Whetstone High School - Legend Yearbook (Columbus, OH)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 176
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1967 volume:
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E x ,V M .-.Q ,.,,. -,.. . . v, f-F1 f aw i-I. 'lsf aff -T :Q-:':-: -1-am:-:-:gg5g2:5:.,.::- ' , . .i i .:.5:f,y -A 5- Y L i 'Q W 5 L 5 Y Ee X lr I i fi Y. 1 5' ,Y 'f B '29 x L s .. . fl U N 'L 5' J 1 L. K 1 XX Un Q, E ,H .+1ii 'iv-3: '11 , x,.,m , . , - L Q. H M3555 , A , xl H . 1 N, A .N 3 xi ' X On those ordinary morn- ings between summer and summer, weekend and week- end, holiday and holiday, the student heads for school, rid- ing or walking through Whet- stone Park or Old Beech- wold, passing over the Olen- tangy River or any of the fine, sky- or tree-ceilinged streets nearby. In the cool-to-warm sunlight of early midmorn- ing he approaches the school door, and in that light, and against the glass of that door, he sees his reflection. He opens the door and sees be- fore him a many-faceted mir- ror of which the door's glass is only an outside part. This is the mirror of high school life, a mirror in which he sees himself in many lights: the dimming lights of his past, the dawning lights of manhood or womanhoodg faint sparks and bright flashes offering him brief glimpses of his future, chang- ing lights with changing sha- dows, moving across the face of his mind, witnessing his becoming. He sees himself grow with his skill in the crafts of the carpenter or metalworker, the homemaker, the artist, the musician, the actor or speaker or writer. His studies in literature, science and mathematics, history, and philosophy and his training in business show him in the lights of different kinds of realities. The 1967 Legend first de- picts the setting of high school life: the school's lo- cation, the student's place among the trees and clouds and river in whose meadows VVhetstone rests, the stu- dent's sex, his newly-defined masculinity or femininity. After depicting the aca- demic program, the Legend recognizes those who main- tain and organize Whetstone, or, figuratively, those who keep the mirror of high school well polished: the librarians and others who serve in the academic program, the jani- tors and cooks, the coun- sellors, nurse, and atten- dance officerg the principal, vice-principal, student ac- tivities coordinator, clerks, office staffg the Student Council and Safety Council. Next comes presentation of several student interests, notably cars and sports, not covered in connection with the various fields of study. Finally, the Legend recog- nizes each pupil as a member of the sophomore, junior or senior class, a student of that course of sense and nonsense peculiar to his own age group and to his own times. Table of Contents Industrial arts, Domestic arts Art, music, drama Academics Business Future Teachers of America Scholastic Awardst School personnel, Service staffs Administration Student Council Cars Clubsf Physical Education Sports Underclassmen Seniors Index Advertisements 18 22 38 56 58 60 62 70 72 74 76 80 106 116 149 162 'Most honors and clubs are covered in connection with specific musical, academic, or athletic areas. Speak to the earth, and it shall teach thee. As a child of Earth by her mar- riage to Time, each person moves to the rhythm of his parents' song, learning only from the books of his parents, library, and living only by the rules of his parents' authority. First as a means of assuring himself of membership in the vast family of living and nonliving things, then as a symbol of that membership, he holds communion with the rocks and the rabbits and the trees, sharing with them the blessings of air and earth and thus restating for his own benefit his part in the only kind of life he can understand. If his life is the record of all that Job. XII, 8 he knows of himself, then the natural World over which he moves is the paper upon which that ac- count is written. Just as the archi- tect must read his building in- structions in the trees and hills and clouds from which his con- struction sight hangs, so can each man recall his past, define his present, and determine his future only in terms of his own move- ments across time and space, the elements of his environment. As students of this high school, we receive our educations in the context of wide, flat fields that extend from Whetstone Park at High Street to Whetstone High School at the Olentangy, the river outside our door. We go to school and return home over the wide streets between the park and Henderson and under the trees that rule Old Beechwold. As our eyes wander out the classroom win- dows, they scan the tiers of houses of the Knolls. Into this setting there came this year a stranger, a new building, an addition to the high school, which, like any stranger, any man or any work of man, accepts its role as both opponent and com- plement of the forces of nature. EVM 1. 'nw .QQ A? ,S I w ,, .J, W , , ,,,. A .,,A. ,,, H 2 5- .5121 w I 1, Maw , W x '15 1 LA 'Z ' f ffsrw ' Z ZW O J Am n :E ,Hmm 4 w Q ' 525-vs 5 2 M M ,, 1. Y W ' X M B -:- ii? I ,f AL. V, NJ- ' .' 3 ' is 1 .. Wx 3 fgf, 113 ' an , ,,, ,weak 221 Egg ' as 'x 'w1f A J.. ' E gfiuikii-f 1 Q x 5 .v vp' 'E 'Vu P xx 5. ' V 312' H a w 1 1 i 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 501 - A -1-mum: 1 --WM., .,.,--- 1111fW 1 L F: ' AW. -: it 1 , . W mf xl '4 S-,-I I 15 O wonderful wonderful, und most wonderful wonderful! and yet again wonderful. . . In many ways the most important factor in a high school student's life is his sex: his recently clarified sense of masculinity or femininity, his approaching manhood or wo- manhood and the boyishness or girlishness which he fortunately retains, a proud and excited recog- nition of his own status which leads to that wonderful awkwardness that makes him a teenager. One evidence of this self-aware- ness is the long and frequent ses- sions that both girls and boys spend before mirrors. More vigorous man- ifestations, for the most part pe- culiar to boys, are body-building programs, sports, and fights. A boy undertakes both body development and sports, responding to a sense of his obligation to attain a level of strength and skill requisite to manhood. He enters both athletic compe- tition and fights in an effort to prove his physical attainment. Vic- tory in either kind of competition offers a satisfaction as justifiable as that derived from a good test score. Ultimately, a boyis se1f-aware- ness and the actions it motivates lead directly to a keen awareness of girls. Although all girls are shaped and formed within a pattern, each is an individual creation. A laugh, a shrug, the lilt in the gentle sway of hips and shoulders: each is as special and unique as the girl herself. A rnetamorphosis is taking place, a girl is in the midst of becoming a woman. The change of body and mind is an exciting one to behold. Child-dreams are the today and now of her life. The dreams of yesterday are replaced by her curi- osity about tomorrow. William Shakespeare She questions the restrictions set by people before her, and she wonders if she wants to be respect- able and ladylike. Does anyone care any longer? Can anyone de- fine a lady? Only me, she de- cides, My opinion is the one with which I must live. The struggle of defining morals in a rapidly shift- ing society is a challenge that fas- cinates her. Her thoughts drift and linger on other interests: faith, daily re- sponsibilities, and the boys who will become the men in her world of wornanhood. Their contrasting nature intrigues her and she is drawn. A boat-sized shoe, a jacket with gorilla-length sleeves, a voice so much deeper. She explores his mind and in amazement discovers a new realm of thoughts and reac- tions which she will never exper- ience. She loves the protection which she really does not believe she needs. She is intoxicated with the power she wields, a power which she must learn not to violate. She loves the world of today and anticipates the world of tomorrow. 4' :wg -fkifl ,- fi ' 1 fikiixf-ggi S. 5 ...jd When I am a man, then I shall be a hunter. When I am a man, then I shall be a harpooner. When I am a man, then I shall be a canoe-builder. When I am a man, then I shall be a carpenter. When I am a man, then I shall be an artisan. Oh father! Ya ha ha ha. Auger bits, chisel, lathe, grinder. Each of these is a complicated combination of gears and levers which are set in motion by the hands of individuals with widely varying interests and talents. The shops pound and throb with the blows of mallets upon seemingly unshapeable materials. Sawdust sifts between the floor's black bricks and solder hardens into lumps on the heavy wooden table tops. Ted Hill pounded together this year an apparatus that, if successful, will travel by way. of an air cushion. This, along with a table done by Murray Reed, was exhibited at a state conference. These shops, filled with organized confusion, con- trast sharply with the cathedral-like hush of the mechanical drawing room. Each boy sits at the island of his own elevated table. He gazes at the expanse of white, then with shoulder hunched, he starts to work. Fine pointed pencils run along the straight edge of a ruler to create a line, clean and unsmudged. These fellows become proficient at lettering and figure drawing, some of the work is exhibited at the Ohio State Fair. Three separate rooms with one single purpose: to acquire and perfect a skill that will be used today and tomorrow to shape and create. Kwakiutl Indian ,i A-5 Greg Hoffman industriously sands. Larry Borst Jerry Haney Curtis Howard 4 I E! Ron Haag grooves metal with milling machine. i i i - .. -4'--W'- '.' ,., -,qc -ff-1... '-5,--v ' , - -HW Av., . 11273 A if - H Chris Grau labors in efforts at lettering precision. Carl Mulberry tools with lathe Concentrating on the recipe, Carol Francis stirs a pot of vegetables. .Twhi :,. .- .H -. , I, ' QE' J :iii - ,I ' ' '- ,L She looheth well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of iclleness. Proverbs The sounds of banging pans, whirring heaters and slamming cupboard doors mingle with the hum of sewing machines and the gritting of feet on spilled and scattered dressmaker pins. All of the girls choose the media with which they want to work and, with the guidance of their teacher, they create. In advanced cooking each girl designs and bakes a cake of her own. The girls are cake decorators of professional calibre when they complete the course. A few girls in advanced sewing combine their own ideas with those of a professional Cby way of a com- mercial patternl and develop their own design. America's Future Homemakers, closely associated with the home economics department, is open to all girls who wish to join. The purpose of the club is to acquaint the girls with the special career fields open to them. This year the club was visited by representa- tives of airline stewardesses and beauticians. An armhole is sewn closed and smoke fills an oven, The cries of disgust and alarm are forgotten when, after the final supreme effort, the work is done and the creation is complete. Left, Mr. Carl Wolf, United Airlines, informs AFH members of stewardess training. Right, Beth McCall acts out a skit for initiation. nil Jane Lacey Patsy Leidich Sheila Henry Pat Smith presses seams on her creation. X -.,, 1 Sophomore Cynthia Makey concentrates on straight, A-producing seams I fr- .wgm if so 4-,A -AVVV , , .. A , -:..g,:V u-5' if' 2 'f-.wid F 'f .gsv - qw, , , , . 2 my uv rw if E : : ' 121 'VY J' u H 'Y Q if 2 , . .i- v- ,z 5 t. . q si 1. , M N if. 5. W I ' giving ' .x Susie Barnhart tests for straight grain in the fabric. 22? wwf wi, 1 With a tranquil mind I abandon the written and spoken word And find deep contentment in the joy of illumination. Liu Tsung-Yuan jf' Before modelling, Dave Hatchett works air bubbles out of clay. N45- ' q-11-1 As checker, John Richardson is responsible for clean-up. 5 Mr. Teichert's chief means of instruction is critique. ,113 -4 Richard Teichert Art is a discipline whose rules were established centuries ago, an occupation that needs no further definition. Its media are paint, stone, and a few other materials similarly sub- ject to adverse changeg its terms are visual imagesg and its orienta- tion is toward the specific and the tangible. Art is not immortal. Artists try to immortalize paint or design or beauty. But canvasses will even- tually rotg statues will crumble. All that men can do in their art is to bear witness, in terms commonly understandable, to their ideal: to their own idea of beauty, to their own faith. Such testimony was the divine purpose of the masters of Ancient Greece and the Renais- sance. In order to attain mastery, an artist must have the perception of a scientistg the freedom, precision, and absoluteness of a surgeong a disposition inclined rather to sym- pathy than to bitternessg and a faith that inspires his accomplish- ments and contains the failures of both himself and his culture. xx. -X Left: Art Club president Jeff Wolfe views one of the movies which highlighted Art Club meetings. Middle left: Susie Davis models for art students. Bottom left: Chris Harte, Lora Lampson and John Richardson study Whetstone art. Below: Lora Lampson regards Jon F1-ost's self portrait. .- gl 3 fri 'ri A' Music is love in Search of cz word. Sidney Lanier 1' It is music which ascends upon us and drunkens momentarily the soul, but molds the intellect to a higher degree of perception. The composer creates the structure and form, often injecting moments of insight to his imaginary world of sound. He seeks to capture his atti- tudes on life in the musical media. Free to create this attitude, the composer explores deep beneath the crust of thought and reason and delves to the soul and the heart of man. The performer grasps with mind and soul the structure and form created by the composer. Exploring the rise and fall ofthe melodious lines undulat- ing in sound and emotion, the per- former gives the structure and form excitement, depth, and fire. Together, the sensitivity of the performer uniting itself with that of the composer gives substance to rare emotional beauty. Such a manner of emotional involve- ment can never again be produced. Each note, phrase, nuance will change in depth and understanding. But some- thing will remain with the audience and the performer. Perhaps there will be a better understanding of the imagination of music and what secret lies beneath the modulating tones. Why man creates and interprets his world in music is unanswerable. Per- haps it is that some of us find words inadequate in expressing pure emo- tional attitudes. ,. ..,,,.,:, 1.5w,, Z, W X, , -Huff mis, ,, 1 A w wwf bf 31 f fiiikf ' Sing, sweetness, to the last palpitation of the evening and the breeze l '?' St. John Perse Boys' Glee practices under Miss Morgan's direction. Harmony, melody, blend, Sharps, flats, dissonance. This is the lan- guage of music. The director gives the signs and signals and the stu- dents, taking their cue from her, expand and embellish upon a story written in the strange hand of notes, rests, bass, and treble clefs. The musical mechanics are only part of the entire expression. Words, words, Words are ever pres- ent and always stressed. Enuncia- tion, vowel sounds, cross your t's and sound your d's. The vocalists are constantly reminded, they con- stantly forget, and remember again. 'ie . I ,, ,N ,,ek ,, i 191-ww W .wx 1 4 ,, Q ,gi . , Ruth Morgan Carol Ish and Jane Kay team voices. Ma-me-mi-mo-mul' warms up Girls' Glee. 3 qu QT Baritones supplement tenor tones in Boys' Glee. W g Judy Becker and Margi Monroe harmonize in Sr. Girls' Glee. Above and below, Senior choir sings at PTA Christmas program ,Sf-A At the annual PTA Christ- mas program the music groups collectively sang twenty-eight traditional and contemporary songs. Among the featured groups was Ctopb Sr. Girls' Glee which was accompanied by flutist Kathy Groff on Sleep Baby Jesus . Also included were Cleftl Boys' Glee and Cbelowl Jr. Girls' Glee. l Senior Choir exerted much effort to SENIOR CHOIR-Row 1: J. Becker, S. Smith, M. Monroe, L. Wilson, L. Zartman, M. Koch, H. Meeker, L. Harlan, D. Ramage, C. Bybee C. Diamond, J. Lutz, K. Dorn, D. Harkness, C. Pasco, M. Shimp, B. Lessler, B. Herrema, M. Cameron, J. Robbins, K. Allenbach, N. Coch- run, B. Alexander, E. Betts, I. Lipovsky, S. Dunn, K. Groff. Row 2: J. Kay, L. Harmon, P. Bradley, L. Franklin, C. Hindman, S. Van Meter M. Squire, B. Dorsey, L. McCallum, K. Fortney, J. Dixon, M. Blocher, K. Snyder, J. Jones, K. Long, L. Near, J. Ammerman, C. Swinehart T. Edgar, C. Murdock, B. Meyer, L. Little, J. Heise, S. Natoli, J. Sagstetter, E. Parker, L. Ater, J. Hoehne, C. Frank, T. Scholl, M. Cook L. Prushing, C. Baker. Row 3: S. Metzmaier, S. Tavenner, D. Brooks, B. Kearns, T. Daye, D. Baer, R. Brantner, D. Lipp, B. Jenkins, T Staley, B. Swinehart, R. Alexander, S. Burgstrom, L. Davis, J. Schmidt, T. Frisby, M. Greenwood, D. Williams, S. Haslup, D. Wall, N Alexander, G. McElwee, G. Belknap, D. Simpson, M. Nolan, L. Pearson, B. Greenlee, R. Acton, S. Engel, M. Putnam. prepare for district and state vocal competition, one of its biggest activi- ties. In district competition Choir was rated superior and thus was eligible for state vocal contests. Other Senior Choir activities in- cluded Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter assemblies and the annual Spring Concert. Ensemble sung endlessly entertain- ing for assemblies, churches, and pri- vate organizations. Christmas was an exceptionally busy time for the song- sters. At district vocal competition three ensemble groups earned superior, two others fared as excellent. EN SEMBLE-Row 1: H. Meeker, L. Zartman, M. Koch, B. Alexander, J. Robbins, N. Cochrun, K. Allenbach, K. Dorn, M. Shirnp, B. Herrema. Row 2: D. Lipp, T. Carlisle, B. Kearns, L. Harmon, L. Franklin, E. Parker, L. Harlan, M. Cameron, J. Lutz, J. Jones, B. Meyer, L. Near. Row 3: T. Daye, S. Tavenner, S. Bybee, D. Ramage, R. Sellers, B. Trueblood, D. Harkness, P. Andrus, T. Frisby, M. Greenwood, L. Zart- man, D. Becker, B. Eagle, D. Frank, S. Engel. Sr. Girls' Glee sings at PTA Christmas program Mr. Leslie Susi, second semester music theory teacher, instructs class on simple chords in bass and treble clef. Start at the very beginning . . . start with the five clean lines and four fat spaces, the black notes, the clefs, chords, and rests . . . start with these and buildg expand and construct a har- mony, a melody, a song. The course of music theory appeals to the student who is not satisfied with simply repeating the creations of other artists. It is designed for the student who wants to speak his own words and hum his own tune. His Whys are answered as new ideas are introduced. New words, a new tune, new concepts that vibrate and hum within his mind. He is released . . . able to explore a new realm of creation. Music should strike fire from the heart of man, and bring tears from the eyes of woman. L 'W gr'-rv 'Ex 5' ,. I -v 'L' f tix-l' ,V - i 3- .- . iv , l, if A , - - n . , ir. ll ell, .rg ' L1 .fp-' ' kd' . -I-' 4' NTC, ,' V , V 'U . I r id l Q ' ' , ' L ' A sf' T K'- K: il ' l A321 ' Eli' 'bk -. r if ', '55 ' 1Q?i'fQl. r r gf r f lllm ' Q Pianist Beverly Meyer accompanies orchestra. -Ni HQ: 7 5' T Ludwig van Beethoven After listening to the directions of Mr. Leslie Susi, the orchestra anxiously watches his still, raised hands. Upon the downbeat the music begins: music from the strings, the woodwinds, and the brassesg music sympathetic to the pulse of the percussion. Each per- former plays his own peculiar vari- ety of music. Without losing its individual qualities, his song com- bines with those of over seventy others to dress the moment with greater variety and impact than any single player could ever achieve. Orchestra officers John Tracy ltopl Bud Jenkins, and Linda Zartman add another plaque for a superior performance in state competition. , 2 E 'xl Wu LESLIE SUSI TRUMPET QUARTET: J. Beekman, J. Tracy, B. Hecker, G. Weber. TROMBONE QUARTET: D. Byers, D. Farrell, J . Buehler, B. Grossman. SAXOPHONE QUARTET: D. Hummel, R. Brantner, J. Harrison, D. Poulton. FLUTE QUARTET: K. Groff, P. Hatfield, C Wiles, A. Howison, S. Hutchison. 32 . ORCHESTRA-Row 1: B. Jenkins, D. Becker, B. Hightshoe, B. Flath, B. Basile, C. West B. Meyer, B. McLaughlin. Row 2: A. Weimer, P. Kador, C. Monnett, D. Rarnage, C. Wiles P. Hatfield, A. Howison, S. Hutchison, N. Forrester, J. Angel, L. Taylor, J. Gallogly, M Blocher, S. May, L. Young, S. Gillhouse. Row 3: L. Hobart, K. Hale, M. Hess, D. Thompson D. Bachman, J. Allen, D. Cahill, D. Poulton, J. Harrison, J. Pugh, L. Fosnaught, V. Nau, A Lasley, J. Fosnaught, C. Wilder, M. Ravely, B. Adair, L. Garrison, S. Hall. BAND-Row 1: S. Hutchison, A. Howison, P. Hatfield, J. Schmeck, P. Dixon, C. Cox, B Burgoon, K. Groff, C. Wiles. Row 2: L. Fosnaught, J. Pugh, J. Harrison, D. Poulton, J. Lutz K. Holdren, B. Dorsey, J. Jarvis, V. Nau, A. Lasley, J. Fosnaught, S. Melton, J. Gallogly L. Taylor, J. Angel, N. Forrester. Row 3: J. Brown, D. Cahill, P. Beall, T. Hinton, D. Mor rison, P. Barker, D. Lamp, R. Jones, B. Hatfield, K. Woodyard, B. Moore, D. Horn, J. Nord Strom, D. Hummel, C. Howard, D. Cook, C. Pearson, D. Garner, L. Little, R. Brantner. Row 4: S. Easter, C. Arnold, S. Heffner, K. Fisher, D. Ramage, N. Schickner, M. Sells, P. Beall, K. Holdren, D. Lamp, B. Moore, D. Horn, J. Nordstrom. Row 5: R. Brown, S. Sheridan, B. Bonner, R. Heath, M. Purslow, J. Schmidt, J. Beekman, G. Weber, B. Hecker, J. Tracy, J. Buehler, B. Grossman, D. Farrel, B. Colburn, G. Gunderman, D. Schlegel, D. Franck, D. Inskeep, L. Zartman, Mr. Susi. Row 4: D. Franck, S. Cooperrider, C. Hindman, J. Koczera, D. Weed, J. Phillips, S. Engel, P. McClellan, J. Porter, B. Donahue, J. Beekman, J. Tracy, B. Hecker, G. Weber, L. Zartman, G. McElWee, B. Wood, R. Quam, B. Teaford, B. Willardson, B. McLaughlin, B. Naylor, D. Wall, D. Glandon, D. Byers, D. Farrell, J. Buehler, B. Grossman. Row 5: C. Brown, S. Sheridan, R. Brovsm, B. Bonner, R. Heath, C. Mader, M. Purslow, D. Bachman, B. Adair, P. Mingler, G. Gunderman, D. Inskeep, D. Schlegel, L. Zartman, B. Meyer, Mr. Susi. BRASS CHOIR-Row 1: D. Lamp, B. Moore, D. Horn, J. Nordstrom. Row 2: J. Beekman, B. Hecker, J , Tracy, G. Weber. Row 3: B. Grossman, D. Farrell, J. Buehler, M. McLaughlin, D. Schlegel. ' : '.l.3vwf. Mgr 1' :ex PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE-Row 1: B. Bonner, C. Mader, M. Purslow, R. Heath. Row 2: R. Brown, S. Sheridan, CLARINET QUINTET: J. Pugh, J. Harrison, D. Poulton, L. Fosnaught, J. Brown. 