Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA)

 - Class of 1972

Page 1 of 190

 

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 190 of the 1972 volume:

iRf-p ' 3 WESTON HIGH SCHOOL WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS WESTON HIGH SCHOOL , ARY K£:DiA cmrm W TOFi fefA. 02193 Editor-in-Chief Bruce Howard Co-Editors Maureen Costello Philip Richardson Editorial Staff Marie Cacace Edward Downey Diedri Fisher Biography Editor Laura Carlson Sports Editor Kathleen Mori arty Assistant Editors Judith Breck Dayl Ratner Art Editor Barbara Cole Photography Staff Fred Abbott George Benoit Douglas Gillespie Business Managers Kathleen O’Hara Julie Shaw Subscription Manager Lyle James Wilson Advisers Mr. George Mickus Mr. Marshall Pratt DEDICATION Among the faculty and administration of Weston High School, one person in particular guided our class. As a teacher he has been straightforward and energetic, a concerned, responsive friend with whom we could talk easily, both in groups and individually. As our class adviser his ideas, support, and participation have been stead¬ fast and valuable. In Appreciation We, the class of 1972, gratefully dedicate our yearbook to Mr. Donald Burke, whose interest in our class was enthusiastic, whose advice was wise, whose involvement was dedicated. To you, Mr. Burke, in memory of a moment we have shared ... 2 RECOGNITION No task could ever be completed without taking into consideration the unsung work of many good people. It is here that we would hke to say a special “Thank you”, to you, Mrs. Moriarity, for being so kind, generous and understanding at times when we must have made your work so trying. Many of our endeavors through these years could not have been completed without your untiring help. We do not want to forget all you have done for us, with your patient and friendly personahty. Thank you, Mrs. Moriarity. Even though Mr. MacLeod is retired from Weston High School, his smiling face is not forgotten. As every class knows, there are many projects that de¬ velop through four years of High School, and without the special help of Mr. Mac we might not have succeeded with them. So it is with a special “Thank you” that we would like to give you this recognition, Mr. Mac, we know that we are unlikely to forget you. We hope that you will remem¬ ber us. Thank you, Mr. Mac. 3 4 5 I 11 13 14 16 17 ' OY FACULTY SEATED: (L to R) Mr. Garland, Mr. Stayn. Dr. Wood, Mr. McFarlin. STANDING: (L to R) Mr. Pauff, Mr. Ide, Mr. Teittinen, Mr. Tornrose, Dr. Pierson, Mr. Toto, Mr. Kellett, Mr. DeRusha. JOSEPH F. AIETA Curriculum Director Mathematics Defer not till tomorrow to be wise, Tomorrow’s sun to thee mav never rise. William Congreve JOHN G. BARCLAY Speech, Drama -Appearance almost always deceives; one must not judge by what one sees. Tartuffe by Moliere IRENE BARYLSKI French Optimism is the madness of maintaining that everything is right when it is wrong. Voltaire 20 GEORGE BLAKESLEE Biology “Freedom necessitates responsibility. Responsibility necessitates freedom.” ROBERT G. BOUCHER Chemistry think; therefore, I am. Descartes ANNETTE BUSSE English “I don’t have a ‘message’ for you but 1 do have some reading hsts.” DONALD J. BURKE Physics Don’t it always seem to go that we don ' t know what we’ve got till it’s gone. Joni Mitchell MARIE L. BUTERA Physical Education It is not what he has, nor even what he does, which directly expresses the worth of a man, hut what he is. Henri Frederic Amiel MARY M. BUFFETT Parent Counselor To understand is to stand under which is to look up to which is a good way to understand ... it ain’t easy. Corita Kent GARY J. CANDELET Industrial Arts “Frustration and satisfaction together is an equal to total involvement.” ROBERT J. CARINI Guidance “Take care.” O ' ) LUCY C. CARTLAND French Every man takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world . . . Arthur Schopenhauer HUGH W. CHANDLER Guidance, Chairman “Advice is seldom welcome; and those who want it the most always like it the least.” DANIEL J. CRONIN Mathematics If you feel comfortable in yourself you don’t love yourself and you don’t hate your¬ self you just live. Frederick Peris LEO J. CRONAN Social Studies, Driver Education “Is health important? Good health is everything.” ELINOR F. COSGROVE Physical Education I “A winner is never a quitter; a quitter is never a | winner.” | I t ! DONALD M. DUNCAN Industrial Arts, Chairman From compromise and things half done. Keep me with stern and .stubborn pride; And when at last the fight is won, God, keep me still unsatisfied Louis Untermeyer 23 JOSEPH D. EMERSON I ROBERT FRANK English “If only I could put into English the wis¬ dom I have for you—the Graduating Class—, you surely would all live a long, happy, prosperous life.” BETH M. FOSTER Mathematics We may achieve climate, but weather is thrust upon us. O. Henry WALTER J. FIELDS Mathematics The direction in which education starts a man will determine his future life. Plato Social Studies “What could I possibly say in September that would still hold true in June?” 24 MARY W. FRENNING Guidance Never a Up is curled with pain that can ' t be kissed into smiles again. Francis Bret Harte DONALD E. GARLAND Principal “Better to burn out than rust out.” RICHARD F. GILL Social Studies Learning is acquired by reading books; but the much more necessary learning, the knowledge of the world, is only to be acquired by reading men and studying all the various editions of them. Lord Chesterfield CONSTANCE D. GARTLAND Business Education The fool wonders; the wise man asks. Benjamin Disraeli DONALD V. GEARAN Dean of Students Mechanical Drawing There is no failure e.xcept in no longer trying. Unknown 25 GEORGE R. HARRIS Physical Education When the One Great Scorer Comes to write against your name, lie marks not that vou won or lost But how you played the game. Grantland Rice MARTHA J. HATCH Art And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter, and the sharing of pleasures. Kahil Gibran CHAREES S. HATCH English Words move, music moves Only in time; but that which is only living Can only die. Words, after speech, reach Into the silence. Only by the form, the pattern. Can words or music reach The stillness, as a Chinese far still Moves perpetually in its stillness. From “Burnt Norton” by T.S.Eliot ANGEEA N. HEPTNER Spanish That man may last, but never lives. Who much receives, but nothing gives. Thomas Gibbons 2 () RUSSELL S. HENSEL Science “Tomorrow never comes.” DOUGLAS IDE Assistant Principal Goodwill is the mightiest practical force in the universe. Charles Fletcher Dole CAROL HOWARD Social Studies Shallow men believe in luck. Ralph Waldo Emerson JOSEPH E. JORDAN Chemistry Life is measured not by its duration, but by its donation. Peter Marshall NATALIA KAKTINS Russian War on the one hand is such a terrible, such an atrocious thing, that no man, espe¬ cially no Christian man, has the right to assttme the responsibility of begin¬ ning it. Leo Tolstoy THELMA C. HOYLE Business Education, Chairman May you live all the days of your life. Jonathon Swift 27 JOYCE W. LASHWAY Mathematics “Life lived for others is a life worthwhile.” ROBERT E. LAVIN Art. Curriculum Director THOMAS MAMOS Business Education For of all sad words Of tongue and pen. The saddest are these: “It might have been!” John Greenleaf Whittier 28 BRUCE L. MacDONALD English, Curriculum Director “Be skeptical about what you know to be true.” ALEX MANZO Mathematics Things are seldom what they seem; Skim milk masquerades as cream. W.S. Gilbert IRV MARSDEN Science, Curriculum Director “Metaphor? Metaphor! Poet? Painter? Physicist? Right on!” LEE MARSH Social Studies Ao man is free who is not master of himself Epictetus DENNIS McCOWAN Mathematics “Could you prove it to an aborigine?” CLAIR c. McDonough English The day shall not be up so soon as , To try the fair adventure of tomorrow. William Shakespeare “May all your tomorrows be ‘fair adventures’.” 29 CHARLES F. MEDFORD Mathematics “Graduation is but a vespers, an eventide to ever hopeful and promising tomorrows.” MICHAEL A. MENDELSOHN Guidance “Where are you running . . . what do you want out of life . . . stop and think about it for a while.” LUCY MENK Guidance Being entirely honest with oneself is a good exercise. Sigmund Freud SUSAN W. MEIRY Riology Nature’s first green is gold. Her hardest hue to hold. Her early leaf’s a flower; But only so an hour. Then leaf subsides to leaf So Eden sank to grief So dawn goes down today. Nothing gold can stay. Robert Frost GEORGE W. MICKUS English So long as I remain alive and well I shall continue to feel strongly about prose style, to love the surface of the earth, and to take pleasure in solid objects and scraps of useless information. George Orwell 30 JAMES MORAN Art The possible is irrelevant, so it is only worth trying for the impossible. Robert Theobald LAWRENCE A. NILSON Biology No one is injured save by himself. Erasmus LOU PALENA History “The next few years in your life will be a time when your ideals will be tested in ac¬ tion as never before. Keep those ideals, but never forget that: PERFECTION IS THE ENEMY OF GOOD.” RONALD J. MORI Music, Curriculum Director “Everyone is responsive to music and can find satisfaction and enjoyment through experience with it. Make music a vital part of your life—as a consumer or producer of music—and your life will be enriched in many ways.” RON O’LAUGHLIN Physical Education Give me a man that is capable of devotion to anything, rather than a cold, calculating average of all the virtues. Francis Bret Harte 31 MARSHALL G. PRATT English Let me tell you something. Con¬ fusion is a luxury which only the very, very young can possibly afford and you are not that young anymore . . . You do, sometimes, remind me of the kind of man who is tempted to put himself in prison in order to avoid being hit by a car. James Baldwin DOROTHY A. RAYMOND English Then learnedst thou how much harder it is to give properly than to take properly, and that bestowing well is an art—the last, subltest master art of kindness. Friedrich Nietzsche JOSEPH C. ROCHE French We have not here an abiding city. Saint Paul Hebrews 13:14 ARNOLD F. SANTOSPAGO Mechanical Drawing, Work Study III habits gather by unseen degrees; As brooks made rivers. Rivers run to seas. John Dryden ANTHONY M. SAMMARCO Erench. Spanish La jeunesse croit beaucoup de choses qui son! fausses; la vieillese doute de beaucoup de ( hoses qui sont vraies. French Proverb 32 CHARLOTTE SHOEMAKER Art The great mind knows the power of gentleness, Only tries force, because persuasion fails. Robert Browning CHARMIAN B. SPERLING English Learn we the larger life to live. To comprehend is to forgive. Henrietta Heathorn ROBERT W. STARMER Physical Education, Director “Yes! I believe you BUT . . MARJORIE STEIN English If a man does not keep pace with his companions, per¬ haps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however meas¬ ured or far away. Henry David Thoreau SHELDON G. STERNBURG Spanish El que hov cae, puede levantarse manana. Proverb from Don Quijote 33 JOHN W. VEGA Physical Education, Pool Happiness is the only good; The time to be happy is now; The place to be happy is here; The wav to be happv is to make others so. Robert Ingersoll JOSEPH A. VEROSEK Social Studies To be indifferent—for whatever reason—is to deny not only the validity of existence, but also its beauty. Be¬ tray and you are human; torture your neighbor, you’re still a man. Evil is human; weakness is human; indif¬ ference is not. Elie Wiesel TERRY J. VEITCH Industrial Arts “A chicken in every pot—a Camero in every garage.” SHEILA VOGT Choral Music A bell is no bell till you ring it, A song is no song till you sing it. And love in your heart wasn’t put there to stay . . . Love isn’t love till you give it away. Oscar Hammerstein The Sound of Music ROBERT V. WALKER English As if you could kill time without injuring eternity. H. D. Thoreau 34 BEVERLY A. WELLER Mathematics “Awareness! The togetherness of people. The interchange of ideas. The enjoyment of beauty.” JOHN C. WILLIAMS Social Studies “The morning dawns, old— Novel bird the time, today. And man, God, nature.” JANET WOHLERS French How dull it is to pause, to make an end. To rust unburnished, not to shine in use . .. Come, my friends, ’tis not too late to seek a newer world. Tennyson’s Ulysses r THERESA M. ZAMPROGNO French Curriculum Director Je pense, done je suis. Descartes MARTHA ZELINKA Mathematics If we do well here, we shall do well there: I can tell you no more if I preach a whole year. John Edwin 35 I EVELYN MORIARTY Bookkeeper MARIE MacRAE Guidance Aide JEAN DOW Principal’s Secretary EDITH ASQUITH Aide, Main Office RUTH LASCOUTZ Secretary, Guidance Office POLLY ANN SMITH Attendance Office Aide ALICE B. THORNHILL Librarian ELORENCE GRATCY Secretary, Attendance Office JANE HOSTERMAN Nurse 36 MARGARET FREEDMAN Foreign Language Aide JEANNE SAUNDERS Foreign Language Aide RACHEL WYCHE Audio-Visual ELEANOR SOORIAN Mathematics Aide CAFETERIA STAFF JEAN GATTl Science Aide CUSTODIAL STAFF George Sinclair Samuel Moore William MacLeod 37 pi ' 1 DANIEL J. ABDUN-NABI 184 Hickory Road September 15 The permanent temptation of life is to con¬ fuse dreams with reality. The permanent defeat of life comes when dreams are surrendered to reality. James A. Michener PETER ACCONCIA 14 Briar Lane August 26 Pete . . . known for his red Mustang “66” . . . hopes to be future Triple “A” owner . . . Life Philosophy: to get rich fast . . . Frequently seen in the senior lounge play¬ ing Ping Pong . . . “Things go better with Coke” DOUGLAS S. ALCAIDE 106 Merriam Street February 4 Va Que Vert CAROL M. ANDERSON 74 Country Drive August 24 Td like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony . . . Coca Cola SUSAN L. ACKLES 70 North Avenue November 3 And, indeed, one’s personality dissolved as a grain of salt in the sea; but at the same time the infinite sea seemed to be contained in the grain of salt. Arthur Koestler 40 PETER C. ANTON 43 Sherburn Circle August 13 To laugh after and much; to win the re¬ spect of intelligent people and the affection of children; to earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false friends; to appreciate beauty, to find the best in others; to leave the world a bit better whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, or a redeemed social condition; to know even one life has breathed easier be¬ cause vou lived. This is to have succeeded Ralph Waldo Emerson CLAUDIA ANZA 67 Spring Road August 17 JEFFREY P. ARPIN 51 Colchester Road August 25 Jeff, Arpo . .. “You only go around once in life, so you’ve gotta grab for all the gusto you can” . . . “golden” soccer center . . . flirtatious . . . prom committee chair¬ man . . . Elvis Presley fan . . . “such a dill factor” . .. remember a 1200 beer can pyramid . . . warm personality . . . unique sense of humor . . . one of a kind. ELIZABETH G. ATKINS 90 King’s Grant Road August 11 Claudia, Clod ... “Oh, mother!” . . . Jun¬ ior Year in Italy . . . powerful