the light of a crystal chandelier . . . sophomore Creole Waiters . . . background music by Andrew lVlingione's dixieland band . . . waiting in line for Mr. Berkebile . . . waving politely . . . tearing off to more parties and the shore . . . Officer Catalon,s suggestions! . . . a memorable voyage recorded in the Dixie Queenas logbook . . . I - -Q And on to the South Seas Organization-Carole Plenty, General Prom Chairman . . . 1-2-3 GOI... 66 Decorations chairman Ellen Wild man adds the finishing touch . . Adventures in paradise . . . the class of '67 transports you to Polynesia . . . palm trees, wild orchids, and a glimpse of the beach . . . Ellen Wildman and Anne Marie Harnett's Decorating Committee transform the gyms into a south sea island . . . check your coats with the girls in muu muus and leis . . . General Prom Chairman Carole Plenty greets you in the receiving line . . . island music provided by the Ben Vitanza Band . . . refreshments in the Tiki Room . . . Koko-Nut Snow Balls, Mai-Tai Punch and Tahitian Cooler . . . waiters in those loud Hawaiian print shirts . . . relax in a big rattan chair . . . thanks go to advisers Mrs. Schenck and Mrs. Stephens . . . a fragrance of exotic flowers fills the air . . . giant Tiki statues survey the dancers . . . their good luck insures a successful evening . . . There are three things to remember in shaking hands Be careful! The Junior Class has insured these for 8100900 . . . ...sogoteamgo... QM.- Out of the frying pan . . . and into the fire . . . X Another fender is demolished at 2:45 . . . TGIF Y m Beating the B lunch rush . . . It's what happened A long day,s journey into night . . . , mf' 1 xa- M Tw gf. F:-Q ' 4' -A g -'-- :Q A , -' 4 82: , ,Y,l.,,.A.,.n q...,wmiWg,1e,.,,lr.ILL . , ., .. . ' - A K 'K WKW' 'x'k y I ! YN , ' , in l . ffafw gm xfgfw g-.-rl . ' ,,,,n, L V,V, I 251,21 I ,, 01 --v-W C' REEN BN? ' 7I , - X, - Q i ff X 3? ff' Z ,. ' . , lf, QA 3 If 7 fv ,' ' f ,ff f 11 !?'ff1.l,k Nffw-. ll 636297 v i , ,lf K Adof ZZ ,, fp,' X f I7 I 4' 2, In - WH fyff Q LW' X j 5 x !f 'f f Jin. J g , .VVY , , 5 ' -EN T 5 ,, , ' wi-?fQX5?LiTQlEfWf15W,w , , sf, , f M E Y 1 f - E w U 2 I' . S, X I ? 4, X I fb' x 1 1. if? W V : , fi' ' ' -W Westfield victorious . . . FOOTBALL 1965 WHS Opponent 50 Cranford 14 33 Roselle 7 14 Scotch Plains 12 14 Rahway 9 27 Linden 0 42 Springfield 7 33 Hillside 0 34 Clark 13 21 Plainfield 0 The kickoff to a perfect season . . . FRONT ROW: Coach Kehler, M. Compton, E. Jamieson, M. Mangan, .l. Goski, D. Stotler, R. Hall, C. Hood, B. Backus, R. James, J. McElroy, I. Greene. SECOND ROW: T. Mannino, B. Treut, R. Beales, D. Murphy, T. Hood, R. Hedden, .l. Thiel, B. Brouse, C. Stein J. Gordon, P. Harvey, G. Glassey THIRD ROW: Coach D'Andrea, Coach Koury, M. Froystad, P. Chin, W. Davies, T. Raabe, T. Schaible R. James, .l. Tourtelotte, T. McNamara, D. Pushman, S. McCroarty. FOURTH ROW: Coach Zimmer, Coach Loughridge, B. Stevens, J Howarth, W. Uriciouli, R. Bolan, C. Gibney, B. Brewster, G. Anderson, J. Miller, L. Bryant. 9 s The untested line?', . . . allows only 62 points . . . defense scores three shutouts . . . offense piles up a massive 268 points . . . Ron Hall and Dick Stotler lead the team . . . Ed Jamieson . . . out- standing defensive tackle . . . blocking punts . . . Hedden pounces on a Roselle fumble . . . producing six points . . . a tight one with Scotch Plains . . . uAnother speech by Ron Hall . . . Jim McElroy . . . student athlete . . . Hey Beretl' . . . Mangan and Backus as the ends . . . '6You,re not born with glue fingers . . . the crowds . . . Get that horn out of my earlw . . . Uncle ,loe's . . . John Greene toes 31 for 37 . . . Chuck Hood leads the scoring column . . . Blue Devil Tom McCoy adds the extra touch . . . Coach Kehler's boys . . . Coaches Koury and Zimmer keep the team working . . . .lV,s guided by coaches Loughridge and Brauman . . . the cake-eatersn . . . smash the Cardinals 21-0 . . . those good ratings by Dr. Saylor . . . football '65 . . . a great team led by a great coach . . . Cardinal attack halted by the powerful Devil line . . . A rare moment of tension . . . coaches Kehler and Koury . . . Goski provides protection as Stotler launches the bomb . . . H. ,ig -4 'Y' Uncle Joe's???-three with mustard Ron 76 Hall breaks loose for a long gain . . . A few choice words from Mr. Zimmer , W E: ' ffl, ,,. ,af the champions of all . . . A quick hand-off to Coski . . . on his way to another first CAhoveJ C0-captains Hall and Stotler swcep right . . . fRightJ Stotler and Hood connect for another TD... y V, Cross . . . trap HHUMQ.. :LL . ,Wg t Q' I - xk-:, K l. L . .. ff N K VV M Aw his yi Center-half John Ohaus passes to the wing . . . Third varsity year . . . ,65 co-captains John Ohaus and Elio Cuccaro . . . an offense . . . found at last . . . 4-2-2-2 defense . . . Tamaques field . . . Non practico sabatoi' . . . Walter . . . Hsuperfoot front line fullback . . . today is a running dayv . . . team posts 8 wins, 3 losses, 3 ties . . . Union County Champs for the first time . . . try at the States . . . Bill Paden foots nine goals . . . Pat Smith and brother Dave . . . newcomers this year score 3 and 2 lrst ,l.V. team now varsity first cycle . . . promising juniors Mario Porchetta and Timmy Reagan . . . well-done Mr. Tonnessen much thanks . . . Mr. Adriance keeps J.V.'s moving . . . high hopes . . . must continue big W tradition . . . victory cigars and smiles . . . Now we trot . . . WHS 2 2 4 0 0 2 1 0 2 1 SOCCER 1965 Opponent N. Plainfield 0 Linden 0 Edison 0 Watchung 0 Pingry 3 Cranford 1 Union 1 Johnson Regional 2 Dayton Regional 0 Pat Smith adds a head to the Devil offense . . . 78 5 4- 3 0 Governor Livingston 1 Hillside 1 0 Jefferson 0 Scotch Plains O Trenton fstatesl 1 Out maneuvering his opponents, Bill Paden shows some fancy dribbling . . . shoot . . . victory . . . Elio Cuccaro drives for a goal against Scotch Plains . . . Devil booter Don Decker brings it up the field FRONT ROW: P. Villani, P. Smith, W. Carraro, J. Bauman, W. Paden, E. Cuccaro fcapt.J, J. Ohaus Ccaptj, D. Decker, M. Monninger, G. Leslie SECOND ROW: D. Dilorio, R. Steiner, P. Rub, W. Mcjames, M. Newborg, M. Patton, D. Merrill, J. Haig, P. Davidson, M. Porchetta, D. Schroth THIRD ROW: R. Heffernan, R. Kahn, A. Ganun, D. Douster, T. Wiltshire, W. Harrington, T. Reagan, C. Schmit. FOURTH ROW: Coach Ton nessen, H. Sturcke, D. Smith, G. Handza, D. Berg, D. Moore, S. Squires, fmanagerl. we The loneliness . . . the agony . . . FIRST ROW: B. Lieberman, B. Hand, B. Primosch, D. Herron, D. Calvert, M. Lark, D. Oldfield, J. North, .l. Brown, B. Hilb, M. Kennedy, D. Mayer. SECOND ROW: D. Shill, B. Gordon, B. Shriver, C. Royce, R. Mumford, S. Kallstrom, M. Thorn, K. Monley, E. O'Neill, J. Crane, M. McGlynn. THIRD ROW: T. Savage, D. Demarest, W. Hang, D. Rider, M. Campbell, J. Jeffers, J. Orling, T. Scacifero, T. Tomka, R. Pepper, Coach Clarkson. FOURTH ROW: J. Weidman, R. Hearne, P. Nelson, P. Kaplan, N. Greer, B. Gilbert, B. Meyer, R. Barkdull, J. Kane, M. Allen, D. Quirin. CROSS COUNTRY 1965 WHS OPPOUCTW 7:00 AM . . . Echo Lake . . . begins with double sessions . . . 39 Rutgers CFroshJ 21 Coach Clarkson runs along side . . . six returning lettermen 17 Hillside 46 . . . Don Mayer's consistent good times . . . team plagued by 15 Plainfield 48 injuries . . . competition stiffened . . . Roselle Catholic . . . 24 Somerville 36 Rutgers Frosh . . . Wfwilight Zone to Somerville . . . Watchurig 19 Edison Tech. 40 Conference champs . . . sixth straight time . . . huge trophy 28 Linden 27 . . . four points make a difference in Central Jersey cham- 15 Rahway 46 pionship . . . strain two and one-half miles . . . all out for 21 Dickinson 34 last quarter . . . Johnsville, Pennsylvania . . . 1000 . . . 41 Roselle Catholic 19 considerable hill . . . excessive fatigue . . . 6:30 PM, 22 Scotch Plains 33 Tamaques Park . . . ending a long day . . . 566 co-captains 23 Cranford 38 Dave Calvert and Jerry Brown . . . 30 Edison Township 28 Devil harriers mix with the crowd . . . only temporarily . . . the achievement . . No spikes . . . no starting blocks . . . sharp turns . . . wooden tracks . . . it's cold outside . . . 3-1 dual meet rec- ord . . . second place in Union County championships . . . Plainfield drops 47-17 in the rain . . . Big Loop . . . Rahway-Willow Grove-Lamherts Mill-Shackamaxon . . . street runners . . . hardware house . . . Angie Wilmot clocked at 6.5 in the 60 . . . hurdle relay added to the slate this year . . . mile relay team of honorary captain Ed O'Neil, Dave Calvert, Don Mayer, and Don Quirin set school record of 3:33 . . . snowball fights . . . Frank Rugg fifth place miler in the state . . . Gerry Brown, Calvert, and Wilmot return for next year . . . WINTER TRACK 1966 WHS Opponent 15 Scotch Plains 10 frelayl 392 North Plainfield 32Mg 341 Roselle Catholic 53 47 Plainfield 17 Cold weather, hard breathing . . . Don Mayer leads in the turn . . . af , V , 1 gg, fp Vp , -' V, . , . 5 Q R ff' if s FIRST ROW: E. O'Neil1, M. Kennedy, D. Mayer, M. Lark, K. Trimmer, R. Hilh, D. Quirin, T. Reimer, B. Lieberman SECOND ROW: T. Savage, G. Brown, J. North, P. Ambos, R. Hearne, L. Bryant, F. Rugg, D. Calvert, J. Crane, A. Wilmot, G. Braxton, Coach Clarkson. THIRD ROW: T. Tomka, D. Rider, P. Chin, J. Weidman, P. Nelson, W. Martin, A. Ducatman, P. Kaplan, D. Daubenspeck FIRST ROW: T. Reddy, G. Handza, Coach Sanislow, E. Down, R. Stut- ler. SECOND ROW: J. Backus, G. Whitmore, P. Jones, J. Harmon. THIRD ROW: K. Keller, R. Flynn, R. Hopper. Up in the air . . . Tap's to you, Redi' . . . Tom Reddy's fine perform- ance and leadership in 566 . . . 106 foul shots set gym record . a'I'Ielp out in the pressv . . . '4Reserve the ball . . . ulilollowi' . . . g'I've got the shootern . . . screen-down . . . G'Get a good ballw . . . stance, cour- age, and block-out drills . . . senior Dick Stotler always moving . . . the Bayonne Bomber . . . Bob Flynn's expert dribble . . . ,lim Harmon up for 1,000 . . . sup- port from '6Pork , 6'Wink7', and Pinhead,, . . . '4Red Raidersn . . . noise makes them feel good . . . those Batman boys and the crazy hats . . . Mr. Sans . . . PRESSure . . . ulimmy, when are you going to get a haircut?,' . . . I just didl' . . . smelling salts . . . green go juice . . . Mr. NDI, . . . calluses instead of blisters . . . Mr. Miller takes movies . . . shower melodies . . . Don't mess with Billv . . . Captain Mark Reddy shines in ,I.V .... coached by Mr. Locasio . . . Geez-O-Petew . . . George Paine adds spirit . . . up strong on the shots . . . zone breaker Johnny Lay . . . Hliosers Only Club and dimes for-the party . . . Var- sity,s professional show against Edison in the States . . . drive and determination . . . all's well that ends well . . . FIRST ROW: Captain M. Reddy. SECOND ROW: C. Bartlett, P. Persons, J. Locascio, M. Robin- son, G. Pain, F. Tokash. THIRD ROW: M. Bukowiec, G. Titsworth, J. Lay Jr. R. Brewster, S. Bauer. MISSING: J. Nelson, P. Welsh. over the rim WHS 55 5 1 66 52 63 53 44 75 47 63 37 5 1 50 50 60 61 68 44 Q Q . BASKETBALL 1966 Opponent Plainfield 72 Seton Hall 52 Scotch Plains 51 Dayton Regional 33 Hillside 56 Summit 54 Johnson Regional 42 Dayton Regional 50 Jefferson 67 Cranford 62 Scotch Plains 48 Rahway 59 Hillside 52 .lohnson Regional 35 Rahway 70 Cranford 63 Roselle 66 Linden 68 Stop action captures Glenn Whil- morels rebound-ability . . . Bob Flynn controls the ball . . . Devils set up offense HP? ,Q I l s i . .mf , -an M .- 1 1' .nv Man Q - Q.. ww ,WV ...ann-vf vfoaono's l'l'f'f unify 8 l O Surglng forword . . . SWIMMING 1966 There's something fishy about Westfield . . . no WHS Opponent PM homeroom . . . 3:00 at the Y . . . repeats . . . 