33 I5 I z L Marching band prepares for Friday-night football games. Above, Dave Hammel polishes sousaphone. Below, Greg Trout and Martin Buchhart practice their parts. Below, Paul McClellan and Dennis Lamp take part in band's morning march through school. 1 wa ,X J Wvflkaxllj 'H' llil +- 5 J -kv i 933 4, M FI C ..' - -X -.. . -.g. .1 .- - R . Two faces of the Senior Band-Top picture: Marching Band. Center picture: Concert Band performing at District Contest. - ,-f JJQZW1 ,.-9-N.,-'K v. DANCE BAND-Row 1: D. Hammel, G. Trout, M. Buchart, R. Branter, J. Harrison, D. Poulton. Row 2: B. Grossman, J. Buehler, D. Farrel, D. Wall, D. Byers, K. Bennett. Row 3: M. PLu'slow, D. Inskeep, B. Hecker, J. Tracy, J. Beekman, G. McElwee, J. Porter, G. Weber, R. Brown, B. Bonner. Patriotic medley, Spirit of '76 was re- enacted during half-time. The half-time ceremonies of Homecoming 1966 were dedicated to the fantastic world of television advertising. The hi-jinks of the Ajax white knight, the devil from Diablo, and various characters from the realm of Teaberry Shuffle were accompanied by the marching band along with wet and wild and no matter what shapef' Throughout the entire program was the band's theme song Win- ston tastes good. Sheri Stevenson rides as white knight in Bandis half-time spoof on commercials. In appreciation for half-time shows and morale boosters, Co-Captains Greg Wright and Bud Jenkins, on behalf of the football team, present Band plaque to members Bill Hecker and Brian Bonner. 35 Let us give a play! Get hold of life in all its variety. Effective communication through acting is the goal of the Jesters Club. President Bev Meyer and Vice-president Louise Harmon led the club in traditional activities such as initiation of new members in the beginning of the year and decoration of the large Christmas tree in the auditorium. Club members attended several plays in the Columbus area and studied different aspects of success- ful plays. Jean Martinez, of Playhouse on the Green, and David Garfield, from the touring company of Fiddler on the Roofl spoke to the club, giving members insight into the life and experiences of a pro- fessional actor. As a concluding activity, many Jesters' members applied their skills and talents to the production of the spring play. Q Wil T1 in . J Eugene Schafer and Larry Fletcher sing and dance for Jester initiation. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe .null Jean Martinez, professional actress, ad- dresses J esters. Boys put up girls' hair while girls try hand at boys ties during initiation Before and after the J esters initiation clothing shuttle race Mary Pritchett, Joe Marshall, and Jeff Brooks rehearse Get Smart. Left and above, Connie Albrink rehearses scene with Tom Elliot. Linda Taylor, student director, confers with Mary Lou Bell, stage manager. Jeff Brooks as Maxwell Smart, Barbara Lessler as Agent 99, John Pierce as the Chief, Linda Ham- mock as Princess Ingrid, and Mary Lou Pritchett as Miss Finch headed the cast of Get Smart, this year's spring play. This contemporary play is simi- lar to the popular NBC television show which is a spoof of all secret agent thrillers. Linda Taylor, student director and Mary Lou Bell, stage manager, helped the cast project the humor- ous mood of the play, through the numerous sight gags and intelli- gent satire. Without the behind-the-scenes assistance of stage and sound crew the play could not be executed X . Student director Linda Taylor illustrates point. au! , ., . ..,, , t .-, A. 1 -.. - f , Ps 'S ' 1: .1 , V ,. Cast members wait for cue. Mr. Davis, director, discusses problem with Dennis Simpson. Terry Johnson of stage crew constructs set. STAGE AND SOUND CREW-Sit- ting: R. Haag. Row 1: L. Pepple, M. Hann, L. Harmon, K. Maddex, D. Fitch, S. Tavenner, R. Hopkin, J. Roumeliote. Row 2: R. Blume, R. White, S. Coffman. smoothly and efficiently. They are also responsible for set- ting up assemblies, microphones, and taping announcements. -wwww-qw' mmwg naw ' Tw W 1 f ' y An acute struggle is consum- mated, and a thought is born. It may be a private thought to be carefully nurtured and cultivated in one mind. It may be a thought too big for one mind to keep, or too small to care about keeping. The thought too big to keep es- pecially tortures the thinker. It throbs, it beats, it struggles to be free, but it lacks the substance of expression. It lacks the physical counterpart of its mental concep- tion. It lacks words. A pull, a wrench, a contraction, and the words begin to take form. At first tentative, incomplete, vague, and indiscriminate, then becoming solid, explicit, a mirror of the thought. A word is chosen, discarded, altered, kept. A verb is past, present, future, and finally just right. A sentence deleted, added, or transformed makes the meaning complete. The once-mute thought has spoken. Its shadows of meaning are concrete in words. Its value, worth, and many facets are free to be interpreted, elaborated upon, and disagreed with by the reader or teacher. At this point the idea has reached its fullest adulthood. In such an idea, clothed in the words of the student and housed in the evaluation of the teacher, two minds meet. lk wr' J , l Maurice Allgyer Christina Bolin Donald Davis '-' ' F5 4,5 Virginia Dundon Evelyn Folk Marilyn Gfllmet Mr. Davis instructs in dramatic technique. iw:ia-- 'Il Q J f-we--1M John Langham James McDonald ' Chairman Peg Wada directs Tyros meeting. .igfxg Q? V xi'-1 Debate president Warner Wada makes a Cathy Wilder-and Dan Johnson prepare Debating canbe exasperating. point. debate notes. Of our arguments with others we make rhetoric, of our arguments with ourselves we make poetry. William Butler Yeats 5 ,, - . . ,i e s , 'rr Debaters Craig Morgan and Mary J. McFadden compare notes. Chris Grau orates in speech class. The essential goal of man is to project his mind into immortality. To add an original concept or translation of a concept to the flow of intelligence is to write your uniqueness into man's heritage. Eloquence in communication to others can provide great power. Eloquence within our own sensibilities will create the ability of creativity. Between the first babbling words of infancy and the orations of philosophers is many years of learning the art of communication. Once the basics have been learned, assimilation of knowledge and creation of logical thought patterns must come. In communication with others comes a blending and sharing of ideologies. Once the concepts have been defined, thoughts be- come more far-reaching. Eventually creative thoughts form and congeal into patterns of life. Discussion is the primary mode of idea transfer. Learning logical thought processes and becoming adept in presenting them is the purpose of Debate Club. A successful year of debating proves this year's team knew their business: among laurels were two first places in Eastmoor and Hartley tournaments. The creative mind naturally seeks out others of sympathetic attitudes. Tyros guided hopeful philosophers into well-developing channels. Eventually they may become the great minds of this time period. Dan Johnson refutes the affirmative. .A -e.1 Nancy Needham studies Jim Sillick ponders. Milton's poetry. 41 I fear only lest my expressions may not be extravagant enough as to be adequate to the truth of which I have been convinced. Henry David Thoreau 51-...Q LEGEND Staff, left to right, P. Sattler, J. Bentz, Co-editor S. Stevenson, C. Ish, P. Phillips, C. Schieve, D. Hill, C. Czap, L. Penwell, C. Pickering, L. Wilson, K. Haas, N. Nye, J. Richardson, J . Fulton, Co-editor N. Needham. Extreme right, Co-editor Jon Frost ruminates on problems of homeroom pictures. In the background, Pat Rohde forcefully directs underclassmen. Right above, Dormant ideas are spawned at late night LEGEND meetings. Right below, Mob insanity reigned during Parker Mass Portrait sessions. Forbear the eloquent insanity each day leaking from 211B. The intellectual brawls, ten liberals versus two conservatives over one Scout editorial is clangorous but not in vain. Legend pains, though obnoxiously frustrating, will, in the end, produce something. Beneath appearances, Scout production schedules and 25 per cent of total pages Legend deadlines roll by. Scout originates in the journalism classes, the students therein are reporters. Scout staffs job is born of journalism-student-written copy which must be read, laughed at, Coften applaudedl, edited, typed, re-edited, and finally okayed. The staffs job is not done until the printers' galleys have been Crelproofed, articles have been pasted up in at least five different ways, and page proofs acknowledged with silent curses. Summertime and the shapeless ideas come easy. An imaginary yearbook comes into being, but its fruition is tossed to the dim distant deadlines. But too soon the deadlines are upon us. N o longer is there time to cement the summeris heroic ideas with final page plans. Time's unrelenting prods are augmented by yearbook company representative Paul Retrum's driving voltages. Ideas corne, ideas go-it is the property of true genius to disturb all settled ideas. s 1 1 Q, it NW SCOUT STAFF-Front Row: B. Morse, L. Roberts, D. Ramage, C. Pickering, C. Hindrnan. Row 2: C. Demos, H. Meeker, Row 3: Editor W. Wada, V. Ale- shire, S. McCaw. 'ffl' Left: Warner Wada, befuddled Scout Editor, ponders page paste-up puzzle. Above center: Dorothy Hill, Legend and Scout advisor, journalism teacher. Above right: Cathy Schieve pounds out copy to meet a deadline. IW' Devise, witg write, pen, for I am for whole volumes in folio. William Shakespeare . -it ,, y To have thoughts immortalized by print completes a pre- carious communication between the writer and an unknown, wanted reader. A poem read by hundreds is an acknowl- edgement of the author's very soul, a never-spoken idea is silently expressed and at least partially understood. Folio is an attempt at acknowledgement. It is selective ac- knowledgement, to be sure, the staff must objectively select original works which best express cursive thoughts. Each manuscript is ruminated. The outstanding result in the annual anthology. Folio is not only a literary acknowledgement. Recognition of art objects is also an aim. Art of exceptional quality is photo- graphed and included. 'H ,. FOLIO STAFF-Row 1: L. Franklin, L. Harmon, N. Forrester, S. Smith, S. Limes, P. Wada. Row 2: J. Buehler, D. Morrison, J. Bell, J. Wolfe, G. Wright, B. Merkle, D. Pierce. T' Above far left, above far right, and lower right, Peg Wada, literary staff member, rates each manuscript of the hun- dreds submitted. Above center, Jeff Wolfe and Linda Frank- lin, art editors, consider art objects to be included. Lower left, Jeff Wolfe appraises clay vase. ll H '1.'f,' clasp the hands and know the thoughts of men in other lands. Mastering a language involves both the speaking and the writing of it for Karen Dunham. John Masefield Constant conversation and composition in a foreign language brings first glimpses of the understanding of foreign concepts. Famil- iarity with alien cultures creates a thorough comprehension of not only the language, but also of its peoples. The student may grasp the nature of the country and its citizens by reading the Works of various foreign authors. He may explore the ideologies and motivations of whole nations of people formerly entirely unknown to him. One tries to develop a knowledge and apperception of the language so he may ar- ticulate his own thoughts and ideas through the language. And thus he creates an exten- sion of himself within another country's heritage. Mary Bordner Thomas Grahek Margaret Harold Barbara Niehoff MaIj0!'i6 Snow Latin German Spanish French - Spanish French .. I .W v is 'J HN The toga-d banquet was the extra- ordinary activity of the Latin Club. Above right, Latin club president Bob Larkin issues a decree of appetite. Above left, Latin students Warble Roman folk songs for banquet enter- tainment. The German Club, an extension of German class, delved deeper into con- temporary Germany with a visit to the Maennerchor. Center, German stu- dents sway to Deutschland drinking songs. Below, Mr. Grahek traces the Rhine for Noreen Forrester. . m 11-.Q 'Q-as -us .- 2 v 1 Banquets were highlights of the Spanish and French clubs' calendars. Counterclockwise, above right: Spanish club members converse over tamales. Above left: Club advisor, Mrs. Harold, joins in Spanish folk dances. Center left: French club sponsor, Mrs. Snow, partakes in cuisine and conversa- tion. Lower left: The imitation Wine and French pastry were delicieux. Lower right: Larry Garrison and Vicki Voss lead club in traditional Spanish songs. Science is nothing but perception. Plato arf l James Criswell Richard DeWeese James J onard Chemistry Biology Chemistry Jerrold Karshner William Schmitter Marian Thomas Physics Biology Biology Man is a curious animal. He has been searching for the truths of his existence since his time began. His quest has led him through the visions of his own mind, to the facts of his environment, and into the theories of the atomic and subatomic world, Biology is immediate. Life is thrust into incapable hands. Vague ideas of molecules and cells become realities as their mechanisms are no longer the mystical images of earlier years. Awe of the unknown turns to wonder of the fantastically intricate, but understandable perfection. Hands become more trustworthy, but no more capable of managing life. Concepts evolve into theories. Theories are real, until the next one is better. Chemistry is built only on a probability and the fertile imagination of man. The very basic structure of all that we know has been constructed, torn down, and rebuilt a thousand times in the cranial laboratories of countless men. Gravity, centrifugal force, F:MAg Physics portrays man's world as a dependable book of rules. Absolute equations converge in absolute an- swers. Expansion of knowledge is con- stantg what is known is. God must be an engineer. Man's insistent curiosity is the essence of his superiority. This monu- mental inheritance has been the creator of man's existence as we know it. Such as it is. s .1 ! g ' ,ff ' 5 -f M 5 1, . Intent Mr. Karshner ponders over a physics ansvxfer. Chemistry holds wonders to despair. 41,-f ,L Dan Tederick focusses on spirogyra. . I o l 1 1 ..... a..... an 4--.. 14.-Q ...Y nu 4... ..-. ....... ... ,..,,. 'SLC -521.1 ... .5 '- ill Sheri Stevenson and Steve Wenger question Mr. Jonard on science practicum project. Vicki Simons adjusts micro-projector. Science practicum participants Doug Lipp and Pat Rohde measure serum drops. m Q :.-:--mega E ss. 'SE is 29? Mrs. Marion Thomas and Dave Dr. Edward Thomas briefs Biology Club mem- Elizabeth Blees listens intently to Dr. Thomas. bers at Blendon Woods outing. E's1tB.-f-- 0951 Amateur Radio Club members Ted Hill and John Puchstein relay messages to Chris Robinson. Traphagen began landscaping for new wing early. Ted Hill and Amateur Radio Club president Chris Robinson trans- mit Morse code. Mathematics possesses not only truth but supreme beauty. Mr. Towers demonstrates trigonometric idenitities. Bertrand Russell The novice is baffled at his early introduction to mathematics. He is unable to visualize the overall arrange- ment, thus the small but essential part that his assigned algebra or geometry plays is not evident. Logical proofs, designed to eliminate his non-existent doubts, seem endless. Gradually, he recognizes the neces- sity of proofs, as he learns to challenge before accepting even those theorems from the mind of a Pythagorus or a Euclid. At this point in his develop- ment, the student finds that each new concept, once mastered, serves to clarify and justify those preceeding it. As that which he has learned classifies and arranges itself in his mind, he realizes how minute is his knowledge. .1335 Marilyn Baker Lafe Dodds Marilyn Mueller Robert Smart Jacob Towers Human history is in essence cz history of ideas. History is not what would have happened if . . . but rather the unreconciling chronicle of the lifespan of ideas. History cannot be accosted with speculation, it commands the present posterity's respect and gesticulates toward the mimicking future. Ideas are the tendrils of individual men. To each Alexander, Jefferson, Marx, Whitman, Beethoven, and the endless et al., a responsibility is owed. Any ideas given by predecessors are secondary. More important is posterity's ability Cor inabilityb to emotionally and mechanically assimilate preceding thought. Thus history converges into the present and bears itself as a means with which to predict the future. Human history of individual ideas is capable of being conveyed only by individ- uals. The Past teaches the teachers of the Past and history can be placed in its recep- tacle-posterity-only by verbal means. The teacher, history's tool, whittles im- pressions of learned lessons on the student's consciousness. Centuries of thought, eradi- cated by revolution, remembered fragments hypothetically interwoven, can be known quickly. But the present, even when de- synthesized cannot be grasped even in fragments. History is the passage of timeg time is the personal measure of history's inheritors. Time, dark time, secret time, forever flowing like a river . . . H. G. Wells Joseph Arthur Roy Ault Sue Chandler John Eberly John Hayes Robert Kinney 'l iii! Roger Murphy Norris VanNoy Richard Yurich I., Q , egg, if , L. E Q3 if aw 2 f :fir 5 5 we A i-sexggal HPF?-M W H , .M -55-, 'i E , ,, H ' 4 lzi In a typical stance, Mr. Van Noy, romanticizes the gone- before. Mr. Hayes has a ready word for today's students -. ,- eu. , ,' .A ' . ifmiisk . ki 1, A Q .,,...k gig, , x 111 Topography is next to geography in the course of history. -,- Group discussion led by experience, the teacher, sometimes yields success in understanding conflicting ideas. Philosophy is the discourse of ideas in realms of the theoret- ical. Philosophers weigh the pragmatic and moral value of - V history and speak to their civilizations accordingly. Youth, the doubter, the prosecuter, though naive, is often the most discerning philosopher. In his ambivalence he speaks from an objective view. Strung with knowledge of little exper- 'l ience, he has no personal life to justifyg his thoughts can accommodate the lives of others. The only original philosophy would be the one that would justify someone else. : Albert Camus. Mr. Arthur interprets history in the light shed by philosophers' words. lnformality of senior philosophy class stimulates stagnant thought. This is the age of automation. Machines play dominant roles in our There is no better ballast for keeping the mind steady on its keel, and saving it from all risk of crankiness, than business. James Russell Lowell homes, businesses and industries. The business education curriculum acquaints the business-bound student with machines he will Work with in this, until now, foreign world. Comptometer, rotary calculator, ten key and full key. These confusing names become workable realities to the business education student. The clacking typewriters, hum of adding and duplicating machines, and bri- ing of timers, are everyday static to those who operate in this environment. Sixty words per minute in typing or 100 words per minute in shorthand are goals that are strived for. Notehand is a confusing maze that, when untangled, yields an intelligible chain of thoughts or instructions. Book- keeping students become familiar with column upon column of figures and facts concerning accounts of corporations, payrolls and individuals. Future Secretaries of America is the club associated with business edu- cation courses. The club introduces members to the written and assumed laws and customs of business. Monthly meetings are held at the Board of Education and cover a wide range of business-related topics. For example, one meeting was devoted to introducing FSA members to the responsibili- ties of a court recorder. Numbers, lists, white paper, black type, red pencils, blue markings: words that are familiar but whose meanings vary in a world beyond the household and next door neighborg the world of business. Debbie Hill. left. and Marilyn Marshall improve their typing speeds. 'QA 56 Avalee Moseley puzzles over shorthand. Business education includes instruction in machines. .Q'l: t'?'f 3 'T- I Q-3551115 1, 1... ufiieq al' .. 5..F':., 1933 l 2 .uvgvl An wa. aff Jig 2 of 1 lu, can Z Under the watchful eye of Mr. Cook, Mike Cramer and Gary Dickerson Cforegroundl complete a typing exercise. TREASURER'S STAFF-Row 1: B. Igo, B. Fuller, P. Johnson. Row 2: C. Cahill, P. Thomas, Mr. Cook. Tina Ammon Grover Cook Mary Hgeter Darlene Williams What greater or better gift can we offer the republic than to teach and instruct our youth? Cicero Boys! MEET MORE GIRLS- JOIN FTA. Obviously something new has been added to the spirit of the Future Teachers of America. This year for the first time 50 fellows have joined the formerly almost completely female club. The regular membership has also doubled over the former years. People join when something intrigues them. What is there about FTA that does this? if 1, Q. al .Jiri ,nf Vi -gtafyn - mf Fi . rs:-1 1 .QQ , .5 ' . fig, nf A ,ui 9'-4 . 1 A32 -fr ' FFITIPZQ gg! , ,. V Qgbg l ' . lr V situ.: l v- KA4 - Q ' , It Q ' 'ls ' t 2' I ,ff ,,, 3 'ia wi . l S23-fr ' fT 1 Several Whetstone students have been honored for their achievement in their respective fields. Jerry Beekman was recognized for his scientific and academic excellence and won a trip to the National Youth Conference on the Atom in Chicago. In a test given to recommended students, Jerry placed high in the Central Ohio competition and joined over 800 other students from across the nation at the 5-day conference, the theme of which was The New Instru- ments of Sciencef' The annual accolade for the Betty Crocker American Homemaker of Tomorrow was awarded this year to Susan Barnes. Sponsored by General Mills, the test consisted of a written homemaking and aptitude examination. By achieving the highest score on the examination, Susan was named the Homemaker of the year at Whetstone. The state winner, chosen from all high school winners, will eventually compete in the national test for the All- American Homemaker of Tomorrow. Warner Wada and Chris Hindman garnered high honors in high school journalism competition sponsored by the Spectator. Warner was named High School Journalist of the Year. The credit came as a result of his noteworthy editing of SCOUT. His award-winning writings in- cluded verbal editorial combats urging fee cards, toler- ance and individualism. Also his article on LSD and a political poll he conducted were cited. Chris, assistant editor of SCOUT was awarded first place in the feature division. Her extensive treatment of the fair trial-free pressv controversy surpassed con- siderable city wide competition. National Honor Society induction U i , Y ,M I 4, .