Westlake School for Girls - Vox Puellarum Yearbook (Los Angeles, CA)
- Class of 1966
Page 1 of 118
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 118 of the 1966 volume:
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fww 65? ,I nwwjvyovfvfr ,PH ffffy PWM' W fwyxggiivwlgbd 3 f'A?Lf WfW?T,f3 ff JJ if sa My ,Q W 0, xg ffjiiiifw P359 kwwjkjfabffx My Y f' wifi?5WX W ff fig! ff'fQA ,f f6 z2ff,?f il W E V 355 Af I ' N Y V f A N E I T Y YV.! w i E I , ' X - -,.' W? wf , 1 , 7 N I - , 0 VVVA Y U , gi N! ' iv 1 w , X ' , V , ' l X - If J W ' M ' ' i 7s',: ' , , 'N E , ,,f , ' , A X ' gi, 5' 'bf tai' ,. Q XM M . 4 - 33- , , n 1 f in ' A JH' Wil mv 5 53 'T' vvwwgg' WWW A A 'ii 4,1 46 1,41 , , ,wg 1,-.afz-f.,.4:J, ,. . :,!,iY, Q ' ' fx25Yff:,.'Q.:-55952, K vg- , ,gg M ,fe ' , 2 . fi, f 4 ff 2 , ff, f .W -, ,4 yi' ,iw V, ,, , .jgL144Zf?4x'5Qf H ff ,Q-,fl gg,:Q,g2,,,,f,fG',4,1xff, .gg X35-:V fV,.,,, , 'wwf W A , WA ,Q M. W .62 rw 14,0611 f , vm ,A aff -W ,im y 4 ,524357 ,L-LL , L ,, ,. . W? ,.11,. K K . mf' ' ' . ,eyafj , , J , in f fl Y, f wg' '- A f ,.z'gv--' if 1' .Q.j1,, za- :ff ffl? 1 ' ' ' -sv, wx V ,iw ' 71 Q X. gi, Q f ,, .W , Mhz . 'fm ,. I f y, fei - . f,. ,M If ,f ,V,,,, I f f ff , Q , Y uf , f ,,:1f,g.,'fQif,fn,,, X 163679131 ffffw fm , ' ,V W, fx, f - .,W,,.. ,V -1 3-2-of ,, ' g.,,1.f,f,l,g.ffg pf Q Q. f' ',jV,7W .,fL'1- I 122.542, ,I k , f ,L43,wwfff- SA '- 7 'if , 1 ' ' L 5 vwfw-If JZS?'5'Z5:M,'. ,X-N: 2 I f AM, my V M- , 'I ,f-W , My 71526, wp xww-, iv f f '- 2Gor9:v424- mf-3f'p,,', 4 5:5 2-zdffr, H3 V f 'ln ,ff mf? TABLE OF CONTENTS administration and faculty seniors Z i O underclassmczn 2 lower school activities fine arts athletics ISTRATION FACULTY 1, ! , V :fam ,, Lkqfff f V ,f , ,V.V ,A J, . ,J 1 r X f , ,,., , Y. fm w ,V 11, , f. LV. ,::-::gr , Xi N1 I 6 A V 1 1 N W 1 I , 1 7 'N l l .S 1 - iN 2 ,W if -'N 1 lm ,!,-1 Ti V V fl., i5 1 H n 'i .If m, I. n ..4 f,,i,,.fjf?y, , . 1, - Qfffffwdvvg- 1' 'f' 'H' - emgx, , If ,f w .1 1 ,,, Mr. Sidney A. Temple Education is the most valuable of all assets. It cannot be lost, it cannot be stolen, it cannot be taken away. When misfortune has scattered riches and poverty has conquered wealth, the educated brain remains to furnish either a foun- dation for a new fortune or consolation for the one that was lostff ' DR. and MRS. MALCOLM DICKINSON Dr. and Mrs. Dickinson have combined their talents and experi- ences this year in the direction of Westlake. Between them they rep- resent five college degrees, ten plus years of graduate study, and teaching experience in such di- verse fields as English, speech, biological s c i e n c e s, physical sciences, mathematics, philosophy, psychology, social sciences, and physical education. Their com- bined careers represent over fifty years of successful academic ad- ministration. We are grateful to Dr. and Mrs. Dickinson for estab- lishing educational goals within each of us, and for helping us to develop the qualities necessary to achieve these goals. l X t Miss Carol Mills Through my many years at Westlake, Vox has meant much to me. Each year the plan for the book has made that issue distinctive. But as one year flows into an- other, a likeness is evident. Hair styles, skirt lengths, favorite music may change, but Vox Puellarum, the Voice of the Girls, is always reassuringly the same. That voice expresses the warmth of friendship, the interest in learning, the love of tradition which make Westlake distinctive. Mr. Joseph D. Coles Bookkeeper Mrs. Mary Lou Heavey Director of Admissions Mrs. Catherine Zangrilli Lower School Principal English 7 Mrs. Muriel Ruick Telephone Secretary Miss Dorothy H. Erickson Academic Secretary Miss Patricia Henning Head Counselor Algebra I Mrs. Sue M. Witt Alumnae Secretary Miss Esther May Carter Telephone Secretary Miss Lu Bredlow English 10, 1 lg Vox Advisor Mrs. Marcia Ewing Miss Dorothy Smith l English 8, 9 Commercialg Economicsg Vox Business Manager VM ,V . 4,3 , 1 ., ,, fa ,,,.1. 7 Q' 7.7414 , M , iffffff 1 'Daw 45? ' z Z Mrs. Susan Breiholz Choralg Lower School Musicg Music Appreciation ffffyfffvfy fff f ff ff' 9' , Wffynfw-ffff'fwz:ff'W'f'7 ' fv ' f Mba ffywfffwfcff ' ,,1amW f' 33,3 Q7 ff , ff '2fiQ:,.f.3z O' M, . , QRGANS Mr. James Bruno Biologyg Chemistry 7 4,4 4 .f1iffwyf,Qf, ff rim f,-,f-'wg ., f.-,sf f, ,, -fr-ff, wwf, ,fl is-fp . ., waz ff, at va ry ff' zf,5ig!f :ff if ',f' T My W Mfg.. of A! Mrs. Dare Michos History 8, 9 Mr. Dale Ireland U.S., European History 8 Miss Doris Lee Crane Piano Miss Ann Reid Physical Education Betty Ann Beswick and friend Mr. Constantin Tanesescu Tennis FACULTY -C., Miss Anne Roberts Physical Education fx ga Ls 'rf' ,ll ,xxx ,P C l i flaw-M , S , .LQ Miss Linda Heldman Physical Education Mrs. Elizabeth Mornrnaerts Physiology 9 Miss Charlotte Lamson Artg Art History xi Mrs. Irma Lees Lating Library All Mrs. joan Siegemund ' A f L Lower School French M f Mr. John Macbeth Lirh hf'hr , Lrryf Q hrr, 1 French 2, 3, 4g Dramatics Miss Barbara Jacobson Science 83 Math 8, 9 Mrs. Evelyn Macbeth French 75 1, 2 Miss Adela Navarro Spanish Miss Junita Van Burg Geometryg Algebra II X QQ 29 XX , XHE1 l 1'x 'Q-xt All right! Who put the orange peel in my typewriter? And have you been a good boy, Dale? Ralph Mason, Robert Clarke, Bill Connor. in 7 , f,, Fit for the mountains and the barb'rous caves Where manners n'er were preached. -Shakespeare l 1 S ,f,,i 1 V L, ' 4, uf-Var Please, Wordsworth, bring me a teddy bear. M 1 First Row: Edith Gatewood Josephine Warren Mary Whittaker Never in the history of Second Row: Julie Smith Wegdake , , I 1 Sue Palmer 1 its ll SENIGRS if , z T5 1 7 rs' ,Q: 13T2- . '5 Rgdweml- ,x :., , -f' M1 ,ff 'MJ W 1' Pima ,, 7'2.n 5 Y I V w,KXf'i? 's ,Jw .5 ,.v,,, if 1 ,F 25,41 51.5 via, I Ag. . f .,1.gm,,Jq if 1+ :fp Q if 1 '1' 5. 1, V -I-,xv 1-,,-. 4 2352, . , ,,, ,M .,., C2135 gi! .,-an 5. F finifi LTV' -- 'mf 1..1.,,, -, 4 L- 1 '7Yi... rr,f: V' Q . ,.qg.qfLg ki. ' ' f .llfflhf N 9 41M,,g'l.t L. ,,,....-V , Y. , , W A , ,Z . . Q -N 1 qv, V ,. ,YK V Ai, Zfvfi A 3' 'f '- 21- ' ? f , ,ff 5 if ' V ,, I 4 , 4: 5 X' 5 l,,,,, A A ,U Y Wt. 5 -V.-,. fy ,J . Z: i ,mfr --M ' V K 1 W, M Li: - ' ln ,,. M. 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J, f 3 4' 3 1 ,fhligiggi 1,3 v.,--f ...,,x W ,f ...- X 4 RENEE JEAN BERGES Pleasant it is, when winds disturb the vast sea, to watch from land another's mighty struggle. Pi Circulation Manager . . . Drama . . . Swim Club . . . Vox Staff . . . surpng at Dana Pt. and Hawaii ..- nf. skiing at Mammoth . . . warm and friendly Secondf' . . . bubble gum . . . The Endless Summer . . . life ambition to test drive MG's Pizza fade East . . . Century City . . . Piece o' DORCAS ANN BA TTEY The less of routine, the more of life. White Team Captain . . . Drama . . . Pi Spy . . . skiing . . . typical . . . Shakey's Pizza . . . Berke- ley enthusiast . . . Sally Sororityf' . . . Twinkle- toes . . . persecuted . . . pistachio nuts . . . Dufus . . . Sophomore study balls . . . DAB . . . champ tobogganer . . . PS . . . The thing is . . . . . . Enjoys Miss Mills' discussions on life, Carter . . . BETTIE ANN BESWICK You have to believe in happiness or happiness never comes. Ninth grade class treasurer . . . Athletic Associa- tion secretary . . . horseback riding . . . tan . . . Bab . . . everybody's buddy . . . Hawaii . . . water- skiing . . . B.A .... M.B.M .... Foster Towers Elevators . . . Newport . . . Donft you panicj' . . . Boogs . . . smile for everybody . . . Pud . . better than you . . . Islander . . . MARISSA MARGARET BOGUE To each his own. May Queen Attendant . . . Drama . . . Interna- tional Debutante . . . friendliness . . . enjoys be- ing European . . . The Continental Lookf' . . . traveler . . . lawyers . . . Thursday night dinners . . . Father and Son . . . Star athlete . . . Fm sorry, please forgive mei' . . . 'punctualityi' . . . Copenhagen . . . perpetual diet . . . French rec- ords and magazines . . . ANN CAMERON BROMFIELD Deep colors hut often shaded poorly. Athletic Association President . . . I 1th grade class secretary . . . 8th grade May Queen Attendant . . . Fanny Breadsticks . . . Goon . . . Amo . . . Cammy . . . A Belle . . . long blue pnger- nails . . . the Hamlet . . . Australia . . . McCul- loch's Room G Board . . . 4W . . . What's the Skinny? . . . rings . . . Dylan . . . Sure, Elf' . . . Where Did Our Looe Go . . . Blue Turns to Grey . . . DIANE BREWER To see a world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower. Student Body President . . . 