75 Pin r 20 locomotives . . . Doug McOwen, Big Gun . . . kick ,MV Colfmii 20V board fights . . . John Ricker . . . one half of that 80 2 Mountaii Lakes 15 2 Duo . . . Are you going to let him say that about 82 Trenton 13 you? . . . strong sophomore ranks come through at 66 Seton Hall 29 Rahway . . . work, animals, work . . . revenge on 63 Rahwa 23 Princeton . . . GK and the Mammals . . . the Hot 44 Yale cigroshb 53 Hemi . . . shower door at Connells . . . Walter's clown 65 Columbia 30 dive . . . cork screw relays . . . record set with 98 48 Lawrenceville 47 points at Eastern's . . . McOwen and Gerber double 70 West Oran C 16 winners . . . national dibble champs . . . Honda Hurri- 53 Princeton ?Fr0Sh5 42 cane Kammerman . . . party chairmen Roger Leonard 53 Plainfield 33 and John Ketcham . . . The Statesi' . . . captain John 57 Newark Academy 38 Ketcham has a few words . . . No times please, 641 Weequahic 22 had luck . . . 4-40 free relay . . . tieda for National Rec- 132 Union County ord . . . 3:18.8 . . . Caims, Gerber, McCoy, and McOwen 98 Eastems . . . 8 All-Americans . . . Let's go for Uncle Joe . . . 111 New Jersey Group Av FRONT ROW: J. Ketcham, D. McOwen, R. Leonard, H. Gerber, J. Greene, J. Schaub, R. Trenner, J. Ricker, G. Gibson, G. Klaiber. SECOND ROW: G. Gruber, P. Swart, B. Haertlein, D. Demarest, T. McCoy, B. McLay. THIRD ROW: Coach Della Badia, C. Caims, D. Welty, H. Kurusz, F. Lieberberg, D. Mutz, S. Squires, fMgr.J. leaving broken records J' 4' O. fn? - !' K - , Dave 'Demarest surges forward to another first . . . 4.m A ,nik , ,.f4 Coach Dellia Badia, recruiting from the ranks . . . N-5 . All-American John Ketch- am churns his way to 56 at . . . There,s a fish down there THIS bign, exclaims butterfly champ Harvey Gerber . . . in their wake . . . Eastern title-holder, Jeff Schaub, displays championship form . . Doug McOwen reaches for a new record . . . Roger Leonard leaves the blocks at the touch . . . A hard fight FIRST ROW: Coach Kehler, D. Wight, J. Stephens, D. Anderson, J. Armstrong, S. West, R. Hedden, J. Thiel, D. Wahl, R. Hall, M. Monninger, J. Gordon, S. Jones. SECOND ROW: J. Petrucione, M. Ramage, D. Fowler, C. Miller, P. Fair, J. Benedetti, E. Hindman, J. Ingram, A. Feld- man, T. Gordeuck, P. Harvey, A. Mallor. THIRD ROW: Coach Kursar, Coach Brauman, D. Ober, G. Grebel, D. McKay, J. Siff, C. Brown, B. Treut, C. Wolfe, C. Shoemacher. Takedown . . . butt outi' . . . driving . . . pin . . . captain Jeff Thiel and Dave Wight undefeated in dual meet competition . . . district champions for Union County and State District 12 Tournament . . . Wight f106J, Thiel f141J, Dave Wahl fl.47J, Ron Hall f157J, and Mike Monninger f167D tops in district compe- tition . . . Awful Awfuls after the match . . . training makes perfect . . . calisthenics . . . 15 second drills . . . rubber sweat suits . . . change top and bottom . . . Scotch Plains and Union- exciting victories . . . Monninger and Hall place second in regional competition . . . Thiel wins by default . . . arm bar . . . Fish . . . Hedden side-lined with injury . . . finished strong . . . no quittersn . . . 11-1 season record . . . 5 graduating lettermen . . . Steve Jones, Jon Gordon, John Stephens, and Dave Wight form nucleus of next year's squad . . . WRESTLING 1966 WHS 45 Dayton Regional 27 Scotch Plains 35 Plainfield 34 North Plainfield 21 Rahway 32 Edison High 48 Hillside 37 Johnson Regional 29 East Brunswick 22 Union 29 Cranford 31 Gov. Livingston Sideline suggestions . . . Opponent 5 15 8 8 25 12 8 5 14 17 11 13 - l for a vital five points Dave Wight maintains control . . . Ron Hall drives for a pin . . . An unwilling Raider is taught the handstand by captain Jeff Tlfleil Jon Gordon wraps his op- ponent . . . Swinging for the fences FIRST ROW: E. Down, D. McOwen, G. Chlan, C. Clark, D. Stotler, Coach Koury. SECOND ROW: G. Hendershott, G. Griswald, J. Bauer K. Brix, R. James, Coach Zimmer. THIRD ROW: C. Hood, R. Flynn, B. Dloughy, S. Wright, M. Mease, K. Stith. One for the fences by Ken Stith 90 WHS 5 2 3 0 4 4 3 5 8 4 5 4 3 5 9 3 5 0 4 7 4 4 2 4 BASEBALL 1965 Clark Cranford Livingston Cranford Roselle Scotch Plains Thos. Jefferson Springfield Clark Rahway Berkeley Hts. QUCCTJ Scotch Plains Hillside Bridgewater-Raritan Springfield Roselle Springfield QUCCTJ West Orange Rahway Pope Pius CGNTJ Snyder QGNTJ Linden Union Rahway QUCCTJ Opponent 3 6 1 4 0 3 1 0 1 2 4 5 1 4 1 4 4 3 2 3 1 0 1 3 Rich James beats one to first . . . 'M l GG 93 7 Batter up . . . Edison field . . . Mr. Softee truck g . . 65 devils boast 19-6 record .... 684 season percentage . . . Union County semifinalists . . . finished second in Watchung Conference . . . rivals Rahway and Scotch Plains successfully defeated . . . WI-IS's first entry in the Greater Newark Tournament . . . all the way to the finals . . . sophomore Bob Flynn leading hitter at .329 clip . . . Chuck Hood top glove man at second base . . . seniors Greg Chlan and Steve Wright best hurlers . . . Chlan posts a 2.00 ERA . . . slide, steal, squeeze, bats, and gloves . . . balls and strikes . . . Coaches Koury and Zimmer give encouragement and advice . . . a strong de- fense coupled with hard hitting . . . a winning formula . . . eisr fAboveJ A little advice on the name of the game from Coach Koury... fLeftJ Jeff Bauer racks up another for the 3 to 1 win over Hillside . . . 0 0 I lndlvlduul effort . . . Run, leap, vault, heave . . . '65 co-captains Hoffman and Wallace . . . lVIavra- ganis, Selig, and Wallace rate all-around honors . . . school records shattered in four events . . . Wallace clears 12' llilf' in pole vault . . . Mavraganis leaps 21' 3 . . . mile relay clocked at 3:27.0 . . . Otto, North, Robinson, Cal- vert set Union County record in four mile relay . . . time 19:10.3 . . . Mike Hoff- man hurls discus to new county record . . . WHS over Scotch Plains by of a point . . . school's first fiber-glass pole . . . broken by Jim lVIinno . . . the uamoeban provides softer landings . . . Rich Selig timed at 4-9.9 in the 440 . . . Ron Hall and Don Mayer return as new ,66 co-captains . . . all will work Pete Chinffputtinvforth effort.. . hard to surpass 9 and 1 record . . . Plainfield for next time . . . 68 boys . . . a fine team . . . led by coaches Clarkson and Della Badia . . . FIRST ROW: D. Lang, S. Hoppin, K. Bushey, D. Horner, D. Plenty, H. Thomas, K. Robinson, M. Hoffman, P. Mavraganis, B. Wallace, C. Hunt, J. Minno, B. Bonow. SECOND ROW: B. Newell, S. Hirschberg, R, Hall, M. Compton, P. Chin, G. Gabinelle, D. Otto, D. Calvert, R. Selig, J. Tourtellotte, D. Herron R. Hearne, B. Mandell, C. Ozimek, J. Hanson. THIRD ROW: G. Cumming, R. Beales, E. Doak, J. Ewen, B. Tusso, K. Trimmer, K. Monley, D. Mayer, B. Hilb, M. Lark, J. North, D. Quirin, E. O'Neil, L. Bryant. FOURTH ROW: B. Primosch, S. Sanborn, D. Oldfield, C. Selfridge, R. Phillips, G. Braxton, J. Brown, B. Lieberman, J. Baker, M. Thorn: FIFTH ROW: Coach Clarkson, Coach Della Badia, J. De Torre, B. McCullough, D. Irwin, C. McCarthy, T. Reimer, B. Hawke, S. Squires, J. Price. 92 Y team triumph SPRING TRACK 1965 WHS Opponent 65 Somerville 52 83 Rahway 34 70 Clark 47 89 Springfield 28 68 Linden 49 74 Edison Township 43 58M Scotch Plains 581132 45 Plainfield 72 80 West Orange 37 65M North Plainfield 51W Pete Mavraganis leaps to record A hard sprint proves rewarding breaking 21,37 . . . to Dave Herron . . . v Braxton and Hanson lead devil hurdlers against Cranford . . . Limbo in reverse . . . pole vaulter John, Tourtellotte in flight . . . Bidding farewell to Coach Sam Bunting . . . 13 wins and 1 loss in '65 . . . team captain Phil Grant . . . singles' competition . . . runner-up for Union County Championship . . . third in State Tournament . . . Anderson and Squires County Doubles' Champs . . . serve, return, volley . . . Mine , 'iY0urs , Out . . . lobs, chops . . . Page Stephens' strong stroke . . . Steve lVlcC0y's drop shots and smashes . . . ease of movement . . . accuracy and timing . . . long hours of practice at the Westfield Tennis Club . . . high hopes for the '66 season . . . new captain Chuck Schmit . . . returning lettermen Henriksen, Stephens, Twitchell, and Catalon . . . Coach Bill Hansel's first season . . . speed, power, the follow-through . . . game . . . set . . . match . . . success . . . TENNIS 1965 WHS Opponent 5 Rahway 0 3 Jefferson 2 5 Linden 0 5 Plainfield 0 5 Woodbridge 0 5 Cranford 0 2 Mountain Lakes 3 5 Pingry 4 5 Roselle O 5 Plainfield 0 5 Rahway 0 5 Cranford 0 3 West Orange 2 5 Scotch Plains 0 Power serve by John Stephens . . . ROW 1: J. Stephens, J. Henriksen, P. Stephens, T. Catalon. ROW 2: S. McCoy, B. Anderson, D. Squires, C. Schmit, P. Grant. Lightfoot . . . quick wrist . . . Hitting it u Maxfli mile ROW 1: P. Davies, C. Hall, B. Mammen, W. Crampton, J. Boates, J. Friedland, R. Jordan, Coach Kehler ROW 2 J McElroy G Mulford J Skelly, K. Kelly, J. Haig, B. Backus, P. J ensen, J. 0'Sl1aughnessy, C. Brown, T. Reddy, J. Ketcham K King B Hunt Coordination and ability to perform well under pressure . . . Coach Kehler,s team earns another set of medals . . . '65 devils post 14 and 1 dual meet record . . . first in Union County Championship Tourna- ment . . . second in Watchung Conference . . . captain Bill Mammen leads team with consistent scores in the seventies . . . Jim Friedland and Jim Boates lead senior starters . . . Dick Jordan boasts top junior average . . . Willie Crampton adds humor to the links . . . juniors Chip Hall and Pat Davies show continued improvement . . . scorching Weather and sand traps . . . bad lies, pressure putts . . . from tee to green . . . individual excellence . . . combined in a team effort . . . GOLF 1965 WHS Opponent 13M Clark LLM 17 Rahway 1 13 Springfield 5 16 Plainfield 2 18 Hillside 0 13 Scotch Plains 5 141 Scotch Plains 4 10V Roselle Park 7M2 17 West Orange 1 15 Rahway 3 SVZ Bridgewater IZV3 10 Linden 8 14- Cranford 4- IOVZ Millburn 7M 10M Cranford 7W fAboveJ Pat Davies blasts out on the 18th fRightJ Captain Bill Mammen urges one in ,, ,M 5 There'll be a hot time in the old town toni-g-h-tl . . . Hail to the victors valiant . . . Who,s gonna wear this after itls finished? . . . ge, ftlwf 1, All the way down the field, hey! . . . 96 Q We're behind you Left: S. Dugan, S. Durfee, S. Warren, Captain: G. Monks, L. Graves, B. Mould, C. Kellogg Absent: J. Markwell. Ginger Monks captain for second year . . . efficient and still well-liked . . . she even hums . . . some problems though . . . HGirls, watch where you're going . . . One, two, three . . . No! You hop up on the next beatlw . . . those 7:45 sessions . . . last minute changes in bandis program . . . broken zippers, lost tassels, forgotten headbands . . . What's a first down? . . . three batons clunk in one ame . . . scramblinff u for sonffs g an P c during time-out . . . Blue Devil borrows batons . . . high knees and smiles . . . 'Sing in the Sunshinev . . . umbrellas turn inside-out . . . new uniforms . . . boots with built in lipsticks? . . . humor from Sandi . . . a proud Thanksgiving Day . . . an easy team to twirl for . . . energy and spirit personified . . . ooo, L, ,, ..,. ,,,,...-0.,,,,,,.....-+ lr - M-1 .....,,,...-4 ,.....- ,. MM. ,..... Q, f ,. ,, , ,, L, W' 'X WT C D . ' fv .l.V.: S. Shallcross, L. Terry, C. Newman, -K. Ketcham, T. Mangina, M. Myers, B. Ketcham, J. Perkowski. We,ve got the pep, we,ve got the steam . . Left D Ohenchaln S Dugan J Ackerman R Sutley J Clancy C Houston K Farley, D. Charles, S. Davis, Adviser: Miss Johnson, C. Lerman. in-nal'-fa S., Boys to the stands . . . Girls' night to shine . . . Bottoms up Hang on tight! I l 1,000 spectators . . . 500 girls . . . Annual Spring Program . . . starched suits and polished sneakers . . . G.S.C. president takes charge . . . girls' turn to shine . . . Varsity Club ushers . . . in step, bermudas . . . modern dance to Humpty Dumpty and Three Little Kittens . . . Tumblers really have to Wear leotards? . . . successful first try at les gymnastiques frangais . . . apparatus and black shorts . . . to split or not to split . . . awards . . . i'Would the following leaders please standi' . . . left step, right back step, forward, to the rear-MARCH . . . no changing in gym classes . . . mass commands . . . routines and little Xis Period 3: color, red . . . You will have one minute . . . relays for tense nerves . . . inspection . . . don't breathe . . . , 'iW'ho's humming? . . . All's quiet . . . Miss Theurer will if now present the trophies . . . One minute more and it'll all be over . . . Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound . . . L A .Q Q 5 ,Q x 5 X 1 S i E S fs X 4 QR Yi-si fins -. Lhf' ii . - i K 'X Q iff '1-- , ,Jia . . - Q 5 Off the pedestal . . . Behind the scenes . . . FIRE DRILL . . . She tries a little harder and jumps a little higher .. G-U-I-D-E! ! ! IOO on to the parallels Happiness is two minutes to get dressed in . . . a lock turned backwards . . . Everything goes home this week in- cluding socks and bloomersn . . . freezing hockey . . . Try stopping it next timen . . . '6Don't play golfw . . . lVlacCon- nachie and Davis score for seniors . . . basketball extramurals HA girl hit it and I didn't even have to help it over. . . . Miss Unkelbach: 'llfiemember it matters not who wins but . . . try harder! . . . Do we have to use zones?,7 . . . race for refreshments . . . coed folk dancing and volleyball . . . L - . 1 it . W T h Boys, you have to let the girls serve. . . . ap it to t e Q77 front . . . '4Was it over or through. . . . spring . . . lacrosse . . . softball . . . Can we wear golf socks? . . . 110 in the shade . . . chartreuse and lavender gym suits as a graduation present . . . And just because Miss Hoffman's on a yoga kick this week Above: Up in the air, over the fence . . . maybe next time . . . Left: Jump, jump, get that ball! ll . . . Q59 Inspiration through leadership . . . All clear . . . . Sports from a girlis point of view . . . called to order by president Geri Botwinick . . . I donit want to push my opinions on you-BUT anyone who complains is expected to work . . . aided by Ellen lVlacConnachie, Robin Ackerson, and Lee Betts . . . Devil pins for 25c? . . . senior sisters . . . El, we're neighbors and l've known her longeri' . . . Apache relay canceled after three rain-calls . . . box supper . . . lost on the way to Cranford High . . . jtmiors clean up . . . gym studies . . . staging 'ccandidn slides for Back-to-School- Night . . . Spring Program and Dessert . . . jewelry sales . . . No matter what, we need more for tunicsv . . . dance with Varsity Club . . . appointments with Dr. Foose . . . early meetings checking to see who shows, because if it had been important . . . blazers and blue and white shoulder patches . . . Leaders' Club . . . remarks on attitudes . . . Do we get points for this?,' . . . G.S.C .... to prevent a monopoly for the boys . . . to promote keener interest . . . however, we are not Amazons! . . . and We do not lift weights! . . . Jump-rope with the personal touch . . . g'Mammy . . . ll! ' it -1 ,L or n X A, X7 TOP ROW: Miss Hoffman B Neuss, S. Heesch, J. Perkowski, P. Kass, M. McManus, H. Matuszak, Miss Unkelbach. SECOND ROW: C.- Lerman, C. Plenty, L. Isaa,cman, M. Dunfee, J. Wiendl, L. Otzman. THIRD ROW: Miss Melosi, F. Carpenter, G. Harnett, M. Greene, S. Grif- fin, N. Vogler. FOURTH ROW: R. Ackerson, G. Botwinick, E. MacConnachie, L. Betts. Punctual, cooperative, talkative, participates . . . what else is there 997 Be sure to be forceful with them . . . well try! Items not claimed Within two Weeks become the prop- erty of . . . Challenging fig n a .., . 'C' -sh. gn 3 - , ' , 1 . Q is gsgw Y ' T if X 1' M' E X 3, 5 X W? X , S , I A-0 A ' - , , , X1 Qi, W N X 'W-' V 4 ,, f T M - - iv QW m ,, EW - ' ' 'Q W f QW .wk-Q. Q ,W X, . S E55 . fg 'J A-1 f ,,,,,, was - M is M :N-. WSE Q , if QW: 5 X k f na! 5 ,tg A '71 ,f -' 1 IJ- R: --5 , s-fa 'f .. haf? ' ll 1 sul ,, z b . xii , 1 A S, ' 0 S K' ,F 1 . var: 3-: 51:1 7 Q R ta 45 f 1414 'V A 7 .Q .4. 12:3 ' ' S! 4' cs ' ' If '- ' - f M 0 Q 334 It 5 an fm , Hi ' M N, Wg. lu ggi W' fl ' il 1 37 X ' , ., , W Ll , ' Q o lu ' ' XA W ' !' I ,gi 'Jwr WW: Z 1 X in ? 5 1 f . f I . l'i .za 'E A If i P4 w I05 There will be a concert band rehearsal tomorrow at 7:45, . . . flat-fooled marchers . . . Straighten up that Rank 6l . . . a new drum cadence every year . . . braying brass after a touchdown . . . playing Fancy Pants on the buses . . . Doug Irwin, drum major, and Mr. Greenwald coach the marching band . . . preparations for the Winter Concert . . . Second Preludew . . . the clarinet concerto played by Art Michaels . . . The Pearl Fishersw . . . informal gathering for the spring Pops Concert . . . scholarships to Inter- lochen . . . theater trip to New York . . . president Bruce Conrad, vice-president Bruce lVlcLay, secretary Ann de Jong, treasurer Frank Rugg . . . Mr. Banks returning from his semester at Columbia U. . . . a gathering of instrumentalists providing experience and enjoyment for all members . . . Bun Drchestru Let,s take it from letter B as in babyu . . . Mr. Greenwald directs the WHS fiddlers with modern pieces in mind . . . president Marilyn Meigs, vice-president Anne Bouchal, treas- urer ,lack Rehner, secretary George Gunza . . . performances at the Pot Luck Supper and Mask and Mime play . . . 'The Toy Trumpetg' . . . '4Hey brass, don't cover the strings! . . . 6'Rosamunde', . . . relaxing students before an assembly . . . forzanda, pizzicato, fortissimo . . . HDance Maeabren . . . strings, woodwinds, brass . . . the intensity of musical concentration . . . a blend of smooth rhythm with vibrant tones . . . entertaining others . . . Mr. Banks returns from his sabbatical to lead instrumental- ists in second semester . . . Christmas Tubleuu The pageantry of Christmas . . . under Mr. Wallace, Mrs. Schenck, and Miss Brinser . . . glitter, make-up, gowns . . . Joanne Fedorocko poses everyone . . . Don7t pull off your beardslw . . . angels, wisemen, shepherds, children . . . O Magnum Mysteriumv . . . the new blue cyc . . . time-consuming rehearsals . . . Sue Ander- son is the head angel . . . Mary Enders plays the Virgin Mary . . . Hlubilate Deo . . . blinking lights twenty seconds before the cur- tain opens . . . ustand still! . . . Hodie, Christus Natus Est . . . the final, complete tableau . . . Steve Palmer sings the traditional benediction . . . a heavenly, awe-inspiring effect . . . New A-Q in! N' A The congregation of WHS' well-trained and exub- erant vocal musicians . . . Christmas program re- hearsals . . . the familiar 'CO Come, O Come Ein- manuelv . . . president Scott Anthony, vice-presi- dent Art Michaels . . . sponsoring the Indiana Uni- versity Singing Hoosiersv . . .lmemorization . . . a capella , . . Morley, Franck, Vecchi, Hairston . . . mesmerizing audiences . . . choirmaster Mr. Wallace produces polished musicians . . . l.et's get that one off the walllw . . . lgor Stravinskyls 4'Symphony iii Choir of Psalms . . . . . . at 7:1157 . . . All-State try- outs . . . 4'You altos sound like female bassesln . . . His truth is marching on . . fi . . . reverberations from the new accoustical Lshell' . . . self-discipline . . . working as a group . . . combining talent and energy . . . receiving an artist's satisfaction for work well done . . . Twelve The twenty-five . . . the Twelve', . . . Girls in a Garden . . . budding vocal talent . . . take a Senti- mental ,lourneyw in music . . . admiring glances and applause . . . popping up at PTA meetings, Back-to- School-Night . . . singing carols . . . twelve green jumpers . . . well-blended voices . . . the convivial l'Thirteen . . . not such an unlucky number . . . showing their spirit 'cWe Love the Halls of lvyv . . . combining with the Twelve . . . Heather on the Hill . . . Autumn Leaves . . . singing for the elementary schools . . . the cream of WHS' vocal talent . . . developing style and personality while singing . . . IO9 Sophomore girls leam to blend and harmonize . . . voice testing . . . the first high school performance . . . On This Good Christmas Mornv . . . '6Christ the Lord is Ch S I Born . . . Susani . . . chairman Sarah Overbay and co-chairman Karen Danker assist Mr. Wallace . . . pianists Debby Holder and Cathy Cake support the voices . . . Somebody stole my folderli' . . . preparing for their spring concert . . . 6'Fare- well Ye Limpid Springs . . . I Hear a Song . . . developing a musical background vital for future vocal performances . . . Sopranos and altos improving their technique . . . the December 9th Christmas Program . . . Spanish Caroln . . . Jesus, .lesus Rest Your Headi' . . . Ellen Mac- Connachie and Gwen Peterson provide student leadership . . . the long grind to the Spring Festival . . . Widmung,' . . . Self-evaluation and criticism . . . This sounds like mushy spaghetti! . . . shaky knees while singing alone . . . Mr. Wallace guides 0 , the Chorus l grads to more expression . . . experience that is rewarding in awareness and memories IIO Future members of Choir and 13,' are initiated into the WHS vocal spirit . . . prospective tenors change to basses overnight . . . Can't you sing it right the first GI b I time? . . . the Christmas Assembly . . . March of the Three Kingsi' . . . accom- ee U panied by Tim Murray and Cathy Cake . . . Stout Hearted Menv . . . arpeggios, scales, chords . . . tenors, haritones, basses . . . try-outs and auditions . . . learning how to sing as a group . . . Junior and senior songsters keep on learning . . . Discipline must come from within the group. . . . Christmas in the air . . . Sleigh Ride . . . Hark Ye Christiansi' . . . striving toward new accomplishments . . . Spring program . . . lip-stick and b footlights . . . What Should We Do with a Drunken Sailor? . . . Last Words of U David . . . talent and harmony . . . singing together with gusto . . . performances at other schools . . . relaxation while learning and creating . . . That,s enough 'Michael, 'Row the Boat Ashore, for one day! . . . Ken Schoel leads . the boisterous multitude with the aid of Nancy Weston, Vvice-president, and Tina Sav- k U b age, secretary . . . folk songs for every mood, including pre-exam blues . . . time to discuss the better folk song hits . . . technical counselling provided by Mr. Wallace and Mr. English . . . El Preso Numero Nueve . . . impromptu hootenannies . - . H picnic in the park . . . plans for the WHS stage performance . . . relaxation . . . enthusiastic participation . . . Yes, Stan Kenton is a Lhas beenif' . . . Birdland to Dixieland . . . New Orleans to Greenwich Village . . . Mr. Goslin, Jack Rehner and Art Michaels set the tempo of the group . . . Rondo a la Turk . . . impromptu sessions in room 29 . . . wor- shipping contemporary swingers . . . Clark Terry . . . Dizzy Gillespie . . . John Coltrane, Thelonious Monk, and Herbie Mann inspire the apprentice improvisers . . . 'LFive-four, J u Z Z C I U b anyone?,' . . . running commentary on the Dave Brubeck Quartet . . . club members man their instruments for a refreshing assembly . . . 'f0.K. you guys, out of the clouds and back to schoolln . . . it it f lI2 if 'fi 3 l . xp 'I 6 , i r 'A little dab will do ya, . . . Clara Diaz applies the greasepaint . . . Mask and Mime Club Next year we,ll have to buy greasepaint by the gallonlw . . . two hundred fifty members combine efforts to cover all the phases of a production . . . make-up committee . . . stage crew . . . student directors . . . actors . . . Ken Morris- pre- sides over the drama followers . . . vice-president Pat Parker, secretary Barbara Crittenden, treasurer Mary Lou Mann . . . shepherds, scrims, crowns, and cradles . . . the classic tableaux . . . cranky heiresses, lovers, lawyers, and butlers . . . dress rehearsals . . . '4Don't try to upstage anyone! . . . One-Act Play Tourna- ment . . . council members choose the fall play . . . viewing a Broadway show to see how the pros do it . . . donations to Radio Free Europe and CARE . . . assisting the production of the Music Festival and the Fashion Show . . . ad- visers Miss Brinser, Miss Vlfhite, and Mr. Craycraft direct the cast and production crew . . . rewarding performances . . . real troupers . . . 9 Mask and Mime Council II4 jSe habre la sesionll . . . president John Aiello, vice president Cindy Brown, secre- tary Marge Urban, and treasurer Greg Klaiher . . . Miss Vicedomini's slides of Sud EI e n e 0 America and Mexico . . . We usually break the pifiata before it's on the groundln . . . Hershey bars for fastest spellers . . . Clara Diaz tells about Colombia . . . a club seal . . . Villancicos add to Christmas festivities . . . La Raspa . . . organization for a better club . . . The fun and pugeuntry . . . 