Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA)

 - Class of 1981

Page 1 of 208

 

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1981 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 208 of the 1981 volume:

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J t,dt CV 1 brtGjl Miqk Fl;p T 4? v 4 rc vV + 4| -V- ' I H h rc b Weston High School Library Weston, MA 02493 WESTON HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK 1981 EDITORS: Sue Funkhouser, Tom Galligan JUNIOR EDITORS: Shelly Cotter, Nancy Kaneb BUSINESS EDITORS: Jamie Sykes, Emily Shain FACULTY ADVISOR: Iona Nickeson PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: Mark Grunbaum BUSINESS STAFF: David Komessar, Susan Spencer LAYOUT STAFF: Sue Clabault, Christina Lee, Mavis MacNeil, Karen Martin, Debby North, Diane Santos, Amy Slifka, Sara Williams PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Katy Bushman, Bemy Jelin, David Komessar, Joss Moore, Steve Patton, Wade Shannon, Ed Walker, Chris Zannetos This yearbook would not have been possible without the cooperation of the Town Crier Sports Department, The News Tribune, Arnie Lohmann, Ross Farnham, and Rowan the Popcorn Man. v fv y: DEDICATION There is one man who always has a smile, a hello for everyone and who can make even a cockroach feel loveable. We see him in the morning with coffee and bagel in hand, in the hall with his briefcase, in the classroom with his pounding fist against the blackboard, and in the cafeteria during lunch time as one of the few brave teachers who dares eat with us ram¬ bunctious students. Although he has only been in the high-school for two years we have known him since eighth grade. Sure, we pity the deprived youngsters at the Junior High, but we are glad he joined us during our last years at Weston High School. Not only has his spirit uplifted the school, but his teaching has en¬ couraged students to learn and enjoy it all the while. We, the Class of 1981, dedicate our yearbook to you, Mr. Beevers, for being one heck of a great guy. The first word for today is . . . thanks! We are thanking you for your corny jokes, illegible scribbles, mandatory moments of silence, unique paper topics, but most of all, for letting us get to know a man of greatness. You ' re a man with intellect, wit and one whom many students respect. Sure, we may gripe a lot, but how can we dislike a man who wears Levis and teaches Shakespeare? Keep slugging away at those tennis balls, and remember, when kids bring you down, you have tons of fans out there! Mr. Walker SPECIAL RECOGNITION Dick, what can we say? You are a friend to everyone. You have taught us the real meaning of caring by showing in¬ volvement, enthusiasm, and support in our school activities. You continually cheer all the games, plaster your bus with pictures and articles and take a sincere interest in us as individuals. Thanks for all your smiles, laughs and cookies!! Dick Fanning, we ' ll never forget you! SENIOR CLASS ADVISORS The class of 1981 would like to thank Mrs. Schwartz and Mr. Blakeslee for their help and support throughout our four eventful years at Weston High School. From the first car wash freshman year to the outstanding prom of 1980, and finally graduation (can you believe it?) you have always been there, reody, willing, and able to help us in good times and bad. We weren ' t too sure about two science buffs, but in our book you ' re alright. For everything you ' ve done as advisors and as friends, Thank You!. 5 n. «G «n uLS wf nu m. wtiroi j ! JL ” ” ■ jv. ,. y , • r. ' :— SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Cheedeoder Chris Zannetos, Vice-President Football Jocks: Kim Long, Treasurer; Andrea Pulcini, Secretary; Martha Katz, President June 24 BETSEY ALLEN 23 Lexington Street Demasiada cordura es locura. Too much sanity is madness. Don Quixote JEFFREY W. ACKLEY 20 Round Hill Road Your future after death is unknown. So while still in life, let your smile be shown A little nonsense now and then Is relished by the best of men. Anonymous December 13 CAROLYN E. ALLANSMITH 19 Nash Lane When you don ' t know Where you ' re going Any rood will get you there. 9 T 0 E J lUHAT A£f y on. Qx )6 TO tso UJ n H TT AL 5T 0N I 7 Greenwood Street OUT COt Tf CH5H • I ' m black and proud. PrO tey PCFALL) i JBLL C ' 3sJmJ [kJB t-L- HPPG yO(T- H ' AV’tr At £ eat w ioe yg aw I boNT WW ' SS [vip iMurSH CH HO UJErEL. G-otTA RHAT P_FADy Foe. ahcthep X Am. fc k e|r AT GftA oAT ' i ' OA TRACEY ANDERSON December 5 sod Palet What are you doing? Hunting, said Pooh. ' Hello, said Piglet. __ r _ 9 . . .. 3 _ w . w Hunting what? Tracking something, said Pooh. Trackim hat said Piglet That ' s just what I ask myself. I ask mysell. whot ? What do you think you ' ll answer? I ' ll have to wait until i catch up with it. said Pooh. A. A. Milne So walk tall or baby don ' t walk at all . . Bruce Springsteen ALEX ANZA 67 Spring Road DOUGLAS A. ANDLER 32 Hawthorne Lane August 24 Moving on is a chance that we take everytime we try to stay together, say o word out of line, you find that the friends you had are gone forever, so many faces in and out of my life some will last some will just be now and then. Life is a series of hellos and goodbyes and I ' m afraid it ' s time for goodbye again. O.K., Funny Boy S.S. TODD AZADIAN 23 Chadwick Road March 1 There are no more new frontiers, we have got to make it here The Eogles it+ i4 ANNE-MARIE MICHELLE BAKER 373 Conant Road June 15 No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main; if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less . . . Any man ' s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. John Donne Oooh no! Mr. Bill KATHERINE BARBETTI 58 Oakdale Avenue February 13 Never measure your wealth in possessions, Unless that possession is a friend, And if it is Then your wealth is Immeasurable. JACQUELYN W. BARBETTI 58 Oakdale Avenue December 2 All I want is less to do, and more time to do it. Once in a while I just get away from everyone and go off by myself. I never really do anything But still I accomplish so much Talbots 12 CHARLES S. BELL 18 Wood Ridge Road December 12 A man cannot be said to succeed in this life who does not satisfy one friend. Thoreau So after all is said and done, I gotta move while it ' s still fun. I ' m gonna walk before they make me run. Stones ARNOLD A. BARNES III 32 Bradyll Road A P ril 3 If all our wishes were gratified Most of our pleasures would be destroyed. Richard Whatley Soccus vacuus non rectus starabit. Ben Franklin 6 Conant Road AMY BERMAN June 13 Life is a gift waiting to be unwrapped. Leo Buscaglia 13 L—« 26 Golden Ball Rood EDMUND AUGUSTUS BOOTH March 9 To speak kindly does not hurt the tongue. To speak kindly does not hurt the tongue jpQ fht. fo Qny Vic Qy i 6er-j 6) ( r d ast? ma+ ?$ to do a iyih ' te) ' yoor Meo ' i are recti is-hc. (oVox-rsej i rod ilAeJdtf Ql{ IocK ,,yi fue iU£ r id y P The jpod ujotK d did ypO d G enT.J r r, 76 Scotch Pine Rood DARYL BRESSLER July 12 There comes a time when rebellious young people should take their turn as odults against whom the next wave of youngsters can rebel. D Sutten If you try to be too sharp, you will cut yourself. Italian Proverb PIERS BOWNESS 76 Shody Hill Road September 12 When life looks like easy street, there ' s danger at your door. If the horse don ' t pull you ' ve got to carry the load. What a long, strange trip it ' s been. Grateful Dead NATHANIEL RICHMOND BROWN 35 Pinecroft Road April 6 What stands if freedom fall? R. Kipling He ain ' t heavy, he ' s my brother. Neil Diamond TRACEY BROWN 87 Sherburn Circle September 15 Piglet sidled up to Pooh from behind, Pooh! he whispered. Yes, Piglet? Nothing siad Piglet, taking Pooh ' s paw. I just wanted to be sure of you. A. A. Milne Conform and be dull. PHEBE HART BROWN 11 Valley View Road October 13 Do I search for what is not, Vainly, vainly, have I sought, or in search do I find, The end that so eludes my mind O.S.B. 15 JEFFREY MAURICE BRUTON 67 Washington Street, Dochester Do not turn back when you are just at the goal. Anonymous I ' m black and proud. May 12 DAVID B. BRYSON 112 Scotch Pine Road June 17 We ' re going to the Roadhouse and we ' re going to have a real good time. Jim Morrison and the Doors May the road rise up to meet you, May the sun be always at your back. And until we meet again, May God hold you in the palm of His hand. Old Irish Prayer MEREDITH D. BURKE 36 Church Street October 16 All that we see or seem Is but a dream within a dream. Edgar Allen Poe The best mirror is an old friend Anonymous 16 KATY BUSHMAN 5 Colchester Rood February 16 Abandon hope, all ye who enter here. Anonymous I only took the regular course. Reeling and Writhing of course to begin with and the different branches of Arithmetic — Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision. Lewis Carroll I STEFF CARLSON I 7 Audubon Road Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you ' ve been up to. I. L. 5. ! Let ' s swim to the moon, uh-huh Let ' s climb through the tide. Jimmy Mo Life is a perpetual series of adventures. Anonymous SCOTT C. CARPENTER 242 Glen Rood September 19 If you love something set if free, If it comes back to you it ' s yours. If it doesn ' t, it never was. Anonymous Tom — I K H I.F.I.H B T.E., U S C W A P. ARTHUR L. CHIN 26 Lexington Rood, Wellesley January 24 If the World should stop Revolving, Spinning slowly down to die. I ' d spend the end with You, and when the World was through, Then One by One the Stars would all go Out; and You, and I would simply Fly . . . Away. Bread Do not wish to be anything but what you are, and try to be that perfectly. St. Francis de Sales ELIZABETH CARUSO 31 Green Lane It ' s a hard world to get a break in, All the good things have been taken, But I know there ' s a way to make certain these days, Though I come dressed in rags, I will wear sable some day. Bruce Springsteen P S WHS . . . Are you speaking of what you know, Or just repeating what you have heard? Jefferson Starship RODNEY CHEh 80 Sherburn Circle April ( Public schools are the nurseries of all vice and immorality Henry Fieldinc I love Chinese Monty Pythor 1 CYNTHIA JEAN CLARK 53 Golden Ball Road If I leave here tomorrow Would you still remember me? I must be traveling on now Because there are too many places I ve got to see. If I stay with you now, Well things just couldn ' t be the same. Because I ' m as free as a bird now And this bird you ' ll never change. Lynyrd Skynyrd M.G.Y.A., S.C. AND M.M. Dear You — We made it! — Me December 2 It ■ ROBERT J. COLLINS 21 Chiltern Road May 13 It is not what he has, nor even what he does, which directly expresses the wealth of a man, but what he is. Henry Amiel No one is known in history or legend of having died of laughter. Sir Max Beerbohn ROBERT SAGAR COBURN 115 Meadowbrook Road March 6 Common sense is not so common. Voltaire What is it; is Man a blunder of God, or God a blunder of Man- 5 Neitzsche. To be is to do. Aristotle To do is to be. Sartre Doo-be, doo-be, doo. Sinatra v.r , jj . v ' t- « • ROB CORNELL 15 Warren Place December 25 Good morning yesterday You wake up and time has slipped away And suddenly it ' s hard to find The memories that you left behind Remember the times of your life. We are either going to win or we ' re going to lose. Peter Noonan JAMES M. CONCANNON 36 Pine Street I ' m as free as a byrd now, and this byrd you ' ll never chain. Lynyrd Skynyrd Born to be wild! Steppenwolf Oldsmobile = 442 foot patch. Firestone JOHN J. CONCEISON 679 Wellesley Street December 15 We ' re just ships that pass in the night And we smile when we say it ' s alright We ' re still here It ' s just that we ' re out of sight Like those ships that pass in the night. Ian Hunter I ■ 0M| ■ ■ k i . I ' ' .V - v • JOHN R. COSTELLO 200 Ridgeway Road June 16 It ' s not the size of the man in the fight; It ' s the size of the fight in the man. Unknown America ' s Best Chew. Red Man The moose is loose! To A. G.: Top of the line! I ' m sick, but not insane. Pousette-Dart THOMAS CRONIN 65 Juniper Road February 7 What was behind us and what is before us are tiny matters compared to what is within us. Ralph Waldo Emerson Then I fell out of a cloud, hit the ground and noticed something missing. _ ,. ... Stephen Stills Armadillo! B. D. makes S. M. of fat kid ' s face. Jethro is a rette. STACEY CRANE 56 Black Oak Rood Moving on is a change that we take every time we try to stay together. Soy a word out line and you II find that the friends you had are gone forever. So many faces in and out of my life some will last and some will just be now and then. Life is a series of hellos and good-byes and I ' m afraid it ' s time for goodbye again. i. + + • • -4 lW v . v ' -- itf.- LAVEL S. CROSBY 45 Mognolia Street, Dorchester December 12 First man to die, for the flog we hold high, was a black man. The ground where we stand, with the flag held in our hand, was first the redman ' s. The rail roads for trains, came on tracking that was laid, by the yellow man. We pledge alleaiance all our lives, to the magic colors Red, Blue and White. But we must all be given, the liberty That we defend, For with justice not for all men, history will repeat again. It ' s time we learned, this world was made for all men. S. Wonder — Byrd — MICHAEL DAOUD 19 Bakers Hill Road January 27 Never before have we had so little time in which to do so much. Franklin D. Roosevelt 51 Church Street DAN DAVIDSON 51 Church Street Here is my song for the asking Ask me and I will play So sweetly. I ' ll make you smile. This is my tune for the taking Take it, don ' t turn away I ' ve been waiting all my life. Thinking it over, I ' ve been sad Thinking it over, I ' d be more glad To change my ways for the asking Simon and Garfunkel We must cultivate our garden. Voltaire 1 STEPHEN DITMORE 41 Young Road January 8 They may say I ' m a dreamer, but I ' m not the only one; I hope some day you ' ll join us, and the world can live as one. John Lennon ROBERT L. DAVIS 27 Whiting Street, Roxbury September 2 MARLENE DHOORE 76 Newton Street f .4 23 ms. ‘ :.av. w TARA DONAHOE 8 Ash Street July 1 If you smile at me I will understand cuz that is something everybody everywhere does in the same language. Crosby Stills Nash Young There are no good or bad times in life, there are only things to be remembered and things to be forgotten. Unknown And I ' ve got the urge for going and I guess its time to go ... Tom Rush POLLY E. DOTTER 30 Radcliffe Road July 10 If I leave here tomorrow would you still remember me? For I must be travelin ' on, now, ' Cause there ' s too many places I ' ve got to see. But if I stayed here with you, Well, things just couldn ' t be the same. Cause I ' m as free as a bird, now, And this bird, they ' ll never change! Double Slush puppies — desire, D.P.D ' s Halloween in ' 78, New Years Eve on Brown Street, You really boge me out, O K ? THOMAS DURKIN 389 North Avenue SYLVIA FALLON 26 Portridge Hill Rood September 4 BENTON DAVIS EDWARDS 240 Westerly Road March 2 Every word of God is pure, he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him. Proverbs 30:5 MEMORIES: Ski trips, summer beach trip Junior year, Young — Life — Saranac, P.F. outdoor trips, Rt. 9 Old ' s cruises, great summer times on the cape, MLH. V 2 the Olds Brothers. TO: Chip, Andy, Peter Keats, J. C., Little buckshot, Ron, Chris, John Murray, Nelson. Thanks to my special brother Allan for the Olds, and to Stanley, the greatest sister. Mom and Dad, thanks for your support. Jamie, I love you. HEATHER ELIZABETH EDDY 366 Winter Street December 8 Blackbird singing in the dead of night