- X, Q .i , 1'1? l l . X . qi pq. S' .- 'I nz,-ff ,- .ff , ix N X ll . I 'wr , A 1 Jerry Beekman, Science winner '!-I 'l f' V -1 'p l ' Y 4, ' I, f' ' ' Q5 .gi 'F I' 1 -c... . Wi' 1 V .ji .11 ' f. .-1. 1.. . VQ ., .. gy- wc g , ' x. 1-Q 1 , , nf - .. r ...,.., . T. ..R -A-.- rt , .xi li! - A mit i f Mix ? FW , i wg 1' - XJ, '15 ' .' BAA in w if g g?s.a' mia ,QA J - is .. .ffflr QPR. A A r .4 -'A f if ,,, 529' 4 'E f' Q H fi' tl ' ' lg5TxifM:,g- '?7' v1, Q s n aiii ', 'E' Q - . ' - 1. .1 .. N irzzmgi 1. 5 xg ng 1: 'iw is-s.i'?gif'.Q.LE 4 Iftigit . .... -'.i.:.+.a... if me-fx-1. . '-' rl, .gh Q --'rs .w li -, wif:-141. - F' 1 ' .. ...Q ,v,o, Y ' 1 Y. ,QQ Warner Wada received award Warner Wada and Chris Hindman Spectator Susan Barnes, Whetstone Betty Crocker Home- from Spectator editor Robert Bur- Journalism winners dock Cleftl on Jerry Rasor's Dance- O-Rama. maker of Tomorrow 61 All that Mankind has done, thought, gained or been: it is lying as in magic preservation in the pages of Books. They are the chosen possession of men. All neatly stacked, sorted, filed, or- ganized into a meticulous system of cata- loging so that the student may locate a specific book. Each book contains a world of its own, one in which the reader may absorb him- self and assimilate its material. Through books a person may experience situations which he ordinarily would not encounter in his life. Reading lends depth to a person's out- look on life, affords knowledge to those who search for it, and elevates us from our daily lives. g:F1n ',-:aii53g5?:w . 'ww' 1 if' ' i ' ,li 'wig' wi -1 ' 41.5, Mrs. Barry commands respectful silence. Thomas Carlyle Sheri Smith, Ed Hillsman, and Ed McCarthy assist in maintaining a well-organized library. Anne Barry Pamela Richards With excess knowledge stored on shelves, the bookroom becomes a home of potential wisdom. Casual attitudes towards school on the part of many students is exemplified by the shelves reserved for lost books which remain until final exams propagate a sudden urge for education. The lights are out, the black blinds pulled. As students' eyes become ac- customed to the dimness, a narrow beam of light, illuminating dust par- ticles in its path, is flashed on a screen. Ears, eyes.and minds become alerted to the subject matter presented or illustrated in a way that cannot be otherwise accomplished in the class- room. This is the outcome of the audio- visual staffs efforts, familiarity with the machines involved and efficient scheduling which are vital in a system of so many rooms, teachers and stu- dents. Lester Duncan prepares to rewind film. I-943' BOOKROOM STAFF-Row 1: D. Heisel, C. Mader, T. Nowe. Row 2: D. Hicks, P. Meyer, C. Stilson. Dave Heisel studies as he mans the bookroom :Jr- Hectic activities outlined on clipboards are overseen by Mrs. Helen Stephenson, Co- ordinator of Student activi- ties. Her student staff assists in assuring that the week's fren- zied activities materialize successfully. The Coordinator's staff in- cludes from left to right Row 1: S. Limes, T. Edgar, P. Dixon. Row 2: Mrs. Stephen- son, N. Cochrun, B. Herrema, L. Smith, S. Dunn. Clubs take advantage of' audio-visual facilities. AFH prepares to watch a film on stewardesses. You work that you may keep pace with the earth ' and the soul of the earth. 3-11 p.m. CREW: Seated: Jim Thomas. Standing, left to right: Nathaniel Jackson, Raoul Donaldson, Paul D. Cook. Kahlil Gibran W lil Q W, ,, fa Y M A ta 'Q ,, i at li ,gi M R M ff ,tw W an MWF 2 . X 5 1 i xttzyyfai he 1 1 7 a.m.-3 p.m. At right: L. Warren Kernple, Cennie Hill, Dennis Craigo. . . . is followed by the maintenance of the day The day is spent straightening, replacing, fixing, carrying. Maintenance follows cleaning as night follows day in a natural and necessary sequence for the good of the earth. For ci man seldom thinks with more earnestness of anything than he does of his dinner. Samuel Johnson 9 Yv -15 xr y - 7 Standing, Left to Right: Mar- agaret Ruffing, Mildred Trent, Tillie Tuttle, Laura Woods, Louise Gilliland, Nellie Stozklin, Arlene Ben- nett, Ida Williams, Thelma Vance. Five...four...three...two... one . . . BRRIIINNG! The bell, fi- nally. I thought it would never ring. I'm starved. Didnlt have any breakfast 'cause I had to come early. Lunch is the student's period. In it he is free to do what he wants whether it is eating for forty-five solid minutes Cif he survives the herd of starving students stamped- ing to wait in linel or to hunt down a quiet corner and cram for a test or complete some last minute homework. DLL-l.l.'!. The line is slowly Cwhen you are starved? past the counters of food supplied by hands of nameless kitchen helpers and prepared by cooks who are rarely seen. After the initial feed is over, the chairs are tipped back, the shoes slipped off and over the cluttered trays and ice cream wrappers, the students talk. Glancing at the poster covered walls, they talk about people, last week's game, the next dance, their dating troubles, and occasionally about their ideas and opinions. , 6 Toward the end of the period the coins appear, the flip takes place, and the loser returns the trays- all thousand of them. Out in the hall they gather and drift to their lockers and on toward their next class. .- A 1 -.s . 'efwbldti' ' ' i gf' I am not a teacher, only a fellow-traveller of whom you asked the way. I pointed ahead- ahead of myself as well as of you. George Bernard Shaw Charles Joseph Phyllis Hull Nancy Lundy Guidance staff- Seated: P. Betz, K. Holdren, K. Haas, P. Troxel. Standing: M. Darby, M. Hess, K. Kimmel, N. Nye, K. Long. A green-slip-summoned student watches the girl at the desk as she mumbles, VVhetstone High School guidance office, student speaking, into the phone. Barely audible from behing the door- Do you realize you are failing biology? asks the guidance counselor, his mind probing for the why. The student, desiring to change his schedule, enter college, or get a jobg the parent, concerned about the way his child is relating to some aspect of schoolg the teacher or administrator with a question about a particular studentg each comes to the guidance department. Whetstone students meet college representatives at conferences, often absorbing a portion of the representative's enthusiasm for his school. Frenzied seniors fill out applications and anticipate ACT and SAT scores, the arrival of which causes a series of hurried conferences as student and coun- selor try to determine chances for admission. Those who are not college bound must make the all important choice of occupation. Counselors try to ease the task with preference tests and vocational manuals. In the guidance office, files of students' names materialize into faces and personalities Whose owners have a distinct past and a future to be determined. Seniors' futures congregate at college conferences. 4 Interschool Nurse, Mrs. Elsie Hayes, checks Juniors for tuberculosis test reactions. NURSES STAFF: S. Ward, C. Davis, K. Fisher, C. May kuth, J. Angel. T ml? ,em .niiwfxi All seniors were weighed and mea- Tom Beck. sured by the school nurse. ' ,ev U A cut finger and a cut slip are equally f . painful. The finger bleeds in the nurse's office, and the cut slip is repudiated at the attendance office's subpoena. Checking schedules, filing health records, administering to sick students are a few of the tasks the nurse and her staff perform. Tardy, cut, absent, ill? where and why? are the answers demanded by the atten- dance staff. Going from room to room, leaving an absent list or green slips, are the most important attendance staff. Wild '-.Q seems Attendance staff member summons by means of green slip. As the beams to cz house, as the bones to the microcosm of man, so is order to all things. Omnipotent from the student's point of view, nothing more or less than human from a closer vantage point. The administration has the im- mense job of turning a mass of 1400 teenagers into a tidy group of meaningful identities. The creation by a joint effort of cajoling, asking Cpolitelyl, restrain- ing, demanding, and sitting back and letting him do it himself, of a significant life is no easy job. Few who receive these benefits realize their importance in finished personalities. Many influences Robert Southey must unite to produce one whole adult individual. Novice efficiency, the office helpers, make life easier for the administration. How many mes- sages per annum does one office aide deliver? Conservative esti- mate: 3,458,391. Where are those little yellow slips? The clerks pound out student lives on faithful typewriters. IQ added to personal records and test scores plus yearly health records equals one complete paper person. They know us better than we do. We were just displaying a little CLERKS: Standing, Hilma Evans and Betty Wagner. Seated, Ruth Simons. Aa! 71 ..- Steve Marriott asks assistance of office helpers Patti Thomas flefti and Cathy Pasco. school spirit, sir. I have a headache, can I go home? Susie left her lunch at home today, could you . . .? I know, I know, but I just don't want to take notehandf, Could you sign this recom- mendation, Please? I can't cut my hair. I'm in this band, see . . . It's a Columbus Board of Ed- ucation rule. Newly realized maturity recog- nizes seemingly blind power as responsibility. HELEN STEPHENSON, coordinator of student activities. 4, ESTHER STRICKLAND Vice-Principal lik DON T. HARPER, Principal Luana MacCullum and Cathe Swinehart seek information from office worker Bev Meyer. Q What government is the best? That which teaches as to govern ourselves. We, the students of Whetstone High School, in order to have a Christmas project, direct hall traffic, promote the homecoming dance, propagate a booster drive, and to establish communication be- tween the administration and stu- dent body, do ordain and establish the student council. All right, let's have a little quiet here. Crap, rap? D0 we have any suggestions for a Christmas project? How about the Franklin County Home, for the Aged? We could take brownies, sing carols and maybe talk Mr. Susi into taking the brass band. I'll bring a tie. Okay, and somebody bring soap or perfume. Maybe someone could bring some jewelry. That's great! I know the people there are lonely and that would be a great project. Johann Wolfgang Van Goethe . . '. and those are the chairmen and committees for Homecoming. Any questions? You'll have to get started right away because we don't have much time. What do you mean you lost all ten tickets to the dance? Do you realize how much those tickets are Worth? A solution to between-period chaos: The hall traffic committee has decided on a new system. Everyone to the right. Well, most of the between-period chaos. Listen, we've got to really get these kids out for the Booster drive. We'll have a dance and lots 'of food afterwards, that should help. - That's a good idea, ask the administration. A good Student Council deals not' only with the tangibles of projects. Its basic Worth is judged in the intangibles of human rela- tions and school communications. Treasurer Teri Edgar contemplates the budget. Mr. Teichert advises cabinet which includes Rick Trout, presidentg Ned Kirby, vice- presidentg Cathy Pasco, secretaryg Teri Edgar, treasurerg Steve Wood, sergeant-ab armsg and Lynda Brown, sophomore mem- ber-at-large. SOPHOMORE REPRESENTATIVES - Seated: D. Nowe, M. Birkhead, B. Hatfield, V. Diamond, L. Herrel, P. Sellers. Standing: P. Rooney, B. Wolfe, D. Koehler, B. James, N. Edgar, L. Lampson, L. Brown, S. Haslup, D. Trout. JUNIOR REPRESENTATIVES - Seated: P Russell, P. Hatfield, B. Kutz, M. Blocher B. Backus, D. Brundage. Standing: N. Mc- Bride, L. Davis, C. Harte, D. Perdue, D Fertig, P. Stutz, B. Jones, S. Wood, S Gillhouse, S. Neff. SENIOR REPRESENTATIVES - Seated: C. Pasco, S. Stevenson, V. Aleshire, S. Bran- non, T. Edgar, L. Prushing, L. Taylor. Second Row: N. Kirby, N. Cochrun, A. Buck- lew, S. Dunn, K. Long, R. Trout, B. Jenkins, J. Robbins, J. Farley. Third Row: S. Mott, B. Johnson, J. Smith, J. Richardson, D. Hicks, T. Elliot, J. Bell, G. Wright. l lx Nfl.. ' 4 g I M5511-ggi- I J -W35? Travel, in the younger sort, Ls a part of education. Francis Bacon Everyone sits ready tensed for the begin- ning of the inevitable end. The ignition key is slowly turned, all eyes are found to be riveted to the area of a supposedly frightened driver education teacher. At once the student becomes master of a two ton mass-produced sculpture of cam shafts, pistons, gears, and an elaborately organic transmission. The accelerator is pressed, and youthful infatuation with power is released. The automobile response is immediate. For every human action there is reaction. A new independence surges and a pseudo- adult jaunts down the freeway. The thrill of the automobile is not difficult to understand. It is analyzed and recounted in endless bull sessions and countless paid-for custom magazines. Phil Weber adjusts the mirror on his cycle. David Thomas First Semester Roger Wolfe ...tn-.,......-. ... -,.-. 1 C ...N-M . .. .. V tr 2- ,- G W -. 1. 1'-.:.: '- rr: .g.. ' 2 . fi -1 1 H -. J fi' 2 I ' 1 ..' ' ' ' ' ' - 1 ' f -.J V - i QQ 'V V - if if ' - 9 . , flu if , 'A . . s. : K , I i 'ef 'X i a glwm jg 4.-.ff ' l Above: All driver education students must succeed in the grueling par- allel parking test. Left: Bob Manley executes a hand-over-hand turn. I congratulate . . . this great high school for the fine interest in auto safety. . . M. E. Sensenbrenner Mayor of Columbus I congratulate all students, faculty, and friends of this great high school for the fine interest in auto safety at Whetstone High School, and for winning its first-in- the-nation award. With these words, Columbus Mayor M. E. Sensenbrenner lauded Whetstone High School Safety Council for its unusual activities. In recognition of their actions, the National Commission on Safety Education honored the Safety Council with a special award which was presented Sep- tember 29 in an all-school assem- bly. The national award was earned as a result of Whetstone's efforts in obtaining better traffic control near the school during the 1965-66 school year. Steve Wenger, president of the 1966-67 Safety Council, presented Mayor Sensenbrenner with a plaque in appreciation of his as- sistance in securing a traffic light at Olentangy Boulevard and Hen- derson Road. Other activities of Safety Coun- cil include providing maps to away games, supervising the salting of icy streets near the school, sending delegates to attend the State Safety Convention, and present- ing a monthly safety award to the student who demonstrates safety consciousness and courtesy to other drivers. - Q 1 f l l' 'ix - , :-r-ff' Safety Council sent a sizeable delegation to the State Convention this year. Among those attending were J. Docherty, C. Smith, and S. Dunn fseatedlg R. Pfeiffer, B. Jenkins, J. Woof, V. Simons, T. Docherty, and K. Kimmel fstandingl. Above, Mayor Sensenbrenner salutes the student body. Below, the Mayor accepts a plaque from Steve Wenger. The chessmaster combines the distinctive powers of the chessmeri to produce a masterpiece of the chessboard. R I , .,N-t The miniature battlefield of the chessboard . . . Queens, Kings, and Rooks dart hither and yon . . . Knights leap from square to square in peculiar fashion . . . the Pawn marches straight forward, one square at a time . . . castling with the King-Rook . . . stalemate . . . the King threatens the Queen's position . . . the perpetual check . . . checkmate! Irving Chernev John Fulton prepares for a castle move. A Brookhaven opponent, right, battles John Phillips. Left, Steve May appears pleased with Jeff Franklin's move. Good things happen when Youth I would help others out of a fellow-feeling. Robert Burton serves. Red Cross, under the leadership of Chris Baker, actively served school and community. For their Christmas project, they de- signed centerpieces for the Methodist Chi1dren's Home. As well in December, Red Cross played host to City-Wide Council meeting in which 25 schools participated. The club rounded out the year by presenting a specially created play for State School students. Individual service included two mem- bers' service as Volunteens-teen-age hospital aides. Christian Youth Fellowship served to bridge the gap between Sundays for its members. The club is a flexible organization, not bound by restricting membership or attendance rules. Friday morning meetings vary as the inclinations and moods of the members vary. Meetings ranged from devotions and singing, to speakers Csuch as Tom Bar- rington and Tom Andrickl to spirited discussions concerning a Christian in today's society. I Q . , .A Red Cross president Chris Baker, a Volunteen at Mt. Carmel Hospital, consults with floor supervisor Mrs. Hastings on a patient's record. Morning breakfasts were a feature of Red Cross meetings. Professor of electronics at OSU Dean Davis addressed CYF at a morning meeting. Tom Barrington, former OSU football star and member of Campus Crusade for Christ, poses at CYF meeting with Mrs. Mueller and Tom Kis- ling, president. Y- Teens move through faced-paced year, H i-Y team champions basketball league Y-Teen president Susan Dunn directs cabinet proceedings. Despite their notorious immensity, Y-Teens is still a strongly active club. Large membership brings in a greater cross section of talents, creating a club of varied interests. A diligent cabinet met once a week, designing a fulfilling program of service projects and stimulating meetings. Programs stressed cultural and service overtones, helping to plan futures on a basis of a careful measuring of desires and duties to others. Nine committees provided a varied opportunity of expression for different interests. Among other activities, Y-Teen girls found time to make stuffed animals for the Ship Hope, carve pumpkins for a nursing home, and take Christmas trees to needy families. Links committee mem- bers Worked as volunteers at the blind school and as Candy Stripers. A joint effort by Y-Teens and Hi-Y re- sulted in a successful Christmas Dance, the Snowball. A panel of student teachers high- lighted a fall meeting. Social committee co-chairman Becky Kutz ponders. Hi-Y member Craig McNett proffers his aid in Snowball prep- aration. Christmas dance enjoyed crowded atten- dance. The Hi-Y basketball team under the able coaching of Mr. Jim Cris- well completed a perfect 8-0 season. The team averaged 70 points per gameg their opponents, 35. The team beat Brookhaven, Worthington, Northland, and Westerville two times each. Of the 30 boys who went out for the team the 14 chosen were Mike Ciminello, Dave Hicks, George Rutan, Dave Heisel, Pat Meyer, Jon Davies, Doug Fertig, John Tracy, Jeff Wolfe, Jeff Smith, Gary Morin, Jim Buchan, Roger Beatty, and Jeff Davies. Teri Edgar and Rick Trout delight in Santa Beck's gifts at the Christmas dance. Above, Jeff Davies and Bob Johnson rest during harrowing Hi-Y practice. Left, Hi-Y basketball champions practiced every Thursday night. 1 if -1 ' ' v . ,- A lik .4 .l A I Sporting capes, new this year, Block W relaxes between card showings at Dads' Night during South game. Athletics are a major part of high school life. At the heart of Whetstone's athletic program are classes in physical education which help both boys and girls to develop bodily strength and skills and to expand their knowledge of related areas. Because the time alotted these classes is inadequate to insure every student proper physical fitness, they serve mainly to impress upon him the importance of such fitness so that he will carry on outside of class the work of developing strength, coordination, and overall athletic ability. Athletic Director Dodds heads up the program, consisting of Block W, cheerleaders, Varsity W, Girls' Interschool Basketball, GAA, and varsity Boys head for speedball game. Mr. Lafe Dodds, as Athletic Director, oversees ath- letic activities ranging from athlete eligibility to ticket count. 80 sports. In phys. ed. girls learn folk dances in addition to regular sports. Athletic Director's staff -Seated: C. Hart, S. Pontius, P. Barker. Standing: P. Spence, S. Cashman, K. Kovacs, D. Parker. Jane Walter Paul Eckelberry A healthy body is cz guest-chamber for the soul, A sick body is cz prison. Cheerleaders, Varsity W supply needed moral, financial backing. Reserve Row 1: P. Thomas, Captain B. Backus, S. Barnhart, P. Rooney, L. Herrel, S. Wenger. Varsity Row 2: J. Robbins, J. Becker, C. Murdock, M. S. Blocher, T. Edgar, Captain, C. Pasco. rl'4i-'.'l Cathy Schieve adds feminine touch to Craig McNett's bow. wire bows to wreaths. Varsity W is a bulwark of school spirit. This year in order to raise money for needed athletic equipment, members made and sold Christmas Wreaths. C To build team spirit, Varsity W Went en masse to one meet or game of each varsity sport. Chris Strauss, left, and Donn Schumaker There is more to a cheerleader than a pleated skirt, a letter sweater, slightly used sneakers, and seemingly inexhaustible energy. Beneath it all there is a girl who has the same joys and sorrows as every girl . . . except her good times and bad times tend to be the stu- dent body's property. A cheerleader must be a character of unquestion- able reputeg she must,watch her language, her dress, her activities, her behavior. To many the honor exceeds the disadvantages, from among these the cheerleaders are chosen. The cheerleaders' responsibilities began this summer when the girls began working to earn money to purchase new uniforms. The source of income ranged from bake sales and car washes to the painting of an entire garage. During the school year their re- sponsibilities extend far beyond pep rallies and games. The girls promote school spirit with posters, booster badges, and general high hopes. The job of cheerleading is a time consuming one, but it is not with- out its rewards. The hours of prac- tice and the restricting rules are lost and forgotten in the laughter and chatter of the before-the-game spreads, in the roar of an enthusi- astic crowd, and in the knowledge of an honor well-deserved. V l GIRLS' INTERSCHOOL BASKETBALL-Kneeling: K. Bryant, J. Litzinger, J. Nordstrom, J. Beem, C. Cox, B. Miller. Standing: Manager P. Thomas, C. Murdock, J. Dixon, B. Flath, P. Draudt, P. Rooney, C. Burt, M. Fregonas, C. Musick, S. Penwell, C. Robinson, Manager L. Case. For two months Girls' Interschool Basketball team practiced three days a week at 7:30 a.m. Their preparation tuned them for their three games. A Team, led by Claudia Musick and captain Carol Burt, stood with a 1-2 record at the season's end. B Team, un- der captain Mary Blocher and with Sharon Penwell's points, ended with a 2-1 record. Far right, Powder Puff hopefuls view compe- tition. Below, anticipation mounts as inter- school ball nears basket. 