fullback on hockey field . . . enjoys dancing, horses, and sports . . . year-round tan . . . easy to talk to . . . full of life. I tasted the odor of a hundred blossoms and the green .shimmer¬ ing of innumerable leaves and the sparkle of sifted sunbeams and the breath of highland breezes and the song of many birds and the murmur of flowing streams—all in a wild strawberry Henrv Van Dyke 41 CLYDE W. AVERILL 15 Columbine Road November 21 Life is short and the art long; the occasion instant, experiment perilous, decision difficult. Hippocrates DOUGLAS K. BACHELDER 81 Chestnut Street August 13 Two roads diverged in a vellow wood, and _ took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference. Robert Frost GEORGE N. BENOIT 70 Black Oak Road September 25 shall not be there. I shall rise and pass. Bury mv heart at Wounded Knee. Steven Vincent Benet JILL A. BENTLEY 20 Green Lane November 10 Jill . . . “Did they really mean what they said?” . . . red hair and freckles . . . week¬ end parties . . . pet peeve: being mistaken for an underclassman . . . sensitive . . . Triple A worker . . . tiniest senior. “It all comes,” said Pooh crossly, “of not having front doors big enough. ” A. A. Milne 42 STEVEN H. BLACK 65 Autumn Road March 25 JONATHAN BILLINGS 244 Ridgeway Road October 26 Jon, Mr. B . . . “You’re on your way out” . . . Latest night out, 10 o’clock . . . very ambitious . . . lots of sportsmanship and spirit. .. class athlete .. . quiet, but likely to succeed. MELISSA M. BOSHCO 36 Saddle Hill Road June 20 We judge ourselves by what we feel we are capable of doing, hut others judge us by what we have done. Longfellow Live by the foma (harmless untruths) that make you brave, strong, healthy and happy. Cat ' s Cradle Kurt Vonnegut GARY R. BOUTELL 35 Westland Road DEBORAH A. BOYES January 31 61 Oakdale Road March 28 Life belongs to the living, and he who lives must he prepared for changes. Goethe If vou stop to be kind, you must often swerve from your path. Mar Webb 43 DOUGLAS B. BRADLEY 123 Robin Road April 12 Doug . . . “How are you?” . . . wants to be a disc jockey . . . “Live my life the way it should be lived” . . . William F. Buckley . . . friendly. KATHLEEN E. BREWER 53 Bemis Road April 2 Kathy, Fish Face, Ski-Kat . . . “Guess what happened?” . . . known for her long blonde hair . . . wants to be a secretary . . . outstanding memory; leading all the girls into the boys room in first grade. JEFFERY A. BRODERICK 74 Pinecroft Road January 4 And that wind would rush upon him with its one wild life and fill him with its spirit. Ashe gulped it down into his aching lungs, his whole life seemed to soar, to swoop, to veil with the demonic power, flight, and in¬ vincible caprice of the wind’s huge well . . . Thomas Wolfe GARY BROMBERGER 111 Montvale Road July 27 Nature has given us two ears hut only one mouth. Disraeli HOWARD BRONSON 64 Country Drive November 30 “Then came” ... “1 think so” . . . new ad¬ dition to the senior class . . . friendly, out¬ spoken ... ski bum . . . Shirley Temple fan . . . Mrs. Heptner’s Spanish class . . . would like to study medicine. 44 i DAVID L. BROWNELL 45 Willard Road November 6 The whole of science is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking. Albert Einstein SAM BUSH 3 Bittersweet Lane October 21 Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light. Dylan Thomas KATHY L. BURNS Deerhaven Road, Lincoln June 21 Kathy . . . “Life is what you make it” . . . fond memories of Junior year with many friends . . . seems always to be around when she’s not expected and not around when she is expected . . . pet peeve: argu¬ ments between friends . . . aspires to be¬ come a beautician. i i ROBERT H. BUSTIN 12 Jones Road August 7 Bob . . . VW mechanic . . . remembers Miss Torpie . . . ambition: electronics engineer . . . can be found in the auditorium . . . technician for all the plays . . . pet peeve: big cars . . . always willing to help. 45 PHYLLIS J. BUTLER 107 North Avenue September 23 Phyl . . . enthusiastic majorette . . . faith¬ ful McDonald’s and Hazel’s Bakery worker . . . known for her laugh . . . cheerful and sincere. w o JOHN M. CAMPBELL 26 Perrv Lane April 14 When I was voung and they packed me off to school and taught me how not to play the game. 1 didn’t mind if they groomed me for success or if they said that I was just a fool. So left there in the morning with their God tucked underneath my arm; their half baked smiles and the hook of rules. based on Ian Anderson MARIE B. CACACE 241 North Avenue April 19 Hunk . . . one of the Chinese food gang . . . the blonde bombshell with the green mustang . . . “Schlitz” . , . class treasurer for 3 years . . . the beach ... an excuse to get out of every class . . . our Swedish import. RANDALL Q. CAIL 11 Silver Hill Road July 2 Randy . . . known for his Volkswagen with the blue fender . . . school technician . . . ambition: hotel management . . . con¬ cerned about dishonesty in people ... al¬ ways in there to help out. J. STEPHEN CAMPBELL 70 Sherburn Circle February 12 Steve. Soup . . . “Live life and enjoy it!’’ . . . man with feet of wings . . . “write on” . . . Mr. Pratt’s English class . . . out¬ standing memory: Field Day, 1970. 4T. LAURA V. CARLSON 7 Holly Circle August 18 ROBERTA D. CARLSON 203 Hickory Road February 25 When I leave home to walk to school. Dad always savs to me, “Marco keep vour eyelids up and see what you can see. ” Theodore Geisel J. SCOTT CARNEY 22 Summer Street March 11 To me, he has all fault who has no fault at all. Who can look at the sun at noon? Give me the low sun. It has the color. Alfred, Lord Tennyson Patience, gentlemen, and shuffle the cards. Cervantes CAROLYN C. CARPENTER 1 Cherry Brook Road January 18 Charpentier, C.C. ... “I don’t know” . . . musical interests . . . FHA . .. Mrs. Fos¬ ter’s math class . . . Alfred Hitchcock fan . . . likes old movies . . . field hockey and lacrosse player . . . helpful. ROBIN M. CARROLL 126 Beaver Road January 8 Deep peace of the running wave to you. Deep peace of the flowing air to you. Deep peace of the quiet earth to you. Deep peace of the shining stars to you. Deep peace of the watching shepherds to you. Deep peace of the Son of Peace to you. Irish Treasures 47 JOSEPH P. CLAIR 50 Apple Crest Road February 24 Big Joe ... a different car every day interested in waterskiing and fish¬ ing ... “Tell ya what Tm gonna do” hopes to be the next owner of Clair Buick . . . always likes a good time. DANA R. CLARE 32 Pelham Road February 10 Dana . . . “It was really far out” . . . soccer co-captain . . . memorable pool tourna¬ ments with Bill and Rob at Carlson s . . . cheerful . . . model A car nut . . . full of energy . . . powerful build. GORDON H. CLARK 476 Conant Road October 21 He was ditched by a shack and a cruel fate. The con highballed, and the manifest freight Pulled out on the stem behind the mail, And she hit the ball on a sanded rail. from The Gila Monster Route by Post and Norton JAMES A. COAN 38 Golden Ball Road May 1 Love is possible, evil is reversible, and man can live liberated from his past. Unknown MICHAEL CHEN 17 Holly Circle March 30 Chen . . . known for not being known . . . “You goof!” . . . photographer . . . cars and motorcycles . . . gala class party fresh¬ man year . . . brief soccer history . . . Be yourself.” 48 JOHN F. COBURN 115 Meadowbrook Road November 1 CYNTHIA K. COOK 51 Coring Road November 21 Cindy .. . “You’re kidding!” . . . life phi¬ losophy: keep a good disposition and have a good sense of humor . . . hopes to teach music . . . teacher’s aide . . . enjoys tennis, swimming and skiing. KIMBERLY COBURN 171 Church Street September 6 Kim . . . “Forget it!” . . . incessant hum¬ mer . . . “Keep your sense of humor” . . . unique laugh . . . enjoys the out of doors . . . junior year in France . . . qa va? ... bi¬ ology . . . Kurt Russell . . . outgoing. . . . some burn quickly and with ambition quench their source. Yet here and there a more passive ember plows warm until morninp. F. Baffett BARBARA A. COLE 21 Radcliff Road March 6 Barbie . . . likes meeting people . . . talkative, always has something to say . . . winters on the slopes . . . sensitive .. . “We need one another, so I will be friends. Each man as mv brother, each man as my friend.” American Folk Song LEE C. CORMAY 26 Willard Road October 3 Lee ... “Hi you guys” . .. known for her homemade peanut butter and jelly sand¬ wiches . . . FTA member . . . would like to go into elementary education . . . Mrs. Heptner . . . friendly ... a smile for everyone. 49 CAROLINE F. CORT 75 Pigeon Hill Road February 11 All lies and jest, stil l a man hears what he wants to hear, and disregards the rest. ” Simon and Garfunkel JONATHAN P. CURTIS 501 Glen Road July 25 Jon. Jay . . . interested in skindiving, ski¬ ing. and swimming . . . Mr. Verovsek fan . , . ambition: oceanographer . . . gradu¬ ates leaving Mr. Jordan finally safe on Glen Road . . . Mi.xed Choir 1, 2. 3. 4 . . . “ fo thine own self be true.” JEAN M. CREMMEN 110 Cherrybrook Road April 8 Jamie . . . one of the Chinese food gang . . . always willing to help . . . soda jerk at Buttrick’s ... “I wonder what he’s doing now?” . . . easy to talk to . . . Patty’s bas¬ ketball coach . . . always on a diet. MAUREEN K. COSTELLO 200 Ridgeway Rd. May 11 Mausie , . . one of the Chinese food gang “Pididdle” . . . “what are you guys talking about?” . . . always laughing . . . beautiful hair . . . known for being crazy. DOUGLAS W. DANCER 58 Lawrence Road November 13 Doug . . . “PMA” . . . enjoys mechanical drawing, golf, tennis, swimming and soc¬ cer . . . friendly to all . . . favorite political figure: Teddy Roosevelt . . . would like to become an engineer. 50 KENNETH DAVIN 14 Overlook Drive August 28 Ken . . . known for size . . . “Enjoy life” . . . interested in architecture . . . spends his free time pursuing his hobbies such as swimming and bike riding . . . soccer. JOHN T. DECAMP 342 Winter Street April 13 Woe is—a me bop om drop a rebop—om well, everybody’s doin’ it please don’t let them ruin it om. Captain Beefheart DANIEL J. DITTMANN 50 Lawrence Road January 22 Dan, Ditty . . . new addition to the senior class. . . outstanding memory; first day of school, 1971 . . . loves football . . . “Car¬ ling Black Label” . . . “You only get to do it once, so do it right.” LESLIE E. DONOVAN 16 Pheasant Trail December 14 We are remarkably adept at believing what we have never seen—and at seeing what we have come to believe. Wendell Johnson 51 LESLIE C. DOWNES 40 Old Colony Road August 19 What sunshine is to flowers, smiles are to humanitv. They are trifles, but scattered along life ' s pathway, the good they do is inconceivable. Joseph Addison GENEVIEVE DUQUET 11. Rue Gal. Maugin 57 Moyeuvre—Garde September 3 France Ginou . . . “Boff!” ... our girl from France ... be what you are ... enjoys swimming, tennis, skiing . . . French ac¬ cent . . . likes to listen to music . . . favor¬ ite teacher; Mrs. Heptner . . . would like to leave the States speaking perfect Eng¬ lish . . . natural. EDWARD A. DOWNY 56 October Lane November 6 We cannot tell the precise moment when friendship is formed. As in filling a vessel drop by drop, there is at last a drop which makes it run over; so in a series of kindness there is at last one which makes the heart run over. James Boswell ROBERT W. DOWSE 87 North Avenue December 7 The word ‘liberty’ in the mouth of Mr. Webster sounds like the word ‘love’ in the mouth of a courtezan. Emerson ELLEN ECKER 1 Spruce Hill Road July 5 Drop him out a window and he’ll fall. Set fire to him and he’ll burn. Bury him and he’ll rot, like other kinds of garbage. The spirit gone, the man is garbage. Joseph Heller 52 4 lift T ALAN M. ENGLER 73 Ash Street April 14 The fool doth think he is wise; but the wise man knows himself to be a fool. Shakespeare PHILIPPE R. EUVRARD 294 Glen Rd. March 2 I do my thing, and you do your thing. I am not in this world to live up to your expectations, And you are not in this world to live up to mine; You are you, and I am I, and if by chance we ever meet each other. It’s beautiful. Frederick Peris i MARK FABRIZIO 43 Bemis Road January 19 Since when have we become familiar? I don’t remember that we ever slept in the gutter together. Remarque SANDRA L. FERGUSON 77 Brook Road February 3 Sandi . . . Dairy Maid at Dairy Joy .. . “Bite your tongue!” . . . enjoys skiing and horses ... pet peeve: ladies in curlers .. . soft spoken . .. live and let live. WILLIAM J. FALLON 55 Hidden Road November 21 Bill . . . “You’re out the window” ... pet peeve; social hangups . . . devoted to ski¬ ing ... the Cape . . . enthusiastic football player . . . Mr. Frank fan ... plans to live a full and happy life. 53 DIEDRI T. FISHER 687 Wellesley Street February 15 Fish. Deedee, Dee . . . Field Hockey bum . . . “This is going to be real big!” ... Wa¬ ter Safety Aid ... Mr. Walker’s vocabu¬ lary tests . . . hates school lunches . . . “I’m sure” . . . warm smile. PATRICIA F. FRANCHl 16 Westcliff Road February 26 Patty . . . one of the Chinese Food Gang . . . Basketball Star-1 point? . . . memo¬ ries; Field Day “70” ... Mr. Walker’s cla.sses . . . vibrant personality and warm smile. KATHARINE H. FFEISCHMANN 71 Concord Road July 6 To him whose elastic and vigorous thought keeps pace with the sun, the day is a per¬ petual morning. Henry D. Thoreau JAMES E. FOX 15 Indian Hill Rd. April 2 Jim. Foxy . . . “Who’s havin’ the party?” . . . known for his maroon wagon . . . out¬ standing memory: Field Day 1970 ... a dedicated football player . . . practically built the junior prom ... the Cape . .. generous and enthusiastic. DANIEL V. FRENCH 111 Sudbury Road August 7 Sailing in the wind in a milk white gown, dropping circle stones on a sun dial, playing hide and seek with the ghosts of dawn, lovely moonchild . . . Peter Sinfield FRANCES S. FUCHS 9 Ellis Road April 1 Now welcom somer, with thv sonne soft. That hast this wintres weders overshake. Geoffrey Chaucer GARY GLICKMAN 372 Winter Street November 25 Remember that a man’s life lies all within this present, as it were hut a hair’s breadth of time; as for the rest, the past is gone, and the future yet unseen. Short, therefore, is man’s life, and narrow is the corner of the earth wherein he dwells. Marcus Aurelius MARTINA M. GAVIN 176 Hickory Road May 24 Tina . . . quiet . . . would like to join the Peace Corps . . . interested in ballet and skiing . . . majorette . . . enjoys French and biology . . . short story writer. DOUGLAS P. GILLESPIE 751 Boston Post Road January 14 Someday I will die. And when I die, I want others to know that have lived . . . for am not just another member of the society. I am me! Anonymous REISA A. GLICKMAN 372 Winter Street January 27 To see the earth as it truly is, small and blue and beautiful in that eternal .silence where it floats, is to see ourselves as riders on the earth together, brothers on that bright loveliness in the eternal cold—broth¬ ers who know now they are truly brothers. Archibald Macleish BRIAN J. GLYNN 26 Arrowhead