Take these broken wings and learn to fly All your life You were only waiting for this moment to arise. Lennon McCartney •; ti ; j ( V r { ?; k i f 1L i i rfV ■■ Jul3 e 0 e 10 Sherbufrv Circl v 1 ov vy FEDERICO January 1 1 . l know that the earth exists, y ' a it is none of my business why; ' c grinot find out v)hat it ' s all about, V- ' y , f) hwpould but v aste time to try. fei a Brief, brief thing, here for a little space; 10 SherbctrvCircle .. oP ' ,■ qj - n- a „A =l a - ,v • C CA ' nd stay I would like, if I may, Ov J c s v CTo brighten and better the place. ,6 ' Ella Wheeler Wilcox BRENDA M. FARINA 85 Byron Road March 19 Time ain ' t long, soon we ' ll be moving on . . . Natures way for her to say in perfect harmony Believe, find your place, your past erased For life ' s new destiny With peace the dawn will bring New light to sing and shine it ' s warmth on you It ' s true you ' ll feel the glow and start to grow Into a brand new you. Earth, Wind and Fire CHRIS FERGUSON 17 Conant Rood March 27 Tis better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt. Mark Twain The greatest pleasure in life is doing what people say you cannot do. Mark Twain A ' HAL FISKE 52 Spruce Hill Road I wanna see what ' s never been seen I wanna live that age old dream No beef age upon you. B. D. buys motorhome. November 8 April 24 EDWARD FREEDMAN 82 Shady Hill Road Life Is A Dream What is Life? A Frenzy What is Life? An Illusion, a shadow, something unreal, and the greatest good is small; for all of Life is a dream, and Dreams Themselves are but a dream. Calderon de La Barca Follow me, I ' m as lost as anybody. Anonymous GAYLE FLEISCHER 47 Walnut Road Keep your face to The sunshine and you ' l never feel the rain. It ' s been a teamin ' , laughin ' , lovin ' , n ' cryin ' experience but it ' s only the end of the beginning I.S.Y.U.T.H ILY, T October 7 SUE FUNKHOUSER 68 Westlond Rood October 26 We meet again sixteen years later — I invite you in for some wine you say it ' s too early in the day. As I pour myself a glass of wine I smell your lemony cosmetics and you study my jeans and dirty toes. I clear away my stray papers so we can sit and talk a while. You ' re married, 3 kids, 2 cars and a large house. I ' m single, 1 dog, 2 unpublished manuscripts. You say you have too many things to do at once, I say I am disgusted with the human race. Then we laugh — Even in high school we knew how one another would turn out. I could never understand your restricted life, because I had to be free just to be and nothing really has changed after all these years, has it? sf V TOM GALLIGAN 30 Bakers Hil Scott, I.K.H.I. October 25 CATHERINE C. GEE 31 1 Boston Post Rooa June 15 life, and in life there is love. Dan Cheever 1980 The Lord is first, my friends are second, and I am third. Gale Sayers Having come to this place I set out once again on the dark and marvelous way from where I began Anonymous ANDREW GIAMBARBA 81 Woodchester Drive November 5 Romans 10:13 Thanks Been. Especially for: Cape Trips, Springfield Trips, Mountain Trips, and all the good times, warmth and kindness that I got from you and your family, and Muffet, Stonewall Jackson, and Mr. Grinch. L. N.: Izzzie Number One, Little Greg really knows what he s talking about. 1-4-3 My eyes are turned toward the future; but I will not forget the past. Unknown JOE GIAMO 21 Warren Avenue March 10 When through one man a little more love and goodness, a little more light and truth comes into the world, then that man ' s life has had meaning. Fr. Alfred Delp God asks no man whether he will accept life. That is not the choice. You must take it. The only choice is How. Henry Ward Beecher mmmmm SUSAN M. GOODE 44 Ledgewood Rood October 20 The secret of life is enjoying the passage of time. James Taylor Memories — June 23, 24, May I momma dog; face to the banana patch? Biggie; Awoowoo; In the race; Suuueeey pig pig pig; You really boge me out, okay? 25 mph; photobooths; May 10, day tripper, MASH; Hugh ' s here that ' s cute; L. S.; Funneee; I feel like $100, Abso — lutely; Desiree; snowball fights; Megan; Joyce; lie through your teeth; SORRY . . . and all the good times. MARK GRUNBAUM 719 South Avenue November 27 Life is just one damn thing after another. Frank Ward O ' Malley I ' d like to beat it off to the woods right now. And loaf all day. And go to (a party) again to-night, and play poker, and cuss as much as I feel like, and drink a hundred and nine-thousand bottles of beer. Babbitt Deutschland uber alles! Goethe ZINA GRAVES 16 Irma Street, Dorchester August 30 You are what you are, I am what I am. So don ' t walk in front of me, I may not follow; don ' t walk behind me, I may not lead, just walk beside me and be my friend. 30 THOMAS GUARENTE 89 Block Oak Rood March 28 In the days of my youth I was told what it means to be a man Now I ' ve reoched that age I ' ve tried to do all those things the best I could No matter how I tried I found my way to the same old jam. Good Times. Bad Times. You know I ' ve had my share L. Z. Take care G.R., R.H., K.M.,R.J.,B.K.,B.C,S.G.,K.F.,C.C. J.P. DOMINIQUE GUILLEMIN I 50 Indian Hill Road (From France) | II ne faut pas de tout pour faire un monde il faut un peu de bonheure et c ' est tout. Elvard I need someone to believe I ' m someone to trust. Genesis BENGT GUNNE 44 Oak Street April 22 An empty bag cannot stand upright. Benjamin Franklin 31 95 Merriam Street GRETCHEN HARMON July 2 And time weaves ribbons of memory To sweeten life when youth is through. But I would need no memories there If I could share My life with you Stephen Schwartz ROBBY HARRIS 642 Boston Post Road December 16 If you are under the impression that when you are walking toward something you will end up further onward — remember things aren ' t quite that simple. The Who, good memories, Junior Prom with L.C., C.C., AND G R Had a real good time with L.C., C.C., G.R., T.G., P.S., K.M., B K , R.J., M S., and Dave Bryson with the Door ' s Madness at the Roadhouse. Good luck to you all. Fond memories of St. Louie Buds. 7 4 Meadowbrook Road DUDLEY C. HARRIS February 7 32 55 Spruce Hill Rood AMY HARRISOI August 2 But there never seem to enough time to do the things you want t do, when you find then from Time in a Bottle You say you wont me to change. I will change easier when yo accept me as I an John Woo Ugh! Morning! What o way to start the day! Unknow 58 Dean Road BETH HARTMAN June 22 LIANE HARTEN 82 Lexington Street November 4 Once a task you ' ve begun Never stop til it is done. Be this task great or small, Do it well or not ot all! So how did I do? Baby this town rips the bones from your back It ' s death trap, it ' s a suicide rap We gotta get out while we ' re young ' Cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run. The Boss Sometimes I feel I ' ve always been just passing through. On my way away, or toward. Shouting allelulias in an unseen choir or whispering fades down beneath my breath waiting for an echo, not an answer. Everybody has the answers or they ' ll make them up for you. Just once I ' d like to hear A brand new question. THOMAS MORGAN HEALEY April 13 A brief candle both ends burning An endless mile, a bus wheel turning A friend to share the lonesome times A handshake and a sip of wine So say it out loud and let it ring That we ' re all a part of everything The present, future and the past Fly on , proud bird, you ' re free at last. Charlie Daniels .v! KIMERA SUE HIGH 39 Warren Avenue September 19 1 ( The best and most beautiful things in the world can not be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart. Helen Keller Thanks to S.F, G.H., J.W. Without them I would never have known true friendship. STEPHEN HODGETTS 214 Church Street January 1 PETER W. HIRSCH 7 Conant Road June We have forty million reasons for failure, but not a single excuse Rudyard Kipling JANET HOWARD 41 Juniper Road February 23 All that we see or seen is but a dream within a dream. Edgar Allen Poe There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is in having lots to do and not doing it. ■ y Mary Wilson Little uaktL- cvs vUULO uocvaJ tun Y00 . yoo dJUcMcu S Koccl £X MouUnp (VUL l«Xcdf- LaJoMM l cUdn v -f bOdojEA tW21 . Mr n co cUjr nGi iv ' VyML uciPCQ rM ' VNope vjoo u£Vt£ QpQd eJALOT K OCC£ ) KARtfN JACKSON . -t WCU- ' V C)p yCO 15 Stony Brook Rood Fondest memorise: All the fun times witf Cv K ££ ,janxr ith P. R. and J. 0., winter of 1979 with T F and the best summer of 1980 with T D ' -KOO • ' ?S T o CJpiY uo ' . OtM A 0 £ 7 . P C P‘ i V v. BETTY JEAN JACKSON 104 Ormond Street, Mattapan August 7 Live eoch day the best you can and let tomorrow take care of itself. Sv5 STEPHANIE LEAH JACKSON 115 Hutchings Street, Roxbury Cuentame uncuento Hazme sonar la vida Hazme vivir el sueno Tell me a story, make me dream about life . . . Make me live that Dream. Anonymous July 31 RICHARD NELSON JACOBS 80 Bradford Road While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand; When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall; And when Rome falls — the world. Childe Harold ' s Pilgrimage, canto IV, st. 145 You may fire when you are ready, Gridley. Anonymous From Battle of Manila Bay July 15 CATHERINE E. JACOBS 20 Colchester Road September 29 If your determination is fixed, I do not counsel you to despair Few things are impossible to diligence ond skill Great works are performed, not by strength, but perserveronce Samuel Johnson SHARON JOHNSON 15 Hallowell Street, Mattapan April 3 It ' s just on illusion we have here on earth that one moment follows another one, like beads on a string, and that once a moment is gone its gone forever. Kurt Vonnegut ■ ■ BEMY JELIN 95 Church Street July 27 Heaven is in your mind Traffic it s cheerio my deario that pulls a lady through Don Marquis Time waits for no one No favors has he Time waits for no one And he won ' t wait for me . . . Rolling Stones LYNN JOHNSON 17 Halbom Street, Mattapan ■ WILLIAM I. JOHNSTON 19 Arrowhead Road January 12 Architecture is frozen music. Friedrich von Schelling . where there is no integral order, there can be no beauty, though the order be no more obvious than mathematics in music is obvious. Frank Lloyd Wright LAWRENCE JONES 141 Harrishof Street, Dorchester LAURA JONES 67 Brook Road February 20 . . . there is something to be said for the lyric attitude . . . Archy the Cockroach Free will is not one will, but many wills conflicting in one man. Flannery O ' Connor I ' ve had post-natal depression ever since I was born. A pub wall in Surrey 39 STACEY KANAVOS 24 Hancock Road September 19 The real test of a man ' s character is what he would do if he weren ' t found out. The true test of Intelligence is not how much we know how to do, but how we behave when we don ' t know what to do. Nothing ever happens in a small town, but what you hear makes up for it. ILYT FFL. Lorna, Kal-Kan, Fred, Apple, Cat KATHERINE M. KANEB 24 Colonial Way May 11 Friends are like the notes of a song. One harmony, one melody. Together they make music. Lloyd Bunch Slow down, feel the warm wind blow Clown around, bide your time Soon enough, you ' ll know Which way is right for you Which rood you must go I ' m glad we had this chance to talk You don ' t have to choose Livingston Taylor ELLEN KAMENTSKY Decmeber 20 We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring will be To arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. T. S. Eliot There are places I remember all my life Though some have changed Some forever, not for better Some have gone and some remain. The Beatles 261 Country Drive mm SETH H. KAPLAN 423 Concord Road December 2 Contrariwise, continued Tweedle-dee, if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn ' t, it ain ' t. That ' s logic. Lewis Caroll I think I think I am Therefore I am I think Moody Blues MARK A. KASEVICH 680 Wellesley Street July 21 It requires more than a day ' s devotion to know and possess the wealth of a day. Henry David Thoreau A human being is never a total and permanent stranger to another human being. Man belongs to man. Dr. Albert Schweitzer January 4 Fil v .1 WENDY ALISON KASSIRER 24 Dean Road, Wellesley Hills 2 Riverglen Road, Wellesley Hills I worry ' bout the world that we live in I ' m worried by all the confusion I wonder ' bout the lies I ' ve been reoding I wonder where this madness is leading. Foreigner TO • I . PETER KEATING 64 Bakers Hill Rood February 1 1 Nothing is as easy as it looks. Everything takes longer than it should, and if anything can go wrong, it will at the worst possible moment. Murphy ' s Law Memories: Beach trip ' 80; V 2 of the OLDS Brothers. Thanks for the memories: Benton, Ron, Steve, Ced, Jamie and others. MARTHA KATZ 1 1 Sunset Road September 29 My heart is warm with the friends I make, And better friends I ' ll not be knowing Yet there isn ' t a train I wouldn ' t take, No matter where it ' s going. St. Vincent Millay When you find yourself in the thick of it Help yourself to a bit of what is all around you. Silly girl. Beatles MIIKA KEERD July 18 1 00 Bradford Road Fame is vapor, popularity an accident, riches takes wings. Only one thing endures, and that is character Horace Greenly JOHN BRUCE KENNEDY 15 Deerpath Lane Two roads diverged in a wood and I — I took the one less traveled by And that made all the dofference Robert Frost Everyone is the Architect to his own future. Switchin to Glide. Good luck to everyone in the class of 81 . TRACEY E. LANG 14 Warren Place August 26 The good times are the best times, the bad times fade away, the good times are forever . . . J. Geils Happiness is not having what you want, but wanting what you have. Hyman Jodah Schachtel I said, Hey baby, take a walk on the wild side. December 24 JOHN KRAKAUER 31 Beech Road And when the lion gave a roar — Pierre fell out upon the floor. Maurice Sendak ft v U! ' -• t . KAREN LAURINE LEACH 40 Rockport Road July 5 LOUIE LEOMBRUNO 10 Winter Street May 7 Take time to smell the roses Don ' t hold back your one chance It hardly last, it hardly last Better, better believe in Forever. Styx DOUGLAS TODD LINDE 265 Country Drive The day is immeasurably long to him who knows not how to value and use it. Once I had a little game I liked to crawl back into my brain I think you know the game I mean I mean the game called go insane! Jim Morrison The old get old, the young get stronger, they got the guns but we got the numbers. Jim Morrison U, va o . V s J voC t ' Vy. fcj_V .. rvU rv.O ' ' .X y L cr sP CX ' ' o v - JOHN EDWARD LYNCH 243 Westerly Road November 27 A man ' s mind plans his way, But the Lord directs his steps. Proverbs 16:9 I once heard a man say . . . Sow a thought, reap an action. Sow an action, reap a habit. Sow a habit, reap a lifestyle. Sow a lifestyle, reap a destiny. Anonymous To A. G. J. C. : Top of the Line! K.W. — P.F. ELIZABETH GRAY LUNT 75 Bradford Road Before the rising sun, we fly So much of life ahead So many roads to choose We start out walking and learn to run And yes, we ' ve just begun . . The Carpenters It ' s the laughter we will remember when we remember the way we were. Barbra Streisand Keep your feet on the ground and keep reaching for the stars! Casey Kasem N ' OS December 18 Of ■3 Tn of o n N r KIMBERLY ANNE LONG 56 Colchester Road April 9 Happiness comes of the capacity to feel deeply, to enjoy simply, to think freely, to risk life, to be needed. Storm Jameson STEPHANIE MACDONALD 87 Sunset Road February 4 High on this mountain, the clouds down below I ' m feeling so strong and alive From this rocky perch I ' ll continue to search For the wind, and the snow, and the sky I want a lover, I want some friends And