1 . ..rv T GAA activities ranged from the annual Powder Puff game to intra- club functions such as pizza parties and a fall picnic. The club planned and directed a homecoming assembly and orga- nized bowling and softball after school. GAA extended their services out- side school by joining With CYF and Varsity W in aiding a needy family in Columbus. A new constitution was drafted so the club can better fulfill the needs of its members. 1.41 rf iu-....l,.H GAA initiation, Props, plays on the ridiculous. Right, Sharon Penwell and Bev Miller string macaroni necklaces. Above, Michelle Fregonas marvels at her creative maca- roni masterpiece. Interschool opponents leap for jumpball No sport involves more preparation and excitement than football. Disgraced North Polar Bear hangs in effigy Easier Thursday practice features no pads from stage scaffolding, and no contact. - - ' ' . 1 , ., . , . , . . I . - , 1 Q- '- v e'-cf' ' .- . f fsff il, Q .s i ' rf. . :- is , + fe5f..4F - ', fe ff. . . A ' J'- is - ' -1- 1' A . , a Yah 1- ' - ' :- . , , Practice 1n front of empty bleachers ' , ' ' T ,-wg A. f ' ' ,fi is ' anticipates Friday night's game. , .. my s ae Thi., i, s gag, - x , ' I ,' 1 , -'H - f. - J: A251 X Q 1 ' N . I 'Y agar W mfimhiu JL' K , w , 4 - ' ' L -v 31 .-.-115,515 i ... , ' 'ea ' 'P' ' fi M 13 ,. '11 fix ,qw gif,-I-' J... Af, V F9 'Rfk ' -'K H N 'V -. '.- V' ' 1 ws ' if '. 7- sf. 'A , 'Q I ' 2, V - I f Q, 1 i ' . hge .V V 5- 1 .1 . :- E' 1 s T - 5 . -. -3 eil ', s , 'M' I ,JAlh-s.i,4AL L . , . 1 , ., . , N: h T Y : , V' 5 ' 52:1 'P Y 1 :Ji I.: , ' I ' m 5 1 5 5. I Q i tg' -lil L 'fl-1-fi LEFT: Whole school squeezes into stadium for ninth period pep , or- ,Lg ' 2. 4, - f-'i 55' L rally. LOWER LEFT: co-captains Bud Jenkins and Greg .IQ fx .14 -EQ aff T, 'f i 'rl E Wright arouse hopes for Friday's game. LOWER RIGHT: . ihii- y'. ! ' - -- -.E . .. if . 1 ' .. l L. I , Marching band adds lively enthusiasm to pep rally. ' ,.,4-s- ,111 - - - Cheerleaders and band energized first period classes with ra1lies-through- V vi N11 X, , 1 t QQ L ww df 9 'vgif The crowd arrivesg Drum Major Ric Brantner leads band through gates time for pre-game ceremony. Senior Warner Wada announced play-by-play action throughout season. the game begins. W l Ric Grau, guard, 1645 flies in for a tackle against South. 1 The North line succeeds in bringing down Scott Overturf 6843. 1- Bill Colburn, fullback, i333 smashes the North line. Quarterback George Rutan is brought down by a Central player Jack Wilson, end, 1873 picks up extra yardage against Central. Scott Overturf, end, goes in for the kill. Tackle Bart Merkle i775 throws block for halfback Jim Huber 6443, Wh6tSf0I16' line, Bud Jenkins 1657, Greg Wright i707 and Quarterback George Rutan confers with Coach Schmitter dur- ing game crisis. Rick Sellers i635 go for North opponent. Resignation wilts spirit of Bruce Powell and Bruce Kaplan dur- ing Ready 18-0 victory. Halfback Jim Huber and quarterback George Rutan 4173 romp through Central line in frustrated touchdown attempt. The Homecoming Dance, seen from the faculty parking lot, topped Homecoming activity. Homecoming Court from left to right, Teri Edgar, Cathy Pasco, Linda Zartman, Lynne Penwell, and Janet Robbins. - Homecoming activities began with the coming of October. The senior class chose the Top Ten candidates during the first week of that month, the following week the student body selected its choices. For these five girls, the re- mainder of the week was spent in writing speeches, rehearsing for the game and dance, and anticipat- ing the big evening. Pre-game activities were cli- maxed as Linda Zartman was crowned 1966 Homecoming Queen. The Braves fought hard only to lose to Central, 6-3, in the last few moments of the game. However, high spirits prevailed at the dance immediately following the game, where Queen Linda and her court were guests of honor. Bud Jenkins, Honorable Mention All-City Linda Zartman, 1966 Homecoming Queen v v. - Greg Wright, Honorable Mention All City 11 11 an is-13. Q M 1 ME-1 2- :N 'g...Q .. ' f ' S24 .-. VARSITY FOOTBALL-Row 1: D. Roberts, S. Wenger, R. Sellers, R. Powell, G. Wright, S. Overturf, J. Keir, J. Hill, J. Bell. Row 2: B. Merkle, K. Kaeser. J. Davies, R. Cline, T. Frisby, P. Woehle, J. Roumeliote, T. Converse, C. Grau, M. Hiller. Row 3: D. Oldham, D. Eller, B. Slatter, B. Humphrey, R. McCoy, J. Reynolds, J. Williams, R. Grau, M. Marshall. Row 4: J. Huber, B. Hart, F. Safranek, L. Mulberry, D. Jenkins, H. Hindman, D. Ross, S. Wood, B. Colburn. Row 5: T. Burke, B. Powell, J. Wilson, M. Valentine,J. Magers, K. Rinehart, B. Jones, R. Ramsey. Row 6: D. Elzey, D. Brooks, M. Showalter, M. Moriarity, R. Trout, G. Rutan, M. Sarris. Row 7: Mr. Beck, Mr. Eckelberry, Mr. Schmitter, Mr. Ault. This year the football team started out with high hopes of a successful season, but numerous injuries to key players eradicated that hope. Team spirit prevailed, however, throughout the somewhat discouraging season. Highlights of the season were the victory over arch rival North, 21-6, and the defeat of East, 31-12, end- ing the season on a note of success. Seniors controlled most of the key positions. Co-captains Greg Wright, tackle, and Bud Jenkins, guard, secured berths on the all- city squad. George Rutan, quarter- back, when not injured, also did an exceptional job as did John Keir, tackle, and Ken Kaeser, guard. The team ended with a league record of 4 wins-5 losses and an overall record of 5 wins and 6 losses. ul? I' '.':T,'7 ,. -z-1' -J? ,. - 7- fa zz ' mnvlam g L x F0 as f 6904- ii Q ' ,xc-rSf'U4. W mumu ' ...ii RESERVE FOOTBALL-Row 1: K. Wil- FOOTBALL SCHEDULE hams, B. Wolfe, M. Wills, M. Kuhn, P. Hil- WHS ler, D. Nuzurn. Row 2: S. Schmitter. D. Alex- , ander, T. Strasser, B. Yorde, G. Bluestone, B1Sh0P Ready 18 0 L. Palma. Row 3: K. Davies, S. Haslup, R. Worthington 8 28 Roberts, P. Higgins, D. Adams, R. Ramsey. North 6 21 Linden-McKinley 14 8 West 14 0 Central 6 3 Brookhaven 0 21 South 8 7 East 12 31 Wonder if it's worth it. . it must be. Two miles, here we come. Hey, it's cold out here. Wish he'd fire the gun. Finally. I hate the first 200 yards or so, it's just like a sprint. What a lot of guys! must be around 75. Let's see: eleven teams, seven guys each-yeah, 77. Wonder where I'll be at the finish. Time to move up. About a quarter mile gone, sixth place. Good. Here come the creek and that bridge. Gotta keep pushing it, keep relaxed. Third place nowg it's starting to hurt. Wonder how the rest of the team's doing. Oh well, no time to help them now. Let's see, the mile mark's coming, I'll try to keep this pace till I hear my mile time. Those golfers are looking at us, sure wish I were playing golf. Can't complain. Now to get that guy in second. Here goes. Even, but he won't let me go around. I'm tired, but I won't let him know it! Gotta keep pushing it! When is he going to fade? or will I fade first? We'll know soon. I wonder about that theory of mind over matter in running. Sounds logical, but- Whoa! don't daydream! Caught up with that guy again. I'd better watch it. This is really a pretty nice place to run, if running can be nice. Anyone coming up behind me? Better worry about this guy beside me first. I'm glad the sun's out. Pat Meyer, Cross Country captain What if it were snowing? Thatls so funny, I'd laugh if I could. When's this guy gonna give up? Better pull myself together now -about a half mile left. I'm hurt- ing, but I've felt worse. He looks about like I feel, but I think I'm better. Now, if I can cross that darn creek and get up the little hill without falling apart, I'm going to leave this guy! Or maybe, I should just make a deal with him. That's another funny one. There's the creek, the hill, I hate this part. Well, here goes. Push it. Good. I'rn around him, but he isn't giving up. It's hard to be- lieve, 77 guys from Columbus and me in second place. Wow! Quarter of a mile left and he's got at least 175 yards on me. Better worry about second. Start giving it more. Stride, relax. But faster. It hurts. My legs and my lungs are on fire. Wonder if it's worth it. No time to ask that question nowg it must be. I'm just happy to know that a Whetstone jersey's gonna finish, with me in it, in second . . . I hope. Wish it could be first. Here's the last straightaway. Nobody's gonna catch me! Now spring! Everything! Don't hold anything back! There's that line. Closer. I can't hear anyone behind me. Keep kicking - hurry - few more seconds-keep going! I can hear him now: . . . 10:27, 10:28, 1 0:29 - it's over! 13' j 'xi-'.i.. 'R ,K 4,5 , 1. ff? X JET: ,cg- nf i-R Pat Meyer concentrates on rounding a turn in the course. ,11' '. Russ Rogers Cleftl and Alan Clifford near the finish line. H. Coach Roger Wolfe bellows encourage- ment. fu ,3,..,. fini V , o .go -S lm... V ,l , 5-g,y'rx3?.'-,fag-r.i ,Q v.l Q 45, 55'f. v -,Mo-' ', -' my siglifxii IN-,.,,-41-taxa :' Q 'v'.f -f I '. ,' Q- .--ws : r, Q- w of '- -if: fu' Hay fl. f. , ,K- Q .,1,m-,- 5 ,. v ,N-J.-5 ,l S.-.. -, F' . . 4,-.Jah ... .i .se,::i-:ares-ff:-' - -5' 'ff .f- As' F 1.551 V 4 9:1 A r .-., . 1 A 1 ., 1 ' , :V - 1 'H wap-'K-Ms! - 1 .rw , , - . Q - 'I ffm. .- Q- -hh., V o,..f,. ,. I ' ,. Aw 4- . 'Jl . uf , V ' .-'7 -rqfng N I ,J 'J7-T 4 .-.:w1.,. -w,,.r'. 'Z' 'f . . -l f'1 r3r1 . .., ... ,nf . :ff'? L1-1. Z In the course of this season's six regular meets the Whetstone cross country team ran against nine schools Ceight in the City Leaguel, losing to only two of them, West and Brookhaven. The Braves confirm their rank by taking third to those schools in the City Varsity Meet late in October. In that free-for-all, held at Raymond Memorial Golf Course, Pat Meyer and Gary Kopp, team co- captains, placed second and sixth respectively. In addition to taking part in City League competition, the team participated in the district meet, also at Raymond, in which it placed seventh among the 17 teams of its division. Because Whetstone did not finish fourth or better in its division, it did not qualify for the regional meet. However, the top 10 runners in each of the two divisions of' the district were allowed to run in the regional, regardless of whether their teams qualified, and Pat Meyer, having finished seventh in Whetstone's division, began to get his legs and lungs in shape for the regional meet. In the regional, Pat distinguished himself by placing 10, and, as one of the top 15 runners, he qualified for that all-star competition held at the Ohio State University Golf Course-the state meet. Among those who ran in the state meet, alone or with their teams, Pat finished 24. Three years ago, in Mr. Roger Wolfe's first season as coach, the team ranked second to Brookhaven in the City League. The following season, autumn of 1965, brought the City championship to Mr. Wolfe and the Braves. This year's team, again under Mr. Wolfe's leadership, continued Whetstone's fine record by placing third in the city. REGULAR MEETS WHS Opponent WHS 25 Grandview 3 1 wonl 33 West 22 lost 32 North2 85 2nd Brookhaven 27 24 East 70 1st Central 42 25 Linden-McKinley 37 lst Groveport 72 25 Eastmoor 34 won 1Each team's score is the sum of the finishing places ffirst, second, third, etc.J of its first five runners. Therefore, the winning team is the one with the lower flowestl score. 2Brackets indicate triangular meets. ' 15- W L - P: 1, , gif? if lj .' tis. -izl3 'iffta it f ' ' 'MQ' -1' 4' 1'- ' .AE'+3'4:5 fps. 53? ii-52Fi7 'w'7 's A -' 'i l' Nw .- riff' .J i:53, ','vQ'z 'f by W 433 - ,.g,-, ah , 'Q If '33'Q f. f an 'Ava - Y 4 G' ,'-1:23 'Zig' ff..-F Ii '- 'f l- 7 itil? ,ff .y Q . 'YY if 5, .Q pm f. iff i- ' dry ' i HU 'Q' I A .- .fi ff, V - ' t .l si' X inilrr fb' H f ' 'film Hlvlff, f.,:j'fQ1zQ:.' ,QJQQ ',l2.l':ii . f' 5 T .. fl' ' : 'lf ' 2 ,1Z?'f - - 'i If .431 -'df . .5-A 41, r: 5 - .-:L r 5-7i'1f.1.'2'a:agi4i: 1332-if Rf-T? .'ff.- al' ,l i ' i 2.- Row 1: L. Hoskinson, D. Fertig, D. Wall, G. Kopp, P. Meyer, P. Sattler, A. Clifford, C. Strauss, l S. Engel. Row 2: P. Stutz, D. Lipp, R. Blume, R. Quam, D. Cribb, G. McElwee, F. Drobot, R, Rogers., N. Alexander, manager T. Graham, coach Roger Wolfe. Q ,.. X A .. , vi VARSITY BASKETBALL-Kneeling: J Shields, R. Clouse, B. Powell, S. Davies, S Overturf, L. Davis, S. Marriott, manager Standing: Coach J. Hayes, D. Ross, J. Wil- son, B. Baker, N. Kirby, S. Kerns,J. Mount, II1al'l8.geI'. RESERVE BASKETBALL-Row 1: B. Hughes, V. Sams, C. Kloman, J. Jones, S. Mirise, S. Peltier, B. Wolfe, L. Ryder. Row 2: G. Gunderman, M. Schmidt, managersg D. Koehler, L. Mulberry, M. Wills, B. Yorde, D. Hughes, C. Peterjohn. Team turns in 5-12 season A game is not entirely Won or lost on the court. Off court incidents and decisions are often underesti- mated. Basketball calls for strict training of both mind and of body. The practices, the coaches' criti- cism andlor encouragement, the mood of the student body, and the lockerroom tension are important factors. The season is long over now. Even though the recordC5-125 is not overly impressive, many games were lost by very small margins. Only the East High Tigers beat the Braves decisively. Coach John Hayes feels that Gary Kopp, Scott Kearns, Bill Baker and Captain Ned Kirby, all seniors, did a re- markable job. Kirby and Kopp re- ceived honorable mention in all- city ratings. Coach Hayes also feels that Whetstone will have a strong team next year when Jack Wilson, Jim Shields, Rich Clouse and Bruce Powell will be returning lettermen. Upper left: Jack Wilson loses a jumpball to Linden. Center: Reserve Coach Murphy, Cleftl and Varsity Coach Hayes discuss pre-game strategy. Lower left: Heroic managers form parade of young boys. ' -'fi H. 1. mu ---1 :W -If!-in-9-A I ...1.. A, Team introductions are made and the season launched with cheers at first basketball pep rally. Officials arrive and pre-game preparations are culminated in players' warm ups. Confusion mounts as ball slips from dribbler's hands. ' AS A Scott Overturf looks for open man. Jim Shields tips in two. Ned Kirby passes to unseen player. X-1 Jack Wilson wins two points. gf n i , i , ppiil if 5, 6 51 ' W V 7 . '45, Kirby heads for front court while Rich Clouse looks on. l W .......f. ,,,- mt- so , si ,-. U-1-4 Kirby, Baker, and opponents scramble for ball. Ned Kirby hits open man under basket. ,, , ' ' . ,.,f ' A J - -,,i 4 .1 f- 'nga 5 A 5 x Q J. J fgiwlzli X l ' nor., 1 h , V hymn ,. --.,-. 1 1 I net- Opponent unsuccessfully goal tends. Arduous Everyday Practice. . .is Dick Morrison struggles for advantage. 1 . f . .1-V, qxwfslmg eu, w V ui - , M. ' , ' - in., Wrestling captain Steve Wenger leads team in warm-up exercises Jeff Hill and Greg Wright grapple during practice. f'--fznl' Andy Kerr is unexpectedly thrown by opponent. ....i3t ' o c. 15154 ' ig' E yi? -vnwegigf we Qbwlzmkfvwmq L it ,K we ua,,,,,st, MM? f ,,,. 1 42 J 'r :MW ' Sji wgwv 'Riff wwwiiif -. ' . Ji, ,V .A .iw .. fgfmf 5 ,. . ,- If Kgs, il. ww ,..,, .L ,V V' 'Ji,.,' g. 'MS' ' tale, '- '- . . , fix K- W, A rf wliqgl 'S J? -x- L Q: J: 9 . Er-I . 5 Sb, . 4 . l awfmgi fe' A 311 f ,, 'W ,H ,M M, A .f-, , nw- ' 15, f ef . lf- l - , h:f:wlz,,.v. Q.: it .Q .W .AS 1 2 f it Q m N 4, F sf R ls 1 0 . Upper rlght Jeff H111 grlmaces ln efforts to pull down opponent and in horizontally ensumg three plctures struggles to mamtain advantage. Above, Tom Burke fights for pm and ult1mate vlctory Rlght Referee declares Jim Hersey victor. U sf,s'Aqn:w:w. .ye s, A W n ,,S,,,fl:zf5'rf 'fi' -.,.1L'i'f Wrestling Squad Grapples Its Way to Victorious 5-1 Record Orange is for energy as far as the wrestling team is concerned. The oranges, which members eat be- tween and after matches, must have done the job because Whet- stone's record for the dual meets this season was 5-1. The squad also did Well in tourna- ment competition, finishing second in the city meet, Walnut Ridge In- vitational, and Westerville .Invi- tational, and fifth in the North- side Invitational. Several outstanding individual performances were turned in dur- ing the season. Doug Johnson, jun- ior, returning letterman, finished first in his weight class C1273 in all invitationals as Well as the city meet, ending the season with a record of 21-1. Dick Morrison, senior, C1453 placed first in the city meet as well as Walnut Ridge Invitational. Both Doug and Dick made it through the sectional to the district meet. Others who placed in the city meet were Steve Wengerf133J fourth, Jeff HillC154J second, and Greg WrightCHvy.J second. The season started with a burst of enthusiasm on the part of both the team and the student body. Many home meets had larger crowds than ever before, and even the tournaments were sparked by some active school support. Kneeling: G. Stravelakis, J. Kasmersky, D. Johnson, D. Eller, S. Wenger, J. Hersey, D. Morrison J Hill D Hatchett T Burke G Wright, Mr. Ault. Standing: D. Kasto, T. Henderson, W. Gleim, A. Kadlec, P. Stutz, P. Mingler J Tanner L Hoskmson H Hind man, M. Collins, K. Rinehart, D. Barnes, D. Sears, T. Egelhoff. Swimmers Race To Better-than-ever Season This year's swimming team , having a better-than-ever season, broke nearly all school records, and ended with an overall record of 9-2. A good beginning to the season was placing fifth in the Denison relays. As the season progressed, the record of three years standing in 100-yd. butterfly was broken by Barry Armitage. Charlie Duna- way, a newcomer, lowered the 100 yard backstroke time to 1:01. Besides individual records, this season was the first time Whet- stone beat Bexley and Worthington and finally surpassed Academy at the district. The team put a sting- ing record on Arlington's board by defeating them in 200-yard relay, setting a new pool record. The Braves secured third place in the Central Ohio Swim League. I I ' I I The season ended with a victorious second place in district. Swim Team-Row 1: D. Rabold, R. Daniell, C. Hill, S. Metzmaier, D. Ruhwedel, S. Davis, R. Robbins, S. Hill, J. Zook, C. Yarrington, D. Morgan. Row 2: Mr. Thomas, K. Schmitt, M. Manley, P. McClellan, S. Engle, M. Wiess, P. Andrus, J. Corotis, J. Pratt, B. Sayre, Mr. Eber- ly. Row 3: D. Inskeep, D. Schlegel, J. Robb, K. Koehl, B. Armitage, C. Dunaway, B. James, J. Schumaker, D. Kullbergg R. Beatty, T. Elliot, S. Russell, managers. - 1. x-, 5, , ge... ' '.X x M ' A 45.2 wg, we I Amphibious Whetstone student hits water at start of the race. A-. H ez wif'-5 -J :VQ K-in., Mark Blake strokes through 100 yard butterfly. 1 i ,.l 'Zi 233 1 .Ke 1 . ., gi' 94 are , 'ii ' 2 Ken Koehl churns through backstroke event. Far left: John Zook strains in 500-yard free- style. Left: Steve Engle completes breast stroke lap of individual medley. fri'-Q :ga-. - .- - fer Q-ggg,54f:f:.:.. . '- -gg V if-n::,. 1e-r'-:fs 1 .. ' ' . A' N ' , is-'t-11. 1-fl, 5: .1.. A QQEI A Water, water everywhere. . - t 0 Samuel Taylor Coleridge ' , . ,- ' 'X Barry Armitage speeds to a finish in 50- yard freestyle. Ric Trout surges forth in the butterfly. 3 ' 3 ,.e , .. . tn.lE,. up - 'Qn ,sf 'A-I. ' W 1 4 k 4 .. - -,..m V ll' f i, fy -' .5 u K, ffm 1: I 'iv ' 4 '55 ' ga n :xx ' rl -. rg' ff 5 fJ',f,f'fj? Jlfrfi An b I H' ' 'fl Ji J up W. , s .L , .4. . 3? fig 4 ,,, -2 Q.-.ge f ' ' x V ' 5333 ' - -Y . ..', ,. xv- . V 1. '- . Q. ' 'G' Tennis team looks forward to second straight city league championship. Q, .. . f . ,T ' 5 ' ing: J. Archer, managerg J. Frost, P. Arnold, F. Drobot, J. Wolfe 9 inns' 7 'i'- ' 1 ' ' 'j 'Wi N 1 J. Bell, Mr. Criswell. 1-ff' J L . li -' lg M' l x RESERVE-Kneeling: B. Sharpe, B. Mc Dowell, M. McLeod, S. McLeod, S. Metz maier. Standing: J. Woof, manager, D. Beck- er, P. Kador, J. Porter, J. Wheaton, Mr Towers. il' w.wLwwm mimi. 5, , sp. , it 7 J eff Wolfe returns ball with backhand. ' 'L - 1-T '-f Having practiced all school year at the Buchey Clndoorj Tennis Club on the Ohio State Fairgrounds, Whetstone's tennis team is ready to defend its city league title. All but two of last year's title Winners will play again this season. The team's goal is to be runner- up to Arlington in the district. VARSITY-Kneeling: D. Jip- ping, C. McNett, J. Tracy, T. Nowe, J. Cook, B. Sayre. Stand- 1. 1' it , N, .m,t,,.K..f ,-as J 5 'f -Lee, , elf. was .if-T Q. 1 7 'if H'Qeif?iQ. 7 ? 5 3 4. ,f I W k 5 6 li E Coach Criswell poses with John Tracyileftb and Tom Nowe, first doubles players. Frank Drobot first singles player smashes return H Q' ef In foreground Phil Arnold practices volley drill. In background John Tracy hits from backcourt. Doubles team Tom Nowe and John Tracy warm up. Q -J-ai QQQRPQ 5531, A' lj- ' I. F N ,. N . - qc , y . it V '11 . P, .. 'rj I , ' -l .. ya p 5. ff. , f ,vw A .5 'i' f V LQQV : ...N Y l T ' ff r A 1.1 T - .1 , Q .- .M . .. 3 ' my . . . ':b?5Tf7fi-. ' Su-1. 'fyrliip .Q ' , - ss'-515. ' V '.-251577. ' '- . 'fix-..2.,.w - fmfkilfl Jon Frost displays questionable form but determination. V A 1 X' M 1 Q X E . 'X X15 M . J .