Road July 22 Brian . . . “oh!” ... shy ... frequently seen in the Senior Lounge relaxing ... en¬ joys golf and hockey . . . works as a caddy ... fan of J.F. Kennedy .. . friendly. BETSY GOODE 44 Ledgewood Road December 26 The world is round and the place which may seem like the end may also be only the beginning. Ivy Baker Priest JAMES S. GOODWIN 181 Merriam Street June 11 Jim, Jimmy . . . quiet . . . would hke to make plenty of money and travel . .. “Not to be first always, just more often.” loves all sports . . . Rocky Marciano fan. MARTHA L. GOVE 12 Hubbard Road April 13 Face into the wind and your hair will never blow in your eyes. A Friend HALCOTT GRANT 55 Wellesley Street December 2 It is easy in the world to live after the world’s opinion: it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude. Unknown 56 THOMAS W. GRIFFIN 20 Pigeon Hill Road May 16 Tom .. . Quiet .. . likes to run . . . cafe¬ teria fights . . . memories of Mr. Mac¬ Donald . . . cross country, indoor track, spring track . . . brief basketball history . . . happy. JOHN N. GUIDI 55 Cherry Brook Road July 28 John, PE . . . “Buon Giorno!” . . . soccer enthusiast . . . pet peeve; laziness . . . Bill Cosby . . . thinks about becoming an engi¬ neer ... “Never say die.” LISA M. GUSTIE 170 Ridgeway Road August 12 Lisa, Lis . . . White Bonneville Bomb . .. Pet Peeve: slow drivers . .. “I’m sure” . .. CVS Girl . . . shortest skirts . .. enjoys summer sports . . . always ready to listen .. . cheerful. DAVID A. HARRISON 8 Rockport Road November 13 Dave, “toe” . . . “How ya doin’?” ... as¬ pires to become a pilot or engineer . . . loves to travel . . . “Everything passes; everything changes; just do what you think you should do.” WILLIAM P. GRANT 55 Wellesley Street November 30 You are not wrong, who deem that my days have been a dream; vet if hope has flown away in a night, or in a day, in a vision, or in none, is it therefore the less gone? Edger Allan Poe 51 CHRISTINE MARIE HEALEY 52 Robin Road May 14 SHEILA L. HEFFERNON 91 Montvale Road February 15 Chris . . . “Catch ya later!” . . . CMH jew¬ elry . . . “Don’t worry about the things you’ve already done.” . . . energetic cheer¬ leader . . . diving . . . Chinese food . . . sports fan. People who need people are the luckiest people in the world. Bob Merrill CHARIS A. HOLT 52 Doublet Hill Road March 22 To be the child of one’s time. Naturalism against your own self Objectivity of inner vision. Max Beckmann CHRISTOPHER G. HILL 61 Woodchester Drive September 18 Chris . . . known for his super wheelies and bell star helmet . . . enjoyed Mr. Jor¬ dan’s Chemistry class ... the hodaka . . . outstanding memory: winning trials con¬ test . . . motorcycles, motorcycles, motorcycles. BRUCE R. HOWARD 137 Wellesley Street March 4 Life is full of messes. Wisdom is choosing the messes you enjoy. Dorothy Parker 58 1 I F. TAYLOR JOHNSON 60 Pinecroft Road August 19 Tail, Pauncho, Tiki . . . campaigns for Congressman Drinan . . . “Gatherings” . . . the golden rule . . . intramural hockey . . . collects coins . . . interested in music . . . ambition: “to be able to do what I please.” CATHERINE C. JONES 78 Possum Road September 9 Cathy .. . “cool it!” . .. candy striper at Newton-Wellesley . . . enjoys singing and making banana bread . . . Simon and Garfunkel . . . ambition: airline steward¬ ess .. . would like to return to Germany and Norway . . . leaves with a good wish for the future. NANCY A. JOHNSON 55 Sunset Road May 2 Nook. Nooka . . . “Oh, ya!” . . . crutches at the prom . . . melodic laugh . . . Miss McDonough fan . . . swims at Waltham Boy’s Club Saturdays . . . spirited majorette. MARK B. JOHNSON 621 Wellesley Street August 14 He who would see wonders must travel alone. Unknown BERJ KHANIKIAN 25 Holly Circle September 18 When I was a Child I spoke as a child I understood as a child thought as a child But when became a man I put awav childish things. I Corinthians 13:11 59 I JANET R. KIDD 16 Pembroke Road March 11 Jan .. . “I’m sure!” . . . babysitter ... un¬ mistakable laugh . . . enjoys Spanish class . . . would like to become a dental hygien¬ ist ... works hard and plays hard . . . petite. JAMES G. KLOTZ 21 Driftwood Lane July 22 Jim . . . quiet . . . water balloons for field day practice . . . jeep . . . enjoys science . . . an outdoorsman . . . wrestling heavy¬ weight . . . trip to Africa . . . considerate. JANET L. KIRJASSOFF 7 Rockport Road August 16 A day is wasted without laughter. Nicholas Chamfort KAREN A. KIRKPATRICK 40 Radcliffe Road April 19 Karen . . . wishes to continue her knowl¬ edge in the field of Math and Sciences . . . enjoys sports . . . camp counselor . . . “God gifted each person with one life, so live this life to the fullest.” 60 STEFAN G. KRUG 25 Rolling Lane September 9 The funniest mortals, and the kindest, are those who are most aware of the baffle of being. Unknown RUTH LANDOWNE 67 Woodchester Drive BRUCE LANDRY January 5 70 Beaver Rd. May 19 We haven’t all had the good fortune to be ladies; we haven’t all been generals, or poets, or statesmen; But when the toast works down to the babies, we stand on common ground. Mark Twain Juicy, Ken . . . hockey fan . . . broken nose before the prom . . . humorous . . . outside work: National Drinking Team . . . hates conceited people . . . slow motion action .. . “You’re only young once.” NIKKI LANE 5 Chiltern Road September 29 I took the one-eyed collie to chase rabbits on the upper fields, but it barked at ducks and brought me a tramp’s shoe from a hedge, and lay down with its tail wagging in a rabbit’s hole. Dylan Thomas CHRISTOPHER A. LARSEN 47 Fairview Road May 28 Chris, Tripper . . . fantastic soccer goalie . . . pet peeve: knees . .. class vice-presi¬ dent .. . good sense of humor. . . wants, to be a lawyer . . . philosophy: “Work hard to gain success as well as happiness.” 61 WENDY LARSEN 47 Fairview Road May 10 “Stop teasing me” . . . collects post cards and shells . . . fond memories of junior year . . . friendly to new members of the school . . . favorite teacher: Mr, Gill . . . Home Ec fan . . . Babysitter . . . Everyday is a new beginning. CHERYL C, LEACH 31 Holly Circle July 15 Cheri , . , Orange VW , . , weekends at the Cape . . , always out for a good time , , . not afraid to say what’s on her mind , , , enjoys being a Senior . . , friendly. EDWARD F, LEE 134 Wellesley Street November 25 Ned . , . California heritage , . . “wrong again” , , , plans to replace Pepsi with Coke machines . , . fond memories of a winter without snow . , , interested in sail¬ ing and the Civil Air Patrol , . , favorite teacher: Mr. Burke . . . humorous. i LOIS M. LEONHARDT 253 Glen Road April 15 Mav vou live as long as you like, and have all that you like as long as vou live. Anonymous ANDREW E. LEVIN 4 Pond Brook Circle March 9 The most beautiful thing we can e.xperience is the mysterious; it is the source of all true art and science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and .stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eves are closed. O — Albert Einstein if SUSAN LINDER 272 North Avenue October 17 Sue . . . claims she is always in the wrong place at the wrong time . . . first to receive a 4 by S ' A yellow slip junior year. . . “If you can’t make it in Weston, you can’t make it anywhere.” f KIM LORD 30 Ash Street July 21 Kim . . . every Wednesday, “no English tomorrow” . . . babysitter . . . ruined ny¬ lons . . . skiing, tennis . . . Spanish. Math . . . favorite teacher; Mr. Jordan . . . inter¬ ested in secretarial work . . . cheerful helper. 7 was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of be¬ lief it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the winter of pain, it was the spring of hope. Charles Dickens (Tale of Two Cities) SARAH E. MacMILLAN 132 Wellesley Street July 12 Sally .. . machine gun Sal . . . “Oh, you’re so sad!” . . . long blonde hair . . . unmis¬ takable laugh . . . forever truckin’ . . . sweet and sincere. CATHERINE E. MANNICK 81 Bogle Street October 30 I do not know what I may appear to the world: but to mvself seem to have been only like a bov playing on the sea shore, and diverting mvself in now and then, find¬ ing a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lav all undiscovered before me. Sir Isaac Newton 63 JOAN M. MANNING 30 Rolling Lane December 7 No man can live with the terrible knowledge that he’s not needed Unknown PETER A. MARSTON April 16 Peter, Pete . . . the one who talks the most and says what he says . . . enjoys anything . . . favorite teacher: Coach Starmer . . . Elip Wilson fan . . . life philosophy; “I’ll try anything once.” MARTIN D. MARSHALL 29 Bradyll Road October 13 It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing. Duke Ellington MARTHA J. MATTHEWS 247 Glen Road May 9 Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves. Sir James Barrie DEBBIE MARTIN 19 Silver Hill Road August 25 Deb . . . tolerant and understanding . . . known for her high-pitched laugh . . . yel¬ low culottes . . . ambition: to help and un¬ derstand people . . . avoids arguments. 64 STEVE MATTSON 9 Newton Street September 3 The wheel that squeaks the loudest is the one that gets the grease. Josh Billings c. JOHN McCarter 14 Newton Street December 8 The entire world is in labor . . . this great planet, bursting with riches, is grasping and riving in agony, and all we do is sit by the bedside concocting wavs to cheat the tax authorities. Unknown WILLIAM W. MATZELEVICH 80 Cherry Brook Road October 13 Bill . . . lifeguard at the “pit” ... pet peeve: idealists, extremism . . . band and orchestra participant . . . enjoys chem¬ istry, eating, Mark Twain, and sleeping . . . excels in all fields . . . tall, reserved, handsome. LAWRENCE L. McGLYNN 15 Ware Street October 14 Larry . . . golfer . . . “That’s cool” . . . summers working at the Case Estates . . . pet peeve: girls . . . favorite subject: girls . . . cross country, track . . . would like to become a landscaper . . . “Live the most, the best.” The question is not. Can they reason? Sor, can they talk? But can they suffer? Jeremy Bentham 65 DAVID A. McMULLIN 87 Summer Street October 2 Dave . . . wants to be a weatherman . . . “I’ve always wanted to do this” . . . Art Buchwald Fan . . . enjoys all sports, espe¬ cially tennis . . . loves to travel ... a hard worker who’s likely to succeed. PETER E. MELONE 54 Bemis Road November 22 Pete . . . supersensitive . . . “Really, what?” . . . hates having to speak in front of the class . . . long, beautiful eyelashes . . . C.Y.O. treasurer . . . ea.sy to talk to and understanding . . . fun-loving. STEPHEN A. McSHANE 13 Ledgewood Road April 25 MICHAEL J. MELONE 225 Boston Post Road November 2 Mike, Lamonie, “Bubbles” . . . gold sparkle dune buggy . . . construction worker . . . eats turtles . . . “Oh, hush!” . . . memorable parties at Wetherbee’s . . . conscientious football player . . . beautiful eyes . . . warm smile. Then strip, lads, and to it, though sharp be the weather, And if, by mischance, you should happen to fall. There are worse things in life than a tumble on heather, A nd life is itself but a game of football. Sir Walter Scott JOHN E. MENDELSON 106 Bay State Road January 28 A road followed to its end leads precisely nowhere. b( Frank Herbert MARY MESSINA 120 Beaver Road July 22 came into this world not chiefly to make this a ood place to live in. but to live in it, he it good or bad. Henry David Thoreau MARY JANE MORRIS 97 Sherburn Circle September 21 Is it hard to make arrangements with yourself, when you’re old enough to repay, hut young enough to sell? Neil Young KATHLEEN F. MORIARTY 37 Sherburn Circle December 29 Happiness is the only good; the time to be happy is now; the place to be happy is here; the wav to be happy is to make others so. Robert Ingersoll LYNN K. MORTON 52 Arrowhead Road September 26 Lymbo . . . knowm for her “vile” . . . “jllay carumba!” . . . loves astronomy class with Mr. Hensel . . . Karate ... fa¬ vorite person in history: .Mr. Palena . . . one of the purple bugs . . . pet peeve: pis¬ tachio ice cream . . . giggly and good natured. 4 f ' ALISON J. MORK 12 Woodland Road May 25 I am but mad north-north-west. When the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a heronshaw. Shakespeare MARK T. MURPHY 165 Country Drive June 17 If he is indeed wise he does not hid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather lead you to the threshold of your own mind. Kahlil Gibran VINCENT T. NISHINO 281 Country Drive February 22 ■ CYNTHIA NIED 352 South Avenue May 6 Cheerfulness keeps up a kind of daylight in the mind, and fills it with a steady and per¬ petual serenity. Joseph Addison MARY S. NOBLE 148 Country Drive November 25 It is better to know nothing at all than to know what ain’t so. Josh Billings o VV AC A CROIVN A A SVMBOU of=- amp some WEAR IT BECAUSE IT (3IVES THEM AN AIR. OF authority. I-Y WHY POES OUR KINS WEAR aHEPl r 68 RUTH R. NOBLE 148 Country Drive November 25 still find each day too short for all the thoughts I want to think, all the walks I want to take, all the hooks I want to read, and all the friends I want to see. John Burroughs ROBIN OAKLEY 4 Deer Path Lane May 14 Robin . . . “Good grief!” “REALLY?” . . . most harebrained ideas . . . enthusiastic bike rider . . . leaves Weston her sleepless nights ... pet peeve: stubborn kickstands and heavy books . . . working toward be¬ coming a surgeon ... “A person has to make life worth living for himself.” KATHLEEN P. O’HARA 79 Nobscot Road January 22 Kathy, Frack . . . one of the Chinese food gang . . . always where the trouble is . . . “I don’t know” ... ski bum . . . has a ten¬ dency to run into things . . . unforgettable personality . . . easy to talk to . .. sincere. C. DANIEL ORTH 455 Glen Road August 14 Hermit hoar, in solemn cell wearing out life ' s evening gray, smite thv bosom, sage, and tell, what is bliss, and which the wav? This I spoke: and speaking, sighed scarce repressed the starting tear; when the smiling sage replied Come, mv lad, and drink some beer.” Dr. Johnson DAVID S. ORTH 455 Glen Road August 14 Fear no more the heat of the sun. Nor the furious winter ' s rages; Thou thv worldly task hast done. Home art gone and ta ' en thy wages: Golden lads and girls all must. As chimney-sweepers. Come to dust. William Shakespeare 69 JANE F. PARK Bradford Road Somehodv tell me. have I been gifted or robbed? Stephen Stills DOROTHY G. PASKIEWICZ 38 Conant Road November 6 Dot. Dottie . . . part time worker at the public library . . . enjoys cooking, sewing, and reading ... pet peeve; homework . . . favorite subject; business machines . . . Mrs. Nickerson fan . . . quiet and helpful. PATRICIA PATEY 189 Merriam Street December 2 ROBERT M. PAREEE 342 Conant Road November 21 If music be the play on! food of love. William Shakespeare JAMES W. PEARCE 15 Laurel Road March 3 Drink!