Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA)

 - Class of 1983

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Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1983 volume:

FOR REFERENCE Do Not Take From This Room HESTON A SfeAo. - r 4 . Z , : ' ' ' : ' t • f i .. V ' V ■t rf ■ _ , . v_ . 1 _ • , V _ « • ■•:• ' • “T • r • • -Tv —-rt 5 r - • .V . ' - f ■ ' ' ' .V ■ ■ ' ■ - ' ■ ,• - u l. . . .; yr v V ' , j v -_ V o MM 11 1 1983 EDITORS Diane Santos Sarah Williams JUNIOR EDITORS Christina Lee Susan Sandler PHOTOGF EDITOR Wade Shai EDITOR BUS1NES David Koi ref 57 ' • 74 c -3 EULOGY for DONALD E. GARLAND It seems contradictory to speak of “laying Don Garland to rest.” Repose” was as foreign to his nature as “pretense.” Who else would choose the yearbook quotation “Better to bum out then to rust out 9 Who else would hold the Marine Corps record for the shortest time debarking from a landing barge and hitting the beach? Don preferred doing to being. He worked hard and played hard. One suspects that he will figure out some way to “rest hard.” Generous to his friends — generous even to his enemies — Don believed in the power of food and drink to make friends and keep the peace. How can people quarrel with a glass in one hand and a pretzel in the other? He and Gigi fed us all: familly, friends, faculty and students. For him. hospitality was one of the sacraments. It was the only way he could tell us he loved us. A very private person, Don was a public man. He was a father to other people ' s children. Students felt that they had as much right as any faculty member to fill his office with their plans and complaints. His phone rang day and night. If he wasn’t at the dance, he was at the game. Earlier, he had dropped in at scrimmage. His voice was recognized at the police station, Town Hall. the. Fire Department and the Youth Commission. And there was no relaxation to be gained from a trip to the Center. Don believed in the old fashioned American virtues. He was loyal — even to his own injury. He was blunt and forthright when others were artful. He believed in manhood and honor. He believed in patriotism. He believed in The Common Man and the Stiff Upper Lip. Don insisted on being himself. All the secrets he had been told died with him. We will miss Don in ways impossible to predict. We will recollect him in odd moments when — unexpectedly — We will remember his laugh, the creases of his smile and the set of his jaw when he would say — (against all the evidence, against all common sense) — “No problem! Everything ' s going to be all right! No problem!” The dictionary calls that spirit faith.” St. Paul, in his Epistle to the Corinthians, said it was a characteristic of “love.” Written by Bruce MacDonald Dedication “The One and Only” — Donald E. Garland We, the class of 1983, are dedicating our yearbook in memory of a very special person. Donald Garland. His sudden death is a great loss to us all because he was much more than our principal; he was our friend. Despite his many duties as principal, he was always there to give us advice from his many years of experience, always there to help us with a personal problem, always there to help us grow and learn from our mistakes. The dedication of our yearbook to Mr. Garland is a small way for us to express our feelings for a man who cared about people. Special Recognitions FOR BEST PERFORMANCE The Romans put it together, the Barbarians knocked it apart, and we’ve been trying to put it together ever since ' These words often quoted by Bruce MacDonald seem fitting to describe the difficult role he has had to play during our senior year. He spent the first semester of the school year under the almost unbearable scrutiny of parents, teachers, staff and students. Mr. MacDonald succeeded in creating a supportive atmosphere. He was always accessable, amiable, and assertive. Most important, he used wit and wisdom to take control of situations. Mr. MacDonald has earned the respect and friendship of the entire Weston High community. We proudly recognize him as Best Performer. Mr. Burke made his physics classes interesting and double labs bearable by turning the radio on to FM 103. Even though his tests were impossible, we struggled through because he was always willing to work with us. His sense of humor and willingness to listen made him a very special Best Performer. Thank you. Mr. Burke, for being the person you are. 4 Special Recognitions SENIOR CLASS ADVISORS We want to express our thanks to you. Mr. Barclay and Ms. Cosgrove, for all your help and support during our years at Weston High School. You guided us through bake sales and dances and helped us to .establish the dinner before the spring musical. Other activities we have done together were the concession stand, the Senior Banquet, the Variety Show (the best!), and. of course, the Graduation party. Thanks and goodbye! Advisors 5 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS “OFFICERS AND A GENTLEMAN” Row 1 Sarah Williams, Secretary; Elaine Segal, Treasurer; Liz First, Vice-President; Kevin Daner, President. 6 Class Officers SENIORS 1983 Stars Seniors 7 SCOTT ACKLEY 20 Round Hill Road August 5 To affect the quality of the day, that is the highest of arts. H D Thoreau My life’s philosophy is simple: fill what’s empty, empty what ' s full and scratch where it itches. Alice Roosevelt Longworth Chance favors the prepared mind. IAN DOUGLAS AGRANAT 10 Winthrop Circle February 21 I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me. Sir Isaac Newton “Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time for that’s the stuff life is made of.’’ PAMELA ADAMS Here and There June 28 The best things in life are free Take your time Don’t live too fast, troubles will come and they will pass, but don’t worry you ' ll find yourself. Does your conscience bother you? (tell the truth) (LS) Goodbye yellow brick road (EJ) 8 Seniors CHRISTINE AHARONIAN 436 North Avenue December 12 “Hello I’m Terry and I’m going to enjoy myself first. Terry Hall “My friends call me Keith; you can call me John.” Keth Moon . ain’t no need for no motoride ...” Peter Wolf PETER ASHLEY 25 Whitney Tavern Road April 1 “Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.” Mark Twain KAREN M. ALLEN 20 Walnut Road October 5 Don’t walk behind me; 1 may not lead Don’t walk in front of me; I may not follow. Just walk beside me And be my friend. Unknown Seniors 9 SARAH BARKER 148 Sudbury Road Special thanx to Catie. my loyal friend forever. Thanx to Mom. Dad. Nanda for helping me through everything. I love you. CH, JH. AH. remember the fun we had together? KR. LR. PA, LM, etc., remember the good old days? KK. you made my Senior year more special. I’ll never forget the times I ' ve had with everyone. These could be the best years of our lives. Billy Squier SCOTT BEINNER 173 Conant Rd April 24 If you’d like to find out what’s behind these cold eyes? You’ll just have to claw your way through the disguise. Pink Floyd I think you know but how do you know what you know is true? Joe Jackson He runs wishing he could fly, only to trip at the sound of Good-bye.” JEFF BELVIN 23 Old Colony Road April 11 The Earth is like a grain of sand, only much heavier I have seen the future and it is very much like the past. Only longer. from Kehley Albran’s version of “The Prophet” 10 Seniors JOHN H. BOOTHROYD 51 Indian Hill Road June 27 LISA BLOCK 143 Meadowbrook Road August 21 Catch your dreams before they slip away. Stones Do the best you can, and leave the rest alone. Smack, Stubbies, Bryant and Blender, thanks for making the good times so good Watch out for the elephant! Dibs, you’re the bestest! D.D C B the gopher, picnics and P B J LAURIE ANNE BENDER 29 Winsor Way April 28 What you do is not nearly as important as the attitude with which you do it Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. Age doesn’t matter unless you’re cheese. Seniors 11 SANDY BOTTICELLI 63 Westerly Road September 24 Imagine there’s no heaven, it ' s easy if you try no hell below us. above us only sky Imagine all the people living for today Live. Love. Laugh and be happy. Louis Armstrong Love and Thanks to M D. and especially Frank. r PAUL P. BROUNTAS 22 Conant Road August 12 Has anyone seen a dog dyed dark green? The B-52’s Writing is an act of ego, and you might as well admit it. William Zinser Jet Boy Jet Girl MARY-ALLYSON BROWN 145 Lexington Street June 12 Qui ne risque rien, n’a rien Hold fast to dreams, for if dreams die Life is a broken-winged bird that cannot fly. Black is not all inclusive; there are other colors We come not to praise Funk, but to JAM it 12 Seniors KATRINA A. BRYANT 5 Summer Street December 20 It is only with the heart that one can see rightly: What is essential is invisible to the eye. The Little Prince Wherever you are, it is you own friends who make your world Where there ' s life, there’s mud. It was “meant to be!” MARIA BURNEO 14 Bradford Road March 8 Somos como los arboles: debemos crear nuevas ojas. nuevas direcciones, para poder crecer. Give me a fish and 1 eat for a day teach me to fish and 1 eat for a life time. SUSAN CABRAL 12 Hobbs Brook Road Apnl 4 There ain’t no water in that there rain That ' s just my Dad! We can t erase the sadness or edit out the tears. We can ' t undo the wrong we ' ve done. We can’t revive the years. LMB Little Boy it’s cabin time Seniors 13 28 Pine Street ROBERT CAMERON May 9 JEFF CAIL 14 Linden Circle August 22 1 am who 1 am, so whadda ya want from me Billy Squier Those crazy NIGHTS, I do remember in my youth 1 do recall those were the best times most of all. Journey Smile, it makes people wonder what your up to. THOMAS CAPPELLO 42 Conant Road October 24 1 don’t know where I’m going 1 don’t know what 1 need But I ' ll get to where I’m gonna end up And that’s all nght by me. The Who Thanks P A D O L.H T M J P, K S. PS. 14 Seniors 1 BENEDICTE CLAUDE Montois-la-Montagne, France September 15 Like a bird in the wind Like a tree in the storm Like the breath of a child From the moment he’s bom Till the very last day When the curtains are drawn We are children. Bee Gees GREGORY CONDAKES 28 Woodchester Drive September 28 A good disposition is more valuable than gold; for the latter is the gift of fortune, but the former is the dower of nature. Addison JOHN CLEARY 15 Bemis Street July 3 You only go around once in life, but if you do it right, once is enough. Everybody knows this is Nowhere. Neil Young 1 know it is a long road ahead, but l know 1 will be on that road Seniors 15 GEOFF CORNELL May 24 15 Warren Place There is only one success . . To be able to spend your life in your own way. Early in the morning ... To live in an exotic land MAHALO ' M.D KEVIN B. DANER 759 South Avenue May 3 All that is now. all that is gone, All that’s to come, and everything under the sun is in tune, but the sun is eclipsed by the moon. Roger Waters We ate a ‘shroomer and ’roni pizza and talked for a while.” memories of My Dinner with Sach. JAMES RICHARD CRANE 5b Black Oak Road August 14 A real friend is one who walks in when the world walks out. Walter Winchell I fear there is an angel within me. that 1m constantly shocking! “Wicked” lb Seniors JOHN K. DIIANNI Questionable December 19 Special Thanks to Jennifer Nichols, Paul John Ferri and John Stasik John Stasik: Garjield. Webster, Biking, Hiking. Taping, slides, 206. Jennifer Nichols: Memories, Best Friends Forever, see you at Dartmouth Thanks Dad and Sue. I couldn’t have done it without you. love John. Well, we made it, a whole school year, another Dilanni first. Back rooms, allies and the trusty woods: See you all later! Never a dull moment. ALAN DITMORE 41 Young Road April 1 I’m sure we all agree that we ought to love one another. And 1 know there are people in the world who do not love their fellow human beings, and I HATE people like that. Tom Lehrer FIONULA JACQUIELINE DOCRAT 50 Rockport Road August 7 Fin, Finny, Finster. Myster, Pistons, Fineus. 1 woopy cushion kitten To all my friends: TANKS FOR DA HUGS! Aye! What chu do’in Fin?! Favorite Animimab: Smurfs. Coons. Bollwevils, Black Panthers It’s just an ILLUSION, in all this CONFUSION! Love will always stay just a touch away, come with me all the magic ' s waiting there. Take my hand let’s walk through loves door and be free from the world once more here ' s my heart, we can hide today and love the world away. Mark. I love you. Seniors 17 53 Skating Pond Road JOHN DOYLE May 22 DAVID DUBOIS 475 Conant Road April 15 If you get down and you quarrel everyday You’re saying prayers to the devil I say . . . Bob Marley BRIAN DURKIN 389 North Avenue October 20 There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable There is another which states that this has already happened. Douglas Adams 18 Seniors SUSAN BETH FAIN 405 South Avenue October 29 Hey Fainie, Track. Fall Spring play crew, cast parties WdW 79-81. 12 31 80 w DS (burnt lips, ring dings and BT ' s w JS, PJ. DS. LO. and LW. Summer 81, 12 31 81 w CS (Surprise visiters) Cotuit 82 windows, baseball, beaches bonfires w SMF, suprise parties 10 31 81 9 10 82. Everything is funny as long as it happens to somebody else. I really have enjoyed my stay; but I must be moving on. JOHN A. FARINA 85 Byron Road June 3 Sometimes the light’s all shin’ on me other times I can barely see lately it occurs to me what a long strange trip it’s been The Grateful Dead Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you’ve been up to. Unknown DEIRDRE FAWCETT 14 Bemis Street June 28 And we all know it’s better Yesterday has past Now let’s all start living For the one that’s going to last. Cat Stevens We haven’t the time to take our time Ionesco Seniors 19 PAUL JOHN FERRI 211 Meadowbrook Road December 21 Thanks — JDD. JVH. CEV. CRK, JK. JDN. MP. CLP. LVD — It was a group effort. What the heart knows today the head will understand tomorrow. Remember: S O B . Rte 90, Ski Trip 81. AWS. Cape 82. Northerns 81, J.C., Snoopy Don’t rush the good things in life. Mom and Dad — Thanks for the love and support. ELIZABETH G. FIRST 22 Rockport Road July 28 I might rise above I.might qo below Ride with the tide and go with the flow. Inez Charlie Foxx, J-T Keep passing the open windows. John Irving ELLEN BETH FLEISCHER 47 Walnut Road May 7 If you smile at me 1 will understand, cause that’s something that everybody, everywhere does in the same language. If endings symbolize beginnings, shouldn’t good-byes be easier to say? Be yourself, an original is better than a copy We treat this world of ours as though we had a spare in the trunk. BG Tonight ' s the night we’ll make history . . . STYX!” Thanks guys for making it special LF. SL. BG, CP, JP. GC 20 Seniors DIANE MARY GALLAGHER 10 Nobscot Road June 7 Finish each day and be done with it . . . You have done what you could; Some blunders and absurdities no doube crept in; Forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day. You shall begin it well and serenely. Ralph Waldo Emerson THOMAS FULTON 21 Hillcrest Road April 1 DINA GHALI 15 Country Drive June 11 Seniors 21 KATE RYAN GLEASON Wherever Mike is November 22 Goodbye my friends, maybe for forever, Goodbye my friends, the tide waits for me. Who knows when we shall meet again, if ever. But time, keeps flowing like a river, to the sea. Time. The Alan Parsons Project To all my hoser and hoserette friends — thanks for all the great times. JENNIE GRAUNAS 37 Spring Road April 9 I ' ve been happy lately, thinking about the good things to come And I believe it coulcf be, something