-mga... Golf season had not begun to swing at yearbook deadline. The only returning senior is Ron Osh- ner, pictured above, who with teammates under Coach Hayes will be going for fourth consecutive city championship. Baseball Team holds gym practice in pre-season This seasonis baseball team is a young one, consisting mostly of juniors and a few seniors. The same team that will probably be playing Varsity ball played in the summer league and won 15 straight games. It's a well balanced team, ac- cording to Coach Eckleberry, with good batting and pitching as well as fielding. The team has high hopes of cap- turing the city championship. Jim Shields, catcher, awaits pitch. Dave Eller shows bunt- ing form. Short stop Rich Clouse goes for infield fly. 1. 1 . ...K -1 Starting pitcher George Rutan winds up. Team mugs victoriously. 104 agers. Missing: M. Cramer, D Hammel. VARSITY-Row 1: G. Rutan, B. Jenkins, G. Morin, S. Overturf, K. Kaeser, R. Trout, L. Davis. Row 2: S. Davies, T. Frisby, D. Ross, B. Yorde, J. Jones, B. Pow- ell, B. Hart, J. Shields, S. Peltier. Row 3: S. Scmitter, J. Buchan, R. Tyler, L. Ryder, H. Lynskey, S. Warren, M. Wills. Row 4: Mr. Eckleberry, R. Clouse, D. Eller, J. Davies, S. Mirise, Mr. Murphy. Row 5: D. Velsy, M. Schmitt, D. Horn, T. Evans, C. Schoyer, Man- My respiration and inspiration, the beating of my heart, the passing of blood and air through my lungs. . . The track team this year is a Well-balanced team, especially strong in running events, with a little Work left to do in the field events. The team consists of many re- turning lettermen as well as some promising sophomores and juniors. This should be an outstanding season for the relay teams, which show much promise. The team has had the best in- door season ever and has hopes of taking the city and possibly prog- ressing even further. - . an: , TTY' l,.al!,p-1'- 5' Sh ' - .c .1 -'rg-5. . is- Track Team-Row 1: D. Colburn, J. Keir, J. Schmidt, A. Clifford, S. Mott, D. Heisel, P. Meyer, G. Kopp, N. Kirby, G. Wright, S. Bybee, C. Strauss, J. Huber. Row 2: R. Rogers, R. Gibson, B. Kaplan, D. Wall, B. Ismon, D. Schumaker, R. Pfeiffer, P. Sattler, D. Morrison, N. Alexander, S. Wood, F. Saf- ranek, B. Kinsey, S. Engle, Mr. Beck. Row 3: D. Fertig, J. Magers, H. Hindman, D. Cribb, P. Stutz, P. Mingler, J. Williams, D. Morgan, D. Lamp, D. Inskeep, B. Naylor, Managers C. Mor- gan, T. Graham, Mr. Wolfe. Row 41 D. Habchett, T. Hill, L. Mulberry, V. Sams, B. Wolfe, T. Strasser, M. Wil- liams, S. Haslup, D. Jen- kins, R. Quam, P. Hiller, M. Sells, W. Augensteing S. Graham, manager. Walt Whitman f- '1'!'Y-lla ' ' Ah --15. .YQ . - ' .Wea v . ...QE 'Ms - M :sf 5 15. Q ' ,f s D p , . , -13 4,-.AJ .. - ' ' -E' if 1 251. , Prior to the first meet and last . J yearbook deadline, the track I 1fQj:',ji team Worked out in both adverse 1,55 and favorable weather condi- tions. -' 24... - an .A 34 -if 1 Q A- G 'WV 105 To be is wonderful, but how, moving it is 1 to feel oneself becoming. A young turtle becomes an old turtle A sandlot quarterback transmutes into a reserve athlete A sexless ninth grader molts into a sophomore girl And all converge in the ruins of Rome, The turtle grows older The athlete coins a poem The girl spills acid on her dress And all in silence groom their reflections What did isjhe say Areyoua12ora3? 'I need a comb! 'Tm mouthing the Words. and hairily eye one another. Ei ' ??9 'YOU ARE DEVELOPING ALONG UNFAVORABLE LINES my lungs are burning WHAT no hall pass? The beauty of old man L Pythagorus blows my poisoned mind, I feel pretty fhandsomej but I fear ' Qsjhe did not see me for the green fusion, Openmouthed I look and wait to pierce the perforated paper of myself Sz thee. We are not sick Wet are not dying We are becoming! Emile-Antoine Bourdelle HOMEROOM 100 - Front Row: S. Al- len, V. Adams, C. Albrin-k. Row 2: R. Barn- um, J. Angel, B.'Basile. Row 3: E. Barton, J. Ball, M. Arensbak. Row 4: M. Avant, B. Balogh, B. Backus. Row 5: B. Armitage, R. Alexander, D. Barnes. Row 6: E. Arnold, C. Allen, D. Becker. Row 7: N. Alexander, M. Baumann, D. Baer. Row 8: J. Bartett, T. Bartha, R. Acton, J. Barnett. HOMEROOM 101 - Front Row: L. Boyce, B. Bennett, B. Britton. Row 2: V. Brooks, B. Bell, P. Betz. Row 3: S. Boghossian, M. S. Blocher, M. Brasher. Row 4: D. Beem, D. Betts, S. Bowler. Row 5: V. Belville, B. Bol- lard, L.'Brown. Row 6: D. Brooks, M. Brad- ford, J. Bell. Row 7: V. Brotton, B. Brown, B. Bradbury. Row 8: R. Blume, C. Bendixen. Row 9: T. Brockmeyer, T. Brockmeyer, T. Beman. .. HOMEROOM 102 - Front Row: S. Barn- hart, L. Blees, S. Belknap. Row 2: S. Bel- ville, N. Archey, C. Arnold. Row 3: K. Am- berg, K. Baumann, M. Birkhead. Row 4: C. Arnold, J. Beem, J. Adair, K. Beskow. Row 5: N. Benedetti, D. Bennett, J. Berry, K. Bennett. Row 6: S. Barbour, R. Barnett, D. Beyer, M. Bell. Row 7: W. Augenstein, D. Alexander, B. Arledge, B. Ashcraft. Row 8: C. Beardsley, K. Amstutz, P. Benedetti. Row 9: R. Baer, S. Adams, C. Blasutta, L. Beaver. HOMEROOM 103 - Front Row: B. Casmo, B. Botkins, B. Bro. Row 2: S. Blume, M. Burrows, L. Brown. Row 3: K. Burdette, F. Casper, D. Bucklew. Row 4: M. Bucklew, D. Burger, J. Boling, D. Bruck. Row 5: P. Carr, S. Campbell, M. Bonsecour. Row 6: P. Bolon, P. Chervank, B.-Callahan, J. Brody. Row 7: L. Callabretta, W. Cheyney, M. Buchart, J. Buchan. Row 8: J. Casey, G. Chess, B. Chan, M. Bybee. Row 9: G. Blue- stone, R. Bluff, G. Boulware, D. Casto, S. Bruny. HOMEROOM 105 - Front Row: R. Dan- iell, G. Dickerson, D. Cribb. Row 2: M. Dar- by, M. Crawford, B. Cordell. Row 3: C. de- Vries, V. Diamond, D. De Roberts. Row 4: H. Davis, J. Dennis, C. Dame. Row 5: L. Crosby, C. Czap, J. Cooke, J. Chicco. Row 6: M..Cline, A. Cooke, M. Cramer, K. Da- vies. Row 7: J. Deutshie, A. Cooke, J. Davis. Row 8: G. Clark, C. Daenhke, K. Daenhke, M. Clements. Row 9: M. Cramer, S. Coch- ran, P. Demos, J. Corbett. HOMEROOM 113 - Row 1: M. Carpenter, S. Cheeseman,C. Carr, M. Clark, L. Coen, C. Bybee, K. Cleland. Row 2: W. Clark, K. Carter, K. Bryant, K. Bull, D. Brundage, J. Cook, S. Burgstrom. Row 3: M. Clutter, T. Burke, S. Cooke, G. Carroll, R. Cline, J. Clifford, R.. Clouse, J. Conklin. Row 4: E. Corbett, S. Coffman, J. Chilcott, T. Byg, B. Collburn, G. Bush, R. Casmo, B. Collins. HOMEROOM 121 - Row 1: S. Frith, J. Ful- ton, P. Draudt, K. Fisher, D. Dodge, L. Doerfler. Row 2: S. Easter, M. Fregonas, M. Dudding, N. Edgar, E. Egger, J. Dillon, D. Edgington, S. Dover. Row 3: D. Diller, J. Franklin, D. Ervin, T. Egelhoff, W. Farris, D. Eierman, P. Doland, J. Frederick. Row 4: C. Dixon, P. Flocken, D. Forquer, L. Dun- can, J. Downerd, D. Fisher, F. Ebert, J. Eagle, J. Fair. HOMEROOM 122 - Row 1: S. Haslup, C. Hatch, W. Gleim, S. Graham, M. Grigsby. Row 2: R. Hartig, K. Harlan, K. Garrison, B. Gibson, K. Gibson, C. Hardie, K. Harte, D. Harkness, J. Harper. Row 3: J. Gorsuch, J. Girard, P. George, E. Haney, P. Grimm, B. Grizzel, K. Hand, S. Hall, N. Geese, D. Hatten, J. Harrel. Row 4: T. Hartman, S. Graham, D. Hammond, T. Harold, S. Gil- pin, M. Haines, S. Harvey, D. Grau, H. Graves, M. Harper, K. Gilbert. HOMEROOM 123 - Row 1: C. Dame, B. Ellwood, L. Davis, J. Donley, M. DeVine. Row 2: K. Drobot, C. Dernos, J. Davis, T. Docherty, C. DeRoberts, C. Davis, P. Das- cenzo, L. Davis, P. Davis. Row 3: C. Dailey, E. Donner, J. Drake, B. Cordell, J. Docher- ty, N. Ely, K. Dunham, D. Corbin, E. Ed- wards, J. Davis, D. Davis. Row 4: S. Davies, D. Eller, J. Davies, F. Drobot, C. Dunaway, J. Croft, S. Dickerson, D. Elzey. HOMEROOM 124 - Row 1: P. Fotis, K. Ganley, J. Fenholt, T. Frisby, D. Grey, B. Eshleman. Row 2: D. Fitch, J. Good, S. Gill- house, K. Fortney, T. Glass, S. Gilroy, C. Green, J. Fasone, D. Francis. Row 3: B. Endter, B. Flath, C. Francis, B. Friedlander, S. Greene, T. Evans, R. Findlay, M. Green- wood. Row 4: L. Gay, D. Fertl, R. Gibson, B. Greenlee, R. Grau, A. Falk, D. Frank. HOMEROOM 125 -- Row 1: R. Haag, D Hanhilammi, C. Hill, J. Hersey, M. Grom- mersch, E. Hillsman. Row 2: K. Hale, L Hobart, J. Harper, S. Hall, G. Herrick, S Heffner, K. Grimstad, C. Hart. Row 3: S Grubb, S. Hinson, G. Haslup, C. Harte, N. Heck, J. Haueisen, J. Henry, D. Hoppe. Row 4: B. Hawley, B. Hightshoe, D. Hann H. Hindman, M. Hiller, B. Hort, P. Hem: ming, S. Henke. HOMEROOM 130 - Row 1: J. Kellam, J. Kauderer, D. Johnston, D. Hutchison, A. Kadlec, M. Justus. Row 2: J. Hunsinger, M. Hoppe, D. Klein, S. King, A. Jordan, B. Johnson, C. Hunt, C. Klinksick. Row 3: K. Kerchner, N. Hutson, B. Knight, D. Kelley, B. Humphrey, B. Kearns, P. Kador, M. Kinzelman. Row 4:'B. Jados, T. Johnson, J. Huber, B.oKirk, B. Jones, B. Kaplan, S. Hu- cek, J. Kesler. HOMEROOM 150 - 1 - Row 11A. Lasley, J. Porter, D. Farrell, R. Brantner, D. Horn. Row 2: T. Hinton, P. Dixon, V. Nan, J. Nordstrom, C. Pearson, J. Gallogly, B. Hat- field, K. Groff. Row 3: D. Byers, B. Moore, J. Koezera, S. Melton, J. Smeck, B. Bur- goon, D. Garner, G. McElwee. Row 4: D. Weed, D. Poulton, D. Bachman, G. Gunder- man, D. Glandon, J. Harrison, D. Hammel, P. McClellan. 0 . 1. HOMEROOM 150 - 2 - Row 1: B. Hat- field, C. Hindman, D. Franck, C. Wiles, S. Cooperrider, J.Fosnaught, D. Cahill. Row 2: B. Naylor, D. Wall, R. Jones, K. Woodyard, L. Zartman, B. Teaford, G. Weber. Row 3: D. Connin, C. Howard, D. Inskeep, D. Lamp S. Engel, C. Brown, B. Donahue. N HOMEROOM 158 - Front Row: P. Heffner, J. Hults, M. Herrema. Row 2: J. Hewlett, L. Herrel, M. Hillon. Row 3: S. Hennington, D. Hill, B. Inhat. Row 4: S. Hindman, M. Hockinberry, S. Heckman. Row 5: P. Hughes, C. Heisel, D. Hendrix. Row 6: B. Hoffman, P. Homeyer, K. Hilson, C. Hill. Row 7:fM. Hendricks, P. Higgins, D. Hughes. Row 8: G. Hill, B. Hughes, B. Hiller. Row 9: J. Hill, R.'Daniell, B. Holtz, B. Hill. Row 10: C. Horton, P. Hoffman, B. Henson. Row 11: C. Daehnke, G. Clark, D. Hulse. 0 HOMEROOM 202 - Row 1: C. Jones, E. Keefe, S. Kanamann, K. Kohli, D. Kieper, L. Jones, M. Korn, D. Kruckeburg. Row 2 C. Kaiser, B. Jones, S. Johnson, P. Keller, C Jordan, N. Kachadoorian, P. Janson, J. Kas- mersky. Row 3: J. Krafft, C: Kloman, B Kelley, D. Jenkins, R. Jones, B. Kaemmerer, T. Kellett. Row 4: J. Lambert, L. Imboden, A. Kerr, R. Kocheran, M. Kuhn, D. Koeh- ler, T. Kossmann, M. Kidwell, B. James. HOMEROOM 203'- Rowlz B. MacCal1um C. Mayer, M. L. Ley, B. McCall, K. Long- shore, C. Maykuth, S. Mader, C. Makey Row 2: B. Lynch, C. Limes, C. May, C Mann, D. Matthaes, L. Lampson, J.JLaugh- lin, J. Longest. Row 3: S. Macpherson, M Leonard, H. Lynskey, P. Leidheiser, J. Ma- jor, J. Marshall, J. Leatherberry. I if 1 'A -WN xlsh .Q HOMEROOM 204 - Row 1: B. Lehman, B. Kutz, L. Long, D. Liebert, K. Kohn, M. Marshall, M. Lentz. Row 2: D. Lamp, N. McBride, M. Mall, R. Loer, S. Maxwell, M. Maxwell, J. Magers, I. Lipovsky. Row 3: B. Larkin, D. Lipp, M. Margarace, T. Massar, M. Kontras, K. Maddex, N. MacBlane. Row 4: T. Lampson, S. May, W. Marshall, J. Lytle, S. Latham, K. Koehl, M. Marshall, M. Manley. HOMEROOM 205 - Row 1: B. McCandless, P. McMahan, C. Norman, C. Monnett, C. Monroe, P. Moore, K. Mueller, S. Natoli, D. Moseley. Row 2: C. Melton, M. Myers, H. Mouser, S. Michel, J. Metzmaier, H. Mc- Grath, B. Miller, J. McFadden. Row 3: S. Mirise, R. Moore, J. McDonald, M. Mc- Leod, M. McLeod, T. Moore, E. McCarthy, D. McGinnis. Row 4: P. Milosevich, A. Mor- ris, L. McFarland, R. Morley, K. McCaw, R. Mulberry, J. Moore, J. McCreary. HOMEROOM 206 - Row 1: W. Reedy, S Penwell, M. L. Paul, M. Prior, D. Pepple L. Orr, N. Pfefferle, J. O'Ryan. Row 2: B Price, P. Peterson, P. Reed, V. Nye, J. Phil- lian, D. Pickering, B. Oates, S. Piersol, K. Peters. Row 3: D. Overturf, D. Peters, S. Perkins, L. Palma, R. Quam, M. Raymond B. Puchstein. Row 4: J. Pratt, S. Redman D. Reed, D. Peters, N. Panzone, W. Reeves D. Nowe. 1 s 1 HOMEROOM 207 - Row 1: J. Merchant, S. Moore, J. McFarland, C. Nettleship, L. McDonald, K. McComb, M. Mereness, B. Nutter, M. Nathanson. Row 2: P. Meeker, B. Morse, N. Moore, C. McClintock, M. Mc- Fadden, S. Neff, K. Mitchell, B. Miller, T. McCabe. Row 3: T. McCarthy, M. McMan- is, P. McFadden, E. Micks, D. Opatich, J. Middlesworth, G. Nichols, B. McDonald J. McClain. Row 4: D. Oldham, G. Miller, R. McCoy, D. Morgan, B. Moore, M. Oden- wald, C. Morgan, S. Morgan. HOMEROOM 211 - Row 1: K. Robbins, E. Richey, B. Rohde, S. Saunders, C. Rush, T. Schieve, L. Rittenhouse. Row 2: J. Rieffen- berger, L. Riley, T. Rossetter, C. Sandburg, D. Robinette, P. Rooney, J. Porter, B. Sayre. Row 3: M. Sarris, V. Sams, R. Rob- bins, L. Ryder, B. Rose, B. Sanner, E. Schaf- er, J. Russell. Row 4: R. Rudinger, M. Rind- fleisch, S. Russell, D. Roush, D. Ross, B. Saup, M. Ringer, R. Roberts. HOMEROOM 213 - Row 1: P. Overholt, E. Pennell, S. Pontious, B. Pierce, S. Richard- son. Row 2: M. Peters, J. Penwell, K. Rhein- frank, N. Pierce, J. Petry, D. Ramage, K. Pearson, M. Prichett, J. Pitcher. Row 3: L. Richardson, S. Peltier, B. Ray, H. Rickman, B. Powell, J. Reeve, M. Pattin, L. Pearson. Row 4: W. Pratt, F. Paddock, R. Ramsey, F. Phillips, G. Parker, D. Perdue, J. Puchstein, D. Pifer, K. Peterjohn. HM: en f we F .5 J .. f M. .. .aa 32545. fi ,im 'QQ' 5 YES rv . . ' li 1. W 1 11 HH , . n H.. -3' .,,.,,,. -.B7 in. 5... ,. HOMEROOM 214: - Row 1: D. Shaw, D. Schilling, N. Rogers, J. Shannon, G. Rus- sell, P. Russell. Row 2: K. Schmitt, B. Ru- dolph, J. Schwenker, P. Schilling, L. Ro- berts, L. Sacks, J. Rutan, C. Rucker, P. Sel- by, S. Shaw. Row 3: M. Showalter, M. Rucke er, M. Sharpe, D. Ruhwedel, T. Ries, R. Rucker, S. Roudabush, C. Scott, B. Sharp. Row 4: F. Safrank, P. Riggs, K. Rinehart, D. Sears, J. Shields, R. Rogers, J. Shumak- er, J. Shaffer, J. Robb, J. Roumeliote. HOMEROOM 215 - Row 1: P. Ustick, P Smith, L. Taylor, M. Summerford, P. Trox- el, R. Tigner, P. Spence. Row 2: G. Swider J. Smith, B. Tanner, D. Thurston, N. Tay- lor, C. Toronto, S. Stapleton, G. Stravelakis Row 3: M. Spahr, D. Smith, V. Simon, M Stansbery, H. Sigler, T. Staley, P. Stutz Row 4: R. Sw1nehart,R.Tavenner, K. Stouf- fer, J. Tanner, M. Valentine, J. Tate, J Simmons, B. Slatter, T. Thoma, M. Tome- sek. HOMEROOM 216 - Row 1: T. Smith, B. Sillick, A. Shipley, P. Sellers, V. Simons, L. Smith. Row 2: K. Siegwald, K. Shindle, S. Secrest, H. Schmidt, C. Sneed, J. Sinzinger, C. Schoyer. Row 3: C. Shaw, D. Scholl, P. Scott, P. Shearer, J. Shober, D. Shipley, R. Sells, D. Smith. Row 4: M. Schmitt, J. Si- mon, J. Scott, S. Schmitter, S. Scott, W. Scholer, S. Serif, T. Skeele, S. Shrewsbury. HOMEROOM 217 - Row 1: K. Verne, S. Waslohn, N. Wiesert, R. Wolfe, C. West, G. Withrow, K. Willard. Row 2: M. Wiess, C. Weiss, C. Wine, K. Wernecke, R. Vehslage, J. Wylie, J. Zientek. Row 3: P. Weber, R. White, J. Yoder, C. Walz, K. Willardson, D. Willis, R. White. Row 4: J. Wilder, J. Woof, J. Wilson, L. Veach, J. Williams, P. Woehle S. Wood, D. Williams, G. Wheaton. HOMEROOM 218 - Row 1: H. Suarez, D. Trout, K. Walker, C. Thompson, N. Sprague, P. Thomas, M. Tigner, S. Voris, B. Snyder. Row 2: D. Souders, D. Thompson, C. Vol- kema, F. Steele, D. Teterick, M. Strauss, P. Spence, S. Stuckey. Row 3: R. Steiger, D. Traphagan, R. Tyler, J. Thomas, J. Spitz, P. Stein, K. Theiss, L. Tevain. Row 4: T. Strasser, D. Velzy, J. Spencer, S. Speelman, G. Trout, D. Waldo, S. Syfert, A. Stilwell, H. Summerson, S. Stromsta. HOMEROOM 220 - Row 1: L. Young, C. Webbe, S. Wheeler, B. Willis, S. Wenger, D. White, M. Watson. Row 2: L. Westerviller, J. Williams, K. Zimmerman, E. Whitsel, K. Williams, J. Whitcraft, P. Yasko, J. Zook. Row 3: N. Williams, S. Westerviller, J. Wei- sent, G. Williard, S. Ward, R. Wassmuth, D. Wolfe, R. Wilson. Row 4: J. West, S. Warren, J. Zientek, B. Weber, M. Wills, B. Wolfe, B. Yorde, M. Williams. Merry have we met, and merry have we beeng, Merry let us part, and merry meet again, With out merry sing-song, happy, gay, and free, With a merry ding-dong, happy let as be! Seniors: the junior's envy, the big guys, the oldies, the almost gone, mentally if not physically. This is the celebration of twelve years' labor. Now We rule. We lead in spirit, in privileges, and in status. We are to be deliriously carefree and un- troubled. It is never so. We have the responsibility of planning for the future, of setting a good ex- ample for the underclassmen, and of inspecting ourselves. One foot steps in the adult sphere of college, business, or matrirnony, while the other rests in the de- manding world of a high school stu- dent. The balance is a difficult one to maintain and many upsets occur. It is up to us to right ourselves, a responsibility we bewail and pro- tect. So we hustle and bustle saying I'll see you and It's been great in the same breath, all the while glancing forward and then back till We are dizzy. It's a year to be experienced and lived to the hilt, because were will never be another quite lik t. l w r ' ' ., xi, 1, . .. J Old English Rhyme Upper left: Impartial is the word for Nate Fuller during senior class elections. Above: Senior class officers, top to bottom-Bud Jenkins, presidentg Tom Elliot, vice-presi- dent: Sharon Brarfhon, secretary: and Mark Wiess, treasurer. Bob Adair Skip Adams Valerie Aleshire Brenda Alexander James Allen Karen Allenbach Jim Amick Judy Ammerman Phil Andrus Judith Angel Patti Applegate John Archer Christine Arnold John Arnold Philip Arnold Linda Ater ff- '3- ' .V ..,.asrA if - 11 i S A little nonsense now and then Is relished by the wisest men. Anonymous date. Mr. Ault and Mr. Kinney escort Mrs. Stephenson, Senior Sweetheart candi- Once each year, Seniors enjoy an evening of insanity at Senior Fun Night. This year with the prose of Mr. Joe Arthur and the smell of mashed potatoes, every- thing remained frivolous and in- nocent throughout the night. Volleyball, student plays, faculty plays, and a mock court with un- salted mashed potatoes as punish- ment tickled the seniors in this once-a-year sweep of madness. Hang it up, friend. Your man- ners are deceiving to your looks. Seniors are great! Marca Cameron bounds for volleyball. 119 Kathy Bahorek Christina Baker Bill Baker Dick Baker Susan Ballantyne Paula Barker Susan Barnes Paul Bartholf l xx Margaret Baum Patty Beall Roger Beatty Chuck Beck David Beck Don Beck Judi Becker Jerry Beekman Judy Beem Gary Belknap John Bell Mary Ann Belyea James Benjamin Brad Bennett Jon Bentz Elaine Betts Mark Blake Brian Bonner Mike Botkins Pat Bradley Sharon Brannon , Dean Brill Marcia Britton Jeff Brooks Chuck Brown I Dianna Brown Janet Brown Karen Brown Sha!-gn Brown Ann Bucklew Sheila BllCk1eW James Buehlel' if Carol Burt Stephen Bybee Hugo Cabrera Cathy Cahill 'sw Mike Callahan Betsy Callender Marca Cameron Tom Carlisle One September morning senior hornerooms housed a sense of unstrained anticipation, a sub- tle excitement in addition to the usual semi-con- fusion. A spotlight made a target of the stage podium, about which hurried Jimmy Crumm, local sports commentator. The preparations resulted in a surprise se- nior assembly in which weightlifter Jim Benja- min, a senior, received the Sullivan Award, an- nually accorded Ohio's most outstanding athlete. The above picture shows James Lorirner, presi- dent of the Central Ohio AAU fAmateur Ath- letic Unionl, presenting the award. Below, Jim displays the ability which earned him the 1966 National Junior Weightlifting Championship. ABOVE Whetstone's top ten candidates for homecoming queen sit before their escorts. The couples, left to right, are Linda Zartrnan and Gerg Wright, Marcy Wickliff and Bart Merkle, Vicki Voss and Phil Andrus, Janet Robbins and Steve Davis, Lynn Penwell and BELOW: The top five candidates for home- coming queen axe, left to right, Lynn Penwell, gy, 'ii Y-V ' ' 7' 3 5 Buddy Jenkins, Cathy Pasco and Randy Pfeiffer, Hedda Meeker and Gary Morin, Teri Edgar and Rick Trout, Marca Cameron and Jeff Davies, and Sharon Brannon and Ned Kirby. Teri Edgar, Cathy Pasco, Janet Robbins, and Linda Zartman. lu, I ' if. , 'A v 'QE Vi' 1 W' M. 1 U. I Msg, D. l x Linda Case Cathie Casey Ann Cashman Sue Cashman Ken Cashner Jim Cassady Jeff Cesner Pam Chervank Jeff Christopher Judy Christopher Mike Ciminello Alan Clifford Nora Cochrun Barbara Coffman Mike Collins Ginger Colvin Tom Converse Dave Cook Gary Cook Marcie Cook X 1 I celebrate myselji and sing myselji And what I assume you shall assume For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you. Walt Whitman Jim C01'bett Craig Corbin Lois Corcoran Jerry Cotter-ill Cheryl COX Glenda Crandell Thomas Cribb Jill Crites F1-ed D'And1-ea Sharon Daubert Jeff Davies Steve Davis E X X if w Q, 1 i ,t H .. . Susie Davis Thomas Daye Greg De Chant Rita De Nune Carol Diamond Audrey Dickinson Gary Dimenna Jeanene Dixon ff .M L Judy Doerfler Phil Donner Kathy Dom Beverly Dorsey 'J Dennis Douglas Nancy Douglas Susan Dunn John Durst my T Robert Eagle Rusty Echelbarger Teri Edgar Tom Elliot Karin Engel Nancy Eshelman Carolyn Essner Dennis Fair r Bob Fannin John Farley Don Farmer David Fatt Steven Fetters Bob Fogle Noreen Forrester Lynn Fosnaught Gary Foti Cindy Frank Linda Franklin Larry Frey Jonathan Frost ng F John Fuleky Bonnie Fuller Jonathan Fuller mn Jean Fulton John Fulton Georgia Gardner Christy Garrison Larry Garrison Jeanne Gawne Pam Gentzel Nancy Gilroy SP . Kathy Godlove Christopher Grau Marsha Grether Bob Grossman iv'-v ' Ka,-en Haas Linda Hager Mike Haines Thomas Hambleton Ill 'umm pf.,.m Y FORWARD A.u.2..f2 WR . E!!E '7f , LG dn ..n.- L.,-, I- 1,1 vu ,-,-, UNIVHIBIT Y U! 'JA .. --. 'L INK, I O Linda Hammock Martha Hann Linda Harlan Louise Harmon James Harper Judy Harris Dawn Hartman Constance Harvey Dave Hatfrhett Rick Heath William Hecker D Janice Heise Dave Heisel Tom Henderson -QQ 16 Betsy Herrema Margaret Hess Dave Hicks Joann Hiehle Jeff Hill Judy Hill Steve Hill Tom Hilliard Mike Hite if Nile.: l 1 Leon Hoch ' Lewis Hoch Janis Hoehne Greg Hoffman V Kathy Holdren Danny Hooks Larry Hoskinson Angela Howison o if Y Bill Hubba-rd Jon Huber Tom Hummel Susan Hutchison Becki Igo Carol Ish Bill Ismon Diane Jauchius V John Jarvis Bud Jenkins Mary K. Jewell Dan Johnson Ed Johnson Lynne Johnson Penny Johnson Bob Johnson Janet Jones Kay Jones Joan Joyce Ken Kaeser Bob Kane Jane Kay John Keir Judi Kellet Scott Kems Patricia Kilkenny Karen Kimmel Ned Kirby Thomas Kisling Mike Knode Marylu Koch Gary Kopp Kathy Kovacs Dave Kullberg Melissa Lamp Linda Lavender Barbara Lessler Susan Limes Julie Litzinger Terry Lively Lebby Little Kathy Long Caren Longo Sally Lucas Janet Lutz Luana MacCal1um Chuck Mader Glenna Major Robert Manley John Mann Stephen Marriott Luisa Marsili Dick McBride Sherry McCoy L. Terry McMichael Michael Mechlin Steve McCaw Mike McComb Paul McKe1vey Robert McLaughlin Thomas McMichael Craig McNett Hedda Meeker Susan Melaragno Bart Merkle Bev Meyer Pat Meyer Margi Monroe Terry Moore Annette Morgan Michael Moriarty Gary Morin Will Morris Dick Morrison Avalee Moseley Stephen Mott wx if John Mount Carl Mulberry Carol Murdock Marsha Myers are Sherry N atoli Kathryn Nordstrom Tom Nowe Marilyn Oakley Ron Ohsner in Debbie Parker Ellen Parker Lise Near Nancy Needham Mike Nolan Linda Nuzum Nancy Nye Barbara Opatich Scott Overturf Cathy Pasco Lynne Penwell Linda Pepple Sharon Perry Dean.Peterseim Randy Pfeiffer J 01111 Phillips Pamela Phillips ff!! al Carolyn Pickering Dannie Pierce John Pierce Linda Pierce Sheila Pletz Rusty Powell Melanie Pratt Richard Price Pi Bethiah Prior Linda Prushing xiii' Jann Pugh Richard Puppel Mark Purslow Mandy Putnam 1 Richard Rabold Steve Rainey Dan Ramage Melanie Ravely Tina Ray Murray Reed Donna Reeves Steve Rennick Joyce Reynolds Football players and cheerleader flank Band Sweetheart Linda Taylor at a school-time par ty held by the football team for the marching band. From left to right are Rusty Powell John Keir, Chris Grau, Linda, Greg Wright, Bud Jenkins, and Carol Murdock. il 4' Margaret Rice John Richardson Janet Robbins Chris Robinson is Nzznv- Dave Roberts Jerri Rodenbeck Nia T239 Pam Rogers Patty Ronde Mike Rose George Rutan Karin Sceva John Schmidt Nancy Rowland Chris Rubaxt Julie Sagstetter Paul Sattler Cathy Schieve Dave Schlegel ww W , L r L 1 lag.