4'Ruhe!', . . . president Gwen Peterson calls meeting to order . . . additional oppor- tunity to explore German culture . . . enthusiastic Christmas celebration . . . Kookie Verkauf yields profits for UNICEF . . . Mark Twain expounds difficulty of language . . . Die So-und-So Zeitung . . . Rob Seigle, vice-president, Ellen D' R d O'Neall, secretary, Frank Rugg, treasurer . . . Ist das nicht eine Schnitzelbanki' u n e . . . trip to Caucasian Chalk Circle at Lincoln Center . . . the Good F mu . . . activity . . . increased knowledge . . . Auf W iedersehen . . . Latin A Go-Co . . . togas and armor . . . consul Bart Jackson, proconsul Richard Parmentier . . . representatives attend New Jersey State Junior Classical League Con- vention . . . scriba Jeffrey Owen records minutes as quaeslor Robin Schork handles financial matters . . . Mrs. Winquist in her purple stola . . . Messrs. Bunting and Ryan lend a hand . . . 'LWhat will you bid for his fine specimen of manhood?', . . . The ldiodessyv . . . it is alive . . . of another language . . . President Liz Kahn leads singing of Le Marseillaise .... Dee Dee Charles' cookies- les petits gateaux . . . bake sale at the Finast . . . vice president Trudy Kaehler, secretaire Ellen Wildman, and tresorier Sam Kuna . . . La Comedie F rangaise per- 0 Q formance . . . French cuisine supper . . . Mr. Cucurello-the romantic Frenchman n . . . International Ball with the Riviera scene . . . Dr. Young adds enthusiasm . . . beginners enriching their understanding of French . . . Anderson, Phipps lead . . . trip to New York . . . slides from France . . . A Visit to Pere N5el', . . . interests in another culture . . . 0 0 Wherever there is a group gathered together in the name of literature, we shall discuss. . . . evening meetings once a month in 115 . . . Miss Learish serves as moderator . . . Conradis iiSecret Shareri' . . . Huxley defines genius . . . hoard of Bob Boruchowitz, Jeri Riddle, and Pat Parker select works . . . No Exit . . . theatre cl trip to New York . . . existentialism in the works of Sartre . . . free discussion . . . probing for new questions and ideas . . . Discussion . . . depth . . . Thirty-three articulate members discuss modern literature . . . Albee's Zoo Story and American Dream . . . Katherine Ann Porter's Flowering Judas . . . 0 0 Mr. Keane provides spiritual guidance and doughnuts . . . president Rick Brown n r heads selection of monthly works . . . theater trips to Morristown and New York . . . The Persecution and Assassination of Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade . . . U b examining experimental literature . . . investigating new writers . . . exploring avant-garde drama . . . free discussion . . . going beyond the curriculum . . . II6 f phi The Weathervane literary magazine . . . interested members with a creative talent . . . authoring poems, short stories, language translations . . . Alan Corn, literary r b editor . . . secretary Lynn Jacobs helps assemble the magazine . . . art editor ,lan Shapiro . . . Mr. Craycraft urges contributions from members and interested students . . . It has possibilities? . . . racing toward publication deadline . . . a finished product and a growth in writing . . . u developing appreciation . . . Whoopee! . . . lit bugs explore the works of modern authors . . . president Don S k A Mayer plans monthly meetings with Mr. Keane . . . a play is 'always better when itis read aloud . . . whoopee . . . O'Neill, Breckett, Albee . . . vitals-brownies and milk . . . whoopee . . . '4It really makes you thinkw . . . secretary Barb Zack records clubis progress . . . Jason Robards reads from The Hairy Ape . . . relaxation with b depth . . . whoopee, whoopee . . . Bridge Clubs '5Do you deal out the whole deck?', . . . down two, doubled and vulnerable . . . Mrs. Trifon and Mrs. Hill teach beginners the rudiments of bridge . . . Mrs. Brewer's advanced club plays duplicate . . . Does anyone know how to score? . . . east-west players move around counter-clockwise . . . the boards move clockwise . . . Pass, one heart, pass, six spadesli' . . . '4Didn't we already have this hand?', . . . But according to Coren . . 3' Varsity Club Fostering school spirit . . , our Letter- men . . . the girls' favorite club . . . president Jim McElroy leads planning of activities . . . successful dances after home basketball games . . . music by the Rogues and Signatures . . . Mr. Locascio instills pride and cooperation . . . ushering at athletic events . . . promoting student partici- pation . . . service and spirit . . . ll8 Chess Club Required: intelligence and strategy . . . the Annual Union County Interscho- lastic Chess League Championship . . . John Farley heads the team . . . Mr. Romano presides . . . pawn, knight, bishop . . . sacrifice and exchange . . . This sure beats checkersv . . . stiff Competition among the members . . . Time's up! . . . queen's gambit, bishop counter . . . learning from the masters . . . Debate Club Resolved . . . 18 eloquent members argue the pro's and con's of current problems . . . president Marc Selig- man heads committee to write a con- stitution . . . aided by vice-president Steve Gentino, secretary-treasurer Dale Binger . . . labor-management is sub- ject of National Debate Topic . . . presentation before the school, March 16 . . . Miss White lends instruction on offensive and defensive skills . . . incisive attacks . . . heated discussion . . . developing the techniques of de- bate . . . World Affairs Club A serious interest in national and in- ternational affairs . . . co-chairmen Chip Krevet and Linda Fisher plan meetings . . . Lindsay, Beame, and Buckley in New York . . . Mrs. Mathe- sius helps stimulate discussion . . . Henry Salomon's impromptu lecture on Viet Nam . . . Who's a reaction- ary? . . . Walter Carraro offers an introduction to Italian politics . . . the Palestine dispute . . . a visit to Arab and Israeli embassies . . . les- sons in diplomacy . . . town govern- ment . . . keeping up with an ever- changing world . . . Art Club Aspiring Picassos and Van Goghs ad- vised by Mrs. Grandcolas . . . imag- ination + ability : success . . . Dick Jordan, Kathy Hideman, and .lan Shapiro manage the club . . . lectures by artists . . . contrast, tex- ture, and proportion . . . Renoir and Goya . . . speakers discuss architecture and modern art . . . trip to an art studio . . . pop art . . . Monkeys have done better with their feet! . . . building a background for future ac- complishment . . . ll9 Boys' Bowling Club Friendly competition yields skill and interest . . . Tuesday afternoons at Clark Lanes . . . 'Trofessionalsi' win first half tournament . . . handi- cap, 7-10 split, fencepost, pocket . . . Mr. Stokes aides president Neil 'Kam- ler, secretary Janet Warneke . . . Stokes, Heroes, Astronuts, Lucky Sevens . . . fathers and sons com- pete in spring banquet . . . trophies to the first place team . . . Girls' Bowling Club Relax and bowl . . . every other Fri- day at Clark Lanes . . . Miss Fla- hault, Mrs. Willard, and Miss Thomas show the way . . . Doreen Fuhrer, pres- identg Diane Pallo, vice-president . . . top ten bowlers enter state tournament . . . 4'Snack time . . . secretary Berna- dette Angelo computes averages . . . Anybody want a piece of gum? . . . LaVerne Mack handles finances . . . May banquet completes the year . . . skill . . . sportsmanship . . . fun . . . l20 Ping Pong Club Slam, slice, serve . . . Your point . . . What do you mean it hit the edge?', . . . eleven point games . . . stiff necks for observers . . . Mr. Jackson joins in . . . girls: boys is 1:8 . . . chairman Don Vella gets things moving . . . Get those shoes off! . . . net ball, overspin, smash . . . spring open determines school champ . . . a game to be played and enjoyed by all . . . Surf Club Surfis upl . . . WHS' newest addition . . . president Jeff Loftus and vice president Alan Teeple encourage mem- bership . . . Big Kahuna flVlr. Elder? gives the group character . . . films in the un-surfable months . . . trips in the spring . . . Carolyn Wells pro- vides the spirit . . . gremmie, Woody, big gun . . . turned-on . . . first at- tempts . . . wipe out . . . splash . . . the first ride . . . Ski Club Think snow! . . . Warren Miller from Bowcraft demonstrates equipment and shows film . . . snow-plow, parallel, slalom . . . trips to Big Bear, Elk Mountain, Woodbrook Farm . . . 'iwho has silver Wax? . . . the welcome warmth of the ski lodge . . . presi- dent Dave Callahan, vice president Charles Reber . . . novice, intermed- iate, expert . those bus rides home . . . Mr. Stokes joins in the action . . . skiers unite . . . STAMP OUT SUMMER .... Skin Diving Club Scuba and skin divers unite . . . spear fishing trips in spring . . . club en- courages members to take outside les- sons . . . fins, masks, regulators, wet- suits . . . Mr. Ross speaks of dangers: bends, air embolism, nitrogen narcosis . . . The Silent World . . . hand signal demonstration . . . watch out for those girls modeling tanks . . . Don't ever dive aloneli' . . . l2l Knitting Club Madame Defarge, anyone? . . . begin- ning and advanced knitters learn new skills . . . cast on, knit, purl, cast off . . . sweaters and more sweaters . . . refreshments during club period . . . a Christmas party . . . Miss Bjerklie advises . . . with president Paulette Kandra, vice-president Dana Manier, and secretary Cindy Obenchain . . . 'iEvery time I talk I lose count of my stitcheslv . . . the busy Click of knit- ting needles . . . fruits of their labor are worn with pride . . . Bakers' Club Mmm, what's that smell?,, . . . Miss Weis supervises her hungry chefs . . . preheat the oven to 3500 . . . sift . . . fold in egg whites . . . bake until done . . . the best part is sampling after- wards . . . president Rosalie Rameo, vice-president Mary Franco, secretary ,loan Matino lead culinary aspirants . . 1 members get four meals a day . . . a tour of the cafeteria . . . young gourmets . . . 4. if ii ....,..!W N ..,..,.s. .. Sewing Club A chance to sew and chat . . . a club for the fashion minded . . . president Karen Forsberg and secretary Duane Taylor lead seamstresses . . . Mrs. Kosak leads club toward the spring pro- gram . . . frantic pace before the show . . . suits, dresses, slacks, blouses . . . color coordinates . . . top-stitching and trim give finishing touches . . . economical and original additions to a girlis wardrobe . . . ul made it myselflv . . . Jewelry and Lapidary Club Studying the methods of the jewelry profession . . . trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art . . . Greenwich Village artists . . . Mr. Specht lends advice . . . president Chuck Aurand and his band of grinders, polishers, and rock hunters . . . joint meetings with the Earth Science Club . . . a rock hunt to northern New.,lersey . . . Don't take it for granite . . . . . . alum- inum, silver, brass . . . agate, lime- stone, quartz . . . Superimposed de- signs . . . OK, people, let's clean up . . . hand-crafted possessions . . . Girls' Auto Club insatiable interest in cars and the Way they run . . . changing tires, checking oil . . . allow do we put it back to- gether, Mr. Dello Russo? . . . Sue Brunner, president, leads aspiring grease monkeys . . . fuel system, car- buretor, distributor . . . trip to Gen- eral Motors . . . reports on parts of the engine . . . learning for practical use . . . Model Airplane Construction Club Prepare for takeoff . . . president Leroy Carmichael, vice president John Matteo, secretary Dee Sutphen lead junior aviators . . . winter for building, spring we fly! . . . each member constructs his own plane . . . Mr. Dorner adds advice and help . . . flying contest in the spring . . . wings, fuselage, ribs . . . stunt flying, combat, throttle control . . . construction of a radio control plane . . . wllhereis almost no wind! . . . silk for stronger wings ...thetest...itflies... I23 Conservation Club The outdoor life draws these mem- bers . . . officers Kevin Mormelo, Bob Brown, Jackie Conover, and Cliff Zackey plan a trip to the Hackettstown fishery . . . an ice-fishing trip in lan- uary . . . discussing the techniques of fly and spinning equipment . . . tying flies . . . hunting talks . . . HBIT, the icy waters of Lake Hopatcongv . . . Mr. Sanislow shares their interest . . . a new club with enthusiastic mem- bers . . . . 