—for, once dead, you never shall return. Omar Khayam On ne voit bien qu’avec le coeur. Vessentiel est invisible pour les veux. Antoine De Saint Exupery 70 THOMAS G. PELSUE 93 Concord Road August 21 Tom . .. adept trumpet player . . . band member since fifth grade . . . known for his blue Ford Falcon . . . one of the Sar¬ gent gang . . . frequents the bikie scene . . . interested in Jazz . . . easy-going . . . great smile. PAUL PINA 90 Sherburn Circle May 17 Paul, Pigeon . . . socializes in the smoking lounge ... is a member of the U.S. Army .. . enjoys Mr. Palena and Social Science IV . . . girlwatcher . . . superfriendly . . . life philosophy; win. JOHN M. POWERS 6 Page Road August 17 John . . . “Hi!” ... a smile for everyone . . . interested in all sports, especially baseball, basketball, and football ... fa¬ vorite teacher: Mr. Fields . . . great man¬ ager of Weston’s teams. RICHARD C. POWERS 5 Fox Chase Lane August 27 Dick . . . Dicka . . . enjoys frx)tball and ba.seball . . . fond memories of Friday night parties . . . favorite teacher; Mr. Starmer . . . secret smiles. MARIA C. PROVENZANO 171 Ridgeway Road July 28 Maria Prov. Bemea . . . spirited cheer¬ leader . . . active . . . enjoys sciences and math . . . Prom Court . . . popular with evervone . . . I ' m sure” . . . mother’s yel¬ low car . . . distinctive laugh. 71 NANCY RAFFIO 30 Holly Circle May 25 A radical is a man with both feet firmly planted in the air. A conservative is a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned how to walk. A reactionary is a somnambulist walking backwards. Franklin D. Roosevelt RANDALL RICHARD 45 Chiltern Road October 5 My motto as I live and learn Is dig and be dug in return. Langston Hughes I must go back where all the ladders start To the foul rag—and-bone shop of the heart. Yeats BRIAN J. RICHARDSON 159 Merriam Street December 4 Brian, B.B. . . . can be found in the music room . . . interested in sailing and physics ... a thorough student . . . “If you have a lemon, make lemonade’.” PHILIP W. RICHARDSON 59 South Avenue August 25 Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in. Henrv David Thoreau CARL N. ROSE 184 Winter Street January 17 Strives to be best in life . . . pet peeve: liver . . . favorite teacher: Mrs. Heptner . . . interested in motorcycles, hunting, and hiking ... to live on a farm in the country. 72 NEIL RUBADO 34 Lantern Lane December 12 Independence? That’s middle class blas- phemv. We are all dependent on one an¬ other, every soul of us on earth. George Bernard Shaw JEAN P. RULAND 22 Bradford Road April 29 Only when you are empty are you at stand¬ still and balanced. Kahlil Gibran ELAINE C. SANGIOLO 179 Newton Street June 29 Forsake not an old friend, for the new is not comparable unto him ... a new friend is as new wine: when it is old thou shalt drink it with plea.sure. Ecclesiastes 19:10 HEATHER S. SAUNDERS 15 Ellis Road May 27 Cathy, I’m lost, I said though I knew she was sleeping. I’m empty and aching and I don’t know why. Counting the cars on the New Jersey Turnpike. They’ve all come to look for America. Paul Simon BENJAMIN B. SAWYER 397 Concord Road May 6 Learn from the birds, the thickets yield; Learn from the beasts, the physic of the field; The art of building the bees receive; Learn of the mole to plow; the worm to weave; Alexander Pope I 73 CHRIS SCHUCH 25 Drabbington Way December 7 Chris ... a green 1960 Peugeot . . . repairs bicycles . . . enjoys math and chemistry . . . memorable bike trips all over New England . . . leaves Mr. Veitch a 1911 De- gol special . . . advice to classmates; Don’t get mad and don’t buy an American car. JULIA SHAW 44 Silver Hill Rd. February 8 Julie, Flo ... one of the Chinese Food Gang . . . known for her green truck . . . often at McDonald’s with the girls . . . cheery personality . . . has the last thing to say . . . creative and talented. RITA C. SHEEHAN 490 Concord Road March 14 Ritz . . . active participant in all sports . . . enjoys horses and strumming her guitar . . . pet peeve; school lunches . . . life phi¬ losophy; Live life with a smile . . . remem¬ bers Mr. Walker’s vocabulary tests . . . gullible. JOSHUA O. SHNEIDER 1716 Deason Drive Edmond. Oklahoma November 26 NANCY M. SHRINER 77 Dean Road January 6 Shrin, Shrinner ... red hair and millions of freckles . . . Fernald School volunteer . . . enjoys sailing, skiing and tennis ... re¬ members Field Day practices at 6;00 a.m. “I’m sure” . . . very friendly . . . fun to be with . . . smiles. Thou wci.si not horn for death, immortal bird! John Keats 74 DAVID G. SIDEBOTTOM 19 Tamarack Road September 13 Dave. Leadbottom . . . professional cynic . . . “Flibbetgibbet!” . . . life philosophy: take the money and run! . . . work within the system . . . interested in food, jogging, reading, research, biology . . . “out¬ standing!” ... an enthusiastic, all around guy. MARK G. SILVERMAN 347 North Avenue March 18 It is surprising how content one can be with nothing definite, only a sense of existence. Henry David Thoreau ESTHER SIRACUSA 93 Woodchester Drive October 1 Essie ... a Cape lover . . . interested in boys, waterskiing, and sailing . . . active member of her class . . . pink champagne . . . and always laughing. STUART M. SMITH 90 Sunset Road June 28 Skip . . . car fiend . . . fast mustang . . . Give me a break!” . . . ambition: to own and run a garage . . . Ed Abbott’s . . . al- wavs driving somewhere . . . cheerful. BARBARA A. STACY 76 Sherburn Circle October 18 Barb. Stace . . . Shorrr” ... red cougar . . . wants to leach high schix)l music . . . talented . . . Oue sera sera” . . . David Frost fan . . . remembers summer of ’71. 75 ROBERT W. STARMER, JR. 247 Boston Post Road May 8 Old Friends are best. King James used to call for his old shoes; they were easiest for his feet. John Seldon DAVID STARR 19 October Lane July 29 Dave . . . Dad’s candy factory . . . hockey, cross country, baseball, golf. . . Mr. Mac¬ Donald fan . . . in his spare time, makes goalie masks and Mary Janes . . . the jeep . . . ambition: airplane pilot . . . leaves the school with all the books bought for Mr. Walker. CHE-CHEE STIGLER 225 North Avenue May 11 Cheech . . . “Don’t let it bother you’’ . . . interested in basketball . . . wants to help people ’cause that’s what life’s all about . . . friendly and outspoken. K.AfHY L. STUART 137 Sherburn Circle June 8 think now that if I had had any intimation that the self I was going to find would turn out to be only the same self from which I had spent so much time in flight. would have stayed at home. James Baldwin 76 FREDERICK SURETTE 357 Conant Road December 12 Ered . . . ambition; make a million . . . seen every Saturday night . . . favo¬ rite subject; business law . . . Benedict Arnold, George Wallace . . . kind and sincere. LINDA J. TEBO 15 Highland Street December 14 “You’re kidding!” . . . always hanging around the center . . . memories of sophomore year ... Triple A worker . . . sewing and cooking . . . wants to help children . . . Love, Peace, and Happiness. CATHY SUSSMAN 100 Cliff Road May 20 Suss . . . known for her New York ac¬ cent . . . “But can I just say one thing?” . .. pet peeve; people who slump when they eat . . . insane . . . “Life is a long road in which you have to follow the signs along the way.” RUSSELL TILL 461 Conant Road September 30 It takes two to speak the truth, one to speak, and another to hear. H.D. Thoreau 77 LAURIE F. TILTON 216 Westerly Road November 26 Seeker of truth Follow no path All paths lead where Truth is here. e.e. Cummings DIANE A. TROW 75 Woodchester Drive January 22 Di . . . “Em sure!” . . . Wellesley Manor Aid . . . memorabl e trip to Florida junior year . . . beautiful hair . . . outside inter¬ ests . . . ambition: nurse . . . decisive WENDY D. UPHAM 479 Conant Road February 5 And he learned compassion, and with his heart of compassion, he saw his enemies; like unto himself; and he learned love; then he was answered. Moody Blues ELIZABETH R. TURNER 27 Brook Road November 19 Thinking is the best wav to travel Moody Blues 78 C. WADE VINAL 37 Baker’s Hill Road June 7 “Friction causes heat.” ’1 =-i .n ——. y. ‘ -1 ' i ' ji THOMAS E. WALTZ 15 Sears Road November 16 A nd if you slop and think about it. You won ' t believe it ' s true; That all the love you’ve been giving Has all been meant for you. Moody Blues KELVIN VON DER HYDE 95 Concord Road June 14 Keep cool: It will be all the same a hundred years hence. Emerson WENDY S. WALDMANN 44 Pine Street September 24 Weed, Wendell ... the other purple bug . . . “Cut the comedy” . . . artistic . . . known for her pic and flo . . . interested in astronomy and astrology . . . mailbox painting . . . memorable ’71 summer . . . musically inclined . . . creative in all fields. JODY WARREN 230 Countrv Drive April 8 Jo . . . “Oh! No!!!” ... A bit gullible . . . weird? . . . does not like risky situations . . . remembers Wetherbee’s parties . . . once a Triple A worker . . . occasionally wears short skirts . . . friendly, outgoing. 7V PAMELA L. WARREN 105 Newton Street February 25 A Chinaman of the Tang Dynasty—and by which definition, a philosopher—dreamed he was a butterfly, and from that moment he was never quite sure that he was not a butterfly dreaming he was a Chinese phi¬ losopher. Envy him in his two—fold security. Tom Stoppard MARY S. WATSON 118 Deerpath Lane May 11 Mary . . . “What are you doing?” . . . weekend parties . . . leaving school for breakfast . . . life philosophy; “Take each day as it comes.” . . . Enjoys skating and swimming . . . Mr. MacDonald . . . always happy to help. MARK G. WEISSBECKER 16 Woodland Road December 12 Mark . . . respects the ' opinions of others . . . interested in training and showing horses . . . would like to own a farm on a Vermont hillside . . . very active in band, orchestra, and Biology Club . . . favorite teacher: Mrs. Meiry . . . won’t forget last day of school. JOHN S. WETHERBEE 60 North Avenue July 26 Bubs . . . “Banana!” . . . card shark . . . known for parties and ping-pong ... fa¬ vorite teacher: Mr. Palena . . . remembers his birtliday party . . . enjoys Social Sci¬ ence . . . quite a sense of humor. ROBERT H. WHITAKER 19 Coburn Road January 10 Nitpicker, Whistakers . . . atomic particle arbiter . . . interested in numismatics, as¬ tronautics, gardening . . . favorite teacher: Mr. Duncan . . . leaves the school his col¬ lection of manhole covers . . . french horn . . . cheerful. 80 DAVID H. WHITNEY 527 Boston Post Road February 27 When you have something to sav, it’s not difficult to sav it. The difficulty comes when vou have nothing to sav and must talk anvway. Vassilis Vassilikos SUSAN M. WHITTEMORE 21 Warren Place April 30 Sue, Susi . . . “Whooper” . . . Maynard Interest .. . Russian . . . hopes to own a horse . . . speech class . . . pet peeve: mid-year and final exams . . . enjoys sew¬ ing .. . happy disposition . . . considerate. L. JAMES WILSON 247 Country Drive July 4 Life is a mystery to be lived, not a problem to be solved Unknown SUSAN J. WILSON 19 Newton Street He who knows not, and knows not that he knows not, is a fool, shun him; He who knows not, and knows that he knows not, is a child, teach him: He who knows, and knows not that he knows, is asleep, wake him; He who knows, and knows that he knows is wi. !e. follow him. Persian Proverb August 14 BARRY WITT 40 Forest Ridge Road April 20 Barry . . . split personalities . . . “Palkala- malolafratz . . . soccer enthusiast . . . Mr. Frank and the Iliad . . . pet peeve: people who think they are better than they really are . . . life philosophy: not to let those people bother me. SI DEBORAH A. WOOD 21 Sunset Road June 30 Deb, Debby . . . “Omanko” ... our latest import from Japan . . . hopes to become a social worker . . . Triple A cashier . . . loves music . . . known for: free butts . . . “Live each day as it comes but don’t forget the past” . . . enthusiastic speaker. ARTHUR N. WOODBURY 68 F ine Street October 15 Art ... enjoys physics . . . remembers making tacos on Arts Festival Day . . usually seen around the track . . . high spirits. ROBERT E WOODSIDE 51 Willard Road February 17 Bob, Woody . . . “Ya, right!” .. . enjoys car racing and motorcycles ... Mr. Mac¬ Donald fan . . . pet peeve: hippies . . . will to school: “my brains” . . . hopes to own a gas station . . . never say do or die. I HOLLY K. WRIGHT 301 Glen Rd. December 21 Holly, Mouth . . . loudest and most con¬ tagious laugh . . . “734-1300” . . . hyperac¬ tive cheerleader . . . monkey blood . . . “Let’s Live” . . . makes everyone around her happy. MICHAEL P. ZIRPOLO 87 Sherburn Circle August 21 Muffins, Miguel Rios . . . “dig it” . . . din¬ ing at Miss Busse’s house . . . Spanish and English . . . hates the complexity of life . . . “Steal one day out of thy life to live” Abraham Lowley 82 They went home for ever. STEVEN SHAWN CLANCY July 20, 1954—November 28, 1968 JAMES FRANCIS NOONAN JR. June 15, 1954-March 26, 1971 83 85 BABY PICTURE INDEX PAGE 1 1. Mary Watson 2. Hal Bill Grant 3. Martha Mathews 4. Reisa Glickman 5. Lisa Gustie 6. Deedee Fisher 7. Jim Wilson 8. Janet Kiijassoff 9. Lois Leonhardt 10. Dave Harrison 11. Chris Larsen 12. Betsy Goode 13. Laura Carlson 14. Diane Trow 15. Phil Richardson 16. Bob Dowse PAGE 2 17. Liza Turner 18. Marie Cacace 19. Randy Call 20. Rita Sheehan 21. Jim Fox 22. Ruth Mary Noble 23. David McMullin 24. Kathy O’Hara 25. Maria Provenzano 26. Tom Waltz 27. Barbie Cole 28. Bruce Landry 29. Alan Engler 30. Doug Gillespie 31. Arthur Woodbury 32. Dan Adbun-Nabi 1. Mike Melone 2. Janet Kidd 3. Fred Surette 4. Carl Rose 5. Cindy Nied 6. Carolyn Carpenter 7. Lee Cormay 8. Sandi Ferguson 9. Sally MacMillan 10. Cathy Sussman 11. Maureen Costello 12. Jeff Arpin 13. Martha Gove 14. Doug Bradley 15. Kathy Brewer 16. Nancy Shriner 17. Julie Shaw 18. Dana Clare 19. Charis Holt 20. Peter Acconcia 21. Patti Franchi 22. Joe Clair 23. Robin Carroll 24. Leslie Downes 25. Rob Starmer 26. Nancy Johnson 27. Leslie Donovan 28. Bill Fallon 29. Ed Downey 30. John Wetherbee 31. Jim Coan 32. Barb Stacy t I I ( 86 WESTON EXCHANGE STUDENTS MARY ANNE FREEDMAN June 22 Hello, babies, welcome to earth. It’s round, wet, and cold in the winter. At the outside, babies. I’d say you have about 100years here. There’s only one rule that I can think of. Dammit, babies, you’ve got to be kind! Kurt Vonnegut PAUL M. WEINER 568 Wellesley Street April 22 Paul .. . “Yeah, right!” ... wants to be a doctor ... never trust anyone too quickly . .. loves Chemistry and Mr. Boucher . . . has been employed as a cleaning lady, bus boy, and truck loader ... friendly . .. sen¬ ior year abroad. EAREY GRADUATES LYDIA R. JOHNSON 343 North Avenue February 22 just came to see if you were here. Unknown CATHERINE R. SEARLE 75 Myles Standish Road January 11 Potentiality has always been our most at¬ tractive characteristic, which is one reason why we have always been so reluctant to commit ourselves to finally realizing it. Phillip Slater 87 1 V -7y, . -.sar fe r« ‘5K(1 - 4 : ' 0t ■mV WIM ■ ▼ JUNIORS I L to R; David MacRae, Bill Deterling, Fred Abbott, Jeffrey Ela, Chns Queen. FIRST ROW: Steve Brown, Paul Davis, Stefan Karas, Robert Winsor, Robert Dun can. SECOND ROW; Robert Reilly, Dan Prawdzik, David O’Connor, Bill McCarthy, David Bell, Tom Phillips. FIRST ROW; Joe Sheehan. SECOND ROW: Karen Gordon, Pat Sallese, Debbie Rasmussen. THIRD ROW: Richard Stockellburg, Dennis Anastos, Paul Sadowski. 