I want to live in the sun And I want to do all the things that I have never done. Dan Fogelberg If I dialed the wrong number, then why did you answer the phone? James Thurber ROB MAMMOLA 30 Perry Lane January 9 Well done is better than well said. Benjamin Franklin If it wasn ' t for the optimist, the pessimist would never know how happy he wasn ' t. Anonymous It is better to have tried and failed than to never have tried at all. MARK JOHN MACDONNELL 15 Whitney Tavern Road September 7 We must commit ourselves whole heartedly to pursuing the goals we have set for ourselves. Rev Ned C. Watts Jr. 46 I 1 I ARA MARTIROSSIAN 61 Ridgeway Rood February 12 We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat. Queen Victoria Get there first with the most men. Nathan Bedford Forrest I never forget o face but in your case I ' ll make an exception. Groucho Marx SARAH BETH MARTIN 168 Summer Street August 24 Half of Art is knowing when to stop. Arthur William Radford You ' re gonna need a bigger boat. Chief Brody in Jaws VICTOR RONALD MARTINO 139 River Road July 11 Don ' t let others tell you what to do, your own good judgement will influence you. V. R. M. SUSAN MCCAHAN August 21 4 Bryden Rood Still round the corner there may wait A new road or a secret gate; And though I often have passed time by, A day will come at least when I Shall take the hidden paths that run West of the Moon, East of the Sun. J.R.R. Tolkien JANET M. MCGARRY 11 Indian Hill Road The great hope of society is individual character. William Elley Channing May 27 19 Plymouth Road REBECCA L. MCENROE November 1 I ' m free — I ' m free, And freedom tastes of reality I ' m free — I ' m free. An ' I ' m waiting for you to follow me. If I told you what it takes To reach the highest high. You ' d laugh and say nothing ' s that simple But you ' ve been told many times before Messiahs pointed to the door And no one had the guts to leave the temple! Tommy, from the Who jl I JAMES S. McLELLAN 77 Chestnut Street June 16 Imagination is a force of Nature. It converts to actual. It sustains, it alters, it redeems. i X Sfeve Martin ' s grandmother what? In Art the PAMELA J. MELO 225 Boston Post Road So on and on I go, the seconds tick the time out. There ' s so much left to know, and I ' m on the road to find out. J Cat Stevens Hey tommorrow, where are you going? Do you have some room for me? v Cause night is failin ' and dawn is callin ' . I ' ll have a new day if she ' ll have me Jim Croce PATRICIA ANNE McKENNA 35 Hubbard Road October 2 If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears however measured or faraway. Henry David Thoreau 49 LAURA A. MILLAN 455 £outh Avenue Sometimes I wonder where I ' ve Been, Who I am. Do I fit in. Making believing is hard alone I ' ll be on my own. We ' re always proven who we are, Always reaching for that rising star. To guide me far and shine me home, I ' ll be on my own. v ” Irean Kara ELIZABETH ANN MORTON 20 Spring Road n Don ' t walk behind me; ' f) y. I may not lead. , ( Don ' t walk in front of me;V ; q I may not follow. V U ' Just walk beside me ( 0 And be my friend. IrfUll ' October 1 I (?v T ' LUCIA MORABITO 15 Bradyll Road El que percevera vence January I ANDREA 64 Hobbs Brook Rood MUCCINI February 5 Memories — S. 0. H., L. N., P. M . . . We are four captains Newton . . . New Years Eve ' 79-80 . . . Snowball fight Halloween Wellesley . . . . . Gwibitz R.W. 19 Beatles . . . Friendly ' s . . . Camp . . . . I ' m ill ... I ' m Noony . . . Amnesia . . . Sports. Rivers belong where they can ramble Eagles belong where they can fly I ' ve got to be where my spirit can run free Got to find my corner of the sky. Stephen Schwartz February 19 HEATHER S. MORTON 35 Fields Pond Rood If I tried to read, much less answer, all the criticisms made of me and all the attacks leveled against me, this office would have to be closed for all other business. I do the best I know how, the very best I can. I mean to keep doing this, down to the very end. If the end brings me out all wrong, then ten angels swearing I hod been right would make no difference. If the end brings me out alright, then what is said against me will make no difference. X ,v a Abraham Lincoln Thanks to you I ' m much obliged, 0 V x ' nX It ' s been such a pleasant stay. I cf. A 3 t do K V A T‘ v ELIZABETH S. NOBLE I 148 Country Driv r ' - .oi ' .. V, June 10 The leaves are falling all around, It ' s time I was on my way. a ' T T’oiao ' SJ A Led Zeppelin ■ CAJ 51 PETER C. NOONAN 50 Nobscot Rood May 15 I will not follow where the path leads, but I will go where there is no path and leave a trail. NANCY NOBLES 68 Clarkwood Street, Mattapan MAURA T. NYHAN 429 Conont Road October 1 5 Be careful which dreams you clutch For dreams come true. Joan Walsh Anglund Be life long or short, its completeness depends on what it was lived for. D. S. Jordan Happiness is finding out you’re not so dumb after all. Charles M. Schulz 52 CAROLE O ' CONNELL _ 32 Rockport Road February 28 Yes, there are two paths you can go by, but in the long run, there ' s still time to change the road you ' re on. Led Zepplin The secret in life is enjoying the passage of time. James Taylor The world is before you, you need not take it or leave it as it was when you came in. James Baldwin Jeg Haber, vi kommer igen en gang. SHEILA MARION O ' HARA 79 Nobscot Road January 2 Wellesley nights and days, Field Hockey Camp (pictures) Riunite on ice, thats nice . . . Pink Champale . . New Years Eve 79-80 ... snowball fight in front yard . . . Friendly ' s . . . Beatles Forever, Daytripper Amnesia, County Line . We are four captains .. . Halloween . .. Gwibitz . . . I ' m Nana . . . sports We hurriedly ran from the safety of school yards in search of better, more beautiful world. One day we turned around to find our new worlds were all in our mind. Rod McKuen n w PAMELA W. OLIVER August 16 19 Baker s Hill Road All over the country, I ve seen it the same Nobody ' s winning at this kind of game We gotta do better, it ' s time to begin You know all the answers must come from within. D H. Ayiti, cheri, pi bon peyi pase ou nans povins. B.Y.T.B.F.A.O.C.E.H.L.Y. KAREN LEE OTT December 13 50 Indian Hill Road Follow your own directions, Rumor has it you only live once And Seeing as all-encompassing wisdom Is n the final analysis exceedingly hard To come by Duck the intellectual games And, knowing what you can feel, Run for joy In the appropriate direction(s). Norman Solomon JULIE PAIGE 204 Conant Road April I 1 And in chasin ' what I thought were moonbeams I have run into a couple of walls But in looking back at the faces I ' ve been I would sure be the first one to say When I look at myself today I wouldn ' t have done it any other way. DAVID JAE-HYUN PARK 41 Laxfield December31 Uno no es lo que dice que es, sino lo que demuestra ser. One is not what one says he is, but what one demonstrates himself to be. Roberto Duran We are like unto one who, to light his way follows a torch that he himself is carrying Andre Gide JOSHUA PARIS 11 Driftwood Lane January 3 I know that you believe you understand what you Think I said, but, I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant mm SUZANNE PATNODE 75 Sherburn Circle February 23 Life is a series of ups and downs, Sometime in our lives We all have pain, we all have sorrow But, if we are wise, We know there ' s always tomorrow. Bill Withers I know you think you know but how do you know that what you know is true? Joe Jackson BROOK PARKER 321 Boston Post Road December 16 No act of kindness no matter how small is ever wasted. Aesop DAVID J. PATRAIKO 82 Westland Rood June 4 Every man has a scheme that will not work. Howe ' s Law 56 Goodbye ERICA POWELL 243 Glen Road February 21 Lather was 30 years old today and Lather came foam from his tongue. He looked at eyes wide and plainly say is it true that I ' m so longer young? and the children call him famous What the old men call insane. And sometimes he ' s so nameless that he hardly knows what game to play which words to say. And I should have told him no you ' re not old and I should have let him go on, smiling. Jefferson Airplane STEPHEN PATTON 316 Highland Street April 7 I ' m sitting down by the highway Down by that highway side Everybody ' s going somewhere Riding just as fast as they can ride I guess they ' ve got a lot to do Before they can rest assured Their lives are justified Pray to God for me baby He can let me slide Jackson Browne SHARON J. PECK 243 Ridgeway Road October 16 Go and fetch the captain ' s log and tear the pages out. We ' re on you way to nowhere now. Can ' t bring the helm about None of us are left in any doubt We won ' t be back again. Al Stewart As I walk toward the sunset I turn to see the shadow Of my past growing longer. ME (P2). 57 JULIE PRESCOTT 152 Boston Post Rood December 3 Let the disappointments pass Let the laughter fill your glass Let your illusions last until they shatter Whatever you might hope to find Among the thoughts that crowd your mind There won ' t be many that ever really matter. Jackson Browne ’r t ' KENNETH POWELL 185 Glenway Street, Dorchester I ' m Black and Proud ALAN LAWRENCE PROCTOR 63 Cart Path Road July 30 If you think you are beaten, you are. If you think you dare not, you don ' t. If you ' d like to win, but think you can ' t. It ' s almost a cinch you won ' t. Life ' s battles don ' t always go To the stronger or faster man; But soon or late the man who wins Is the man who thinks he can. The other line moves faster! Murphy ANDREA J. PULCINI 44 Legion Road Each face that flashes back to mind Seems as it was untouched by time I can ' t recall quite all the names. Each one is precious all the same. How strange to think How many friends were lost somewhere behind Between today and yesterday Life came between us all. Barry Manilow Querer es Poder Spanish Proverb June 7 PETER A. REILLY 220 Ridgeway Road November 6 The time to be happy is now The place to be happy is here The way to be happy is to Make other people happy Robert Ingersolt The most glorious moments in life are not the so-called moments of success, but rather those days when out of dejection and despair you feel rise in you a challenge to life, and the promise of future accomplishments. Gustave Flaubert SYLVIA RACCA 654 Wellesley Street September 4 I ' ll do the very best I know how, the very best I can, and I mean to keep doing so until the end. If the end brings me out all right, what is said against me won ' t amount to anything. If the end brings me out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right will make no difference. Abraham Lincoln 19 Pelham Rood JONATHAN RICE August 12 One Evil Deed missed is a loss for all eternity. Grendel You serve me and I ' ll serve you. Swing your partners and all get screwed. Geroge Harrison JANE RENY 70 Possum Road November 7 In the midst of winter, I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer. Albert Campus I ' ve loved these days . . . B. J. I get by with a little help from my friends. Beatles DAWN RICHARDSON 65 Warren Avenue December 25 Gonna Raise Hell Chevelle 128 Remember Chris G.T.O. (Saturday Night Cruising) D B I Love Snow GOLDEN CHOCOLATE COOKIES mmmm good BRUCE RONTY 21 Jericho Road September 4 You ' re young and life is long and there is time to kill today. And then one day you find ten years have passed behind you. No one told you where to run — You missed the starting gun. You can ' t get to heaven without raising a little hell. The good times are the best times. The bad times fade away. Memories of Niko ' s in Vermont. PETER ROSSI 40 Dean Road 40 Dean Road Looking out at the road rushing under my wheels Looking back at the years gone by like so many summer fields In sixty-five I was seventeen and running up one-o-one I don ' t know where I ' m running now, I ' m just running on. Running Empty Jackson Browne KENNAN S. ROSENTHAL I 420 North Avenue November 27 Success is failure turned inside out — The silver tint of the clouds of doubt — And you never can tell how close you are. It may be nearer when it seems afar: So stick to the fight when you ' re hardest hit — It ' s when things seem worst that you mustn t quit Famous Saying 61 . ;? Tj3 f v Z r raiy ha c? ' V a-c+ COOrdS o to ygjJ L brcafn , C corl dgrS 1 3 137 Newton Street KATHLEEN ANN ROULEAU March 10 VS ' T olways remember the times we had, when we had all the time in the world together. K. Simon Memories — Roo, Kelly, Simon, Ginny ' s half sister . . . Someone ' s - seranoding Kyath . . . Jackie, pigs, rainbows, strawberries, Beatles, M M ' s, braids, Garfield, salad bars, piano . . . Nantucket — N B.D.D., Minn, — J.S.M. . . . Waterville Valley ' 80 . . . laugh attack, CB 2 , original him — S.D. . . . Hilton — DSP . . . farm animals, home movies, Reasons , S.D. at S.N., spirit squad, C funneee, winter track — CLTCL, AOBTD, Brian ' s Song . . . Out . here on my own . . . reeefund . . . BREAKING AWAY! r X) i 3 V) 4 V ADELEINE rostad 2 m o d November 15 a X H Me too! c 3P Nobscot Road J_v j Yesterday is already a dream O.__ And tomorrow is only a vision “ But today, well lived, . Makes every yesterday __V A dream of happiness v. And every tomorrow A vision of hope. r- Vj Sanskrit C Memories 0 f Sophomore Ski Trip, J. KAY ROY ' [fj 11 Beech Rood August 28 0 although your mind ' s opaque, try thinking more, if just for your own V sake the future still looks good, and you ' ve got time to rectify all the things that you should, do what you want to do, and go where you ' re going to, think for yourself. The Beatles Everybody ' s a dreamer and everybody ' s a star, And everybody ' s in showbiz, it doesn ' t matter who you are. The Kinks lonely in a crowded room the radio plays out of tune so silently Psychedelic Furs -Ht J S o io c a Super C)u-per So mm erz- Sr-e y cl Q. du -1 GUY L. RUFO e?COd UjLCC 20 Beaver Road h C K Y y cx I People try to put us down Just because we get around C O f- C rj I ' m not trying to cause a sensation I ' m just talking about my generation! The Who December 1 1 You ' ve got to live life for yourself You can ' t live life for anyone else. Kinks C Wl c oiCc jlup ANDREA WINSOR SAWYER 397 Concord Road While in these days of quiet desperation, As I wander through the world in which I live, I search everywhere for some new inspiration. But it ' s more than cold reality can give. Billy Joel Fondest memories . . . Smitty, Besty. January 22 GREG RYAN 11 King ' s Grant Road July 31 Good times in 79 A dwarf is small, even if he stands on a mountain, a colossus keeps his height, even if he stands in a well. Seneca Luck is when preparation and opportunity meet. Pete Foley 63 DOUGLAS W. SCHAEFER 132 Sherbum Circle May 9 You just call out my name and you know wherever I am I ' ll come running to see you again. Winter, spring, summer or fall All you ' ve got to do is call and I ' ll be there You ' ve got a friend. James Taylor Luke 6:27-31 Lord, bless and keep all the staff and high schoolers from Young Life who made my life ever so special. But expecially John Murray and Clell Deever to whom I am eternally grateful for guidance, friendship and love. JENNIFER SCHWARTZ 236 Conant Road September 28 See the people standing there who disagree and never win and wonder why they don ' t get in my door. The Beatles Courage is accepting yourself even if you ' re unacceptable. Anonymous Life is a struggle and that is what keeps you living. Tennessee Williams JEFFERY R. SCOTT 33 Juniper Road September 30 To err is human; To really foul things up requires a computer. 