good has begun! Cat Stevens Seek, seek and you will find! Gino Vanelli D.M.G., a faithful friend is a treasure! TERRY GOVAN 241 Glen Road May 6 Keep your fingers on important issues — on the wind up world — in this almost empty gin palace — in a sense they still smile very sweetly, Charged with insults and flattery — so called gentlemen and ladies dog fight — once this seemed so appealling — now I am beyond belief. I ain ' t never gonna forget you Pizzaroo working in the summer of ' 82, Dancin Fara; My mend forever and a special thanx to you Jude and our silly laughing mood. Hang in there, Tim. Bye NB. 22 Seniors CHUNG TAT HA 30 Georgian Road September 29 JONATHAN GREEN 30 Parks Drive, Sherbum May 7 When I was a child 1 caught a fleeting glimpse Out of the comer of my eye 1 turned to look but it was gone 1 cannot put my finger on it now The child is grown The dream is gone. Pink Floyd BEVERLY CAROL GRIFFITH 63 Black Oak Road September 29 There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is in having lots to do and not doing it. You grow up the day you have your first real laugh — at yourself True friendship comes when the silence between two people isn’t awkward. EF . .. “Our memories of yesterday will last a lifetime STYX!” Thanks M D, Good Luck Dewey! Seniors 23 RICHARD L. HALL 901 Bradford Road May 8 Life is thick sewn with thoms. and I know no other remedy than to pass quickly through them. The longer we dwell on our misfortunes, the greater is their power to harm us. Voltaire A very special thanks to M r. and Mrs Murray and family. Thanks for everything ‘chief ! Forever thankful to Mom Dad and friends. LISBETH ALEXANDRA HAMM 709 Boston Post Road July 4 The behavior of each kind of thing depends on the kind of thing it is. Sir Isaac Newton 174 Meadowbrook Road DEBORAH HARRIS April 12 24 Seniors CHRISTINE HAUFLER 74 Westerly Road April 4 I wanna go home. This is a nice place To visit but I wouldn’t want to live here. I love you Joe. CATHERINE H. HAZEN 50 Radcliffe Road October 6 Life ain’t no easy freeway, just some gravel on the ground, You pay for every mile you go, and you spread some dust a round. But we all have destinations, and the dust will settle down. John Denver This is it, this is life, the one you get, so go and have a ball. Thanks Sarah, for four years of fun and for being my best friend. JOYCE V. HEGEMEN 32 Colchester Road Time is what runs out when you have something fun to do, and time is what drags on when you have drudgery to do. Unknown March 9 Seniors 25 JOHN HERSUM 69 Aberdeen Road August 17 We should live and learn; but by the time we’ve learned, it’s too late to live. Carolyn Wells There isn’t much to be seen in a little town, but what you hear makes up for it Good luck: M.M., J.C., D.L., K.W., R.W., and Sis. RICHARD HESTER 324 Winter Street January 8 STACEY LEE HOCHBERG 68 Westerly Road November 27 If you can keep your head when all about you others are losing theirs, maybe you just don’t understand the situation. Everything that happens and everything that befalls us has a meaning, but it is often difficult to recognize it. Also in this book of life every page has two sides; we human beings fill the upper side with our plans, hopes, and wishes, but providence writes on the other side, and what it ordains is seldom our goal 2b Seniors STEPHANIE HOCHBERG 68 Westerly Road November 27 K.M. D M. J.H. K.E. D.G. J.G. Friendly’s. Movies and Chinese food with K.T. Joe and Pete thanks for the good times. Scituate. Varsity baseball. SPeff. Lost Identity. Switching classes. Cold winters. Leaving home Only those who dare ... truly live — Ferrari SETH HOWE 215 South Avenue October 9 JOHAN HOLMQUIST 228 Ridgeway Road June 23 Gone are the days we stopped to decide where we should go, we just go. Gone are the broken eyes we saw through in dreams, gone, both dream and lie. Greatful Dead Wer sich heute freuen kann Soil nicht bis morgen warten Seniors 27 DOUG JACKSON 459 Glen Road May 12 Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore. The gods do not deduct from a man’s allotted span the hours spent in fishing. Too much sanity is madness “Slatts JILLIAN DAVIS JACKSON 11 October Lane May 6 Oh, God give us the serenity to accept what cannot be changed, courage to change what should be changed, and wisdom to distinguish one from the other Reinold Neibuhr Education is hanging around until you ' ve caught on. Robert Frost VINCENT 1AFRATE 1 Trailside Road Every man is bom to be free, vet some sell there liberty cheap For those of us who don ' t, the eagle is our symbol 28 Seniors 1 JOHN M. JORDAN 35 Dale Street Needham July 7 For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of Light. Ephesians 5:8 Maybe the hardest thing I ' ve done was to walk away from you Leaving behind the life that we’d begun I split myself in two. Jackson Browne PAMELA JOHNSON 19 Bradyll Road October 7 Memories of ' 81 — bookends , Midnight Members. Bloopers, White Olds License??” C.W . Phone bills to Utah. Summer ’82 — S.,C., K M., July 26 — “Good things come in 2’s — coincidence 1 ” To Steph, Mike, Deb. Freddy, Andy G., Mom and Dad Thanks to “Peaks — the ultimate club member and friend, and to Lisa for the years before Weston. A special thanks to Benton, and of course, to Julie, for all the good times. “My baby’s got blue eyes — Elton John CAROL V. KAHN 400 Concord Road August 26 Education is . . . hanging around until you ' ve caught on. Robert Frost Life is what happens to you while you ' re busy making other plans. John Lennon Seniors 29 MICHAEL A. KANEB 24 Colonial Way August 4 Grown up, and that is a terribly hard thing to do. It is much easier to skip it and go from one childhood to another. F. Scott Fitzgerald Just look over your shoulder lt’s out of your hands It’s over for now Leave behind what you can You can always return. James Taylor HEIDI KASEVICH 680 Wellesley Street April 25 Who in the world am I? Ah, that’s the great puzzle.” Lewis Carroll For nothing can be loved or hated unless it is first known.” Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo da Vinci There is no wealth but life.” John Ruskin ERIC KARCHMER 248 Boston Post Road March 29 1 didn t know your typewriter had roman numerals. J.S.. leading class intellectual Fire, SuLu! Do it til it hurts 30 Seniors LIZ KASSIRER 24 Dean Road. Wellesley Hills January 6 Don’t ya think — Sometimes it’s wise not to grow up . . . The Rolling Stones In green sun, on blue earth, under warm running showers .. . Jefferson Airplane R: Y.A.A.M EDWARD DAVID KATZ 11 Sunset Road April 29 I’d like to go by climbing a high birch tree, And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk, Tward heaven, ’till the tree could bear no more, But dipped it’s top and set me down again . . . One could do worse than be a swinger of birches. Robert Frost “A woman is only a woman but a good cigar is a smoke.” KATHERINE LYNN KELLY 59 Orchard Avenue April 19 I am free, yes I’m free, now I’m on my way. Thanks for the Good Times: KM, JS. PJ, MD, RF — Free me! Life used to be so hard, now everything is easy ’cause of you. CSNY Thanks Buddy! Seniors 31 402 North Avenue CHRISTIE ELIZABETH KENNEDY May 21 ' -f |£r A friend is someone who knows all about anyway. you, but likes you Orson Welles If I chance to talk a little wild, forgive me; I had it from my father Shakespeare Thanks Mom and Dad. 1 love you. Pooh ERIC KIRCHNER 60 Indian Hill Road April 27 The winds and the waves are always on the side of the ablest navigators. Edward Gibbon All that is gold does not glitter, Not all those who wander are lost . . . Gandalf from the Lord of the Rings. JAMES KEYDEL 63 Doublet Hill Road May 5 I can’t stand up for falling down. Elvis Costello — listen there’s a hell of a good universe next door, let’s go. E E Cummings Five minutes! Aounds! 1 have been five minutes too late all my life! Hannal Cowley 32 Seniors JONATHAN KOHN 15 Lincoln Street February 3 Wise is the man who is slow to anger and quick to forgive. Talmudic Saying Contrary to the law of matter where to give more means to have less in the law of love the more one gives, the more one has. J. Mascaro Barriga llena corazon contento! DAVID AARON KOMESSAR 203 Westedy Road October 17 Five to one, one to five, No one here gets out alive. You get yours, I’ll get mine Gonna make it if we try. Jim Morrison You’ve got to live life for yourself, you can’t live for anyone else Ray Davies and the Kinks DEBRA ANN KOMESSAR 203 Westerly Road October 17 Sometimes the lights all shinnin on me, other times I can barely see, Lately it occurs to me, what a long strange trip it ' s been The Grateful Dead So after all is said and done, 1 gotta move while its still fun, I’m gonna walk before they make me run. The Rolling Stones MARK HOGUE LANG 14 Wanren Place January 24 Good Times, Business endeavors with friends, The Three Stooges, M M Brothers, Fred and Barney, J. Damage . . . Midnight Members, the apartment . . . Van Halen, The Police, and The Doors! Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you’ve been up to! RM JOANNE KRAKAUER 31 Beech Road April 23 If eyes were made for seeing, Then Beauty is its own excuse for being. Emerson Some people are going to like me and some people aren’t, So 1 might as well be me. Then at least 1 will know that the people who like me like me. Hugh Prather DIANE ELIZABETH LEACH 40 Rockport Road July 25 You ' ve got one life to live, so live it positively Make sure that all you’re doing’s based on reality Live your life each day as if it was your last. Jimmy Cliff Got your mind set on a dream You can get it, though hard it may seem. Jimmy Cliff 34 Seniors HARMON MICHAEL LEWIS 42 Buckskin Drive July 14 “So many times it happens too fast you trade your passion for glory. Don’t lose your grip on the dreams of the past. You must fight just to keep them alive. It’s the eye of the tiger It’s the cream of the fight rising up to the challenge of our rival.” You see it’s a matter of pride deep down inside I’m gonna win. Ooh I’ll pay the price no more Mr. Nice just watch me roll the dice. I’m gonna win, win, win. MATTHEW LEVIN 49 Woodchester Drive September 16 That’s one small step for Man, one giant leap for Mankind. Neil A. Armstrong I don’t like to think of Death as the end of life, rather a very positive way of cutting down on living expenses. Woody Allen SUSAN ELIZABETH LONG 56 Colchester Road September 15 The secret of life is not to do what you like but to like what you do. My gift to you is one of friendship. It’s the best thing 1 have to offer. I’m glad 1 got to share it with you. E.F , LF , K.S., S B., J H. — KIT l Seniors 35 CATHERINE LUNT 75 Bradford Road Reality itself is too twisted. Hunter S. Thompson Life is full of infinite absurdities which, strangely enough, do not even need to appear plausible, since they are true. Mark Twain SARAH MACK 24 Terrace Road April 3 Youth has gone though don’t think I don’t cry. We let ourselves slip and now I ask myself why I’m on my own and don’t think I really mind when after all, the years have been fairly kind. Marc Almond Thanks for the excellent times and for helping me when I really needed it 1 think you all know who you are. TIM MACDONNELL 15 Whitney Tavern Road August 12 Make sure you’re right, then go ahead. Tim MacDonnell Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice, it is not something to be waited for, it is something to be achieved william Jennings Bryant To R H look puss! 36 Seniors « ' • 5V s % .; ; , „ • wcL ; SARAH MAGIE 683 Boston Post Road February 20 And these children that you spit on As you try and change their worlds Are immune to your consultations they’re quite aware what they’re going thru. David Bowie Moogie! P.S: Varsity . . . Baaah! Thanks Mer. Luv ya Mom! MAVIS MacNEIL 42 Hilltop Road April 30 Life will hit you when you’re unaware, so be grateful and take what you can while you’re there. Ray Davies MIKE McCABE 27 Woodridge Road January 11 Good to till my friends at home. Goodbye to people I’ve trusted, I ' ve got to go out and make my way, I know I might get rich or 1 might get busted, but my heart keeps calling me backwards Steve Miller HI” Gotta love It dippen MM, SB, JR, JF, SR, DM. JM, SA, MW, punge we’re there Education is what you ' ve left after you’ve forgotten all you ' ve learned Seniors 37 KAREN McCORMACK 58 Bittersweet Lane May 30 Happiness is what you have brought to me. Life, love, and laughter. Even though some times have been hard, I know that between us is a very special bond that can never be broken. “1 love you Mom. Thanks!” Friendship we ' ll always remember, mistakes that we ' ll regret. Thanks for all the good times and thanks to you Ricky 143. TERESINA McGUIRE 22 Femboro Street April 13 It often shows a high command of language to say nothing. The deepest feeling always shows itself in silence. doug McDonald 235 Merriam Street August 26 If a grape is a fruit. then a grapefruit is redundant. Graig Shaw ( 38 Seniors WV f KELLY McKENNA 35 Hubbard Road August 28 Happiness is like a butterfly The more you chase it, the more it will elude you but if you turn your attention to other things, It comes and sits softly on your shoulder. L. Richard Lessor JOHN McNAMARA 70 Indian Hill Road August 24 I have never let my schooling interfere with my education. (M.T.) So when this loose behavior I throw Off and pay the debt I never promised, By how much better than my word I am. William Shakespeare Thanks Mom, Dad, Sue, Patrick and K.J.! Love you all! DIANE MICHELE MEDVERD 12 Hawthorne Lane December 8 And when the night is cloudy there is still a light That shines on me Shine until tomorrow, let it be The Beatles Seniors 39 TERESA MELONE 54 Bemis Road December 5 MP — The Cars. Is Elliot home?’ - . Cape Cod Colorado AS — Fanuiel Hall, seen Sm lately 9 Top 40 SD — HARWICH Old Dusty roads led to the RIVER ' p u f{ — oh won ' t you fly high oh FREEBIRD Yahl Ain ' t nothin but a HOUSEPARTY 1 The good life is just a dream away. This is it! FRANK MESSINA 120 Beaver Road March 24 Kindness is loving people more than they deserve Joseph Joubert I never think of the future it comes soon enough. Albert Einstein God Bless R F SB. L N. V B.. M D. Mr Mrs. Botts ROBERT MOINEAU 7 Rockport Road April 9 We don t need no education Pink Floyd ‘School’s out forever Alice Cooper 40 Seniors October 15 CHARLES FREDERICK MOORE IV 65 Old Road The bitter and the sweet come from outside, the hard from within. Albert Einstein MICHAEL MORRIS 8 Rockland Avenue May 16 1 started out afraid to get lost, to fall, but a few scars don’t hurt at all. I know my path, though sometimes I may deviate, soon, I’ll regain my direction. It’s funny how the other day while falling I gained two steps. No. I’m not afraid anymore. Life can hold too much in store.” Michael Morris Special thanks to METCO, my Mom, the Ackley’s and all who helped me. SANDRA KAYE MOORE 116 Meadowbrook Road September 23 Contentment is not the fulfillment of what you want, but the realization of how much you have Anonymous The most wasted day of all is that in which we have not laughed Maxims and Thoughts. I Seniors 41 152 Conant Road MICHAEL PATRICK MURRAY June 30 We can do anything we want to do if we stick to it long enough. A friend who lasts forever — RH the chief. Though we ' ve been through hard times, it ' s hard to keep us apart. S. J. Friends: P.J., J.S. ANN J. NELSON 34 Sears Road April 8 All of the good times were ours in the land of milk and honey And time has its scar, rainy days turn to sunny ones. You live in the light loving everyone. Littl. To get the maximum attention, it’s hard to beat a good big mistake. He who laughs last probably didn’t get the joke! Don’t let that smile fool you ...” Cheers BF! LISA NEMROW 8 Rockport Road July 22 Just us doing years. Lost in silly alleg ories. Together endlessly rejoicing redefining youth. Smile always, remember, and hope. Yesterday don’t matter til it’s gone. Today is none of our concern. JN, LC — Follow purple footprints to find me. Thanks Rico. Be bool TG SW ask a WBLT to lunch Berry, Shammy — 1 have nothing to say, but it’s okay 42 Seniors JENNIFER DUNN NICHOLS 23 Wellesley Street July 25 To ride on the crest of the wild raging storm To work in the service of life and the living In search of the answers to questions unknown to be part of the movement and a part of the growing Part of beginning to understand. John Denver Frosty mornings, Katahdin, the Porshe, JDI the best friend ever. CHRISTOPHER NOBLE 148 Country Drive November 13 Treat people as if they were what they ought to be, and you help them to become what they are capable of being. Goethe God did not create the world in seven days. He slagged for six days, and then pulled an all-nighter on the seventh. If we couldn’t laugh we would all have gone insane. JEANNETTE MARIE NORRIS 72 Cliff Road September 16 If people didn’t think I was strange. I’d be doing what they wanted me to do and I wouldn’t be myself. Well. I’ve been running into some trouble Lord, But I ' m keeping it together, bad company Some find happiness and some find sorrow Some find it today, and some maybe tomorrow Seniors 43 46 Hillcrest Road MARY KEEFE O BRIEN August 18 I don t know where life will lead me but 1 know where I ve been I can ' t say what life will show me. but I know what I ' ve seen Tried my hand at love and friendship but all that is passed and gone This little boy ' ' is moving on. sitting here in Limbo. Life is too funny! (Alissa Paige) Thanx to Dad. Mom. Cheri. my brothers and JJT, I love you all! TIMOTHY PATRICK O’BRIEN II 8 Shadyhill Road March 26 ' Have you been around, done your share of cornin ' down, on dif¬ ferent things that people do. Have you been aware, you ' ve got brothers and sisters who care, buddy what ' s gonna happen to you any year from now Baby I ' ll be there to shake your hand. Baby I ' ll be there to share the land, that they ' ll be given away when we all live together. Don ' t judge a person by performance, but judge the message their performance is trying to get across. RICHARD O ' CONNELL 32 Rockport Road February 7 What is defeat 7 Nothing but education, the first step to something bet¬ ter U Phillips Weston 14 — Wayland 12 Reach ' Cold beers to Bunky the Gang 44 Seniors July 5 LAUREN EVE OELGESCHLAGER 245 Merriam Street A wasted day is a day in which you haven’t laughed. “If everybody minded their own business,” said the Duchess in a hoarse growl, “The world would go round a deal faster than it does.” Lewis Carroll Louise — Thanks for the good times. SHELLIE PAIGE 96 Centre Street, Roxbury January 12 God grant me the gift to make my life an inspiration to someone else. S. Paige One smiles leads to another. S. Paige JUDY O’LEARY 281 Glen Road July 5 Each and every heart it seems Is bounded by a world of dreams Each and every rising sun Is greeted by a lonely one . ’Cause out on the ocean of life my love There are so many storms we must rise above. JLT (NMNL) Tripple L ' s, MV gang. Dude 1 MB. KC + SF. Bn + Eel, AP M dance Seniors 45 CHRISTINE PALMER July 20 17 Trailside Road Pleasures of the senses pass quickly, those of the heart often become sorrows: but the pleasurers of the mind are with us until the end of the journey. Spanish Proverb If you meet the world with a smile, the world will always smile back! JAMES PALMER 36 Juniper Road July 7 Don’t gain the World and lose your Soul, Wisdom is better than Silver and Gold.” Bob Marley “It takes a Revolution a make a solution” Bob Marley, his words live on Don ' t waste time, life is too short. LISA J. PAYNE 10 Gayland Street November 13 To have a friend you must first be a friend, and a true friend is the best kind to be. It’s easy to be an angel when nobody ruffles your feathers. Thanks to B P, I P , R M H Good Luck: JS, KW. LT. SP, TM, MM. RW 46 Seniors MONICA PECK 6 Fox Hill Drive, Natick September 5 Puff — Elliot home? Fly high, Freebird, Desperado, Cape Cod Colorado. S B. — Bab Bids, Chellst, Just call out my name you know the rest. J.R. — People smiled told me I was the lucky one . . . (B.O.F.) M.W. — walking on the moon, Henry, I know that dude! Slant food mood rice road pizzas (you’re a little bit country) Donn-E-O! “Dance all night, play all day, don ' t let nothing get in your way! F 7 f;‘V i TJk JOHN MICHAEL POLLOCK 25 Warren Avenue April 10 There is no disguise which can for long conceal love where it exists or simulate it where it does not. 1 had not hat: I murmered until I met a man with no head. (S.A.) Too much sanity is madness. Extreme law is often extreme injustice. CARA J. POLLOCK 29 Crescent Street August 20 Friendships that have stood the test-time and change — are surely best. You have done it by being yourself, perhaps that is what being a friend means, after all. Shower the people you love with love, show them the way that you feel. D.S. “Whenever 1 call you friend, anywhere we are Many thanks to seven very special people Mom, Carol, Don. DS. BG. AB. EF Seniors 47 JOHN R. POTTER 27 Newton Street February 25 He must have looked up at an unfamiliar sky through frightening leaves and shivered as he found what a grotesque thing a rose is and how raw the sunliqht was upon the scarcely created grass. A new world, material without being real, where poor ghosts, breathing dreams like air. drifted fortuitously about .. F.S. Fitzgerald MICHAEL NEIL PRESCOTT 152 Boston Post Road October 30 Before we end, and then begin, we’ll drink a toast to what it’s been. A few more hours to be complete. A few more nights, that we can meet. A few more times that I can say, I loved these days. Billy Joel Don ' t let go of your beliefs, your hopes, for they are your future and if you let go, so does a destiny. M.P. CHARLIE PUGHE 70 Corwood Drive April 19 Don ' t walk in front of me, I may not follow. Don ' t walk behind me, 1 may not lead. Walk beside me. and be my friend. The true measure of our wealth lies not in what we have, but in what we can do without. Today is not too late to start being what you have always wanted to be 48 Seniors JENNY PYLE 60 Bradford Road September 22 Oh baby, baby it’s a wild world It’s hard to get by just upon a smile. Cat Stevens ... Thanks, everybody. SUSAN ELAINE PULCINI 44 Legion Road August 28 Vuela sin temor y haz realidad tus suenos. I look to the sea, reflections in the waves spark my memory, some happy some sad, I think of childhood friends and the dreams we’ve had. Only time will tell .. . ASIA CHRIS REILLY 220 Ridgeway Road January 2 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. The tune will come to at last When all are one and one is all To be a rock and not to roll. Led Zeppelin Seniors 49 STEVEN A. RENY 70 Possum Road June 21 Live as if everything you do will eventually be known. Hugh Prather I count myself in nothing else so happy As in a soul remembering my good friends. Shakespeare 15,143 always was my favorite number. PATRICK REYNOLDS 14 Colchester Road February 28 If the sun refuse to shine 1 don’t mind, I don’t mind If the mountains fell in the.sea Let it be, it ain’t me. Alright, cos I got my own world to look through. And I ain’t gonna copy you Jimi Hendrix MARANGELI RIVERA 106 Bogle Road May 29 FRIENDSHIP It grows It grows from sharing time, circumstances, thoughts, feelings. It gives up . . Is not possessive, does not hang one, lets go, free. It accepts ... Another’s mistakes, weaknesses, misunderstandings — it is forgiveness, pardon, unconditional acceptance. It is a gift A treasure . . What 1 treasure most. 50 Seniors JAY RONEY 99 Oxbow Road August 12 Cruising in the ' cuda. No explanation is necessary because none would be satisfactory Dwight D. Eisenhower JOHN ROTE 119 Park Road May 2 JOHAN M. ROSTAD 30 Nobscot Road March 17 1 hear some people been talkin ' me down. They bring up my name, pass it around. They don t mention the happy times, They do their thing. 1 do mine. Neil Young Lay down beside me. Love ain ' t for keeping. — 83 Seniors 51 TERESE ROTHENBERGER 108 Buckskin Drive December 14 Live your life and love who you are Cause all of us were bom to go far K.G. SUSAN Y.H. PARK RYAN 11 Kings Grant Rd. January 8 Later! Thanx M.W., K.S., J.S., M.P., S B , C.B., K.C., C.G., D M , M.W., S M Bays 76-83- Champs! “82” finally. Bah! P. Silverman, especially thanks Geoffrey; D.L. remember 2nd grade, work, memories, Susie-Q, Uncle Foies, Good Luck everyone! Parties, fashion, seniors. There’s no way to thank you Mom and Dad for everything. JEFFERY SACHER 117 Deerpath Lane May 9 Live one day at a time Greg Boyington Everyone wants to own something. The challenge is not in maintaining, but in creating Vince Lombardi 52 Seniors STEVE SAINT-AMOUR 231 Country Drive Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of Thoms or Rowers, that would never have bound you. but for the formation of the first like on one memorable day. Charles Dickens DIANE M. SANTOS 4 Stillmeadow Road September 5 Just keep yourself up, don’t ever complain. Before you walk in the sunshine, you gotta laugh in the rain. Just get your act together, be ready for who and whatever. Life is a smile, so find it, put your face behind it. Get it straight in your mind, you gotta make your own sunshine. C.P. “ .. . you and I will always be forever.” JON SAVITZ 36 Deer Path Lane February 22 Live each day as if it were your last — Some day you’re bound to be right. He was a self made man who worshipped his creator “ ” memories from “My Dinner with Sachmo” I’ve never let my schooling interfere with my education Seniors 53 JOHN SAVINO 286 Boston Post Road October 19 Saw the people standing a thousand years in chains, some say it ' s different now. but look it’s just the same. Creedance Clearwater Revival Everybody knows this is Nowhere. Neil Young 1 JAMIE D. SAUNDERS 48 Juniper Street May 6 The more I study, the more I know, the more I know, the more I forget. The more I forget, the less 1 know, so why study? CBO.JB.AR — organge; caz. worm; TR BonJour; remember when ... LP BJ — Be nice cause I still got the files — RJ The deepest feeling shows itself in silence; Mom and Dad — love ya — ELAINE SEGAL 139 Country Drive April 11 A fool will lose tomorrow reaching back for yesterday D Wl It ' s worth the trip! Dunkrn Donuts 54 Seniors MARK D. SEGEL 221 Country Drive March 5 People say that nothing’s impossible, but I seem to do it all the time. It doesn’t matter to me if she doesn’t have a mind. E. David Kata Com, vegetable oil (com oil, peanut oil, soybean oil, sunflower oil, or partially hydrogenated sunflower oil) and salt. Frito-Lay, Inc. MICHAEL SCOTT SEGEL 50 Bittersweet Lane March 18 If I leave here tomorrow would you still remember me? I must be traveling on now, because there are too many places 1 have to see If I stay here with you now, well things just couldn’t be the same. Because I am free as a bird now and this bird you’ll never change. Lynyrd Skynyrd I am the Walrus, the Beatles MARK SEMICH 51 Nonesuch Road May 6 If you’d know the value of money, go and borrow some In Rivers had Governments, the lighest things swim at top. Ben Franklin There’s so much you and me can discover And 1 think we should start, start right now Jimi Hendrix Seniors 55 WADE R. SHANNON 20 Tamarack Road August 24 We are not weak if we make proper use of those means which the God of Nature has placed in our power . the battle, sir. is not to the strong alone, it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave. Patrick Henry One man with courage makes a majority. Andrew Jackson EDWARD JOSEPH SENNOTT JR. 27 GoldenBall Road July 28 No this is not the End It is not even the Beginning of the End, but perhaps it is the End of the Beginning. Sir Winston Churchill Ned. Nedo, Nedy Thanks. RH.SL.MM.TC. CS Good luck and Go For IT ' 494 North Avenue KEITH SHIELDS March 6 f- ■ — ■ . m i =E ■ • •• ' m ' V 1 56 Seniors JULIE ANN SHORE 32 Hallett Hill Road November 1 What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us. It takes 13 muscles to smile 33 to frown so why overwork? Don Mason Thanks: SC, KM. KK, PK, BE, LW, LO. Remember Summer ’81 midnight members WGC W Peaks. the awesome threesome. ’82 fond memories w RLH. Hey Babe! F f. PJ, MM. Thanks Gram. Dona and Chris. KATHY STIMPSON 29 Warren Ave May 7 It takes more time to be mean than to be nice, so why waste time? Anonymous Thank you for all the roses. ANNE ELIZABETH STEIN 27 Robin Road November 14 A little kingdom 1 possess, where thoughts and feelings dwell. And very hard the task 1 find of governing it well. — L.M A. Time goes, you say? Ah no! Alas, Time stays, we go. Henry Dobson No one regards what is before his feet; we all gaze at the stars. Quintus Ennius Seniors 57 JOHN W. STREHLE May 26 188 Country Drive Everything is a mixed blessing. . . . And miles to go before I sleep. R. Frost Always give yourself time to think. R. Dubuc LORI STUBBS 798 Boston Post Road March 19 It ' s like a jungle sometimes it makes me wonder how I keep from going under. (G.M.F.) Everybody needs love and adventure. Everybody needs cash to spend Everybody needs love and affection. Everybody needs two or three friends These are the thinqs that dreams are made of.” (H.L.) Where there’s life there ' s mud. MARSHALL REED TARBOX 38 Chestnut Street May 25 Good sportsmanship we hail, we sing It ' s always pleasant when you spot it There’s only one unhappy thing. You have to lose to prove you ' ve got it. Richard Armoir To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. 