90 FIRST ROW: Grant Klotz, Chris Kelley, Dennis Kerwin, Brad Currier, Stephen Underhill. SECOND ROW: Bruce Ferguson, David Teittinen, Mark Sangiolo, Gerald Taylor, Tom Rader, Mike Hooven. FIRST ROW: Martha Connelly, Tom Brown, Stephen Arbetter, John Saint-Amour, Cindy Croatti. SECOND ROW: Mark Roazen, Barnaby Ka- lan, Robert Springbom, Timothy Scott. L TO R: Peter McKearney, John Cremmen, Danny Johnson, Mark Mad¬ den. FIRST ROW: Pamela Bryson, Priscilla Sgroi, Judy Breck, Terri Birger, Laura McMullin, Pat Fox, Dayl Ratner, Ba rbie Page, Lois Wikstrom. SECOND ROW: Audrey Bromberger, Barbara Morrison, Maureen O’Connor, Nancy Weaver, Su¬ zanne Quigley, Laurie Davis, Betsy Lenahan, Nancy Rodman, Linda Loeb. 92 FIRST ROW: Wolfgang Meyer, Robert Merz, Chase Morrison, Lisa Christ¬ opher, Rebecca Warren, Nancy Weil, Sally Ward. SECOND ROW: Robin Kingsbury, Steve Knott, Brenda Schafer, Brad Kulow, Cheryl Smith, Tom Bailey, Pam Gatos. THIRD ROW: Byron Holt, Jonathan Whitaker, Gary De- Rusha, Carol Charpie, Anne Quinlan. SEATED: Rob Pexton, Peter Fay, Bruce Isaaason, Nancy Maher, John Fro- thingham, John Dowse, Steele Shane. STANDING: Mark Eaton, Rob Don¬ aldson, David Magill. SEATED: Peter Way, Sherri Kagno, Susan Sawyer. Candace Kent. KNEEL¬ ING: Steven Uhlir. Benjamin Jackson, Alex Nedzel, Ralph Deterling. 93 STANDING: Donald Schwarzkopf, Michael Alexander, Mark Robbins. UPSIDE DOWN: Peter Valle SEATED: Doug Shaw, Sue Naegle, Lee Cressy. STANDING: Peter Jacobs, Lisa Anza. SEATED: Betsy Chapman, Jill Revotskie, Hans Hug, Amy Leisman, Judy Coleman, Linda Leatherbee. SECOND ROW: Don Cacace, Kim Gould, Cheryl Gould. 94 FIRST ROW: William St. George, James Theall, Rob Libitz, Jeffrey Robbins, Dave Doane. SECOND ROW; John Skakle, Gary Russell, Gordon Siek, Ronald MacKay. L. to R.: Bill Reid, Dave Nelson, Charles Nichols, Brian Fitzpatrick, Bill Rowe. Castelline, David Shepherd. Bruce Campbell, Matt Rolland. 95 L. to R., FIRST ROW: Deborah Schlegel, Linda Phillips, Marianne Senatore. SECOND ROW: Arlene Comeau, Cibele Fagundes, Mary Jo Wilson, Beth Wieler, Susan White. L. to R.: Joe Marino, Peter Wetherbee, Paul Carney. 96 T. to B. FIRST ROW; Ann Noble, Diane Newman. SECOND ROW: Maureen Leombruno, Maureen Raffio, Duffey Trantham, Leanne Lord, Alice Spafford. THIRD ROW: Eileen Muldoon, Sharon Guidi, Sharon Proctor, Mary Surette. MISSING JUNIORS: Elie Baghdady Robert Bennett Paul Benotti Charles Cleary David Colpitts Dale Della Rocca Christopher Doyle Andrea Frank David Goodman Christina Hamilton Oliver Hayes Thomas Ingersoll Alfred LaGreca Jay Lang Richard Lee Todd Lilliott Nancy Luneau Wendy Milne Donald Morris John Murphy Jonathan Orth David Parker Mary Pendergast Mianna Pontoppidan Stephen Sherman Holly Shooshanian Edward Small Kevin Whittemore Peter Williams Hilary Wilson L. to R.; Charles Hiatt. Roger Parker. Andy Gleason. 97 SOPHOMORES L. to R.; Laurel O’Connor, Kevin O’Hara, William King, Deborah Hewett. FIRST ROW: Kim Rosen, Janet Prifti. SEATED: Faith Proctor, Heather Moodie, Mary Valle, Veronica Krek, Nancy Bianchi. STANDING: Lila Bag- hdady, Ann Kirkpatrick, Nancy Hill, Debora Fischer, Suzanne Morris, Isabell Hill. FIRST ROW: Marie Becker, Susanne Stein, Donna Quan. SECOND ROW: Lee Weir, Dianne Argyris, Carol McGarry. THIRD ROW: Ruth Glynn, Lori Morton, Nancy Ingersoll. L. to R.; James Clifton, Bryan Smith, Michael Miller, Russell Cohen, Michael Englander, Albert Campbell, John Sturgis. T. to B. FIRST ROW: Jean Cleary, Therese Provenzano, Julie Pen- dergast. SECOND ROW: Ellen Gallagher, Jo-anne Melone. THIRD ROW: Dianne Manning, Marcia Mancuso, Mary-Helen Me Neff. I W I 1 FIRST ROW: Donald Melone, Frank Hiatt, Jeffrey Starr, Court Queen, David Powers, Steven Shaw, Mark Clair. SECOND ROW: Gerald O’Brien, Peter Smith, Peter Carney, Robert Klotz, Douglas Doane. I 100 FRONT ROW; Doreen Surette, Elizabeth Allen, Margaret MacNeil, Francine Messina, Margaret Cronin. BACK ROW: Beth Glickman, Linda Cistulli. FIRST ROW: Peter Richardson, Jill Ratner, Cathia Campobasso. SECOND ROW: Niki Gatos, Jill Harvey, Cathy Goode, Arthur Nichols. THIRD ROW: Ann Heffernon, Douglas Brown. FRONT ROW: John Doherty, Richard Palumbo, Paul Knowles, Shawn McCarthy, Brian Costello. Mike Soper, Scott Stettner. BACK ROW: Mark Francis, Andrew Forman, Mark Dowell, Robert Woll, Michael Warren, Philip Hutchings. Steve Palmer. 101 SEATED: Alan Weiner, Edward Eaton, Grover Norquist. STAND¬ ING; Kenner Swain, Lawrence Krakauer, Michael Gummeson, Brian Lynch. SEATED: Dayna Jones, Susan Schloemann, Wendy Robinson. STANDING: Daniel Sherman, Susan Freedman, Janet Redden, Brian McCarter. FRONT ROW: Dana Carter. BACK ROW; Robert Nahigian, Richard Brandeis, Jeffrey Abbott, John Wilson, John Aftandihan, Craig Averill, Thomas Raffio, Peter Condakes. 102 L. to R. David Harrison, Kim Laver, Alain Roguzac, Michael Shores, Frank Harrington, Kevin Conley, Scott Shane. FIRST ROW; Kenneth Watson, Diane Ferguson, Charlene Tierney, Philip Thomason, Nancilee Todd, John Miller. SECOND ROW; Donald Campbell, Ben Marsden, William Kidd, Peter Foersterling. FIRST ROW: Barbara Brasco, Valle Nazar, Deborah Honthumb, Janet Ver- planck, Lisa Colodny, Anne Colt. SECOND ROW: Barbara MacRae, Barbara Sanders, Elizabeth Haydock, Jennifer Atkins. FIRST ROW: Richard Janigan, Mark Griffin, Theodore Cormay, Kevin Nolan, William Bond, James Brown. SECOND ROW: Bruce Hill, Kirby Pollock, John Senatore, Carl Nedzel, Clayton Rogers, Robert Noble. FIRST ROW: Kim Rheinlander. SECOND ROW: Rachel Martin, Jill Cox, Peter Guttmacher, Brian Lynch, Thomas Couch. 104 i 1 i i. FIRST ROW; Gordon Russell, Wilmot Whitney. SECOND ROW: Karen Prince, Lisa Clare, Susan Wilder. THIRD ROW; Katharine Spencer, Mary Fox, Earlene Bustin, Paula Bickford. FIRST ROW: Stephanie Steranko Karen Lowell, Carol Bryson, Dotty Farrell, Bronwyn Pughe, Sue Nickerson. SECOND ROW: Laura Sutherland, Sally White, Leone Pease, Carol Abbott, Adr¬ ienne Krug. . w FIRST ROW: Posie Mork, Anne Sebestyen, Holly Brooks. SECOND ROW; Carolyn Morrow, Mary Doyle, Jocelyn Dawson. THIRD ROW: Helen Goltos, Virginia Welford, Elizabeth Mannick. MISSING SOPHOMORES: Scott Anderson James Anza j Carolynn Botticelli i James Butler Peter Davidoff Paul Davin Laurie Edmunds Rick Fluke Victoria Illman Michael King Stephen Linder Dana Carter David Scott Peter Segien Joyce Sexton Lisa Sheehan Linda Sheridan Kevin Sherman Jeffrey Toran Debor ah Tropeano 105 FRESHMEN L. to R. Virginia Wood, Sue Bently, Diane Fluke, Susan Luchetti. L. to R. Gary Shaw, Steven Murphy, Richard Fellows, Jeffrey Cole, Ray Landry. L. to R. Ellen Mendelson, Anita Sherman, Katherine Taylor, Lisa Pontoppidan, Sonia Schloemann, Margaret Chapman, Sarah Clifton. Dena MacLean, Allison Moulton, Lauren Merz, Mei-Gi Toong. 106 FIRST ROW: Rebecca Cozort, Lisa Wikstrom, Heidi Fergu¬ son, Lee Elinoff, Eleanor King. SECOND ROW: Joyce McShane, Antoinette Corrado, Eileen Morrison, Karen Gal¬ lagher, Jane Dittmann. FIRST ROW: Nance deCamp, Mary Melone, Maryjane Healy. SECOND ROW: Christine Johnson, Susan Anderson, Alicia Billings, Robin Messing. THIRD ROW: Lisa Burger, Anne Hastings, Deborah Turner. FOURTH ROW: Diane Sullivan, Wendy Lowell, Marjorie Stein, Marsha Schore. L. to R. Paul Freedberg, John McBride. “Wiky” Wikstrom, Bruce Marcus. Robert Slattery. Mi¬ chael Zagami. 107 SUSPENDED: Franklin Kettle. FRONT ROW: Michael Brewer, Russell Ferrelli, Everette Hale, ' hilip Bartels, Thomas Morganstern, Charles Cormay, Thomas Rodgers, Stuart Kim, James Rader, Robert Oppel, Michael Butler, Jonathan Carney. BACK: Daniel Sun¬ derland, Gregory Aftandilian, Brian Wilson, Herbert Davis, John Deterling, Judson Kuehn, Jonathan Kaye. FIRST ROW: Nancy Boyes, Amy Kassirer. SECOND ROW: Eliza¬ beth Wright, Linda Walker, Mary Davis, Holly Hamilton. THIRD ROW: Lynn Azadian, Deborah Sallese, Lisa Ullian, Martha Camp- obello. FRONT: Donald Uhlir, James Vlachos, Philip Gardiner, Gordon Weiner. BACK: John Nyhan, James Shields. 108 { CLOCK WISE: Craig Morton, Dave Merdinyan, Douglas Black, Ted Carlman, Ann Hogan, Neil Hediger, Susan Bigham, Randall Boshco. FRONT ROW; Stephen Wilkins. BACK ROW: Peter Gleason, Suzanne Trow, David Cain, Carol Schlossberg, Leslie Whittemore, Robert Grant, Susan Heinrich, Peter Hug, Megan Brandeis, Amy Usen, Christian Von der Heyde, Steve Marden. SEATED: Andrew Magjll, Bruce Eaton, James Downey, Russell Engler, Peter Silverman. STANDING: Stuart Forman. Louis Phillips. Kent Backe, Scott Reiman, Stephen Prawdzik, David Park. 109 FIRST ROW: Tasmin Pesso, Anna Giacconi, Anita Carpenter, Julie Senior, Elizabeth Boyd. SECOND ROW: Sarah Murphy, Carolyn Pink, Michele St.George, Sally Small. THIRD ROW: Elizabeth Behringer, Linda Webber, Karin Way, Sandra DeFina, Carol Abercrombie. T. to B. FIRST ROW: Cobey Gatos, David Penfield, Bruce Fischer. SECOND ROW: Richard Johnson, Scott Tucker. Donald Ewen, Peter Schlegel. THIRD ROW: Thomas Whitney, Gregory Jacoby, Michael Mollenkamp, Thomas Campbell. 110 SEATED; Susan Muldoon, Leigh Jackson, Deanne Dohaine, Lynn Zanowski, Diann Newton, Mollie Cameron. STANDING; Barbara Patey, Kathy McCawley, Georgette Baghdady. FIRST ROW; Andrew Hudson, Donald Hegeman, Chip Fleisch- mann, Dan Waltz. SECOND ROW; William Crum, Douglas .Mat- son, Stephan Pannier. L. to R.; Ronald Hines, Robert Coleman, Jack Crane, Robert Powers. FIRST ROW; Amy Davidoff. Linda ShefTer, Penelope Janzen, .Alexandra DenHartog, Claire Quan, .Marv Saewert, Andrea Nickas. SECOND ROW; Annabel Lombard. .Me¬ lissa Brodrick. Tyla Lord. Susan Bailey, Jane Whitmore. I 1 1 1 L. to R. Michael Critch, Benjamin Russell, James Wells, George MacCleave, Joseph Loeb, Joseph Manion, Christopher Lenahan, James Brownell. FIRST ROW: Catherine Ryan, Lana Moy. SECOND ROW: Donna Turley, Rebecca Bronson, Ann Marie Ulm, Jean Goodwin. THIRD ROW: Rachel Dawson, Vera Do- lansky. FIRST ROW: Joyce Abdun-Nabi, Jayne MacRae, Normandy Simons, Suzanne Gar¬ cia. SECOND ROW: Carolyn Tuttle, Ann Nenneman, Anne Francis. THIRD ROW: Patricia Stuart, Mary Ward, Janice Bolton. 1 12 CLOCKWISE: Frank Carter, Dana Janigan, Glenn Colpitts, Gilbert Boyes, Ronald Bell, Francis O’Brian, Kerry Asquith. KNEELING; Maryanne Healy, Maureen O’Brien, Susan Cremmen, Janet Compton. STANDING: Nina Blacklow, Lesley Laver, Jan Becker, Karin Laver, Amelie Gardella. L. to R : Steven Nishino, Michael DiBartolomeis, Thomas Schofield, Walter Row. Nor¬ man Magnanti. John ’u, John Cappello. MISSING FRESHMEN: Kate Albrecht Kent Backe Mary Ann Botticelli Richard Bush Kristina Carlson Richard Fallon Naomi Fuchs Kenneth Gordon Katherine Guild Catherine Hiller .Mary Maynard Michael Sheridan Paul Zirpolo 113 • 1 1 Wl ' u ■i JOMB W, « r W MM J| — 1 -1 •%, 1 ' L - [j 1 I 1 - ■ n ■ - K- 1 1 • i 11 , Cf r,: W ' I 1 1 1 ' 1 i ' v ■ ' V n ' li • i iaMH r,r5a 1 MMMM % 1 Ti III li m i Wn I Eiki OiB FIRST ROW: Linda Sheffer, Rebecca Cozort, Bruce Eaton, Judd Kuehn, Daniel Waltz, Philip Bartels, SECOND ROW: Carolyn Weinberg, Mary-Helen McNeff, Bronwyn Pughe, Mike Grummeson, Lawrence Krakauer, Michael Englander, Peter Richardson, Joan McGarry. THIRD ROW: Jim Coan, Doug Gillespie, Karen Kirkpatrick, Pam War¬ ren, Kathy Stuart, Joe Sheehan, Cathy Mannick, Sherri Kagno, Martha Connelly, Betsy Lenahan, Suzanne Quigley, Davida Weinberg. STUDENT SENATE CLASS OFFICERS CLASS OP ’75: Scott Tucker, Alix DenHartog, Sue Bailey, Claire Quan. CLASS OP ’74: Miss Weller, Mr. Starmer, John Wilson, Julie Pendergast, Jill Ratner, Barbara Brasco. CLASS OP ’73: Todd Guild, Dave Teittinen, Paul Davis, Ar¬ lene Comeau, Laurie Davis. CLASS OP ’72: John Littlefield, Maureen Costello, Chris Larsen, Mr. Burke. 1 16 I STAC Grover Norquist, Marsha Schore, Mr. Jordan, Mrs. Hoyle, Linda Loeb, Bamaby Kalan, Andrew Levin, Mr. Gearan, Mr. Chandler, Joan McGarry. MATH TEAM FIRST ROW; Bill Crum, Sally Ward, Mary Beth Ward. SECOND ROW: Steve Uhlir, Dave MagiU, Tom Phillips, Chris Queen, Dave O’Connor, Alex Nedzel, Mark Robbins. IHy 1 i ■ iB COIN CLUB Mr. Sammarco, Alain Roguzac, Mike Soper, Sherri Kagno, Kathy McCawley. SECOND ROW: Charlie Cormay, Tom Waltz, Rob Duncan, Bob Whitaker, Frank Harrington, Kevin Conley, Scott Shane. 117 OFFICE AIDES Karen Lowell, Diane Ferguson, Ann Heffernon, B. Patey, Nancy Bianchi. SCHOOL STORE TECHNICIANS FIRST ROW: Mike Mollenkamp, Tom Campbell, Tom Whitney. Bruce Fisher. SECOND ROW: Mike King, Bob W ' hitaker. Mike Miller. THIRD ROW: Steve Black, Bob Bus- tin. Steve Knott, Tom Waltz, Mike Ale.xander. Russell Till, Doug Black. 1 : 1 1 1 11 1 I mi FIRST ROW: Cathy Goode, Joanne Melone, Therese Provenzano, A1 Roguzac. SECOND ROW: Ellen Gallagher, Cathy Mannick, Charlie Cor- may. THIRD ROW: Rob Pexton, Joan McGarry, Mr. Mamos, Leslie Donovan, Ted Cormay. MISSING: Lee Cormay, Peter Melone, Nancy Raffio. 118 EXCHANGE STUDENTS Nancy is there a meeting today? Bakesales, taffey apples . . . Who has paid their dues??? Dinner at Nancy’s house . . . STUDENT TEACHERS talk about their teaching experiences . . . Field trip coming up . . . L. to R., T. to B.; Davida Weinberg, Nancy Raffio, Kathy McCawley, Sue Wilder. SECOND ROW; Kim Coburn, Reisa Glickman, Cindy Nied. THIRD ROW; Kathy Spencer, Miss McDonough, Cindy Cook, Charts Holt, Marianne Senatore, Mary Messina. Cibele Da Cruz Fagundes, Mrs. Menk, Genevieve Duquet. SPANISH CLUB 1 In my 1 PM, 1 FIRST ROW; Mrs. Heptner. Laura Carlson, Abby Turner, Steve Black, Brad Kulow. SECOND ROW: Barbara MacRae. Janet Prifti, Rachel Dawson, Liza Turner, Pat Patey, Martha Donovan, Mary Messina. Mar ' Noble. MISSING; Howard Bronson. Where are they? . . . What ever happened to the Spanish Christmas Party? . . . What meeting Activity Period?? . . . What do you mean the president resigned??? What’s going to happen now??? What Spanish Club???? 119 MARINE BIOLOGY SEATED: Linda Sheffer, Patty Stuart, Sue Sawyer. STANDING: John Cappello, Mark Silverman, Dave Sidebottom, Mike Alexander, David McMullin, Mr. Blakeslee, John Wu. AQUARIUM CLUB Andy Hudson, Chip Fleischmann, Stephen Pannier, Don Hegeman. MISSING: Dan Waltz. ASTRONOMY CLUB FIRST ROW: Larry McGlynn, Mike Alexander. SECOND ROW: Brian Lynch, Mark Silverman. Amy Davidoff. Laura Carkson, Susan Sawyer, Don Schwarzkopf. THIRD ROW: .Mr. Burke. .Mark Robbins. David McMullin, Dave Sidebottom, Ben Sawyer, Phil¬ ip Richardson. “Hey, what’s this I hear?” We’re going on a field trip to Nova Scotia to photograph the solar eclipse this summer . . . Let’s start planning our trip to the Sahara for 1973 ... I hear the eclipse is going to last seven whole minutes there! . . . “Mr. Burke, how much does it cost round trip to the Sahara?” . . . “Mark, how’s the observatory coming along?” . . . Need my help today? . . . The Astronomy club thinks big—After all isn’t that what astronomy is all about anyhow! 