- L Donn Schumaker Cathryn Schuster Rick Sellers Candy Sharp Melissa Sharpe Marilyfl Shim!! 1 S Jim Sillick Dennis Simpson Cindy Smith Jeff Smith , L Nancy Smith Sheri Smith Susan Smith Kristine Snyder Spiros Spantithos Marlene Squire Sheri Stevenson Christopher Strauss if BQ, Cathe Swinehart Linda Taylor Mary Taylor Wesley Taylor Robert Tevlin Pam Thomas Don Torrenti John Tracey Rick Trout Robert Trueblood James Turner Madeline Twigg Sally Van Meter Vicki Voss Peggy Wada Wafllel' Wada John Walker Ann Weimer -4-Q, if 11, Nancy Weingarth Steve Wenger f if W Qq1.,.,a., Tom Wemecke x Marcy Wickliff Susan Whitsel Vickey Widney Mark Wies Bill Willardson Larry Williams Tim Williams Penny Wills Leslee Wilson Jeff Wolfe Greg Wright Toni Wright Charles Yarrington Cherie Young Linda Zaxtman Senior Index Adair, Bob: 32,313,117 Marching Band 1,2,33 Orchestra 1,2,33 Concert Band 1,2,3 Adams, Richard E.: 117 Tyroa Club 33 Jr. Achievement 3 Aleshire, Valerie: 43,73,117 Student Council 2,33 Y-Teens 1,23 FTA 33 GAA 1, Sgt.-at-arms 2, V. Pres. 33 La- tin Club 13 SCOUT Staff 33 Office Staff 13 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Gym Monitor 2,3 Alexander, Brenda Kay: 29,60,117 Y-Teens 1,23 FTA 33 GAA 1,2,33 AFH 33 Latin Club 13 J .R. Cross 33 Library Staff, Pres. 33 Coordinators Staff 1,21 Sr. Choir 2,33 Girls Ensemble 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Block W 1,2,33 Safety Council 33 Nation- al Honor Society 3 Allen, James W.: 32,117 Amateur Radio 23 Orchestra 1,2,33 Safety Council 23 Spanish Club 1 Alleubach, Karen: 29,117 Student Council 13 Y-Teens 1,2,33 AFH 33 FTA 33 Jr. Choir 13 Sr. Choir 33 Girls Ensemble 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 23 Reserve Cheerleader 13 Safety Council 2,3 Amick, James E.: 117 Ammerman, Judy: 29,117 Y-Teens 1,2,33 FTA 1,2,3Q GAA 13 Span- ish Club 1,23 Hall Monitor 33 Sr. Choir 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 23 Safe- ty Council 2,33 J.R. Cross 1, Sec. 2 Andrus, Phil: 29,102,l17,124 FTA 33 Hall Monitor 33 Attendance Staff 1,23 Boys Glee 1,23 Sr. Choir 2,33 Boys Ensemble 33 Varsity W 33 Block W 1,2,33 Swimming 1,2,3Q Gym Monitor 3 Angel, Judith L.: 32,60,117 Y-Teens 1,2,33 GAA 1,2,33 German Club 2,33 Latin Club 13 Cadet Band 13 March- ing Band 2,33 Orchestra 1,2,33 Concert Band 2,33 Safety Council 23 National Honor Society 3 Applegate, Patti: 117 Y-Teens 23 GAA 1,2,33 AFH 1,2, V. Pres. 33 French Club 13 Block W 1,2,33 Gym Monitor 3 Archer, John: 60,117 Marching Band 13 Concert Band 13 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Arnold, Christine: 117 Y-Teens 23 FTA 2,33 German Club 23 Of- fice Staff 33 Library Staff 3 Amold, John: 117 Photography Staff 13 Cross-Country 23 Gym Monitor 3 Arnold, Philip: 102,103,117 Jr. Choir 13 Cross-Country 13 Tennis 1, 2,3 Ater, Linda: 28,117 Y-Teens 1,2,3: AFH 23 Jr. Choir 13 Sr. Choir 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 23 Block W 1,2,3 Bahorek, Kathy: 120 Y-Teens 2,33 FTA 2,33 Spanish Club 2, Pres. 33 Marching Band 1,23 Octava Club 1,23 Concert Band 1,23 Safety Council 2,3 Baker, Christina: 29,77,120 Y-Teens 1,2,33 FTA 1,33 GAA 1,2,33 AFH 33 J.R. Cross 1,2, Pres. 33 SCOUT Staff 23 Jr. Choir 13 Sr. Choir 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 2,33 Block W 1,2,3 Baker, Richard W.: 120 Football 13 Track 13 Wrestling 2 Baker, William Burdette: 93,94,95,12O Hi-Y 33 Dance Band 13 Cross-Country 1, 23 Reserve Basketball 1,23 Varsity Bas- ketball 2,33 Golf 3 Ballantyne, Susan: 60,120 Student Council 13 FTA 33 GAA 1,2,33 AFH 23 Spanish Club 23 Block W 23 Gym Monitor 2,31 Guidance Office Staff' 33 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Barker, Paula: 32,530,120 Y-Teens 1,23 AFH 1,23 Office Staff 33 Ca- det Band lg Marching Band 2,33 Octava Club 2,33 Concert Band 2,33 Block W 1 Barnes, Susan: 61,120 Y-Teens 1,23 FTA 13 GAA 1,2,33 AFH 2, Pres. 33 French Club 33 Block W 2,33 Gym Monitor 3 Bartholf, Paul: 60,120 Hall Monitor 1,2,33 Jr. Achievement 23 National Honor Society 3 Baum, Margaret: 121 Y-Teens 1,23 AFH 2,31 Jr. Achievement 23 Jr. Choir 13 Jr. Girls Glee 1,23 Safety Council 1,2. Beall, Patty: 32,313,121 Y-Teens 13 GAA 1,23 Spanish Club 1,23 Hall Monitor 33 Cadet Band 13 Marching Band 2,33 Orchestra 33Octava Club 1,2, Sgt.-at-arms 33 Concert Band 2,3 Beatty, Roger Dean: 99,121 Hi-Y 1,33 Latin Club 13 Chess Club 13 Cross-Country 13 Swimming 2,3 Beck, Chuck: 121 Hall Monitor 3 Beck, David: 121 Football 1 Beck, Don: 121 Jr. Achievement 1,2,3 Becker, Judith Ann: 27,29,60,82,121 Y-Teens 1,2,33 FTA 33 GAA 1,2,33 Span- ish Club 1,31 Sr. Choir 3: Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 2,33 Varsity Cheerleader 33 Reserve Cheerleader 23 Safety Coun- cil 23 Gym Monitor 23 National Honor Society 3 Beekman, Jerome F.: 32,33,35,60,61,l2l Whynauts 2,33 Hall Monitor 1,2,33 March- ing Band 1,2,33 Orchestra 33 Concert Band 1,2,33 National Honor Society 3 Beem, Judy C.: 121 Y-Teens 1,2,3Q FTA 33 GAA 1,2,33 Span- ish Club 1,2,33 Block W 1,2,33 Safety Council 2,33 Interschool Volleyball 2 Belknap, Gary: 29,121 Boys Glee 23 Jr. Choir 1,23 Sr. Choir 33 Tennis 1,2 Bell, John H.: 44,73,105,121 Student Council 1,33FTA 33 Varsity W 2,31 Block W 13 Football 2,33 Track 1,2,3 Belyea, Mary Ann: 121 Whynauts 2 Benjamin, James: 121,123 FTA 33 Hall Monitor 2,33 Football 1,23 Track 13 Wrestling 1 Bennett, Bradlet B.: 121 Photography Staff 13 Jr. Choir 13 Boys Glee 2 Bentz, Jon: 42,121 LEGEND Staff 33 Photography Staff' 33 Basketball Manager 13 Cross-Country Manager 1 Betts, Elaine: 29,121 Student Council 23 Y-Teens 1,33 Office Staff 1,23 Jesters 23 Jr, Choir 13 Sr. Choir 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Blake, Mark: 60,l00,101,122 Swimming 1,2,33 National Honor Society Bonner, John Brian: 33,215,122 Hi-Y 13 Debate Club 13 Hall Monitor 33 Marching Band 1,2, Pres. 33 Orchestra 2, 33 Concert Band 1,2, Pres. 3 Botkins, Mike: 122 Jr. Choir 1 Bradley, Pat: 29,122 Y-Teens 1,23 FTA 1,23 Art Club 2,3: Jr. Choir 13 Sr. Choir 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Brannon, Sharon Sue: 60,73,116,122,124 Student Council 33 Y-Teens 1,2,33 Traf- fic Court 33 Block W 33 Senior Class Sec. 33 National Honor Society 3 Brill. Dean: 122 Hall Monitor 1, LEGEND staff 2, why. USU'-S 1,2,33 Photography Staff' 3 Britton. Marcia: 60,122 AFH 1,2,33 Latin Club 13 Jr. Choir 23 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 33 National Honor Society 3 Brooks, Jeff: 37,122 FTA 3 Brown, Chuck: 122 BUYS Glee 1,2,3: Jr. Choir 1,2 Brown, Dianna: 122 Y-Teens 33 AFH 13 Nurses' Staff lj Jr. Girls Glee 2 Brown, Janet: 32,33,122 Y-Teens lg GAA 23 Art Club 13 March- ing Band 2,33 Octava Club 2,33 Concert Band 2,3 Brown, Karen: 122 Y-Teens 1,2,33 French Club 23 AFH 2,33 FTA 13 Jr. Girls Glee 1,2 Brown, Sharon: 122 Y'Teens 1,2,33 FTA 13 AFH 2, Treas. 33 French Club 23 Jr. Girls Glee 1,2 Bucklew, Ann: 73,122 Student Council 33 Y-Teens 1,21 AFH 33 Spanish Club 13 Hall Monitor 2 Bucklew, Sheila: 122 Y-Teens 1,23 AFH 2,33 J.R. Cross 1,23 Nurses' Staff 1,23 Hall Monitor 2 Buehler, James: 32,33,34,35,44,60,122 German Club 2, V. Pres. 33 Hall Moni- tor 33 Marching Band 1,2,33 Orchestra 2,31 Concert Band 1,2,33 Dance Band 1, 2, Student Leader 33 Safety Council 33 National Honor Society 3 Burt, Carol: 83,123 GAA 1,2,33 Latin Club 13 Dining Room 13 Block W 1,23 Gym Monitor 2,3 Bybee, Stephen L.: 29,105,123 French Club 23 Jr. Choir 13 Sr. Choir, V.P. 2,33 Boys Ensemble 33 Varsity N 13 Varsity O 23 Block N 13 Track 1,2,33 Transferred from Oceana High School, Pacifica, California, and North High School Cabrera, Hugo Alfredo, Jr.: 123 Cahill, Cathy: 57,123 Y-Teens 1,2,33 AFH 33 Treasury Staff 33 Cadet Band 1 Callahan, Mike: 123 Student Council 1: Jr. Choir 13 Football 1 Callender, Betsy: 123 Y-Teens 13 J.R. Cross 13 Safety Council 2 Cameron, Marca: 29,119,123,124 Y-Teens 1,2,33 FTA 2, Treas. 33 Spanish Club 1,23 Office Staff 2,33 Sr. Choir 33 Girls Ensemble 33 Jr. Girls Glee 13 Sr. Girls Glee 2,33 Block W 2,33 Safety Coun- cil 2 Carlisle, Tom: 29,123 FTA 33 Boys Glee 1,23 Jr. Choir 1: Sr. Choir 2,33 Boys Ensemble 33 Football 13 Safety Council 3 Case, Linda: 83,124 GAA 1,2,33 Spanish Cluh 13 Y-Teens 13 Office Staff'13 Gym Monitor 3 Casey, Cathie: 124 Transferred from Detroit, Michigan I 1 1, rr, Cashman, Ann: 124 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Spanish Club 15 Mr. Dodd's Staff 35 Art Club 1 Cashman, Sue Carole: 80,124 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 Spanish Club 15 Block W 1 1 Cashner, Ken: 125 Cassady, Jim: 125 Cesner, Jeff: 125 Chervank, Pam: 60,125 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 French Club 35 Office Staff 2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Block W 1,25 National Honor Society Christopher, Jeff: 125 Christopher, Judy: 125 Y-Teens 35 AFH 35 Art Club 1,3 Ciminello, Mike: 125 Hi-Y 35 Traffic Court 25Studem Council 25 Reserve Basketball 1 Clifford, Alan: 90,92,l05,125 Cross-Country 2,35 Varsity W 35 Track 35 Boys Glee 1,2,35 Block W 3 Coo1u'un, Nora: 29,721,125 Student Council 1,35 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 Spanish Club 1,25 Coordinator's Staff 35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Girls En- semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Block W 1,35 Safety Council 3 Coffman, Barbara: 125 Collins, Mike: 125 Football 15 Track 15 Gym Monitor 2 Colvin, Ginger: 125 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 FSA 3 Converse, Tom: 60,857,125 Varsity W 35 Football 2,35 Tennis 15 Swimming 1,2,35 Gym Monitor 35 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Cook, David: 32,125 Whynauts 15 Amateur Radio 1,2, V. Pres. 35 Audio-Visual 1,2,35 Jr. Achievement 2,35 Cadet Band 25 Marching Band 25 Concert Band 35 Football 1 Cook, Gary: 125 Hi-Y 35 Attendance 25 Marching Band 1, 25 Concert Band 1,25 Track 3 Cook, Marcia: 29,125 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,25 AFH 2,35 Dining Room Staff 15 Jr. Achievement 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 2,3 Corbett, Jim: 126 Corbin, Craig C.: 126 Tennis 15 Cadet Band 1 Corcoran, Lois: 60,126 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 2,35 Attendance Staff 35 Jr. Achievement 15 Art Club 15 Block W 15 Gym Monitor 35 National Honor So- ciety 3 Cotterill, Jerry: 126 Wrestling 1,25 Boys Glee 1,2,3 Cox, Cheryl: 32,83,126 GAA 1,2,35 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Octava Club 2,35 Concert Band 2,35 Girls Basketball 35 Gym Monitor 3 Crandell, Glenda: 126 Y-Teens 1,35 AFH 35 Gym Monitor 3 Cribb, Thomas: 126 Football 1 Crites, Jill A.: 126 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 35 AFH 2, Sec. 35 French Club 15 Office Staff 15 Block W 2,3 D'Andrea, Freddric Joseph: 126 Gym Monitor 2,35 Track 1,2,35 Football 1,2 Daubert, Sherry: 126 Y-Teens 1,25 GAA 1,2,35 AFH 35 French Club 1: Dining Room Staff 15 Jr. Achieve- ment 15 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Sr. Girls Glee 35 Block W 1,2 'Daviea, Jeffrey William: 79,105,124,126 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Attendance Staff 1,35 Varsity W 15 Football 1,2,35 Track 2,35 Gym Monitor 3 Davis, Steve: 99,101,124,126 FTA 35 Varsity W, Sec. 35 Block W 35 Football 1,25 Track 1,2,35 Swimming Capt. 1,2,35 Gym Monitor 3 Davis, Susie: 23,127 J.R. Cross 25 Art Club 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 2 Daye, Thomas: 29,60,127 Student Council 2,35 Photography Staff 2, V. Pres, 35 Boys Glee 25 Sr. Choir 35 Boys Ensemble 35 National Honor So- ciety 3 DeChant, Greg: 127 Audio-Visual Crew 15 Stage and Sound Crew 1 De Nune, Rita: 127 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 Spanish Club 2,35 Jesters 35 Safety Council 2 De Vine, Jerry: Diamond, Nancy-Carol: 29,60,127 Y-Teens 1,2, Sec. 35 French Club 2,35 Jesters 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Dickinson, Audrey: 127 Y-Teens 1,25 Jr. Choir 1,2 llDiinenna, Gary: 127 Hi-Y 15 Latin Club 1,2 Dixon, Jeanene: 29,813,127 GAA 1,2,35 AFH 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr, Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Girls Basketball 3 Doerfler, Judy: 60,127 Donner, Phil: 127 Dom, Kathy: 29,127 Y-Teens 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Girls Ensemble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 FSA 3 Dorsey, Beverly: 29,32,127 Student Council 15 Y-Teens 15 FTA 1,2,35 French Club 1,25 J.R. Cross 35 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Octava Club 35 Concert Band 2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee I5 Sr. Girls Glee 2 -Douglas, Dennis: 128 Hi-Y 15 Hall Monitor 2,35 Attendance Staff 2,35 Block W 1,25 Football 15 Safety Council 3 Douglas, Nancy: 128 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 Block W 1 Dunn, Susan: 29,73,75,128 Student Council 35 Y-Teens 1,2, Pres. 35 FTA 1,25 Spanish Club 15 Coordinators Staff 1,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Reserve Cheerleader 25 Block W 1,35 Safety Coun- cil 3 Durst, John: 128 Student Council 15 Hi-Y 35 Baseball 1,2 Eagle, Robert: 29,128 Track 15 Boys Ensemble 2,35 Sr. Choir 2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Boys Glee 1 Echelbarger, Rusty: 128 Hi-Y 3 Edgar, Terri: 29,60,72,73,79,82,124,128 Student Council 2, Treas. 35 Y-Teens 1,2, 35 FTA 35 Coordinators Staff 35 Traftic Court 25 Jr. Choir, Pres. 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Varsity Cheerleader 35 Reserve Cheer- leader, Capt. 25 Block W 15 Safety Coun- cil 1,2, Regional Pres. 35 Homecoming Court 35 National Honor Society 3 Elliot, Tom: 37,60,73,99,116,128 Hi-Y 1,2,35 Marching Band 1,25 Orches- tra 25 Concert Band 1,25 Swimming Man- ager 2,35 German Club 2, Pres. 35 Hall Monitor 35 Block W, Sgt.-at-arms, 35 Stu- dent Council 2,35 Senior Class V. Pres.5 National Honor Society 3 Engel, Karin: 60,128 Y-Teens 25 German Club 2, V. Pres. 35 AFH 35 National Honor Society 3 Eshelman, Nancy: 128 Y-Teens 35 J.R. Cross 3 Essner, Carolyn: 128 Y-Teens 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Fair, Dennis: 128 Hi-Y 1,2,35 Latin Club 1,2,35 Science Club 1,25 Cross-Country 15 Basketball 1 H.Fannin, Robert Edward JR.: 123 Transfer from St. Charles Farley, John W.: 73,128 Student Council 35 Cadet Band 35 Boys Glee 2 Farmer, Becky: Student Council 15 Y-Teens 1 1 -Farmer, Don: 128 Boys Glee 35 Cross-Country 1,2 Fatt, David: 128 Track 15 Wrestling 15 Jr. Choir 1 5, Fetters, Steven A.: 129 Hi-Y Basketball 3 Fngle, Robert: 129 Forrester, Noreen: 32,44,46,60,129 Y-Teens 15 GAA 1,25 German Club 1,2,35 Latin Club 15 Marching Band 1,2, Treas. 35 Orchestra 1,2,35 Octava Club 1,2, V. Pres. 35 Concert Band 1,2, Treas. 35 Gym Monitor 25 National Honor Society 3 Fosnaught, Lynn: 32,33,60,129 Y-Teens 25 GAA 1,25 French Club 15 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 2,35 Oc- tava Club 1,2, Treas. 35 Concert Band 1, 2.3: National Honor Society 3 Foti, Gary Joseph: 129 Hall Monitor 3 Fox, Bill: Frank, Cindy: 29,129 Y-Teens 1,25 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 FSA 3 Franklin, Linda: 29,444,129 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Hall Monitor 25 Art Club 2, Sec. 35 Jr. Choir 25 Sr. Choir 35 Girls Ensemble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 2 Frey, Larry: 129 Frost, Jonathan James: 42,60,102,108,129 Hi-Y 1,25 French Club 1,25 LEGEND Staff 2,35 Art Club 1,25 Marching Band 15 Orchestra 25 Concert Band 15 Cross- Country 1,25 Tennis 2,35 National Honor Society 3 Fuleky, John: 129 Hi-Y 15 Boys Glee 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,3 Fuller, Bonnie: 57,129 Office Staff 35 Hall Monitor 25 Treasury Staff 35 Jr. Achievement 2, Sec. 35 CYF 1,3 Fuller, Jonathan: 116,129 German Club 1,2,35 Stage Crew 1,25 Sound Crew 2, Head 35 Jesters 1,2,3 X Fulton, Jean I.: 60,130 FTA 1,2,35 Spanish Club 2,35 Office Staff 35 National Honor Society 3 Fulton, John: 42,76,130 LEGEND Staff 35 Chess Club 35 Photog- raphy 2, Pres. 3 Gardner, Georga: 130 Y-Teens 15 Library Staff 1,25 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Jr. Achievement 3 Garrison, Christina: 130 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 AFH 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Garrison, Larry: 32,47,130 FTA 35 Spanish Club 35 Hall Monitor 2, 35 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 35 Concert Band 1,2,85 Safety Council 3 Gawne, Jeanne: 130 Gentzel, Pam: 130 Gilroy, Nancy Jane: 130 J.R. Cross 35 Transfer from Massapequa High, Long Island, N.Y.5 GAA 1,25 Cho- rus 15 Jesters 2 Godlove, Kathy: 130 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 AFH 2,35 French Club 15 Library Staff 3 Gordon, Sheila: Grau, Christopher R.: 19,41,B1,130.143 Varsity W 15 Football 2,3 Grether, Marsha: 130 Y-Teens 15 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Grossman, Robert Evans: 32,33,35,130 Latin Club 15 Marching Band 1,2,35 Or- chestra 35 Concert Band 1,2,35 Boys Glee 15 Sr. Choir 1,2,35 Boys Ensemble 2 Haas, Karen: 42,60,68,130 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 French Club 15 LEGEND Staff 35 Art Club 1,2,35 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Hager, Linda: 130 German Club 2,35 Coordinatoris Staff 35 Jesters 2,35 Marching Band 1,2,35 Con- cert Band 1,2,3 Haines, Mike: 130 Football 1,25 Orchestra 35 Boys Glee 15 Jr. Choir 25 Sr. Choir 3 Hambleton, Thomas: 130 Hammock, Linda: 131 FTA 1,2,35 French Club 1,25 Jesters 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 1,25 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 1 I-Iann,Martha: 37,60,131 FTA 35 GAA 15 Spanish Club 2, V, Pres. 35 Sound Crew 2,35 Jesters 2, Sec. 35 Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 35 Block W I5 National Honor Society 3 Harlan, Linda: 29,131 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,35 GAA 15 French Club 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Girls En- semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 1 Harmon, Louise: 29,37,44,60,131 Y-Teens 1,25 Student Council 15 FTA 1, 2, Pres. 35 German Club 1, Sec. 25 J.R. Cross 1,2,35 Stage Crew 15 Sound Crew 2, 35 Jesters 1, Historian 2, V. Pres, 35 Sr. Choir 2,35 Girls Ensemble 35 Jr. Girls Glee, Pres. 15 Sr. Girls Glee, Sec. 25 Na' tional Honor Society 3 Harper, James: 60,131 Spanish Club 15 Hall Monitor 35 Nation- al Honor Society 3 Harris, Judy: 131 AFH 25 J.R. Cross 35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W,2 Hartman, Dawn: 131 AFH 35 Transferred from Wayne High School, Dayton, Ohio Harvey, Constance: 131 Y-Teens 1,2,35 AFH 35 SCOUT Staff 35 Art Club 1,2,3 Hatchett, Dave: 98,105,132 Varsity W 25 Wrestling 1,2,3 Heath, Richard: 33,132 Hall Monitor 3: Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Orchestra 2,3: Concert Band 2,3 Hecker, William C.: 32,33,35,60,132 Hall Monitor 35 Marching Band 1,2,3: Orchestra 2,3: Concert Band 1,2, Co- Capt. 3: Dance Band 2,3: Safety Council 35 National Honor Society Heise, Janice: 29,132 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 1,2,3: Jr. Achievement 2, Treas. 35 Jr. Choir 1: Sr. Choir 3: Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Gym Monitor 2,3 Heisel, Dave: 63,105,132 Student Council 1,25 Hi'Y 3: Attendance Staff 2,35 Bookroom Staff 2,3: Varsity W 3: Block W 2,3: Track 1,2,3 Henderson, Tom: 98,132 Hi-Y 1,2: Debate Club 1,2,35 Hall Mon- itor 25 Block W 1: Wrestling 35 Biology Club 1 Herrema, Betsy Ann: 29,150,132 Y-Teens 1,25 Coordinator's Staff 2,35 Jr. Choir 1,2: Sr. Choir 3: Girls Ensemble 3: Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Hess, Margaret Ellen: 32,60,68,132 Guidance Staff 3: Orchestra 1,2,85 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Hicks, Dave: 60,63,73,l32 Student Council 35 Hi-Y 35 Bookroom Staff 35 Basketball 1,2: Safety Council 35 National Honor Society 3 Hiehle, JoAnn: 60,132 Student Council 2: Y-Teens 1,2,3: FTA 2,35 GAA 1,25 French Club 1,25 Office Staff 1,25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Sr. Girls Glee 35 Block W 1,25 National Hon- or Society 3 Hill, James: Art Club 1,2 Hill, Jeff: 60,96,97,98,l32 German Club 1,25 Marching Band 15 Or- chestra 25 Concert Band 15 Varsity W 35 Football 2,35 Track 1: Wrestling 1,2,3 Hill, Judy: 132 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 3: GAA 15 Hall Mon- itor 3: Art Club 2,3 Hill, Steve: 99,133 Swimming 1,2,35 Varsity W 35 Block W 1 Hilliard, Tom: 133 Boys Glee 1: Jr. Choir 1 Hire, Michael: 133 Tran ferred from Watterson Hoch, Leon: 133 Hoch, Lewis B.: 133 Audio-Visual 1,25 Wrestling 1,25 Safety Council 3 Hoehne, Janis: 29,133 J.R. Cross 2: Sr. Choir 3: Sr. Girls Glee 2 Hoffman, Greg: 133 Whynauts 2, Pres. 3 Holdren, Kathryn: 32,33,6'8,133 Student Council 1: Y-Teens 1,2: FTA 1, 2,35 French Club 1,2: J.R. Cross, Sec. 35 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Or- chestra 3: Concert Band 2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Hooks, Daniel J.: 133 Hopkins, Ron: Hoskinson, Larry 92,913,133 Hi-Y 1,3: Cross-Country 3: Track 35 Wrestling 1,2,3 Howison, Angela: 32,133 German Club 2,35 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 2,3: Octava Club 2,35 Concert Band 1,2,3 Hubbard, William R.: 134 Huber, Jon Alan: 29,134 Attendance Staff 25 Boys Glee 1, Pres. 25 Sr. Choir 2,35 Block W 1,35 Football 1: Track 1,2 Nulrlummel, Tom: 134 Hutchison, Susan Louise: 32,60,134 GAA 2,35 French Club 15 Hall Monitor 1,25 Marching Band 2,3: Orchestra 1,2,3: Octava Club 2, Sec. 35 Concert Band 2, Sec. 3: National Honor Society 3 lgo, Becki: 57,134 Y-Teens 1,25 French Club 15 Treasury Staff 2,35 Art Club 1,2,35 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Ish, Carol A.: 26,42,131,134 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 2,35 Latin Club 3: LEGEND Staff 35 Hall Monitor 3: Art Club 2, Treas. 