21' Aeronautics Club Private flying for pleasure . . . four flyers give first hand knowledge . . . president John Bushby moderates questions and answers . . . Mr. Lux- emburg describes operational cost and procedure . . . program chairman Alan Burnley . . . emergency landing on a golf course . . . J -B Cub, 7-AC Aeronca, 150 Cessna . . . Once you try it you'll want to go back to itf, . . . l24 A it tWfQf'r X. ix Earth Science Club Kames and Kettles . . . stratosphere and ionosphere . . . grinding stones . . . gem cutting wheels . . . a trip to the gravel pits in Watchung . . . lapidary work, astronomy, ocean- ography, and topography . . . outside meetings for interested members . . . fossil hunting, anyone? . . . Mr. Koury offers scientific advice . . . president Peter Kelman helps plan meetings and trips . . . learning about the world we live in . . . Math Club Mathematics and fun can be synony- mous . . . logical minds at work . . . Miss Chew presents challenging prob- lems . . . puzzles and brain teasers . . . Secretary Dan Kilkenny records club progress . . . a visit to Rutgers to view computers . . . Ulf the angle of elevation . . f' . . . slide rules and adding machines . . . all a farmer Wanted to divide his land among his sons . . .', . . . stimulating sessions . . . satisfaction -derived from uncover- ing solutions . . . res Slide Rule Club Log scales at 7:45 in 152 . . . Mr. Montag, Miss Hill, and Miss Bjerklie dispel qualms about problems . . . trigonometric functions on the T , ST , and NS scales . . . Wait until you're taught the log logs. . . . decitrex . . . Acu-Math, Kuefel, and Esser demonstration models . . . Bob Schriver leads the interested students . . . The C1 scale can be used to divide similarly to multiplying on the C and D scalesf, . . . the shortcut to mathematical mechanics . . . - . . I ...... Z . 0 . .. K i C .T . K, fx Qjja '15. ,...-r-'MN--If Radio Club i Radio hams advised by Mr. Jones . . . an introduction to the Watchung Area Radio Club . . . radio theory . . . practicing code . . . where to buy equipment . . . Working toward oper- ators' licenses . . . It's five words a minute for the novice and thirteen for the generalf, . . . collecting QSL cards . . . a contact with Texas . . . Don Baumgartner helps inexperienced members . . . a subscription to QST . . . 73's to all members . . . an ac- tive interest in the mechanics of com- munication . . . I I26 These things will l do now that I may be worthy of that high office of teacherf, . . , Miss Flahault and Miss Sandefur acquaint the members with teaching as a career FTA . . . president Jean Hitchcox leads planning of speakers, films, and panel discussions . . . sophomores and juniors tour Douglass College . . . seniors visitation day at Edison and Roosevelt . . . guides at Back-to-School Night . . . inspired by their teachers to follow in their footsteps . . . Preparing now . . . Volunteer Work at the Red Cross . . . helping at nearby hospitals . . . president Ann de Jong, Vice-president Chris Czarniak, secretary Shirley Kansky, and treasurer Janet Barkdull help to plan club programs . . . speakers from collegiate and hospital A schools of nursing . . . patience, skill, and sensitivity required . . . a trip to the Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing . . . prepare for emergency . . . Mrs. Bar- ber's lectures and films help to interest members in the field of nursing . . . 4 O C Extra preparation for girls taking business education . . . president Emmajane Di Nizo plans trips to the Federal Reserve Bank and the NY. Stock Exchange . . . a A package sent to orphans in Viet Nam . . . speaker from Bell Telephone . . . movies and discussions on business techniques . . . Mrs. Willard and Miss Thomas super- vise tomorrowis executives . . . providing insights into future jobs . . . for future responsibility . . . Stock and uSell that Sperry-Rand nowli' . . . last yearis project-this yearis profit . . . browsing through the financial pages . . . devotion to the Wall Street Journal . . . hypothetical purchases to pick the wisest investor . . . president Rick Mumford, vice- president Tom Jones, secretary Dale Gallagher . . . a future speculation in American Tobacco . . . bull and bear markets . . . Dow Jones, Standard and Poor's . . . 4'Get b it before it splitsil' . . . Mrs. Jensen manages a money-wise crew of future tycoons . . . 'fm-aw.,,,,v mn Library Council Would you help me find. . . ? . . . Mr. Hayes and lVlrs. lVlintell spark clearance for new books . . . pulling cards from the file . . . Dewey's Deci- mal system . . . president Sandy Fead leads students who sacrifice extra studies . . . Working at the circulation desk . . . arranging shelves . . . hunting for a July 7, 1957 Life in the stack room . . . shelving books . . . the spring picnic . . . quick, efficient service for WHS . . . Audio-Visual Squad Need a projector, screen, or record player? . . . these are the guys to ask . . . up and down the elevator . . . president Richard Setzer and vice-pres- ident Gary Stoll lead the squad . . . Mr. Hansel offers technical advice . . . '4lt's the fifth time l'Ve seen this mov- ie! . . . 500 feet of film on the floor . . . splices, fuses, extension cords . . . serving the faculty . . . fostering an interest and ability in operating audio- visual equipment . . . l28 Public Safety Club A greater appreciation of the men in uniform who protect Westfield . . . Mr. D'Andrea arranges short trips during club period . . . transportation: the safe driving car . . . to the Fire Department . . . to the Rescue Squad . . . speed to save lives . . . officers Sue Disque, Janice Barber, Linda, Eck- ert, and Carol DiMaio . . . learning personal safety rules . . . civic responsi- bility . . . exploring a little-acknowl- edged service of our community . . . NHS . . . scholarship . . . advanced most places in class rank . . . honor roll . . . leadership provided by Roger Leonard, Harriet Greisser, Gwen Peterson, and John Farley . . . future leaders of tomorrow . . . character . . . de- pendability and cooperation . . . patience and a willingness to help others . . . service . i. . sounds of lan and Sylvia . . . tickets, posters, radio announcements . . . U0f course we'll get our 2522 backi' . . . volunteers to tutor . . . Miss Gromlich devotes time and energy for a better club . . . Pot Luck Supper promotes unity . . . March induction . . . pins and charms . . .'lVlay banquet . . . gold tassels at graduation . . . 411 if NHS tutor Gwen Peterson gives a lesson in trig . . National Honor Society if ,, 1 President Rog Leonard seeks catalogue room . . . volunteers to serve in the Striving for excellence . . . Student Council .WM vb , I2 gf V1 2. if wif , ,g - I? Y, 5 Q, f K I 'V' , ,V w, . 'Y n.vn,.f'- Q.. A X Joan Mikesell, secretaryg Tom Reddy, treasurerg Harvey Gerber, president Are there any additions or corrections?,' . . . Secretary Joan Mikesell reads the minutes . . . gf 5 Advisers: Mr. Lazzaro, Mr. Shillg Officers: Andy Mallor, vice-presidentg ' 'si 3 N si Q sikiiewi Initiative and leadership in serving the student body . . . president Harvey Gerber helps to promote school spirit . . . vice-president Andy Mallor heads the campus committee . . . secretary Joan Mikesell records the discussions . . . treasurer Tom Reddy leads the SAT drive . . . orientation . . . handbooks . . . pep rallies . . . Kick-Off Dance begins the year . . . lVIid-Winter Ball lets off exam steam . . . Stephanie Stapp reigns . . . record boards in the gym foyer . . . Blue Devil in the jump circle . . . a school banner . . . a school motto . . . a school seal . . . meetings in 256 . . . 'GI get out of Frenchll, . . . Mr. Shill and Mr. Lazzaro provide advice and assistance . . . shakers, books, and devil parkas from the school store . . . considering senior privileges . . . I move that we . . f' . . . an outlet for student participation and representation . This meeting is adjournedn It's all right, no one's coming . . . Book store managers Kathy Smith and Barb Toddie total the profits . .. l3l f - - 1 '- --', ',-1 f Hi's Eye Editorial Staff: SEATED: R. Neufeld, B. Boruchowitz, C. Davis, F. Czarniak. ISTANDINC: J. Gross, Mr. Clarkson, D. Obenchain, R. Hooper S. Klein, D. Mayer, D..Christiano, T. Reddy. Wfhereis always next weeklv . . . Adviser Mr. Clarkson and co-editors Bob Boruchowitz and Cyndie Davis discuss the current issue . . . l32 Westfield Hi's Eye . . . WHS' weekly newspaper . . . Bob Boruchowitz and Cyndie Davis share responsibilities . . . 11:30 P.lVl. deadlines . . . girls' sports column? . . . Joanne Gross hunts for senior models . . . coverage of our championship teams . . . editor- ials on senior privileges, Student Council, and town issues . . . Hughes or Dumont . . . 30 words to the line . . . cropping . . . 'al-ley Bob, how about ears? . . . Mr. Clarkson demands file cabinet reform . . . photos by ,lim Breslauer, Dick Marshall, Pete Brumbaugh, and Polaroid . . . Cyndie Davis plays Santa Claus . . . :ADO you think we have enough ad space this week?,' . . . Reddy and Christiano handle the sports . . . latecopy . . . in depth reporting . . . , fourth period mayhem to meet deadline . . . a narrow victory in football . . . 'LWhat can you expect from a weekly paper?7' . . . we have to, we're only number two . . . Yes, you see we try to avoid scandaln . . . Joanne Cross conducts an interview . . . HI Click . . . Ed Doak . . . click . . . races . . click . . . to meet deadline . . . click . . . We try harder . . . Who gets the last laugh? Q69 avwmgg, uns. FIRST ROW: M. Raskulinecz, L. Fisher, B. Zack, H. Greisser, J. Riddle, S. Foraker, B. Schaible. SECOND ROW: J. Farley, R. Dugan, C. Bucina, T. Kaehler, M. Urban, S. Demo, J. Fedorocko, L. Kahn, M. Smith, A. Carnot, M. Knox, J. Holschuh, H. Sturcke, D. Crawford, Mr. Scott. THIRD ROW: K. Schoel, B. Conrad, H. Kirshenbaum, H. Haller, C. Reber, S. Holland, R. Bartels, B. Rough, D. Gibson, J. Jones J. Hewitt, S. Siegel. XML The current trend in yearbook journalismv . . . a united, enthusiastic staff . . . first meeting April '65 . . . theme assignments . . . senior portraits . . . editor-in-chief Steve Siegel plans, pleads, and pushes . . . delegate authorityn . . . adviser Mr. Scott provides inspiration . . . Clean up that back room! . . . photographer Doug Crawford seeks ucandidi' pictures . . J the business campaign . . . hardcovers only . . . 1300+ sales . . . 7th period study . . . c'Whose turn is it to bring food?,' . . . charades . . . roller skates . . . 4'Scrooge . . . captions . . . layout sheets, running heads . . . galley proofs and pastelups . . . deadlines met ahead of schedule . . . Christmas parties . . . decorations records, helping a needy family . . . a giant 9 photo of our 'Sleaderv . . . a staff toboggan . . . selecting the theme and dedication . . . HIt's classifiedii . . . What does X-76-C mean? . . . 'LS-T-E-V-EV' . . . You people are having entirely too much fun! . . . SM .... '4Not another new senior! . . . Taylor-made yearbooks are best . . . 