58 Seniors LINDSAY TOMPKINS 80 Cheny Brook Road February 12 Maybe tomorrow I’ll find my way to the land where the honey runs in rivers each day and the sweet tastin’ good life is so easily found, ’way over yonder, that’s where I’m bound. Carole Kind Wake now, discover that you are the song that the momin’ brings, But the heart has its seasons, its evenings and songs of its own. Grateful Dead LISA MARIE TERRY 86 Fayston Street, Dorchester September 3 Tomorrow is dream that leads me onward . . . tomorrow is a path I’ve yet to choose, it’s a chance I’ve yet to take, a friend I’ve yet to make, it’s all the talent I have yet to use Tomorrow is a dram that leads me onward, always just a step ahead of me . . . it’s the joy I’ve yet to know, the love I’ve yet to show, for it’s the person I have yet to be. Karen Raun DAVID TURNER 8 Surrey Lane November 3 Smile, and the world smiles with you. Life is a celebration, not a destination Seniors 59 KEITH UPHAM 198 Newton Street August 1 People you’ve got the power over what we do You can sit there and wait or you can pull us through Come along, sing the song You Know that you can’t go wrong. Jackson Browne A man’s got to know his limitations. Clint Eastwood, Magnum Force LYNNE WILBUR VAN DUSEN 62 Lexington Street September 23 And all that fills the hearts of friends. When first they feel, with secret pain Their lives hence forth have seperate ends, And never can be one again Longfellow Keep smiling, it makes people wonder what you’ve been up to. THOMAS F. VALLE 40 Ash Street April 26 The past is there if 1 need it, but I’m busy making the future. Frank Miller 1 don ' t know what’s gonna happen, but 1 wanna have my kicks . . . Jim Morrison Life is too short, so why waste precious time? Thanks Mike 60 Seniors LOUISE CHRISTINA WALKER 25 Westland Road November 20 Now I’ve been happy lately thinking about the good things to come and I believe it could be something good had begun. Cat Stevens “But wait a bit,” the Oysters cried, “Before we have our chat; For some of us are out of brath, and all of us are fat!” (L.C.) LAUREN — What?! Sshhh . . . (You’re a great friend, thanks for everything) MARGARET WALTON 109 Beaver Road June 26 Catch your dreams before they slip away. I’ll come around to see you once in a while or if I ever need a reason to smile. O K. I.R. D.S. L.Y., L., J.K. Mon — You’re a little bit rock n roll. Bye Bye Fove, Walden Sar MEBA — thanx for everything. (S C. 83 what? Yeah!) Let the stories be told. Let them say what they want. KIMBERLEE DENISE WYCHE 64 Sigourney Street, Jamaica Plain There can be no rainbow without the clouds and the storm, right Mike 9 I’m wishing on a dream to follow what it means And I’m wishin on a rainbow that I’ve seen. Gubba, Just call my name and I’ll be there CAZ, how do you eat an oreo PF means To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die Seniors 61 140 Cherry Brook Road MICHAEL WOOD June 3 SARAH ANN WILLIAMS 140 Orchard Avenue June 30 . meet the future with a peaceful heart.” TG. LN. JO; NB. TM, SG, GM, WB (LT); Who can it be knockin’ at my door? Thanks “Adrianne”, Mom, Dale, Dad and Barbara, for everything. George: “1 hope you don’t mind that I put down in words, how wonderful life is while you’re in the world.” Celebrate! DBF l shall never forget all the times we shared; the memories will never die I love you. 165 Greenfield Road. Mattapan ROWAN WELCH September 8 b2 Seniors November 3 RICHARD D. FEDERICO 10 Sherburn Circle July 11 “Always borrow from a pessimist — he never expects to be paid back. (me) “A man may die, but his reputation lives on forever. (MKO ' B) Good times summer of ’82 with LF, AP, DB, RH, RM, BK. KF, SB, FM, at the Brothers 4 and Casino. Cold ones at Narcissus and the Nine with Obey, Ikie and Mels. Working with Stemma. Karen thanks for everything. EARLY GRADUATE CAROLINE A. ZRAKET 71 Sylvan Lane KW — Send me forget-me-nots, help me to remember. Hey tuxboy, you breathing my air? Rick Slobbering Snoop, this is wimpy Woodstock signing off. Seniors 63 L b4 Candids ROLL ’EM .. 1983 ROLL EM 65 “FAST TIMES AT W.H.S.” More things happen at Weston High than people would think. After all, we re always here! Remember the bomb scare? And the fire alarm that burned poor Mr. Skeleton in the Sci¬ ence Department? And the “Student Revolution’’? And who can forget ‘Blueberry Hill’ on Chronicle or the high rating W.H. received in Boston Magazine? We’re pretty awesome! Another major part of Weston High, aside from academics and sports, is the social life. W.H.S. is made up of a lot of different cliques. From the most basic, the jocks, to the stagecrew, and the cheerleaders, cliques can be found. But when it comes to the weekend, every¬ one gets the party spirit. But the ulti¬ mate goal of every student in the high school is to find someone of the oppo¬ site sex. Rumors always fly about cou¬ ples getting together and breaking up. As soon as someone is available, the chase is on! Attack! After all, it’s the friends, the fun, and the “fast times” that we’ll always remember. 66 FAST TIMES AT W H S.” FAST TIMES AT W H S.” 67 “VISITING HOURS” What was the most fashionable item to wear at Weston High this year? Crutches, casts and slings! It seemed that Newton-Wellesley was more chic than Bloomingdale’s. At the start of fall sports, more students were off the field than on. Broken legs, sprained wrists, and pulled muscles were just some of the casualties students suffered. Of course, these injury-ridden people were being deprived from participating at team practices and in the games. But just think of all the attention they get. After all, at Weston High, a crutch is certainly the in thing — and the sign of a true dedicated jock! 68 -VISITING HOURS -1 “CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN” When one describes Weston, he she usually labels it a small, family community. Weston High can certainly back this statement considering over forty members of the Senior class have younger siblings in this school. From an older sibling’s point of view, it’s not so bad having that younger pain in the neck in the same school. It’s great being the Senior and teasing the younger brother or sister about being a Frosh and having three years to go. Although it would seem that the younger sibling would follow in the older ones footsteps, this is not so. Many share the same interests but succeed on their own, without always being referred to as so-in-sos little brother sister. Other siblings show themselves by doing totally different activities than the Senior. Looking around, you can always see siblings whether fighting or actually getting along. ‘CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN ' t “THE LAST CONVERTIBLE” In that all-important Junior year, we begin to start looking into that all-important, unavoidable issue. Not colleges, we are talking about TRANSPORTATION. Not foo t pow¬ er, but real wheel power. And how else does one get this power than to have his very own set of wheels? To some, this means anything with four wheels and an engine. But to others, . . . Weston High students have been seen cruising in anything from a large yellow convertible to a bright red fire¬ bird, and even a black limo. Whatev¬ er car we might have, a new driver might be someone to watch out for. Even after our intellectual stimulation at Commonwealth and Cams, we might still need a little practice. Our best advice — STAY OFF THE ROADS!!! 70 THE LAST CONVERTIBLE THE LAST CONVERTIBLE ' 71 72 WORKING FIVE TO NINE “WORKING FIVE TO NINE” Of course Weston is famous for its high pressured academics and quality athletic teams, but how many people are aware of the number of students with jobs? Even with the increasing unemployment rate, you can find various Weston students working after school in the kitchen, preparing or rather sampling dinner at the Weston Golf Club, creating masterpiece sundaes at Friendly’s, and checking out food at the Triple A. Their work pays off in more ways than one; these people, because they are earning extra money, always have new clothes, great weekends, and rarely have to beg their parents for “greens.” •WORKING FIVE TO NINE 73 “ON THE TOWN” Believe it or not, there is more beyond our horizon than Richardson ' s, Ye Olde Cottage and Buttricks. The well known city of Boston lies a mere twenty minutes away by car or forty-five minutes by the “T The city offers many exciting things to do and interesting places to go. There ' s the Science Museum, the Aquarium, shopping and eating at Fanuel Hall and Newbury Street and the Boston Common. There ' s also an active night life. People are always spinning around at Spin-Offs, “getting it down’’ at the Dance Factory and going to rock concerts or sports games at the Garden. In the future, we will be fortunate enough to remember that in our younger days we made it in Massachusetts. GREEN LINE OJLJTBC IND a 74 ON THE TOWN I ON THE TOWN 75 “FATSO” Piggin ' out . . . getting the munchies . . . Mickey D’s ... stuffing our faces . . . Sound familiar? Those are all lines used during the lunch hour when mean hunger pangs drive us toward a good home cooked meal, like the one’s served at MacDonalds or Ye Olde Cot¬ tage. Hungry after school? Dunkin Donuts is only a few miles away. And on the weekends, hike into Boston fora delicious gastronomical experience, as many Weston High students do. FOOD. It ' s something everyone can get into and that no one can do without. Unfortunately this favorite past time of eating shows up on our figures. BILLIONS AND B 76 -FATSO” • FATSO ' 77 “ANIMAL HOUSE” S’up? Where’s the party? How many times have we heard those famous lines on Friday afternoon? Although parents have discussed the drinking that goes on at parties, students still manage to have successful “get togethers.’’ This past year was no exception. Almost ev¬ ery weekend some innocent house was instantly transformed into an “Animal House” as soon as the rumor of a party spread throughout the school. Whether talking, dancing, posing for pictures, or “doing cold ones,” every¬ one from W.H.S. “Let the qood times roll.” 78 ANIMAL HOUSE “ANIMAL HOUSE” 79 “GOING IN STYLE” Face it. Weston High is noted for its Preppy look, and it certainly seems that espadrilles, Bean boots, oxfords, and alligators are here to stay! We are mentioned in the reknown Preppy Handbook” as being one of the preppiest communities in the country, not a small achievement. But at last we are finally breaking away from that old pink and green stereotype. This year, we are seeing a lot more miniskirts, jean jackets, cowboy boots, ruffles and the like. Getting Vogue” seems to be the general trend for future generations at W H S. 80 GOING LN STYLE ' ’ JUNIORS 1984 Co-stars Juniors 81 HOMEROOM 201 Row 1: Bee Baker, Holly Berkovitz, Tony Baker, John Bumpus, Sylvia Browne, Bridget Bloxon. Row 2: Peter Alphas, Rob Birkenstock, Phil Cacciatore, Wendy Andler, Ken Brown, Marcia Belvin. Row 3: David Bemat, Lillian Autler, Jane Boyle. Missing: Liz Bello and Renee Altman P w I iw T . W v ' J 1ilb L lit I iBHl J B T jM V 4 BfeA HOMEROOM 205 Row 1: Mike Coyle, Vincent Chiang, Tim Claman. Jay Choi. Mike Deldechetto, Nick Dowling Row 2: Amy Coller, Anne Cahill, Erin DeChristopher, Michele Chiavacci, Vicki Corrado, Mike Cremmen, Chris Cahill, Jackie Cort Beth Cornell, Sonji Crowder Row 3: Julie Cohen, Tracey Danforth, Sally Callahan, Mark Donahue, Joe Connelly, David Drumm Missing in action: Sean Collins. 82 Juniors HOMEROOM 206 Row 1: Jeff Hall. Kurt Haufler, Jeff Fiske, Freidberg. Margaret Grace. Brock Edmunds, Rache l Hazen. Row Aristine Harris, Melinda Ferguson, Lauren Goldsmith. Row 3: Sandy Franchi, Carolyn Cabral, Kathleen Gordon, Kim Rich 2 Jill Glazerman. Kim Healey, Kris Fiore. Tim Gilman, Mike HOMEROOM 22 Row 1 Pat Kelsey. Michele Holdsworth. Kim Jansen. Lisa Jacobs. Dennis Kirshy. Curtis Johnson Row 2: Susan Howard. Tobi Karchmer. Karen Jacobs. Debbie Hinckley. Emily Isaacs. Liz Knight. Katie King. Carol Hooven-Fuchs Row 3 David Kerwin. Dana Ingram. David Krakauer. Ken Jacoby Peter Kahn. Alan Jacobson. Peter Katsikaris. Mark Kilayko Ji Koujoumijian HOMEROOM 209 Row 1 Neil Marshall, Paul Nyhan, Satish Lathi, Lisa Nyman. Jill Landauer, David Norquist. Row 2: Merdith Magie. Karen Linde. Chris Moran. Danny Lynch. Ronald McPherson, Sandra Martin. Row 3: Jimmy Levitt, Michelle Noonan, Joe Lawrence, Andy Nickerson, Christina Lee, Richard Martin, Holly Melone, Eddie Leopold HOMEROOM 211 Row 1 Stacey Radcliffe, Rachel Perkins. James Park Alissa Page. Magic Pan, Andrea Parker Row 2 David Ott. Mike Potter Susie Prescott Lynn Parrish Holly Reiman, Lora Parker, Dana Peny, Val Clark. Row 3: John Randall, Tom Palmer, Doug Perrelli, John Potter, Mark Polansky, Michelle Peterson, Lisa Parker Row 4 Chuck Peters Matt Paris, David Reilly, Cliff Owens. 84 Juniors HOMEROOM 214 Row 1: Andy Sacher, Margot Roth, Susan Sandler, Marion Robbins, Liesl Rockart, Pam Stubbs. Row 2: Linda Smith, Jill Savitz. A1 Rogers, Chantha Sawanna, Andy Scott, Mark Retik. Row 3: John Fatty Strachan, Paul Slagle, Tom Szekely. Kim Rich, Almitra Stanley, James Rosenberg, Steve Siegal. HOMEROOM 216 Row 1 Gordon Waldron. Chris Vitello, Joe Tagliente, Chris Walker. James Turner, Harry Thompson Row 2 Paul Zemer, Biddie Thomas. Dawn Widugurus. Kelly Whitaker, Christine VanDermeid, Victoria Walker Row 3. Fredrick Westerling, Laura Westman. Karin Vandervenne. Christine Van Wart. Kim Wooters Row 4 Robbie Waltral, Kr Wathne. 85 Junior 8b Candids SOPHOMORES Understudies — 1985 Sophomores 87 l HOMEROOM 26 Row 1: Wes Atamian, Rebecca Barry, Shivonne Brown, Shirley Barbour, Brian Williams, Peter Alhart. Row 2: Lori Campisano, Lisa Albering. Eliza Brown, Elise Billings, Kris Beinner, Andrea Bottecelli, Mike Brown, Matt Brill, Jeff Beck. Row 3: Katie Aames, John Barrnett, Chris Berg, Susan Allen, Greg Blatt, Chris Billie. HOMEROOM 21 Row 1 Mike Claubault. Rob Ciappendelli, Catsidas, Andrea Caleffi, Sandy Burke, Betsy Cronin, Monica Philip Cassarino, Liana Caso, Lisa Cacciatore, Lisa Camey. Row Cohen. Row 3: Carol Clark. 2 Jerome Bryant, Mike Bunker, Greg Carbone, A1 Caira. Kristin 88 Sophomores HOMEROOM 23 Row 1: Marsha Downey. Lara Fortune, Chance Fechtor. Patricia DaRosa, Chad Edwards. Anne Frenning. Row 2: Susan Espo, Chip Cutler, Joanna Farmer, Eric Ferguson, Margot Fulton. Row 3: David Fitzgerald, Peter Cutter Diane Cynn. Michelle Cuker, Nicole Daley. HOMEROOM 27 Row 1 Jill Herscot. Betsy Giles. Mary Harris. Sarah Glass. Wendy Harrington. Robin Karofsky. Timothy Govan. Paul Garcia. Rob Karofsky Row 2 Steven Hotchberg. Cheryl Hebert. Gita Grube. Roz Hill. Kaia Keerd. Roland Gibson. James Haas. Jamie Goldstein. Ken Holmes. Peter Kakridas Row 3: Geoffrey Grant. Keith Jacoby Jeann Hart. Letitia Howland. Lisa Houde, Alison Jones. Stephanie Johnsons. Arthur Jacobs Sophomore 89 HOMEROOM 29 Row 1 Richard Caruso, Ellen Leibowitz, Robin Macdonald, Lockie McNeish, Laura Miltner. Timomi Kimura. Row 2: Andrew Lee. Liz Lesser, Robert Roger, Brian McPherson, Darren Mack. Richard Manning. Kathleen Kinahan, Cathy Kohn, Andrea Mengoli, Bonnie Kirchner Row 3: Scott Merill. Gregory Lind. Richard Lofberg. Patrick McShane. Jonathon Medverd. Row 4: Kurt King. Reed McCracken. HOMEROOM 30 Row 1 Jose Morabito. Doug Patton. Jen Rossiter. Rob Mosher. Steve Minervino, Willie Pughe, Brad Richard Nichols. David Rolde. Jewell Owens. Kenn Nobles Row Rosen. Row 3: Julie Muccini, Anne Moellering, Chris Reilly, Sara 2 Carlos Rivera. Beth Perkins. Laurel Paltrineri. Wanda Murphy. Oh, Michelle Moran, Jeff Potter. Jon Patnode. Mr Hall 90 Sophomore HOMEROOM 36 Row 1: Kurt Samowski. Karen Slifka. Bob Stewart. Nila Stringer. Row 2: David Smith, Mitchell Solomon. Heather Shamsai, Rebecca Szeckely, Paula Sullivan, Rebecca Shores. Row 3: James Summers, Julie Schreiber. Karen Swain Loralee Ryan. Joan Savino. Glynis Shields. Eric Schreiber. Amanda Smith. HOMEROOM 44 Row 1 Andrew Wheelock. Steve Trier, Thomas, Bruce Thurston. Betsy Vining. Liz Wood, Amy Kevin Whitaker. Brian Williams. Matt Vlachos. Fordie Wright. Williams Row 3: Mike Williams. Jenny Zeitrogel, Jenine West Row 2: Celeste Wilson, K.C. Wilder, Lodewijk Westerling, April Elaine Theodore, Heather VanHolland, Alan Urell,_ Sophomore 91 «4 K W) PJPVk ■ 9 H ‘ft qm } L A|KJ . • m Ra | 92 Candids HOMEROOM 2 Row 1: Marc Alexander, Kim Bristol, Steve Kathryn Boucher, Young-Sue Bae. Row 3: Linda Bowermaster, Aserkoff, Adam Berman, Heidi Baker, Heidi Benjamin. Row 2: Wilford Allen, Greg Blatt, Eric Berg, Peter Agnello, Greg Catherine Birgeneau, Jessica Berkowitz, Brenda Bouvier, Wendy Aharonian, Rosemary Baghdady, Genevra Buchanan. Ahman, Carolyn Cacciatore, Jenny Blair, Cathy Boosales, HOMEROOM 4 Row 1: Scott Cail, Andy Canellos. Rob Leslie Davidson, Karen Cotter, Chris Lynn, Tom Davidson, C leary, Doug Cook, Christina Davis. Joe Campbell Row 2 Danny Cohen, John Daly Row 3: Tom Callahan, Jim Carsten Couchouron, Joanna Daly, Julie Conell, Leslie Catlin, Cronin, Cathy Chong, Betsy Chace, Chris Childs. 