'Iunior Class Vice- President . . . Dorm secretary . . . Assistant Editor of Literary Magazine . . . Debate Team . . . Drama . . . Pi . . . chapel announcements . . . cantelope . . . Newport . . . truant ojicer . . . strong cojee . . . The Greek Way . . . Benson's . . . paraplegic walk . . . CA TH LEEN M EREDI TH CA RR OLL Of all the forces that make a better world none is so indispensable, none so powerful as hope. Lost and Found Committee chairman . . . Chapel committee . . . Checkout committee . . . Black- Foxe . . . Kanga and Roo . . . Ding dong horn . . . Friendly . . . life-savers . . . constant chaufeur ... ...dear ...rahrahgirl... CA THY COX Procrastination is the thief of time. Swim Club vice-president . . . Uniform Commit- tee Head . . . junior Class recorder . . . friend to all . . . memories of aguacade . . . huge eyes . . . fun-loving personality . . . commuter . . . bananas . . . yogurt . . . horseback riding . . . y its DIANE REBECCA DA RROW When our tear wells have run dry and the voice of laughter is silenced, the world will truly he dead. Pi photographer . . . Vox photographer . . . pas- sion for fashion . . . skiing . . . Badger Pass . . . Mammoth . . . future skiing instructoris wife . . . political opinions . . . physiology expert . . . Spar- row . . . Happy Birthday!! . . . Arizona . . . Yellow S.S. Nova . . . licorice ice cream . . . COLE TTE ERANCOISE CROSS One inch of foy surmounts of grief a span, Be- cause to laugh is proper to the man. Pi Business Manager . . . Vox Business Manager . . . Class secretary . . . Class vice-president . . . Secretary of National Honor Society . . . UCLA . . . love of travel . . . thoroughly enjoys looking French . . . poise . . . CoCof' . . . generosity . . . Freckles . . . long eyelashes . . . French hikinis . . . sincerity . . . petite jille . . . HELEN BA RRIN G TON DE TLIE Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, but bears it out even to the edge of doom. Bulletin Board Committee . . . Choral . . . Bar- zun impaled on a barbecue spit . . . sitting in her treehouse counting her money . . . Holly . . . lunch in the L.G.R .... witticisms from below . . . Sophomore study hall diary . . . LINDSA Y MARGARET DORAN Green, how much I want you green. Green wind. Green branches. Pi Editor . . . Vox Layout Editor . . . Choral . . . UCLA . . . Bob Dylan . . . Frizzy . . . Poet laureate . . . playwright . . . guitarist . . . Winnie the Pooh . . . back seat of Tiny Alice . . . pigeon feathers and archangels . . . Mrs. Prothero and the fireman . . . Hamlet ' . . . I think if I were king of Greece, Pd push things of the mantel- piece' . . . MARCEE M. FA REED The self-reliant soul is like the inmate of a house who owns the house. Ninth grade class president . . . Eleventh grade vice-president . . . Senior Honor Society . . . Charity Committee . . . femininity . . . Wil DIANE LEA EAS TVOLD Whatever is true, whatever is honorable, what- ever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. funior Class President . . . Chapel Committee Chairman . . . Iolanthe forever . . . Mi mi mi . . . enthusiasm . . . melodramatic soprano . . Kodak . . . best actress . . . Wright's ice cream . . . hair-do's . . . tennis play- er . . . orange mustang . . . future doctor . . . 12 years at Westlake . . . procrastination . . . minaret reject . . . Super skier . . . Supreme hostess and Olga's employer . . . organizer of Hearts Unit- ed Club . . . Excuses, excuses . . . ROSEMARY ANN POND Life is a time bomb plane of opposites. Sophomore Class President . . . Debate . . . Vox Literary Editor . . . A Love Supreme . . . The Gold Room . . . The Canyon . . . Pensati1fa . . . RF . . . big white hearse . . . artista . . . KBCA . . . Open your paths of creative think- ing . . . Burn, Baby, Burn . . . Parnelli Fond . . . Olga . . . Yuset Lateef . . . FBT with the SBC . . . the melodic, lyrical, powerful sounds of jazz . . . r ROSALBA LAIS T GORE If a man does not keep pare with his compan- ions, perhaps it is because he hears a diferent drummer. Choral Club -. . . Pocahontas . . . Split ends do not get better when dipped in mineral oil . . . charm . . . quietness . . . phosphorescent nights . . . perfect figure . . . Nureyev . . . JANE KIRKEBY The years like great hlack oxen tread the world And God, the herdsman, goads them on hehindf' Choral Cluh . . . funior Tennis League . . . shy concern . . . Miami U .... Hud . . . the white kitten . . . 3 years at Westlake . . . the Center Cluh . . . CHRISTINE ANN KEITH Be of love a little more careful than everything. Debate Club President . . . Vox Photography Edi- tor . . . Swim Cluh . . . Charity Committee . . . chocolate mint ice cream . . . organizer . . . Is your radar up? . . . little sisters . . . true inno- cence . . . Did you know that Anne Boleyn's sister was married to this great Earl . . . . . . pineapple . . . perfectionist . . . The Tempest that was almost mine . . . . . . the heach . . . CHERYL LEE KREIMENDA HL Weepiizg may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning. Pi Copy Editor . . . Choral Club . . . Skiing at Badger and .Mammoth . . . sailing . . . enviable laugh . . . curly locks . . . VW . . . English gram- mar . . . rheeriness . . . Champagne bubbles . . . I haz'en't even started it . . . Big Bear . . . Dry Wirzdf . . . skin diving . . . Old Faith- fulf' . . . if -s fi ' 'S , n it vs, '1 NANCY KAROL KULIK To ererything there is a season. And a time to every purpose under the hearenf' Swim Club . . . Drama Our Towif' . . . Choral . . . Debate Club Vice-President . . . woman execu- tive . . . UCLA . . . Go-gettef' . . . stage man- ager . . . glasses on a chain . . . JEAN PA ULA MANN I can resist everything except temptation. Bulletin Board Committee Head . . . Pi Spy . . . Gold team rheerleader . . . skiing at Mammoth . . . Hawaiian Summef' . . . Harvard . . . ficus liber . . . gromits . . . Rorkin' out Todo . . . striped socks . . . red VW . . . gives free driv- ing lessons . . . the Green Cheetah . . . Primo . . . So how are you already? . . . yellow comp stripes . . . Berkeley weekend . . . PUD . . . The Islander . . . LORNA ALDEN MA CDONNELL Think wrongly, if you please, hut in all cases think for yourself. Check-out Committee Chairman . . . hoarding . . Lights out at 10:00 p.m. . . . Gelson's . . . T.P parties . . . Theta Si . . . hunger pains . . Doane . . . I - NA NC Y JEANNE MARRIOTT With malice toward none and with charity to all. Student Body Vice-President . . . Charity Com- mittee Head . . . junior Class Secretary . . . pho- tography . . . private eye . . . Kohana . . . trouble- some 2-piece bathing suits . . . Who, what, where? . . . Chicken Delight . . . ballerina . . . Pardon my peas . . . The Happy Boarder . . Born Free . . . MARY PATRICIA MA THISON Enjoy life while you're living for you're a long time dead. ' Skiing at Mammoth . . . Surfing at Pt. Dume . . . Tennis Team Captain . . . Pi Sports Editor . . . Boopers . . . champion grape catcher . . . eternal tan 6 eternal summer . . . daisies . . . blue comp stripes . . . yellow X-KE . . . Blond curly hair . . . Black vet fB.G.S.Q GTO . . . Shorty . . . PN ANNE CAROLINE McGIL VRA Y Come, together let us build a non-violent world. Debate Club Secretary . . . Proctor Committee . . . Charity Committee . . . Honor Society . . . UCLA courses . . . Pi . . . Caloinism . . . His- torian . . . Geneva . . . Stanford . . . energetic volleyball player . . . bull sessions at 1:30 a.m. . . . Dear Cleo . . . BARBARA BRANCH McCULLOCH A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a hone! Proctor Committee Chairman . . . Gold Team Cap- tain . . . Drama Club . . . Specleles . . . Hawaii . . . But Mr. Ireland . . . . . . Dorm Mother . . . Here chick, chick, chicle. ' . . . Oh, groovy! . . . a certain gas station . . . ring collector . . . Ungawa . . . Primo . . . Big D . . . the Hamlet . . . 4W . . . Dear Gundy . . MELINDA ANN MILES The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of. Sophomore Class Secretary . . . ambition to be a buyer . . . Minner . . . laughing pts . . . wants an MG and a brick driveway . . . nervous break- downs . . . advisor . . . skiing at Mammoth . . . Posh . . . DIANE LINDA ORR Oh as I was young and easy in the mercy of his means, Time held me green and dying Though I sang in my chains like the sea. Vox Editor . . . Pi Assistant Editor . . . National Merit Scholarship . . . Little Napoleon . . . Tiny Alice . . . Miss Bredlow's historian fSir Gawainj . . . the White Knight . . . New England . . . composing poetry at the beach . . . HamletJ' . . . DARLEEN ANITA RODDENBERRY The longest journey begins with the first step. Lost and Found Committee . . . junior Tennis League . . . poodle puppy farm . . . swimming . . . memories of Black-Foxe . . . two week hoard- er . . . Can he seen with Cathy C . . . future pharmacist . . . LA URENA PAULA RICCI What wisdom can you find that is greater than kindness. Student Body Secretary . . . Drama . . . Yum0r,' yumanu . . . Long Tall Texani' . . . Italiano . . . Hgohhle, gohhlei' . . . jean Nate . . . exceptionally talkative . . . Gloria . . . giggles . . . jahher- wocky . . . L.P.R .... Laguna-Shakey's Pizza . . . Mammoth-skiing . . . smiling . . . Dancing-Orange Rock . . . STEPHANIE LOUISE ROSE He who kisses the joy as it flies lives in eternity's sunrise. Pi Assistant Business Manager . . . Choral Club . . . UCLA courses . . . National Merit Scholar . . . Courrege boots . . . Palm Springs . . . LHS . . . Blark TR Spitjire . . . Cucamonga . . . By the sea . . . the Rumors . . . the Kinks . . . Shakey's . . . Sunset . . . ' giifg, K .-I -5' S-sf, JL 4,1 Ar LINDY SHELDON My heart took me past and led me away Yet it was my heart that wanted to stay. Bulletin Board co-fhairman . . . Gold cheerleader . . . calm driver . . . desire to marry a million- aire . . . traveling . . . water-polo . . . Malibu al noon . . . Giggles . . . ., hff7W , M t f M. NINA CLA UDIA S TERN Now and again The life that looks through my eyes And quivers in words through my mouth And behaves like the rest of men Slips away so I gasp in surprise. Literary Magazine . . . Drama . . . UCLA . . . Summer Sfhool of World Affairs . . . Class Ath- lete . . . individualism . . . octagonal sunglasses . . . straight Afs . . . john Osborne . . . the old Bob Dylan . . . Piglet . . . Norwegian Wood . . . Summer Nights in Soho . . . CHRISTINA SINGLE TON Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free . . .H Vox Co-Layout Editor . . . May Queen Attendant . . . Debate Club . . . Senior Class Treasurer . . . K beautiful confusion . . . Piglet . . . See the happy moron . . . . . . prop . . . fasons Forever . . . skiing at Mammoth . . . procrastination personi- jied . . . Dylan . . . salt shakers from Truman's . . . Lavoris time. ' . . . summer . . . 