35 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Sr. Girls Glee, Lib. 35 Block W 1,35 Mr. Dodd's Staff 1,25 GAA 1 rlsmon, Bill: 105,134 FTA 35 Attendance Staff 2,35 Dining Room Staff 15 Stage and Sound Crew 25 Jesters 25 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 15 Track 1,2,3 Jauchius, Diane: 134 Y-'Teens 1,25 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2: French Club 1 Jarvis, John: 32,134 Tyros 1,2,3: Chess Club 1,2,35 Cadet Band 1,25 Photography Staff 35 March- ing Band 3: Concert Band 3 Jenkins, Walter W.: 29,31,32,35,60,73,75, 84,87,l02,116,124,134,l43 Student Council 2,35 Traffic Court 25 Orchestra 1,2, Co-Capt. 35 Boys Glee 15 Sr. Choir 1, Lib. 2,35 Boys Ensemble 25 Varsity W 2, Treas. 35 Football 1,2, Co- Capt. 35 Baseball 1, Co-Capt. 2,3: Wres- tling 1,2: Safety Council 1,2,3: Sr. Class Pres.: National Honor Society 3 Jewell, Mary Kathryn: 134 Y-Teens 1,2,3: FTA 1,2, Sec. 35 GAA 2,35 Spanish Club 1,2,3: Hall Monitor 1,25 Office Staff 35 Jesters 1,2, Treas. 35 Jr. Choir 15 Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2: Reserve Cheerleader 25 Block W 1,3 Johnson, Dan: 40,4l,134 Hi-Y 1,3: Debate Club 1, Treas. 2, V. Pres. 35 Hall Monitor 35 Block W 1 Johnson, Edward: 135 J.R. Cross 35 Dining Room Staff 1,2,35 Jr. Achievement 2,35 Jesters 1, Trees. 2, 35 Cadet Band 1,25 Marching Band 3: Concert Band 3: Football Manager 1 Johnson, Lynda: 135 FSA 2, V. Pres. 3 Johnson, Penny Lynn: 57,135 Y-Teens 1,2,3: French Club 25 Treasury Staff 35 Art Club 35 Jr. Choir 1,25 Jr. Girls Glee 25 Sr. Girls Glee 3 'Johnson, Bob: 60,73,79,l35 Student Council 35 Hi-Y 2,3: FTA 35 Safety Council 3 Jones, Janet Lynn: 29,135 Y-Teens 15 GAA 1: French Club 1, Sec. 2: Jr. Choir 1: Sr. Choir 2,35 Girls Eng semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Jones, Kay Ann: 135 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 3: French Club 15 J.R. Cross 15 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Joyce, Joan Marie: 135 Kaeser, Kenny Jo: 104,135 Hall Monitor 35 Varsity W 35 Football 1, 2,35 Baseball 1,2,3: Gym Monitor 1,2,3 Kane, Bob: 135 Kay, Jane L.: 26,253,135 Y-Teens 1,25 AFH 15 French Club 15 Jesters 1,25 Jr. Choir 1: Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Keir, John: 105,135,143 Varsity W 3: Football 1,2,35 Track 2,35 Gym Monitor 3 X, Kellett, Judi: 135 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Spanish Club 25 Jr. Achievement 2: Art Club 35 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Kerns, Scott: 93,135 Hi'Y 3: Bookroom 25 Cross-Country 15 Basketball 1,2,3 Kilkenny, Pat: 135 Y4Teens 1,2,3: FTA 2,35 Hall Monitor 35 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,2 Kimmel, Karen: 68,75,135 Student Council 15 Y-Teens 3: FTA 3: AFH 25 Latin Club 15 Cadet Band 15 Safety Council 3 QDKirby, Ned: 29,so,7s,93,94,9s,10s,124,135 Student Council 2, V. Pres. 3: FTA 3: Boys Glee 1: Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,3: Varsity W 35 Block W 1, Pres. 3: Safety Council 2,3: Baseball 15 Track 2,35 Bas- ketball 1,2, Capt. 3: National Honor So- ciety 3 Kisling, Thomas: 77,136 CYF 1, Pres. 2,35 Hall Monitor 1,22 Di-U' ing Room Staff 2,3 Knill, John: yAKnode, Michael V.: 136 Spanish Club 15 Jr. Choir 15 Block W 2: Football 1,25 Wrestling 1,2 Koch, Marylu: 29,136 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 Library Staff 15 Hall Monitor 35 Attendance Staff 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 3: Girls Ensemble 3: Jr. Girls Glee, Treas. 15 Sr. Girls Glee, Lib. 25 Block W 1,2 Kocheran, Eddie: Kopp, Gary: 92,95,105,136 Student Council 15 Hi-Y 1, Treas. 2, V. Pres. 35 Attendance Staff 2,35 Varsity W 1,25 Cross-Country 1,2,35 Basketball 1,2,35 Track 1,2,3 Kovacs, Kathy: 80,136 Y-Teens 1,2,3: GAA 1: Block W 1,2,35 FTA 35 Mr. Dodd's Staff 35 FSA 3 Kullberg, Dave: 99,136 Hall Monitor 2,35 Varsity W, Sgt.-at- arms 35 Block W 1,2,35 Swimming 1,2,3 Lamp, Melissa: 136 Y-Teens 15 AFH 2,35 J.R. Cross 15 Jr. Choir 15 Block W 1 Lang, Michael: Lavender, Linda: 136 Lessler, Barbara: 29,60,136 Y'Teens 3: FTA 2,3: French Club 15 Spanish Club 25 Tyros 25 Office Staff 25 Hall Monitor 35 Jr. Achievement 25 Jest- ers 1,2, Historian 35 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 National Hon- or Society 3 Lirnes, Susan: 44,60,136 Y-Teens 15 FTA 15 Coordinator's Staff 3: Art Club 1,2, V. Pres. 35 National Honor Society 3 Litzinger, Julie: 83,136 Y-Teens 2,3: Gym Monitor 35 Girls Baa- ketball 3 Lively, Terry: 136 Wrestling 1 Little, Lebby Lu: 29,32,34,136 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 2,35 Jesters 35 March- ing Band 1,2,35 Octave Club 1,2,35 Sr. Choir 3: Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Long, Kathy: 6O,68,73,136 Student Council 1,35 FTA 15 AFH 35 Guidance Staff 1,3: Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2: Safe- ty Council 25 National Honor Society 3 Longo, Caren: 136 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,25 AFH 1,25 SCOUT Staff 2,3: Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 15 Safety Council 2 Lucas, Sally: 136 Student Council 1: Y-Teens 1,2: FTA 1, 2,35 Spanish Club 15 Art Club 1,25 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 1 Lutz, Janet: 29,32,137 Y-Teens 15 GAA 1: Latin Club 2: Stage Crew 2: Jesters 2,35 Marching Band 1,2, 35 Octava Club 25 Concert Band 1,2,3: Sr. Choir 3: Girls Ensemble 3: Jr. Girls Glee 1: Sr. Girls Glee 2 Mac Callum, Luana: 29,71,137 Y-Teens 15 FTA 35 AFH 1: Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2: Block W 1 Mader, Charles: 33,613,137 Bookroom 35 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Concert Band 2,3 Major, Glenna: 137 Y-Teens 1,2,3: AFH 25 Latin Club 25 J.R. Cross 2: Hall Monitor 3: Block W 2,3: Safety Council 2 Manley, Robert: 74,99,137 Jr. Choir 25 Boys Glee 3 Mann, John: 137 Marriott, Stephen: 70,93,137 FTA 35 Coordinators Staff 35 Attendance Staff 15 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 25 Concert Band 25 Varsity W 35 Football 15 Basketball 2,3 Marsili, Luisa: 137 Y-Teens 1,2,35 GAA 15 AFH 1,2,35 FTA 1,25 Coordinator's Staff 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Jr. Choir 2 Martin, Danny: McBride, Richard Alan: 138 Hi-Y 35 Track 2 McCaw, Steve: 43,138 SCOUT Staff 35 Jesters 1,25 Gym Mon- itor 3 McComb, Mike: 138 Hi-Y 1 McCoy, Sherry: 138 Jr. Choir 2,3 McClure, John William: Audio-Visual Crew McFadden, Torn: McKelvey, Paul: 138 McLaughlin, Robert Mark: 32,313,138 Hall Monitor 35 Varsity W 35 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 1,2,35 Wrestling 1,2 McMichael, Terry L.: 138 Orchestra 1,25 Hi-Y 1 McMichael, Thomas: 138 Hi-Y 1,25 Marching Bind 15 Cadet Band 25 Jr. Achievement 25 Concert Band 1 McNett, Craig: 78,82,102.138 Student Council 15 Hi-Y 1,2,35 Atten- dance Staff 1,35 Varsity W 3: Block W 1, 35 Tennis 1,2,35 Wrestling l5Safety Coun- cil 3 Mechlin, Michael: 138 Jr. Achievement 25 Wrestling 1,3 Meeker, Hedda: 29,43,124,13B Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 SCOUT Staff 35 Office Staff 35 Attendance Staff 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Girls Ensemble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 1,2 Melaragno, Susan: 138 Y-Teens 2 Merkle, Harlan Bartley: 29,44,60,87,12-1,139 Student Council 25 Boys Glee 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 1,2,35 Foot- ball 2,35 Swimming 1,25 National Honor Society 3 Meyer, Beverly: 29,32,33,71,139 Y-Teens 15 GAA 1,25 Office Staff 35 Jest- ers 1, V. Pres. 2, Pres. 35 Orchestra 2,35 Octava Club 35 Sr. Cchoir 2,35 Girls En- semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 1,2 Meyer, Patrick: 60,63,90,92,105,139 Hi-Y 1, Sec. 2, Pres. 35 Bookroom Staff 2,35 Varsity W 2,35 Block W, Sec.-Treas. 35 Cross-Country 1,2, Co-Capt. 35 Track 1,2, Co-Capt. 35 National Honor Society 3 Monroe, Margaret: 27,29,139 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 2,35 GAA 35 Trea- sury Staff1,25 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee, Sec. 15 Block W 2,35 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Safety Council 2,3 Moore, Terry: 139 Hi-Y 15 Spanish Club 15 Hall Monitor 35 Cross-Country 25 Biology Club 1 Morgan, Mary Annette: 139 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 GAA 2,35 Latin Club 35 Hall Monitor 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 1 Moriarty, Michael Scott: 139 K-. I' Faculty swamped seniors in annual fiasco Morin, Gary: 60,104,124,139 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Hall Monitor 35 Atten- dance Staff 3: Varsity W, Pres. 35 Block w 1,2: Baseball 1,2, National Honor so- ciety 3 Morris, Will: 139 German Club 25 Art Club 1,2,35 Biology Club 1 Morrison, Dick: 32,44,60,96,98,105,139 Cadet Band 25 Marching Band 35 Concert Band 35 Track 2,35 Wrestling 2,35 Nation- al Honor Society 3 Moseley, Avalee: 56,139 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,35 GAA 2,35 AFH 1,2,35 French Club 15 J.R. Cross 1,35 Jr. Achievement 2, Treas. 35 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Block W 2,3 Mott, Stephen Craig: 73,105,139 Student Council 35 Hi-Y 35 Hall Monitor 35 Traffic Court 35 Block W 15 Track 1,2, 35 Safety Council 35 Gym Monitor 2,3 Mount, John: 29,923,139 Whynauts 1,2, Treas. 35 Hall Monitor 2, 35 Boys Glee 1,2,35 Sr. Choir 35 Block W 15 Basketball 1,2,3 Mulberry, Carl: 19,139 Library Staf'f 3 Murdock, Carol: 29,82,83,139,143 Y-Teens 15 GAA 1,2, Prea. 35 German Club 1,25 J.R. Cross 25 Attendance Staff 2,35 Stage and Sound Crew 25 Jesters 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Varsity Cheerleader 35 Gym Monitor 25 Block W 1,25 Girls Bas- ketball l,2,3 Musick, Claudia: 83 GAA 2,35 Block W 35 Gym Monitor 1,2, 35 Transferred from Lorain High School, Lorain, Ohigg Student Council 15 Y- Teens 1,2 Musick, Linda: Myers, Marsha: 139 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FSA 1,2,35 French Club 15 Jesters 2.35 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Natoli, Sherry: 29,140 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Spanish Club 1,2,35 Hall Monitor 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Sr. Choir 3 Near, Lise: 29,140 Y-Teens 15 Marching Band 1,2,35 Con- cert Band 1,2,35 Sr. Choir 35 Girls En- semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Octava Club 1 Needham, Kathryn: 41,42,140 Student Council 2,35 LEGEND Staff 2,3 Nolan, Charles Michael: 29,140 Hall Monitor 15 Audio-Visual 25 Boys Glee 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Block W 35 Football 1: Tennis 15 Biology Club 1 L Nordstrom, Kathryn: 60,140 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 1,2, Sec. 35 AFH 35 French Club 1,2, Pres. 35 Li- brary Staff 1,25 Concert Band, Sec. 35 Safety Council 35 National Honor So- ciety 3 Nowe, Thomas D.: 63,102,103,140 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Bookroom Staff' 2,35 Var- sity W 35 Block W 35 Tennis 1,2,3 Nuzum, Linda: 140 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 2,35 Spanish Club 35 Jr. Choir15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Nye, Nancy: 42,658,140 Student Council 15 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 Latin Club 15 LEGEND Staff 35 Hall Monitor 15 Art Club 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Guidance Staff 2,3 Oakley, Marilyn: 140 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Oshner, Ron: 103,140 Golf 1,2,3 Opatich, Barbara: 140 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,2: AFH 1,2,3 Overturf, Scott: 86,93,94,104,140 Hi-Y 15 FTA 35 Varsity W 1,2,35 Cross- Country 15 Football 2,35 Basketball 1,35 Baseball 1,2,35 Gym Monitor 2 Parker, Debbie: 80,140 Parker, Ellen: 29,38,60,140 GAA 15 French Club 15 Latin Club 1, Sec. 2,35 LEGEND Staff 25 Orchestra 1, 25 Jr. Choir I5 Sr. Choir 2,35 Girls En- semble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 National Hon- or Society 3 Pasco, Catherine L.: 29,60,70,72,73,82,124, 140 Student Council Sec. 2,35 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 25 Office Staff 35 Hall Monitor 25 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee I5 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Varsity Cheerleader 2, Capt. 35 Reserve Cheerleader 15 Safety Council 25 Homecoming Court 35 National Honor Society 3 Penwell, Lynne: 42,83,124,140 Y-Teens 2,35 FTA 35 GAA 1, Sec. 2, Treas. 35 LEGEND Staff 2,35 Hall Mon- itor 25 Attendance Staff 35 Reserve Cheerleader 25 Block W, Sgt.-at-arms 35 Homecoming Court 35 Transfer from Wooster High School, Wooster, Ohio Penault, Rachel: FTA 35 French Club 1,2,35 Stage and Sound Crew 25 Jesters 2 Pepple, Linda S.: 37,141 Y-Teens 1,2,35 GAA 1,25 FTA 1,25 Span- ish Club 35 Office Staff 25 Stage and Sound Crew 1,2,35 Jesters 1,2,3 Perry, Sharon: 141 Y-Teens 1,2,35 French Club 15 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Peterseim, Dean: 141 Hi-Y 35 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 1 Pfeiffer, Randall W.: 29,75,105,124,141 Hi-Y 35 Hall Monitor 35 Bookroom Staff 25 Boys Glee 1,2, Sec. 35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 1,35 Track 1,2,35 Safety Council 3 Phillips, John M.: 33,60,76,141 Chess Club 2, V. Pres. 85 Marching Band 1,2,35 Concert Band 1,2,35 National Hon- or Society 3 Phillips, Pamela Jo.: 42,60,141 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 1,2,35 AFH 35 Spanish Club 1,25 Latin Club 1,35 LEG- END Staff 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Safety Council 35 Block W 2,35 National Honor Society 3 Pickering, Carolyn: 42,-13,141 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 AFH 35 LEGEND Staff 35 SCOUT Staff 35 Treasury Staff 1,2 Pierce, Dannie: 44,141 ' Hi-Y 1,35 FTA 35 Library Staff, V. Pres. 35 Hall Monitor 1,2,35 Jr, Achievement 2, V. Pres. 35 Block W 25 Biology Club 15 Gym Monitor 1,2 Pierce, John: 141 Hi-Y 1,35 FTA 35 Cadet Band 15 March- ing Band 25 Concert Band 25 Sr. Choir 35 Block W 35 Dance Band 2 Pierce, Linda: 141 GAA 1,2,35 Coordinator's Staff 25 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Pletz, Sheila: 141 Y-Teens 35 FTA 35 AFH 35 Library Staff 35 Art Club 1 Powell, Rusty: 141,143 Coordinator's Staff 15 Hall Monitor 35 Varsity W 2,35 Football 1,2,35 Baseball 15 Track 25 Gym Monitor 3 Pratt, Melanie: 142 Y-Teens 15 Spanish Club 2,3 Price, Rick: 142 Prior, Beth: 142 Y-Teens 1,2,35 GAA 1,2,35 AFH 1,25 Din- ing Room Staff 1,2,35 Jr. Achievement 25 Block W 2 Prushing, Linda: 29,73,142 Student Council 35 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2, V. Pres. 35 GAA 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2, Treas. 35 Gym Monitor 25 Sr. Choir 3 Pugh, Jann Noreen: 32,33,60,142 Y-Teens 15 FTA 25 German Club 1,2,35 Latin Club 15 LEGEND Staff 25 March- ing Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 1,2,35 Octava Club 1,2, Pres. 35 Concert Band 1,2,35 Jr, Girls Glee 15 Safety Council 35 National Honor Society 3 ,Puppel, Richard: 142 Track 1,2 Purslow, Mark: 33,135,142 Cadet Band 15 Marching Band 2,35 Or- chestra 35 Concert Band 2,3 Putnam, Susan Amanda: 29,142 Y-Teena 1,2,35 GAA 15 Art Club 25 Sr. Choir 3: Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2 Rabold, Richard William: 99,142 Hi-Y 35 Swimming 1,2,35 Block W 1,2,35 Art Club 1 Rainey, Stephen: 142 Football 1,25 Track 15 Wrestling 1,2 Ramage, Daniel: 29,32,33,142 Orchestra 1,2,35 Boys Glee 15 Sr. Choir 1,2,35 Boys Ensemble 2,3 Ravely, Melanie: 32,142 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1: AFH 2,35 Orches- tra l,2,3: Octava Club l,2,3 Ray, Tina: 142 Reed, Murray: 142 Swimming 15 Gym Monitor 2 Reeves, Donna Lohree: 142 Y-Teens 1,2 Rermick, Stephen: 142 Jr. Choir 1 Reynolds, Joyce Ann: 143 Jr. Girls Glee 25 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Rice, Margaret: 60,143 Transferred from Watterson High School5 Glee Club 15 Jr. Achievement 15 Future Physicians 1,25 EAGLE-VIEW Staff 2 Richardson, John V., Jr.: 23,42,73,143 Student Council 35 LEGEND Staff 35 Traffic Court 35 Swimming 25 Transfer from Brookhaven High School: Numis- matics, V. Pres. 1 Robbins, Janet: 29,60,73,82,124,143 Student Council 2,35 Y-Teena 1,2,35 FTA 35 Latin Club 15 Office Staff 35 Hall Mon- itor 25 Sr. Choir 2, Sec. 35 Girls Ensemble 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Varsity Cheerleader 2,35 Reserve Cheerleader 15 Homecoming Court 35 National Honor Society 3 Roberts, Dave: 105,143 Varsity W 35 Football 1,2,35 Track 2,35 Wrestling 15 Gym Monitor 2 Robinson, Chris: 60,83,102,143 Y-Teens 25 FTA 35 GAA 1,2,35 Spanish Club 1,2,35 Chess Club 15 Library Staff 1,2,35 Amateur Radio 1, Sec.-Treas. 2, Pres. 35 Treasury Staff 15 Jr. Choir 15 Girls Basketball 1,2,35 Girls Volleyball 25 Safety Council 25 Gym Monitor 3: NH- tional Honor Society 3 Rodenbeck, Jerri Alice: 60,143 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 GAA 15 Spanish Club 1,2, Treas. 35 Office Staff 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 National Honor Society Rogers, Pamela Carol: 143 Y-Teens 1,25 GAA 15 French Club 15 Bi- ology Club 15 Transfer from West Jeffer- son High School: Future Nurses 15 Col- lege Club 1 Rohde, Patty: 42,50,143 Y-Teens 15 French Club 1,2,35 Tyros Club 35 LEGEND Staff 2,35 Hall Monitor 35 Jr. Choir 25 Jr.Girls Glee 1 Rose, Michael I.: 144 Hi-Y 35 Attendance Staff 25 Block W 1 Rowland, Nancy Lee: 144 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 15 Jr. Achievement 25 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Rubart, Christine: 144 Student Council 15 Y-Teens 1,25 GAA 15 AFH 35 Hall Monitor 2,35 Gym Monitor 2 Rutan, George: 86,87,104,144 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Hall Monitor 2,35 Varsity W 2,35 Football 1,2,35 Baseball l,2,3 Sagstetter, Julie Ann: 29,144 GAA 15 Y-Teens 15 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Jr. Choir 25 Sr. Choir 35 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Sattler, Paul A.: 42,92,105,144 Hi-Y 2,35 LEGEND Staff 2,35 Audio-Vis- ual 15 Varsity W 2,35 Cross-Country 1, 2,35 Track l,2,3 Sceva, Karin: 144 Y-Teens 1.3: Art Club 3 Schieve, Cathy: 42,43,82,144 Y-Teens 1,2, Treas. 3: FTA 15 LEGEND Staff 35 Office Staff 35 Jesters 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Safety Council l,2,3 Schlegel, Dave: 33,60,99,144 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 1,2,35 Concert Band 1,2,35 Varsity W 35 Swim- ming 1,2,35 National Honor Society 3 Schmidt, John Philip: 29,33,105,144 Orchestra 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2, 35 Cross-Country 25 Wrestling 1,25 Track 1,2,35 Football 1 Schumaker, Donn: 82,105,144 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Attendance Staff 2,35 Bookroom 25 Varsity W 3: Block W 1,2,35 Cross-Country 35 Track 1,2 Schuster, Cathryn: 144 Y-Teens 2 Sellers, L. Rickey: 29,87,145 Hi-Y 35 FTA 35 Boys Glee 1,25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Boys Ensemble 35 Var- sity W 35 Football l,2,35 Baseball 15 Wrestling 2 Sharp, Candy: 145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Spanish Club 15 Dining Room Staff 35 Stage and Sound Crew 2, Jesters 2,35 Safety Council Sharpe, Melissa: 145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Nurses' Staff 15 Dining Room Staff 1,2,35 Stage and Sound Crew 25 Jesters 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Shimp, Marilyn: 29,145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 Spanish Club 1,25 Sr. Choir 2,35 Girls Ensemble 35 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 35 Gym Monitor 3 Sholl, Trudy Jane: 29 Transferred from Elkhorn High School, Wisqonsing American Field Service 1,25 GAA 25 Choir 25 Golf 15 Girls Glee 25 Marching Band l Sillick, James D.: 37,41,145 Hall Monitor 35 Golf 35 Football 1 Simpson, Dennis: 29,145 Cadet Band 15 Boys Glee 15 Jr. Choir 15 Football 15 Tennis 15 Marching Band 25 Concert Band 2 Smith, Cindy: 75,145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 Attendance Staff 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 1,35 Safety Council l,2,3 Smith, Jeff: 73,145 Student Council 35 Hi-Y, Sgt.-at-arms 35 FTA 35 Gym Monitor 25 Wrestling 1,25 Baseball 1,25 Cross-Country 15 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 1,35 Hi-Y Basketball 3 Smith, Nancy: 145 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,25 AFH 1,2,35 Coor- dinator's Staff 2,35 FSA 3 Smith, Sheri: 44,60,62,l-45 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 1,35 French Club 15 Library Staff 1,2, Sec. 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 National Honor Society 3 Smith, Susan: 29,145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 1,25 AFH 15 Latin Club 1,25 Office Staff 15 Hall Monitor 1,25 Jr. Achievement 25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Block W l,2,3 Snyder, Kristine: 29,145 German Club 2,35 Block W 25 Sr. Girls Glee 25 FTA 2,35 Sr. Choir 3 Spantithos, Spiros George: 145 Latin Club 1,2,35 Cross-Country 15 Track 2,35 Boys Glee 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 1 Squire, Marlene: 29,145 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 J.R. Cross 1,2, V. Pres. 35 Attendance Staff 2,35 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,3 Stevenson, Sharon: 35,42,50,60,63,73,145 Student Council 1,2,35 Y-Teens 1,25 GAA 1, Treas. 25 German Club 1,25 LEGEND Staff 2, Co-Editor 35 Office Staff 35 Co- ordinator's Staff 1: Attendance Staff 35 Jesters 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Block W 1,2,35 Safety Council 2,35 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Stilson, Chuck: Strauss, Christopher: 60,82,92,105,145 Hi-Y 35 Varsity W 3: Cross-Country 1,2, 35 Track 2,35 Biology Club 1,2, Pres. 3 Swinehart, Cathe: 29,71,146 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 AFH 35 Dining Room Staff 1,25 Sr. Choir 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Block W 1,3 Taylor, Linda: 32,60,73,143,l46 Student Council 35 Y-Teens 1,35 French Club 15 Marching Band 2, Sweetheart 35 Orchestra 2, Sec. 35 Octava Club 2,35 Concert Band 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Na- tional Honor Society 3 Taylor, Mary: 146 Y-Teens 1,25 Spanish Club 1 Taylor, Wesley: 146 Tevlin, Robert: 146 Hi-Y 35 Safety Council 35 Block W 2,35 Dramatics Club 2 Thomas, Pam: 146 Y-Teens 152,35 FTA 1,35 GAA 15 Jr. Choir 15 Art Club 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2,35 Block W 15 Safety Council 1,2 xv-Torrenti, Don: 146 Transferred from Watterson High School Toth, Jaci: Y-Teens 1,25 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1,2 Tracy, John: 31,32,33,35,102,103,146 Hi-Y 35 Marching Band 1,2,35 Orchestra 2,35 Concert Band 1,2,35 Dance Band 1,2, Student Director 35 Varsity W 35 Tennis 1,2, Capt. 3 Trout, Rick: 60,72,73,79,l00,l01,104,124, 146 Student Council 1, Sgt.