64 EMILY SHAIN 720 Wellesley Street August 26 Stars They come and go They come fast They come slow They go Like the last light of the sun All in a blaze and All you see is Glory Janis Ian MAXINE GAIL SEGEL 221 Country Drive March 20 Sunny bright mornings and pale moonlit nights Keep me from feeling alone Now, I ' m learning to fly And this freedom is like nothing that I ' ve every known I ' ve seen the bottom and I ' ve been on the top But mostly I ' ve lived in between And where do you go When you ' ve finally realized your dream? Dan Fogelberg My treasure closet is locked away, A memory for a rainy day. Loggins and Messina CHERYL A. SEARCY 35 Devon Street, Dorchester To say that you can love one person all your life is just like saying that one candle will continue burning as long as you live. Tolstoy, The Kreutzer Sonata July 18 65 March 25 SUSAN C. SHEFFER 103 Cherry Brook Road Don ' t believe what your eyes are telling you All they show is imitation Look with your understanding Find out what you already know Who you ' ll see the way to fly. Jonathan Livingston Seagull ERIC JOHN SHANABROOK 794 Boston Post Rood August 23 He who never climbed, never fell. Proverb The difference between men and boys is the price of their toys. 494 North Avenue If I try to define time I lose it. and if I surround myself with time I lose myself. Anonymous SUZANNE M. SHIELDS November 12 BILL SHORES 6 October Lane November 5 Why not? — What? — Why not? — Why should I not send it? — Why should I not dispatch it? — Why not? — Strange! I don ' t know why I shouldn ' t — Well then — You will do me this favor. — Why not? — Why should you not do it? — Why not? — Strange! I shail do the same for you, when you want me to. Why not? Why should I not do it for you? Strange! Why not? I can ' t think why not! Mozart l r ■ AUDREY SMITH 9 Marshall Way Imagine there ' s no countries, it isn ' t hard to do Nothing to kill or die for, and no religion too Imagine all the people, living life in peace Imagine no possessions, I wonder if you can No need for greed or hunger, a beotherhood of man Imagine all the people sharing all the world You may say I ' m a dreamer, but I ' m not the only one I hope some day you ' ll join us, and the world will be as one. (John Lennon) 1940-1980 MATTHEW SIEGEL 50 Laurel Road October 2 Don ' t ever accept mediocrity? Mr. Duncan Go Golden State Warriors! 67 JAMES SMITH 9 Blake Road YVETTE SMITH 23 Fen no Street, Roxbury December 4 If you love something Set if free If it comes back It ' s yours If it doesn ' t It never was Just take the time to find yourself. March 9 One ship drives east another drives west, While the self-same breezes blow; It ' s the set of the sails and not the gales, That bid them where to go. Like the winds of the seas are the ways of the fares, As we voyage along through life; It ' s the set of the soul that decides the goal; And not the storms or the strife. Ella Wheeler Wilcox Good luck Betsy, Tiger ELLEN SMITH 136 Sudbury Road KIMBERLY I. STEERE 210 Meadowbrook Road I ' ll walk where my nature would be leading — It vexes me to choose another guide — Where the grey flocks in ferny glens are feeding, Where the wild wind blows on the mountain-side. Emily Bronte May 23 MICHAEL M. SPENCER 93 Church Street May 27 Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day You fritter and waste the hours in an off hand way. Kicking around on a piece of ground in your hometown Waiting for someone or something to show you the way. Gilmour Mason Waters Wright KAREN SOKEL 88 Black Oak Rood 1 k PHILIP SULLIVAN 18 Conant Rood December 17 Sometimes the lights all shinin ' on me Other times I can barely see Lately it occurs to me What a long strange trip it ' s been. Grateful Dead You ' re gonno spend the rest of your life getting up one more time after being knocked down. So you better start getting used to it. John Wayne Either we ' re going to win or we ' re going to lose. Peter Noonan I LAURA C. STRUMPH 94 Baker ' s Hill Road You can change if you want But you can ' t change me I ' ve got a dream, I ' ve got a dream Jim Croce A good friend is better than silver and gold 103 Sherburn Circle JAMIE SYKES January 19 March 21 So many faces in and out of my life Some will last, some will just be now and then Life is a series of hellos and goodbyes — I ' m afraid it ' s time for goodbye again. Billy Joel To you, I ' ll give the world To you. I ' ll never be cold ' Cause I feel that when I ' m with you. It ' s alright, I know it ' s right . . . And I wish you all the love in the world But most of all, I wish it from myself. Fleetwood Mac So, before we end, and then begin, We ' ll drink a toast to how it ' s been. Billy Joel 70 T DAVID TALAMO 410 Concord Road May 10 Kayaking is the ultimate reality. In and around the lakes Mountains come out of the sky They stand there! Twenty-four before my love and I ' ll be there? Yes One can drink too much, but one never drinks enough. Lessing LESLIE C. THOMSON 4 Mills Street, Boston September 13 I am young, gifted, and black And that ' s a fact. TANYA LINNEA THOMAS 32 Wenonah Street, Roxbury November 18 I may be just a foolish dreamer but I don ' t care cause I know my happiness is waiting out there somewhere I ' m searching for that silver lining, horizons that I ' ve never seen Oh I ' d like to take just a moment and dream my dreams 71 x ri JOHN C. TROUSDALE 23 Old Cooch Rood August 24 I gotta run to keep from hidin ' and I ' m bound to keep on ridin ' . I got one more silver dollar, but I ' m not gonna let ' em catch me, So I ' m not gonna let ' em catch the Midnight Rider. Greg Allman REES TULLOSS 433 Concord Road January 21 Foce piles of trials with smiles. It riles them to believe that you perceive the wit they weave, and keep on thinking freely. The Moody Blues The Pad The Gaz The Anti-Gaz . . . The Tuid . . . Boots . . . B D kills ten in forest fire! Cronus is a rino THOMAS J. ULLIAN 73 Westerly Rood April 2 Learn as though you were to live forever. Live as though you were to die tomorrow Anonymous V A T.S.O.M C ILY,G y- 72 KAREN URELL 12 Whitney Tavern Road February Smile, and the world smiles with you. One may not reach the dawn save by the path of the night. Kahlil Gibran CINDEE VANDERMEID 40 Winter Street June 25 Time is the least thing we have of. Ernest Hemingway You can observe a lot just by watching. Yogi Berra CHRISTOPHER VAN WART 629 South Avenue October 4 You know that history repeats itself. What you just done, has somebody else. You know you do; you gotta think the past. You ' ve got to think of what it ' s gonna take to make it last. S. Tyler The Moose is Loose And I didn ' t cut through P.T 73 JAN H. WATKINS 246 Glen Road September 30 Just me and my friends . . . We ' ll travel for miles on our Saturday smiles And then we ' ll move on. But we will remember long after Saturday ' s gone. A smile is the whisper of a laugh. Salada Tea JOHN H. WARREN December 12 4 Laurel Rood One must be a wise reader to quote wisely and well. A. B. Alcott AMY RACHEL WARD June 15 One thing I think you should know I ain ' t gonna miss you when you go Been down so long I ' ve been tossed around enough Couldn ' t you just let me go down and do my stuff Fleetwood Mac 405 Concord Rood JENNIFER A. WATRAL 37 Baker ' s Hill Road October 31 Life, so they say, is a dream if you let it slip away; So I want to laugh while the laughing is easy, I want to cry if it makes it worthwhile, I may never pass this way again, That ' s why I want it with you. Seals Crofts People like you make life nice for people like me, I like the things you do, I hope you know what you mean to me — M.R., P.O., S.S., S.C., G.F., J.H., S.P., T.L., W.G., L.S., R.W.M. A fool will lose tomorrow reaching back for yesterday HSr JULIE WHITMORE 107 Loring Road February 15 It is only with the heart that one can see tightly. What is essential is invisible to the eye. St. Exupery, The Little Prince MIKE WOLF 186 Newton Street January 4 The order is Rapidly fadin ' And the first one now Will later be last For the times they are a-changin ' Bob Dylan Stand by to crash. Herbert V. Wiley 75 1 CARLA WORLE 85-40 Codmon Park, Roxbury The important thing is this; to be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are, and what we could become. Charles DuBois MARK YAMASAKI 1881 Commonwealth Avenue, Auburndale January 28 You can ' t always get what you want, but if you try something you just might find, you get what you need. Mick Jagger Don ' t carry the world upon your shoulders for well you know that it ' s a fool who plays it cool by making his world colder. John Lennon The finest friendship is better than any property. former Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohir HUGH HAMPTON YOUNG III 12 Robin Rood December 7 A man should be like tea, his real strength showing when he gets into hot water. The Irish Digest Experience is a hard teacher. She gives the test first and the lesson afterward. Spuditems Why not go out on a limb? Isn ' t that where the fruit is? Frank Scully Any man can stand up to his opponents, Give me the man who can stand up to his friends. William Gladstone SGT ILYAS BP 76 JOHN W. ZABRISKIE 6 Dogwood Road March 13 A ship in a harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for. Shedd He who does not love wine, women and song remains a fool his whole life long. John Heinrick BARRY ZELLEN 55 Robin Road am now before April 14 can become something I have to act the way else. Hugh Prather It takes a single spark to start a prairie fire. The Weather Underground Some people are going to like me and some people aren ' t, so I might as well be me. Then at least I know that the people who like me, like ME. Hugh Prather CHRISTOPHER ZANNETOS 164 Country Drive Procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday. Donald Robert Perry Marquis In the end the love you take is equal to the love you make Lennon McCartney Now my soul hath elbow-room. William Shakespeare July 26 6 Legion Rood BEN KADEN October 5 Early Graduate CLAUDIA SCHMITT Porte Alegre, Brazil January 21 ”E preciso sair pelo mundo, procurando somente encontrar, e preciso alcantar a aurora que a noite teimou em fanger noo chegar, E preciso entender que agora noo pode esperer por vir. Fagner SUZANNE M. ZRAKET 71 Sylvan Lane May 23 Susana Primera, Susana Segunds, Sue 2 , Jackie Reilly, Bo Zraket, driving ability . . . Funneee, Words, Zraket, Words . . . Don ' t get quiet on me! . . . sign language . . . Are they married yet? . . . Absof lutely!! . . . Winter Track parties, Desiree — Double Slush Puppies . . . Waterville Valley ' 80, Quick go hug him!, and and him, original and him — S.D., Hey Dino! . . . Farm animals . . Space Cadet II — P.D. ... ha, ha ha, ha ha ha ... Where ' s the chicken?, A.O.B.T.D. . . . M M ' s . . . SD at S.N. — shark attack Beatles — I get by with a little help from my friends . . . Breaking away. It ' s time to move on, but I ' ll never forget the good times that are now memories. J. Reilly A yearbook should do more than just reflect the school it is from. To complete our future memories it is necessary to reflect society and what has happened in it, in addition to our school. With this in mind, we (the editors) have scattered a few pages through the book dedicated to the outside world. This page is a recap of the most important news stories since our freshman year (1977) through the present (1981). During our first high school years, Son of Sam stalked New York City. After having shot and killed more than a dozen young women, David Berkowitz was arrested, and is presently serving a 315 year sentence for his crimes. In Guyana, Jim Jones and his entire People ' s Temple committed mass suicide. More than 900 men, women, and children drank Koolaid with cyanide and lay down to die. Around this time period, the King Tut exhibit was touring the States. Tutmania was everywhere, even in Steve Martin ' s comedy routine. During the summer of 1978, Pope Paul VI died. His successor, Pope John Paul I, died thirty-three days after he took the office. After considerable deliberation and speculation, the first non-Italian Pope in hundreds of years was selected, John Paul II of Poland. The most important news story of 1979 was the take over of the American Embassy in Teheran, Iran. For over four hundred days over fifty Americans were held hostage by a group of militants — some physically and or psychologically hurt. In October of 1979, the Pope visited Boston. His mass on the Common was attended by hundreds of thousands who stood in the pouring rain for hours. 1980 saw Ronald Reagan defeat Jimmy Carter for the Presidency, making him the fortieth president of our country. On May 18, about 100 miles south of Seattle, Washington, Mt. St. Helens erupted, the first of a series of eruptions. The summer Olympics in Moscow were shadowed by a boycott of the games by the United States and a half dozen or so other countries. This and a grain embargo was Jimmy Carter ' s way of expressing his displeasure at the Soviet Union ' s invasion of Afghanistan. In December of 1980, John Lennon, song writer for the Beatles, was assassinated on the steps of his Manhattan apartment house. Radio stations played his music continuously, there were vigils the following evenings in every major city across the country, and his album Double Fantasy, released just before his death, became the number one hit across the country. ' illlam Be Ik In captivity and in freedom 5 •HOP. li Ta x Cut Iffr ft or i S 0Q u, YearofTorrr . were nfully a .i in paraded n jthe li Vailed i IA bolt - 1 ST ▲( l iia H V (er-in-effigy to his k. Tehran, an Iranian 79 Senioritis is: feh school Some impression Filling up your schedule with home — . .. Breaking ou! in hives over your I’VE HAD IT FFFlTRAPPEC]! COLLEGE BQ SSL-, prospective DoYoor BOOK5 There are no easy answers. employers drone on about the decadence of youth, i Trying to memorize your social security number. • Getting the uncontrollable urge to see what the vice-principal’s office looks like. • Sending out graduation announce ments to great-aunts and other relatives you ' ve never even met (and hoping for presents). • Wearing a graduation gown that drags on the floor because the class secretary put you down as six foot two • Standing on the threshold of adult¬ hood —and not at all sure you want to be there U hat’s Going On! The signposts of success are clear Homework T ho hemispheres of ray brain are drifting apart. Repq I ENTER. c x I ' m me a bum steer... its in Share a We can tell you f what life’s all aoout. PARTIES! THE BLOCKBU5TEB COMPLEX-1 THE BLOCKBU5TEB COMPLEX-II Fun tor hours Party time. isions, class.AL i Oooh! aood lifeR - - T VlUdde- easure before bus I earn: wait to gi? A BOWL FOR ALL SEASONS ■ good times FEELIN’ ttne laufj Taste tht I pretty spectacular ! VbuVecome a long way baby T See you later, alligator. HOWTO fall in love etHOteed EMBRACING! ,VC MAKES 1 THINGS Close frien( Close feeling Just say th venimr does N ® 1 WHERE HAVE ALL THE lITfllVI rviAn iD good men gone? WIIIU- -- _ I riCIHlS you can learn a lot from a f lAflW ' ifi timn ic the memories will last rorever. Galvir 1 WnUT fillip IS , IMLAnrCTTADI T UNFORGETTABLE WOMEN visinetinw? terrific.. J LAUGH THE EIGHTIES i tiust luck Educate 1 Yourself rSTTI Oh, give me a school ) | I I ' 1 Where the students can rule, ic l III And the teachers are all locked away; li Where “homework’s not heard- FHJE TIME Tis an obsolete word- s Confounded troublemaker!” And the students may slumber all day “Pm uncommitted. And lUjnto each life, a little sun must shine. Brain TO MU llj)OK PREPPIE tudying. It’s «« 50 hormg! “I’m 18, But My SSI Happy Lff.TcS.T— - problem Is There Life After High School? |-£ha Ts jons O ft0 willg Up hooray teenager SCHOOL OUT! AT LEAST ONCE IN YOUR LIFE ONE OF A KIND. orfl oslossic leifi: in the wort away m lliCiwin •O ' rimiHiivisn £ ik t JL BT r h w ,1 H | Steve Shelton. Row 4: Albert Walker, Shauna Evans, Stocey Rogers. Row 5: Bibbi Saunders, Rene Weathers, Butch Turner, Andrea Hunter Row 1 Ben Koden, Steve Andrews, Carl Hyman Row 2: Stephen Crone, Chris Dowling, Jenny Benoit, Rodger Cook Row 3 Tom Voutour, Gregg Wynn, Jamie Ferelli, 85 JUNIORS DuBois, Joe Kerwin, Peter DeLong, Steve Breyer, Alan Gale. Row 5: Mike Ferri, Frank Hamm, Andy Robbins, John Sangiolo, John Koger. Row 6: Cindy Curtis, Roberta Louis, Amy Cooper, Kristen Frechette, Jill Newstadt. Row 1: Andy Doyle, Karen Donahue, Ken Connolly, Bill McCabe, Row 2: Robert Park, Lucy McQuilken, John Nobles, Bruce Miller. Row 3: David First, Pauli McBride, Amy Palmer, Steve Rossiter, Gary Pan. Row 4 Ricky Row 1: Kathy Fibiger, Chris Stanton, Stephanie Rogen, Eric Fishman. Row 2: Julie Prescott, Sue Clabault, Shelly Cotter, Debby North Row 3 Michelle Kinahan, Holly Cressy, Tricia Shotwell, Wendy Chace. Row 4 John Gryska, Sue Connelly, Amy Kazanjian, Cheryl Steranko Row 5: Linda Campobello, Gina Zagami. JUNIORS Row 1: Stonley Edwards, Roxanne Tashjian, Alexandra Mackenzie, Amy Slifka Row 2: Caroline Fish, Carol Sutherland, Amy Barnes, Cherese Grant, Liz Divoll Row 3: Rhona Gibson, Sue Goldstein, Allison Kaplan, Becca K Donham. Row 4. Sue Parrish, Joss Moore, Jenny Selldorff, Lisa Quirk, Vida Jakabhazy. Row 5: Lali Jayasankar, Katie Norton, Mei-Lyn Toong, Lynn Catanzaro, Carol Kahn. -j mm - lfL mi ri ' T h U- jOP ..