08749 . . . '4Does anyone have a cigarette? . . . our book . . . a challenge . . . a responsibility . . . thanks to Steve, Mr. Scott, and the whole staff . . . a totally unique and 6'You people are so bitter . . . Mr. Scott holds unforgettable experience. . . forth on the staffis weaknesses . . . I34 Weather Vane '66 . . . Editor-in-chief Steve Siegel and managing editor Marsha Smith discuss the elements of a good yearbook . . . wa. It's Y-Q-QI book . . . f Photographer Doug Crawford reaches the apex of his career . . . Put two dollars on Avocado in the 7th . . . Business committee checks receipts from yearbook sales I35 X Q . .jf 17 f Q .b f 9- '4 X Ev T W ' Q ,r Zfql, Q .sf Q . , f as I ' fr' ,f wh A Aj if J! - ' If V! X 4L Q 'I 'f 0 fl wi .K N 1 1 WMF Jak ful lQ.w ,QLU I1 ., 1 P fljipqfv ,, x I '.,,f X I , ,fri ' 4 ' I R 1 r-' ,., A 5 i w W n. i Sophomores . . . overcoming obstacles . . . Class of ,68 . . . a beginning . . . Edison and Roosevelt unite . . . fifty minute periods . . . '4We,re from Westfield, and nobodyls prouderw . . . led by officers Tipson, Morton, Hefferman, Overbay, and Braxton . . . advised by Miss Learish . . . class meetings . . . constitution and motto . . . handbooks . . . school rings and jewelry committee . . . first-aid . . . underclassmen once again . . . hoping to grow four inches . . . Silas and Eppie . . . A Separate Peace . . . first girl-ask-boy dance . . . Senior-Sophomore Picnic . . . talent show . . . i'The fault, dear Brutusn . . . detention hall . . . four days of exams . . . realization that you donlt have to eat HA lunch in Cafeteria HA7' . . . pink report cards . . . junior varsity . . . pierced ears and madras . . . first thoughts about college . . . dues . . . Junior Prom waiters and waitresses . . . language labs . . . part of the blue and white . . . 'LDown with senior privilegesi' . . . West- SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS: Miss Learish' ad' field dear Westfieldw achievements Lathe best is viserg Pam Hefferman, secretary, Mark Braxton, assist- ,, ' i ' P ' i ' L ant treasurerg David Tipson, presidentg Casey Morton, yet to Come ' vice-presidentg Sarah Beth Overbay, treasurer. SOPHOMORE COUNCIL: FIRST ROW: M. Connell, C. Graves, D. Tipson, S. Overbay, P. Hefferman, C. Morton, M. Braxton, B. Bloomberg, N. Trimble. SECOND ROW: .l. Leopold, B. Brown, K. Danker, C. Parker, C. Marshall, L. Terry, V. Miller, V. Vorhes, R. Swencionis, M. McManus, C. Zoble. THIRD ROW: C. Fleck, P. Phipps, B. Simone, J. Allen, K. Richardson, L. Kaplan, D. Desimone, T. Murray. I38 adapting . . . udlushng . . . ,v , 1 r T 'mm Mu nn me mf an ww am mmigiii was 1 1 X 1 1 mm if M i ,, ,, Q Q 2F I i 1 1 1 1 i in mAg ffillmzi H-ilH 8 V , , E , A , . ? U1 1 2 1 i iii . L g. .- A .. .. -1-V'--ii Wx 33 -...' M ww Qlltuizf' ' sg, ISQKCHMSHQ SBBUDWI ,1: 5-35 -5:53555 E i lili 1 1 ii K F 'z 'f ' W Wm ii 1 1 i ii l iiluz u. mm wwf LIJV 222-MRS. TAYLOR FIRST ROW: C. Baggaley, A. Barnes, S. Anderson, L. Addis, S. Bechtle, M. Benti- vegna. SECOND ROW: K. Andresen, B. Berk, J. Baker, N. Bauer, B. Bemis. THIRD ROW: T. Agurs, B. Anderson, C. Balzer, S. Bagley, R. Anderson, J. Bacon. FOURTH ROW: G. Albertson, I. Allen, M. Akins, C. Aurand. 228-MR. ELDER FIRST ROW: C. Brown, M. Brader, S. Bottorff, S. Booth, S. Bowden, S. Bowden. SECOND ROW: M. Braxton, L. Brown, N. Boyle, M. Breslauer, M. Brown. THIRD ROW: B. Bradley, R. Boates, S. Bower, B. Brewster, R. Blunt, D. Blake. FOURTH ROW: R. Bollinger, B. Brown, D. Borucho- wxtz. I40 225-MRS. NOLDE FIRST ROW: A. Boardman, S. Blindt, B Bloomberg, P. Bobal, C. Bixler, V. Black man. SECOND ROW: T. Blanken, B Baumann, V. Barbiero, R. Cuzzolino, S Bernstein, E. Blodinger. THIRD ROW: C Bartlett, I. Bednarz, R. Barkdull, P. Bar ton, .I. Binger, R. Berg. ,Nfl I 231-MRS. DacDOUGAL FIRST ROW: I.. Checchio, K. Coleman K. Collette J. Ciraolo R. Circhirillo J Checchio, T. Connell. SECOND ROW: 'I' Cherin, M. Colwell, A. Cohen, B. Conrad, S. Coburn, S. Cloyes. THIRD ROW: T. Carpenter, E. Condon, D. Clark, D. Camp- bell, T. Clark, M. Connell. FOURTH ROW: S. Colwell, J. Clark, J. Clasen, M. Christ mas. A A 1 230-MR. GOSLIN FIRST ROW: M. Bundy, J. Buckley, J. Buckley, A. Campbell, S. Brown, D. Buerkc. SECOND ROW: S. Carmody, B. Bullen, K. Burke, J. Buldo, S. Burke, C. Cake. THIRD ROW: R. Burke, C. Cairns, R. Bur- ton, R. Brown, R. Buonanno. FOURTH ROW: M. Bukowiec, G. Buttermore, B. Brown. 232-MISS KRESCH FIRST ROW: M. D'Addario, S. Cory, S. Crawford, D. Coumbe, J. Craig, C. Daman. SECOND ROW: C. Cryer, N. Dariano, K. Danker, C. Crawford, L. Cushman. THIRD ROW: R. Dello-Russo, J. DeChellis, C. Crow, M. Criss, P. Conrad, G. Day. FOURTH ROW: R. Danks, J. Connor, B. Cutler, D. Deacon. l4l VWW,5,,g f--'f Q .Q is!! 'dn I A first look at WHS . . . be- coming o part of the school life . . . keeping up with the latest in studies and styles . . . working as a class . . . 'fl 233-,MR. KOURY FIRST ROW: M. Davidson, J. Dorsett, J. Eldridge, C. Exstrand, D. Diener, I.. Eakin, T. DiMaio. SECOND ROW: I. Di- Marco, N. Donaldson, B. Eidel, M. Dixon, C, Devalon, S. Durr. THIRD ROW: J. Downing, B. Dennehy, T. Dries, H. Dilorio, D. Dilorio, A. Demarais, B. Dick. FOURTH ROW: J. Denman, W. Donaldson, D. De- Simone. 1, ir,-. 4.4 Q's o Qc I',1':'? -1-t 242-MR. CUCURELLO FIRST ROW: C. Gleich, C. Gilbert, M. Gianquinto, D. Gibson, A. Gerlach, J. Fuller. SECOND ROW: E. Cilmartin, D. Fowler, A. Gardner, P. Fromm, B. Graf, S. Gillin. THIRD ROW: B. Foster, G. Fleck, D. Gibbs, J. Furhman, B. Filiciello, L. Gibson. FOURTH ROW: M. Ferrin, R. Galuppo, W. Frederick, R. Frost. I44 235-MISS FLAHAULT FIRST ROW: D. Feraiolo, C. Foster, M. Fitzpatrick, P. Fisher, N. Fey, S. Firran- tello. SECOND ROW: V. Durante, M. Eck- ert, J. Fead, J. Friscia, D. Everett. THIRD ROW: S. Ewing, W. Eckhart, P. Fair, G. Dunfee, S. Duelks, A. Ducatman. FOURTH ROW: R. Elliot, D. Emery, D. Enes, M. Fennelly, B. Ellsworth. C 244-MISS O'LEARY FIRST ROW: D. Hauser, P. Hefferman, L. Hayward, K. Hilb, R. Helmstetter, D. Hobbs. SECOND ROW: S. Heesch, W. Herpich, J. Henning, E. Herberich, L. Henderson, D. Hartman, C. Hermann. THIRD ROW: D. Harris, J. Herr, J. Hamilton, T. Harley, G. Gunza, W. Haug, R. Gruber. FOURTH ROW: J. Hely, R. Heins, T. Hege, C. Harris, K. Herbert, C. Hanna. 243-MRS. CLARK FIRST ROW: D. Hendley, B. Harris, B. Green, M. Gurman, C. Graves, B. Hancock. SECOND ROW: P. Grander, K. Hannis, S. Hackett, J. Greenberg, J. Hackmann. THIRD ROW: H. Graves, G. Greenberg, A. Grey, H. Greve, K. Hall. FOURTH ROW: R. Gilbert, D. Given, S. Goldblatt, H. Glad- stone, S. Gentino, D. Garabrant. FIFTH ROW: N. Greer, N. Garretson, J. Gilmartin. 245-MISS OLMSTEAD FIRST ROW: J. Howard, K. Hydeman, L. Jacobi, D. Holder, S. Hodes, D. Hoover. SECOND ROW: A. Hunter, K. Ishrecht, M. Helf, J. Howe, N. Hufnagel. THIRD ROW: B. Imhoff, B. Hingel, S. Hoffman, D. Hill, A. Hollaway, J. Hyde. FOURTH ROW: K. Holmes, J. Hopper, C. Howell, L. Inkster, L. Holschuh. FIFTH ROW: J. Huttenbach, J. Honymar, K. Hosp. I45 246-MR. BICKNELL FIRST ROW: R. Jeffers, V. Kaycoff, B Kalbacher L. Johnston K. Kansky B Ketcham,, P Kass. SEZQOND ROW? Lf Judge, G. Jennings, M. Kenny, B. Johnston V. Jones, P. Kaufmann. THIRD ROW: J Kavanau h G. Jacobs R. Jensen N. Kam g 5 7 5 ler, R. Jaszewski, L. Kaplan, J. Kahn. FOURTH ROW: P. Kaplan, C. Jackson E. Jensen, M. Jacobs, G. Jacob. 251-MRS. WINQUIST FIRST ROW: B. Lynch, L. Mackenzie, H. Matuszak, S. Maish, M. Lee, P. Louns- bllry, J. Matino. SECOND ROW: J. Lom- bardi, A. Medea, D. Mattson D. Matt C Marshall, s. Mann, N. Lutter. THIRD ROWQ B. Mandel, T. Mahon, C. Magliozzi, R Mahone F. Manca T L1 itt . Limmer Y, , . 'gg , J ' M. Macaluso. FOURTH ROW: G. Lozier, E. Loeffler, J. Lucy, F. Lieberberg, G. Mag liaro, D. Ley, R. Manthey. I46 1 250-MISS LEARISH FIRST ROW: S. Larson, K. Kiningham, A. Lambrinides, E. Kubacki, P. Kirn, M. Klastorin. SECOND ROW: J. Leopold, J. Klages, K. King, D. Lange, M. Korn, L Lane. THIRD ROW: A. Kefalonitis, J. Lay, B. Kope, K. Lambla, L. Labanco FOURTH ROW: P. Kelman, J. Lauer, D Lewin, K. Lee, C. Kobrak, H. Kurusz. 255-MISS OLIVER FIRST ROW: B. Montamat, C. Moore, J. Munson, K. Miller, M. Mottes, J. Miller, J. Migliozzi. SECOND ROW: V. Miller, C. Morton, L. Morgan, B. Morgan, D. Mikotacyzk, B. Meyer, M. Meyers. THIRD ROW: R. Napack, C. Miller, S. Miller, C. Morrison, D. Montelione, P. Mese, L. Moran. FOURTH ROW: L. Murphy, T. Mettler, J. Nelsen, B. Mussman, T. Murray, M. Molowa. 253-MISS VICEDOMINI FIRST ROW: B. Meiklejohn, C. Meglaugh- lin, P. Meier, S. McWilliams, L. Mauti, K. McCormack. SECOND ROW: M. McCloskey, S. Mclnerney, M. McMurray, M. McManus, B. Mehorter. THIRD ROW: G. McMillan, J. Matino, J. Markos, P. McGinnis, P. Mayo, C. Mayo. FOURTH ROW: C. Mc- Cluski, R. McGuire, B. Martin, B. Merritt, B. Maurer. FIFTH ROW: M. McGlynn, K. Mayers, J. Matteo. 257-MR. BUNTING FIRST ROW: B. Payne, R. Murray, K. Pavelka, B. North, M. Millea, C. Newman. SECOND ROW: S. Nelson, J. Nelson, S. Overbay, B. Neuss, A. O'Connell, E. Nubel. THIRD ROW: T. Paterson, D. Ober, B. Newton, J. Newborg, P. Mulqueen, C. Parker. FOURTH ROW: B. Noonan, G. Pakenham, J. Ohaus, J. Owen, R. Papaccio. FIFTH ROW: R. Onksen, P. Nelsen, G. O'Neil. E I47 wg -xx i KM- A ,,, 1, A -W4 .f 17 m,,' ' '4- 'rw-':'5:1. J' 10: we gf?-.1 - x fs I fufv sw i' 4 ,WA fm 'Ab- 4 ,,' ff ' if ,l 1.' te. ' fu ,N rw' 'Q s- ivan.. In spite of the rain . . . Apache relay en massev cancelled three times . . . rain, rain, go away . . . no luck . . . girls in the varsity gym . . . Geri Botwinick organizes a crowd of females . . . GSC juniors help . . . nose the ping-pong ball across the floor . . . run faster . . . pull the girdles above the knees . . . umph . . . hop, skip, jump . . . potatoes on the spoon . . . mashed on the floor . . . please cooperate, kids . . . captains' pie eating contest . . . tired laughter and smiles . sophomores aren't so had . . . and neither are seniors . . . 258-MR. MILLER FIRST ROW: D. Perry, P. Perry, B. Peter son, L. Perkins, S. Perkins, D. Pearson C. Pon. SECOND ROW: P. Phipps, Jf Perkowski, C. Phillips, .I. Pfeiffer, F. Plow cha, L. Poplar, .l. Pugh. THIRD ROW: G. Pain, F. Porter, D. Pepper, M. Porchetta, .I. Petrucione, D. Porchetta, L. Perego. FOURTH ROW: P. Plage, J. Pattison, J. Peacock, L. Pearson, J. Percy, T. Quag- Iietta, P. Persons. 261-MR. DELLA BADIA FIRST ROW: S. Schreiber, H. Sempreviva, C. Schultz, M. Shaw, .I. Shapiro, R. Shaw, K. Schrader. SECOND ROW: I. Robinson, G. Saltzman, B. Sharkey, A. Shaffer, D. Schmidt, S. Shawcross, D. Schrag, M. Rosen. THIRD ROW: K. Schaefer, H. Schunck, H. Sanford, L. Shapiro, T. Roberts, P. Rohowsky, R. Robertson, B. Robin. FOURTH ROW: B. Rood, T. Schaible, M. Robinson, R. Schaaf, C. Royce, B. Samuelson, .I. Rosen, .I. Schade. I50 259-MRS. GILBERT FIRST ROW: L. Ruzansky, R. Romeo, C. Samuels, S. Reid, G. Rost, A. Reeder. SECOND ROW: S. Richey, E. Quackenhos, E. Roos, M. Reynolds, P. Salsbury. THIRD ROW: R. Reis, T. Raabe, M. Ramage, M. Ramage, K. Riddle, D. Roth. FOURTH ROW: J. Raba, K. Richardson, T. Ranney, R. Rawls, M. Reddy, .I. Raskulinecz, W. Rau. be 264--MR. JONES FIRST ROW: L. Taylor, L. Terry, R. Swen- cionis, J. Taylor, H. Sharer, W. Suifern, S. Thena. SECOND ROW: L. Taylor, C. Taylor, D. Sutphen, W. Taylor, V. Taylor. THIRD ROW: C. Stein, C. Stapp, J. Stem- ber B. Stewart D Ste hens J. Sone 7 9 ' p 5 y' FOURTH ROW: S. Strange, J. Sefiuk, R. Southern. 263-MR. ENGLISH FIRST ROW: W. Smith, C. Stanford, K. Slahor, M. Smolenski, B. Sollenberger, L. Shipman. SECOND ROW: L. Sherb, S. Spilner, B. Steinbacher L. Smith, C. Shea T. Stafford, R. Shrewsbury. THIRD ROW: B. Simone, R. Selig, K. Shannon, S. Staff, A. Skinner, J. Sozzio. FOURTH ROW: D. Sharkey, H. Smock, M. Schrag, W. Smith, R. Shriver. FIFTH ROW: G. Skrba, J. Smith, J. Siff, M. Sidrer. 265-DR. HOFFMAN FIRST ROW: B. Toddie, N. Trimble, L. Towers, A. Tingley, J. Tiedeman, J. Thomas. SECOND ROW: B. Sutphen, D. Tomchek, E. Villa, K. Tiemey, N. VanVoorhis. THIRD ROW: S. Stump, C. Tapscott, G. Stoll, J. Stitch, F. Talcott, R. Townley. FOURTH ROW: B. Stewart, B. Sullivan, A. Strat- ton. 268-MR. KURSAR FIRST ROW: S. Wakefield, V. Vorhes, A Warnock, N. Waite, C. Whipple, S. Walton C. Weber. SECOND ROW: G. Wallace, .I Warner, D. Weldon, A. Warshaw, D. Tucker, B. Waddy. THIRD ROW: G. Titsworlll B. Templeton, G. Walker, L. Urso, J. Urso L. Villani, K. Visconty. FOURTH ROW: I Tokash, W. Vroome, D. Tipson, .l. Weid man, J. Ward, R. Vella. .wif e'ee.ei .iei A 4. - B 9 160-MRS. CONNELLY FIRST ROW: C. Bangs, A. Mann, S. Bacon. SECOND ROW: B. Schwartz, S. Passariello, L. Lane. THIRD ROW: J. Mayers, R. Whitehead, S. Vetenko. I52 270-MRS. HANSEL FIRST ROW: .I. Zobel, N. Wright, P. Width, B. Wickes, .I. Yusko, H. Winett. SECOND ROW: .I. Willner, K. Wolfe, S. Winter, M. Wildman, D. Wood. THIRD ROW: D. Welty, J. Wick, H. Williamson, B. Zercher, C. Wolf, R. Wyatt. FOURTH ROW: P. Welsh, P. Weiss, R. Wheaton, S. Warnock, E. Wildner. 