'Wx JAN ELIZA BETH TA RA DA SH . . . To sail heyond the sunset, and the baths of all the western stars, until I die. Class secretary . . . Assistant editor of Literary Magazine . . . May Queen Attendant . . . Check- out . . . Charity Committee . . . The Eve of De- struction . . . UCLA courses . . . sports enthu- siast . . . Carrot Top . . . Dissecting fetal pigs . . . sophistication . . . creativity . . . good sand- wiches . . . Great Big Green Snow Feet . . . Satisfied Sujererv . . . l A VERY TA YLOR God gave them youth, God gave them love, And even God can give no more. National Honor Society President . . . Literary Magazine Editor . . . Sophomore Class Vice Presi- dent . . . Aquacade Vice President . . . Daisies and pigtails . . . UCLA courses . . . Mammoth . . . original . . . vivacious . . . The Lark . . . Hamburger Hamlet . . . the heach . . . pierced earrings . . . happiness . . . GRETCHEN MARGARET IHSEN There is magic in the stillness of a seed. Choral . . . Photography for Pi and Vox . . . French scholar . . . Appalachian Spring . . . Ticktocker forever . . . Why are we doing all this? . . . Tallness . . . Highway 101 . . . fire- roads . . . the Byrds . . . smalle fowles maleen melodye . . . eat, sleep, make merry . . . PAMELA SCOTT VAN IHLIN Whatever dies was not mixed equally. Dorm president . . . Choral Cluh . . . Drama . . Pheasant flies again . . . Stanley . . . 'flimin J' cricket . . . Dorm hair-dresser . . . Croolees' . . . Shakespearels Ideal Puck . . . SANDRA ANN WILCOX A 'liberalP' One who has both feet planted jirmly in the air. First year at Westlake . . . President of Choral Club . . . Swiss exile . . . Granny gown . . . chewing gum . . . quiet . . . Franglaise . . . Scout girl . . . took it all quite well . . . Santa Bar- bara . . . Senior boarder . . . LINDA BONITA WRA THER And let today embrace the past with remem- branre and the future with longing. Chapel Committee co-chairman . . . machine gun laugh . . . bubbly personality . . . Stanford Cheer- leader . . . teacher's pet . . . gullible . . . Woof.' Woof. ' ICR CLASS PRE IDE T 6 SECOND EMESTER LINDSA Y DURAN FIRST SEMESTER MARGARET GALE BAER Hitch your wagon to a star junior Class Treasurer . . . Sophomore Class Sec- retary . . . Dorm Vice President . . . Mrs. Santa Claus . . . Imitation Proctor . . . Q-U-I-E-T . . . Skeleton pants . . . Prima Ballerina . . . Clumsy Bertha . . . Panda . . . Summers in Michigan . . . Stan Laurel . . . All night escapades . . . Brave and cheruhic hoarder . . . La folla weekends . . . Unique menagerie . . . Serious scholar? iw Get OH my cloud . . . 'S ,ff X' , V, t The never-ending Search for What's pink and purple and has 25 legs?,' Well, I don't know either but I just found it in the custard! Look Jane - Batman!! . . . Uh . . . Would you believe the Lone Ranger? . . . Would you believe Tonto? . . . How about . . .? truth, justice, and split-ends. I k f .Q I Jzlv-' , Q ' W. ff I 1, 'Q w 'f,, iiu f I f aff 'M V' ff, , -f , . :Wir V, I' M .vwQr.f'y?- 'V 1- 1 4? 1' 1 'E J' Q 4-f 'L I, All Right! WHO'S the clown that my Vfkg' thought up the bulletin board THIS nmafi f , 4' I P month? 1W i 'f'i '1 5 gr ff if iffeyf, g,yt.,,1j.: ,, am f 1 fi! I ffm -sf A : ma. , '.,. fig,-Q. 1, we-,fi ., :Mg r y if-if M ' 'llfl if 5f'f5'f 1 fif-V' U, . 1 y - A at Avon calling ' So wheres Jeannie already?', 'I' f 'QI'-E X I Oh, she's hanging around e someplace . . . 35 Roughing it at Freshman Initia- tion. WEN We ,X,, x hs.,x...X.-,. f , 'V I I , W We f '-.,, ' ..-f Iv' Senior class president Gale Baer receiving her ring. W 'rx , 'Mm 5' CEREMCDNY Lirs. Sue Win, guest speaker, ad- dresses che seniors, juniors, and assembled parents. ? , ,-i, WESTL KE SAYS GOODBYE TO MISS MILLS After teaching at Westlake for years, and being its principal and vice- principal, Miss Carol Mills is leaving us this june. She spoke with me about the changes she has seen in the girls and in youth in general during this time. Miss Mills feels that the atmosphere at Westlake is highly conducive to intellectual endeavor, and, more importantly, is conducive to a realization on the part of each girl of her strongest interests. She is increasingly impressed with the desire to know of the students, and believes that today, because young people are made aware so much earlier of the necessity of surviving in a world that places insupportable demands on its youth, they themselves are demanding more and more of their teachers. One of Miss Mills' most persistent annoyances is the fact that the small minority of young people who have, for example, been active in the Berkeley disturbances, have received considerably more publicity than those many who are active in the fields of Civil Rights and social work. She attributes much of the responsibility for widening the gap between the teenager and the adult to the news media and to manufacturers who have made those people between thirteen and twenty a distinct group, to be both feared and venerated. Thus, because students today want to and do learn, or make themselves aware, and are forced into a mold contrived in a large part by the adult to which they are supposed to conform, Miss Mills feels that many young people feel ill-at-ease with adults, cannot trust them, or simply enjoy their peers more than ever before. For this reason, Miss Mills thinks that she has perceived a difference in the relationship of student and faculty, for she believes that fifteen years ago girls and their teachers were more genuinely friends. Parents place added pressure on their children today to mature socially. Miss Mills said that before girls and boys should think about going out they should be intellectually and culturally mature enough to derive more than just social prestige from being seen together. However, because girls are introduced at a younger age to dating, when they are seniors they seem to have a much more relaxed and adult attitude about their relationships with boys. Miss Mills feels that at all times girls at Westlake have worked together for the common good of the school. She has seen many striking in- dividuals, many highly creative girls, and has enjoyed working with them and helping them to develop their particular skills. Miss Mills has been an inspiring teacher, a wise counselor, and above all, a devoted friendg we shall always be grateful for her undying loyalty. --NINA STERN 38 TWO OF HER FAVORITE TEACHERS This is the last year that Miss Van Burg will be teaching here at Westlake. She has devoted herself to guiding us for forty years, teaching geometry and algebra as a basis for learning. She has served as a friend and inspiration to many, always eager to help. As she is leaving, she finds several changes have gradually occurred over the years. For one, Miss Van Burg feels that the Westlake girls today are of a generally higher caliber than before, primarily because of the stiffer entrance examination and requirements. These girls have a greater potential than their predecessors had, they take their studies more seriously. They tend also to be more aware of the need for better work because of increasing college pressures. Miss Van Burg feels that with each year of experience she has be- come a better teacher. Every year of her teaching has posed a different challenge, no two classes have ever been the same, either in ability or actual interest. She has basically kept the same teach- ing methods over the years, because the basic principles of geometry and algebra never change. But to this essentially unchanging core, she has had to add new concepts. Recent developments in math, including the new math,', have brought out new techniques, and Miss Van Burg has had to teach these to her girls as well. Miss Van Burg feels that one of the greatest problems she has had to cope with over the years is the challenging of the more mathe- matically inclined students without going beyond the capacities of the slower girls. It is primarily for this reason that Miss Van Burg has given so much of herself and of her time. She has spent hours of effort trying to pull the weak ones up to the range of their fellow students, she has given her students countless opportunities to get better marks. She has sought to make her students challenge themselves to their own greatest capacities. The results of her efforts are plainly visible in the rising College Board scores of the girls. Miss Van Burg has devoted almost her entire adult life to helping and guiding Wfestlake girls, teaching them day in and day out the principles of geometry and algebra as a basis for all kinds of learning. As she leaves Westlake, let us sincerely hope that she will keep with her always the warm admiration and respect of the girls of Westlake School. -COLETTE CROSS 39 MISS VA BURG Z..-ave' CLASSMEN ., .ge--JV 'gz,,.'1'1.. X Y fu:2+'1vi+1'Q5i,'f:T - A 12' 'EH ri-22'-'5 -L' - . V - 4Lwi??-I -.,11-I ' 41-: -.- ' 'F r-, W -f. 55?5? f 'Q5qgL.f2i f 'I' 1 'rl-' ,ji -Qi' ' .g,,-' 2: N f 111- wa- g. Q 4. - V, 1 ,fu . , . A , l aq fff f'1 'f? 1' ' wry. L-. . - , ,. .,-E --1-1 : ',:'!. v f , Q . ' H 35i1:e, Q! ., ,Ja , , , -P, ,A , ,. fi . w -. fm L+, 1 gif. r, 5 , 11' ' '25 ' gli. :F 5 W ' ,I ki: I f b 'W ' V S3511 K wi. x ,Al - ,wa X nv '45 W' ' QV 31 Wiz' . 'J . wi - :Kiwi Q ' ,fy V. 1' QA, , Louise Ashjian Leslie Brown Candy Carpenter Pamela Cheney X K af ,W xi' K ,jf f 2 Q f ' , X 4 me y Z 2' sv, 1 f- mC. - va 41- gf? 'gljik ,,,t? ,f7 f X f X 1 X , v iw ,f 7 1:1 at .fy Va , ' Q, I Ef f fi W if aW,Vf i , qvbi v V.,v.,,,W , I Roylee Bailey , . ffl, , , ,wa , ff f.. ., nf ,af fy, I2 ff . I JW., ,V , fy ,',. If fl ' ,Z ,Vai ,V 1.45 - I ,W f 4135152 az W M, 1,155 it f X f A' 4 MW X f f f A if f W W! W f V' f J f 4 y 7 ' X 4 A f y, , A f f Q 1 f 'V , H Mff, ,ff ef' V. , g f, ff 1 ' 1' M M4' ' f . ' 1 .V 1, ff -f fm! 411 J-M' 9,101 ff nw'-4' J' f B' Q 25, f 1 5 A ,ff , f f ,4 , f W f W4 X f Brenda Carlson ,ffl ff-,cgi . yayy , ,,fr,Vf,4,g,5,r! f,,, Q, . 4,3 4 5.,'fjf?ffzf: 4 ., yi., C .Z , , ft 3 f,,f,y1-Q' - zz M, - - ' mfg, 4 ff - A f Wlfy- M ff Q X ' , 9 4 I , , , fi W y Cathy Carsten Nancy Fardelius V ,fm 4 if 1 x QQ?-7, X jx ,ff Agia' f 1 4. V' ..,15,.u ' f I don't know, Emily, but my friends seem so stand-ofiish lately. u 7u Uniform Committee Meeting. ,, ,fffzffy , X u 1 ,, Monday, Monday . . . cant trust that day 42 IOR Be back in a minute-I'm going to the Batroom. l l Uh, ladies and gentlemen . . . Unfortunately Mr. Sham will be appearing with only one pharaoh tonight. Keep on dancing! She said the only valid excuse from sports is a note from the undertaker. 43 Catherine Foster 355 'iQ ' 7' ff QQ, lt? ,f ww x QYH 'EQ A if 5 f v ! , ..