94 Freshman HOMEROOM 6 Row 1: Mark Gowan, Daryll Emerson, Chris Evans, Kevin Durkin, John Harrison, Neil Day. Row 2: Brad Hathaway, Craiq Gunderson, Charlie Galligan, Dan Gilman, Rob Fallon, Dwight Griffith, Will Hartmann, Andrea Floyd, Kathleen Fawcett. Row 3: Laura Harmon, Jennifer Foley, Rosey Donovan, Kathy Fratus, Amy Field, Heather Delaney, Paige Dolins. Row 4: Rob Gee. HOMEROOM 7: Row 1 Kent High. Chip Jackson Dionne Herring, David Irving. Craig Johnson. Dietrich Jones Row 2 Helen Kahn, Mary Holton. Paul Katsikaris. Christer Holmquist. Vasant Jayasankar. Mike Kaplan. Arlene Hong, Scott Karchmer. Scott Keery Row 3: Josh Jancourtz, Joci Jones. Gretchen Kamp. Wendy Jackson. Jody Karofsky, Amanda Kazanjiar Doug Johnson Fi ian HOMEROOM 18 Row 1: Rebecca McLaughin, Ann Marie Landauer, Missy Lonq, Karen Leibowitz, Stacy LeBaron, Krista Koontz. Row 2: Ted Majoca, Steve Kenosian, Austin McClintock, Mark McClintock, Peter Kleim, Steve Mallett, Matt Lawrence. Row 3: David Manning, Randy Martens, Andy Melone, Maria Mercur, Lisa Mazzotta, Tod Marsden. Row 4: Russell Kirsky, Riller Marshall, Caroline Marple. HOMEROOM 19 Row 1 Monique Penta. Lynne Meterparel, Knsten O Keeffe, Laura Paresky, Suzy North, Erica Nuymer. Row 2 Cheryl Paltrineri, Julie Nemrow, Damon Movitz, Steve Penelli, Gordon Pan, Mike O ' Brien. Patrick Noble, Michelle Owens. Carolyn Peters. Row 3: Heidi Norton, Doug Nahigian, Rob Miller, Steve Perron, John Palmer, Nick Papastavros, Thuyen Nguyen, Kuong Ngan 96 Freshman HOMEROOM 20. Row 1: Julie Raphel. Ayla Rosenthal. Missy Sperber. Leigh Ryan. Alyce Santos. Elizabeth Ray. Row 2: David Retik, Evan Salke, Scott Pryor, Andy Sheffer, Jon Shore, Matt Sacher. Row 3: Debbie Salt 2 . Jill Slagle, Michelle Roy. Scott Rockart, Andy Slifka. HOMEROOM 42 Row 1 Chris Wilson. Marvin Upshaw David Wilson. Michelle Sullivan. Richard Strachan. Andy Walton. Row 2 Kurt Upham. Keith Ward. Linda Stevens. Lydecke Sweet, Sarah Sullivan, Curtis Trousdale. Tom Wooters. Jonathan Strimling. David Urell Row 3: Nardella Thoma Jessica Tyler, Missy Wolfson, Laura Woodward, Jennifer Waldron. Karen Walker. Ed Yurcisin. Will Weisman Freshman 97 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Row 1 Vincent Chiang. Susan Sandler. David Norquist. Tim Claman SOPHOMORE CU SS OFFICERS Row 1 Karen Slifka, Row 2: James Haas. Christie Callahan, Julie Muccini. FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Amy Sandler. Chris Cynn, Lynne Meterparel. Stacy LeBaron, Caroline Marple. 98 Class Officers : FACULTY Directors 1983 Faculty 99 I Dan Cheever Superintendent of Schools Bruce MacDonald Acting Principal John Stayn Assistant Superintendent Donald Gearan Assistant to Principal Joseph Aieta Mathmatics David Baldanza Physical Education John Barclay Speech and Drama Walter Beevers English Department Head Joan Bines History George Blakeslee Science Department Head Robert Boucher Science Beverly Brown Mathematics 100 Faculty Donald Burke Science Gary Bush Mathematics Annette Busse English Marie Butera Physical Education Mark Catalini Industrial Arts James Centorino Science Hugh Chandler Guidance Department Head Diana Coates Skills Center Department Head Elinor Cosgrove Physical Education Phyllis Coughlin Science Donald Duncan Industrial Arts Department Head Joseph Emerson Alternate Studies Social Studies Faculty 101 Nicole Engborg Foreign Languages Margaret Fernald Foreign Languages Pete Foley Physical Education Department Head Robert Frank English Mary Frenning Guidance Constance Gartland Business Education Dawn Gatos Business Education Janet Ghattas Foreign Language Roland Gibson History Donna Gonzales Mathematics Barbara Haggerty Foreign Lanaugae Peter Hall History 102 Faculty James Hartmann English Martha Hatch Art Department Head Angela Heptner Foreign Language Richard Houde Mathematics Department Head Thelma Hoyle Business Education Department Head Joseph Jordan Science Natalia Kaktins Foreign Language Donald Kennedy Social Studies David Krathwohl Mathematics Joyce Lashway Mathematics Josephine MacLeod Library Department Head Susan Majors Science Faculty 103 Alex Manzo Mathematics Marylee Marsh History Dennis McCowan Mathematics Claire McDonough English Susan Miller Guidance James Moran Art Ridge Morgan History Ronald Mori Music Department Head Haworth Neild Physical Education Iona Nickeson Home Economics Department Head Clifford O’Connor Business Education William O’Rourke Mathematics 104 Faculty Dora Gttariano Mathematics Jerry Poliak Psychologist Stella Raudenbush METCO Liason Dorothy Raymond English Susan Rhodes English James Ryan Guidance Anthony Sammarco Foreign Language Arnold Santospago Industrial Arts Joyce Schwartz Science Alta Starr METCO Coordinator Sheldon Stemburg Foreign Language Cecile Sullivan School Nurse Faculty 105 Rheta Swain Science Peter Taberski Skills Center Denise Taggart Music Don Taggart History Joseph Verovsek History Irene Vouros Mathematics Robert Walker English John Williams History Department Head Janet Wohlers Foreign Language Department Head Edith Asquith Aide. Physical Education Lorraine Benotti Aide. Attendance Office Norma Cail Library Technician 106 Faculty Mary Carberry Career Consultant Ann Carpenter Aide, Mathematics Leo Cronan Study Hall Supervisor Florence Gratcy Secretary, Attendance Thomas Healey Study Hall Supervisor Cynthia Kazanjian Director, Food Services Jean Kennedy Aide. Skills Center Barry MacNeil Head Custodian Elizabeth Moodie Aide, Library Joanne Morton A.V. Department Barbara Muir Bookkeeper Sally Nahabedian Aide. Pnncipal ' s Office Staff 107 Jean Najarian Aide. Foreign Language Nancy Nance Aide. Science Cynthia Nangler Aide. History Mary Olson Secretary, Principal Helen Phinney Aide, Library Jean Saunders Aide, Foreign Language Charlotte Seeley Tutoj Candelaria Silva METCO Office Coordinator Marie Sweeney Aide, Guidance Toby Vogel Tutor. Skills Center Shirley Weinberg Library Staff Pauline Whittemore Secretary, Guidance 108 Staff Susan Williams Tutor, Skills Center Elaine Whyte Aide, English Barbara Ferri Community Liason. METCO Cafeteria Staff Row 1: Penny Theall, Margo Rossi, Helen Battista. Barbara Cotts. Row 2: Ruth LeBlanc, Phyllis Montgomery, Dorothy Flaherty, Paticia Lapenta, Jane Goodale. Missing: Lorraine Giffin, Cynthia Kazanjian (Director). Custodial Staff Ernest Scofield. Mario Salvucci, Scott Ackley, (Support Staff), Barry MacNeil (Head Custodian), Dennis Cidno, John Benotti, Gil Grassilli Staff 109 110 Candids Candids 111 i 112 Candids SPORTS Stuntmen 1983 Sports 113 SWIFT STICKS SCORE The season opened on September 12th against Acton-Boxborough. For the first time ever, Weston lost its open¬ ing game 0-4. After a few changes in personnel, along with additional hard work. Weston went on to win the next six consecutive games. Another first in Weston field hockey occurred when Weston beat Wayland by the unheard of lopsided score 8 Weston 1 Wayland. We were over all the hurdles now. and met Acton for the second encoun¬ ter. This time the game ended 0-0. We followed this with six more consecutive wins to finish the season 12-1-1 for 2nd place in the league to guess who? We qualified early for Tournament play and were seeded second. Weston beat Bishop Fenwich 3-0, then met Ipswich and went into double overtime, double stroke-off to finally take them in a thriller 2-0. The next game was for the North Division Title against Rockport. This game went into sudden death overtime and Weston scored to win the title. Next we traveled to Middleboro to meet the Southern Division Cham¬ pions. Harwich, and defeated them 2-1 for the North South Divisional Cham¬ pionship. Thus with a slow start we had a phe¬ nomenal finish and a great time doing it. Three of Weston’s returning and starting seniors were named to the DCL All Stars, co-captians Jenny Pyle, Lind¬ say Tompkins and forward Elai ne Segal. 114 Sports FRESHMAN FIELD HOCKEY Row 1: Carolyn Cacciatore, Laura Paresky. Ayla Rosenthal, Lynne Meterparel, Amy Sandler, Caroline Marple, Heather Delaney Row 2: Carolyn Peters, Rebecca McLaughlin, Julie Connelly, Amy Field, Julie Raphel, Genevra Buchanan, Young-Sue Bae Row 3: Laura Woodward, Gretchen Kamp, Leslie Catlin, Cheryl Paltrineri. Cathy Chong. Katherine Fratus Row 4: Jill Slagle (manager), Annmarie Landauer, Amanda Kazanjian. Missy Sperber, Coach Healey missing: Alyce Santos, Jody Karofsky JUNIOR VARSITY FIELD HOCKEY Row 1: Lara Fortune, Diane Cynne. Captains; Debbie Hinckley, Paula Sullivan, Julie Cohen. Kelly Whitaker, Melinda Ferguson, Becky Shores, Row 2: Betsy Vining, Tia Pollock, Wanda Murphy, Kim Healy, Allison Jones, Karen Jacobs, Liz Bello. Lettia Howland. Row 3: Christy Callahan, Robin Macdonald. Elise Billin gs, Julie Muccini, Marsha Downey. Marion Robbins, Jenny Brountas, Jennifer Rossiter, Coach Cosgrove. VARSITY FIELD HOCKEY Row 1: Annie Nelson; Captains. Lindsay Thompkins, Jennifer Pyle; Lynne Van Dusen Row 2: Managers: Jane Boyle, Jill Glazerman. Missy Pan. Liz First Sandy Moore. Christie Kennedy, Elaine Segal, Meredith Magie. Coach Butera Row 3: Val Clark, Kns Beinner. Beth Cornell, Andrea Parker, HoL Reiman, Amy Coller Lisa Jacobs, Tobi Karchmer. K C Wilder. Anne Mollering Sports 11 VARSITY FOOTBALL: Row 1 Coach Howie Nield. Mark Lang. Tim McDonald. Ned Sennot. Rich O ' Connell. Rick Hall. Tim O ' Brien. John Cleary. Chris Reilly. John Bumpus Row 2: Coach Jim Perell, Torn Palmer. John Strachan. Mike Rouleau. David Reilly, Chuck Peters. C ;ay Risher. Joe Tagliente. Ron McPherson. Coach Baldanza Row 3 Kurt Huaghler. Paul Slagle, Peter Cutter. Brian Williams. Mike Williams. Bob Stuart. Rob Karofsky, James Haas. Coach Hall Row 4 Reed McCraken, Dave Irving. Steve Mallet. Jim Cronin. Torn Callahan. Steve Perrin, David Manning. Richard Strachan. Glen Cort Row 5: Chip Jackson. Andy Melone. Chris Wilson, Curtis Trousdale. Rob Summers. Rob Cleary, Steve Perrelli Row 6 Derrick Jones, Harry Thompson. Jack Cort. Jeff Hall. Mike O Bnen, Dwight Griffith 116 Sports GO WILDCATS IN ’83 Y 4 ' in The Wildcat football team rebound¬ ed from a slow first half of the season when their record was 1-3-1 to finish with a strong half surge, ending the season with a 5-4-1 record. Led by Captain Rick Hall the seniors once again proved to be an important factor in the team’s success. The dedication, loyalty, and enthusiasm demonstrated by the seniors — Captain Rick Hall, John Cleary, Mark Lang, Tim MacDon- nell, Tim O’Brien, Richard O’Connell, Chris Reilly, Ned Sennott, and Marshall Tarbox, helped bring along the under¬ classmen and developed a feeling of pride among the team. Tim MacDon- nell was selected as our outstanding de¬ fensive player. Richard O’Connell re¬ ceived the George R. Harris Award. Captain Rick Hall was selected by the coaches as the outstanding offensive player. Rick was also selected by the Middlesex News as our Most Valuable Player and for the second consecutive year was the recipient of the Town Crier Award for his outstanding play in the Weston-Wayland Thanksgiving Game. The seniors continued the momen¬ tum started by the previous season. The momentum of this year’s winning season will continue next year, led by the juniors, John Bumpus, Jeff Hall, John Strachan, Joe Taglante, Harry Thompson and many others. VARSITY SOCCER Row 1: John Doyle. Jeffrey Sacher. Enck Karchmer. Steve Reny, John Fanna. Johan Rostad. Richard Caruso. Kevin Daner Row 2: Charlie Pughe. Scott Ackley. Doug MacDonald. John Jordan, Mike McCabe. Paul Nyhan, Mike Potter. Mike Birgeneau. Chris Berg. Frank Taylor (Coach). 118 Sports HOTTER THAN EVER! The Weston High School Boy’s Soc¬ cer Team, under the guidance of first year head coach Frank Taylor, had its best year ever — ending up at 13-2-2. The Wildcats, led by senior tri-captains Eric Karchmer, John Farina, and Steven Reny, stormed their way to the first Dual County League Cham¬ pionship in history for boys’ soccer in Weston. The team also participated in its first state tournament, making it to the semi-finals of the North Sectionals before losing a heart-breaker to Mar¬ blehead. The team was powered by league All Stars Mike McCabe, Mike Prescott, Johan Rostod, John Farina and Steven Reny while seniors Scott Ackley, Jeff Sacher, Eric Karchmer, Doug MacDon¬ ald, John Jordan. Kevin Daner, Char¬ lie Pughe and “Mad Dog” John Doyle, each greatly contributed to the team’s success. Next year ' s team, led by Mike Potter, Paul Nyhan, Rich Caruso and Greg Blatt, will have to survive the loss of ten starters, but hopes are high for the Wildcats to win back-to-back League titles. BOY ' S J.V. SOCCER. Row 1: John Coyle, John Medverd, Jamie Goldstein, Andy Scott. Wes Atamian, Willie Pughe, Fortie Wright, Vincent Chiang, Scott Raynovich Row 2: Brad Rosen, David Kerwin. Robbie Blanck, Sean Collins, Mike Clabault, Andrew Sacher, John Karofsky, Roland Givson. Row 3: Peter Kahn, Artie Jacobs, Dennis Kirshy, Job Lawrence, John McCahan, John Santos, Carlos Rivera, Jeff Potter, Frederick Westerling, Chantha Souvanna, Steve Buchanan. it 3M. 1 1 -W mm P FRESHMEN BOYS SOCCER Row 1: Scott Pryor, Tom Davidson. Patrick Noble. Adam Berman. Charlie Galligan. Eric Berg Row 2: Rob Fallon, Scott Karchmer. Christer Holmquist. David Retik. Greg Blatt. Danny Cohen. Mike Kaplan Row 3: Stephen Aserkoff. Matthew Sacher. Doug Cook. Robert Gee. Chris Childs. Keith Ward. William Hartman. Jonathan Stnmling Row 4: Nguyen Thuyen. Matt Lawrence. David Ross. John Daley. Scott Rockhart. Will Weisman. Andy Lewis. Coach Dickson Sports 119 IN A CRUTCH The Girl’s Soccer season was hampered with injuries, but the mor¬ al spirit and enthusiasm of the team persisted and team work was the best ingredient. The team, led by tri-captains Cara Pollock. Margaret Walton and Diane Leach, competed against some very competitive teams this season and played well. The recipient of the MVP award was Diane Leach. The coaches Award was presented to Margaret Walton. Cara Pollock received the Tucky Gee Memorial Award. All- Stars were Diane Leach and Jennifer Nichols. Jennifer Nichols also re¬ ceived the Bob Gillis Award. GIRLS VARSITY SOCCER Row 1: Coach Silverman, Jen Nichols, Monica Peck, Margaret Walton (Capt.) Cara Pollock (Capt.) Diane Leach (Capt.) Sue Long, Kathy Stimpson. Row 2: Lori Stubbs. Joyce Hegeman. Renee Altman, Sue Cappello, Karen Linde, Sarah Magie, Kelly McKenna. Row 3: Andrea Botticelli. Tracey Danforth, Sandy Botticelli, Loralee Ryan, Diane Medverd, Jenny Graunas. Missing: Sue Ryan, Manager — Stacey Hochberg. 