4.4 A I , Y-'W . . . the forest primeval . . . and this is the life academic . . . learning by participating . . . chairs are for sittingp ears are for listening . . . a life within a life . . . developing a greater understanding between teacher and student . . . Juniors . . . realizing challenges 4'We came, we saw . . . . . . old friends, new classes, new teachers . . . a growing school spirit . . . Knowledge is the key to freedomf, . . . president John Aiello-g'This meeting of the class of 1967 will now come to order. . . . Miss Russo supervises the class project . . . and how many AFS bonds did you sell? . . . the '66 Prom . . . Mrs. Stephens, guiding hand . . . a trip to Polynesia . . . a growing concern for col- lege . . . PSAT, NMSQT, SAT, ACT . . . Hawthome and Hofstadter . . . Giants in the Earth-clods in the sod . . . a trying unit of English grammar . . . parallelism, tautology . . . Jeffersonian democracy, manifest destiny . . . Mrs. Barber and Home Nursing . . . fasten your seat beltMBTW in the parking lot . . . girls twining to the tune of Miserlou in the gym . . . mock elections in U.S.I . . . i'Me, a radical? . . . sunglasses and berets-Junior boys, uenthusiasmi' at basketball games . . . spring fever and final exams . . . a feeling of class unity . . . hope and inspiration . . . the middle classi' moves on . . . prepared for another year . . . JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Linda Hanrahan, assistant treasurer, Mrs. Stephens, adviser, Jack Henriksen, vice-presidentg John Aiello, president, .Ion Cordon, treasurer, Ellen Wildman, secretary. .JUNIOR COUNCIL: FIRST ROW: S. Davis, L. Hunrahan, J. Cordon, J. Aiello, J. Henriksen, E. Wildman, K. Stephens, R. Wade. SECOND ROW: A. Wolfsie. R. Brown, L. Isaacman, P. Tubbs, C. Plenty, I.. Cillie, J. Carter, S. Dughi. THIRD ROW: R. Schork, B. Norder, T. Mannino, E. Ackmun, J. Haig, D. Schroth, J. Markwell, L. Knee-ht, E. Isaacman. and goal . . . anticipating 1 I N 'R Nw., f dx 0 Q x li fe 4 lm ,Q , -Q I MD' 7. Q e5,,, if l fn aa 'bf' Q ur 5 1 - 1 Vx u K 9 3 , QQ .2 9 L., - z ,ll ,il-vu' 'rmffflf ' ' 'X , 1 J' bg Q' ki '91 Ja 123fMISS WHITE FIRST ROW: D. Binger, S. Black, B. Blyth, A. Baer, D. Bailey, R. Bcttencourt, V. Blackmon. SECOND ROW: R. Beales, R. Ackerson, S. Bauer, W. Bork, D. Baer. L. Bent, S. Bailey, P. Amhos. THIRD ROW: B. Backus, D. Anderson, T. Beddows, T. Aloia, M. Alpert, J. Armstrong. J. Andrews, S. Allman, B. Bartik. FOURTH ROW: M. Austin, I.. Bartolf, B. Anderson, T. Ash- haugh, D. Barton, M. Bass, D. Anderson, E. Ackman. 141-MR. SANISLOW FIRST ROW: S. Cleary, J. Carter, J. Craf- ton, W. Crittenden, C. Cole, D. Conway 1 N. Chapman, A. Cintorrino. SECOND ROW: J. Breslauer, P. Brumhaugh, K. Brudno, C. Corkum, J. Crum, D. Cordes, J. Baum- gartner. THIRD ROW: B. Buckley, L. Bry ant, T. Bumsted, J. Brown, C. Brown, F. Byrne, G. Braxton, M. Bundy. I56 129-MR. STOKES FIRST ROW: S. Bullington, J. Brownell S. Brown, R. Brown, B. Caemmerer, S Carlisle. SECOND ROW: A. Bosco, A Bouchal, J. Busch, M. Best, B. Bolan, R Bernstein. THIRD ROW: J. Bannon, D Berg, B. Bolen, J. Beninato, J. Benedetti FOURTH ROW: D. Bickle, K. Billet, J Blauvelt, M. Blacklock, D. Belcher. 76' ' Tl ,,, ,Ai ,gk .. 521, . 144f-MR. ROSS FIRST ROW: C. Evans, C. Fletcher, K. Eidel, M. Dunfee, L. Earl, P. Dughi, C. Fink, S. Dughi, M. Ewing. SECOND ROW: D. Dauberspeck, B. Cutrer, K. Farley, J. Elliot, A. Dunn, B. Edmunds, S. Durfee. THIRD ROW: P. Davidson, R. Dello-Russo, C. Crispen, J. Crouse, J. Crawford, D. Dauster, B. Cox, R. Cosgrove. FOURTH ROW: D. Dillon, B. Davie, M. Danco. 143-MRS. GRAYBILL FIRST ROW: A. Cuckler, L. Doerr, K. Daiber, L. De Lorenzo, C. Dinges, G. Fried- man. SECOND ROW: D. Doerr, S. Dugan, S. Davis, K. Cunniff, P. Doerrer, K. Daisey. THIRD ROW: R. Calabro, T. Catalon, C. Dean, P. Dobrucki, A. de Jong. FOURTH ROW: S. Cicchetti, T. Christiano, D. Christ- iano, P. Cheyayl, B. Caldwell. FIFTH ROW: M. Carroll, D. Clark, I. Burrows, J. Clancy, D. Christopher, D. Calvert. 145-MISS CHEW FIRST ROW: C. Colias, K. Ginouver, A. Goodwin, C. Fowler, L. Franco, C. Graves. SECOND ROW: E. Garcia, K. Freiherr, M. Fogerty, P. Cerarde, L. Gillie, D. Cib- bons. THIRD ROW: A. Ellis, S. Elder, D. Demarest, N. Fremon, C. Gaydick. FOURTH ROW: P. Facciponti, A. Feld- man, J. Ewen, F. Flynn, P. Doscher, H. Downie. FIFTH ROW: D. Felter, M. Escof- fier, M. Finklestein, E. Down. I57 ,,, , ,,,....'--0- J The junior class . . . the girls, the boys . . . crazy cars and lazy days . . . pep assemblies . . . school spirit ii V fm 146-MR. CERBER FIRST ROW: A. Hays, .I. Hedden, M. Heim, J. Hachmann, H. Gruber, N. Haley, A. Harnett, L. Gross. SECOND ROW: B. Flynn, L. Hekeler, P. Greer, K. Greer, S. Hardy, S. Hartelius, C. Hake. THIRD ROW: K. Furnback, B. Haertlein, G. Glassey, C. Cihney, .I. Haig, B. Cordon. FOURTH ROW: A. CaNun, R. Coski, C. Freiberger, R. Grigg. 149-MRS. STEPHENS FIRST ROW: 'N. Kavanaugh, L. Jacobs, S. Kempner, S. Kavanaugh, F. Johnson, I. Johnston, L. Issacman. SECOND ROW: B. Johansen, K. Keesing, L. Hanrahan, E. Wildman, P. Kandra, M. Kalbacher. THIRD ROW: D. Holloway, J. Hunter, J. Henrik- sen, J. Aiello,.C. Infantino, R. Hydeman, S. Keese. FOURTH ROW: J. Gordon, .l. Ingram, J. Howarth, T. Hood, B. Hopper, I. Hyman, G. Gruber. I60 148-MISS RUSSO FIRST ROW: T. Hudson, J. Henshaw, A Holt, B. Hooker, C. Hughes, E. Issacman SECOND ROW: K. Henderson, L. Hoffman R. Hoyt, L. Hess, M. Hill, L. Hudson THIRD ROW: D. Harmon, E. Hindman, W Harrington, T. Heyder, M. Heffernan, L Hames. FOURTH ROW: W. Herr, .I. Harris R. Hearne, B. Hamilton. 152-MR. JACKSON FIRST ROW: K. Mahoney, B. Lyng, S. Mangan, P. MacFarlane, R. Macaluso, E. Lounsbury, D. Manna. SECOND ROW: B. Lindley, J. Macaulay, K. Long, T. Mangina, I. Mass, M. Loofbourow. THIRD ROW: A. Kolar, R. Longway, A. Luck, J. Last, P. Kulig. FOURTH ROW: W. Kingston, C, Lauer, R. Luckman, K. Kimmell, M. King. 151-MISS CELL FIRST ROW: C. Kester, M. Kindregan, L Knecht, K. Ketcham, K. C. Leopold, C Lerman. SECOND ROW: KL Lamhla, P Kimmell, K. Koppenhoefer, B. Kolar, S Kreuger, D. Laile, C. Kin. THIRD ROW: G. Jennings, J. Keyser, J. Kesty, M. Judge D. Kilkenny, R. Kahn. FOURTH ROW: K Keogh, S. Kallslrom, J. Kane, H. Johnson R. James, K. Kammerman. FIFTH ROW P. Jones, F. Jensen, T. Jones, K. Keller S. Jones, J. Jones. - 153mMISS BJ ERKLIE FIRST ROW: J. McCarty, M. Masuhr, L. Miller, L. Mellen, M. McTague, C. Mc- Sweeney. SECOND ROW: J. Kingsley, B. McNee1y, G. McGrath, T. McCoy, V. Mathis. THIRD ROW: B. Lynch, A. Maller, T. Mannino, R. Mann, D. MacKay, R. Marsh- all, FOURTH ROW: R. Manier, B. Mc- Chesney, J. Mason, F. Margolin, C. Main- men. FIFTH ROW: G. McCo0l, J. Mark- ham, C. McCarthy. l6I 155-MISS JENSEN FIRST ROW: P. Paden, C. Obenchain, A Monson, B. Norder, V. Panico, B. Muse SECOND ROW: K. O'Shaughnessy, P. Nerl S. Mulkeen, L. Otzmann, B. Mould, V. Pat- rick. THIRD ROW: N. Migliozzi, B. Meyer, A. Mencher, E. Meder, D. Merrill, B. Mc- Lay. FOURTH ROW: B. Mikesell, T. Mc- Namara, B. McJames, M. Mease, J. Miller, R. Milefsky. 158-MR. ROMANO FIRST ROW: A. Schade, B. Scaramastro, P. Sailer, C. Sauerbrun, E. Royce, P. Rudy. SECOND ROW: N. Salomone, E. Schwinn, A. Schmalenher er L Seals J. Rusch L g 7 ' 5 7 ' Romberg, R. Schork. THIRD ROW: T. Savage, M. Rindner, J. Robbins, M. Smith, R. Pfeiffer, B. Primosch, D. Pushman. FOURTH ROW: W. Pusaek, R. Roode, T. Ramsberger, B. Rosenvinge, L. Pollard, D. Rider, B. Randall, T. Reagan. I62 157--MRS. HARRIS FIRST ROW: T. Plyer, K. Randles, A. Quackenbos, K. Remeta, V. Rendell, L. Payne. SECOND ROW: C. Plenty, L. Peter- son, K. Rohrey, S. Potter, J. Reber. THIRD ROW: P. Reinhardt, A. Prince, M. Per- rucci, L. Pfeiffer, J. Perrulli. FOURTH ROW: E. Noell, H. Parkinson, E. Norris, J. North, D. Moore. FIFTH ROW: S. Par- kerton, J. O'Shaughnessy. 161-MR. SPECHT FIRST ROW: R. Sterns, B. Stoecker, E Swingle, G. Steuerman, R. Taliaferro, L Struble. SECOND ROW: H. Smullen, .I Stephens, J. Sleesman, K. Stephens, G Steengrafe. THIRD ROW: R. Stake, R Steiner J. Sully, R. Stier. FOURTH ROW: M. Sodomora, R. Stevens, S. Squires. 159-MR. ADRIANCE FIRST ROW: N. Sofield, Z. Smith, A. Stowe, L. Shine, L. Smith, D. Shallcross. SECOND ROW: B. Smith, S. Silverman, S. Rossello, T. Stanley, S. Smith, N. Shorsher, T. Rothhard. THIRD ROW: K. Smith, P. Spilner, J. Sims, B. Simon, S. Smith, J. Staubach, R. Stalbaum, P. Shapter, B. Sentivan. FOURTH ROW: B. Ruggeri, G. Selfridge, D. Shill, C. Shoemaker, D. Schroth, E. Schlesinger, C. Seiter. FIFTH ROW: S. Smith, J. Scott, P. Rub, J. Skelly, D. Ryan, S. Sanborn, G. Shiffrin. 163-MRS. TRIF ON FIRST ROW: C. Vanderbilt, M. Tice, S. van de Sande, P. Tubbs, V. Tomlinson, B. Thome. SECOND ROW: J. Thomas, P. Swart, B. Taylor, B. Thiele, L. Thorn, M. Sweeney. THIRD ROW: D. Smith, D. Sut- ton, B. Tapley, S. Teitelbaum, M. Thorn. I63 -hu Y 172-MRS. BREWER FIRST ROW: J. Wyatt, C. woods, G. Wittke S. Za aranick SECOND ROW: M , p . . Wolff, A. Wolfsie, D. Wight, C. Vvorthing. THIRD ROW: B. Watt, K. Wheatley, S. West, G. Whitmore, F. Whitaker. 168-MR. KEANE FIRST ROW: J. Weinrich, J. Walker, M Wiest, R. Wade, S. Wechter, S. Warren K. Waehler. SECOND ROW: L. Wallace J. Walker, M. Wetterhall, K. Vavoulis, D Welden, B. Whitehead. THIRD ROW: D Twitchell, J. Tourtellotte, K. Truet, T Tomka, S. Trager, C. Wells, J. Wiendl FOURTH ROW: W. Walb, J. Waltermirc B. Tusso, R. Urciuoli, C. Tingley, R Thorne, J. Valerio. l V Nw! The books, the dances . . . research and discovery . . . honor your partner . . . building with ideas . . . t i 1 1 The life of an undergraduate . . . rushing, waiting in line . . . batons, hula hoops, yo-yos . . . proiects . . . spirit . . . twist and shout . . . mint lemonade and 254 change . . . f -fm ff.. . 3 134, - 1 ' , Q- , . , ' g gy .,,... I 1 3 3 ,,, f 'Ml , ma- , We K .N ' .,' . . i - K 3 H IVMIKKA- :Sig T 4 , . 1 , X v I Ls ' v' w 4 ,, N' 'f if ,fi I 3 ' Q, K' , . 3 A I - . 1 1' if- gtffi ' Q 'L i ' ' ' iff YK .lg .4 Am In ' uibclgi v V, H VV ' 1 - 42-l, ' R . I 5 J. I. ' L-, , 4 , t . ,,,,, , ,?,. Alv1 :, . :X i jg. ' ,, :ff 'k' W K H I, ' A ' Q I I , 3 , . I , . la' , 6' V, :A ,J 1 'A' N ' ' 1 f ,,, A ,:,1,,z,1,' , f, 1 I ' f f, , -,Y fyflrfilii. .4 5 AP' f,l,f,' 1, 41,1 . 3 Q 2 I f ff' if, f '. , sr -W x f ' , f I w f 'ff f f ' f f, , 1 . zu 4 A vw... vw-9 , ff? rv 4 ,f ,-,www fa m.eQx '1 Shaping the Future .,-n-' MMMWW Wa' v1L,f-..- i A-:pw-f' ff, fl ,Aff- ,nvw Lb'-S4 . f Schroth urgei senio rs If fl. f 1 If Z Er. s Y 1 5 ' 2 W1iiq,,,M seek higher visions 5 2 s :V ., 4' 1 K' 1 Q f 1 I, 6,0 , '. Q V '41 Aff ' A wr A 1.0.9. U 1 V v v' , Q , Ns 1 . 1.15 Q, gr '2,:gj,f?, is '25 ,X V lss Q s 0 0 0 'Xp I Q., iff: 4-A-F iw! riff! F 5 ,MWW Class of '66 . . . 2? Class of 1966 . . . 'cthe best yet '. . . musicians, il artists, craftsmen, dramatists, scholars, businessmen, athletes . . . Fry's Ladyis Not for Burning . . . :'Sell those ticketsli' . . . tragic trauma of the TB tests . . . and the rains came- Senior-Sophomore picnic, New Orleans Prom, Race to the Moon . . . Bessie and Vvalter . . . senior portraits at WHS . . . Math Review, International Relations, English IV, Calculus, English V, Probability and Statistics, U.S. History II . . . circular discussions . . . de- cisions and evaluations . . . senioritis, senior slump . . . at seventeen, license, at eighteen, draft . . . senior class meetings: Bill presides, Robyn, Jim, Mary Lou, and Cindy assist, Miss Dietrich advises . . . New York Times . . . news analysis . . . the I2,' and '4l3 . . . senior class project . . . Ian and Sylvia at NHS concert . . . college boards . . . IAOI7 . . . We regret to -inform you . . . . . . ACCEPTED . . . '4Can you beat that Westfield team?,' . . . toilet paper, compliments of SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS AND ADVISER: Margaret B. Dietrich, adviserg - - 1 t P 1 ' u i U Robyn Sutley, vice-president, Jim McElroy, treasurer, Cindy Morton, assistant thi Senior glrls ' ' ' New Gr eansk 0 0 ynesla treasurerg Mary Lou Mann, secretary, Bill Schroth, president. H LS Eye VS. Weather Vane . . . eep your average up . . . final exams! . . . banquet at the Washington House . . . graduation . . . rehearsals and rehearsals . . . June 22 . . . an end and a beginning . . . uKnowledge is the key to the future . . . SENIOR COUNCIL: FIRST ROW: .I. Baumann, L. Bristol, B. Verzillo, K. Rich, D. Irwin, L. Dunn, P. Smith, C. Charles. SECOND ROW: Miss Dietrich, D. Hunter, V. Monks, B. Cast, K. Zitch, J. Retzlaff, E. Kahn, J. Stempel, R. Hill. ttf moving ahead ? 