-,ZZ W ,f f SW ff '44 4 Q A SW I 1 4 af Q 4 i Wi, ,W sf gs? ' f Cathy Graef Sue Heldfond Libby Foster Nicki Greene Linda Hoppe Gail Johnson Vicki Kassell I'm beginning to think about bringing my own a lunch again. Emily Katenkamp Marcia King And then I said, Well, Miss Van Burg, Marilyn King U Dorie Krahulik Z?g1i:T,?1'l,f believe this, but my goldfish 'ww ff I M Ai' ff It's about my date for the Webb fff My f ,Q 4 y Z2 ,gy gf, f i:,, s.lV, 4 ,,1, ,,,,, . ' y,el i ' iff - f dance! 35. fffzg' A .alfl Ti, .g,4,. y f' , 'VW a 44 Cindy Moreton Carolee Snyder IOR 'iff' v Qt: 1 ig, Sports Enthusiasts 'Y And remember, You are a Westlake girl twenty- four hours a day. is fs Reidun Sognnaes rv f L. .N , ,, t, .,,. A, A ' sk r -01 2-53. 'Lf f . . E jf . ii? - in Ruth Turney Leslie Weiss Pam Woodill ' ,aw K Anne Taylor 535' ., ' tl M ,., .xx Ki ww. P. , - . be ' e Lucia Walters , A e, VA 4, , ,N , life px 5 1 x . -, wif? V 1-. ref, if I Debby Wood Wendy Wylie 1 1' . N-'IV' V A i ry, V h In f L jg ' - h'A, 1 , Alice Alton Marjorie Breech if - 'V.,, r f Vf ,Z . ,I ,f ,-I ff! 1 ' f 5 i r j, 1 V X W , uf V' f 1 V wg' f X A , M ,g Z , U 5 f 1 +1 Q ,ff f 4 of 1 4: 2 X' ff! ' byf W X If f X 2 ,f 113 1, ay pf' ff 1 , 1 1 .7 f f f Z f Cindy Cox Page Forsythe f K ,iz 3 fm 1 .,,fx ' mv ,o-,' eoo.,. P .1 , L eeeeo Francine Applebaum aaia if - if if' 'f 'A' if , X. 5: 1 ' ,V ' J Q ,wx ibm. 5 ' I 1.5 K, -N 1.5, ., x 2 Jane Camp ,...,fif -fy' F , f , v , 4 if H 'f 'fx .,.,. -1. 4 brig, 1 ,if W? 5 1-Lf Zi 2 Gwen Field . L2 2315 ,Q i 1 .Lf l . Q nfl ,C ,yffflii ' ' PY F 7. Q:'g,i5:?'i 5 ','A Stephanie Grant SOPHO And here, ladies and gentlemen, we have one of the woi-ld's most famous performing bears. ,Hi x Eyfffi-mg ' s I Good afternoon, Mr. Macbeth!! MORE 5 ' A a I wi Take it from us - Eileen Feather can improve your figure too!! , .Jole- is Mary Mahr J ,Qwr of ii I ' in 'V ' f . , i . Q , , . R f it 1 Ann Hamilton Karen Hathaway fi wg--gy' .. 43 0 A- A, S if? V , ' 2 Q V. 'F A y 0' Anita Kalb , 'fa ., - A alfa .hr I X - - we-' if 'Y 9175 V , ygqa ,a ,.-5, 1 vs. ov R l Melinda Martin -rg -ga- 32 Victoria Harris Dana Kadison -rr -K ff, Jill Kanin Patricia Mittry oeuu , , :ig' ' ' L ' . if '- 7 j , Q, iV,,Lg2!f 1 S , ff E 5' up ng Susan Okie jebron Peterson Mary Bea Porter 17 M ff M ,V A, cf H f if V ' ' , srff a..., ' 236-'W'24'f a 4,,-, ,9.n,f .big 1 ,MQ ,V 'f '::. ' 2- .62 4 I , ,yr .A-vvfyfg Af ' ww: v gfjfzffy. 52, O4 ,f .5271 L., HL, ax , , iff' , V W,,M! , 941 e fi f ff ff! 'I . ffm G W, 213, , , ' .fcicfff , yy., li Debbie Schneider za.. ,, i f '7 fy, ' . f1.j,gw f oif'L . ',' 3 .,,, ' ' , , .HQQLVZ , ,. '5' ., 1 1.5125 1'f',,,.- .f'L,H ,gf-.X P' f - n en -y.:-1,331 ,f,,, f . S I 5 1 gx .Eff ' Q W m Nfimmst get ,g ': wail' Q' S .X Yep A K X X wx - X X X xv X9 we -- X X X X Qxgizkxs 2 X ss X X 3 A V MASQ? X Q 5 Qs X X X XX xi X .,,,:f , Yxgx Q X Xxx X Qu, . ,f fm f 7 4' a f f f , f 4' f 7 1 fi ,w X 'Zi f f if A X I f 'Q Z f ' if 1 i - V if if V. ,, ,, X M 1514 -'ff ' 1 ' '- vw f f 271 V: 1121252 XX N A - 'V , '- Z , S ' if L aa W-W Susan Pahner Lynda Parker . ,T ,,,,,h , If QQ ,M- f fffv: ' , V ALM? ' gf .' ,fi W ' .f . 2 ffff .211 7:21 S rree m'1j'i :::rg f V : J , ffm: f-1: ., Wfl. Judy Peterson Mary Pick Claudia Probasco Sally Ride Brooke Shearer Blaire Simpson SOPH We heard you donated this rab- bit for our Toys for Tots drive well, you can have it backg the Tot turned it down . . . Ji? Q 3 gfki Believe me! Suspenders are about to become upper mid- dle camp. 1:4614 ORES ,, ,, 3 ,,i-n, M ,. 1 'lf , Vg, ' I '- qi , I . i. 1 , 'If,f':i: k all 1, ' ,,., , 1 , ,N S: X ' 44ff-4l.,!, - . 1 Qi ,Q 4 ' iii .,.,, . , 1 wr, ,- ,V f fl X f xp I I 1 I 4 f H 9 , , ,I Q! f ey f ill 5 :ij 4 2 , X42 I a ' if , f ,X f f 4 4 f , ff V' , 5 5f 5yg ?f ! ! if is 1, f if f 1 I f ff I fel fi 5 it 2 5 ff f, YW ff , f , g 3 f 5 OS 5 5,2 ' f f 3- ' 6, f ,- Af, 4' ,ye-'f:.1 ' 1 S f f,, , fff Z i f lui 4 F ' ' ' v v 4 mgzzpezl g ' , 'fa' ir 3 gm ? fi2i: f.:-' V , .::,, , , , ,. , ff, ll el ' f ' , f Z 2, W ? 1 641 XX , i 5 f fyfh f f, 2 , RIMM? f ig f W! X 2 f ,4 f ::.,, - 40 21. K4 V. 19 , M, -I V fy: f fm X We If f ff ff ff J, ,X 1 y if 1 W M Z Sz f S F q .gf Karen Spritzler y V - . V , ,,',, ,Wi ,759 ff ',,f , f,,,, X dxf ' fi 3 R M , , I , , if y I, sv hx 5 57 Susan Stanton Victoria Sutro Susan Tiholiz f .z Wgfpyff , Ziff . ' MW Jmiffm My 7 1 f f f f ff Toni Turner joan Vietor m wa, A typical French Club meeting in which Karen Spritzler and Gwen Field devour a loaf of French bread, a girl looks on suspiciously, and Mr. Macbeth pays no attention at all. 49 Deborah Weaver jamie Zeller , wffvcqw- ' ff Q '- . -, ,WC , ,I N 31 ff, If fwffygy ' 'MW - - -49' ' 14 VW, v' 3545743 ' fiyffl ff ffffff 'QM , f, f 4 1 X ? a X f K f ,M m Wi, , ' s 786 if .1 ff 1 1 f JV 2 f Z X I f f ff f f , 57713 f f Daphne Anderson Carol Bowles Mary Craddock Qi M' 1 f ww if '- W 4 M Q' ,- ' . 1 , ' Ev I g 2, C , , rf, 6442 f f , 2 ? 7 , ,' i , ,,f ,, 1- 1, K4 ft, 7.4! ,V ww, fffa , f 'cfffbff ' Gail Dubin 'E 011: 23, 1 ' A , ff ,ggi X I ,Z , 'fn 1 ', , 4 . l IW! 3 Z . 4 X xg' I f f f f f , f f f f ff, if j? f f f 4: I4 Marjorie Aschman Anne Bauer - , . 'J , Ziff ,. wi ' 3, f.-rg ' , ' f, 'fkng y 1 ,A If 1 f ', ! 0 'psf f fag ' J GK' if f V ff L 5 f f ff Q I A ,X 4. if f X Q' at ' ff if J ', 1543- , lh. 1 Carey Cameron Christine Cheney ff -C ,f fuf 'i, , 4574 ga , ' ' ff l' ' Q, 9 X.y?.m': . ' if ,:f,: We , f yy 4 Zz ,Q 9 Cynthia Cummings Linda Day f'ff2fZ'5!fa EM, if , if V f ,lf gf-M -ff. ,, ,if 7 ' ' I , 7:11 K1 15 ,X W f i' -vie w P f fm f Qui 42 4' Lynn Erickson Tima F army FRESH ef ra iffy qw 11 ' ,I 12.1 1 ,'-I 7' Miss America finalists of 1966. Any last words or requests? M F I N s if E s . sm nv 4: s ' 'ah 4 ' Xl a ip 5, 4 I propose the immediate aboli- tion of Freshman Initiation. 3 rf The Zoo Story. 'fr ,.. Hey! There goes Richard Burton by the sports field again ! .fu V 4 , , 4 xxx, , 6 If Susan Gee . A K ' xx 4 ' 5 ' : 1,2353 Q- -,X ' 4.4 Er Roxanne Harris .gwx fn, fr ' -Q zf br , sri, .xl -5 Mona Houghton 2 Blaine Kampe ,a z x X 3 K I 40, V Debbie Hathaway A in wx. ,V X :Qs :X K X3 Mx- y M 1 Q ' ' f .2 1 Y ,, X Asa 1 A u--,.- : ,QI L fs ii K :xi st-35 H . A X Missy Hilty Q ii.. W 3 . gi lii 'A .,1 5 Nancy Huntley if Y ,i:,x I' N tg y a fi I Sandra King Lisa Lerner , If V!,, w ha 5,4 , f fx -..,. ,-...J . , ,V 7 ' ,L -- ,1 i'S., K . . ' 9 1 I ' 5: 'K ill I . 1 ,,W.,, ., Q 5 .fi ' j:?',2Z,f::i,? Ziyi I f-x4 ,g., , , April Porter Pamela Ribbey Berenice Stevenson Wai , fy-we - V -- .V X 7 ?f'f7f51 '? ' nnnn r , L . . ,fs ' -u5?0?4'7f ,. 4:7-4-nf ' PM w Ruth Longenecker Leah Miller H mfg 1 ' i spifffw Q , ' . I ,.., , , s 6 S f XM, .gg fy f ,., ff! K ,Q 4 4,4-r' fr 9 ,.h.,.,. ,N M, Y .sf f f 5555521027 f ww., ef ' fypfgy,-3 S Suzette Renaud 1 X fi 4 A X if V f ff l , if I f 7 , ,, 7 .r f ? 2 ff' ,.,fF ' . K K -5:61. 1 , AQ, XM., ggi! 1 ,j 4 X , y f f ff 0,1 M f t if 4 4, , , fy 1 fi ' x4 Nw ' f ff I fy' f i-'f 'L fa 17' ' f 4 up ,.,,. f 7 f,, 5 44.11 Carey Rose Susan Sharp f Qj5,g,'?g, , pl -, K ' f 11 an ww M61 MW W ,aw-mf M' l X , 2:2 1 ff .Vf,ff6.,- N . ' 'J' f f f L ' ff f ff X f V 1 y ff ff -w . a 'i f J vw' f 'fs 'QW . . - - t . f 'IA- ' - '51 if Y'1 l3a4 W? 'L' 22,21-1,,fp-,si 2 A7-'f ff 53: f I A - :,,:y5fpf-Q-ff,-' gm ,. A ff lffff'-' fi i'137?'ff ' f 2 1 6 f ,fffw . . , ,fy,7,,,.f:W,f,, 1 ,V , S , , Judy Stewart Kelly Stewart f N 1 2 4, M sy , ff J 4' f Z ff 'V I 4 X f Q! W, 6 W , Zi f FRESH 9,3 e Q Q Christina Rhoads Skates. ueen of the L.A. T-Birds fastens her speed kycji if-ly: ..,. Q Si ftrl- l gd ,,'L,, Q ,,,1,' Q 'M , , Q .1 Jean Shrimpton at 13. MN if Irini Tanasescu ff ria ff 4 16- Z2 I Xi' ff 20' , 1 11,3 235 Ai N J 5 f A f wi iv 9 v ' x Y 9 N , . f Sara Tollefson it X ' X J' W 3 J ,W 1 I A fi LLLLL 5 W ' gQ,V v!.iggTf-flTj1. ' 'f f-,.,g X , :F wiki? +1 .-1-.mea --'. , g,., . ,H ,fax , ' K ff' l.1,.iii-355' V gif ,Q 1 K f Lucia Worden To arms! The termites are scaling the walls again! U U Jean Mann has a shape like a tin can f xxx , f-fl A, . , ,1 , H ,yy- .wffr V , , f V- g me as X X X , x N x , N. ,X Y,I's1wQFiS- ,Q . Q1 X- 3 e X-Q A 'El ,L xx' Veil- , ill mv 1 if w A in X351 41' , T 15.131f-1' , , 1 - '1 1' ., X is A 5 'xxglfx 2 ,af wha- ,' f .,:'-v, ' , 1.6 V ,, ,y f., . W. , y'1'C77! f5'5?h4f:fz-' rf .Vg . ,U ,, . H, f , WE? , , 'WI Q .4 ,Vs Karen Ulery fi 335 ,'fg:, m,..m A 235,2 4 f W 5 ,!' . 5: - - ' 1-'K ' 5 , , ,yl4ff7f'w: I I L 22+ MM, ,, , I Z , Arrelle Warwick Cecily Waycott f-erfwy Christine Webster Maggie Wellman gg., Q X X ,J-,Q X . . if X X Q 9 r f X x Y KE :SX Q 2 QQ? KN X We ,Nw X , X N33 'X ,f ,, .aa ' ff 4 Leigh Willis 'f i f , J:-X -lf' Jvfki g T 7 ,1,, , A I 1 ,jf e , M is X Q jf , Y f Q ' Af f f M f , ,Q Q ff. f bl , 3 , if if 3 6, - ,V - ,V . C. m,f, ,. Lucinda Abbott ,X . 'H ,. , . A - , ., J XG! ga -L af 4 a f ,f a n 5 ' 1 'X Cathy Badin 4 WV' T17 ' 51? Q' ,.2C9!, ' , V, I , I 0 1,4 , ,hr ,,,, 33, 1 , ,fr f fn 1 ,f Z 'gg ,f 5 4 P f 5 9 fy if 9 4 f agp , 4.2 My , '-1, - f Melissa Biggs enny Clark Linda Alznauer Karen Beecher W, f f ,qi Ju, M-w e f- . ,gg if-M T . ' 1 , 5 ,fix f f f ff f , 4 ,ls iv, 94 cigar I ff W '- ff ' f X ff! N f'4 , a. , , , ..,r' ff e- -,fl UQ N 'fin Catherine Bryan ve , 'f f PQ: -- f4g1: .,,,f. xf, x 1 , 'm i V C7 mv'-ftfA77 , el z3?a2:a fv 1,Yv'?:f , - f ' , B ,gage vga: Kristin Dahlman - ..p ':'.,,gW Q ' br - ,,, . K f . -fy H rm.: -my -' .,- 'ffkflfffi ,G Z 'f .. ' Tr-N Z'fq2Q,q-gg f w I .Jef ' 1'---f fl, KZ, ' y ff I 9 V 5+ i f ' ff ,gf f ,, ' 47 . ig?v,f 4,, . ., 1 ,M eg a fa. if cf f 1 'fa ff f 3, P X 1 af Q J ,f J f I X I Q ?ff Christie Bader EIGHTH 1-J' Adalah Bennett M ' 1 ff .5 - .:,:' ,..,,-zh .f-. f fl' . faf 0.11 5. ,. N ,.-W3 ' aziwfffff if f ff f f . 13 5 ,V , , f f , 4 f ff! J ff f7 f f 9 . X 4 f f f 1 Q ' cf W My ff f f V f fp f f 1 Janie Crouch ff w, ' 4' :QM 14, 'f 1, f7ii Q.,,, -7- . 1Q,.'fg' 'fff 'g'3f7f'4f1 26 1 f 3' C iff? ' - Anne Dutra f f George got married?! I'm goin' to the top and I don't care who I have to step on to get there! GRADE ,,, wm. ,+,1 ' .W lv? ,wwf VM , A 4 9 Teresa Emi-ich W W. V , f mf . 