120 Sports GIRLS’ J.V. SOCCER. Row 1: Kim Wooters, Lora Parker, Michele Petersen, Dana Perry, Lisa Parker, Wendy Andler, Marangeli Rivera, Bee Baker, Isaac Adeymi (Coach) Row 2: Krista Koontz, Kaja Keerd, Julie Schreiber, Kate Donham. Rebecca Barry. Susan Allen, Amy Williams. Rosie Baghdady Row 3: Andrea Floyd, Helen Kahn. Sarah Sullivan, Leslie Davidson, Missy Long, Jenny Foley, Tracey Clifford, Kristen O’Keefe, Stacey Lebaron Sports 121 ■ RUN WILD! ’82 was a good year for the boys Cross Country Team. John Potter and John Strehle were Co-Captains of the 6 and 1 dual meet record team. We de¬ feated all of the old traditional Dual County League teams. However, the new entry this year (Boston Latin) proved to be just a little strong for us as they gave Weston its only defeat in route to their 7 and 0 record. Seniors John Hersum, and Chris No¬ ble, both new to running this season, were in our top three in every race in which they ran. Peter Ashley had his best season ever and what is next years Cross Country team going to do with¬ out Paul Brountas. The Weston team also became a team to reckon with in invitational meets. We ran strong races in several invitational meets and concluded our season by finishing third (of over forty teams) in our Divisional Meet and 19th in the all state meet. Richard Manning, Dan Claman, Steve Miller, Steve Minervino, Andy Sheffer, and Chris Vitello, all had excel¬ lent seasons and surely brighten the prospects for next year. BOYS CROSS COUNTRY. Row 1 Peter Ashley. Dan Clamen. Paul Brountas. John Potter. John Strehle. Chris Vitello Row 2: Neil Marshall, Lodewijk Westerling, Chris Moran, Steve Miller, Andy Sheffer, Steve Segel. Row 3 Mr Duncan, Steve Minervino, Richard Manning. Sports 123 NEW BALANCE The Girls’ Cross Country team’s record of 3-5 doesn’t reflect the effort put in by the entire team. The team was young with only one returning runner, Junior Erin DeChristopher. Plagued by injuries, the twelve mem¬ ber team never had more then eight runners competing. Karen Allen and Debbie Harris were the only Seniors. Next season, the team will be strong, led by D.C.L. All-Star Jeanne Hart. GIRLS TRACK Row 1: Karin Vandevenne Row 2: Karen Allen, Jenny Waldron Row 3: Debbie Harris Jill Savitz Pryor. Enn Dechnstopher Row 4: Jon Maaz. Gita Grube. Debbie Saltz 124 Sports Sports 125 NET LOSS The Girls ' Basketball Team finished with a record of 2-15. The season was not as bad as the record indicates. Wes¬ ton ' s overall play was much improved and the team lost several close games. Seniors Pam Adams and Lisa Payne were co-captains of the team. At the end of the season Lisa Payne was selected as a DCL All Star and as the recipient of the MVP trophy. Other team members included Karen Allen, Jamie Saunders, Diane Leach, Lori Stubbs, Margaret Grace and Missy Pan. The JV team finished the season with an impressive record of 11-6. JV play¬ ers included Anne Mollering, Loralee Ryan, Jenny Brountas, Lisa Houde, Marcia Downey. Wanda Murphy and Susan Espo. With strong freshmen and JV team members, the outlook for girls basket¬ ball is indeed optimistic. S VARSITY BASKEI BALL Row 1 : Missy Pan, Jaimie Saunders, Lori Stubbs, I iane Leach. Pam Adams. Lisa Payne, Karen Joyce Hegeman. Alien Margaret Grace Row 2: Coach Hall, 12b Sports GIRLS ' JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL: Row 1: Jenny Brountas, Lisa Houde, Anne Moellering. Susan Espo. Row 2: Marsha Downy, Wanda Murphy, Loralee Ryan. FRESHMAN GIRLS ' BASKETBALL Row 1: Amy Sandler, Iyla Rosenthal. Christa Koontz, Lynne Metaparel, Heather Delaney, Dione Herring, Monique Fenta. Row 2: Tracey Clifford, Nordella Thomas, Stacey LeBaron, Andrea Floyd, Cathy Birgeneau, Cheryl Paltrenari. Carolyn Peters, Coach Healey. Sports 127 BOY S VARSITY BASKETBALL Row 1: Clifton Owens. Jeff Call. Michael Morris. John Hersum Row 2: Richard O Connell. Harry Thompson. Butch Turner. A1 Rogers Row 3: Coach Porrell. John Savitz. Chris Moran. John MacNamara 128 Sports A YEAR TO BE FORGOTTEN ♦ Despite their 1-16 record, the Wes¬ ton Boys Basketball team displayed de¬ termination, hustle, and sportsmanship throughout the season. Led by Cap¬ tains Jeff Cail and John Hersum the team should be praised for their win¬ ning attitude and excellent effort. Led by MVP Jamie Turner and an im¬ proved JV squad next years season should be better. Jeff Cail received the Unsung Hero Award, Jack Cort re¬ ceived the Most Improved Award and Jon Savitz received the Coaches Award. FRESHMEN BASKETBALL Row 1: Ted Richard Strachan, Glen Cort. Row 3: Tom Majocha. Will Allen, Gordon Pan, Daryl Callahan, Chris Childs, Bobby Sommers, Mark Emerson, Steve Pollock. Row 2: Coach Alexander, Dwight Griffith. Dixon, Scott Caol, Keith Ward, David Irving, BOY S J V BASKETBALL Row 1: Kurt Haufler. Arthur Anastos. Paul Barcia. Peter Alhart, Rich Caruso. Stephen Kanfer Row 2: Lee Vilas. Rob Blanck. David Fitzgerald. Ken Jacoby, Brian McPherson. David Loughberg. Keith Jacoby. Steve Hotchberg Sports 129 MATMEN MANGLE MANY The Weston wrestling program came a long way in 1982- 83 season. Led by co-captains Charlie Pughe and Eric Karch- mer, the squad compiled a record of 13-3-1. It was the first winning season even for Weston wrestling. Depth was the key factor in Weston’s improvement this year. The team was able to field an experienced wrestler in every weight class. The balance that was the hallmark of this year’s squad should lead next year ' s squad to even greater successes as only a handful of seniors will be lost to graduation. Rookie of the Year went to Craig Gunderson, and Most Improved players were Wes Atamian and Jamie Goldstein. Meanwhile. Most Valuable Wrestler went to Charlie Pughe and the Coach’s Award went to Eric Karchmer. 130 Sports WRESTLING Row 1: Eric Karchmer (co-captain). Charlie Puche (co-captain) Row 2: Emmett Grady. Tom Davidson, Craig Gunderson, Jamie Goldstein, Patrick Noble, Adam Berman, Rob Gee, Dan Gilman, John Friedburg, Robbie Stringer. Curtis Johnson. Wes Atamian Row 3: Tom Healy, Cliff Derrick, Dave Smith, Rob Mosher. Willie Puche, David Katz, Curtis Trousdale, Tom Wooters. Mike Williams, Scott Karchmer, Peter Cutter, Kent High. Neil Marshall. Jeff Fiske, Jim Park. Coach Baldanza Row 4: John Santos. Steve Mollett James Keydel. Dennis Kirshy. Mike Friedburg, Joe Tagliente. Ronald McPherson. Dan Urell, David Bemat. Sports 131 A ICE HOCKEY: Row 1: Steve Asercoff. Matt Sacher, Andy Sacher, Tim O ' Brien, Jeff Sacher. Jon Green, Jamie Perrelli, Mike Prescott. Tom Capello. Row 2: Andy Melone. Peter Alphas. Mark Donahue. Doug Johnson, John Karofsky, Don Smith. Jay Palmer, Brian Durkin, Phil Cacciatore, Chris Potter. Chris Cahill. Kurt King, Coach Brown. 132 Sports IN A DEEP FREEZE The Weston High School varsity hockey team had a tough season this past winter. In our case this year, the enjoyment flowed from the playing, rather than from the thrill of victory. When we look back at the season, we remember a strong intent to win, a lot of good league and non league opponents, and a lot of close games. It was unfortunate we didn’t attain a few “win” points to fulfill the excitement of victory. But win points aren’t the only points that make a season. One could feel tremors of motivation emanating from the team to acquire the common goal of a victory. The captains of the 1982-83 team were Jeffrey Sacher and Mike Pres¬ cott, seniors who have been on the team since freshman year. This year Jay Palmer received the Mr. Hustle award. The M.I.P. award was awarded to Tom Cappello, Tim O ' Brien was the player with the most desire, Jeffrey Sacher was awarded the 7th player, and Mike Prescott was chosen as D.C.L. Allstar. Sports 133 OUR “CHARIOTS OF FIRE” WINTER TRACK Row 1: Tim Donovan (Coach). John Monz (Coach), Karin Cotter. Missy Long. Susan Allen. Jeanne Hart. Jenny Nichols. K C Wilder. Elise Santos. Row 2: Amy Williams. Enn DeChristopher, Robin McDonald, Kris Beinner, Elise Billings, Julie Muccini. Andrea Botticelli. Paula Sullivan, Rachel Hazen Row 3: Brain Durkin, Brain Williams. Chris Reilly. Jody Karofsky, Amanda Kazanjin, Debbie Harris. Lynn Parris, Dan Claman. Liz First, Rowen Welch, Cathy Lunt, Carlos Riviera, Steve Miller. Pam Stubbs. Elaine Theodore, Greg Condakes, Scott Merrill Row 4: Richard Manning. Steve Minervino. Rob Coger. Mark Segal. Chris Noble. Rick Hall. Laura Paresky. Tom Palmer. Mike Claubalt. Mark Kilayko. Tim McDonnell. John Potter, Johan Holmquist. The Boys’ Winter Track Team tied for the Dual County league title with a record of 6-1. This marks the sixth time in the last seven years that the team has either won or tied for the championship. Fine relay running by both the one-mile and two-mile relays, strong efforts by the sophomore distance crew, and field event dominance by Rick Hall and Tim Mac- Donnell provided the season’s highlights. Of course, no one will soon forget the great anchor leg by “Dough” on the mile relay in the Bedford meet, or the continued dominance by Tim Donovan in pre-practice basketball. For the fifth time in the last seven years, the Girls’ Winter Track Team finished the season as undefeated Dual County League champions. Season highlights were the victory over defending champion Acton-Boxboro as well as fine perfor¬ mances on the state level, especially by the two-mile relay. With a solid group of underclass-women (especially) an out¬ standing sophomore class) the team looks forward to con¬ tinued success in the years to come! Sports 135 TIDAL WAVE The Weston High Swim team capped off another successful season by winning their first ever state champi¬ onship in late February. Along the way. “The Red Tide captured their seventh consecutive Dual County and E.M.I.S.A. Western Conference Championships along with their third straight North Sectional Title. Bishop Hen- driken from Warwick, Rhode Island placed the only blemish on a 13-1 dual meet season that was highlighted by Coach Pete Foley’s 150th career win at Weston. Coach Foley attributed the teams success to great depth, fantastic spirit, and a willingness of team members to push themselves to the limit in daily practice and weight training sessions. Co-Captains Jon Kohn and Tom Valle, along with Seniors Mike Kaneb, Paul Ferri, John Strehle, Christine Palmer and Caroline Zraket, provided the essential leadership for a championship season. The State meet victory was highlight¬ ed by two relay victories. Kohn, Valle, Tony Baker and Alan Jacobson took the 200 yard medly relay while Valle, Ferri, Kanab and Mike Delduchetto went on to win the 400 yard Freestyle event. The team’s motto of “THINK BIG IN THE 80’s proved true during the 82-83 season. SWIM TEAM Row 1: Laura Harmon. Christy Callahan. Lisa Jacobs. Christine Palmer, Leslie Davison Row 2: Susan Sandler, Tobi Karchmer. Andrea ' Micro ' Baker, Marion Fu Robbins. Laura Miltner. Linda Bowermaster. Letitia Howland. Julie Connely, Enca Noymer Row 3: Jose Viten (Diving coach). Joe Mcguire. Cathy Fu Kohn. Lilian Autler. Paul John Ferri. John Kohn (co-captain). Tom Valle (co-captain), Mike Kaneb, John Steehle. Pete Foley. Row 4: Steve Perron, Jon Strimlinq, Partie Jacobs, Mark McClintok, Gordon Waldron. Tony Baker. Satish Lathi Row 5: Scott Rockart, Vasant Jaysankar, James Moose . David Ross, Alan Jacobson, Mike Delduchetto, Dan Ewen. 13b Sports Sports 137 j 138 Candids ACTIVITIES Special Effects 1983 Activities 139 YEARBOOK THE STAFF Row 1: Christina Lee. Susan Sand¬ ler. Sarah Williams (Co-editor). Diane Santos (Co-editor), Liz First, Ellen Fleischer, John Shore Row 2: Bruce Thurston. Wade Shannon, Liz Lesser. Laura Westman. Kelly Whitaker. Hol¬ ly Reiman. Lisa Parker. Row 3: Dawn Widugiris, Vicky Corrado. Doug Nahigian, Rob Miller. Jill Herscot. Missing: David Komessar, Debbie Hinc¬ kley. THE EDITORS Row 1: David Komessar. Sarah Williams. Diane Santos. Wade Shannon. This year we, the Yearbook staff proved Murphy’s Law to be true — everything that could go wrong did go wrong. It all started when the editors decided to make this year ' s yearbook unique. We decided upon the theme about two weeks before our first dead¬ line. In this deadline, we wanted to in¬ clude pictures in Boston. The day we chose to go there was the day the KKK marched. We also wanted to get pic¬ tures of kids at parties but it happened to be when articles about parents con¬ cern about alcohol in the high school were being published in the Town Crier. Even though the ' 83 picture was taken twice it still did not come out right — Oh well, so we won’t have it in the yearbook. From there it got even worse. We learned that the seniors were inept when it came to counting lines for quotes. Coaches also had problems handing in write-ups. Everything was misplaced at least once, especially on days of deadlines. But, never fear, when deadlines come around, Logan Airport was only a short ten minutes away. (That ' s when Wade ' s driving!) In spite of all the problems we had, the Yearbook is the best ever. Thanks to all those who worKed on it. AND SPECIAL THANKS TO LIZ FIRST FOR ALL HER HELP WITH THE THEME. 140 Activities MAELSTROM Row 1: Cathy Lunt, Lisa Jacobs, Barry Albert, Nick Dowling. Row 2: Ann Frenning, Sarah Barker, Lisa Terry, Michele Petersen, Christina Lee. Row 3: John Potter, Michail Kaneb, Tom Fulton. PRESS BOX Row 1: Cecile Sullivan (advisor), Michelle Caira, Holly Berkovits, Bonny Parlee, Nick Dowling, Sally Callahan, Victoria Walker. Row 2: John McCahan, James Haas, Lisa T erry, Linda Smith, Julie Schreiber, Margot Fulton. NEWS AND VIEWS Row 1: Michael Albert, Kathy Stimpson, Mark Retik, David Saltz. Row 2: Michael Freidberg, David Krakauer. Activities 141 REVISTA MULTILINGUE Row 1: Monica Cohen. Becky Shores. Kim Wyche, Sue Pulcini, Jill Landauer Row 2: Rachel Perkins. Michelle Petersen. Kelly Whitaker, Erin DeChristopher, Lori Campisano SPANISH CLUB Row 1: Kim Wyche, Sue Pulcini Row 2: Becky Shores, Jamie Saunders, Stacey Hochberg, Rachel Perkins, Diane Medverd, Diane Gallagher, Kelly McKenna Row 3: Monica Cohen, Bonnie Kirchner, Mike Morris, Jill Landauer, Geoff Cornell, Jil Herscot. Karen Leibowitz, Katie Ames Row 4: Dana Parker, Michelle Petersen, Kelly Whitaker, Erin DeChristopher, K.C. Wilder, Jenny Brountas, Paula Sullivan, Lynne Parish. Sean Collina FRENCH CLUB Row 1: Melinda Eeruson. Katie King, Rebecca Barry, Lisa Jacobs, Heidi Casevier. Liesl Rockart, Michelle Petersen. Lisa Parker. Arlene Hong Row 2: Merideth Magee, Jennie Reitvogel, John Medverd, Liana Caso,Eliza Brown. Diane Medverd, Chad Edwards, Lora Parker. Michelle Chiavacci, Chrisina Lee, Debbie Hinckly, Marsha Downey Row 3: Missy Pan. Kristie Callahan, Robin McDonald. Liz Lesser, Tia Pollock. Amy Williams. Julie Muccini. Bruce Thurstein, Andrew Lee, Marsha Belvin, Kate Bryant, Jim Park, Tim Clamian. Julie Cohen. Vicci Corrado Row 4: Dawn Widrugrus. Mike Birgeneau. Karen Linde. Liz Knight. L.iz Bello, Emily lsacs, John Strimling. Holly Reiman. Tobi Karchmer. Susan Prescott. Heidi Benjamin, Karen Walker. Michele Roy, Jane Boyle. Jill Glazerman 142 Activities BLACK STUDENT UNION Row 1: Christina Davis, Kim Bristol. Valerie Clark. Lisa Terry. Stacy RadclifTe. Nadilla Thomas Row 2: Mark Alexander. Wanda Murphy. Jewel Owens. Teresina Mcquire Row 3: Celeste Wilson. Shellie Paige, Kim Whyche, Michael Morris S.A.C. Row 1: Kim Wyche, Row 2: Sue Cappello, Bonnie Parlee, Paul Brountas, Joe Tagliente. Charley Moore, Sarah Oh ■jm m , ' w K ' STUDENT COUNCIL Row 1: Ellen Fleischer, Cara Pollock, Kim Wyche, (co-pres), Paul Brountas (co-pres), Christie Kennedy, Jennifer Nichols, Christine Palmer, Elise Billings. Row 2: Michael Morris, Dan Claman, Mike Delduchetto, Tia Pollock, Anne Moellering, Sarah Oh, Charley Moore, Richard Nichols. Row 3: Boonie Parlee, Sue Cappello, Joe Tagliente. Bob Stewart. Ed Yurcisin. Robert Miller. Michelle Chiavacci. f Activities 143 ANNOUNCERS CLUB Row 1: Elaine Theodor e. Michelle Caira. J.B., Lisa Terry. Sarah Barker Row 2: Bonnie Parlee. David Kerwin. Nadilla Thomas, Heidi Kasevich. Charley Moore Row 3: Tom Valle. Rebecca Barry a - m ,4 L j -JF E.A.T Row 1: Geoff Cornell. Jill Landauer. Kelly Whitaker. Liz Lesser, Lisa Houde, Allison Jones. Amanda Smith, Christy Callahan, Row 2: Jeff Cail, Wanda Murphy, Tia Pollock. Christina Lee, Andrea Parker, Susan Sandler, Debbie Hinckley, Pam Adams, Mike Morris, Row 3: David Kerwin. MEEPS Row 1: Lauren Oelgeschlager, Louise Walker, Bruce Thurston. David Katz, Cathy Lunt, Heather Van-Hollan Row 2: Tim Claman. Mark Retik, David Ott, Kathy Stimpson, (missing) Nick Dowling 144 Activities NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Row 1: Eric Karchmer. Jenny Pyle. Row 2: John Potter, Diane Santos, Heidi Kasevich, Charles Moore, Jenny Nichols. DEBATE CLUB Row 1: Lauren Goldsmith, Rebecca Barry, Elaine Theodore. Row 2: Chris Berg, David Norquist. BUSINESS ADVISORY COUNCIL Row 1: Kathy Stimpson, Kim Wyche. Row 2: Mike Morris, Jeff Cail, Mark Retik, David Saltz. Activities 145 COMPUTER GROUP Row 1: Loralee Ryan, Jeff Belvin, David Salz, Row 2: John Patnode. Mark Retik, Jordan Bell, Mark Semich. John Green. Row 3: Brian Durkin, Paul Zemer, David Krakauer, Tim Claman. Andy Wheelock. Mike Friedberg. MATH TEAM Row 1: Jeff Belvin, Amy Sandler, Dan Cohen, Austin Mclintock, Eric Karchmer, Jeffrey Sacher, Wes Atamian. Row 2: Katie Boucher, Jon Strimling, David Saltz, Andrew Lee, Jamie Goldstein, Michelle Chiavacci, Mrs. Vouros, Jeanne Hart, Dianne Cynn, Chris Berg. Row 3: Tom Gilman, David Krakauer, Mike Albert, John Mchahan, Tobi Karchmer, Marcia Belvin, Mike Potter, Vincent Chiang, Mark Retik. AMERICAN COMPUTER SCIENCE LEAGUE Row 1: Jeff Belvin, David Krakaver, Neil Day, Joe K Row 2: Jon Green, Mark Semich, Jamie Goldstein 146 Activities tT! ANTI NUCLEAR ARMS GROUP (STOP) Row 1: John Mcahem, Jeff Fisk, Tim Claman, Dan Claman, Nick Dowling. Julie Schreiber, Phillip Cassarino, John Patnode. Row 2: David Kerwin, Tim O’Brien, Mavis MacNeil, Scott Ackley, Stacy Hochberg, Rob Fallon, Marget Fulton, Lynn Parish, Lilian Autler, Row 3: Mr. Gibson, Mike Albert, Cara Pollock, Greg Carbone, Mike Freidberg, Steve Trier, Dina Ghali. Kathy Kohn. k 1 imp Wk” Si- S.A.D.D. Row 1: Ann Frenning, Heidi Kascvich, Jennifer Nichols. Row 2: Lisa Jacobs, Ned Sennott, Sue Capello, Lynne Van Dusen, Jill Jackson. Row 3: Amy Coller. John Santos, Cecile Sullivan, Sally Callahan, Karen Leibowitz, Jenny Zitvogel. ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE Row 1: Jane Boyle, Stacy Hochberg. Lisa Jacobs, Jill Glazerman Row 2: J.B. Activities 147 AUDIO VISUAL AIDES Row 1: Greg Carbone. Row 2: Steve Trier. Doug Patton. Barry Patraiko. BIOLOGY LAB AIDES Row 1: Chris Evans, Steven Hochberg SCIENCE CLUB Row 1: Lori Campasino, Holly Melone, Diane Medverd, Stacy Hochberg. Row 2: Arty Jacobs, Chad Edwards. • « • i ail 1 • W ill! lA M 148 Activities LIGHTING TECHNICIANS CLUB Row 1: Cathy Lunt, Bruce Thurston. Row 2: David Katz, Lauren Oelgeschlager, Louise Walker. PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB Row 1: Bruce Thurston, Margot Fulton, Lauren Goldsmith, Lori Campisano STOCKYARD Row 1: Stacey Hochberg, Laura Westman, Christie Kennedy, Karen Allen, Susan Allen, Wanda Murphy. Row 2: Scott Cail, Heidi Kaevich. Letitia Howland, Marsha Downey, Sue Espo, Pam Adams. Row 3: Brian Durkin, Jeff Cail, Michael Morris, Sean Collins. Acn vines 149 CONCERT CHOIR Row 1: J Jackson. R Nichols. L. Westman, J. Nichols. J. Muccini. C. Palmer, D. Kerwin. Row 2: G. Condakes, V. Corrado. M. Kaneb. D. Santos, T. Claman. J. Daly, J Rossiter. R Hazen. L. Lesser Row 3: S. Moore. L. Van Dusen. J. Jordon. E. Theodore. J. Haas. S. Mack. R. Fallon. L. Jacobs, A. Jacobson Row 4: E. DeChristopher. J. Jancourtz. J. Savitz-Pryor. A. Jones. H. Lewis, C. Kennedy. P Brountas. L. Caso. Missing: J. Cohen. L. Autler. J. Campbell. E. Isaacs. MIXED CHORUS Row 1: Mrs. Taggart, M. Mercuri, M. Caira, L. Caso. J. Savitz-Pryor, E. Theodore, L. Westman, J. Cohen, C. Kennedy, S. Moore, L. Lesser, T. Davidson. M. Kaplan. D. Nahigain, A. Caira. J. Haas, R. Nichols, J. Daly, L. Jacobs, L. Mererparel, S. Espo, K. Leibowitz, R. Barry, Y-S. Bae, C. Chong. Row 2: K. Kinahan, B. Kirchner. H. Berkovits, E. Leibowitz, A. Parker, J. Muccini, S. Howard, L. Davidson, C. Paltrineri. K. Vandevenne, J. Jordan, M. Kaneb, C. Palmer, J1 Nichols, J. Jackson, G. Kamp, C. Cynn. A. Sandler, M. Roy, K. O ' Keefe. R. Hazen. K. King. Row 3: D. Cynn, G. Shamsai, A. Santos, L. Smith, S. Callahan. J. Rossiter, W. Murphy, L. Howland. B. Claude, D. Cohen, J. Campbell. J. Jancourtz, R. Fallon, A1 Jacobson, G. Condakers, P. Brountas, L. Paresky, E. DeChristopher, K. Boucher, D. Santos, S. Sandler, C. Marple, L. Catlin, S. Brown. R. Marshall, R. McLaughlin. C. Pollock Row 4: M. Sullivan. L. Mazzotta, B Bouvier, L. Sweet. L. Stevens, W. Ahman, B. Parlee. A. Frenning, S. Mack, J. Zeitvogel. A. Caleffi, M Delduchetto, C. Evans. J. Roney, H. Lewis. D. Kerwin, Row 5: L. Van Dusen. A. Jones, L.. Autler. K. Donham, E. Billings, S. Allen. J. Brountas, S. Burke. J. Brountas, S. Burke. J. Savino. BOYS GLEE CLUB Row 1: D. Nahigian, T. Davidson, N. Dowling. A. Caira. R Nichols, J Strimling. D Cohen Row 2: M Kaplan, T. Claman, M Kaneb. J Jordan. R Fallon. P Brountas. G. Condakes. A. Jacobson, J. Campbell. Row 3: M Delduchetto, J. Jancourtz. C. Evans, J Haas, H Lewis, D. Kerwin, J Rones Missing: M Kilayko, J. Santos. 150 Acovibes GIRLS GLEE CLUB Row 1: J. Cohen, C. Marple. Mrs. Taggart. M. Caira, L. Caso, J. Savits-Pryor, E. Theodore, L. Westman, C. Kennedy, S. Moore, C. Paltrineri, L. Lesser, A. Sandler. K. O ' Keefe, W. Murphy, S. Brown. L. VanDusen. L. Jacobs, S. Espo, L. Meterparel. K. Leibowitz, R. Barry, C. Chong. Row 2: R. Marshall, M. Mercuri, H. Berkovitz, E. Leibowitz. B. Kirchner, J. Muccini. A. Parker, S. Howard, L. Davidson, J. Daly, K. Vandevenne. V. Corrado, G. Kamp, L. Catlin. J. Nichols, J. Jackson, C. Palmer. M. Roy, C. Cynn. Y. Bae. Row 3: K. Kinahan. D. Cynn, H. Shamsai, A. Santos, L. Smith, S. Callahan, J. Rossiter, K. King, L. Howland, B1 Claude. K. Boucher. D. Santos, S. Sandler, S. Allen. R. McLaughlin, R. Hazen. Row 4: J. Savino, M. Sullivan. L. Massatta, B. Bouvier, L. Sweet, L. Stevens, W. Ahman, B. Parlee, A. Frenning, S. Mack, A. Jones, L. Autler, K. Donham, E. Billings, J. Brountas, S. Burke. PRALINES Row 1: Christie Kennedy, Sandy Moore, Elaine Theodore, Laura Westman Row 2: Vicky Corrado, Rachel Hazen CHORAL OFFICERS Row 1: Elaine Theodore, Christie Kennedy, Sandy Moore, Julie Cohen Row 2: Greg Condakes, Tim Claman Activities 151 V FLAG TEAM Row 1: Terisina McGuire. Christina Davis. Nardilla Thomas. Riller Marshall. Liz. Kim Bristol. Shellie Paige Row 2: April Thomas. Celeste Wilson. Jewell Owens. Shirley Barboa. Carol Clark. ORCHESTRA Row 1: Marcia Belvin, Tomomi Kimura, Chris Cynn. Michelle Moran. Robert Fallon, Jim Park. Jennifer Graunas, Charlie Moore. Row 2: Anne Moellering, Lydecke Sweet. Daryl Emerson. Andrew Lee. Tobi karchmer, Bee Baker. Bonnie Parlee, Christie Kennedy. Julie Schrieber. Michael Kaplan. Row 3: Julie Nemrow, Eric Schrieber. Liza Mazzotta, John Harrison, Michelle Sullivan. Gita Grube, Julie Connelly, Eric Karchmer. Jeff Belvin, Rob Birkenstock. Sarah Oh, Chris Berg. Row 4: Eric Karchmer, Lee Villas. Catie Hazen, Karen Allan, and Sandra Kingsford. MARCHING BAND Row 1: Bob Berkinstock, David Norquist, Austin McClintock. Dan Gillman, David Smith. Dan Cohen. Chris Bille Row 2: Michelle Moran, Michelle Caira. Bee Baker. Ellen Leibowitz, Cathy Birgeneau, Sue ( apello. Kathleen Gordon. Liz Hamm. Mr. Mori Row 3: Andv Lewis. Doug Nahigian. Rachel Hazen, Jeff Eiske. Jeff Beck. Nick Papastavos, Mike Birgeneau. Charlie Galligan. Scott Karchmer, Sandy Kingsford (practice teacher) Ross Duhaime Row 4: Chris Birch. David kerwin. Rose Baghdady, Angus McQuilken, Catie Hazen. Alberto Caira. Arthur Jacobs. Dan Claman, Tom Valle. Gila Grube. John Strimmling, Linda Birkinstock 152 Activities ■ Il f - 1 v 1 :, r i 1 V ' - ' a fjM, BAND Row 1: Bonny Parlee, Terese Pothenberger, Michelle Caira. Susan Cappello, Eric Kirchner, Jeff Belvin. Charlie Galligan, Scott Karchmer Row 2: Bee Baker. Cathy Birgeneau. Kathy Gordon. Ellen Leibowitz, Rob Birkenstock, Chris Bille, Jeff Beck. Michael Birgeneau, Nick Papastauros, Steve Siegel Row 3: Dan Claman, Douglas Nahigan James Keydel, David Kerwin. — . Pam Stubbs, Rachael Hazen Row 4 and 5: David Smith, Kent High. Lee Villes, Jeff Fiske, John McCahan, Austin McClintocky, Catie Hazen, Posie Baghdady, Dan Gilman, Sandra Kingsford, Lisa Jacobs, Tom Valle. Alberto Caira BAND AND ORCHESTRA OFFICERS Dan Claman, Catie Hazen, Rachel Hazen MAJORETTES Row 1: Terese Rothenberger, (captain) Caroline Zraket (co-captain) Row 2: L.auren Oelgeschlager. Jamie Saunders. Holly Melone. Lisa Cacciatore Row 3: Laurel Paltriner, Jeanne Hart. Christine Palmer, Kathleen Kinahan. Pam Lipson (alt.) Activities 15. “WAITING FOR GODOT” WAS WORTH THE WAIT “Waiting For Godot , a tragicomedy in two acts by Samuel Beckett, has been described as a play where nothing happens, twice. In the production done by Weston High School, this so- called nothing really made something happen. The play became an experi¬ ence for all who watched it. In this play, two grubby tramps — Estragon and Vladimir, played by Richard Nichols and Charles Moore — THE COMPANY Estragon. Richard Nichols Vladimir.Charles Moore Lucky.Michael Albert Pozzo.Rachel Hazen A Boy.Elaine Theodore PRODUCTION Director.John Barclay Assistant Director . . Nicholas Dowling Stage Manager.Mark Retik Assistnat Stage Manager. David Krakauer are doomed to wait for the arrival of a certain Mr. Godot. The waiting fills their days, and although they complain bit¬ terly and try to fill their time with various diversions, the one thing that gives them the impression they exist is the waiting. The identity of Godot, who never does appear, remains a mystery. Could he be God, Death, the Future, or what? Properties.Kathy Stimpson David Krakauer Mark Retik Set.Davi d Ott Lights.David Katz Lauren Oelgeschlager Assistant, Bruce Thurston Makeup.Lynne Van Dusen Publicity.Louise Walker Poster Design.Louise Walker Tickets.Jill Jackson Front of House.Laura Westman 154 Fall Play Was I asleep while the others suffered? Am 1 sleeping now? Tomorrow, when I wake, or think 1 do, what shall I say of today? That with Estragon my firend, at this place, until the fall of night, I waited for Godot? That Pozzo passed, with his carrier, and spoke to us? Probably. But in all that, what truth will there be? ... Astride of a grave and a difficult birth. Down in the hole, lingeringly, the grave-digger puts on the forceps. We have time to grow old. The air is full of our cries ... But habit is a great deadener ... At me too someone is looking, of me too someone is saying. He is sleeping, he knows nothing, let him sleep on ... 1 can ' t go on! ... What have 1 said?” Dialogue by Vladimir Fall Play 155 “The Way 156 Baby Pictures We Were!” Baby Pictures 157 158 Bdby Pictures S. Fain Vgl ... J S. Moore Sennott n •-? ! M. Wahon L. Van Dusen J. Krakauer Baby Pictures 159 160 Candids ADVERTISEMENTS Grants 1983 Advertisements 161 SENIOR PARENT SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Ackley Ginny and Jim Allen Betsy and Peter Block Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brountas Henry and Melinda Brown David and Jains Cail Clare and John Cappello Mr. and Mrs. John P. Condakes Judith, Goliath, Bufu, Tribble, and Stanley Daner Mr. and Mrs. John J. Doyle Tom and Elinor Durkin Allen and Ann Fain Mr. and Mrs. John A. Farina Paul and Barbara Ferri Debbie and Bob First Mr. and Mrs. David Fleischer Dr. and Mrs. Phillip G. Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. C. Wayne Griffith Nancy N. Hall Nathan and Shirley Hazen Mr. and Mrs. George Hegeman Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Hochberg Dr. and Mrs. B.T. Jackson Diane and A1 Kaneb Gaye Williams Jelley Barbara and A.W. Karchmer Elaine and Tomas Kohn Saul and Alice Komessar Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Lang Susan and Don Levin Jay and June Long Nancy and Merril Mack Mr. and Mrs. John W. MacNeil Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. McKenna Joynce and Richard Medverd Mr. and Mrs. Herbert E. Nelson Jim and Betsy Nichols Suzanne and E. Christopher Palmer Dr. and Mrs. Roger G. Prescott Mary and Wells Pughe Mr. and Mrs. Guy Reny Hanson and Linda Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Ole M. Rostad Suzy and Bob Sacher Adel and Herb Savitz George and Dorothea Santos Dottie and Dave Segal Roberta and Gerald Segel Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Segel Mary Jo and Rex Shannon Glenn and Kathy Strehle Mrs. Louise Tarbox Buffy and Tim Tompkins Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Turner The Valle Family Bob and Barbara Williams Shirley and Charles Zraket Advertisements SPONSORS Ruth G. Alberding Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Andler Mr. and Mrs. James Daley Mike and Debbie Delduchetto Ruth and Paul Donahue Phyllis and Vic Drumm Mr. and Mrs. Peter Fortune Mr. and Mrs. John U. Harris Mr. and Mrs. James Herscot Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Karofsky Linda and Lee Karofsky Howard and Ann Leibowitz Mr. and Mrs. Harry Martens Linda and David Paresky Lynn and Alan Retik Mr. and Mrs. James A. Risher Mr. and Mrs. John Rockart Mr. and Mrs. William J. Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sandler Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Schore Mr. and Mrs. John Summers Ms. Sally Glass Taggart George and Mary Walker Skip and Bill Whitaker Mr. and Mrs. Joel B. Wilder PATRONS Mr. and Mrs.R.W. Danforth Vivian and Neil Day John and Susan Gunderson Carol and Ralph Hinckley Pat and Brian Holdsworth Bobbie Kazanjian The Kerck Kelseys Valerie and Dennis Kirshy Emily and Dean LeBaron Clare and Dick Lesser Bob J Mr. and Mrs. Martin Marshall Dr. and John McCahan Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence Miller Anne and Ridge Morgan Albert and Barbara Sheffer Susan and Bob Stringer Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Thurston William and Gloria Thomas Rev. and Mrs. David B. Van Dusen Sarah and Matt Weisman and Donna Wheelock V Advertisements 163 25 KEMPTON PLACE WEST NEWTON, MASS. Mon — Fri. 9:30-9:30 Sat 9:00-6:00 Phone 332-6300 Fine Footwear and Sporting Goods For the Entire Family at Discount Prices V_ J 164 Advertisements SERVICE CONTRACTING Weston Electric Co., Inc. MASTER ELECTRICIANS 24 hour Emergency Service 596 BOSTON POST ROAD 899-0098 WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS TEL. 891-9112 Master Lie. No. 7322 781 1 MUNSON PLUMBING HEATING COMPANY, INC. 596 BOSTON POST ROAD, WESTON v_y v_y ( GIFTS ANTIQUES DECORATING SERVICES WESTON CENTER MALL 899-4331 v_y Advertisements 165 CONGRATULATIONS BEST WISHES TO TO THE CLASS OF THE CLASS OF 1983 1982 THE NOBB HILL PRESS, TRAVEL AGENCY INC. WESTON 432 Boston Post Road. Weston 8-91-5680 BILL DON y v V CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL SENIORS TEA GIFTS JEWELRY IDENTS EARRINGS Agents for Rubber Stamps and Name Tapes Repair of Jewelry and Beads Personalized Stationery and Informals SHAM mm chung’s 502 Boston Post Road Phone: 894-4290 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF ’83 B.J OGEWIE SONS, INC. BUILDING MATERIALS — FUELS — HARDWARE SERVING THE AREA FOR OVER 62 YEARS WARREN AVENUE 894-1265 WESTON J V 166 Advertisements ORTHEAS NORTHEAST PETROLEUM CORPORATION 295 Eastern Avenue • Chelsea, Massachusetts 02150 Albert J. Kaneb President Telephone Area Code 617 884-7570 TLX: 94-9409 “Best wishes to the class of ’83 from Northeast Petroleum. Much future success. J Advertisements 167 r 1 BEST WISHES CLASS OF 1983 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1983 WESTON PHARMACY YE OLDE COTTAGE INC. RESTAURANT AND 397 Boston Post Road 894-3785 YE OLDE COTTAGE TOO WESTON CENTRE y v CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES RICHARDSON DRUG 37 Center St. — Weston, Mass. 617-891-1440 168 Advertisements POWER TOOLS. PAINT HARDWARE MAINTENANCE SUPPLIES (61 7)5 4 7 - 9500 1076 CAMBRIDGE STREET CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 Advertisements 169 SS Wc ONtmZD.ciKC. y al(o S 45 COLPITTS ROAD, WESTON 894-1423 24-Hour Answering Service Member Both Multiple Listing Services m REALTOR Residential Real Estate Consultants and Appraisers ( Ehi (Office CHRIS SHAW GINNY BEARV • Secretarial Services • Word Processing • Manuscript Typing • Xerox • Mailings • Bookkeeping Services • Notary Public THE WESTON OFFICE, INC. Mrs. Phyllis Black Mrs. Ursula Dowd, GRI Mrs. Anne Flynn Mrs. Beatcice A. Fye Mrs. Adriana Glynn, GRI Mr. Paul Moorhead Mrs. Mary Petersen Mrs. Ricki Stambaugh 30 Colpitts Road “Directly across from the Post Office” Weston, Mass. 02193 Samuel J. McDonald, GRI, CRS, CRB Mrs. Edythe Karnes, Secretary v J Telephone (617) 894-0200 _ J TRIPLE MMA RKETS “Growing By Serving” Weston Concord Acton Needham Triple A Supermarkets 21 Center Street Weston, MA. 02193 170 Advertisements A Final Salute to WHS Thanks to all my friends to whom without these four years would not have been so memorable: Tom, Kate, Jill, Joyce, Lynne, P.J., John, Jen, Mike, Dave, Alan, Heidi, Terese, Christine, Christie, Sue. Remember: Dolge, Bud S., Donuts on the soccer field. Move that log!; Heterozygous angel? Math with Bev, Speech Class, Irv, bananas, One finger-two fingers, The Ash Street Search, tennis, car washes, muscle-man show, Ditto, my license — your permit, Birthdays, Dolge, Joe, and Disco?; John Valby, Prom, Prom party, the Dreaded German accent, Annette, Debbie the inflatable doll, Feuds, “C.C.”, Shah hung in effigy, Jim Morrison, The Wall, Tron, Lechmere mall, Putt-Putt, Pizza Hut, Tom 2 Mike 2, Chinese waiters, different colors, sizes, scents. Ribbed or Spiked? 