■P ! ' fi L J Jm Row 1: Scott Wilson, Joanne Melikian, Morey Sandler, Anne Hinckley, Danielle Rankin Row 2: Nancy Kaneb, Ellen Sobin, Audrey Epstein, Sally Nickerson, Cindy Healey Row 3: Donna Mognanti, Robbie King, Debby Sabin, Annie Van Dusen, Susan Alphas, Leslie Carbone Row 4: Jay Bellisimo, Joe Crowley, Maura O ' Leary, Alison Jacoby, Heidi Kaplan Row 5: David Sacher, Susan Lesser, Rick Noonan, Jody Hoffner, Emily Hirsch 89 JUNIORS LO oc O z D 90 Row 1. Alma Chisolm, Ellen Barbour, Courtney McNeil, Maria Holmquist. Row 2: Jamie Richardson, Whitney Bell, Margeret Krek, Carol Dickson. Row 3: Lisa Wyche, Holly Hart, Meredith Lipson, Lisa Zraket. Row 4: Mary-Ann Lynch, Janet Hong, Kirsti Keerd, Nancy Lundquist, Andrea Strimling. Row 5: Lynnette Federico, Lauren Colatosti, Haldey Brewer, Debbie Ewell. Row 6. Ivette Ortiz, Debbie Ewen, Denise High, Pam Berkovits. Richardson, Chuck Whitaker. Row 4 Doug Ellis, Matt Hiatt, Erik Dohlman, Kurt Mack, Jeff Perrelli. Row 5: James Riseborough, Howard Shain, Herb Merrill, Rich Enright, Jay Allen. Row 1 Eric Fishman, Doug Strout, Vinnie Bono, Chuck Omsteen, Andrew Carlson Row 2: Doug Delaney, Russell Allen, Larry Cope, Ed Walker, Winthrop Booth Row 3: Steve Thrall, Peter Strumph, David Brandeis, Jimmy JUNIORS i is 1 9 ’ M % a l Taa4ft Et ' i2Ja w ! s%-a_ggV xJL ' « Lfffi 1 f a ( jA jfl jm . if Row 1 Ally Brown, Lisa Block, Kate Bryant, Laurie Bender. Row 2: Steve Reny, Paul Brounas, Karen Allen, Sarah Barker Row 3: Pam Adams, Sandy Botticelli, Sue Cabral, Scott Ackley. Row 4 Christine Aharonian, Ian Agranat, Bobby Cameron, Jeff Belvin. Row 5: Tom Cappello, Peter Ashley, Nick Burke, Jeff Cail, Steve Saint-Amour. . • % • y Nl 0 C oV h ' . ' fe’- ' v 0- ,y « i V Row 1 John Forino, Ellen Fleischer, Liz First, Finny Docrat, Susan DeLong Row 2: John Cleary, Kevin Daner, John Doyle, Jimmy Crone. Row 3: Sue Fain, Geoff Cornell, Greg Condakes, Tom Fulton. Row 4 John Paul Ferri, John Diami, Brain Durkin, Alan Ditmore. Row 5: Gambel Fechtor, David DuBois. fl SOPHOMORES SOPHOMORES I 6 - PJfcHjyr,.,;.-. A Y ... p - ■El jB fl pf. JVWw V Jfer - E v ' i f fl k fl L ' ' TWnm. j LT . ■1 II dQ Vm. - ■ V pi P r ■ tI Bow 1: Heidi Kasevich, David Katz, Mike Kaneb, Diane Leach. Row 2: Christine Kennedy, Jill Jackson, Liz Kassirer, Lois Kuiper. Row 3: Katie Kelly, Debbie Komessar, Harmon Lewis, David Komessar. Row 4: John Jordan, Doug Jackson, Mark Lang, Trip Jones. Row 5: Joanne Krakeur, Matt Levin, Eric Karchmer, Eric Kirchner 98 Row 1 Becky Gallup, Andrea Hatch, Joyce Hegemon, Kate Gleason Row 2: Stacey Hochberg, Terry Govan, Katie Hazen, Stephanie Hochberg Row 3 John Hersum, John Howland, Jenny Graunas, Diane Gallagher Row 4 Vinny lafrate, Debbie Harris, Beverly Griffith, Wendy Helm. Row 5: Jon Green, Doug McDonald, Johan Holmquist, Richard Hester 99 SOPHOMORES Row 1: Kelly McKenna, Diane Medford, Charley Moore. Row 2 Susan Long, Sandy Moore, Sarah McGee, Doug Mcdonald. Row 3: Sarah Mack, Karen Melone, Mavis MacNeil, Frank Messina. Row 4: Michael Morris, Cathy Lunt, Tim MacDonnell, Liam Maher. Row 5: Andy Miltner, Bob Moineau, Michael Murray, Chris Minervino. Ar_ 4 A N.Qb X ,Qi_ ' c i- ' N ' . ' c ' f . . jO ' ' 7 I r c£M e ' 0 _ x . , — I 0 0 VjQX,V M - C vy c eYos V vTso 2 cxooX Ac o - ' W Nr r-k S A 7 c As ' cifeX2_ r Vsc SL. Xc 2 S ViOC V V j , X oj $ - aC o ObO e. « A CS2Ki® cML ■ tS £ 3 ewo - o x X uoo V= VXx x V . VXr -®- C_ 0-— hn $9 v ; ov,V Nj£ X- VIV NtV Row 1: James Palmer, Mike Prescott, John Potter, Charlie Pugh. Row 2: Marialina Ortiz, Cara Pollock, Terry Norton. Juay O ' Leary Row 3 Richard O ' Connell, John Pollock, Monica Pecker, Lauren Oelgeschlager Row 4: Jenny Nichols, Jeannette Norris, Christine Palmer. Row 5: Annie Nelson, Susan Pawlic, Shelly Paige. SOPHOMORES Row 1: Elaine Segal, Susan Ryan, Diane Santos, Terese Mike Segel. Row 4 Johan Rostad, Steve Reny, David Rothenberger. Row 2: Jay Roney, Wade Shannon, Mark Schendorf. Semich, Dede Seale. Row 3: Mark Segel, Chris Reilly, 102 1 .v, , ; . V 1 IV ' .A CCT £. -f snS 5- ? - Sm r ' CT o S r S[ v y,v : 7 r 0- rf.vP u 3£T i jp 1 - 9 1 SM K v Row 1: Kim Wyche, Lynne VonDusen, Sora Williams, Caroline Zraket, Tom Valle Row 2: Lisa Nemrow, Lisa Terry, Lori Stubbs, Lindsay Tompkins, Louise Walker Row 3: Susan Pulcini, Anne Stein, Mimi Taylor, David Turner. Row 4 Lisa Payne, Jenny Pyle, Margaret Walton, Kathy Stimpson, Keith Upham. Row 5: Jaimie Saunders, Wynn Harlan, John Streile, Rowan Welch, Marshall Tarbox. 103 SOPHOMORES Row 1: Sylvio Browne, Bridgit Bloxson, Rob Birkenstock, Ken Brown. Row 2: Mike Birgeneau, John Bumpus, Doug Brodley, Tony Baker. Row 3; Renee Altman, Liz Bello, Courtney Brewer, Wendy Andler. Row 4 Mike Albert, Steve Becker, Arthur Anastos, Phil Cacciatore, Row 5: Rebecca Briggs, Holly Berkovits, Peter Alphas. 108 Row 1: Sonji Crowder, Val Clark, Ann Cahill, Erin DeChristopher Row 2 Vicky Corrado, Sally Callahan, Sue Cappello, Michele Cairo Row 3: nick Dowling, Dan Clamon, Vincent Chiang, Mike Delduchetto. Row 4 Amy Coller, Beth Cornell, Julie Cohen, Michele Chiavacci. Row 5: Sean Collins, Jackie Court, Mike Cremmens, Chris Chaill, Tracy Danforth. Row 6: Joe Connelly, Jay Choi, Tim Claman, David Drume FRESHMEN t ' Row 1: Erik Gosule, Phil Greven, Jeffery Hall, Tom First. Row 2: Rachel Hazen, Jeff Fiske, Michael Freedburg, Brock Edmunds. Row 3. Daniel Ewen, Jill Glazeerman, Cue Flood, Tom Gilman. Row 4: Aristine Harris, Kim Healy, Sandy Franchie, Kathleen Gordon. Row 5 Melinda Ferguson, Beth Dupee, Marcie Goldstein, Sarah Gibb. « • Row 1: John Korofsky, Dana Ingram, Lee Kenosian, Alan Jacobson Row 2: Michelle Holsworth, Kim Jansen, Mark Kilayko, Dennis Kirshy Row 3: Sue Howard, Debbie Hinckley, Joe Kouyoumjian, Patrick Kelsey. Row 4: David Krakauer, Michael Jones, Peter Kahn, Lisa Jacobs Row Tobi J. Karchmer, Katie King, David Kerwin, Curtis Johnson. FRESHMEN FRESHMEN Row 1: Cyrus Noble, John McCahon, Ronald McPherson, Neil Marshall. Row 2: Michelle Noonan, Job Lawrence, Richard Martin, Dan Lynch Row 3: Holly Melone, Jill Landauer, Christina Lee, Meredith Magie. Row 4: Jim Levitt, Satish Lathi, Chris Moran, Fredrick Marckini. Rc 5: Sandra Martin, Lisa Nyman, David Norquist, Annie McQuilken. Row 6: Paul Nyhan, Karen Linde, Andy Nickerson, Brian Mulligan. I Row 1: John Randall, David Reilly, James Park, Cliff Owens Row 2: Matt Paris, Tom Palmer, David Ott, Chuck Peters Row 3 Lora Parker, Susan Prescott, Lynn Parrish. Row 4 Rachel Perkins, Holly Reiman, Dana Perry, Lisa Parker. Row 5: Andrea Parker, Alissa Paige, Missy Pan, Stacey Radcliffe. Row 6: Mike Potter, Scott Powell, Chris Potter, Doug Perilli. FRESHMEN ' ,, .. ,i xw , ■ -• - • , f T- Row 1: Mark Retik, Andrew Spencer, Pam Stubbs, Steve Siegel Row 2: David Saltz, Jill Savitz-Pryor, Marion Robbins, Linda Smith Row 3: Liesl Rockart, Susan Sandler, Almitra Stanley, Al Rogers. Row 4 Kim Rich, Carolyn Cabral, Alison Salke, Andy Scott Row 5: James Rosenberg, John Strachan, Jeff Rice, Andy Sacher, Paul Slagle, Matt Paris. Missing: Reed Searle. 1 14 Row 1: Chris Vitello, Horry Thompson, Joe Togliente, Row 4: Robynn Trager, Robby Watral, Kelly Whitaker, Victoria Walker. Row 2: Chris Walker, Barton Wright, Paul Zerner. Row 5: Christine VanWart, Kim Wooters, James Turner, Gordon Walker. Row 3: Christine Kris Wathne, Karen Vandevenne. Row 5: Dawn VonDermeid, Loura Westman, Biddy Thomas, Ben Sweet. Widurgiris, Melissa Taylor, Deborah Ellsworth. 115 FRESHMEN CLASS OFFICERS A. i I SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS: Row 1: Jenny Pyle, Vice-President. Row 2: Cara Pollock, Secretary; Sara Williams, President. Row 3: Wendy Helm, Treasurer; Christie Kennedy, SAC. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Row 1: Anne Hinc kley. Vice-President. Row 2: Joe Kerwin, President; Annie VanDusen, Secretary; Andy Doyle, T reasurer. 1 o j .r FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS: Row 1: Steve Becker, Treasurer; Andy Nickerson, President; Mike Delduchetto, Vice-President, Meredith Magie, Secretary. 116 BRUCE MACDONALD Dean of Secondary Faculty DANIEL CHEEVER The only way to look at a fact is square DONALD GEARAN Superintendent of Schools in the face. Assistant to Principal DONALD GARLAND Principal ' Better to burn out, than rust out! JOSEPH AIETA Mathematics We must squeeze the disk. 4 DAVID BALDANZA Physical Education 120 JOHN BARCLAY Speech and Drama Be kind to others. WALTER BEEVERS English-Department Head Live! Laugh! Love! GEORGE BLAKESLEE Science-Department Head Wisdom is a sense of context. liU 1 j Utf M I ROBERT BOUCHER Science Today is yesterday ' s tomorrow BEVERLY BROWN Mathematics DONALD BURKE Science For a successful man is he who receives a great deal from his fellowmen, usually incomparably more than corresponds to his service to them. The value of a man, however, should be seen in what he gives and not what he is able to receive Einstein on Education 121 ANNETTE BUSSE English Please oblige me. A real roar. We must hear your voice. It tends to be rather choked. I told you the tendency of your conscious is to isolate itself. Saul Bellow MARIE BUTERA Physical Education It is just as important to react properly after a loss as it is to keep riding high on the wins. MARK CATALINI Don Cherry Industrial Arts Boston Globe Keep Smiling! HUGH CHANDLER Guidance When all else fails, read the directions. DIANA COATES Skills Center The tree harvest of my daily life is somewhat as intangible and indescribable as the times of morning and evening. Thoreau ELINOR COSGROVE Physical Education Practice your weaknesses. Your strengths will take care of themselves. 122 DONALD DUNCAN Industrial Arts-Department Head PHYLLIS COUGHLIN JUDY DERDUL Avoid, at all costs, the acceptance of Science Science mediocrity. JOSEPH EMERSON NICOLE ENGBORG RALPH FARRIS Alternate Studies Social Studies Foreign Language Music What matters is not the meaning of life in general but rather the specific meaning of a person ' s life at a given moment. Each person is questioned by life; and he can only answere to life by answering for his own life; to life he can only respond by being responsible. Viktor E. Frankl MARGARET FERNALD Foreign Language All that is necessay for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing. Edmund Burke ROBERT FRANK English The fruits of an age are like a tree without hemlock; it rarely rains. What once was deemed saline is now a mere tiptych. Powhatan (1550P-1618) ROBERT FREEMAN Art-Department Head When there is nothing to do — the wise man does nothing. African Proverb CONSTANCE GARTLAND Business Education JANET GHATTAS Foreign Language To a greater or lesser degree, every language offers its own reading of life. George Steiner Literary Critic ROLAND GIBSON Social Studies Success is to be measured not so much by the position one has reached in life as by the obstacles which one has overcome while trying to succeed. Booker T Washington 124 MARCIA GOLDSMITH Social Science Men never make passes at girls who wear glasses. Dorothy Kilgallen That ' s why it ' s time for a change. DONNA GONZALES T.A. Dewey Mathematics BARBARA HAGGERTY Foreign Language PETER HALL GRANVILLE HARRIS Social Studies Guidance Every picture tells a story, don ' t it! Rod Stewart JAMES HARTMANN English The chief tragic event of the old man ' s life, so far as I could judge, was his mishap with a certain goose, which lived and died some twenty or forty years ago; a goose of most promising figure, but which at table proved so inveterately tough that the carving knife would make no impression on its carcass. Nathaniel Hawthorne The Custom House 125 _i_i_ NATALIA KAKTINS Foreign Language BARBARA LADOUCEUR Mathematics It is better to try and be wrong than not to try at all. — The Ladouceur Philosophy : JOSEPHINE MACLEOD I Librarian SUSAN MAJORS ALEX MANZO Science Mathematics What we want is to see the child in Give me nothing to do and twenty-four pursuit of knowledge, and not knowledge hours a day to do it. in pursuit of the child. George Bernard Shaw RICHARD HUBNER Business Administration claire McDonough English The great thing in this world is not so much where we stand, as in what direction we are meaning. Oliver Wendall Holmes SUSAN MILLER Guidance The quality of mercy is not strain ' d, It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath. It is twice blessed: It blesseth him that gives and him that takes. . Shakespeare Merchant of Venice JAMES MORAN Art He ' s got the whole world in his hands. 