1 ff. , . -- N f :..,J?MzfP'- Ar 'f, 'H , VLH Qfyf-fa-AZQ f f A ,X ,f ,VW U, ,WV V X, ,Q Tix, ,,:g,, f f9i,f,f:qfZ f'f f ffl , 4 1 X 255. , ,Q ' 4935. f af, y Leslie Foldvary Cathy Haljun fr ' , as 4 ,, il, A f ' f Elizabeth Harris Barbara Evans ms i EL , ,, V-, sf Cathy Grant , V7 ,, fkf 213, , ,4 an if f g f , ' V f , ' fff,,,' 2 ' '13 fi 21 5' iff? . fan 'fa , ,V ff V 2 M , s, ff, ch 3 V Virginia Hanson i Constance Hart gin yljf ' Q 'X ' A T01 ' -55' f I , Helen Henriksen X Nwifl 'MT X F 31,4 ' -Q 59? -TE, ,wr ,f Q W , M , 9 f 6 1 ev ' A N ' 55293 . V ,,., K ,,g1g,,3 .3 Y f K A' ,J f 'wi Q 5 A si N 'Zv i f ' as Lauren Henry f f Af ,f , f 2 4 f 'I ' ww- ' 4255 ,ff Y 1 fig, ' ah , X 4, W Robin Humberstone Kerry Keck 51.3. fi V54 gi, M a MUNI-fv 33, ',e: 'nrr I iv rrrrn . 'f 'f 1522 Victoria Lolmaugh 17 75: Vk'k h r A :2' 'j Q. gf L Daphne Markham Le Anne Maillian Nancy McIntosh EIGHTH Pass it on. Batman's secret identity is RALPH! Is Sports over yet? 56 gm! W2 GRADE You won't believe this but my name is Granny Goose. You've got your troubles, I've got minef, ik ,y f qv , M .V p-it ' ' ' ' , f , 42 f X ' X' ' eff , 'Eff VM! ' , I f K f 1,4 f 1' MZ f sg X ' I ,, ,X f 'W ' ls I ,Q 1 , X V 'A,. 1 .ff , , yf l 5 Melinda Stearns Carolyn McQuay ,f 4 4 A 3 Q, 1 :mil f 5 Jew, 'vt U A , f Ei 1 M f lf! 3' f ff ,,,.,,, ,Q W Cf' 11' 11 If iflgvfzf f W 1 ' f if V 1.-f 7 S X 1. f f , Q . . . Z Sandra Scott S ,yyyf 4 .1 , if ,, ' , r Z f f T Y 4 f f .,,1 if-ff ft -, ar' x '- - ' ff' W, , I 1 ' fm fff fff A ff ' , f f X ff f X X ' 'Q Q f f ffff Victoria Simmons , 1 Qf:,.y5L5, , 1 I 9 f K 1 1 4? rv f f 1 ,Q 4 ? 5 M ,ff , , MW . ., , 1 77 f f f ff . 4 C if s f ff 0 V Roberta Stirrett Penelope Moore Suzanne Siskel 1 i kfivflif ' 77 3 t e gs : I W f 4? 9 .f 45 X 4 , ff 4? X ff! 4' Linley Skoro ,qvv f 1 X I ,. f c ff .V .1 V . ,Af ,. fi, fi f If g f ,ff :V fl Caroline Weber LOWER SCHCJOL 1 1 . . A-' 1 f 1 , I H 4. 11' 1 l r I ff- ,- ff' , 'kx '1. 1 f . Q ' 1 . f '. 1' 1 1' ' 1 ' f,. ' ff , f , .,g1?,.,fy f f 4, 1--. .,..,....A 4- ., k Azijzivkfg 1 , . ' , ini.. f1 V, .477 .41 1, 1 f - Q1 . - 1 1155 nz NV 1 Lf . QM Wk. J f.,. ,,. . Lf , 1 ww ,wg ' 1.1-1, a,W,,.,.A1-1 . 1, :J . ' v -,D .d.gwa 1 . . 11, ,. .1 -1 ,1 . . -. ,N ,. 1-N 5. 1, , 1 ' ,1'1,Lf--,,1,41 , .1 11 1. K 1. . 1 ' 1 L-1 1 111:51 f ' W1 1 1 FJ. ..' .M K 1... .fl .111 1. 1,151 4 , 4- --kv 1245 L ,Q-.'v2,, .V 'kk.f?rg55 ' 1' 1 ,.. . ,Q , 1. 1 11, 1. .,.1, 1 , --1 1 , 1 fi uvy Z, ' ' 1- 'f 1 '1..'f. way'-'41. ' 1 N: 1, . flf-:Ui ,Neff ng jg-F. 11? 22, 1 'X 'T' 11 11 z 1-Ef?,'4fZ'1A?1S5w1-ew I, 1 15? 11ff f,1!Lg-f,1.1:g1w. . 422. ,gg-1554 .. 1f12?'Li1511fb,1' 2 E-il-Ti 1? 11: uf 1-,--1-11,4 11 , - 541.1 ' ' 2. 11f'11af'f2Lg11 11a'Q1g4ff4, - f 11 1353 Q if ,511 Q-.1 jf 23 AQW,-'LQ YQ 11- 1-Q-111.-,,q 1 -4, .1 1.1 ' 1155 5 1,3 1 . ,sw f'Z11,1.:MQ 14' f i 4,13 4153? puff'-1 . ,.. .W .Y...,..., .. . -A..-g...x....4,.. , 1 .-..11:'f..cf1 '11 'i - .TSW 'W .1 'M . , ' 1 . '1 f i. 1 :fi ,f-. ff . 1 1, 1Y'f -, , 1 'Q' 115-QQ' 2131,-.V 1:5 1 21. 32 .fff'Ll ,,h'3:F?,11--,Q 1' gf-13371 15- If N11 1 1 -,.1,M .fn fm! 1 ,ug-3.-1,,! H 44.31 1,1 , 1 .WL Q -. ,. 1 W, 71, ,,. 1, V. , . 1: - .11-,,-... ,'7- if .111-gA,,1A1 - f..1, 1 1 -.1 11,v11:f. , ....,1f. M.. 11. ww: . . 11 -I 1 ' 11 . ff , fm. 1-,,g..1 ffm, 5 . . 1, 1 1 ,V ':- 'f K . 1, 1 3:'2l1:,1:f 415' 1 . 'f f ,VA ' '- ' wg ' 'KQr'i'8.iQS?1f1 ' ' 1 1 -,Qs ' 4 M. . .1 , 11- 1 611 1 , . V... 5 ,,- 11 -,...?., , 1.1, I, 11, 1. . 1 ,....... ... I. ., ff, 1. A----ml-f '. 1 gif 11. . jj! L'-:N 11 -. . 1 1'1 ,, 4.1! -I 1 , 4 Q 7-.1,1fj ' is-,,.1.1'3 1 ' ' 1' 1 1 , 1 , ' ' F jj 1 11!l ,:L,1-1, , 1 ' 11 '1 ., . 1' ' 11 . 1 . X X . 1. 1 1 . 1 1 1 . 5,1 ,N ' .1 A 1 1' 'S 1 , f X .5'f,'Qg-ig f'f,-fk- 17 f,:i'f!L4fI,,!'Z. 'L ,f X ,,. ,. P4 f ,,-' 1 .. . 1 f 1 7 ', 1 2 ff ,,,. f . f-h'f f, m'h ' ' ssllr 7 . i so , A 1' ' 1. , fL r 21 X , , Q ' . ' , 5 53 '. 4I?iPQ?,f3 f . L to .ie,elre H '-' r s ' , , T ,.,, ,,. . i 1 -V I ll 0 f T , 1 . : I ,f 'Wiz' .,, ' , 1 3233, .. , ,c A' .'fIzE'Qfr'::f'15 fj, ,., ,lx 4 M5 7 '1.lel.fff-Q-1''jew hree ' ' T I my kk', ,,,V ' ' , ..b r l I SEVENTH LINCOLN'S FACE By jenny Gillespie The Lincoln that we know today, That face that's most revered, Became that way when one quite small Said, Please sir, grow a heard. Then Lincoln, tall with heardless face, So gentle and so kind, Replied to her with utmost grace, Would you, if yours were mine? I Teacher: Mrs. C. R. Zangrillig BOTTOM ROW: L. Miller, N. Stuart, C. Malden, G. Brandt C. Bridges, L. Larson, P. Bliss, SECOND ROW: K. Fisher, L. Vietor, C. Martin, W. Burnett S. Friedman, D. Polos, THIRD ROW: A. Joslyn, R. jones, L. Heck, J. Williams, L. A. O'Leary S. jones, ABSENT: L. Jacobs. ST. VALENTINES DAY by Cathy Kanin This is to you, the flowers, I really must say, Beware of little thililren On St. Valentine's Day. Little boys will pick you With the greatest of care, And give you to their ladies Only one should they dare. And then they will say With a funny little rhymeg Please on St. Valentine? Day Won't you be mine? Teacher: Miss J. Hallg BOTTOM ROW N Trmdle B Tompson C Teng I Stevenson M. Dutra, C. Kanin,j. Gillespie SECOND ROW C Ph1ll1ps P T1hOl1Z M Mann L Utley P. Gantz, A. Davidsong THIRD ROW M Wynkoop N Erickson W Grant M De Haven V. Reed, j. Sharp, G. Fuller 3. ,. WINTER SIGHTS AND SOUNDS by Polly Rich The trees form a lacy pattern against ' 'kh, Q , gif - 1 the grayzsh-black sky. ef, T. ggszgf i 3, T P The world sleeps under a blanket of snow. ggi H ' I R, All zs silent now except for gay shouts f S and screams of children. I . 1 Winter zs here. V , 5, 'f ,,, ,MM , l ' ,, . ' r , ,, M lT'S CHRISTMAS . . . gg? f ..a ,X -s r' f , by Helen Polos ,, ' ,ls, fe , T . fre ,,,., . I' Ch ' dr?-ff jl ,k,L ,f f ,fr L, VW t 5 rlstfnllf s . . firing tllvzwrhfglqby nwgrgyzk 1 , ,,,, , K , V V. V I lss, ' T 3 , Angels sing l S S T And flap their wings Down the chimney Santa goes With a couple of jolly Ho ho ho's! Presents are opened in a great big rush, And winter's snow turns to slush. That's Christmas . . . Teacher: Miss Saallield. BOTTOM ROW: Chatfield, T. Beecher, M. Mills, L. Heyler, P. Holdam, P. Mitchell, C. Granholm, SECOND ROW: N. Parker, L. Sanders, L. Rose, D. Roddenberry, L. Holden, M. L. de Herrera, P. Speight. SIXTH GRADE OH, BUTTERFLY! by Ellen Fead The butterflies pass swiftly In my little garden Carrying their wings loftily As they fly about. Quickly they make sure X That no human, bird or beast Will catch them in their carefree play T And have them for a feast. Z 51.35 Their colors are all dijerentg Lines and polka-dots, too. Such a pretty violet! What a dark shade of blue! 2,4541 , te' So persistent in their playf Lighting only once or twice On a leaf or blade of grass Which they think might be nice. Oh, Butterfly! Oh, Butterfly! If only I had wings! Then I, too, could fly about And see such lovely things. Teacher: Mrs. L. Smith. BOTTOM ROW: D. Kurtzman, S. Farmy, L. Teng, T. Brewer, M. Wood, C. Rand, M. Baderg SECOND ROW: H. Polos, P. Rich, L. Mandelik, E. Keck, G. Rogers, L. Siskelg THIRD ROW: K. Bowles, C. Boone, W. Huntley, E. Fead, A. Bok. if 1 45 WL' ,gm ,f fffZl,.f-ffm.. MG... , . ,, ,K FIFTH GRADE X N, ,.-VL ff :L , . I , I V,.JfgZ f ,ff Q gr . ,ef -3 V 5? P 4' Ay ,. if Eff X, . e ff M Arithmetic 1 lzke me best, 3. 4. ' ' . f. . jen!! 3 A. ,Mn ' ', 4 V 4 It's lots of fun to do. 'S A 1 There are so rnany things to count, P W Birds, baskets, flags, and you. I ' i5eig'+'frf.:fiITju,, . . . .eg ...fm Englzsla zs also fun, ,, Nouns, pronouns, conjunctions, too. f . A Every word is a part of speech, zu A sly, Even I and you' , A'-1, ,,,',, , A by Nzcola Moore ,L My .5 ' 1. V. vu ,.,- ,, M ,, sse, 3.3 A ' Teacher: Mrs. H. McBurney. BOTTOM ROW: P. Thompson, H. Parker, Fried- man, L. Mallery, T. Lakeman, H. Coppin, A. Lihng SECOND ROW: A. Sognnees, C. Sanders, K. Tempereau, M. Penney, B. Rogers, L. Cummings, V. Foldvaryg THIRD ROW: Henry, A. Keith, N. Moore, Anderson, E. Gettle, L. Ramser, J. Stone. FO RTH GRADE WANTED-FOR CHRISTMAS by Laurie Beyer Wanted- one kitty to love And a puppy to hug And a ladybug to fly in the sky. Wanted-a wolf to howl A tamed owl, A zebra and a horse to climb on. A frog in a pond And a mouse that is shy. Wanted-I don't know why, For Christmas! A RAINY DAY Rain makes bubbles That burst into little stars As they splash on the ground. by The Fourth Grade Teacher: Mrs. E. Plaisted. BOTTOM ROW: R. Granholm, A. Jacobs, P. Alznauer, D. Freberg, K. Miller, F. Merrill, C. Skourasg SECOND ROW: K. Kurtzman, Brooke, C. Warner, L. Tempereau, Dutra, G. Pierose, G. Mandelikg THIRD ROW: L. Walters, M. Martyn, L. Beyer, J. M. Harris, N. Ramser, Tavelman. MU... l , W9 ,J THIRD GRADE THE BEE by Pamela Stewart I know a little bee That lioes in a tree. He has a little stinger He buzzes all day As he flits in play. He searches for food When he's in the mood. My little bee makes yellow Which we sell for money. He's a friendly little bee When he doesn't sting me. That he used on my finger. honey THE ANT by Kim Keith Although the ant is a little creature, He also is a helpful teacher. He likes to pull a load of sand, And build the houses for the land. He works the night and all the day, It's work, work, work and little play, His friends are helpful as can be, But what s their use is news to me. Teacher: Mrs. V. Odland. BOTTOM ROW: J. Reed, C. Labiner, M. Peters, A. Vietor, K. Lohman, L. Trope, K. Keith, P. Stewart, SECOND ROW: W. Holdam, J. Speight, D. Cheney, N. Fletcher, M. L. West, S. Nelson, M. Tempereau. SECOND GRADE GEORGE WASHINGTON'S BOYHOOD by Kelly Pierce George dug in the corner of his mother's garden. He played army when he was a little boy. He could not play with his sister Betty. She was still a baby and the children on the next plantation were far away from his home. It was too far to walk, and he was too little to ride a pony. W'ashington's birthday is in February. He was born on the twenty-second. We celebrate George's birthday because he grew up to be a great man. 1' N4 I ' . .7 s - sh if I . . ' WW 1 ,Eg NW 4 f' T , if - ,f R OUR VALENTINE PARTY by Alison Greene I liked the cards very much. They made me so happy. I was so sorry that I missed the party. I think it must have been fun. I wish that I could have been there but I was ill. The next day I came to school and found my Valentines and cookies and candy. I had my own party. Teacher: Mrs. A. Billings. BOTTOM ROW: L. Irvin, H. Milner, K. Pierce, D. Kraus, T. Doughty, M. Masterson, A. Greeneg SECOND ROW: L. Gettle, C. Becker, E. Meenan, D. Nelson, K. Ramser, D. Preissman, L. Boone. Absent: L. Schirmer. V' f 1, , Q23 FIRST GRADE f, I I like the workbooks. I like 'the teachers. I like the work. At school I do arithmetic. I do handwriting. V ..r' I read hooks. J by Vanessa Reed ,,f,, , Teacher: Mrs. M. Morrisg J. Cooke, C. Keith, L. Dutra, N. Carsten, V. Reed 68 f ff A ,W 19, ACTIVITIES 'W-.1 ,..,, -. p... , .