9:5 2-10:26, Fanueil Hall, Moped rides, Hood rides, Soccer, The things you can do with pyrex tubes, Muffy, Bif, Debbre the inflatable doll. Barnacle Bob, the library, the Celica, turbo, Buds across from Kate’s, Mooning, Halloween 111. Silver Chloride Lab, your Mother!; Arts Festival day, the town green, snack shack, Social Sci., Trust, Four trees later. Fun and Games, McDonalds, Hockey, Michelle, Amy, Lynne, Gem, Sue C?, Party at Gibbys, Graduation, Senior Variety Show, Umpiring, The Cape (Almost), Slobberitis, Dress up days, Punk Funk II, The-Truck, Cheryl, Bowden, my Fingers, the locker mangier, the Hyatt, Irene, Spitting H 2 0, Typing exam, Car shases, GO in a 35, Chris E.L, Dark room, To: Joyce and Jill for their patience, understanding, friendship, trust, and love. Two dear friends who mean so much. Thank you. I cannot say enough. To Tom: Without you I would go insane, with you I am. May our friendship unite us forever, for I am always near-in heart or mind, I always want to make you proud. M.P. ’83 J Advertisements 171 CONGRATULATIONS to the D.C.L. SOCCER CHAMPS STANDARD DUPLICATING MACHINES CORP. 10 CONNECTOR ROAD ANDOVER, MASS. 01810 (617)-470-1920 V 172 Advertisements Congratulations To the Class of 1983 4 Somerset Street Boston MA 02108 523-3355 WORLD ' S LARGEST PRINTING CHAIN F. DIEHL SON A complete center for building materials and hardware. Everything for th e home. 180 Linden Street Wellesley, MA 235-1530 653-0170 Advertisements 173 395 Boston Post Road Weston, MA. 02193 ' V ' EfVBER 899-0750 INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE FEDERATION NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS MASSACHUSETTS ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS GREATER BOSTON REAL ESTATE BOARD MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICES Sandra Ashley, GRI, CRB Thomas Cutter Sheila Pattaiko. GRI Norma Lord. GRI Alice Komessar Min Martenson, Secretary Sasiree Cutter Roseanne Giamo Doris Roberts Ruth Alberding Gerry Jones Skip Whitaker Alice Bohlen Gilda Slifka “Are you a Responsible Couple or Individal who is ambitious, likes people, and is interested in developing an income producing part time or full time business of your own? We have a splendid opportunity for you to earn a second income. No experience necessary, we train you. Phone Alexandra K. Rolde, M.D. at 894-2147 for r TO THE CLASS OF 1983 LIGHTS CAMERA — ACTION! — THE FIRSTS V_ r CONGRATUALTIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1983 SJ McNeilly Oldsmobile Inc. 639 Hammond Street Chestnut Hill, MA. 02167 _ J 174 Advertisements marketing . advertising . public relations • ADVERTISING ASSISTANCE, INC. 438 BOSTON POST ROAD WESTON. MASS. 02193 617-891-1227 Let our travel expertise guide you anywhere in the world for business or pleasure .,V M } c, MSfl 4 hi r L DAVENPORT REALTOR SINCE 1934 A SFd CUSTOM. TRAVEL ARRANGEME NTS SINCE lOfi 466 Boston Post Road, Weston Next to BayBank Middlesex Barbara S Viles, Owner 891-9110 j OP Ms $ Effie Anastos Connie Blair Jackie Boyd. GRI Bobbie Bradley, GRI Martie Campbell Jane Cutter Ellen Dwinell Betty Hayes, GRI Ruth Orr Buff Paine Jackie Ralston Anne Rooney Milt Theall David H Bradley, Pres. Lucy D. Boyd, Treas. (617) 893-4500 426 Boston Post Road, Weston, MA 02193 Advertisements 175 UNITED STATES WINDOW CORPORATION 254 Brighton Avenue Allston, MA. 02193 CONGRATULATIONS HARMON LEWIS AND THE CLASS OF 1983 SARAH, CONGRATULATIONS! THE CLASS OF YOU’VE BEEN A GREAT SISTER AND A TRUE FRIEND! THANKS ’83 IS LOVE, ADRIANNE. HISTORY! V 176 Advertisements Xylogics LEADERS IN MASSACHUSETTS STORAGE TECHNOLOGY FOR THE MOST POPULAR MINI AND MACRO COMPUTERS • EMULATING 16 BIT DISK 8c TAPE CONTROLLERS • DISK 8c TAPE SUBSYSTEMS INCLUDING PACKAGED WINCHESTERS • COMPLETE “SOFTWARE SAVER” 16 BIT MICROCOMPUTERS Xylogics, Inc. 144 Middlesex Turnpike Burlington, Mass. 01803 Tel. (617) 272-8140 A SPECIAL SHOP FOR SPECIAL PEOPLE Imported Cheese Pates Quiche Coffee Beans Captain Marden’s Seafood Schaller Weber Meats Fancy Desserts Candy Nuts Dried Fruits Unique Gifts Party Trays We Mail 891-1640 V J J r Prevention and care of Sports Injuries SPORTS CONDITIONING CENTER 830 Bolyston Street Brookline, Mass. 02167 734-7650 Immediate Care of Sports Injuries Physical Therapy for Sports Injuries Nautilus Conditioning WE CARE ABOUT HIGHSCHOOL ATHLETES AND THEIR INJURIES _ s r Ba Bank Middlesex 458 Boston Post Road, Weston 899-8032 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF ’83 WESTON GREETINGS Cards Gifts Jewelry Stati onery School Supplies 464 Boston Post Road Weston, mfl 02193 891-5905 178 Advertisements We would like to thank the following for sharing their lives and love with us: Jill, Lynne, Joyce, Jake, Paul John, Jenny, John D., John K., Heidi, Terese, Mike D., Satish, Tony, Paul D., Joe, Fols, Milty, Christine, Alan B., Cathyryn, Claudo, Gordo, Mary, Mom, Dad, Marshall, Kim, John, Jeff, Dan. Remember — The log; Jake — Road Trips; The Batmobile rides again; Halloween 3; Halloween Patries; Variety Show; Graduation; Let’s run the center!’ Beach Trips; Barnacle Bob; The big Prom Party; Mike’s accidents; “Where’s Mike, let’s find him.” Punk Funk II; The Score: Mike 27,4,2 Tom 4,1,2: Presidential Campaign; Tonto, the hairless wonder!; Yearbook signings — “hwat do you do?’’; The Cape; Harvard Square; “E.T.’’; Tron; the mystery gift-giver; “The King and I”; “What time is it ; “Five more minutes!” God Cast Party!; “I need one, Mike”; Fun and Games; Midnight swims; Rec. Parties; Mike ' s sophomore birthday present; The Tunes — Jack and Diane, the Blues (all John Valby), I ran. Open Arms; Face contortions; Friday the 13th; Macs’; assorted locker writing; Bowdoin (Mike’s hand); Soccer Games; Lynne, Amy, Michelle, Amy F., Sue C?; Assorted Recreation fun?); Maureen’s having a party, huh?’ Bud S’s new flashes; Manic Depression; Junior UD periods; the library; Commando Raids; the Prom dinner; Swim meets, practices, trips; “Don’t Stop” “Is this the end or just the beginning?” — LED ZEP _ ) v Advertisements 179 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1983 IS. MOTORS Inc. AUTHORIZED SALES SERVICE NEW USED CAR SALES • SERVICE • LEASING AT EXIT 17, MASS. PIKE New Car Showroom Service Facilities 527-6525 399 WASHINGTON ST. NEWTON CORNERS Used Car Dept. Body Shop 969 - 8181 624 WASHINGTON ST. NEWTONVILLi 180 Advertisements BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1983 • WEDDINGS • MOWS • CRUISES • TYL£8 BY LORO WIST • PIERRE CARDIN RON-FORMAL SUITS ALSO AVAILABLE Open Eves, til 9 - Frl. til 6 - Sat til 5 T« oioon ton nra wuv omi Of 5 O HOAf 899-5727 15 ELM ST . WALTHAM (BEHIND CITY HALL) EDWIN H. NELSON CO. BUILDERS — CONTRACTORS WESTON _ J v Bride ' s Choice GOWNS AND ACCESSORIES FOR BRIDES AND BRIDESMAIDS Op«n iv«. til 9-Fri. til A-Sot. til 5 899-5727 15 ELM ST. WALTHAM (BEHIND CJTY HAU) Quality 600 PLEASANT STREET WATERTOWN. MASS. 02172 923-0600 Courtesy Service ' We have a complete home and industrial service which includes FUEL OIL • HEATING • ELECTRICAL • PLUMBING Advertisements 181 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1983 FROM THE CLASSES OF 1984 1985 1986 Best Wishes to the Class of 1983 Compliments of, SUMMIT SPORTSWEAR COMPANY 75 Campanelli Pkwy. Stoughton, MA 02072 (617) 341-1000 _ J Bird Roofing Products, Vinyl Products and Specialized Machinery for Industry Bird Incorporated East Walpole, MA 02032 617 668-2500 V___ J Advertisements 183 - SCHOFIELD 894-2187 443-8985 Serving Weston Since 1956 Complete Installation and Repair Service _ J Dealer in coins, stamps, gold, and silver bullion Wellesley National Corporation 552 Washington Street Wellesley, Mass. 02181 (617) 431-1900 _ J Movies Are Better Than Ever Leslie B. Spencer President COMMUNITY _ ILaVTH®ISL WELLESLEY HILLS 235-0047 v_ 184 Advertisements CAPTAIN VIDEO New England’s Largest Movie Club VHS BETA movies for the entire Family — youngsters, teens. adults — sales — professional transfer — service service — rentals — full line of video games V Master Charge and Visa accepted J Advertisements 185 FRIENDS A shoulder to cry on An ear to bend Money to borrow Clothes to lend. Friday night movies Afternoon walks Being together Our private talks. Mending our hearts Crying those tears Planning our futures Voicing our fears. Our memories together May they never end Always together Forever FRIENDS! L i YOU KNOW SOMETHING? I REALLY DIG YOU.” YOU MADE IT, BUBBA! I LOVE YOU. — THE HEAD BUBBA To the H.B.: Thanks, my Bear, I love you, too. “EARTHQUAKE ’83 7 7 Advertisements 187 r Above: Mike, Scott, John, Doug, Fred, Mike, Jeff, John F., John P., Steve 188 Advertisements r a Best Wishes to the Class of 1983 J. MELONE SONS, INC. Contractors Sand Stone Weston 893-6618 Redi-mix concrete Stow 897-9662 77 White Pond Road, P.O. Box 176, Stow, Mass. 01775 Advertisements 189 Midnight members, lawn jobs, the candy bar poem, pina coladas, bongo board wipe outs, electronic boxing, nautilus. Night of the Living Dead, multi-colored baseball bat. Van Halen Concert. First Blood. Valby tunes. The Who Concert. Slant food, bald tires. You can tell by the smell .... tabasco shrimp. The end of the month, skitching. Zaxxon. slowing down to 50, invasion of the sigh snatchers. Dawn of the Dead. Bud and Mich. 2 a.m. mail delivery. Absorb Absorb, nitris oxide tanks. Tac Scan. Sunday Browsers. Fred Locke, visits with Lisa and Barrie, alki posters. FIRST DAY OF SENIOR YEAR! Eight counts of intent to sell. OSU 10 and 89. breathaly¬ ser. “That was my skull , cape codders. a 180 on 128. Pink Floyd — “THE WALL . Sprite bottles. Sprite with a head. Jack Damage, The Apartment, Team quarters, black doughnuts, Haffenreffer. Ganjaman. Hey Spicoli, The Green Monsters, “Narc, Narc, who ' s there?”, The FLUX Brothers. AC DC, Hare Chrishnas, “I’d rather have class in a glass than . . .“.So Hung. Movitz in jail, Mail message mania, allnighter at Mackie’s. Fantasy Highland, almost drowning in the jacuzzi. Rollercoaster Road. Caily ' s Comet, Beaver Road. No snow tires. Doughboy, Caroline ' s party. Worcester Road Trips, a Classic VW Bug. Adventures of Cheech + Chong, Ming Garden. Southern Comfort and the movie. Levitt and one green monster, JD 4x4. The Doors. Detours after being at the SAT course, Bud Tails. Coors, Messy Rooms, Lola, The ' 82 Ski Trip, 78c sixpack, driving thru snowbanks. stacking wood. Beer Goggles, runk, runk, trips to N.H. ters, Mexican, caps, fuzzy duck. Prayer Album, the stripped car Kamikazies, Tequilla Poppers, Mike ' s two week vacation great skiing — nobody’s on the — “how did I get there?”, the “White Bomb”, “Your dog letters from Columbia House, and stuck in the driveway, 4 through my front door, “Club Friends at the Club-except for afro, excursions in a pitch- unidentified flying bottle caps, ride home — with many de- C.V.W, J O., J.Co., J.P., S.M., monoxide poisoning on the ton ” w MW, JC, LT. AN. WS, DK. Radiator Roughnecks, un- JD pins. Happy Hour. Ferky, Barhopping in Vermont, Quar- Led Zeppelin, An American at Jimmy’s, Russian Qualudes, Zombie. Our house parties, bindge, 78 below zero and slopes!, 3 a.m. Pizza at UMASS shots. Trips to the apartment in chases rocks?!”, Many nasty Leaking oil and trannie fluid cylinder pintos. R.W. walking encounters of the “Keg kind, one, the waiter at Ming with the black a ttic with no flashlight. Jack Damage and the bicycle tours, Great times with: P.K., and finally Mary., Carbon way to the apt., “Where’s Bos- BG, LF, SL, EF, KD, CP, DS, concious by the green death. worn out shocks. Stripes, thugs and.Fun and Games, social science class, math books (MIA) missing in action — who cares! Get your motor running, head out on the highway Looking for adventure, and whatever comes our way. Ya darlin’ gonna make it happen Take the world in a love embrace Fire all the guns at once and explode into space We are true nature ' s child We were born, born to be wild We can climb so high, I never want to die! — STEPPENWOLF Mark Lang and David Komessar 1983 190 Advertisements r r CONGRATULATIONS to the Class of 1983 Compliments of, J. Foley Townsend Office Equipment 1286 Washington Street Newton, MA (617) 527-0645 V._ To Bill Stedman, Sports Editor of the Weston Town Crier: Without your help and the Town Crier’s, this yearbook would not have been possible. THANKS for all the sports pictures! The Editors v_y A Quality Color Processing Done on the Premises Same Day Service PHOTON WIZARD 1 78 Linden Street Wellesley, ' MA 61 7-237-9480 Enlargements • Reprints • Picture Frames Bob Keating - Manager _ J ' COLOPHON The 1983 Weston High School Yearbook was published by Hunter Publishing Company of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Our representative was Arnie Lohmann. 450 copies of the 7% x IOV 2 , 192 page book were printed using black ink. Dull 80 lb. enamel paper was used and the type style was Souvenir Light Roman. The cover is custom quarter bound with the title and spine lettering done in silk screen process. The year on the cover was done in silver foil stamping process. We would like to thank Mrs. Nickeson. Mrs. Hatch and Fred Lepine for all their help! The Editors v_y Advertisements 191 — Y , v - v ' L _ _ Weston High School 1983 Yearbook Staff WHS Yearbook T 3434 I V FOR REFERENCE Do Not Take From This Room -• ' ' f r x x ■i ■ - y N ■i- s f ' V V- ' -V ' TS Y 4 . , _V( cf 1 t « . y M ■ ■ V ' -r 7- , Y i (Y I US ' ; V - 1 i y ' $ - v -■■£- , v F, 4- ' - i. r • , % x ' • - V ' i X 7 7 v Y v 7 f jT . ■ f r ' • ., ■ ' “r Weston Hirjh School Library Weston, MA 02493


Suggestions in the Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) collection:

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

1980

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981

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

1982

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

1984

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

Weston High School - Key Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986


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