128 RONALD MORI Music Deportment Head HAWORTH NEILD Physical Education The only place where you will find success before work is in the dictionary. IONA NICKESON Home Economics A stitch in time, saves nine. Ancient Proverb THEODORA OTTARIANO Mothemotics DOROTHY RAYMOND English JOSEPH ROCHE Foreign Language 129 STEPHEN SCHAEFFER Inside Outside JOYCE SCHWARTZ Science NANCY SORENSON Foreign Language MICHAEL RUMRILL Art ARNOLD SANTOSPAGO Industrial Arts The room will be open after school if you want to stay and work. ANTHONY SAMMARCO Foreign Language 130 ROBERT STARMER Physical Education — Department Head Live all you can; it ' s a mistake not to. Henry James ALTA STARR METCO-Academic Liaison Every one of our acts has, as its stake, the meaning of the world and the place of man in the universe. Through each of them, whether we wish it or not, we set up a scale of values which is universal. And one would want us not to experience dread and anguish in the face of such a momentus responsibility! Jean Paul Sartre SHELDON STERNBURG Foreign Language Dime con quien andas y te dire quien eres. CECILE SULLIVAN School Nurse A hug is worth a thousand words. RHETA SWAIN Science All flesh is grass. Isaiah 40-6 PETER TABERSKI Skills Center The aim of a college education is to teach you to know a good man when you see one. William James ROBERT V. WALKER English If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them. H.D. Thoreau JOHN WILLIAMS Social Studies — Department Head A man who has been the indisputable favorite of his mother keeps for life the feeling of conqueor, that confidence that often induces real success. Freud JANET WOHLERS Foreign Language — Department Head Do not make yourself other than God has created you. St. Anthony of Padua IRENE VOUROS Mathematics JOSEPH VEROVSEK Social Studies HENRI TARBI Guidance If you keep a green bough in your heart, a singing bird will come. 4 CAFETERIA STAFF Row 1: Edwina Robbins, Florence Hutchinson, Kathy Allen, Penny Theall Row 2: Phyllis Montgomery, Dorothy Flaherty, Lorraine Giffin, Pat La Penta, Susan Lindsey, Helen Agrilla, Cynthia Kazanjian (Director) CUSTODIANS Row 1: Barry MacNeil, Stanley Morin, Mario Salvucci, Ernest Schofield Row 2: Dennis Citino, Gil Grassini, Randy MaCaro SKILL CENTER TUTORS AND STAFF Regina Gross, Jean Kennedy, Virginia Flint LEO CRONAN Study Hall Supervisor CYNTHIA KAZANJIAN Director, Food Services EDITH ASQUITH Aide, Physical Education 4 CHRISTINE FAULKNER Aide, English 1 tr JEAN KENNEDY Aide, Skills Center MARGARET FREEDMAN Aide, Foreign Language ANN CARPENTER Aide, Mathematics FLORENCE GRATCY Secretary, Attendance JANE HANNON Paraprofessional, Guidance MARIE MACRAE Aide, Guidance NORMA CAIL Library Staff BARRY MACNEIL Head Custodian ELIZABETH MOODIE Library Staff JOANNE MORTON AV Department SALLY NAHABEDIAN Aide, Main Office NANCY NANCE Aide, Science Departmeni CYNTHIA NAUGLER Aide, Social Studies MARY OLSON Secretary, Principal HELEN PHINNEY Library Staff JEAN SAUNDERS Aide, Foreign Language RITA SHEEHY Bookeeper SHIRLEY WEINBERG Library Staff POLLY WHITTEMORE Secretary, Guidance CLARE WARREN Aide, Attendance Office 135 ir Sprayway irk and slain remover Amoves marks caused by- PENCH . INKS ■ Y PAINT • TAPE MARKS L MARK • LIPSTICK cs J nd many others 1 ' HARMfUl OR FATAt r 0 - VAPOR HARMFUL a ff wn - contents c «i onj on b ck pm« 18 01 (1 IB. 2 01) N • YEARBOOK • YEARBOOK • YEARBOOK • YEARBOOK • Editors In the trash: Tom Galligan and Sue Funkhouser. Piano squatters: Nancy Kaneb, Jamie Sykes, Emily Shain, Mark Grunbaum. Missing: Shelly Cotter. General Staff Row 1: Wade Shannon, David Komessar, Debby North, Joss Moore, Karen Martin, Sara Williams. Row 2: Katie Bushman, Ed Walker, Steve Patton, Christina Lee, Bemy Jelin, Maria Holmquist, Diane Santos. Missing: Susan Spencer, Mavis MacNeil, Sue Clabault. A special thanks for putting up with us screaming editors and for all your help. To the freshman photographers: Stick around, they ' ll need you in the next years. - nr- it ■ i- f TOU R ; flu i Ku Yearbook ' 81, A Comedy of Errors ... it was just here a minute ago . . . the ! (a typing room is locked . . the bulletin board of great photographic attempts . . . ordering pizza the night before the deadlines . . . how late is the post office open? . . . 6 pt. page 28, hold it — Sue and Tom still don ' t have their picture in . . Guess who ' s driving tomorrow? Tom! . . . Just exactly where is Bolton Shell? But Nancy, I thought you loved to type! . Okay, Sue, the coast is clear, turn on the fan . . . popcorn man Rowan comes through in the clutch . . . good luck Shelly, Nancy, Diane, Sara, you ' ll need it! We seem to have our own little soap opera here . . . Does you know who know that you know who knows that you know who didn ' t? . . . Debby, does your whole street know when you are doing it? Bo! Get away from Sue . . . all four supra editors on the honor roll, how? . . . Yes Tom, you have to put oil in the pot, you didn ' t? . . Mark with his cough medicine . please excuse the interruption . I am so fed up with the seniors . . To Tom from Sue and vice versa: We did it! (without Specs and Prep) A toast to Arnie . Thanks to so many, especially our calm-tempered loving Mrs Nick 140 STUDENT COUNCIL Row 1: Ken Rosenthal, Ken Powell. Row 2: Kim Wyche, Allisyn Brown, Christie Kennedy, SAC. Row 3: Susan Sandler, Marcy Sandler, Bruce Ronty, SAC, Robert Park, Maxine Segel, SAC, Stephanie Macdonald, Leslie Carbone, Lisa Wyche. Row 4. Tom Ullian, Missy Pan, Rob Chin, Josh Paris, Kim Steere, Nancy Kaneb, Kathy Rouleau, Debby Rowe, Carol Kahn, SAC. ANNOUNCERS CLUB Mr. Barclay Row 1: Tom Valle, Vice President, Heidi Kasevich, Caroline Zraket. Row 2: Rhona Gibson, Secretary, Rob Coburn, Kim Steere, Co-Presidents, Jason Olin, Production Coordinator, Steve Ditmore. n H H n H H — MEEPS Row 1: Alan Gale, Row 2: Lali Jayasankar, Lisa Zraket, Holly Hart, Sue Goldstein. Row 3: Liz Hamm, Liz Kassirer, Cathy Lunt, Beth Morton, Sue Fein, Carol Sutherland, Amy Barnes. Row 4: Tom Valle, Doug Ellis, Bemy Jelin, Rhona Gibson, Liam Maher, David Katz. SPANISH CLUB Row 1 David Bryson, Rob Melone, Scott Wilson, John Noble, Frank Hamm, Peter Strumph, Scott Ackley, Mike Koneb, Alison Jocoby. Row 2: Liz Homm, Doug Schoefer, Hoi Fiske, David Hester, Janet Howard, Josh Paris, Shelley Cotter, Sue Funkhouser. Row 3: Meredith Lipson, Katie Norton, Nancy Kaneb, Ellen Sabin, Sue Goode, Andy Giambarba, Ellen Barbour, Lisa Wyche. Row 4: Diane Gallagher, Jenny Graunas, Bill McCabe, Andy Doyle, Karen Donahue, Pauli McBride, Caroline Zraket, Kim Wyche, Joyce Hegeman. Row 5: Karen Urell, Cindy Vandermeid, Ken Connolly, Cindy Healey, Karen Wilder, Amy Slifka. Row 6: Amy Kazanjian, Sue Parrish, Alexandra MacKenzie, Kirsti Keerd, Lisa Zraket, Ken McGagh. U1 I— U • U1 LU K I— U FRENCH CLUB Row 1: Michelle Holdes, Maxine Segel, Carol Dickson, Michelle Cairo. Row 2: Anne Brubaker, Bemi Jelin, Dominique Guillemin, Mei Lyn Toong, Wende Thomas, Andrea Strimling, Maria Holmquist, Lisa Jacobs. Row 3: Monica Claman, Debby Rowe, Audrey Epstein, Sue Lesser, Lali Jayasankar, Kirsti Keerd, Robin Trager, Sue Parrish, Caroline Zraket. Row 4: Cherese Grant, Liz Kivoll, Allison Kaplan, Becca Donham, Allyson Brown, Cara Pollock, Beverly Griffith, Lisa Zraket. Row 5: Marcy Sandler, Joanne Melikian, Karen Wilder, Sally Nickerson, Johan Rostad, Liz First, Steve Reny, Sandy Moore, Carol Kahn. uo LU K I— U1 LU H I— U POLITICAL AWARENESS Row 1: Steve Ditmore, Barry Zellen, Row 2: Leslie Carbone, Cathy Jacobs, Susan-McCahan, Arthur Chin. Row 3: Heather Eddy. n H H m m WILDCAT WEEKLY Row 1: Monica Claman, Karen Martin, Caylee Nychis, Barbara Schloemann, Susie Spencer, Vida Jakabhazy. Row 2: Rob Melone, Kathy Rouleau, Trip Young, Sharon Peck. m n H H m n H H GRASS ROOTS Row 1: Mike Albert, Arthur Chin, Amy Harrison, Ken McGaugh, Barry Zellen. Row 2: Dan Cohen, Ellen Kamentsky, Bemy Jelin, Bill Shores, Karen Martin. Row 3: Nick Dowling, Barry Albert, Katy Bushman, Jamie McClellen, Chris Zannetos, Josh Parris. m n H H MAELSTROM Row 1: Will Johnston, Jamie McClellen. Row 2: Christina Lee, Nick Dowling, Rob Coburn, Lisa Jacobs. Row 3: Robert Park, David First. TOWN CRIERS Row 1: Don Davidson, Rob Coburn, Joe Kerwin, Jay Allen Row 2: John Jordan, Tim Claman, Reed Searle, David Kerwin. EAT Row I: Madeleine Rostad, Ellen Kamentsky, Marcy Sandler, Audrey Epstein, Amy Kazanjian, Liz Divoll. Row 2: Ken Connolly, Ellen Sabin, Joanne Melikian, Sue Lesser, Sally Nickerson, Maxine Segel. LU h- MATH TEAM Row 1: Karen Allen, Rob Melone, Peter Strumph, Doug Ellis, Lali Jayasankar, David Krakaur. Row 2: Eric Kirshner, Scott Wilson, Jeff Scott, John Koger, Wendy Welch. Row 3: Rodney Chen, Jim Smith, Mark Kasevich, Arthur Chin, David Saltz h- .1 « ' • • 4 r n H H 00 SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Row 1: Arthur Chin, Will Johnston, Jennie Graunas, Ben Sweet. Row 2: Mikka Keerd, Caylee Nychis, Carol Dixon, Marcia Belvin, Matt Siegel, Tripp Jones. Row 3: Lisa Jacobs, Debbie Ewell, Wendy Isaacs, Bill Shores, Eric Kirchner, Jeff Belvin. Row 4: Doug Strout, Karen Martin, Liz Goldstein, Darryl Bressler, Lucy McQuilken, Susan Alphas. Row 5: Tom Valle, Winthrop Booth, Wendy Welch, Joe Kerwin. n H on n H H m on • n H H m on CONCERT BAND Row I: Jeff Belvin, Eric Kirchner, Steve Siegel, Pam Stubbs, Boo Lunt, Rhonda Gibson, Christine VanDermeid, Chuck Whitaker, Bill Shores. Row 2: Amy Kozanjian, Alexandra MacKenzie, Christie Kennedy, Jenny Selldorff, Martha Katz, Alma Chisolm, Ellen Smith, Susan Nickerson, Dan Claman, David Kerwin. Row 3: Joe Kerwin, Wendy Welch, Chip Barnes, Karin Vandevenne, Tobi Karchmer, Amy Harrison, Sue Cappello, Holly Berkovitz, Michelle Cairo, Ricky Dubois. Row 4: Jeff Fiske, Doug Bradley, John McCahn, Doug Strout, Andy Doyle, Karen Martin, Tommy Galligan. Row 5: Lisa Jacobs, Scott Johnston, Karen Allen, Winthrop Booth, Wendy Isaacs, Anne Stein, Row 6: Caylee Nychis, Jeff Scott, Tom Valle, David Norquist, Charlie Skakle, Jeff Perilli, Eric Karchmer, Kim High. BAND AND ORCHESTRA OFFICERS Row 1: Charley Moore, Wendy Welch, Will Johnston, Wendy Isaacs. Row 2: Joe Kerwin, Chip Barnes, Beth Morton, Andy Doyle. ¥ MIXED CHORUS Row 1 M. Katz, B. Lunt, J. Watkins, K. Norton, M. Lipson, M. Delduchuto, T. Claman, M. Kilayco, A Jacobson, R. Cyril, K. Martin, K. King. Row 2. B. Donham, L. Quirk, S. Goldstein, A. Van Dusen, N. Kaneb, J Moore, J. Olin, B. Albert, K. Jacobs, C. Van Der Meid, T. Healey. Row 3: J. Jackson, C. Kennedy, F. Hamm, J. Kerwin, J. Jordan, D. Kerwin, W. Booth, G. Condakes, C. Skakle, P. Brountas, J. Savitz-Pryor, L Westman. Row 4. C. Nychis, K. High, B. Schloemann, S. Johnston, D. Cohen, H. Lewis, T. Valle, H. Shain, M. Hiatt, J. Allen, L. Jayasankar, L. Van Dusen. Row 5: K. Healey, C. Gordon, K. Steere, D. Davidson, S. Carpenter, D. Park, W. Johnston R. Coburn, A. Chin, K. Mack, S. Edwards, R. Tashjian. Row 6: K. Kaneb, J. Reny, S. Fain, R. Gibson, M. Claman, W. Isaacs, L. Goldstein, S. Nickerson, W. Welch, A. Strimling. BOYS ' GLEE Row 1: R. Searle, M. Birgeneau, T. Claman, M. Delduchetto, M. Kilayko, A. Jacobson, D. Norquist. Row 2: D. Davidson, T. Healey, J. Olin, B. Albert, G. Condakes, P. Brountas, C. Skakal. Row 3: D. Park, J. Jordan, H. Shain, M. Hiatt, T. Valle, W. Boothe. Row 4: S. Carpenter, D. Kerwin, D. Katz, H. Lewis, K. Mack, J. Allen. Row 5: W. Johnston, R. Coburn, F. Hamm, J. Kerwin, D. Cohen, S. Johnston. GIRLS ' GLEE Row 1: Lisa Jacobs, Kim Healey, Kathy Gordon, Sandy Franchi, Vicki Corrado, Meredith Magie, Julie Cohen, Susan Howard, Courtney Brewer, Jill Savitz Pryor, Wendy Issacs. Row 2: Martha Katz, Nancy Kaneb, Kim Steere, Barbara Schloemann, Kim High, Jan Watkins, Lali Jayasankar, Mary Ann Lynch, Andrea Strimling, Allyson Brown, Sarah Mack, Joss Moore. Row 3: Boo Lunt, Michelle Cairo, Michelle Holdsworth, Laura Westman Becca Donham, Sue Goldstein, Wendy Welch, Cathy Jacobs, Audrey Epstein, Susan Alphas, Annie Van Dusen Row 4: Linda Smith, Sally Callahan, Christie Kennedy, Jill Jackson, Susan DeLong, Lynne Van Dusen, Sarah Gibb, Katie Norton, Lisa Quirk, Meredith Lipson, Rachel Hazen Row 5: Monica Claman, Sue Fain, Stanley Edwards, Roxanne Tashjian, Rhone Gibson, Liz Goldstein, Caylee Nychis, Sue Nickeson, Karen Martin, Katie King. ACTIVITIES • ACTIVITIES • ACTIVITIES • ACTIVITIES • ACTIVITIES • ACTIVITIES • A THIRD EDITION Row 1 Sue Goldstein, Liz ( J Goldstein, Lisa Quirk, H Caylee Nychis, Barry AIKort Olin (nrpn _; Albert, Jason Olin, Greg Condakes, Karen Martin. _ Row 2: Nancy Kaneb, H Jocelyn Moore, David Park, Matt Hiatt, Kurt Mack, Katie Norton, Jay Allen, I 1 I Kathy Jacobs. Row 3: John Ln Jordan Danny Davidson, Tom Healy, Harmon Lewis, 0 Howard Shain, Daniel Cohen, Martha Katz. Row 4: Barbara Schloemann, Kim Steere, Robert Coburn, C 1 Will Johnston, Scott H Johnston, Wendy Isaacs, _ Wendy Welch. Row 5: Becca Donham, Rhona Gibson, Frank Hamm, Joe l Kerwin, Annie Van Dusen. CHORAL OFFICERS Row 1: Martha Katz, Kim Steere, Joss Moore, Monica Claman, Wendy Welch. Row 2: Dan Davidson, Will Johnston, Tom Healey, Rob Coburn, Joe Kerwin, Winthrop Booth. SQUARE DANCING Row 1: Katy Bushman, Sue Cappello, Caylee Nychis, Karen Martin. Row 2: John Gryska, Anne McQuilken, Amy Harrison, Kim High, Barry Albert. v V V [ Hr Tf. C If Jg 1 l V mONp , , V Ml ' i rjm L , JL ' vPH W J or? g k r ■% _ i j ’I ' m. i • • • •• t n MARCHING BAND Row 1: Bill Shores, Tom Golligon, Karen Martin, Doug Strout, Kim High, Lisa Jocobs, Bonnie Porfee, Caylee Nychis. Row 2: Doug Brodley, Barry Albert, Jim Richordson, Karen Allansmith, Alma Chislom, Amy Horrison, Danny Clamon, Eric Karchmer, Row 3: Ann Stern, Susan Nickerson, Sue Cappello, Holly Berkovits, David Norquist, Robby Burkenstalk, Sue McCahan. Row 4: Scott Johnston, Cindy VanDer Meid, Christie Kennedy, Toby Karchmer, Joe Kerwin, Andy Doyle. Row 5: Mark Siegel, Chuck Whitaker, Winthrop Booth, Charlie Skakle, Wendy Welch, David Kerwin. Row 6: Chip Barnes, Jenny Selldorff, Tom Valle, Beth Morton, Rhona Gibson. uo MAJORETTES Row 1: Co-captains Boo Lunt, Jan Watkins. Row 2: Stephanie Macdonald, Andrea Strimling. Row 3: Caroline Zraket, Terese Rothenberger, Janet Hong, Whitney Bell, Lauren Oegeschlager, Sue Parrish, Alexandra Mackenzie, Meredith Lipson. CONCERT BAND Row 1: Eric Kirchner, Bonnie Parlee, Chip Barnes, Danny Clamen, Ricky Dubois. Row 2: Lisa Jacobs, Wendy Welch, Caylee Nyches. Row 3: Karen Martin, Tommy Galligan, Steve Rossiter, Barry Albert, Jimmy Richardson, Larry Nolte, (director), Joanne Avallone, Jeff Perrelli. .v 4? i •. - .’i m• n H H REVISTA MUTTA LINGUA Row 1: Peter Hirsch, David Hester, Brook Parker. Row 2: Sue Goode, Tracey Anderson, Sylvia Racca. on n H H m on • n H H m cn • n H H m LD NEWS AND VIEWS Row I: Edmond Booth, Sylvia Racca, Mrs. Hoyle, Victoria Walker. Missing: Sarah Mack. n H H NEW ENGLAND COMPUTER SCIENCE LEAGUE Row 1: Bengt Gunne, Ian Agranot, Brian Durkin. Row 2. Mr. Aieta, Scott Johnston, Jeff Scott, Arthur Chen. ARE YOU A WESTONITE ?? 1. Are your ankles so irrestibly sexy that you don ' t wear socks with your docksiders? 2. Do you read the L.L. Bean catalogue while sitting on the john? 3. Do you wear your Weston jacket to bed? 4. Do you feel put upon to hand push a power lawn mower when your yellow super deluxe tractor is broken? 5. Do you spell relief — B-R-E-W-S-K-l-E-S? 6. If you don ' t do any homework for two nights in a row do you suffer from severe guilt pains? 7. Do you wear your clothes inside out so people can see the designer labels? 8. Do you smile at yourself in the mirror so you can see your straight pearly whites? (Had braces in Junior High) 9. Do you have alligators on your underwear? 10. After February vacation are you so ashamed to come back pale that you wear a cast in order to say that you broke your leg while surfing in Hawaii the first day, so you had to stay in the hospital? Tally up your answers and for each YES answer give yourself one point. Then see below for your degree of WESTONITENESS. 8-10 Ultra-Westonite 5-7 Pseudo-Westonite 3-4 Questionable Westonite 1-2 Normal 0 Perfect CAST Bailiff.Winthrop Booth Judge Paul Barriere.Karl Blatt Court President, Henri Marceaux.Kurt Mack Judge Aristide Forestier.Paul Kerwin Claudine.Lisa Yeonopolus Gabrielle.Wendi Messing Marie.Julie Whitmore Celesteine.Jane Reny Hilaire Jussac.Keith Rogal Boris Adzinidzinadze.Robert Coburn Hercule.John Charpie Theophile.Kent Nissenbaum Etienne.Steve Rossiter Waiters.Joseph Kerwin a nd Matthew Hiatt La Mome Pistache.Leslie Ellis Monarchist.Daniel Cohen Nun.Wendy Welch Model.Lynn Alberding Mimi.Linda Mack Doctor.Barry Albert Second.John Jordan Turnkey.Howard Shain Can Can Dancers: Julie Holmes, Stacey Kanavos, Martha Katz, Peggy Kirchner, Wendi Messing, Alexandra Morrison, Caylee Nychis, Jane Reny, Julie Whitmore, Lisa Yeonopolus Apoche Dancers: Winthrop Booth, James Crane, Lisa Yeonopolus l ' CAN CAN PRODUCTION DIRECTED BY JOHN BARCLAY PRODUCTION CHAIRPERSONS Stage Manager. Dou 9 Iqs Ellis Set Design. John Biroth Master Carpenter. Brooks Nelson Lighting Design. Paul Saltzman Console Operator. Scott Duncan Production Coordinator.Edward Coburn Costumes.Mrs. Nadine Harris and Mrs. Beverly Holmes Properties.Amy Barnes and Carol Sutherland Make-up and Hair Styles . Jennifer Schwartz Tickets and Publicity. Jennifer Schwartz Front of House. Rhona G,bson Rehearsal Pianist. SherriN Welch THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET Directed by John Barclay CAST Doctor Chambers. Elizabeth Barrett Moulton-Barrett Wilson. Henrietta Moulton-Barrett. Arab el Moulton-Barrett. Octavius Moulton-Barrett. Septimus Moulton-Barrett. Alfred Moulton-Barrett. Charles Moulton-Barrett. Henry Moulton-Barrett. George Moulton-Barrett. Edward Moulton-Barrett. Bella Hedley. Henry Bevan. Robert Browning. Doctor Ford-Waterlow. Captain Surtees Cook. “Flush . . . . Andrew Giambarba .Martha Katz .Kimberly Steere .Kathrine Norton . . . Anastasia Kanavos .Charles Moore .James Allep .Scott Johnston .David Kerwin .Thomas Ullian .Thomas Valle .Robert Coburn .Elizabeth Block .Stephen Rossiter .Will Johnston .Mark Retik Christopher McDonald • • • Crumpet Norton 154 yVtrw ' lb PROUD TO BE TWIRL IT! ♦ WHIP IT! You ' ve Got The Cutest Little Baby Face You ' ve Got The Cutest Little Baby Face mrry Oiq tTVUf -‘S ' J ' VW1 MORK Ml OftOtHARV PfO tf ALAN ALIA WMl I; Y . 