-,K ,-c, 1. Q 'Wil x ,.. JL.- -1 ,JM ,, Xzw Vi. . . gf ...x .iq Y - yr: . FS , ffff 1 v 1 w f , w ,. 3 ,fm P 'LL' .f' .gfg 1 A rv,., '. W ., .M 1 1 1 . .f1V1,-,,. Carr - gp- L y , nf, .V,.,,L, W- ,IV-N ' 3 fi f' ' 1-1 mf f V , ,Af f .f-S, ,. y f f ' ff ., 1 1 , I 1 . , A ,w if ...,.mw.-.,.1.l..,. ,........A.,. ...,.......4 J ..f : .- ky -A X. .HQ A My . T' '. ,vr, 1 il Q 1- 4 5,- 1 .ser X W . i D Q-If e ' 5 17111 , .5 , 1 gi , fu ,f v ' 'If ' :xv ' ' ' 1, ' ..'f5?f15'ff V 4 0-fm V 1 ' 4 5 ',, ?f',f:L' . 91 'V ' L 'Vm' f 'Q , - 'El 'ff ffl .. . ' Iv., I Y X 1. Wm. fa ...,,, .. Q, 4.- .1 ,ff -. ., K ff Q. 'Y 'Af '. ' If .J .N k ' A 1 ixi , ,?.I,l'.,v .11 .XL- ,.4,1' V- i. -i'Ti.f-.iam 1ff,+f71. ' ff iz! ,f .1 ' Zlfirff .gi 'QU vu.. VM' :QE ' 'Em ff 1r'5pf'.: 1' -4:5117-II ' , I 433-714 'ff ' b .' , M, vu .A 'PM1- ...J ,l, , f.. 57--f'-v'd ' g ' X .... . - N .W .X 1. .A , . H-. ..., .-W..-v. 4 ,fri M xii , f1f?5 f' , . W 1 J 5 . V, 'viii' , .Nl M, , ,mt ' 1 jg. . .,,.. . 1 . .,.,,,.,- .,. -.. f . ....L,, XJ .-Fifi:-2:2 En vw'-4LfLiL? Q. J, x, . il lg, ll gif U gy, 7,131 M. 2- . .gf .. 1' -,a Ji' '.! M . 1' w A, fdfi' if at , H -4 1 Ll, ,..,,,..,-.. PP r BOTTOM ROW: Ann Bromfield, Sandy Wilcox, Christina Singleton, Diane Brewer, Nancy Marriott, Laurena Ricci, Gale Baer. TOP ROW: Karen Beecher, Nicki Greene, Avery Taylor, Pam Van Valin, Diane Orr, Brooke Shearer, Kelly Stewart, Dorie Krahulik. STUDE T COUNCIL joint meeting of the Student Council and Mothers Club to discuss school problems, and further com munication between the two groups. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN BOTTOM ROW: Nancy Fardelius, Nancy Mar- riott, Lorna Macdonnell, Darleen Roddenberry, Cathy Carroll. TOP ROW: Christina Singleton, Cathy Cox, jean Mann, Barbara McCulloch. 72 STUDE T BUDY PRE IDE DIA E BRE ER This year's council has hoped to establish a common ground with other schools in the area in order to indirectly solve some of the prob- lems that we are unable to face our- selves. If you cannot heal a broken leg with love, try plaster. I am not implying in the least that our school is comparable to a broken leg. Westlake has a fantastic potential that must be developed. For this reason we have.. set up exchange days, dances, and athletics in hopes of broadening the scope of our achievements. The council must now step in and generate spirit until it permeates the cement. I had hoped that things might have been easier to accomplishg nevertheless, the ad- vice given me by the council, the senior class, the dorm, Mrs. Dick- inson, Miss Mills and Miss Hen- ning has helped me to define my goals more clearly. At least once a week the Student Council meets to discuss school problems and to provide a link between the administration and students. , READERS BOTTOM ROW: Carol Louise Bowles, Linda Wrather, Gale Baer, Melinda Miles, Stephanie Grant. STANDING: Carey Cameron, Helen Det- T lie, Karol Kulik, Cheri Kreimendahl, Cindy Moreton, Susan Okie, Diane Brewer. Glee Club Choral Club CHRISTMA Diane lights the Christmas Candle to open the Program. l M I 7M... AT C H R I S T M A S WESTLAKE A Merry Christmas from the Faculty. v ' f 'Ti Onstage chaos at the Seniors' Christ- mas play. Sue Heldfond and Steve Talbot drop in to the dance in costume from a production of Charlieiv Aunt at Harvard. DANCE Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus pay their annual visit to the Christmas party. 2 E X l i FIRST HONORS , First row: Susan Okie, Gwen Field, Patricia Mittry. , Second row: jan Taradash, Lindsay Doran, Nina Stern, Christina Singleton. Standing: Lucinda Ab- bott, Brooke Shearer, Suzanne Siskel, Kelly Stewart. 4 l 1 l SENIORS: SECOND HONORS First row: Diane Orr, Karol Kulik, Ann Bromfield Avery Taylor, Cathy Cox. Standing: Christine Keith Dorcas Battey. HO OR DINNER UNDERCLASSMEN: SECOND' HONORS First row: C. Moreton, A. Taylor, L. Walters, F. Applebaum, J. Kanin, N. Greene. Second row: D. Krahulik, G. Dubin, C. Cameron, C. Rhoads, D. Schneider, D. Kadison, T. Turner. Standing: C. Bader, K. Beecher, V. Lolmaugh, C. Badin. Following the dinner both parents and honor students assembled in the Great Hall for a panel discussion entitled, Teenage Values. Panelists included Mrs. Towne, Mrs. Mittry, Mrs. Bader, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. King, Diane Orr, Susan Okie, Cindy Moreton, Lindsay Doran, Christina Rhoads, and Suzanne Siskel. HO OR PROGRAMS U C L A PROGRAM ' .. V . '. . 'Q , Kneeling: Stephanie Rose, Avery Taylor. Stand- ing: Colette Cross, Anne .MCC-Eilvray, Lindsay Dor- an, Nina Stern, jan Taradash. Absent: Karol Kulik, Diane Orr. HONOR SOCIETY INTTIATION PROGRAM Honor Society officers, Colette Cross, Mar- cee Fareed, and Avery Taylor, receive their pins. 77 DOR LIFE 7 fp, ff f 5 V! W! 1 f P' HOUSEMOTHERS: Mrs. Grace Browne and Mrs. Kathryn Leonard. EW FACULTY A D TUDENTS Cathy Crane, Tricia Fredland, Camilia Koenig, Cathy Callo- way, Sandra Stableford. f 'Y 371 -'f,ii Ji ,. A Mrs. Druria Sylvester-Craig Administrative Secretary Mrs. Elizabeth Hopper Miss jonquil Fischer Bookstore First Grade Lady Julia Forbes speaks of her archaeological adventures in Peru. Nina Stern and Diane Brewer describe their experiences in the Summer School of World Affairs. Mr. Felix de Cola entertains with Comedy in Concert. Mrs. Michos, Miss Saaliield, former Student Body President Susie Boles, and Mr. Bruno discuss their respective colleges. Mr. Walter Starkey presents a program gf gypsy legends and music. ' 1 gg Q fl' gli at Ima' S james Stewart and family describe their African Safari. Mr. Bruno's science assembly. , ,, Wfifi , , Viz ', f Father Peter Moore Dr. Van Valin and family. Students in the UCLA Honors Program discuss their courses. Mr. Lloyd 0 Shearer speaks 2 on the always 1 interesting topic at Boys and Girls X: yayyy f y Photography Editor: Christine Keith Editor: Diane Orr Layout Editor: Lindsay Doran Advisor: Miss Bredlow Copy Editors: Rosemary Fond and Renee Ber 'Dx ,M J Colette Cross Layout Editor: Christina Singleton Business Manager : Photographers: Diane Darrow, Gretchen Vasen, Lorna McDon- nel. Absent: Marissa Bogue. 82 i H Business Advisor: - Miss Smith X . A triiiiiii gptiiwi em Xl Q pid Mijw, 5 nhl-. J bhfifmff New rm?fI,15?,?aTfZ'2i W X Q f f f ,J , Assistant Editor: Anne Taylor, Advisor: Miss Mills, Editor: Dorie Krahulik. ff f' ' 4 ,f-.M 'f f if , ., ' ' 419 ' ,C 5,7 in x X Cindy Moreton, Nancy Fardelius, Cathy Carsten, Reidun Sognnaes, A Gail johnson. Ai 1 s Vicki Harris, Brooke Shearer, Lucia Walters, Jill Kanin, Wendy Wylie. Judas w I W ww' agzxzzssma we 5 U 4' fifc, ,ZH ' 'f 'A ' Susan Okie, Nicki Greene, Gwen e Field, Leslie Weiss. 77 I , ,f,, v 1 v fi V 574 ' i ' A A .l,f f rg' '- , I THE st ff CC liter A r A '59 Editor' Avery Taylor Assistant Editor: ' 0: .f 1 f f Vx f 5,52 4 ff Jan Taradash , ff rj X X ff? I Affkwgi Q4 'E 'i 'v-. 9 M, ff f X www f H , A ff X X ff X .r,. ' iff., ' f f' - fw' 5 , f f 'xii f ff., - ffff M -'f fz f ,y f W, 9 f f' 'f?f!7fff i 1 Q9 , W WW '. ii s s' Zi gy K if X X U 4 'Q f VV A QQOA '11 fp vw A ,,,. -:f. ' ft f , , 13 ,Qi ..1, f . - .1-MW V, .. f, pm-W ' 1 A , f - f '. M J,.,g:,yf,.,,,.g,,:.- I ,, I ,f ,, I , f- s .fl .. 'I -JV. ffvym ' ' ,AEQ Qi, i 07, ,I V ,K I ,M V '-wwf uf: fflffflf P WW V ' 4-ZW-i'rff f M ,ff H , f4,4y,7,' Q4My,C45, 7 ff K' ,w s gf 14, y 4 jf M91 ,,z ,gif , - ,M f g,,.zecf'1ff7f2f2,'j'wffflLqgfwg 2. , 1 ' f,4f.ff,,fff,,,ff,f,ff W , 4, M-I f . fy f ff ,fx ,.,, fr, 11 g ff f f , w , ,' f,w'ff 1 ich, - s ' .51 ,f fz my 'ss', f M2 M E , ' 'f ,, ,li l V ,if '- ff!! ' ay,-3 w 1 , 7 P. ,ff,ff.,I j 44? ,A ,W Qifrgt 52.3 Z ', 05,3 5 -,X 7 W' yw,,gfp64,f,5w,' 'zz-,f ,l ,, - -if ' if , f .A ZX.. 5 ,viz nj Z , , f , ,J , Q L ,f f f ff f ff f fwsf f fi f A f f f, 5, '14, UZ 1 6 ,W ,ff if 'fi if C! ,wfff wi, 1 1 ff X 1 fy , ,' H fgfff .W 4 in ,Q XZ , -'V --'14.. ' 'twin vw, Y X- 114.1 .F 5' IE 1 , '4:-W-W gf I Advisor: Miss Carol Mills i 84 Ni Stem Mary Pat Mathison na fzw '--, 71 OFFICERS OF THE MOTHERS' CLUB Seated: Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Singleton, Mrs. Friedman, Mrs. King, Mrs. Houghton, Mrs. Witt, Mrs. Walters. Standing: Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Malden. On January 21, 1966, the Mothers' Club held its Twentieth Anniversary Reception in Westlake's Great Hall. The black-tie occasion, attended by more than three hundred parents and members of the faculty, honored Mrs. Dickinson's retire- ment as headmistress of the school. The music was provided by jack Wilson's Band and floral decora- tions were provided by each class. The hard work of the Mothers' Club officers was well appreciated, and their efforts were rewarded by a tremendously successful evening. MOTHERS, CLUB The annual Valentine Tea was held at Westlake on February fourteenth. The alumnae enjoyed a reunion with former classmates and teachers, while their children were entertained by members of the Senior Class. FINE ARTS ,ff , 1' .LJJY iw jf, - . af.. , gw1-??'