120 LUX-LUMIERE-CBET-LUZ T. to B. FIRST ROW: Mrs. Kaktins, Nancy Bianchi, Mary Messina, John Littlefield, Russell Engler, Stuart Forman. SECOND ROW; Andy Levin, Allen Engler, Cathy Mannick, Joyce Abdun-Nabi. THIRD ROW: Betsy Mannick, Debbie Schlegel, Virginia Welford, Dan Abdun-Nabi, Genevieve Duquet, Sandy van- Nostrand. MAELSTROM Aba ... Where’s the food? ... How much is that electric stapler? .. . What do you mean, around $450.00? We only have around $7 in the Treasury . .. Is Mrs. K. skipping again? ... When are you planning to come to a meeting, Alan? ... Cathy, stop doing your Calculus; read some French! ... You mean that this French word is “unprin¬ table”, John? . . . Russell, where’s the “K” on this typewriter? . . . Ginou, would you read these French articles by this afternoon? —There’s only forty of them. Thanks ... VOICE STANDING: Laura Carlson, Dayl Ratner, David Whitney, Alan Weiner, Jay Coburn, Maureen Raffio. SEATED: Mr. Frank, Bruce Fischer, Peter Schelegel, Tom Raffio. FIRST ROW; Cathy Mannick. Nan¬ cy Raffio, Adrienne Krug, Sandy Van Nostrand, Jane Park, Pam War¬ ren, Pat Patey. SECOND ROW: Joanne Roche, Betsy Mannick. Nan¬ cy Berman. THIRD ROW: Nancy Bianchi. Sue Ackles, Kathy Stuart, Tom Waltz, Dan Waltz, Nancy Hill, Isabell Hill, Lila Baghdady, Randy Richard, Dan French. 121 III YEARBOOK FIRST ROW: Deedee Fisher, Judy Breck, Dayl Ratner, Laura Carlson, Maureen Costello, Kathy O’Hara, Kathy Moriarity, Barbie Cole. SECOND ROW: Mr. Mickus, Jim Wilson, Phil Richardson, Fred Abbott, Ed Downey, Bruce Howard, Mr. Pratt. Shut up, Philip . . . Can I go now? . . . Shut up, Maureen . . . What can I do, now? . . . Maureen, can you please try to get here by quarter of three? . . . Where’s Dayl and Judy? . . . Whose turn is it? ... O.K. let’s have another world famous excuse . . . Where’s Cacace? . . . Our missing business staff . . . It’s ’uge! ... Is Kathy coming today? . . . How about Mort and Fisher? ... Is that the Yearbook? . . . “Toodles” . . . Hey, Bruce ya wanna see me race car drive? . . . Don’t tell George . . . Where is he anyway? . . . Shut up, Philip . . . “No Yearbook today!” BAND FLUTE PICCOLO: Wendy Waldman, Sheila HefTernon, Barbara Brasco, Jill Harvey, Suzanne Morris, Anita Carpenter, Ann Hogan, Jeffrey Brodrick. CLARINET; Carol Charpie, Kathleen Moriarty, Stephen Uhlir, Cheryl Smith, Alan Weiner, Jane Whit¬ more, Jayne MacRae, Kristina Carlson, Dana Carter. ALTO CLARINET: Robert Duncan. BASS CLARINET: Carol Anderson, Bryan Smith. ALTO SAXOPHONE; Bruce Campbell, Mark Weissbecker, Ered Abbott. TENOR SAXOPHONE: Randall Rich¬ ard. BARITONE SAXOPHONE: David MacRae. FRENCH HORN: Robert Whitaker, Cobey Gatos, Thomas Whitney. CORN¬ ET TRUMPET: Robert Parlee, William Matzelevich, David Whitney, Thomas Pelsue, Gary DeRusha, Douglas Brown, Scott Tucker, Bradford Currier, Benjamin Jackson, David Kirjassoff, Judd Kuehn, Michael Mollenkamp, David Merdinyan, William Crum. TROMBONE: Carl Nedzel, Philip Richardson, Philip Hutchings, Kerry Asquith, Michael Butler, Philip Gardiner, Michael Manning. BARITONE: Peter Valle, Thomas Boling, Donald Uhlir. TUBA: Donald Schwarzkopf, Steven Pannier, Russell Cohen. PERCUSSION: Carolyn Carpenter, David Harrison, Niki Gatos, Craig Averill, Ann Heffernon, Michael Marshall, Kenneth Gor¬ don. STRING BASS: Gustav Fleischmann. ORCHESTRA VIOLIN; Alan Engler, Pamela Warren, Lynn Morton, Catherine Goode. Gregory Jacoby, Douglas Mattson, Veronica Krek. Barbara Stacy. VIOLA: Carol Abercrombie, Charis Holt. CELLO: Chase Morrison, Pamela Gatos, Russell Engler, Mary Valle, Elizabeth Mannick, Katherine Fleischmann. BASS: Mollie Cameron, Edward Downey, Gustav Flei.schmann, Cathia Campobasso, Thomas Boling. FLUTE: Wendy Waldmann, Sheila Heffer¬ non. Leslie Downes. Cathy Hiller. OBOE: Robin Kingsbury. CLARINET: Dana Clark, Mark Weissbecker. Cheryl Smith, Joyce Abdun-Nabi. FRENCH HORN: Robert Whitaker. Thomas Whitney. Cobey Gatos. TRUMPET: Robert Parlee, David Whitney, Scott Tucker. TROMBONE: Scott Carney, Philip Richardson, Kenneth French. PERCUSSION: Adrienne Krug, Niki Gatos, David Harrison, Craig Averill, David Teittinen. Kenneth Gordon. Paul Carney, Bruce Ferguson. 12 -- MIXED CHOIR BOYS’ GLEE CLUB 124 THIRD EDITION GIRLS’ GLEE CLUB 125 CHEERLEADERS FRONT: Chris Healy, Kathy O’Hara, Laura McMullin, Betsy Goode. BACK: Pam Bryson, Nancy Weaver, Liza Turner, Holly Wright, Maria Provenzano. FRONT: Sandra Keery, Jean Cleary, Carol Abbott. BACK: Jill Ratner, Leone Pease, Stephanie Steranko, Laura Suther¬ land. MAJORETTES FRONT: Kathy Brewer, Robin Kingsbury, Mary Jo Wilson, Carol Anderson, Elaine Sangiolo, Cathy Goode, Jill Ratner, Mary-Helen McNeff. BACK: Nancy Johnson, Cathia Campobasso, Tina Gavin, Phyllis Butler. Robin’s scrambled eggs . . . Cathia’s carnations . . . “Hot Dog!” ... The Big Scoop . . . “Bam Bam!” . . . “Where’s Nancy?” . . . “Find Bruce” .. . Mary Jo’s books ... “Strawberry Lipstick Forever!” . . . Jilly-Jelly’s tiger pajamas . . . The only majorette who is always out of step is . . . Tinsel and Tassels . . . “You’re all one half an hour late!” . . . “Who’s having the breakfast?” ... “I can’t do it” .. . “You can’t?” ... “I mean it’s difficult to do” . .. “Do it!” . .. “Where’s the end of my baton?” . . . Elaine’s the head for the day . .. Mary Helen was tackled .. . Phyllis on the field in curlers .. . Thanksgiving at the Brewers’—Texas style! . . . “Where’s Elaine?” . . . “Cathy and Jill—You’re IN!” . . . The greatest manager ever! . . . Majorettes make front page in the Town Crier ... “Hey, you ol’ Droopies!” . . . Genou and Cibele—honorary members . . . Martinas’ pigtails . .. “On a Wonderful Day Like Today!!” f i 1 ' ll By Henrik Ibsen CAST of CHARACTERS Nora Helmer. .Ruth Landowne Helen. .Joanna Roche A Porter. .Peter Richardson Torvald Helmer. .Alan Engler Mrs. Linde. .Frances Fuchs Dr. Rank. .John Coburn Krogstad. .Arthur Nichols Anna Maria. .Sheila Heffernon Emmy. .Jennifer Atkins Ivar. .Russell Engler Bob. .William Crum A DOLL’S HOUSE 128 129 h ' f L f V ifi 1 III 1 1 f f f 11. Ll ■ i 11 ( Jr Mr ! hh VARSITY AND JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL FIRST ROW: Coach Neild, Bill Fallon, Don Melone, Bill Grant, Jim Fox, Dave Nelson, Jon Billings, Mike Melone, John Cremmen, Jim But¬ ler, Dan Dittmann, Bill Matzelevich, Coach Harris. SECOND ROW; Coach Gill, Peter Schlegel, Tom Averill, Danny Johnson, Rob Klotz, John Wilson, Steve Brown, Peter McKearney, Jim Klotz, Jay Taylor, Steve Shaw, Dave Teittinen, Mark Sang iolo, Danny Sunderland, Coach O’Laughlin. THIRD ROW: Joe Claire, Mike King, Steve Underhill, Jerry O’Brian, Bruce Landry, Kevin O’Hara, Joe Marino, Howard Bronson, Peter Wetherbee, John Senatore, Coach Baine. FOURTH ROW: Bill Bond, Larry McGlynn, Fred Surette, Jack Rodgers, Dave Doane, Clayton Rodger, Scott Anderson, Bruce Ferguson, Sandy Kel¬ ley, Jeff Ela, Mark Claire. 132 Big day today, let’s work hard! . . . Quit messing around ... Right hand, right toe . .. No, wait a minute . .. Coach’s com¬ ing. Exercises, quick! ... Where is Fal¬ lon, Cremmen? ... We’re rolling these twerps .. . Clair, get off the ground ... Did Matzelevich say something? . . . Good block, Johnson! . .. (only that was Fox) ... Butler scratched his finger. Call an ambulance ... Imagine Fox as a run¬ ning back ... What a riot .. . Nice hi t McGlynn, but leave the goal post alone ... Everybody on your backs! ... Klotz on your—Oh, you are . . . Nice grab, Csonka . .. Incredible, After every play Melone is always praying ... Is Billings here? . .. You mean he’s awake! ... Nice centering. Brown ... Rogers didn’t have to jump. Hey, stone fingers . . . What about spaghetti? 1 Varsity Football Weston Opponent 20 Lincoln Sudbury 0 16 Lynnfield 12 16 Ashland 0 13 Newton South 28 22 Maynard 33 27 Westwood 6 13 Acton 28 00 Bedford 24 0 Way land 29 Junior Varsity Football Weston Opponent 26 Lincoln Sudbury 0 32 Lynnfield 0 12 Ashland 6 22 Newton South 0 10 Westwood 8 32 Acton 0 20 Bedford 14 Freshman Football Weston Opponent 42 Lincoln Sudbury 0 0 Lynnfield 6 42 Ashland 0 42 Newton South 6 14 Maynard 7 49 Westwood 0 32 Acton 14 32 Bedford 0 30 Wayland 8 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL FIRST ROW: Coach Foster. Judd Kuehn, Jim Vlachos, Alan Starmer. Greg Aftandilian, John Deterling, Stuart Kim, Brian Wilson, Coach Connolly. SECOND ROW: Tom Schofield. Tom Rodgers. Tom Morganstern, Jack Crane, Chip Davis, Rob Grant, Bob Op- pel. Fran O’Brian. THIRD ROW: Mike Butler, Ruddy Ferrelli, Glen Colpitts, Don Uhlir, Frank Kettle, Philip Gardinier, Stephan Pannier, Chip Fleischmann. 134 VARSITY FIELD HOCKEY SEATED; Cindy Jones, Joanne Melone, Ellen Gallagher, Martha Gove, Nan¬ cy Shriner. STANDING: Miss Butera, Brenda Schafer, Martha Cochran, Carolyn Carpenter, Nancy Raffio, Lee Cormay, Rita Sheehan, Becky Warren, Claudia Anza, Ann Noble, Ruth Noble. ON SHOULDERS: Kathy Moriarty. IN TREE: Mary Noble, Deedee Fisher. Weston 3 6 1 3 4 3 5 2 3 4 2 3 Opponent Dover-Sherburn 1 Newton South 0 Way land 1 Wellesley 1 Lin. Sud. 0 Concord Academy 0 Westwood 0 Bedford 2 Way land 0 Acton 1 Lin. Sud. 1 Newton South 0 135 JUNIOR VARSITY FIELD HOCKEY FIRST ROW; Lisa Christopher, Jane Rowen, Jill Revotskie, Sue Quigley, Barbara MacRae, Marianne Senatore, Sharon Guidi. SECOND ROW: Browyne Pughe, Paula Bickford, Ann Kirkpatrick, Barbara Brasco, Lee Weir, Nancy Ingersoll, Karen Kirk¬ patrick, Janet Verplank. THIRD ROW: Dotty Farrell, Sarah Speare, Donna Dus- sault, Besty Bradley, Laurie O’Connor, Diane Ferguson, Nancy Weaver, Kim Gould, Cheryl Gould, Valle Nazar. Varsity, undefeated season ... You $ t! ... “Head shoulders knees and toes, knees and toes “Red and yellow and pink and green Mary Noble, captain of the Varsity Spitting Team! . . . Hat contest, winner:Martha Cochran! ... “I’ve been working on the hockey field ...” ... “Pass the candy. I want a hershey bar” . . . Motto: Happiness is an undefeated season . . . Dodge, Ellen, dodge! ... A grand total of 89 corners! . .. Every corner is a goal (Ya right!) . . . Rush it in . . . “I want those forwards to take courage pills.” . . . Terrific saves Ruffie or Rute! . . . “Joanney if you throw that stick one more time “Claudia, sympathetic passes!” . . . Hockey dinner: Miss Butera and Brenda Shaeffer: ping pong cham¬ pions! . . . We don’t mess around! Hey!” FRESHMAN FIELD HOCKEY FIRST ROW: Lisa Wikstrom, Mary Saewart, Dianne Sullivan, Claire Quan, Penny Janzen, Heidi Fer¬ guson, Joyce Abdun-Nabi, Suzanne Garcia, Ann Francis, Robin Messina. SECOND ROW: Karen Gal¬ lagher, Mary Jane Healey, Jane McBride, Annabel Lombard, Lisa Burger, Jane Whittemore, Mary Ann Healey, Kristina Karlson, Cathy McCawley, Melissa Broderick, Alix Den Hartog. THIRD ROW: Kathy Melone, Wendy Lowell, Eileen Morisson, Becky Cozort, Amy Davidoff, Mrs. Healey, Karin Way, Cathy Taylor, Carolyn Pink, Leigh Jackson. 136 CROSS COUNTRY FIRST ROW: Coach Duncan, John McCarter, Tom Griffin, Steve Campbell, Tom Phillips, Dave Starr, Arthur Wood¬ bury. SECOND ROW: Bob Duncan, Dave Magill, Buddy Jackson, David O’Connor, Peter Valle. THIRD ROW: Mike Mollenkamp, Mark Griffin, Andy Magill, Phihp Bartels, Peter Smith, Rob Noble, Doug Doane. Weston 18 Westwood Opponent 43 18 Lynnfield 45 31 Acton 24 32 Wayland 25 18 Bedford 45 19 Lin. Sud. 42 15 Newton S. 50 37 Acton 22 15 Newton S. 44 20 Lin. Sud. 41 21 Bedford 31 25 Westwood 34 30 Wayland 25 19 Lvnnfield 44 137 VARSITY SOCCER FIRST ROW: Coach DeBoer, Jim Wilson, Steve Knott, Dana Clare, John Littlefield, Mark Dowell, Jeff Arpin, Scott Carney. SECOND ROW: Rob Starmer, Chris Larsen, Hans Hug, Gary Russell, Grant Klotz, Mark Madden, Kerry Asquith, Mike Gummeson. THIRD ROW: Brad Currier, Tom Waltz, John Guidi, George Benoit, Charlie Nichols, Peter Fay, Chip Bell. 138 Led by supercoach Klaas DeBoer in his final season, the Weston Varsity Soccer Team romped to an 11-3-1 season, and a second place DCL finish. Captain John Littlefield and record-breaking Jeff Arpin combined for 25 of the 37 goals, and ranked with the top 4 in league scoring. All star goalie Chris Larsen and Co-Captain Dana Clare secured 9 shutouts for the team. Robbed by L-S ... “I said run, Carney!” ... Aggh, I am! ... I am! ... “I’ll take it. I’ll take it!” ... You guys are sooo lackadaisical! ... Overtime penal¬ ty kick wins against Acton ... 10-0 over Bedford ... 5-0 over Wayland ... Hat tricks ... “Larsen, you’re Great; the rest of you guys are terrible!” ... No brain, no pain ... 4 pairs of socks? ... No choke! Let me shoot ... Lit¬ tlefield, why don’t you shoot? ... Twinkle-toes ... Napoleon Benoit and Stalwart Bumpy ... I made the All-Star Team? ... “Arpin, you are the fast¬ est 3-day bear on this field!” ... Robby, get in that goal so Dooby can gun from 5 yards out ... Cannon-foot ... What happened to Wilson’s leg? Varsity Soccer J.V. Soccer Weston Opponent Weston Opponent 2 Rivers 0 0 Newton North 0 5 Wayland 0 2 Acton 3 10 Bedford 0 2 Newton South 3 1 Acton 0 2 Rivers 3 2 Newton South 0 0 Lynnfield 1 3 Cambridge School 1 1 Wayland 2 3 Lynnfield 1 0 Lincoln Sudbury 4 0 Lincoln Sudbury 3 1 Wayland 6 1 Wayland 0 0 Acton 1 2 Lincoln Sudbury 3 1 Rivers 1 2 Bedford 0 0 Lynnfield 1 2 Acton 1 2 Lincoln Sudbury 1 1 Newton South 1 5 B.C. High 1 4 Lynnfield 0 1 Cambridge School 2 4 VARSITY BASKETBALL FIRST ROW: Brad Kulow, Doug Shaw, Danny Johnson, Peter Anton, Dave Teittenin, John Cremmen. SECOND ROW: Mr. Manzo, John Littlefield, Bill McCarthy, Peter Acconcia, Tom Phillips, Jim Wilson, Stefan Karas, Peter McKearney. The 1971-1972 Weston Varsity Basketball squad was turned back in its bid for a perfect season by a hard to avoid victory over its closest rival, Lynnfield. With only two returning lettermen (who wound up as team captains), the Wildcat hoopmen had trouble getting off the ground and suffered thirteen straight losses before romping over Lynnfield, who in turn won over Bedford, thus clinching the cellar spot for Weston. However, the string of defeats did little to dishearten the team, which went into each contest with surprising determination. This is in large part a tribute to Coach Alex Manzo who, in his last season with the varsity, remained equally dedicated to the team and undiscouraged: an inspiration to the players. 140 JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL FIRST ROW: Peter Schlegel, Bob Oppel, Ruddy Ferrelli, John Kaye, John Deterling, Barney Starmer, Danny Sunderland. SECOND ROW ' : Mr. Fo.ster, Stuart Kim, Peter Sil¬ verman. Frank Kettle, Brian Wilson, Chip Davis, Jack Crane, Scott Reiman, Rob Grant. FIRST ROW: Steve Brown, Bill King, Craig Averill, Bill Reid, Clayton Rodgers, Bill Bond. SECOND ROW: Mr. Palena, Tom Raffio, Bob Reilley, Peter Smith, Mark Do¬ well, John Wilson, Jeff Abbott. FRESHMEN BASKETBALL 141 GIRLS VARSITY BASKETBALL FIRST ROW; Deedee Fisher, Laurie O’Connor, Denise DiStefano, Ruth Noble, Mary Noble, Joanne Mel- one, Dayl Ratner. SECOND ROW: Ann Noble, Maureen Raffio, Nancy Raffio, Sharon Guidi, Laura McMullin, Leanne Lord, Kathy Moriarty, Miss Butera. Girls Varsity Weston Opponent 46 Dover Sherbom 38 38 Acton 35 44 Bedford 31 20 Lin. Sud. 22 50 Westwood 33 38 Wayland 28 33 Wellesley 32 39 Lin. Sud. 29 35 Wayland 28 Girls J.V. 7 Dover Sherborn 20 1 Acton 19 5 Bedford 9 6 Lin. Sud. 21 11 Westwood 19 10 Wayland 12 12 Wellesley 24 12 Lin. Sud. 34 9 Wayland 34 Varsity—one loss .. . J.V.’s—well? . . . Ruth and Mary—Captains—isn’t that sweet? . . . But the turkey fell out of the oven .. . “Leanne—What’s wrong?