1 1L 1 J v ’ VA - v ' .V ' - y + v ) P) rwuir twA £vi?n • ? h i - Wwumi ruo JY SATURDfflf NIGHT FEVER Ajj . ’VK H 6 • . HEAVEN TAN WATT V uoi? X V - vQiruadpj .. A. c °°t Byt c.t A ,Tt S - V 0C’ i - V «« • HOC ✓ X REO Speeds agon - 1 v - • • a - r £ , 1 ® eons u Hi Joe, Can uou (n ud man a H JCrY ojn rx. bolide c- aood -Hr dLhonS u 4 V 1 C $cunaC 50 WESTONIJ;;;! VISITOR [jb 7DOWN !TOGO MQTI i X 1 6 aJrviosi ' over) lOc ' vc Jrrj pMefoed -for iiummcr X 1 m Q | cxd u3£ tOCrC. i n - r L-i a e S u QC qo to kW £ CCLCh oiher 163 Row 1 Cooch Neild, Rich Healey, Tom Guerente, Brook Parker, Peter Noonan, Phil Sullivan, Rob Harris, Todd Azadian, Coach Hall. Row 2: Rees Tulloss, David Hester, Bruce Kennedy, Peter Reilly, Rob Melone, Jeff Ackley, Trip Young. Row 3: Al Walker, Rich Federico, Frank Messma, John Boothroyd, Jeff Bruton, Jon Kanfer, Chip Coder, Roger Cook, David Bumpus Row 4 Coach Morrill, Steve Shelton, Tim MocDonnell, Rich O ' Connell, Rick Dubois, Scott Schirmer, Jon Cleary, David Sacher, Ned Sennott. 164 - 1 9m -w ' ' ANOTHER ONE BITES THE DUST! This year, the football team finished the last game with a 7-0-2 record. Having switched leagues, the Wildcats went on to have a surprising season, which pleased the spectators as well as the team. The Captains, Brook Parker and Peter Noonan, lead the team with determina¬ tion. They should be congratulated for their efforts, sportsmanship and dedica¬ tion. In 1980, all of this showed. ront Row: Chris Walker, Joe Togliente, John Randoll, Curtis Johnson, Clylon Owen ow 2 Tom Palmon, Dennis Kirshy, Chris Whatne, Emmit Grody, Harry Tompson, Tom ileman Row 3: Jim Leavitt, Alan Jarabun, Chuck Peters, Jockie Court, John Strachan, jhn Bumpus, Al Rogers Row 4: Mark O ' Connell, Mike Roubam, Brock Edmunds, iavid Drum Row 5 Coach Baldanza, Ronald McPherson, Jett Hall, Dave Reilly, Coach oley. Dover-Sherborne ' LOST 9-7 Moses Brown WON 20-0 Mewton South WON 15-12 Medway WON 3-0 Cathedral WON 7-0 Medfield WON 28-14 Shawsheen WON 19-6 Whittier WON 41-12 Madison Park WON 23-14 Wayland LOSt 33-19 165 Row 1: Coach Cosgrove, Karen Allen, Audrey Epstien, Lucy McQuilken, Marcy Sandler, Debby Rowe, Joanne Melikian, Amy Palmer, Sue Love. Row 2: Lynne Van Dusen, Pam Adams, Ellen Fleischer, Diane Santos, Debbie Komessar, Teri Melone, Stacey Hochberg. Row 3: Elaine Segal, Liz First, Annie Nelson, Sandy Moore, Jenny Pyle, Chris Aharonian. Row 4: Sue Clabault, Beverly Griffith, Gambl Fechtor. UNDEFEATED! The J.V. Field Hockey team had a successful season with a record of 12- 0-2, led by co-captains Lucy McQuil¬ ken and Marcie Sandler. 1 5 of the 30 goals were scored by Sue Clabault (8) and Audrey Epstien (7). LOOK OUT, ANOTHER WINNING TEAM! The team developed into a strong, well disciplined group of hockey players. Coach Healey commented, “They progressed as the season progressed. Coming back from a not so great past record at the Jr. High, the freshmen now hold the record, 12-2-1. Top scorer and new freshman record holder is Missy Pan, with a tally of 11 . A. Row 1: Missy Pan, Val Clark, Melinda Ferguson, Dawn Widugiris, Vicki Corrado, Melissa Taylor, Andrea Parker, Karen Jacobs. Row 2: Liz Bello, Debbie Hinckley, Susan Sandler, Julie Cohen, Kim Healey, Rachel Hazen, Jill Landauer, Amy Coller. Row 3. Tracey Danforth, Beth Cornell, Lisa Nyman, Robin Trager, Holly Reiman, Meredith Magle, Christina Loe. Row 4 Coach Healey, Emily Isaacs, Marian Robbins, Beth Dupee, Tobi Karchmer, Jane Boyle, Lisa Jacobs. 166 • . WESTON FIELD HOCKEY . .. AWESOME!! RECORD Newton North WON 7-0 Concord Carlisle WON 4-0 Brookline WON 9-0 Bedford WON 3-0 Wayland WON 3-0 Acton Boxboro WON 3-0 Lincoln Sudbury WON 1-0 Newton North WON 1-0 Concord Carlisle WON 2-1 Newton South WON 8-0 Bedford- WON 1-0 Wayland TIE 1-1 Lincoln Sudbury TIE 0-0 Acton Boxboro WON TOURNAMENT 3-1 Tyngsbury WON 3-1 Dover-Sherborne WON 1-0 Woburn WON 2-1 Wilmington WON 2-0 Frontier Regional WON 5-2 Auburn WON STATE CHAMPIONS 1980 1-0 Again this year, the Field Hockey team proved their ability and sports¬ manship by ending the season unde¬ feated. They gained the Dual County League title and went on to win the state championship. The team ' s top scorer ' s were Cindy Healey, Sheila O ' Hara and Alison Jacoby. The de¬ fense was unbeatable with Andrea Muccini, Liz Noble, Lindsay Tomp¬ kins, Pam Melone, and, of course, the goalie, Debby Rowe. The whole team worked together to be the State Champs. Do you want it? Yes! Can we do it? YES! They did it, and no other team was more deserving. What can you say about a team that has skill, spirit, determination and dedica¬ tion? They are number one! Row 1. Coach Butera, Jenny Watral, Pom Melone, Co-captain, Sheila O Hara, Co-captain, Andrea Muccini, Co-captain, Madeline Rostad. Row 2: Katie Kelly, Annie Van Dusen, Alison Jocoby, Karen Wilder, Cheryl Steranko. Row 3: Anne Hinckley, Sally Nickerson, Pauli McBride, Cindy Healey, Lindsay Tompkins, Wendy Helm. Missing: Liz Noble, Co captain. c x 4r S Jv . The Varsity soccer team had a year filled with disappointments and frus¬ trations. Generally, though, they play¬ ed quality soccer. Injuries contributed to the low scores, which misrepre¬ sented the abilities of the team. This year the team gained valuable experi¬ ence essential for their future victory next year. It ' s not in what you win, but how you go about achieving it. We look forward to successful season next year. o- 5-tev RECORD LOST LOST LOST WON LOST TIE LOST LOST LOST LOST WON LOST Lincoln-Sudbury Wayland Bedford Newton-South Madison Park Concord-Carlisle Acton-Boxboro Lincoln-Sudbury Acton-Boxboro Wayland Newton-South Lexington Christian Academy Xavarian Concord Westford Bedford Row 1: Frank Hamm, David Park, James Smith, Ricky Jacobs, Rob Cornell, Hal Fiske, Rob Collins, Dominique Guillemin, Chris Zannetos, Peter Delong, Greg Ryan. Row 2: Chris Mason, Will Wrean, John Koger, Mike Ferri, John Noble, Jay Bellisimo, Tucky Gee, Robert Park, Joe Crowley, Bruce Miller, Gary Pan, Steve Breyer, Billy McCabe, David Aptaker. Row 3: Jeff Sacher, Charlie Pughe, Johan Holmquist, Mark Seigel, John Jordan, Bob Mineau, John Farina Joe Kerwin, Johan Rostad, Scott Ackley, Steven Reny, Mike Prescott, Andy Doyle Row 4: Ben Sweet, Peter Kahn, Steven Becker, Andy Scott, Cyris Noble, John Karofsky, Jimmy Park, Mike Birgeneau, Mike Potter, Eric Karchmer. Row 5: Doug Paltrinari, David Ott, Paul Nyhan, Andy Sacher. Row 6: Mike Murray, Doug McDonald, Kevin Daner. LOST 0-4 LOST 0-1 WON—) 8-0 TIE - , M At P Tit 15 nw 1 Peter Silverman Wendy Welch, Debby Sabin, Cathy Jacobs, Janet Howard — ooioTcaZ - Th-Lptain Maura Nyhan - Tri-Captain, Sharon Peck, Carole VConS Morieen Dhoore Coach Carlock Row 2: Johnny lanny, Sarah Magie, Caroline • s h Diane Leach, Margaret Walton, Donna Magnanti, Ellen Sabin Beth Alt ™ a T Je ™ ' f r Jirhols Kellv McKenna Joyce Hegeman. Row 3: Renee Altman, Nancy Lundqui , S Courtney McNeil, Andrea atch, Susan Ryan, Cara Pollock Alison Brown Laurie lender Diane M dverd Row 4 Claudia Schmitt, Carolyn Cabral, Holly Melone, Cue Flood, G roun os Koren Linde, Susan Howard, Diane Gallagher Dana Perry. Row 5: hristine Van Wart Sandy Franchi, Kim Wooters, Lora Parker, Courtney Brewer, Susan ;oppe o, Biddle Thomos.Vlisso Page. Li, Knigh,. Lisa Parke, Missing: G-elchen Harmon, ondy Botticelli. IT DOESN ' T MAT TER IF YOU WIN OR LOSE, IT ' S HOW YOU PLAY THE GAME. Although this team did not have a winning season, they were successful in other ways. Some words to describe the Girls Soccer Team are devoted, skilled, eager and good-spirited. The tri-captains, Cathy Gee, Janet Ho¬ ward and Maura Nyhan, kept the team going; their attitude made up for the losses. They never gave up, but kept on giving their best to the game, and that is a major part of a good team. RECORD Westwood LOST 3-1 Belmont LOST 5-0 Bedford LOST 4-0 Newton South LOST 5-2 Arlington LOST 1-0 Concord-Carlisle LOST 7-1 Lincoln-Sudbury LOST 4-1 Wayland LOST 3-1 Bedford LOST 4-0 Newton South TIE 4-4 Westwood LOST 2-1 Concord-Carlisle LOST 5-2 Lincoln Sudbury LOST 2-1 Wayland TIE 1-1 Row 1: Seth Kaplan, Matt Siegel, Doug Linde, Chip Barnes, John Conceison, John Trousdale, Edmund Booth. Row 2: John Sangiolo, Chuck Whitaker, Barry Zellen, Mike Wolf, Ed Walker, John Howland, Chris Vitello. Row 3: Rowan Welch, John Strehle, Steve Siegel, Mike Delduchetto, Satien Lathi, Greg Condakes. Row 4 Coach Duncan, John Potter, Chris Minervino, Paul Brountas. 170 wmmmm KEEP ON RUNNING! The girls Cross-Country team did remarkably well, especially consider¬ ing this season was the first to have a girls Cross-Country squad. Led by Kim Long and Ellen Kamentsky, the girls ended the season with 3 wins and only 3 losses. Also, they did a great job in the All League Meet, coming in with second place. Special praise goes to Kim Long for breaking two records. The whole team did a great job and should be commended. The boys Cross-Country team, led by Chip Barnes and Doug Linde, had a season of two wins, and four losses, but the team spirit made up for it. All runners seemed enthusiastic and did their part to represent Weston. All young men on the team should be proud of their fine effort. Row 1: Kim Long, Ellen Kamentsky, Meri Burke, Betsy Allen Row 2: Sue Goode, Kathy Kaneb, Anne-Marie Baker, Maxine Segel, Mary Ann Lynch. Row 3: John Monz. Missing Jane Reny, Aron DeChristopher GIRL ' S RECORD Concord Carlilse LOST 26-31 Acton Boxboro LOST 24-35 Bedford WON 27-28 Acton Boxboro LOST 28-29 Wayland WON 21-37 Bedford WON 20-35 GIRL ' S ALL-LEAGUE MEET Concord 40 Weston 42 Bedford 69 Acton Boxboro 73 BOYS RECORD Lincoln-Sudbury LOST 35-22 Concord LOST 40-19 Bedford LOST 47-15 Acton LOST 43-18 Wayland WON 20-37 Newton South WON 16-44 171 WE TRULY BIT THE BULLET The Girl ' s Indoor Track Team com¬ pleted the 1980-81 season undefeated and as Dual County League Champs. The boy ' s team finished with a 5-2 re¬ cord, third in the Dual County League. The girl ' s team was led by outstanding peformers Kim Long, Sue Goode, Liz Noble, Boo Lunt, Allison Kaplan, and Ellen Kamentsky. This strong contin¬ gent led Weston to a 4th place in the Girl ' s Class B State Meet. The Boy ' s Team displayed continual improvement over the course of the sea¬ son, both in the quality of their perform¬ ance and the quality of their humor. They finished the season with a fine second place performance at the DCL All-League Meet, beating old rivals Lin¬ coln and Acton, winning a special tro¬ phy in the process. RECORD BOYS LINCOLN-SUDBURY LOST NEWTON-SOUTH WON CONCORD-CARLISLE WON ACTON LOST BEDFORD WON MARIAN WON WAYLAND WON GIRLS WON WON WON WON WON WON WON WINTER TRACK. Row 1: Hal Fiske, Trip Young, Kathy Rouleau, Allison Kaplan, Tracy Brown, Maura Nyhan, Holly Melone. Row 2: Rowan Welch, Boo Lunt, John Wefren, Mark Segal, Dave Ewen, John Potter, Nat Brown, Charlie Skakle, E d Walker, Mark Lang, Kathy Lunt, Dominique Guillemin, Doug Strout. Row 3: Rob Mamola, Robbie King, John Lynch, Mary-Ann Lynch, Caroline Fish, Doug Linde, David First, Bengt Gunne, Greg Condakes, Paul Nyhan, David Brandeis. Row 4: (Coach) Tim Donavan, Janet Howard, Marleen Dhoore, Kim Long, Ellen Kamentsky, Herb Merill, Bill McCabe, Cara Pollock, Suzanne Zraket, Jamie McClellan, Liz Noble, John Monz (Coach). Row 5: Chip Barnes, Edmund Booth, Chris Vitello, Sue Long, Jenny Pyle, Elaine Segal, Liz First, Susie Howard, Erin DeChristopher, Sue Goode RECORD WEST ROXBURY LINCOLN SUDBURY NEWTON SOUTH PERKINS KEEFE TECH BELMONT WAYLAND ASHLAND LITTLETON SHAWSHEEN MATICK CONCORD-CARLISLE GARDNER ASSABET VALLEY XAVERIAN SHREWBURY WON LOST LOST WON LOST WON LOST LOST WON WON LOST LOST LOST WON WON WON 66-2 33-35 17-42 35- 3 16-35 32-27 9-44 15-32 40- 18 37-29 27-32 11-43 25-37 45-21 36- 25 41- 17 A few good men, a U.S. Marins slo¬ gan, was the way in which Coach Baldan- za described the 1980-81 Weston wrest¬ ling team. Led by Quad-Captains Jeff Ackley, Tom Healey, Dudley Harris, and Dan Davidson, the Wildcats ended their season with a .500 record. Due to a num¬ ber of injuries, seven underclassmen step¬ ped in to fill the slots. This allowed them to gain varsity experience which will benefit the team next year. WRESTLING TEAM Row 1: Captains: Tom Healey, Dan Davidson, Dudley Harris, Jeff kcklev Row 2: David Bumpus, Eric Karchmer, James Smith, Jim Richardson, Tom ' aimer Row 3: Joe Togliente, Niel Marshall, Curtis Johnson, Jeff F.ske, I n .?8Cf r ' lim mit Grady, John Boothroyd, David Katz, Coach Dave Baldanza Row 4: David Ott, Jim ' ark, Ara Martirossian, Charlie Pugh, Paul Friedberg. A FEW GOOD MEN SHOWED THE WAY . vk - ' ’A- VARSITY, HERE WE COME! Weston ' s 1980-81 boy ' s Junior Varsity Basketball Team experienced many ups and downs throughout the season, having a little trouble against some opposing teams. Nevertheless they benefited from many positive things. They worked hard on the basic fundamentals and took pride in the fact that every time they stepped on the court they were representing the school. Learning that all their hard work may not show up immediately on the score board, they feel confi¬ dent that the new knowledge and skills that they have developed will pay off both on and off the court. The Freshman basketball experi¬ ence is one of learning and develop¬ ing. The measure of growth in skills cannot always be measured by game scores, or the won-lost column, espe¬ cially for the 80-81 season. The play¬ ers learned how to better their indi¬ vidual skills and to apply them to team play. In adjusting to their teammates, they each learned a little more about themselves. JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL Row 1: Coach Smith, Tommy First, Phil Greven, Arthur Ariostos, John McCohan, Cooch Taberski. Row 2: Jaimie Turner, Dennis Kirshy, David Drumm, Peter Kahn, Ton Gilman. Row 3: John Bumpus, David Reilly, Jackie Cort Chris Moran, Mike Albert. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL Row 1: Mike Norris, Tripp Jones, Albert Walker, Carl Hyman, John Hersum Row 2: Marshall Tarbox, Tim MacDonnell, Harmon Lewis, Jeff Natick” Cail. 174 VARSITY HOOPSTERS, BETTER LUCK NEXT YEAR! The Varsity Basketball team com¬ piled a 5-16 record for the season. The team led by Captains Peter Reilly, Alan Proctor, and Jeffrey Bruton, suf¬ fered through a season of many peaks and valleys, learning a lot about bas¬ ketball. Jeffrey Burton, Alan Proctor, and Matthew Alston were selected by their teammates as the Outstanding VARSITY BASKETBALL Row 1 Butch Turner, Steve Andrews, Tri-Captains Jeff Burton, Peter Reilly, Alan Proctor, David Hester. Row 2: Coach Foster, Doug Schoefer, Will Wrean, Matt “Pokey Alston, John Sangiolo, Jay Allen, Rob Coburn. Player, the Unsung Hero and the team ' s Most Valuable Player, respec¬ tively. Peter Reilly represented Wes¬ ton in the Dual-County League All- Star game. RECORD MINUTEMAN-ARUNGTON BROWN-NICHOLS ST. MARY ' S FOXBORO MEDFIELD ACTON CONCORD FOXBORO BEDFORD LINCOLN-SUDBURY ST. SEBASTIANS WAYLAND NEWTON-SOUTH ACTON CONCORD BEDFORD LINCOLN-SUDBURY WAYLAND WAYLAND NEWTON-SOUTH WESTWOOD WON WON WON WON LOST LOST LOST LOST WON LOST LOST WON LOST LOST LOST LOST LOST LOST LOST LOST LOST 175 BASKETBALL GALS EAGER, SPIRITED, AND DEDICATED! The Freshman Girls Basketball team had a fine season, boasting 8 wins and 3 losses. Their best attribute was their ability to work together as a team. They handled a 1-3-1 zone defense with confidence and ease, and their give and go offense gave them the opportunity to be a high scoring team. The high scorers for the team were Missy Pan with 106 pts., Sylvia Brown — 80 pts. and Margaret Grace with 65 pts. The defensive backboards were handled by Sonji Crowder, Emily Isaacs, and Tracey Danforth. Val Clark, Meredith Magie, Amy Coller, and Liz Knight handled the ball hand¬ ling and play set-ups while Marion Robbins controlled the defensive boards. The Girl ' s Junior Varsity Basketball Tearn played to a 5-10 overall record. The team made considerable im¬ provement as the season progressed under the able leadership of Juniors Lisa Wyche and Rhona Gibson, and Sophomores Wendy Helm and Diane Leach. FRESHMAN TEAM. Row 1: Liz Knight, Missy Pan, Sylvia Brown, Valerie Clark, Meredith Magie. Row 2: Sonji Crowder, Emily Isaacs, Amy Clooer, Tracey Danforth, Marion Robbins, Coach Nancy Healey. JUNIOR — VARSITY TEAM. Row 1: Lisa Wyche, Joyce Hegeman, Courtney MacNeil, Pamela Z Adams Row 2: Carol Dixon, Nancy Lundquist, Judy O ' Leary, Kelly McKenna, Diane Medverd, Rhona Gibson, Lisa Zraket, Cooch O ' Donnell i I •fk VARSITY BASKETBALL. Row 1: Patty McKenna, Tanya Thomas, Jenny Nichols, Cindy Healey, Th-Captains: LaVel Crosby, Andrea Muccini, Sheila O ' Hara, Diane Leach, Wendy Helm, Karen Allen, Carole O ' Connell, Coach Pete Hall. IMPROVEMENT TOWARDS END OF SEASON The Girl ' s Varsity Basketball team played to a 5-1 1 overall record. The team improved considerably through¬ out the season, and won three of its last four games. The team was led by Senior Tri-Captains Sheila O ' Hara, Andrea Muccini and LaVel Crosby. Andrea Muccini was selected to the Dual County League All Star Team at the end of the season. ACTON LOST 21-35 CONCORD LOST 32-37 BEDFORD LOST 35-43 LINCOLN-SUD. LOST 41-59 HAVERHILL LOST 31-46 WAYLAND LOST 34-55 NEWTON SOUTH WON 30-18 DANA HALL WON 46-21 ACTON LOST 11-34 CONCORD LOST 37-42 BEDFORD LOST 40-43 LINCOLN-SUD. LOST 19-51 LEX.-CHRISTIAN WON 46-38 WAYLAND LOST 39-40 NEWTON SOUTH WON 43-31 DANA HALL WON 42-22 177 —« v,,y DIVING TEAM. Row 1: Sue Goldstein, Jan Watkins, Christine Palmer. Row 2: Lisa Jacobs, Chris Stanton, Sue Clabault, Randy Brainard. SWIM TEAM. Row 1: Lisa Jacobs, Sue Goldstein, Sue Clobault, Christine Palmer, Chris Stanton Row 2: Katie King, Pam Berkovitz, Holly Berkovitz, Sue Ryan, Becca Donham, Caroline Zraket, Cathy Jocobs. Row 3: Coach Jim Brainard, Chris MacDonald, Mark Kasevich, Steve Patton, Captain Jan Watkins, Captain Tom Cronin, Gregory Ryan Billy Shores, Andy Robbins, Coach Pete Foley. Row 4 Alan Jacobson, Paul Brountas Eric Fishman, Mike Mulligan, Andy Miltner, Peter Strumph. Row 5: Dan Ewen, John Strehle Satish Lathi, Mike Delduchetto, Tom Valle, Howard Shain, Gary Pan, Ken Connolly, Mike Koneb SWIM TEAM CAPTURES FIFTH DCL PLUS WESTERN CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP The Swim Tearn captured their fifth straight DCL and Western Confer¬ ence championships paced by senior co-captains Jan Watkins and Tom Cronin. Senior Mark Kasevich set new school records in the 50 and 100 yd. freestyles, as well as in the 400 yd. free relay with Cronin, Chris Mcdo- nald, and Andy Robbins. Robbins, only a junior, added new school re¬ cords in the 100 yd. butterfly and 500 yd. freestyle events. Co-captain Watkins set two school diving records and became the first girl ever to capture a championship in a state-sponsored boy ' s tournament when she won the one meter diving at the North Sectional Championships. Seniors Bill Shores, Steve Patton, Dave Spuds Patraiko and Cathy Jacobs added a lot of points and lead¬ ership to a good team. RECORD NEWTON SOUTH WON 116-53 ATTLEBORO WON 97-74 WESTBROOK MAINE WON 111-58 DON BOSCO WON 49-34 WELLESLEY WON 100-75 WALTHAM WON 114-47 DEDHAM WON 95-76 FRAMINGHAM SO. WON 105-63 ACTON-BOXBORO WON 98-74 BELMONT WON 98-74 GARDNER WON 105-67 LEXINGTON WON 95-77 CHELMSFORD WON 96-62 BEDFORD WON 104-68 B.C. HIGH LOST 94-78 CONCORD-CARLISLE WON 103-69 179 HOCKEY TEAM ... HOCKEY TEAM. Row 1: Jeff Sacher, Phil Sullivan, Jon Green, John Conceison, Jeff Perelli, Tri-Captains Rob Cornell, Peter Keating, Robby Harris, Coach Don Smith. Row 2: Assistant Coach Brown, Manager Mike Murray, J.V. Coach Gary DeFina, Larry Jones, Jay Bellissimo, Mike Prescott, David Sacher, Bruce Ronty, Rich Healey, Chris Cahill, Jamie Ferrelli, Rob Watral, Ricky Jacobs, Peter Alphas, J.V. Coach Wayne Smith. Weston ' s 1980-81 Ice Hockey Team battled through many ups and downs during the season. They had trouble against the opposing teams, but improved over the course of hhe season. They worked hard at a new system given to them by coaches Don Smith and Bobby Brown, progressing as they reached the end of the season. They all learned what hard work will accomplish, although it did not show up right away. All the team ' s experi¬ ence, knowledge and skill proved suc¬ cessful! on and off the ice. RECORD HOLLISTON WON BELLINGHAM LOST MILLIS WON NEWTON SOUTH WON MILLIS LOST BOSTON LATIN LOST HOLLISTON LOST LINCOLN LOST WAYLAND LOST XAVERIAN TIED BEDFORD LOST ACTON LOST BOSTON LATIN LOST CONCORD LOST NEWTON SOUTH WON 180 BASKETBALL CHEERLEADERS. Row 1: Andrea Hunter, — (Captain) Sue Parrish, Nancy Nobles, Yvette Smith, Mimi Taylor, Lynne Johnson. Row 2: Jill Landaver, Holly Hart, Lali Jayasankar, Joimie Sounders, Debbie Komessor — (Co-Captain) Jill Sovitz-Pryor. 181 SENIOR PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Aaclieu Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Aardvark Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Ackley Diane and Stuart Altman Jay and Edythe Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Harry Azadian Dr. and Mrs. Arnold A. Barnes Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Bressler Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bushman Mr. and Mrs. John L. Carlson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Collins Mr. and Mrs. John J. Conceison Mr. and Mrs. John W. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Cronin Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Donahue Dr. and Mrs. Willard Dotter Mr. and Mrs. John A. Farina Mr. and Mrs. David Fleischer Jane and John Funkhouser John D. and Audrey F. Galligan Sandra and Thomas Gee Roseanne M. Giamo John and Alice Goode Mr. and Mrs. John Harris Jr. Betty and Bill Hartman Tom and Anne Healey Rita and Carl Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. James B. Howard Alice and Steve Jelin Mr. and Mrs. William Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Kaneb Martha and Bill Katz Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keating Jay and June Long June and Bob Macdonald Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Mammola Mr. and Mrs. George Martirossian Mr. and Mrs. David S. McLellan Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Melone Mr. and Mrs. Morabito Mr. and Mrs. James Noonan Mr. and Mrs. W.G. Oliver Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. O ' Hara Jr. Judith and Felix Paige Stephen and Roberta Paris Gale and Brooks Parker Don and Jean Patnode Mr. and Mrs. John E. Patton Rodger and Kay Prescott Ellen T. Rice Natalie and Paul Ronty Drs. Stuart and Perihan Rosenthal Mr. and Mrs. Ole M. Rostad Mr. and Mrs. David Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. Howard Searcy Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Segel Dr. and Mrs. Albert Sheffer Arthur and Jane Shores Dan and Roberta Siegel Eddie and Claire Smith Richard and Jane Smith Leslie B. Spencer Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Sykes Mr. and Mrs. Paul Watral Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Zenon S. Zannetos Shirley and Charles Zraket 182 SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Allen Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Cort Mr. and Mrs. James A. Cotter III Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Daner Mr. and Mrs. Michael Delduchetto Ruth and Paul Donahue Mr. and Mrs. John J. Doyle Jr. Phyllis and Vic Drumm June and Alan Gosuie Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Hochberg Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R. Jones Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Palmer John and Joan Parrish Dr. and Mrs. Joel Rankin Mr. and Mrs. C. Edward Row Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Sandler Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R. Strachan The Strimling Family Mr. and Mrs. Rex B. Shannon Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tompkins Janet R. Tullos Joel and Chris Wilder and Family PATRONS Conny and Jim Allen Mr. and Mrs. Francis Bryson Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Carpenter Jack and Katty Chace Bob and Barbara DeLong Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln A. Divoll Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Ewell Barbara and Paul Ferri John and Barbara Fibiger Jerome Freedman Mary F. Galligan Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hatch Carol and Ralph Hinckley Dr. and Mrs. B. T. Jackson Willem and Natalie Jansen Dale and Gaye Jelley Ken and Joanie Karofsky David Love Mr. and Mrs. Richard Martin Jim and Betsy Nichols Dr. and Mrs. David Parker J. Edward Pawlick Mr. and Mrs. Edward Perilli Mary and Wells Pughe Mr. and Mrs. Edward Roney J Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Savitz Mr. and Mrs. Burt Wynn J. SAND STONE WESTON 893-661 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1981 MALONE SONS INC. REDI-MIX CONCRETE STOW 897-9662 77 WHITE POND RD. P.O. BOX 176, STOW, MASS. MILLS ' HARDWARE CORP. POWER TOOLS, PAINT HARDWARE MAINTENANCE SUPPLIES (617) 547-9500 Congratulations to the class of 1981 1076 CAMBRIDGE STREET CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 185 r SAVAL RANCHING COMPANY A L North Fork, Nevada Congratulates Benton and the class of 1981 186 CONGRATULATIONS CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL SENIORS TEA GIFTS JEWELRY TO THE CLASS OF IDENTS EARRINGS 1980 THE Agents for Rubber Stamps and Name Tapes TRAVEL AGENCY 432 Boston Post Road, Weston 891-5680 Repair of Jewelry and Beads Personalized Stationery and Informals KIEN CHUNG’S 502 Boston Post Road Phone: 894-4290 GIFTS ANTIQUES DECORATING SERVICES r r ' t ‘ THE p% CHESTNUT SHOP WESION.MASSACHUSETIS 02193 WESTON CENTER MALL 899-4331 V. CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES RICHARDSON DRUG 37 CENTER STREET WESTON, MASS. 187 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1981 NORTHEAST PETROLEUM CORP. 295 Eastern Avenue Chelsea, Mass. F. DIEHL SON A complete center for building materials and hardware. Everything for the home. 180 Linden Street Wellesley, MASS. 235-1530 653-0170 J 189 ED ABBOTTS GULF SERVICE 596 BOSTON POST ROAD 893-9843 y ■ REALTOR INC7 SINCE 1934 □ Connie Blair Jackie Boyd, GRI Bobbie Bradley, GRI Martie Campbell Jane Cutter Ellen Dwinell David H Bradley, Pres. iMriiir un ii ili 11 MIS Pat Jandl, GRI Ruth Orr Buff Paine Jackie Ralston Anne Rooney Milt Theall Lucy D. Boyd, Treas (617) 893-4500 426 Boston Post Road, Weston, MA 02193 V___ J 190 395 Boston Post Road, Weston, Ma. 02193 899-0750 This office has built its Business and Reputation by Honoring our mottto: “SINCERE INTEREST AND PERSONAL ATTENTION TO YOUR NEEDS — BUYING OR SELLING Sandra S. Ashley, GRI Thomas Cutter Sheila A Patraiko, GRJ Norma J. Lord, GRJ 785-0707 Shirley N. Cohen 237-2226 Roberta Brenner 237-4312 Doris Roberts 235-4488 Roseanne M Giamo Min Martenson, Secretary Beth Mitchell, GRI 899-6356 Alice Komessar 891-4777 Harry B. Jones 899-0977 Eleanor Durkin 893-1420 Sasiree Cutter 891-7781 Let our travel expertise guide you anywhere in the world for business or pleasure ) e •: 1ST! 7 raitel Barbara Viles owner 466 Boston Post Road, Weston Next to Bay Bank Newton Waltham 891-9110 CENTRAL TAILORING COMPANY “Your good will is our greatest asset’ 894-1888 399 Boston Post Road Weston, Massachusetts 02193 J V 191 a r Mac Rae Insurance Agency Inc. 481 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON 893-1500 Jr TOUR ' ZZ Sj ' ™ HOME-AUTO LIFE-BUSINESS Starting Point Real Estate Referral Service 56 Colpitts Road Weston Massachusetts 02193 m mULTIPU LISTING S£NVKX MLS . Starting Point for your residential and commercial real estate needs . . . Barbara N. Buffa, proprietor A Q5cs y Wm lCS ' (o c AS ' of R. M. Bradley Co., Inc. 542 Boston Post Road, Weston, Mass. Realtors John T. Fallon, President 192 Best Wishes Class of ' 81 WESTON PHARMACY, INC. 397 Boston Post Road 894-3785 TRIPLE EjMARKETS “Growing By Serving 5 5 Weston Concord Acton Needham 193 r POST ROAD REALITY Inc. GRACE TREFRY (617) 891-41 1 1 454 Boston Post Road Weston, Mass. 02193 THE WESTON OFFICE, INC. 30 Colpitts Road Directly across from the Post Office Weston, Mass. 02193 Telephone (617) 894-0200 The Office CHRIS SHAW GINNY BEAR • Secretarial Services • Word Processing • Manuscript Typing • Xerox • Mailings • Bookkeeping Services • Notary Public V_ ) r TEL. 891-91 12 Master Lie. No. 7322 781 1 MUNSON PLUMBING HEATING COMPANY, INC. 596 BOSTON POST ROAD, WESTON SAGE BUILDERS ADDITIONS — ROOFS CONTRACTING REMODELING HALCOTT GRANT JR. 260 MERRIAM ST. 894-8333 194 195 ' n r Movies Are Better Than Ever Leslie B. Spencer President COMMUNITY PtArn«ust WELLESLEY HILLS 235-0047 A SERVICE CONTRACTING Best Wishes to The Class of 81 Weston Electric Co., Inc. Nobb Hill Press, Inc. MASTER ELECTRICIANS Weston 24 hour Emergency Service Bill Don ED FROTHINGHAM 596 BOSTON POST ROAD 899-0098 WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS J V 196 GIAMO ALUMINUM CO. ALUMINUM BUILDING PRODUCTS CUSTOM STORM WINDOWS AND DOORS PORCH ENCLOSURES • REPAIRS Serving area for 22 years 83 WOODCHESTER DR. • WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02193 TEL. 237-4047 r HERBERT S. COOMBS REMODELING 76 Westland Rd., Weston, Ma. ROOFING CARPENTRY INSULATION 891-4679 ' ' • Y1L vL i - ' v. ' , ' ' r ‘l, IfM C- . • vP .v- fin ’ o vim v i iE3 :i Cesspool — Septic tank Cleaning Service Grant Butler (D.B.A.) SEARS and SCHOFIELD 894-2187 Serving Weston Since 1956 443-8985 WHAT ' S THIS SUPPOSED TO BE? 198 .-,r ANYWAY WE ' RE HISTORY! WESTON HIGH! GOODBYE i c Vt ' rfe ' Jrt {jj c rvc fi ccAJAAj yv _ vt . vi ) n u J-OVJ - ' OH V WOV 1 °) 1 0 -fW- r ev oV % ’ g.., ilV ’ s.t. -(oc w Weston High School -U- A - ' , j 1981 Yearbook Staff WHS Yearbook o S J . • if ,r , T 3433 j A A V Z xV ' A ■A V v . 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Suggestions in the Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) collection:

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1982 Edition, Page 1

1982

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984


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