.12- L v . -1, . S.. H . -url Q ,, M, ,1 .. , .. ..,- 9-,.,, . ,. iv., -W., .. :gig . -Xfiiiicg ' L',If':Q: . .K ' A541-.,' Y 'x 1 ex -z VX. x- X xx X x EV., ,, ' 1 f f ,lifdiffgl-if , 7 -f if - 1.1 .1 ..,, . J, Qt 5 U.. tg S 7-'Egg - rig:-Q21L1-gj5.:.-bg,fwrf jysnu 2 ff'w-f11 , 6 1 'f - , . iig':1wg,'f.1351-4'1T i u -. V- Y ,, 4, V ,WI .., y A .Ha JT' -1. ' fig? . u as f v i- s vying Qi! .. w . Ll V,-.. Pig wig. X , La r LK. 3 .-' if , . fl' f 1 12-. N 5 1 1 WF., Hn, w 1 QI' 1 l .155 5 a Y 44 , -- lm' L., ' 14 L' im .C 'P-Ln .. iw' .wwae-.., 4 ,g.y5,.,w-5.-w .. x-1, 9537,-Eg., 5. I-2 -E5..ga.., iff +L , ij 'Kew ,L J '1 WK... .R ,- -, ,'f 9, 53 ,JA .. J uf rigw U L N 3 .A V 3:51, I .qg,.,, , 1:1 - 1. ' J .3 ,J ,,g':g1-,bg 9 3 ,gglf-Jlff 2' qg1fjEi1 QQ1ww. :w'SeJ'.:f ff -ni wp, . 5251 ffl' H f+'2f221:.s 2. E ,:- w ircmgff .- .v V fi . 1 Mm Q ,. An. A G . , L.: :mi-, ,eq -P161 ff ' Q . qivgfswii R- 1 Y ' - . .M Q-.'..,.43s,m,:-36 T fp 1' -'f':H1Q'1:,s ' ' A ' A ggg.5::rl'.1-Q' :gan ,I f H 2-rM?i?d3,a'1r1ef1 egg- 3-gy... gl n y.- : w11',fHT - Q A H5543 -,ggfrli ' 1:5 ,mg 5.4311 3, 5 1? giant mf ,Q Y ' ' .. wp, f mir f 1'1- 1, A .1 'iii ' -' 3, V Q. , i. Q gat..- . .V I ..?,, iw .il ' ' all J , CHORAL D GLEE CLUBS The Choral and Glee Clubs under the direction of Mrs. Breiholz have provided entertainment throughout the year. In addition to several programs in chapel they have sung for the Mothers' Club, at Vespers, and in combination with many other groups at E1 Monte High School. In March they presented Westlake's first Spring Concert together with El Monte's Los Contadores and the U.C.L.A. Mens' Glee Club. 90 West1ake's Drama Club, under the direction of Mr. Macbeth, has presented two plays this year for the faculty and students. The first production was A Child is Born by Stephen Vincent Benet which was presented during the Christ- mas season. The second was Xingu, a play adapted by Thomas Seller from a short story by Edith Wharton. West- lake girls have also participated in off- campus productions of Clmrlielv Aunt by Brandon Thomas, of All the Kings Men by Robert Penn Warren, and of No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre. DRAMA CLUB Sue Palmer, Barbie McCulloch, Pam Van Valin, Mr. Macbeth, Gwen Field, Dorcas Battey, Francine Applebaum, Carol Louise Bowles. 91 CHRISTMAS PLAY A CHILD IS BORN 5 2 All together now . . . WE MUST GO! WE ARE FOLLOWING THE STAR. PLAY AT HARVARD ALL THE KINGS MEN Nina Stern in rehearsal for a play at Harvard which also Ki included three other Westlake students: Sandy Wilcox, Z Reidun Sognnaes, and Marissa Bogue. J fl 'ft XX ,i 1 . s f ff My limi- x . ff afqiup X X A ft 4 lx fi ' sf l K X MX! x A ll M ll X ,,,r : xx 0 ' X Kr? YJ? pf Q L Q19 K is - K VP' ff L7 5 'V V s -f fl is X X x , XXX A N K Ky X y W ,U K Q f , rl we f w Mew.-W , s y e, T ' ll . ff l ' X at x , lap JRC e Q . X X QQ. ft fs S X .t it C is . g ear Q T X 228397 j e we 'i S T2 TT QQ? we S X we Q qjwri ax C X SUNRISE AND SUNSET by Dorie Krahulik If the earth were in two halves with two suns, one for each half, I would stand on the mountain hetween them and I would watch them. On my left side, the sun would eternally rise in pastel softness, and on my right, the sun would eternally fall in purple splendor. The varied rays would sparkle in the seas, transforming one into a lily pond with fairies dancing upon its surface and trans- forming the other into an ocean with monsters surging up from its depths. The varied hues would shade the valleys like an artist and a chimneysweep. The valley on my left would he dotted with springtime flowers and ferns and the valley on my right would he scarred with leafless trees and purple shadows. If I were on the summit of this mountain, I would know which side to descend. But such a mountain does not exist, and two suns and two halves of the earth do not exist, either. In our world, all seems to he compiled- evil and good, dark and light, and sunrise and sunset. There's a world just around the corner, 1t's not so far away 1 guess But a fantasy today And the truthls a bit tarnished By pettiness and lies. I lived there once Amidst many miracles And something with fuzzy pink fluffs And a wonder girl with yellow paint hair And a tremendous giraffe with big paper spots And a tall dog with a French name And a couple of hippos too- They were real though They must have been- And I could live there again- I guess. 'Ian Taradash f-9,534 .1 X ,, ,Af ., ,I 'W N ,, ,xnr Q, K A? ,VV V 'Qfyari i 4 ' iff, t ,, Ll ,,i f I Y f . , is My , yrrsra Vymy ,V I y I if I - 3 IVV. , fa K, I L 3' K ' f if f 3,1 ji - a ,, . 6 in -' 4 . 1 4, z, H t I -. w ' fc ., f K ff- , few, as ' ff c I u f ' ' Dorie Krahulik AFTERWARDS by Lindsay Doran CHe smiledj And isn't it funny How all the flowers Seem 'to be dancing today, And the air is spinning In soft shades of blue and green, And the sun is splashing me With gold all over- And I really don't know why Unless it could be because . . . fHe smiledj N o,' it couldn't be that. I AM LIVING by Brooke Shearer And the wind whips your hair so loving the pregnant clouds you begin to run, your youth pounding in your chest And you throw your arms around the nearest tree rolling in its green and laughing. ev 'm iv. HOME by Avery Taylor It wasn't cream-eolored earth Alore brown and somewhat ugly Not shades of mint ire-tea green But rather jade . . . sharp . . . black and fool. Skies were murky - pained with fullness That burst into rain torrents And stabbing ieieles of lightning Penetrating soft whispers and Twisting images into fear . . . Not tan dull sun-smiles. But the rain there spake Portuguese like the rest of us . . . And that felt good. Sandy King A THOUGHT by Emily Katenkamp I I knew that feelings never change: Or if I knew that happiness never ends in lonelinessf Of if I knew that I had met everyone on this earth and still ehosen you . . . We fould keep this time forever and I would be satisped. X H.. X Sandy King TURINT BACK? by Arm Bromfield And you want me to turn back? Turn back to fare The empty stares from blinded eyes The icy thoughts from frozen minds The sinking strength from tasteless souls. Turn back to this? Wlaerz onee they too Blessed and eursed with hollowed words Sang and cried with salty tears Loved and died for noble truths. No, thanks - I 'll not turn back. I'd rather melt into the night And flee - not from this dying life But from what I call This living death. K 'E Kelly Stewart to e.e. Cummings by Sue Okie most happy and elusive man-in-love with every Fleeing, Floating thing upon the earth for notj we thank you I such as we may thankj for nonverses mild and happy-sad or silly praising yes or no or other various creatures in between. we thank you muchly for the lovely lightly lisping singing words that say the things we think we feel we know hut things we cannot fheing not awake, aware Q quite say. we thank you because you awake aware man fand not any other not awake aware manj Know and Feel and think enough to say: the misty windy sunshine-springing grass-come-upping worldish Sandy King things. Gail Dubir Carol Bowles CAT by Avery Taylor Cat sat pawing the earth softly . . . Her velvet blackness was now Pouring like liquid into movements No more to be thrust into 'lagged lightening patterns or Arched into crystal forms. The days were long now. . . Endless stretches of sun And shadow-rest on cool pavement. Sleep rested pained limbs and Softened jagged breaths into purrs. Eyes only mirrored now,' white pupils Glistened with their aged blindness. I pulled cat to me - her form Molded against my legs as she Spilled into my lap. Her eyes shut to avoid the drizzle Of the beginning rain. The beating pattern of the drops Replaced cat's soft breathing And she died an Ernest Hemingway death. Sad . . . oh yes! But beautiful and fittingly grand. 97 my love was born in early morning when the new-risin g sun shed bashful, gray-shadowy light on his face. he grew to be a fairy-child, with gold- glowing hair and white silver skin and deep, faraway eyes. his friends were graceful cloud-animals whom he raced during storms, and delicate daffodils and silverbells who sang him to sleep. my love was a fairy-lad who held me warm on stormy nights and who dressed me in flowers and who loved me with his eyes, his laugh 'neath the dancing cloud-animals. by Nina Stern A Mary Craddock Kelly Stewart to e.e. Cummings by Sue Okie most happy and elusive man-in-love with every Fleeing, Floating thing upon the earth for notj we thank you K such as we may thank j for nonverses mild and happy-sad or silly praising yes or no or other various creatures in between. we thank you muchly for the lovely lightly lisping singing words that say the things we think we feel we know hut things we cannot fheing not awake, aware j quite say. we thank you because you awake aware man land not any other not awake aware rnanj Know and Feel and think enough to say: the misty windy sunshine-springing grass-come-upping worldish Sandy King things. Gail Dubin f i V Carol Bowles CAT by Avery Taylor Cat sat pawing the earth softly . . . Her velvet blackness was now Pouring like liquid into movements No more to be thrust into jagged lightening patterns or Arched into crystal forms. The days were long now . . . Endless stretches of sun And shadow-rest on cool pavement. Sleep rested pained limbs and Softened jagged breaths into purrs. Eyes only mirrored now,' white pupils Glistened with their aged blindness. I pulled cat to me - her form Molded against my legs as she Spilled into my lap. Her eyes shut to avoid the drizzle Of the beginning rain. The beating pattern of the drops Replaced cat's soft breathing And she died an Ernest Hemingway death. Sad. . . oh yes! But beautiful and jittingly grand. 