—take it easy!” . . . cigars . . . Mush, cut your hair! ... 15 consecutive lay up shots . . . fast breaks . .. make those foul shots count .. . “Laurie—why do you like boys J.V. basketball practice so much? .. . Mush—you’re out .. . Joanne get the jump .. . Man to man defense—Denise and Mush .. . “Maureen, I’ve nev¬ er heard you talk in practice before” .. . “Ruth, yell at them”—“You didn’t have to tell her, she does anyways!” . . . love and kisses . . . Do you love me? . . . Miss Butera’s hook shot (0 for 30) . . . the ham in the supermarket is only .75 lb. . .. “Didn’t anyone make anything to eat?” . . . Ruth, don’t get mad! . . . Last game—Wayland—“Mort don’t cry!” . .. “Ruth, I love you!” . . . “If we could sing, we’d sing to you!” GIRLS JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL FIRST ROW; Abby Turner, Ann Kirkpatrick, Therese Provenzano, Janet VerPlank, Nancy Ingersoll, Marcia Mancuso, Jean Cleary, Sue Nickerson, Stephanie Steranko. SECOND ROW: Nancy Weil, Leone Pease, Diane Manning, Carolyn Weinberg, Francine Messina, Leigh Weir, Bronwyn Pughe, Ellen Gallagher, Miss Cosgrove. Team I Weston Opponent 39 Wellesley 22 24 Way land 14 16 WeUesley 15 38 Warren Jr. 21 46 Beaver 6 14 Sacred Heart 8 23 Way land 19 33 Beaver 7 33 Warren Jr. 14 Team II Weston Opponent 16 Wellesley 12 0 Way land 4 13 WeUesley 14 21 Warren Jr. 6 19 Beaver 4 7 Sacred Heart 6 8 Way land 5 18 Beaver 3 27 Warren Jr. 2 FRESHMEN GIRLS BASKETBALL FIRST ROW; Eileen Morisson, Sue Bailey, Lee Jackson, Tyla Lord, Anabell Lombard, Kathy McCawley, Claire Quan. SECOND ROW: Mrs. Healey, Lisa Burger, Becky Cozort, Heidi Ferguson, Penny Janson, Melissa Broderick, Mary Saewart. THIRD ROW: Robin .Messing. Lisa Billings, Katy Melone, Wendy Lowell, Amy Davidoff, Jane Whitmore, Karen Gallagher, Debby Turner, Ann Hogan, Jane Dittmann. 143 WRESTLING FIRST ROW: Randy Boscho, Mark Griffin, Bill Grant, Jim Fox, Steve Shaw, Dave Nelson, Dan Ab- dun-Nabi. SECOND ROW; John Wetherbee, Tom Boling, Phillip Gardiner, Jim Vavacos, Jeff Ela, Mike Hooven, Tom Morganstern, Mark Erancis, Mr. Connelly. Weston Opponent 16 Concord 32 66 Belmont 6 26 Waltham 30 11 Newton South 50 33 Duxbury 30 54 Winchester 9 9 Milford 36 42 Lin. Sud. 24 30 Foxboro 33 5 Way land 50 9 Ashland 33 45 Algonquin 18 WINTER TRACK FIRST ROW: Jim Goodwin, Rob Duncan, Tom GrifTm, Dave O’Connor, Jeff Ela, John Senatore. SECOND ROW: Michael Mollenkamp, Steve Nishino, Rob Klotz, Dave McRae, Bill Deterling, John Nyhan. THIRD ROW: Ron MacKay, Tim Scott, Jay Tay¬ lor, Chris Queen, Sandy Kelley, Coach Gill. The Winter Track Team now has another “building season” under its belt. We finished with a record of two wins and four losses, and the main reason for not having a winning season was lack of depth. We got our share of first places, averaging four or five each meet out of a possible ten, but we just didn’t take enough seconds and thirds. We also had many fine quality athletes as the regu¬ lar season and the All-League Meet showed. In the All-League Meet, Dave O’Connor was first in the 600, Jon Billings was second in the 40, Chris Queen was second in the shotput, Doug Doane was third in the mile and Tim Scott was fourth in the High Jump. The outlook for next year is bright because almost all of our top score rs will be returning. The “building seasons” should be over. ICE HOCKEY FIRST ROW; Dave Starr, Jim Butler, Steve Matson, Chris Larsen, Jeff Brodrick, Mike Butler, Jim Theall. SECOND ROW: Mr. Henderson, Mr. Woodbury, Tom Morgenstern, Dick Powers, John Carney, Jerry O’Brien, Jeff Starr, Dan Prawdzik, Chip Bell, Ian Douglas, Frank Hiatt, Scott Carney, Steve Palmer, Dave Doane, Coach O’Laughlin. Weston Opponent 0 Lynnfield 4 1 Bedford 8 3 Lin.-Sud. 2 0 Acton 4 2 Wayland 5 2 Westwood 5 1 Newton South 2 1 Lynnfield 5 1 Bedford 4 3 Lin.-Sud. 3 1 Acton 5 3 Wayland 4 3 Westwood 2 1 Newton South 5 146 4 Wj A 2-11-1 record, but a definite D.C.L. contender ... Ronnie’s Rockets ... “off to the states” ... Butler’s in the box again ... the tape deck that wasn’t ... “Brodrick, don’t bite your tongue!” ... and we almost beat Wayland ... goal-a-minute Matty! ... “What about a fight, Larsen?” ... “You guys can’t score if you don’t shoot” ... eight loyal cheerleaders plus Elda ... “Who’s the guy with the long, blonde curls?” ... Battle of the Bands ... coaches disguised as bus drivers ... a great climax by Dave Starr ... next year’s DCL champs. 147 SWIM TEAM FIRST ROW; MaryJane Healey, Sue Trow, Alix DenHartog, Sue McNeff, MaryAnne Healey, Dorsy Noonan, Sue Rodgers. SECOND ROW; Sue Clear y, Anne Hastings, Sue Quigley, Janie McBride, Kyle Moran, Elenor King, Melissa Aseltine, Nancy DeCamp, Sue Garcia. THIRD ROW; Dave Connelly, Andy Shores, J. Wilkins, Brian Costello, Mike Kerwin, Ken Bradley, Richard Votour, Jim Taylor, Coach Vega. FOURTH ROW; Court Queen, Jim Rader, Jim Downey, John Saint-Amour, Jack Rodgers, Andy Forman, Rob Merz, Rob Slattery, Steve Linder, Craig Morton, Brooks Harrington. Weston Opponent 61 Westwood 38 71 Way land 119 127 West-Roxbury 57 141 Hyde Park 67 47 Waltham 67 65 Framingham 32 103 Hyde Park-Tech. 86 High 104 Lexington 99 My gosh St.-Amour’s here! . .. Jack’s new suit .. . Hey, where’s Downey the long-haired hippy? .. . Which Healy is in lane 4? . .. 25.0 . . . Lix did you give McNeff a bloody nose again? . .. Swimmers take your mark. No you guys you wait till he says go . .. We’re going to the States! ... the bodies! .. . Hey where are our letters? . .. Vega and Tommy go in if we win this! ... the Barracudas are here, one more quick hand . . . Slats, will you stop whistling? ... Mullion. The Weston Swim Club succeeded in swimming another winning season with the record of 6-2-0. We thank you very much for all your hard work. Coach Vega. 148 SKI TEAM I FIRST ROW: Kim Gould, Sue Schloemann, Martha Gove, Richard Johnson, George MacCleave. SECOND ROW: Martha Cochran, Judy Breck, Dave Powers, Phil Thomason, Coach DeBoer, Judd Keuhn. GIRLS GYMNASTICS FIRST ROW: Betsy Jacobs, Debbie Schlegel, Cathy Mannick, Paula Bickford, Sue Stein, Valle Nazar. SECOND ROW: Mrs. Lee, Betsy Goode, Diane Fer¬ guson. Karen Prince, Marjorie Stein, Sharon Proctor, Anne Sebasteyn. SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. Zaki Abdun-Nabi Mr. and Mrs. Henry Acconcia Mr. and Mrs. Hazen M. Ackles Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Alcaide Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Chris Anton Mr. and Mrs. Santo Anza Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Arpin Mr. and Mrs. Henri B. Atkins Dr. and Mrs. Charles Averill Mr. and Mrs. Richmond Bachelder Mr. and Mrs. George F. Benoit Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bentley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Berman Mr. and Mrs. Eric Billings Mr. and Mrs. William S. Black Mr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Boshco Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert C. Boyes, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. David H. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. John A. Brewer, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm H. Brodrick Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bromberger Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Bronson Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brown Mrs. Catherine W. Brownell Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Bush, III Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Butler Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Cacace Mr. and Mrs. William V. Cail Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Campbell Mr. and Mrs. John I. Carlson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Carlson Mr. and Mrs. John R. Carney, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Jack W. Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Carter, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chen Mr. and Mrs. J. Ernie Clair Dr. and Mrs. John G. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Edmund J. Coan Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Coburn Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Cole Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Cook Mr. and Mrs. John W. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Theodore C. Cormay Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Cort Mr. and Mrs. John F. Cremmen Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Curtis, II Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Dancer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davin Mr. and Mrs. John T. deCamp Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Dittmann Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Downes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Downey Mr. and Mrs. Leonard H. Dowse Mr. and Mrs. Lee Engler Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Fabrizio Mr. and Mrs. John T. Fallon Mr. and Mrs. B. James Ferguson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Fleischmann Mr. and Mrs. Holton E. Fox Mr. and Mrs. Pasquale Franchi Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Freedman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Glynn Mr. and Mrs. John J. Goode Mr. and Mrs. C. Allen Gove Mr. and Mrs. Halcott G. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Griffin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Griggs, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Gustie Mr. and Mrs. Austin A. Harrison Mrs. Edward J. Healey Mr. and Mrs. Elmer W. Heffernon Mr. and Mrs. George L. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Roland B. Holt Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Howard Mr. and Mrs. Clark E. Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. F. Wyman Johnson Mrs. H. E. Jones Mr. and Mrs. William H. Kidd Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kirjassoff Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Kirkpatrick Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Klinck Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Klotz Mrs. Janeth Knowles Dr. and Mrs. Milton Landowne Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Landry Mrs. Robert D. Lane Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Larsen Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Leach Mr. and Mrs. William A. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Jack A. Leonhardt Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Levin Dr. and Mrs. John W. Littlefield Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Lord Dr. Jane C. MacMillan Dr. and Mrs. John A. Mannick Mr. and Mrs. Martin V. Marshall Mr. and Mrs. Vernon M. Mattson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Matzelevich Dr. and Mrs. Robert McCarter Mrs. A. J. McElhinney Mr. Frederick McGarry Mr. and Mrs. Jack F. McGlynn Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. McMullin Mr. and Mrs. Gerard J. McShane Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Melone Mr. and Mrs. William D. Melone Mr. and Mrs. Frank Messina Mr. and Mrs. Dean O. Morton Mr. and Mrs. James W. Moriarty Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Morris Dr. and Mrs. Albert T. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Newell Mr. and Mrs. Hiroshi H. Nishino Mr. and Mrs. George D. Noble Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Oakley Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. O’Hara Mr. Thomas L. O’Hara, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. O’Hara, Jr. Mrs. Harold Ogilvie Mrs. Jeanne Otto Mr. and Mrs. James T. Park Mr. and Mrs. Estey L. Parlee Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Pelsue Dr. and Mrs. Florentina Pina Mr. and Mrs. James J. Powers Dr. and Mrs. R. William Provenzano Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Raffio Mr. and Mrs. James E. Richard Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Richardson Mrs. Ralph R. Rubado Mr. and Mrs. Fred F. Ruland Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Sangiolo Mr. and Mrs. Norman B. Saunders Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Frank O. Shaw Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Sheehan Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Shriner Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Silverman Mr. and Mrs. Shaw B. Smith Mrs. H. G. Sneider Mr. and Mrs. John E. Stacy Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Starmer Mr. and Mrs. H. Austin Starr Mr. and Mrs. John Stuart Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Surette Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Sussman Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M. Tilton Mr. and Mrs. Earle F. Trow Mrs. Priscilla Turner Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. VanNostrand Dr. and Mrs. Francis E. Vinal Mr. and Mrs. Otto Von der Hyde Mr. and Mrs. Franz X. Waldmann Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Waltz Mr. and Mrs. David N. Warren Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Warren Mr. and Mrs. Burton M. Weiner Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Weissbecker Mrs. Malcolm E. Wetherbee Mr. and Mrs. H. Philip Whitaker Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Whittemore Mr. and Mrs. W. Richard Wiebe Mr. and Mrs. Lyle A. Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sewell T. Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Witt Mr. and Mrs. James J. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Roger B. Woodbury Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Woodside Mrs. Shirley B. Wright The Class of Seventy-two thanks the above parents for their support. 24 hour service Your Neighborhood Electricians we specialize in home wiring Weston TW 4-3016 Congratulations to the Class of “72” Y PONrL C ' Qamzc Kurruc 1055 Main Street WALTHAM EST. 1919 Open Evenings Until 9p.m. 893-3600 And p«opl« hiv bMn trading with ui ilnca 191V. Our growth with tha community hat givan ut tha axparlanca to undarttanj your car naadt. Wa offar you tha latait-modal Cadillacs and Pontlact. Autos That Is Private Placement Financing, Inc. 15 Sylvan Lane Weston, Massachusetts 893-5992 R. F. WHELPLEY, PRES. WLipfe , ZJV, Ac. 478 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON. MASS. MASS. Lie. NO. 423 COLOR TELEVISION STEREO RADIOS SOLID STATE Compliments of . . . RICHARDSOIM DRUG CO. 37 Center Street, Weston, Massachusetts “WESTON’S NEWEST PHARMACY” Richard Samson, Mgr. Arthur Carr, Pres. 891-1440 153 TO THE CLASS OF 1972 CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES WALTHAM FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LDAN ASSOCIATION MALCOLM W. RUSSELL, PRESIDENT H. B. KNOWLES, INC FUEL OILS 24-HOUR BURNER SERVICE Telephone 259-9000 Concord Road Lincoln B.L. OGILVIE SONS, INC. IN OUR 53RD YEAR Fuels Building Materials “Blue Truck” Delivery Service Ample Parking 39 Warren Ave., Weston 894-1265 894-1266 154 We are proud of the part Westwood Studios has played in the production of your yearbook. It is with this same pride in our work, and our interest in producing better portraits and candids that we hope you may call upon our services in the future. 