1 . ROXANE ACKERMAN EILEEN AHERN MICHELE ALBISSER JUDITH AMMIRATA DONALD ANDERSON SUSAN A. ANDERSON SUSAN L. ANDERSON BERNADETTE ANGELO I74 G. SCOTT ANTHONY LINDA ARGAST JILL AUGUST GLORIA AVERY 6 RICHARD AYERS SUSAN BACHERT JEFFREY BAKER PAMELA BALDASSARRE I75 JANICE BARBER JANET BARKDULL MARTHA BARKER CYNTHIA BARNES C. RICHARD BARTELS ROBERT BASSETI' JOHN BAUMANN DIANE BEEKMAN ELIZABETH BENGLEN MARY BETTENCOURT E. LEE BETTS GERALD BIANCO WENDY BIERWIRTH BRUCE BINKLEY MICHAEL BIRKLER KATHY BLANKEN ANTHONY BLISS JANE BOARDMAN EILEEN BOERNER JUDITH BOHMFALK ROBERT BORUCHOWITZ ANGELO BOTFONE ROSEMARY BOTTONE SUSAN BOTTORFF GERALDINE BOTWINICK ROBERT BOUTILLIER BARBARA BRADFIELD SARAH JANE BRAUN SHELLEY BRAUN CAROL BREITFELLER LINNEA BRISTOL JAMES BRIX EDWARD BROOKMAN WILLIAM BROUSE MPX CHRISTOPHER BROWN CYNTHIA BROWN ROBERT BROWN SUSAN BRUNNER JEANNE BRYANT CAROL BUCINA diliu... A L LAURA BUNDY M. GAIL BUONANNO WILLIAM BURBAGE ALAN BURNLEY DAVID BURNLEY ROBERT BURSLEM PHILIP BUSBY JOHN BUSHBY ROBERT BUTLER BARBARA BYERS LYNN CAIRNS DAVID CALLAHAN then I put it Senior boys relax in the cafeteria 'ln ':':::v'L CATHY CAMPBELL MICHAEL CAMPBELL LINDA CANTLAY ELIZABETH CAPONE LEROY CARMICHAEL BEVERLY CARMODY ARLENE CARNOT FRANCES CARPENTER WALTER CARRARO D. LYNN CASTEEL BARBARA CHABAK DORIS CHAMBERLAIN CHARLOTTE CHARLES DIANA CHECCHIO PETER CHIN DAVID CHRISTIANO ROBERT CLARK RICHARD CLARKE WILLIAM CLINE MAIRI COCKBURN BRUCE COLEMAN LAURENCE COLES J. DOUGLAS COLESWORTHY JUDY COMISKEY BRUCE CONRAD ALAN CORN ww'-nv KATHLEEN COLUCCI MICHAEL COMPTON I p I t have any k Liz Kahn FRANK CONSTANTINO JENNIFER COY V, V N N 1 a tight squeeze at the senior-so lore picnic . . . JEFFREY CRAIG LAURA CRANE SHIRLEY CRANE BEVERLY CRAWFORD DOUGLAS CRAWFORD K. BARBARA CRITTENDEN EDWARD CUFF MARK CURRALL ROBERT CRAWFORD ELIO CUCCARO GLEN CUMMING JEFFREY CURT CHRISTINE CZARNIAK PATRICIA CZARNIAK KAREN CZARNY DENNIS D ARAGHY R. PATTERSON DAVIES ALLISON DAVIS CYNTHIA DAVIS DONALD DECKER SUZANNE DEMO RICHARD DeSTEFANIS CAROL DiMAIO EMMAJANE DI NIZO ANTOINETTE DI SARRO iw York Times 'comic JOSEPH DI SARRO L. GAIL DIXON SUSAN DISQUE EDWIN DOAK 'Ziff MICHAEL DOBRUCKI BARBARA DOERR LAWRENCE DOYLE JOHN DRIES JOHN DUELKS RICHARD DUGAN SANDRA DUGAN f w SUSAN DUNLAP AMY DUNN LISA DUNN RICHARD DVORIN LINDA ECKERT BERKELEY EGENES CARL EMERY LAURA ENDERS MARY ENDERS JOHN FARLEY WILLIAM FEAD NANCY FECOSKAY JOANNE FEDOROCKO NANCY FISCHER LINDA FISHER NANCY FEDEROWSKY BETTY FELCH Let's do it my way this time. Mr. Berkebile takes senior portraits at WHS . . . nib This is the easiest paper route I ever had! Bruce Coleman delivers the moming JEROME FLYNN papers . . . JUDITH F OERSTER SUSAN F ORAKER KAREN F ORSBERG L. ANDREW FORD JOAN FOSTER KATHLEEN FOSTER CHERYL FOWLER MARIA FRANCO CYNTHIA FRENCH CHARLES FRIEDMAN DOREEN FUHRER 4-15 PETER FUNK LINDA GAFFNEY DIANA GALE DALE GALLAGHER A. RICHARD GARABRANT BARBARA GAST HARVEY GERBER MUSCOE GIBSON W. DAVID GIBSON JOHN GIFF IN WALTER GILL .IEANNE GILLESPIE ELIZABETH GILMOUR MICHAEL GOLD We FINALLY made tl 2? za: JUNE GOLDEN MARTHA GONNELLA ii MARY ELLEN GOODING JOSEPH GOSKI Lrst down... ALAN GRAF PATRICIA GRAHAM LINDA GRAVES M. KATHERINE GRAVES LOIS GREASON RICHARD GREEN JOHN GREENE MARGOT GREENE ALISON GREER GEORGE GREER HARRIET GREISSER SUSAN GRIFFIN LEWIS GRINDLINGER .IOANNE GROSS JEFFREY GRUMAN V JEFFREY HAERTLEIN VIRGINIA HAKE JOHN HALL RONAID HALL HUGH HALLER A .IAYNE HAMMER DENISE HAMRAH ROBERT HAND GEORGE HANDZA ' MARGARET HAN EY PHILLIP HANNA Couldn't we do an epic with a ca of thousands? Play reading comm JAMES HARMON VIRGINIA HARNETT MARY HARRISON ELLEN HAWKE is fa selects Fry's Lady's Not for Burn- WILLIAM HAWKE ELLEN HECHT ROBERT HEDDEN ROBERT HEFFERNAN ' ' JOHN HEILMAN BARBARA HELMSTETTER DEBBIE HENDRYCY HERBERT HERSCHLER G. THOMAS HERPICH JAMES HEWITT CHARLES HEYDER KATHLEEN HIGGINS ROBERT HILB REBECCA HILL PATRICIA HIROSS JEAN HITCHCOX LORRAINE HOENINGS SCOTT HOLLAND JANE HOLSCHUH CHARLES HOOD ROSEMARY HOOPER BARBARA HOPE SUSAN HOPPE GREGORY HORN Becky, Scott, and Joni help to insp PAMELA HORNER GAII. HOUSTON KAREN HUFNAGEL SHIRLEY HULMES ool spirit . . . BRUCE HUNT DAVID HUNTER RICHARD HUNTON JOSEPH IAVARONE ELIZABETH IBANEZ CARL IMHOFF ANNE INGRAM DOUGLAS IRWIN U BARTON JACKSON RICHARD JAMES EDWARD J AMIESON JOHN J EFFERS PAUL JENSEN GLENN JOHNSON PAULA JOHNSON Y C C. RUDOLPH JONES JACK JONES JEFFREY JONES 'inf JILL JONES MARGARET JONES ROBERT JONES RICHARD JORDAN '0r 7', EILEEN JUDGE TRUDY KAEHLER ELIZABETH KAHN SANDRA KAMPE SHIRLEY KANSKY ARTHUR KAPLAN JOAN KAVANAUCH JOHN KEFALONITIS Cropping, captioning, and proofrea ing . . . Yearbook staff members me it fs-i 5 1 eadline PATRICIA KEIL CONSTANCE KELLOGG PETER KELMAN MICHAEL KENNEDY LINDA KESSLER RALF KEYSSER HOWARD KIRSHENBAUM GREGORY KLAIBER JOHN KETCHAM KIRWAN KING GAIL KJ ELLMARK STEVEN KLEIN THEODORE KLEIN CAROL-LYNNE KNOBLOCH MARSHA KNOX MARGARET KRAMM A f MARION KRAMM GEORGE KREVET SAMUEL KUNA G. ANN LAMBERT LORI LA MENDOLA MORRIS LARK JQELLYN LAUHER BARBARA LEE DOROTHY LEHMAN The Spirit of '66 . . . DINA LEIB 's not much, but it's home. Pete Chin ponders the space problem . . . ROGER LEONARD GEORGE LESLIE HAL LEVITTE WILLIAM LEWIS DAVID LEY BRUCE LIEBERMAN JEFFREY LOFTUS JUDITH LOHMAN JUDITH LONSDALE T. DALE LUBECK LINDA LUCEK LINDA LYMAN LaVERNE MACK ELLEN MacCONNACHIE JOHN MacKAY ROBERT MADDEN GAIL MADDOX JAMES MADDOX CHRISTOPHER MAHONEY LINDA MALINSKI GEORGEANNE MALLETT MICHAEL MANGAN DANA MANIER MARY LOU MANN f i P ELAINE MANNINO MARILYN MANNINO Q1-1-nr DIANE MANZO FRED MARSHALL N UN ZIO MARTORINA NICHOLYN MASCARICH First flo PAMELA MASUHR JOAN MATINO 2l8 nior picnic DONALD MAYER GARY MCCABE WILLIAM McCABE SAMUEL McCAULLEY BARBARA McDONNELL PATRICIA MCGARTY DENNIS MCGRATH J. STANTON MCGROARTY I JAMES McELROY 1 JOHN McGEARY CAROL MCGREGOR ROBERT McNAMARA DOUGLAS MCOWEN PAUL MEIERDIERCK MARILYN MEIGS ANNE MEIKLEJOHN IS MELLIN JOANNE MESSINA LUCILLE MESSINA ROY METCALF JAMES METTLER BRUCE MEY WILLIAM MEYER ARTHUR MICHAELS JOAN MIKESELL WILLIAM MILES I L x M. KATHRYN MILLER SANDRA MILLER spec u y 'ary Lou Mann, secretary . . . ROBERT MIRKOW GAYLE MITCHELL THOMAS MOFFETT VIRGINIA MONKS 'Air- MICHAEL MONNINGER MARGARET MONSON EDITH MOORE LAURIE MORGANTI KEVIN MORMELO KENNETH MORRIS CYNTHIA MORTON GUY MULFORD RICHARD MUMFORD B. LYNN MURRAY PATRICIA MURRAY KATHERINE MUTZ THOMAS N AGLE SHERRY NEARING JENNIFER NELSON M. CHRISTINE NESSE RONNIE NEUFELD MICHAEL NEWBORG NATHAN NICKERSON OTTO NIEDERER EDWARD NORMAN BEVERLY NORRIS 2 DIANE OBENCHAIN JOHN OHAUS DOUGLAS OLDFIELD M. ELLEN O'NEALL Y u should have e ts! Bill Fead S66 11103 n my achxe' ns after rece, OICS EDWARD O'NEIL DOROTHY ONKSEN NANCY OPDYKE J AMES ORLING KRISTINE OZIMEK BARBARA PACKER WILLIAM PADEN .IAN PAKENHAM DIANE PALLO STEPHEN PALMER '9 '., JOHN PARKEN PATRICIA PARKER JOHN PARKINSON JANET PATHWAY THOMAS PATHWAY MICHAEL PATTON X BETTY PAWELEC JOHN PEASE MONTE PELLMAR RICHARD PEPPER rf ERIC PETERSEN JAMES PFAFFLE RICHARD PHILLIPS WILLIAM PIERCE GWENDOLYN PETERSON MARGARET PFISTER R. MELCHER PHILLIPS nuff MARIO PISANO Senior girls with toilet paper, cheer and Walter on the eve of the Thank w- , Iffwi-1 1 giving Day game Va? STEPHEN PODD WILLIAM POWERS MERRICK PRATT DOUGLAS PREDIGER PAMELA PROBST DONALD QUIRIN RUSSELL RAGLAND MARY RASKULINECZ CHARLES REBER THOMAS REDDY DONALD REEDER JOHN REHNER ANNE REID THOMAS REIMER JON RETZLAFF ANN REUL EUGENIA RICCIARDI L. KATHRYN RICH JANE RICHARDSON RANDALL RICHTER JOHN RICKER J ERI RIDDLE ROBERT RINGK DIANNE ROBERTS ROBIN ROBERTSON KAY ROBINSON If NANCY ROBINSON Q 'LC-H-A-R-G-E! Seniors urge Devils on . . . JOYCE RODGERS Bartels returns from a mid-morning break ALYSON ROFF zfgg Y J ON ROGERS BRENDA ROLLINS PETER ROOD NAN ROSENVINGE MARYANNE ROSSELLO E JOHN ROTE LOUIS ROTHBARD WILLIAM ROUGH KENNETH RUSSO JAMES RYAN J. TERENCE RYAN HENRY SALOMON GILBERT SAMUELSON SARGENTI AUDREY SAUNDERS KATRINE SAVAGE ANTHONY SCACIFERO .V an 2 , iw 1- I f ,fan A JULIO SCARAMASTRO HOLLY SCARFF FREDERICK SCHAEFER BARBARA SCHAIBLE 237 JEFFREY SCHAUB CHARLES SCHMIT KENNETH SCHOEL L. ALISON SCHRAG RAYMOND SCHLECKSER WILLIAM SCHNEIDER SHARON SCHORK MARTIN SCHRAG Senior girls discuss of senior boys SUSAN SCHRECK .TUDITH SCHROEDER C. WILLIAM SCHROTH H. JEAN SCOTT JEAN SCRIMGEOUR ROBERT SEIGLE RONALD SELIG MARC SELIGMAN LAURA SENSBACH RICHARD SETZER R. JAN SHAPIRO LAURA SHAHNAZARIAN NANCY SHARER 'NOVELLA SHEARIN DENNIS SHERIDAN MITCHELL SI-IIVERS CHERYL SIDORAKIS STEVEN SIEGEL IOANNE SIFF CALVIN SIMON KATHLEEN SLAHOR WAYNE SLOCUM ANNE SMITH DIANE SMITH MARSHA SMITH SANDRA SMITH CHRISTOPHER SMITH DONALD SMITH PATRICK SMITH SUSAN SMITH The 12 and the 13 harmonize SUZANNE SMITH STEVEN SMOCK JOHN SOLIMINE PAULA SOLONEN KAREN sozzlo MARK SPEARS FREDERICK SPECHT LEONARD SPINA PETER SPRAGG STEPHANIE STAPP STEPHEN STEFIUK JAMES STEMPEL CAROL STEVENS PHYLLIS STEVENS KENNETH STITH RICHARD STOTLER FRANK ST OUDT HENRY STURCKE ROBYN SUTLEY HARMON SWART DIANA SWEET DIANNE TAYLOR DUANE TAYLOR JANE TAYLOR MARCY TAYLOR NANCY TAYLOR NHS g ALAN TEEPLE G. JEFFREY THIEL e at pot luck supper . . . YQ FREIDA THOMPSON CHARLES TIEDEMAN CARL TISHLER BRUCE TONNESSEN - ,:..1atIi?1,!El , wx ,lP'?,ww iii N. RICHARD TRENNER BARBARA TUCKER KENNETH TRIMMER WILLIE TUCKER EILEEN UNGER MARGARET URBAN GORDON van DUK DONALD VELLA JOANNE VERDONI 'K' BEVERLY VERZILLO PHILLIP VILLANI A. LENORE VIVES NANCY VOGLER LUCY WACHTER DAVID WAHL SUSAN WALTMAN MARGARET WASTIE DEBORAH WATERHOUSE JULIA WEIDMAN ROSE WEILAND SALLY WEINRICH BARBARA WELDON JOSEPH WERNER NANCY WESTON ANN WHALEN RICHARD WHITEFORD WHS Gb' VICTORIA WILDMAN KATHLEEN WILLARD ajaievvf' .IULIANA WILLIAMS PETER WILLIAMS JAMES WILLSON WENDY WILTSHIRE WILLIAM WOODFORD BARBARA ZACK DAVID YARUSSI A G, CLIFTON ZACKEY NICHOLAS ZARRA GREGG ZIEGLER DAVID ZIMMERMAN KATHLEEN ZITCH the end is only the beginning WESTFIEL HIGH Cl-ICO ZS From the cauldron to the f1re to the shelf the 1966 Weather Vane record book a history book the story of the past of the future the result of ,dedicated effort the story of a school the story of a year we thank Frank X. Scott . . . adviser . . . counselor . . . benevolent dictator . . . for his time . . . inter- est . . . inspiration . . . devotion . . . Mrs. Betty Schenck . . . for her artistic advice . . . Doug Crawford . . . photographer . . . capturing the year on film . . . Joanne Fedorocko . . . layout editor . . . designer . . . David Gibson . . . artist . . . Linda Fisher . . . business manager . . . Harriet Greisser . . . copy editor . . . Marsha Smith . . . managing editor . . . the section editors . . . the staff . . . providing the backbone . . . united in purpose . . . always first . . . suffering through the deadlines . . . the business campaign . . . the senior portraits . . . the proofs . . . the copy . . . the captions . . . weathering the storms . . . sharing the excitement . . . the 1966 Weather Vane . . . many memories . . . especially for those who created it . . . Steven G. Siegel Editor-in-Chief


Suggestions in the Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) collection:

Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Westfield High School - Weather Vane Yearbook (Westfield, NJ) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969


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