97 my love was born in early morning when the new-rising sun shed bashful, gray-shadowy light on his face. he grew to be a fairy-child, with gold- glowing hair and white silver skin and deep, faraway eyes. his friends were graceful cloud-animals whom he raced during storms, and delicate daffodils and silverbells who sang him to sleep. my love was a fairy-lad who held me warm on stormy nights and who dressed me in flowers and who loved me with his eyes, his laugh 'neath the dancing cloud-animals. by Nina Stern Mary Craddock UPON DISCOVERING THAT I AM ALIVE by Lindsay Doran I Try to understandg I know I should not be here. But my heart is overflowing With the sweet joy of expectation. And yet it cowers in the pale shadow Of a growing sadness. Sit with me here in the fading light And listen to my request. It is not so very hard. Listen. D0 not send me away. II I am afraid. The softness of beauty, the fragility of faith, The effervescence of emotion make me afraid. The desire to stop and reflect fills my whirling senses, But my fear is forced down in the rush of life, And bobs to the surface only when The waters are quiet, as they are tonight. Try to understand. Do not send me away. III Tell me all that you know, all that you have experienced Of laughing, shouting, grinning life. Tell me of the tenderness of Kenneth Patchen, Of the bitterness of Edward Albee, Of the placid mind of Emerson, Of the fghting soul of Camus. Tell me of the saintliness of Bach, Of the passion of Beethoven,' Of 'the raging suns of Van Gogh, Of the shimmering lakes of Monet. Tell me of the bright ecstacy of your love, Of the turbulent thrashings of your loneliness. I will listen, and I will cherish Even that which I do not understand. IV Help me. Try to understand. Do not send me away. For tonight, of all nights, I must learn what life will offer me, So that I will know how to accept and embrace it. I feel your heart pounding With the power of your knowledge. Your eyes are shining. Your mouth is opening. Begin . . . fflnd your words will burst like golden sunlight Through the greyness of my cloud-filled horizonj Daphne Andersr Christina Singleton HE TRAVELS ENDLESS TRACKS OF SAND by Dana Kaclison Gaunt tress of shadows, Pale moon of red, Wind where once was silence Unseen livin g among the dead. Distortions of a mirror Rage through corridors of mind. The traveler of these tunnels Finds any turn a blind. All paths lead nowhere, And nowhere is the goal. The portals to expanded light, are dreams, And dreams his only fare. MIRAGE by Jan Taradash a giant seagreen ice creature sailed past my window, his great lucid monster-eyes like huge crystal ponds shone upon the moon. closer and closer until those tremendous circles alone remained twzrlzng with many-colored down the eery filtered paths sun stars and moon-shine met my gaze and huge glass teardro ps an onyx soul of liquid spheres, and white re shapes with taperzn g lzmpzd snow-spray. deeper and deeper into those eternal, luminous and turned again toward the distant cry stal ponds, but elt only the frosty cold udy Stewart o a shattered dream. 99 ATHLETICS L 1-W4 , , an if, K 'HJ 1 1 W ' aw , . A , iff' ' - f' 15552 1 QI! N X Wet 1 N52 EQ WN' 11 Wai: Nw F9 Wfgxs ggfu'-mx .:.v',f . H iv X -,f ,J 1.. 1 S., , w W W EV ,Jiri 'E11' 1' wx.,-L. J -,.,. ,,,,1 f ,Y , .- H - Y . . - M- - ,. , , ,, MM., ., . , , , Vi ll , ,Kg 4 W! N, ,gn ,g 1' A W. f 1 if! V , M- Nw! J 11 ,911 1-1 : , h- 2,41 -fy 1 ,.- - -:if ,VY-I5 Lf 1 ,.f .HY Ln , , ,.,- ,Y ff-,--V -, 1 A , '-'F' 'ZF .: ,, 1 . 1 ,, A, , , 1 'Q - Ik , V 'M -HJ ,Az , '-P5 ' -421 ,W ... , f ,, , ,QU ,, V i ffigilfji ,iw ,E ..,, -H ix L , ,1 ,- ..-1- wc mf -I ,fiwlx . 1 Aanawf- , ie. THLETIC ASSOCIATIO 2: 'f. urmiieiw: y .1-Je 5:r:.'.1LXTr'9,,'7 .Qtifqf x- uf-1 -' A.A. Council: Cathy Cox, Bettie Ann Beswick, Ruth Turney, Ann Brornfield, Marcia King, Pam Woodill, Mary Pat Mathison. QQ. ,M wif, Q, i 24+ ,QE A.A. President: Ann Bromfield. . f fr., y. 4 -Wqmrr, ,:y,w,-41. ,. ..-. .4 9, .-.Q..',4:-f,.3,,45a,,i,fT -'4?,:5,g,,,A,T.:-f::i.,,5f35,-..3:fv3 ,ff-i,.-g155f'sfg.vg,.3xz,ua:..4v5f?wa3i1sSa-v:.v3qygQ!.?1yyfv1 ri-r-' .1 -- - - ,- , -- Y -we v-.T ,Z -. .WSJ - . -.-.M - X .,-'11-Y: ,y',.- T-, ' . f - , 4. ' 'f' -'g jfs.-4 fu fr- 1, '-3' 1 T 4, , A , V Q, . ff- . .yin J' 7z'flt l'- . .244 ff .-- -0 X 1-. ' wwf. E' -. -f 1 - - T-f if-S5335 iifiiffi.5'l z .wi?f'i:l5 .N - ,-'. .1 ,, '-1 -1-.. . ' H : 3,. U.:-+ -- 4 A- --. fr fig fz.Lk'Qu5ft 'K -A-,A..i-wwg-L-..:-5' in figs WHITE TEAM .J Team Captain: Ruth Turney. Team Captain: Marcia King. GOLD TEAM XE A-..., ff--ix..i.-m..,,.L..4-,ann awk. . A A, . ., ,. Q. ?,r.,,...-,.,,-fk,.,v.x. ...Yf.--X.-- 'J' FEEL-f 1 ,L -- X.,,. ,Q .,.... ..-. -f..,yw-A-X - . .hz-. ., .-af-1-1 -4 ' '.':1 -Mm rv: ,. . .-7 f ,, -, f, y'f,,-- yfw. M '- W., ' ,.- .. -,XT Q... .-, gf- wh..--of Av Team: Cindy Moreton, Mary Pat Mathison, Avery Taylor, Ann Bromfield, Dorcas Battey, Bettie Ann Beswick. VQLLEYBALL ff' IQL II , 2 , fi Ya Bottom Row: C. Moreton, D. Battey, M. P. Mathison, A. Taylor, A. Brornf1e1d, A. Taylor, B. Shearer. Top Row: R. Turney, V. Kassel, S. Stanton, P. Van Valin, D. Brewer, B. A. Beswick. BASKETBALL ' V X f 'K I P 7 f f ' , f, 1 I 0' 1 X fa , 4, ff , ,im Ig ffl f z X ffm 41 'f'fN'a, , If , ff 4. ' f , 2 ,.Z,.w ff ,f . Wff W, I ., .V . ,- gf, - , ,f.,:f, ., 4 gr. B . we 'Z' f ff ' I 7f,,'f'M,,fJ5' aff, Q, ' ' ff , .?LJ'f,:,p3Z ' 5 . .--4 ff if 1-at-rf-.1 W, V , at ' , diff , 'fk W., f , fi .Q ,M V IA- , , V f V ,V , .aff 'M ' - f.-,, ., 'f', , ' y .WW 'L fn lf '? E1'ii?9L'3q4 V A V 0 ,, ' , . 4 f ' , . M mf ff f 4 ' .95 nqni f V!! ,ya f 0, 53 f f f , , MQW , f f J . Z ' , ,, , , ,z ,4, , , ' U , ' X' f- ffvf . . EZ , , , f 4. ! . ai on V aww . M 9 af , wig? f 2 f rf 4, 4 , 1, 4 Eff W4 4 4 f ff 5 , ' . f 3.5. fe W, f 7 X fff' My J., 1,7 JIM fff??f'g!f1s. U, 1 ' W !E 1 5' 5:?'3'IlfU IMS' 1 We f .ff ,424 'f ' ' f wfff f S' atv! f,z,5gg2ff If , J. f ,J yy 7 WA , ffffff ' ,,, ' 'f.,,a,' ' I ' , , ,ww f7'f 'f V: 'L 'N f,fQff'Xfi,!!fi'f' I , ' f55Aa zf. my f,,, af ' , 5.5 2 B f 105 a . trte J 'cfm-24? V , .... - Roylee Bailey l w TENNIS TENNIS TEAM Bottom Row: F. Applebaum, R. Bailey, M. P. Mathison, Kanin, S. Grant, C. Cheney. Second Row: C. Waycott, L. Willis, M. Wellman, M. Houghton, I. Tanesescu, S. Ride, Gwen Field. qw, , www 6 Y xi: 1-W' ,QM N, W ,184 'W A , . ' ff f -, ' JMR 4' YS. 'E-fi iw f'l4',ff - ' - 5: -J V4.1 4 -Cf' , , --2 wi if 1 'fig js'-gg, 1 .s .':!,gq-.'-'Y' f4'I+zq,-wifi? 'I ,f ,f.-M-M5 , M-'.3'.,f,f4.-H . ,QM ,ff ,I ' 'f, f .Q,,w,fL- Q .Q.:v.f.-9 4, ,, f ,, . ' ' f-il 'Z ,',,f,,xn vu- Q'-.vw f9,ig2.l,v.,?f,:,1 I, .N ,fJ15Q5Q55:':f mglxbiaa g- bg L4 .- , - - -gghgfgyvg,-4 V 3.53. .-.a,,ijq',4'f 4 ,420 ,255 lg., 9,135 fu ' ,Z f . 5.2115 'X' . y - iii XV' , 1... . I , ,,4 , 1 2450 mi ff M wuz : ' V f13fW ' . , fa Mifggagf 6.1 f ,ff we 6, . H Ken.. ,V - -5 fa- .xmgff ef. 'zjxly' ?,S'lf' kd fx?-fwijgx .fl Q f 3 f 2-m.Xq,:1.f s Ii, idir ,An ,, , - 3 K f,,.,.LJ,.L::H14e , 2 Ei? 7' 9? . I5 Cf' S J I xyz. fi? QM. A 1, .. 1. , V 31.5 2 Q 5' 5 .-:fl Mi ,.,. MA K . , ,,., M., ,,.3.j f,4g-.5361 ,vw 4 -Q w,q.,g,f.,i.,-1 . A 'f K 1 gf 'fW4? Zf6Zi3Z512-S'Z5?fJW,6f , ff f 'iff 111wfgffn2i2f.f?:3f2f,i'i Z S... Tennis Club President Mary Pat Mathison Swim Club President: Pam Woodill SWI A D SKI CLUBS 7. 4, 107 ,w,3y xi Q., P WV if Lv DANCE ' 'ffm ff ww ,Q-u PEED AWAY BASEBALL M. ,wg-wwffgv-W-wljw ff-2 'm:,:p'1j,gpg ' ,, ' ,f I an WM , , ,q, ,f fy , ,X ,.', Dfw' f Vg, ,fz,MM,rM A'-'?' fi L Mr. and Mrs. Harry Applebaum Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Beyer Mr. and Mrs. Pat Boone Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Brewer Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. James Y. Camp Mr. and Mrs. Stan Freberg Mr. and Mrs. Merritt L. Joslyn PO OR The Robert McCullochs Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Christianna F. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. T. Orr Archie Preissman David Lowell Rich Randolph Scott Skouras james Stewart Mrs. Fred Weber IND GR Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Burnett Mr. and Mrs. John Bowles Mr. and Mrs. Parke E. Bryan M. Farmy Mr. and Mrs. joseph A. Field, jr. and Gwen Friends of Pi Friends of Westlake Caroline Labiner Carol Lohman PATRO A Friend Dr. and Mrs. Leon H. Ashjian Charmaine Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Stuart L. Kadison Mr. and Mrs. Moritz Pick Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Singleton Beatrice G. L. Stevenson Mrs. Heisig Weaver Margaret Skouras Martyn Homer J. Wood Mr. and Mrs. jack Wrather Richard C. Larson Henry Lihn Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Keith Beecher Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Mann Mr. and Mrs..Lloyd Bridges Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Markham Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Cross, III Mr. and Mrs. S. Lee Miller, jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fond Richard W. Miller, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Henry T. Friedman George E. Fuller Mrs. Margaret D. Gantz Casey Mills Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Reese L. Milner David A. Palmer William Ravenscroft Fausto M. Ricci Frank R. Spratt and Mrs. Robert Sutro and Mrs. Carl E. Stewart and Mrs. jack C. Tavelman judge and Mrs. Robert S. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Turney Mr. and Mrs. DeVer K. Warner Mr. and Mrs. George Gore Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mort Greene Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. H. Bruce Harris Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Hathaway Mr. Dr. and Mrs. A. Heldfond Mr. Mr. and Mrs. David B. Heyler, jr. Dr. and Mrs. james S. L. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. jack Kalb Mr. and Mrs. Art Kassel, jr. Mr. Mrs. Rodney Kreimendahl Mr. HO ' and Mrs. Abraham Weiss and Mrs. Maurice T. Worden ACKNGWLEDGEMENTS The VOX staff wishes to thank: Miss Bredlow, Editorial Advisor Miss Smith, Business Advisor Mrs. Dickinson, Headmistress Mr. Powell, American Yearbook Co. Mr. Byers, Hap Byers Photography Ill fm. gw 35' va-,, X4 n ef i :fb iii, '4 .- -'L M. 1 -ig , 1 iff All-Q ' . ux ' V' wick' , yi -1511, k ,QA 3 . . 31. V 4 1 V ,,, t,
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