218 Chestnut Street, Needham, Mass. 02192 Telephone 444-0042 Portraits, Wedding Candids, and Yearbook Photography TERESA OF SUMI ' S, INC. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1972 Exclusively for Wardrobe Elegance. 665 Conchituate Road (Rte 30.) Framingham IN THE HOUSE OF THE KENNETH BUILOING Telephone 873-7606 With Best Wishes to the Class of 1972 McKENZIE TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. 194 Moody Street Waltham, Mass. TW3-8800 T. A. McNAMARA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. GENE F. BOYLE ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE 600 MAIN STREET, WALTHAM CALL 899-4228 THE SPOKE SHOP at Diehl ' s The Linden Shopping Centre WELLESLEY Gifts for All Occasions Prop. George M. Gordon 290 North Avenue Weston, Mass. 893-7460 Our best wishes to the class of 1972 8 3 ' McTDONJl ' PD.TIHC. ‘Realtor? 596 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON CENTER 894-1423 COMPLIMENTS OF YOUNG CORPORATION EXCAVATING CONTRACTORS ARTHUR BROWN ASSOC. - REAL ESTATE 358-7714 899- 1111 Residential - Industrial 25 Cochituate Rd. Weston - Wayland - Sudbury Wayland Owner; Lorraine Fox, Weston 899— 6434 Esther Bustin Nancy Hall Paul Riley • William Savage Joanne Segal Norma McDonnell FROM A FRIEND OF THE STAFF Compliments of ACKLES STEEL IRON CO., INC. 12 SUN STREET, WALTHAM R.M. BRADLEY CO., INC. 542 Boston Post Road Weston, Mass. 899-6454 Boston: 250 Bovlston Street 267-5010 BEAR HILL SUNOCO UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Owner: Claude Cormier 1420 Main Street Waltham, Mass. “Guaranteed Best Service” 160 cz sr LSdn THE CARLSON CORPORATION COCHITUATE MASS, 01778 PLANNERS. DESIGNERS, BUILDERS Netos-€rtbinte 18 Pine Street Waltham 893-1670 COMPLIMENTS OF MR. WIZARD’S SCIENCE CENTERS 239 WASHINGTON STREET WELLESLEY 02181 235-2486 MacRAE INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 481 BOSTON POST RD., WESTON 893-1500 HOME—AUTO—LIEE—BUSINESS COMPLIMENTS OF CHARLES N. MILLER COMPANY Makers of Mary Jane Candy PL Aft ttiAit 24 HOUR EHERGCNCY PUn OlASS SERVICE f lAff htadquM-d . . . GLASS FOR EVERY PURPOSE . . . AUTO GLASS STORE FRONTS MIRRORS TABLE TOPS TUB ENCLOSURES LEADED GLASS REPAIRS WE THANK THE PEOPLE OF WESTON FOR THEIR SUPPORT Best Wishes To the Class of 1972 OO-fO JOHN E. STACY COnf On kTiOhi Nickerson Hills Paint Service Center 917 MAIN STREET, WALTHAM “Where the customer is always right” (Sometimes) WESTON CONVALESCENT CENTER and NURSING HOME 135 NORTH AVENUE WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS 893-2936 Fine Wines and Spirits from the world over POST ROAD LIQUORS O’CONNELL BROTHERS, INCORPORATED 358-4300 on the Post Road Wayland, Massachusetts BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1972 LEONHARDT BROOKLINE VILLAGE, MASS. ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL Congratulations to All Seniors TEA gifts jewelry IDENTS EARRINGS Agents for Rubber Stamps and Name Tapes Repair of Jewelry and Beads Personalized Stationery and Informals KIEN CHUNG’S 502 Boston Post Road Phone: 894-4290 C. RICHARD POWERS INSURANCE AUTO - HOMEOWNERS - CONSTRUCTION BONDS Rapretenting Mutual Companias 56 Ccipitts Road, Waston 894-1111 WALrmM leavings • FULLY INSURED SAVINGS ACCOUNTS • HOME FINANCING • INSTALLMENT LOANS • AUTO • PERSONAL • SAVINGS BANK LIFE INSURANCE WALTHAM WESTON SUDBURY 702 Moin St. 432 Boston Post Rd. 525 Boston Post Rd. 894-3064 894-5576 443-2942 WHAT A WONDERFUL WAY TO LIVE A LOVELY HOME LIKE THIS IN A BEAUTIFUL WOODLAND SETTING — WESTON ESTATES A. J. COMEAU CONSTRUCTION CO. INC 21 CENTRE STREET, WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS Phones: 893-3181 AND 893-1104 The future arrives sooner at Raytheon. When you work at the forefront of technology, you work on “tomorrow” every day. That’s whatwe do at Raytheon. With amazing results. For example, Radarange® microwave ovens for the home. A miniature furnace the size of a two-pound coffee can. Motionless radars that “see” everywhere at once. Our facilities stretch around the world. And our activities extend from space exploration to pollution control. Raytheon. The company that makes things happen. p AYTHEONJ 166 EDDIE ROSSETON TW 3-6607 twiT brook electronics inc . TELEVISION r RADIO 984 MAIN STREET WALTHAM, MASS. BORN TO Crafted to the exacting standards of the men who select and wear them, French Shriner shoes exemplify the finest traditions of old New England workmanship . . . with the perfection of styling so important in today ' s fast- moving world. America ' s Finest Shoes available at 63 Worcester Road Natick, Massachusetts Best Wishes to The Class of 1972 CENTRAL TAILORING CO. Weston Center gifts, wallpaper fabrics and antiques THE CHESTNUT SHOP Weston Center Mail 167 SANTO ANZA Finish Grading Landscaping Loam Gravel Excavating Tree Removal — Bulldozing Snow Plowing and Sanding Fireplace Wood and Hay Delivered Phone 894-4252 67 SPRING ROAD WESTON CONGRATULATIONS to Class of 1972 BOSTON POST ROAD WAYLAND Your Florist For all occasions 235-9520 Compliments of ED ABBOTT ' S GULF SERVICE Compliments of . . . DUFF SPRING CO. AUTO TRUCK SPRINGS RESET — REPAIRED — INSTALLED COMPLETE BRAKE SERVICE ANTHONY TAIL GATES BODIES FISHER SNOW PLOWS Wheel Alignment — Bear System Axles and Frames Straightened 367 MYSTIC AVENUE MEDFORD (near Somerville line) TEL 391-5555 of WATERTOWN Authorized Sales — Service BODY SHOP USED CARS BOUGHT and SOLD MUSTANG TORINO T BIRD —PINTO FORD Located Between Newton Corner and Watertown Squore, 66 Galen St., Wotertown LEASE CARS Mudatnf FORD TRUCKS General Engineering Laboratories, Inc. LITTLETON ROAD WESTFORD, MASSACHUSETTS 01886 169 A COMPLETE REAL ESTATE SERVICE • 426 BOSTON POST ROAD • 893-4500 Mrs. J. Robert Ayers Mrs Miss Lucy J. Boyd Mrs Mrs. Lucy D. Boyd Mrs Mrs. David H. Bradley Mrs Mrs. Thomas T. Craven Mrs Mrs. David J. Kingsbury Mrs Mrs. Andrew F. Willis Mr. David H. Bradley, Hugh A. McGettigan James F. Orr . Robert G. Paine, Jr. . Richard G. Patch . Edward W. Rayner . Richard L. Rowe Milton T. Theall President Wherever you go from here. .. Remember to keep in touch with Weston through THE TOWN CRIER 358-7336 891-4720 Compliments of ST. JULIA ' S HIGH SCHOOL OF RELIGION 170 Compliments of THE VILLAGE BARBER VERONICA ' S Open 6 a.m. til midnight everyday Your personal store Foods and Needs 1074 Main Street, Rte 117 Waltham Compliments of BRENTON E. TYLER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 692 Main Street Waltham, Massachusetts 893-4808 GOOD LUCK — BONNE CHANCE — CLASS OF 1972 If you are a skier, tennis player or hiker, be sure to visit us sometime during the year. FRENCH SKI SHOP 45 Colpitts Rd. Weston, Mass. 899-6856 171 172 MASSACHUSETTS BROKEN STONE COMPANY WESTON MASSACHUSETTS Bituminous Concrete Crushed Stone FRED WOODSIDE ' S TIRE SHOP 305 WESTON STREET WALTHAM Citgo Gas Friendly Service Compliments of BILL MITCHELLS WEST END CHEVROLET 110 South Street Waltham, Mass. 173 Congratulations to the Class of 1972 FROM ERNIE CLAIR CAR COUNTRY A Country of Cars at Country Prices Ernie Clair Car Country V.F.W. PARKWAY, RTE. 1, BOSTON 325-4700 WESTON TRAVEL SERVICE BARBARA S. VILES AIR TRAVEL —. CRUISES — TOURS — HOTELS 466 BOSTON POST ROAD, WESTON 891-9110 OLDE COTTAGE 174 Best Wishes to the Class of 1972 THOMAS L. O ' HARA JR. Insurance ONE BOSTON PLACE BOSTON, MASS. 742-7200 79 NOBSCOT ROAD WESTON, MASS. 894-0587 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1972 Trans-Tech Insurance Agency, Inc. ONE BOSTON PLACE BOSTON, MASS. 723-7100 3 HIGHLAND STREET MEDWAY, MASS. 533-8003 If. • N , CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1 1972 1 1 i 1 1 J. MELONE SONS, INC. i CONTRACTORS WESTON 4 COPIES — COPIES Do You Need 1-5-10-25-100 or More Copies???? We Copy Term Papers, Letters, Cards, Notes, and Bills, Charts, Graphs, Checks, and Wills! We can Copy Printing, Typing, or Handwriting — from any color! We Copy any Individual Sheet, Typed Page, Drawing, etc. Sizes ... to ll x 6600 (That’s Right — Up To 550 Feet Long!) Instant Service! We’ll Make Them at Once For You! Instant Service! Here’s Your Cost: 1 COPY $.25 EACH—$.25 TOTAL 2 COPIES $. 171 2 EACH — $.35 TOTAL FIVE CENTS ADDITIONAL FOR EACH EXTRA ORIGINAL AFTER THE FIRST WESCON CORPORATION 21 CENTER STREET WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02193 (Upstairs, on the Side of the Triple ‘‘A” Market Building) INSTALLATION AIR CONDITIONING MAINTENANCE WESTON ELECTRIC Edward Erothingham MASTER ELECTRICIAN 596 Boston Post Rd. 899-0098 Weston, Mass. ABEL J. COLPITIS INC. PLUMBING AND HEATING Lie. NO. 6862 544 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON 177 Best Wishes to the Class of 1972 PETE JACOBS SPORTING GOODS WELLESLEY HILLS SQUARE HART SKIS Sales, Service and Rentals BICYCLES Check our liberal trade allowances C.C.M., BAUER, COOPER Hockey Equipment “A complete line of sporting goods” CALL OR COME ON DOWN 259 Washington Street WELLESLEY HAZEL ' S BAKERY “For the finest of Pastries” 280 WASHINGTON STREET WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS 02181 235-6156 Sportsweor WELLESLEY • CHESTNUT HILL WESTON • PRUDENTIAL CENTER 179 EGRET GROWTH FUND, INC. is a professionally managed mutual fund with a diversified portfolio of common stocks in many American industries. The Fund ' s primary investment objective is possible long term capital growth. Prospectus available from: EGRET DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, INC. 110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. 02107 Carleton H. Klinck, Registered Representative 482-0040 Leiby’s Garden Shop, Inc. JOHN J. CRANE, JR. President CRANE PLUMBING HEATING CO., INC 56 ELM STREET CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 02139 617-864-5678 Weston Cleaners Tailors Robert F. Danahy — Insurance A. M. Meincke Sons, Inc. Grueninger International Travel F. W. Derbyshire, Inc. Patty’s Old Fashioned Donuts Nobb Hill Press, Inc. Yem Mee Restaurant A friend Wal-lex Cleaners, Inc. CONTENTS Recognition and Dedication. 2,3 Faculty . 18 Seniors . 38 Underclassmen . 88 Activities. 114 Sports . 130 Advertisements . 150 IDENTIFICATION FOR CANDIDS 4 UR Robin Oakley 10 LR Becky Warren 4 LL George Benoit 11 UL Chris Larsen 4 LR Jim Coan, Peter Acconcia, 11 UR Mr. Cronin Fred Surette 11 CR Peter McKearney, Linda Loeb 5 LL Cathy Sussman, Mr. Gearan 11 LL Cindy Croatti 5 LR Lisa Gustie 11 LR Sally Ward, Rob Merz 6 UL Mr. MacDonald 12 UR Carol Anderson, Randy Richard 6 UC Nancy Johnson 12 CR Howard Bronson 6 UR Rob Pexton 12 LL Mark Madden, Mike Hooven, 6 C Skip Sm ith Kim Coburn 6 LL Bill King 12 LR Jeff Broderick 6 LR Mr. Jordan, Sally MacMillan 13 UL Marie Cacace 7 UL Fred Surette 13 UR Dan Abdun-Nabi, Jim Fox, John 7 UR Cheryl Smith Guidi, Barry Witt, John Wetherbee 7 CL Tom Bailey 14 UR Joy Sexton 7 CR Brad Kulow, Mrs. Fernald 14 CL Mr. Carini 7 LL Cathy Mannick 14 C Melissa Boshco 7 LR Jane Park 14 CR Arlene Comeau 8 UR Alan Engler 14 LL Paul Davis, Dave Teittnen 8 CL Mr. Burke, Mark Robbins 14 C Sue Trow 8 LL Larry McGlynn 14 LR Mr. Dunbar, Cathy Jones, 8 LR Kathy Fleicshman, Ed Downey Martha Gove 9 UL Mr. Garland 15 UL Todd Guild 9 UR Pam Gatos, Tom Bailey, Patrice 15 UC Kim Gould Cistulli, Wolfgang Meyer 15 UR Dennis Kerwin 9 CL Dan Abdun-Nabi 15 CR Linda Leatherbee 9 LL Jeff Arpin 15 LL Martha Cochran 10 UL Mr. McCowan, John Guidi 16 LR John Deterling 10 UR Gordon Clark 17 UL Mr. Pratt 10 CL Mary Noble, Kathy O’Hara 17 UC Janet Redden 10 C Rob Donaldson 17 UR Kim Rhinelander, Mark Eaton 10 CR Mike Gummeson 17 C Mr. Ide 10 LL Mary Jo Wilson 17 CR Sue Sawyer 17 LL Mianna Pontoppidan 75 John Powers, Wendy Larsen, 17 LR Miss Zelinka Peter Anton 40 Holly Wright 76 Carol Anderson 41 Mike Melone, Jon Billings 77 T Gary Glickman 42 Bob Dowse 77 B Doug Bradley 43 Dan Dittman 78 Lisa Gustie 44 T Cindy Nied 80 Bill Grant 44 B Leslie Downes 81 Bob Parlee 45 T Sandy Van Nostrand, Martha Gove 82 Leslie Donovan 45 C Peter Anton 86 T Holly Wright 45 B Maria Provenzano 86 B Robin Carroll 46 Carl Rose 90 C Wendy Lewis 48 Holly Wright, Mary Messina, Leslie 90 B Carol Charpie, Kathy Moriarty, Downes, Leslie Donovan, Sue Steve Uhlir, Cheryl Smith Whittemore 91 C Lisa Anza 49 C Bruce Landry 91 B Cheryl Gould 49 B Laura Carlson, Rob Starmer 92 Todd Guild 50 Barb Stacy 93 Nancy Weaver 51 LL Bruce Howard 94 Dayl Ratner 51 LR Kathy Moriarty 95 T Cathia Campobasso, Judy Coleman 52 T Karen Kirkpatrick 95 B Dan Prawdzik 52 B Vincent Nishino 96 T Nancy Rodman 53 T Liza Turner 96 C Laura McMullin 53 C Jim Wilson 96 B Steve Knott, Arlene Comeau 54 Carol Anderson 97 T Laurie Davis 55 Bill Matzelevich 97 C Cheryl Smith 56 Mike Melone, Jeff Arpin, Maria 98 T Danny Sherman Provenzano 98 B Ed Eaton 57 Jeff Arpin 99 T Therese Provenzano, Jean Cleary, 58 Chris Larsen Steve Shaw, Sarah Speare, 59 Mary Noble Joanne Melone 60 C Cindy Nied 99 B Paula Bickford 60 B Rita Sheehan 100 C Chris Lenahan 64 Ruth Noble, Nancy Shriner 101 C Janet Compton 65 Jamie Cremmen 102 C Abby Turner, Cathia Campobasso 66 Marie Cacace 102 B Karen Prince 67 Jim Wilson 103 C Mike Gummeson 68 T Betsy Goode 103 B Jack Rodgers 68 C Alison Mork 104 T Valle Nazar, Mike Soper 69 Ben Sawyer 106 T Sue Trow, Anita Sherman, 70 Liza Turner Kate Albrecht 71 Patti Franchi 108 Joyce Abdun-Nabi 72 Steve Campbell 109 Sue Bailey 73 Sheila Heffernon 110 Heidi Ferguson, Bob Oppel 74 Lois Leonhardt r I ( The names on the title page of this book do not tell the whole story of the people who helped put this yearbook together. To the many others who gave a hand in whatever way, the staff of the 1972 yearbook offers a fond and sincere Thank-you. Our thanks to George H. Pride for the use of the picture that appears on page one. 184 Weston High School 1972 Yearbook Staff. WHS Yearbook T5211 FOR REFERENCE Do Not Take From This Room WEST0 4 HlOH SCHOOL library media CENima WESTON, UA. 02193 9‘ ' t • l,f ,tt , r jf;W K W SPW«gKJ , , ,,, • i «■ • • ' .?- ‘iii! ‘ i.‘. Ji r- yb?- I ' lK-®: ; :?-4p b h I :; 5: .X rrv ' KKv ; ' ri j«- .;ii;id;i i,-:,;:;K ' ;, ” (’. ■jt - ’ ’ll ! ' r ' ' .•• ' • ' !■ lid ' s’’ ’ - 1 ,|.’! ,i!‘1 ' Kt-s- -■ ‘ “ ’ T‘ ' - -■ ' 1 ' ' ■. idi!’ , irRjJ y w . , I i nrxj i -MI ;; : { }l•. (lOi;:.. .J2:s:::; ■ yf a ' ' ' rt ' ' • r jtion ' y ;f Urowi fi! rHii ' t ' ? j f ri ly r Tt ' i ' r « tf iti - , J r , ' y .;;u y I l fX Cl ' ir ' i v ■ r 1 i-ib ' x I- ' b) ' i ' ' i;;i;jiH diK’:;.’ . ' •c:c;iX 0! i;KsK::). ::. K;;xK}c;;;r;;; ' jffc ‘i. 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Suggestions in the Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) collection:

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975


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