-at-arms 2, Pres. 35 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 15 Football 1,2,35 Baseball 1,2,35 Swimming 1,2, Co- Capt. 35 Safety Council 1,2, V. Pres. 35 National Honor Society 3 Trueblood, Robert: 29,146 Hi-Y 1,25 Boys Glee 1,25 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Boys Ensemble 3 Tumer, James W.: 146 Hi-Y 3 Twigg, Madeline Jean: 146 Y-Teens 1,25 FSA 3 Van Meter, Sally Jo: 29,146 Y-Teens 1,25 FTA 35 Spanish Club 1,25 Office Staff 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Girls Glee, Pres. 2,35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Choir 35 Gym Monitor 3 Voss, Vicki Sue: 47,124,146 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 2,35 Spanish Club 2,35 Attendance Staff 35 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Block W 1,25 Gym Monitor 35 Safety Council l,2,3 Wada, Peggy: 40,144,146 Y-Teens 2: Tyros 2, Chairman 35 LEG- END Staff 35 Debate 1,2,35 Art Club 1 Wada, Warner: 40,43,60,61,85,l46 French Club 15 Tyros Club 25 SCOUT Staff, Editor 35 Debate Club, Treas. 1, V. Pres. 2, Pres. 3 Walker, John: 147 Hi-Y 35 Transferred from Paris, France: Photography Staff 15 Soccer 1,25 Cho- rus 2, Variety Show 25 Newspaper 1 Weimer, Ann: 32,60,147 Y-Teens 1,2,35 Orchestra 1,2,5 German Club 35 National Honor Society 3 Weingarth, Nancy P.: 147 Y-Teens 1,25 Jr. Achievement 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Jr. Girls Glee 2 Wenger, Stephen D.: 50,60,75,96,98,l47 FTA 35 German Club 2, Sgt.-at-arms 35 Hall Monitor 2,35 Varsity W 2,35 Block W 15 Football 1,2,35 Wrestling 1,2, Capt. 35 Safety Council 2, Pres. 35 National Honor Society 3 Wernecke, Tom: 147 Hi-Y 3 Whitsel, Susan: 147 Wickliff, Marcy Lee: 124,147 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 1,2,35 GAA 15 Span- ish Club 1,25 J.R. Cross 15 Attendance Staff 25 Sr. Girls Glee 25 Jr. Choir 2 Widney, Victoria: 147 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 AFH 2,35 Span- ish Club 35 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Wiess, Mark: 60,99,116,148 German Club 35 Attendance Staff 35 Block W 35 Football 15 Swimming 1,2,35 Safety Council 35 Senior Class Treasurer5 National Honor Society 3 Willardson, Lyman William: 33,148 Hi-Y 35 Marching Band 2,35 Concert Band 2,35 Transferred from Logan High School, Logan, Utah: Debate Team 15 Marching Band 15 Concert Band 15 Lighting Crew 15 Pep Band 1 Williams, Lawrence Phillip: 148 Debate Club, V. Pres. 1,25 Dining Room Staff 35 Photography Staff 15 Jr. Achieve- ment 15 Cadet Band 1,2,35 Safety Coun- cil 2 Williams, Timothy: 148 FTA 35 Varsity W 1,2,35 Football 1,25 Track 1,25 Swimming 15 Latin Club 15 Hi-Y 15 Jr. Choir 1 Wills, Penny: 148 Y-Teens 1,2,35 SCOUT Staff 25 Dining Room Staff 15 Jr. Girls Glee 1,25 Sr. Girls Glee 3 Wilson, Leslee: 29,-12,148 Y-Teens 1,2, V. Pres. 35 Attendance Staff 1,2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Jr. Girls Glee 15 Sr. Girls Glee 2: Block W 1,25 Sr. Choir 35 Safety Council 2, Sec.-Treas. 35 LEG- END Staff 35 Girls Basketball 1,2 Wolfe, Jeff: 23,29,44,60,102,148 Hi-Y 35 Art Club 2, Pres. 35 Boys Glee 15 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2,35 Block W 35 Tennis 1,2,35 National Honor Society 3 Woo, Jun: Wright, Greg: 29,35,44,60,73,84,87,96,9B, 105,l24,143,l.48 Student Council 35 Boys Glee 1, Sec. 2,35 Jr. Choir 15 Sr. Choir 2, Pres. 35 Varsity W 1, Sgt.-at-arms 2, V. Pres. 35 Football 1,2, Co-Capt. 35 Track 2,35 Wrestling 1, 2,35 Safety Council 35 National Honor Society 3 Wright, Toni: 148 Student Council 15 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 15 Jr. Choir 25 Jr. Girls Glee 1 Yarrington, Charles: 99,143 Swimming 2,35 Cadet Band l,2,3 Young, Cherie: 148 Y-Teens 25 Art Club 35 Jesters 25 Jr. Achievement 1 Zartman, Linda: 29,31,124,148 Y-Teens 1,2,35 FTA 35 Attendance Staff 35 Orchestra 2, Treas. 35 Concert Band 35 Jr. Choir, Sec. 15 Sr. Choir 2, Treas. 35 Girls Ensemble 35 Sr. Girls Glee, Pres. 35 Block W 1,2,35 Homecoming Queen 3 Junior Index Acton, Richard: 29,106 Adams, Victoria: 106 Albrink, Constance: 37,106 Alexander, Rick: 29,106 Alexander, William: 29,92,105, 106 J' Allen, Carl: 106 Allen, Susan: 106 Angel, Janet: 69,106 Aquila, Nancy: Arensbak, Marianna: 106 Armitage, Barry: 99,100,106 Armstrong, Betty: Armstrong, Carol: Arnold, Edward: 106 Ashbaugh, Randall: Avant, Mary: 106 Bachman, Doug: 32,533,110 Backus, Brenda: 73,83,106 Baer, Doug: 29,106 Ball, Jeanette: 106 Balogh, Barbara: 106 Barnes, David: 98,106 Barnett, James: 106 Barnum, Rita: 106 Bartelt, Jan: Bartha, Thomas: 29,106 Barton, Elaine: 106 Basile, Elizabeth: 32,106 xBateman, Anne: Baumann, Mike: 106 Becker, Donald: 29,32,102,106 Beckerat, Pamela: Beem, Deborah: 106 Bell, Barbara: 106 -S Bell Mary Lou: 37 Bell Jeff: 102 106 Belville Vicki: 106 Beman Thomas: 106 Bendixen Christian: 106 Bennett Barbara: 106 Bennett John Betts Dorinda: 106 Betz Pamela: 68 106 Blocher, Mary Sue: 29 32 73 82 83 106 Blume Ronald: 37 92 106 Bowler Sara 106 Boyce Lynette 106 Bradbury Robert 106 Bradford Michael 106 Brantner Richard 29 32 35 110 Brasher Marsha 106 Britton Barbara 106 Brockmeyer Terrance 1 Brockmeyer Tim 106 Brooks Donald 106 Brooks Vickie 106 Brotton Vaughn 106 Coffman Stephen 37 108 Colburn William 33 86 105 108 Collins William 98108 Conklin John 108 Cook Gerald 102108 Cooke Steve 108 Cooper Raymond Corbett Edward 108 Corbin Diane 109 Cordell Roberta 109 Croft John 109 Daily Cynthia 109 as il w , 5 , 3, , , , 1 , 2,,, , ' , 2 ', 1, , ,' : ', : ! 7. :1!1 D :I , , 1 , I , : ', : , 1 , , :06 , : , , ,': , : ,lil , 5 V w 3 s ,III , Z 5 37 L 1 : 7 : x ' ' Boghossian, Sherry: 106 Bollard, Barb: 106 Bolon, David: iBolon, Deborah: Bonham, Judy: Borror, Paula: Bose, Becky: 154 fs : - fi Y, 1 .L W Brown, Brent, 106 Brown, Charles: 33,110 Brown, Elizabeth: 106 Brundage, Donna: 73,108 Bryant, Kathy: 83,108 Bull, Karen: 108 Burgoon, Barbara: 32,110 Burgstrom, Steven: 29,108 Burke, Thomas: 97,98,108 Bush, Gary: 108 Bybee, Charlene: 29,108 Byers, Richard: 33,35,110 Byg, Thomas: 108 Cabrera, Francisca: Carpenter, Margaret: 108 Carr, Catherine: 108 Carroll, Greg: 108 Carter, Karen: 108 Casmo, Ross: 108 Castor, Stephen: Chan, Mabel: Cheeseman, Sandra: 108 Chilcott, John: 108 Clark, Mary: 108 Clark, Wendy: 108 Cleland, Kathryn: 108 Clifford, Joseph: 108 Cline, Ronnie: 108 Clouse, Richard: 93,95,104,108 Clutter, Monty: 108 Coen, Linda: 108 Dame, Craig. 109 4 A Dascenzo, Patricia: 109 Davies, Jon: 104,109 Davies, Scott: 93,104,109 Davis, Candace: 69,109 Davis, Debra: 109 Davis, Janet: 109 Davis, Janice: 109 Davis, Laura: 73,109 Davis, Lawrence: 29,93,104,109 1 ' Davis, Pamela: 109 Demos, Carol: 43,109 DeRoberts, Catherine: 109 DeVine, Mark: 109 Dickerson, Steve: 109 Dixon, Margaret: 32,110 Docherty, Jerri: 75,109 Docherty, Terri: 75,109 Donley, John: 109 Donahue, Robert: 33,110 Drake, Jenny: 109 Drobot, Frank: 92,102,103,109 Drobot, Katherine: 109 Dunaway, Charles: 99,109 Dunham, Karen: 45,109 Edwards, Ellen: 109 Eller, David: 98,104,109 Ellwood, William: 109 Ely, Nancy: 109 Elzey, William: 109 Engle, Stephen: 29,33,99,105,110 I-fl Qxf. . -ft 57 , ag I 6 K w 4 J gf Endter, Barbara: 109 Eshelman, Robert: 109 Evans, Tom: 104,109 Falk, Alan: 109 Farrell, David: 33,35,110 Fasone, Joyce: 109 Feild, Kathi: Fenholt, Jeff: 109 Fertig, Douglas: 73,92,105,109 Findlay, Richard: 109 Finney, Pamela: Fitch, Deborah: 37,109 Flath, Roberta: 32,83,109 Fortney, Karyl: 109 Fotis, Peter: 109 Francis, Carol: 20,109 Francis, Deborah: 109 Franck, Debbie: 33,110 Frank, Donald: 29,109 Friedlander, Beatrice: 109 Frisby, Terry: 29,104,109 Gallogly, Judith: 32,110 Ganley, Kevin: 109 Garner, Debra: 32,110 Gay, Larry: 109 Gibson, Randy: 105,109 Gillhouse, Susan: 32,73,109 Gilroy, Sherry: 109 Glandon, David: 33,110 Glass, Trixie: 109 Good, Janice: 109 Graham, Thomas: 92,105 Grau, Richard: 86,109 Green, Christy: 109 Greene, Shelley: 109 Greenlee, William: 109 Greenwood, Michael: 29,109 Grey, Donald: 109 Grimsted, Karen: 109 Groff, Kathleen: 29,322,110 Grommersch, Michael: 109 Grubb, Sharon: 109 Gunderrnan, Gary 33,93,110 Haag, Ronald: 19,37,109 Hale, Kendall: 32,109 Hall, Sherry: 32,109 Halsey, Pattie: Hastie, Edward: Hammitt, David: Hammel, David: 32,35,104,110 Hanhilammi, David: 109 Hann, Doug: 109 Harper, Joyce: 109 Harrison, James 32,35,110 Hart, Byrum: 104,109 Hart, Cheryl: 80,109 Harte, Christine: 23,73,109 Hatfield, Paula: 32,110 Haslup, Georgeana: 109 Haueisen, Joyce: 109 Hawley, Robert: 109 Heck, Nancy: 109 Heffner, Sharon: 33,109 Hemming, Patrick: 109 Henke, Stephen: 109 Henry, Judith: 109 Herrick, Virginia: 109 Hersey, James: 97,538,109 Hightshoe, Bruce: 32,109 Hindman, Christine: 29,33,61,110 Hindman, Hugh: 98,105,109 Hinson, Susan: 109 Hinton, Terry: 32,110 Hill, Craig: 102,109 Hill, Theodore: 50,105 Hiller, Michael: 109 Hillsrnan, Edward: 62,109 Hobart, Linda: 32,109 Hoppe, Diane: 109 Hoppe, Martha: 110 Horn, Donald: 33,104,110 Huber, Jim: 29,87,105,110 Hucek, Stephen: 110 Humphrey, Robert: 110 Hunsinger, Judith: 110 Hunt, Charlene: 110 Hutchison, David: 110 Hutson, Nancy: 110 Inskeep, Daniel 33,35,99,105,110 Jados, William: 110 Jipping, Douglas: 102 Johnson, Brenda: Johnson, Douglas: 98,110 Johnson, Terry: 37,110 Johnston, David: 110 Jones, Robert: 73,110 Jones, Ronald: 32,110 Jordan, Abbey: 110 Justus, Michael: 110 Kadlec, Allen: 98 Kador, Peter: 32,102,110 Kaplan, Bruce: 87,105,110 Kauderer, Bernard: 110 Kearns, Robert: 29,110 Kellam, Jeffrey: 110 Kelley, Donna: 110 Koczera, Jan: 33,110 Koehl, Kenneth: 99,100,112 Kohn, Karen: 112 Kontras, Mike: 112 Kutz, Rebecca: 73,78,112 Lamp, Dana: 112 Lamp, Dennis: 32,105,110 Lampson, Timothy: 112 Larkin, Robert: 46,112 Larkin, William: Lasley, Harold: 32,110 Latham, Stanley: 112 Lehman, Betsy: 112 Lentz, Marilyn: 112 Liebert, Deborah: 112 Lipp, Douglas: 29,50,92,112 Lipovsky, Irene: 29,112 Loer, Rosemary: 112 Long, Leslie: 112 Lytle, John: 112 MacBlane, Nancy: 112 Maddex, Karen: 37,112 Magers, John 105,112 Mall, Merri: 112 Manley, Mark 102,112 Margarace, Martin: 112 Marshall, Brandt: 112 Marshall, Mike: 112 Marshall, Marion: 112 Massaro, Thomas: 112 Maxwell, Michael: 112 Maxwell, Sandra: 112 May, Stephen: 32,76,112 McBride, Nancy: 73,112 McCabe, Timothy: 113 McCarthy, Timothy: 113 Kerchner, Karen: 110 Kesler, John: 110 King, Sue: 110 Kinsey, Robert: 105 Kinzelman, Mark: 110 Kirk, William: 110 Klein, Darlene: 110 Klinksick, Carolyn: 110 Knight, Betsey: 110 Knipe, Pamela: McClain, John: 113 McClellan, Paul: 33,99,110 McClintock, Cathy: 113 McComb, Kathy: 113 McCoy, Randall: 113 McDonald, Bruce: 102,113 McDonald, Louise: 113 McElwee, Gregory: 29,33,35,105, 110 McFadden, Mary: 41,115 155 McFadden, Patrick: 113 McFarland, Joyce: 113 McManis, Michael: 113 Meeker, Patricia: 113 Melton, Susan: 32,110 Merchant, Jan: 113 Mereness, Mary: 113 Micks, Ernest: 113 Middlesworth, James: 113 Miller, Greg: 113 Miller, Rebecca: 113 Mingler, Paul: 33,98,105 Mitchell, Karen: 52,113 Moore, Nancy: 113 Moore, Robert: 32,110 Moore, Sally: 113 Moore, William: 113 Morgan, Craig: 41,105,113 Morgan, Daniel: 99,105,113 Morgan, Sebe: 113 Morse, Barbara: 43,113 Nathanson, Mirian: 113 Nau, Vickie: 32,110 Naylor, Bernard: 33,105,110 Neff, Sally: 73,113 Nettleship, Christine: 113 Nichols, Gary: 113 Nielsen, Peter: Nordstrom, Janet: 32,33,83,110 Nutter, Beverly: 113 Odenwald, Michael: 113 Oldham, David: 113 Opatich, Don: 113 Overholt, Patti: 113 Paddock, Frederic: 113 Parker, Gary: 113 Pattin, Michael: 113 Pearson, Carol: 32,110 Pearson, Karen: 113 Pearson, Lon: 29,113 Peltier, Kenneth: 93,104,113 Pennell, Ellen: 113 Penwell, Joyce: 113 Perdue, Dale: 73,113 Peterjohn, Karl: 93,113 Peters, Mary: 113 Petry, Jeanetta: 113 Phillips, Fred: 113 Pierce, Nancy: 113 Pierce, Rebecca: 113 Pifer, Richard: 113 Pitcher, Jennifer: 113 Pontious, Susan: 80,113 Porter, Jack: 33,35,102,110 Poulton, Dennis: 32,35,110 Powell, Bruce: 87,93,104,113 Pratt, William: 113 Pritchett, Mary: 37,113 Prorock, Gary: 105 Puchstein, John: 50,113 Ramage, Dawna: 29,43,113 Ramsey, Raymond: 105,113 Randles, Diana: Ray, Ralph: 113 Reeve, John: 113 Reynolds, Jeff: Rheinfrank, Kathy: 113 Richardson, Larry: 113 Richardson, Sandra: 113 Richey, Cynthia: Rickman, Harold: 113 Ries, Tim: 114 Riggs, Phil: 114 Rinehart, Kester: 98,114 Robb, Joseph: 99,114 Roberts, Linda: 43,114 Rogers, Nancy: 114 Rogers, Russell: 90,92,105,114 Roudabush, James: 114 Roumeliote, John: 37,114 Rucker, Caryl: 114 Rucker, Mike: 114 Rucker, Ronald: 114 Rudolph, Robert: 114 Ruhwedel, David: 101,102,114 Russell, Gail: 114 Russell, Patricia: 73,114 Rutan, Joyce: 114 Ryan, Deborah: Sacks, Linda: 114 Safranek, Frank 105,114 Schilling, Debbie: 114 Schilling, Patti: 114 Schmeck, Judy: 32 Schmitt, Kurt: 99,114 Schwenker, James: 114 Scott, Cathy: 114 Sears, Daniel: 98,105,114 Selby, Patti: 114 Shaffer, John: 114 Shannon, Judy: 114 Sharp, William: 102,114 Sharpe, Malcolm: 114 Shaw, Donna: 114 Shaw, Sally: 114 Shields, James: 93,94,104,114 Showalter, Victor: 114 Shumaker, James: 99,101,114 Sigler, Harry: 114 Simmons, John: 114 Simon, Vicki: 50,114 Slatter, Robert: 114 Smeck, Judy: 32,110 Smith, Debra: 114 Smith, Judith: 114 Smith, Patricia: 20,114 Spahr, Martha: 114 Spence, Patricia: 80,114 Staley, Thomas: 29,114 Stansbery, Michael: 114 Stapleton, Sheryl: 114 Stouffer, Kenneth: 114 Stravelakis, George: 98,114 Stutz, Paul: 73,92,98,105,114 Summerford, Marsha: 114 Swider, Gary: 114 Swinehart, Robert: 29,114 Tanner, Barbara: 114 Tanner, James: 98,114 Tate, Joe: 114 Tavenner, Robert: 29,37,114 e ,A lm -V rg ,:e.g1,L.'- N- -if cf 12' M- I L , 1,,--1-,i x-ri.,.'1 Qi 3- if hill 7395 17?-1'-71 - lf W! , aff-4'i'f' :N- W f - e. .f1w-'- 2 4- 1 T' ll A 'gi -' wvxix l , , ... : Taylor, Linda: 37,114 Taylor, Nancy: 114 Teaford, Murray: 33,110 Thoma, Terry: 114 Thurston, Deborah: 114 Tigner, Raechel: 114 Tomasek, Michael: 29,114 Torento, Carol: 114 Troxel, Patricia: 68,114 Turnbull, Timothy: Ustick, Patricia: 114 Valentine, Michael: 114 Veach, Lynn: 115 Vehslage, Robyn: 115 Verne, Kathleen: 115 Wall, David: 29,33,35,105,110 Walz, Carol: 115 Waslohn, Stephanie: 115 Weber, Greg: 33,35,110 Weber, Philip: 74,115 Weed, David: 33,110 Weisert, Nancy: 115 Weiss, Carol: 115 Wernecke, Kay: 115 West, Charlotte: 32,115 Wheaton, James: 102,115 White, Richard: 37,115 White, Ruth: 115 Wiess, Michael: 115 Wilder, Catherine: 33,40 Wilders, John: 115 Wiles, Catherine: 32,110 Willard, Kathy: 115 Willardson, Kathleen: 115 Williams, David 29,105,115 Williams, James: 105,115 Willis, Deborah: 115 Wilson, John: Wilson, John W.: 86,93,95,115 Wine, Cynthia: 115 Withrow, Gale: 115 Woehle, Paul: 105,115 Wolfe, Rosemary: 115 Wood, Stephen: 72,73,105,115 Woof, James: 75,115 Wylie, Judith: 115 Yoder, Janis: 115 Zientek, Janet: 115 Sophomore Index Adair, Jane: 107 Adams, Stephen: 107 Alexander, Donald: 107 Amberg, Karen: 107 Amstutz, Kenneth: 107 Archey, Norma: 107 Arledge, Bruce: 107 Arnold, Cathy: 33,107 Arnold, Christine: 107 Ashcraft, Robert: 107 Augenstein, Walter: 105,107 Baer, Raymond: 107 Barbour, Steven: 107 Barnett, Richard: 107 Barnhart, Susan: 21,82,107 Baumann, Kathryn: 107 Beardsley, Curtis: 107 Beaver, Lawrence: 107 Beern, Janet: 83,107 Belknap, Susan: 107 Bell, Martha: 107 Belville, Sandra: 107 Benedetti, Nancy: 107 Benedetti, Paul: 107 Bennett, Doris: 107 Bennett, Karl: 35,107 Berry, Judi: 107 Beskow, Kathy: 107 Beyer, M. Deborah: 107 Birkhead, Mary: 73,107 Blasutta, Craig: 107 Blees, Elizabeth: 50,107 Blevins, Richard: Bluestone, Glenn: 107 Bluff, Richard: 107 Blume, Stephanie: 107 Boling, Margaret: 107 Bolon, Philip: 107 Bousecour, Martha: 107 Botkins, Betti: 107 Boulware, Greg: 107 Bro, Beverly: 107 Brody, Jill: 107 Brown, Lynda: 72,73,107 Brown, Roger: 33,35 Bruck, Deborah: 107 Bruny, Stuart: 107 Buchan, James: 104,107 Buchart, Martin: 34,35,107 Bucklew, Debbie: 107 Bucklew, Marilyn: 107 Burdette, Kathy: 107 Burger, Diane: 107 Burrows, Melinda: 107 Bybee, Mark: 107 Cahill, Donna: 32,110 Calabretta, Larry: 107 Callahan, Robert: 107 Campbell, Stephen: 107 11,4-A 1 Carr, Philip: 107 Casey, Jonathan: 107 Casmo, Barbara: 107 Casper, Frances: 107 Casto, David: 107 Chan, Robert: 107 Chervank, Patricia: 107 Chess, Greg: 107 Cheyney, Winston: 107 Chicco, June: 107 Clark, Greg: 107,111 Clements, Michael: 107 Cline, Michael: 107 Cochran, Stephen: 107 Connin, Dale: 110 Cook, Alan: 107 Cook, Alvin: 107 Cooke, Janet: 107 Cooperrider, Susan: 33,110 Corbett, John: 107 Cordell, Rebecca: 107 Corotis, Jeff: 99 Cramer, Mike: 57,104,107 ff' 1 , N . Crawford, Molly: 107 Cribb, David: 92,105,107 Crosby, Linda: 107 Czap, Carol: 42,107 Daehnke, Charles: 107 Daehnke, Kurt: 107,111 Dame, Christie: 107 Daniell, Ric: 99,101,107,111 Darby, Margaret: 68,107 Davies, Kim: 107 Davis, Helen: 107 Davis, John: 107 Demos, Paul: 107 Dennis, Judith: 107 DeRoberts, Diane: 107 Deutschle, Joseph: 107 DeVries, Cynthia: 107 Diamond, Valerie: 73,107 Dibble, Lynn: Dickerson, Gary: 57,107 Diller, Daryl: 108 Dillon, Judy: 108 Dixon, Charles: 108 ' ,qf 2,461 ,, i 5' ,w Nz: ..,, 1 ,i ,- it JI: , ' 1 n ii , il ' 'mc'-11, 1 . 'wi-if HP i T , 1 J ml? V is , ' Z' J if . - V Dodge, Dana: 108 Doerfler, Laurel: 108 Doland, James: 108 Dover, Priscilla: 108 Downerd, James: 108 Draudt, Pamela: 83,108 Dudding, Marsha: 108 Duncan, Lester: 63,108 Eagle, John: 108 Easter, Susan: 33,108 Ebert, Fred: 108 Echelbarger, Ronnie: Edgar, Nancy: 73,108 Edgington, Diane: 108 Egelhoff, Thomas: 98,108 Egger, Eleanor: 108 Eierman, Richard: 108 Ervin, Dennis: 108 Fair, Chester: 108 Farris, Wayne: 108 Fisher, Dave: 108 Fisher, Karen: 33,69,108 Fletcher, Larry: 36 Flocken, Paul: 108 Forquer, David: 108 Fosnaught, Jane: 32,33,110 Franklin, Jeffrey: 76,108 Fredrick, Joseph: 108 Fregonas, Michelle: 83, 108 Frith, Sue: 108 Fulton, Jane: 108 Garrison, Kathleen: 108 Geese, Nancy: 108 George, Paula: 108 Gibson, Barbara: 108 Gibson, Colleen: 108 Gilbert, Kim: 108 Gilpin, Scott: 108 Girard, Jill: 108 Gleim, Wayne: 98,108 Gorsuch, Jean: 108 Graham, Scott: 102,108 I Graham, Steve: 105,108 Grau, Daniel: 108 Graves, Howard: 108 Grigsby, Michael: 108 Grimm, Paula: 108 Grizzell, Beverly: 108 Haines, Mark: 108 Hall, Susan: 32,108 Hammond, Dwight: 108 Hand, Karen: 108 Haney, Eleanor: 108 Hardie, Christina: 108 Harkness, Diane: 29,108 Harlan, Kathryn: 108 Harold, Timothy: 108 Harper, Michael: 108 Harper, Jacqueline: 108 Harrel, Jennifer: 108 Harte, Kathleen: 108 Hartig, Ruth: 108 Higgins, Patrick: 111 Hill, Christine: 111 Hill, Debbie: 56,111 Hill, Gregory: 111 Hill, John: 111 Hill, Robert: 111 Hiller, Robert: 105,111 Hillon, Marcia: 111 Hilson, Kristen: 111 Hindman, Susan: 111 Hindriks, Michael: 111 Hockinberry, Martha: 111 Hoffman, Elizabeth: 111 Hoffman, Paul: 111 Holtz, William: 111 Homeyer, Phyllis: 111 Hopkin, Richard: 37 Horton, Charles: 111 Howard, Curt: 32,110 Jones, Rebecca: 111 Jones, Roger: 111 Jordan, Cynthia: 111 Kachedoorian, Nancy: 111 Kaemmerer, William: 111 Kaiser, Carolyn: 111 Kanamann, Shelley: 111 Kasmersky, John: 98,111 Keffe, Elizabeth: 111 Keller, Pamela: 111 Kellett, Thomas: 111 Kelley, William: 111 Kerr, Andrew: 96,111 Kidwell, Michael: 111 Kieper, Deborah: 111 Kloman, Charles: 93,111 Kocheran, Raymond: 111 Koehler, David: 73,93,111 Kohli, Karis: 102,111 Long, Larry: Longest, John: 111 Longshore, Keith: 111 Lucka, Richard: Lynch, Robert: 111 Lynskey, Herbert: 104,111 Lytle, Steve: MacCallum, Bradd: 111 Macpherson, Shelagh: 111 Mader, Sandy: 111 Major, James: 111 Makey, Cynthia: 21,111 Maloy, Patricia: Mann, Carol: 111 Marshall, Joseph: 37,111 Marshall, Marilyn: 56 Matthaes, Debbie: 111 Mauller, Sandra: May, Christine: 32,111 Hartman, Thomas: 108 Harvey, Stanley: 105,108 Haslup, Stephen: 29,105,108 Hatch, Christopher: 108 Hatfield, Rebecca: 32,73,110 Hatten, Debbie: 108 Heckman, Suzanne: 111 Heffner, Patricia: 111 Heisel, Diana: 111 Hendrix, Deborah: 111 Hennington, Susan: 111 Henson, William: 111 Herrema, Marcia: 111 Herrel, Leslie: 111 Hewlett, JoAnne: 111 Howe, Patricia: Hughes, Bruce: 93,111 Hughes, Dana: 93,111 Hughes, Patricia: 111 Hults, Jane: 111 Hulse, Douglas: 111 Inhat, Barbara: 111 Imboden, Lester: 111 James, William: 73,99,111 Janson, Phyllis: 111 Jenkins, David: 29,105,111 Johnson, Susan: 111 Jones, Charlene: 111 Jones, James: 93,104 Jones, Lisbeth: 111 Korn, Michele: 111 Kossmann, Thomas: 111 Krafft, John: 111 Kritzer, Marie-Ann: Kruckeberg, Diane: 111 Kuhn, Marvin: 111 Lambert, Jerry: 111 Lampson, Laura: 23,73,111 Laughlin, Joy: 111 Leatherberry, James: 111 Lehnert, David: Leidheiser, Paul: 111 Leonard, Mark: 111 Ley, Mary Lou: 111 Limes, Cinda: 111 Mayer, Carol: 111 Maykuth, Carrie: 69,111 McCall, Elizabeth: 111 McCandless, Bonnie: 112 McCarthy, Edwin: 62,112 McCaw, Kenneth: 112 McCreary, Jack: 112 McDonald, James: 112 McFadden, Mary-Jane: 112 McFarland, Larry: 112 McGinnis, David: 112 McGrath, Michele: 112 McLeod, Mark: 102,112 McLeod, Michael: 102,112 McMahan, Patricia: 112 Melton, Carroll: 112 Metzmaier, Stephen: 29,99,101, 102,112 Michel, Steven: 112 Miller, Beverly: 83,112 Milosevich, Paul: 112 Mirise, Steve: 93,104,112 Monnett, Charlotte: 32,112 Monroe, Catherine: 112 Andrew: 1 12 Moore, James: 112 Moore, Patricia: 112 Moore, Rebecca: Moore, Russell: 112 Moore, Thomas: 112 Morley, Ronald: 112 Morris, Moseley, Deborah: 112 Mouser, Harold: 112 Mueller, Karen: 112 Mulberry, R. Legan: 93,105,112 Myers, Mike: 112 Natoli, Sandra: 112 Norman, Cheryl: 112 Nowe, Douglas: 73,112 Nuzum, Douglas: Nye, Vicki: 112 Oates, Betsy: 112 Orr, Linda: 112 O'Ryan, Janene: 112 Overturf, David: Owen, Robert: Palma, Leonard: 112 Panzone, Nicholas: 112 Paul, Mary: 112 Penwell, Sharon: 83,112 Pepple, Deborah: 112 Perkins, Stephen: 112 Peters, Darrell: 112 Peters, David: 112 Peters, Kristine: 112 Peterson, Pamela: 112 Pfefferle, Nancy: 112 Phillian, Jody: 112 Pickering, Doris: 112 Piersol, Sheri: 112 Poff, Linda: Porter, Joan: 113 Pratt, Jeffrey: 99,112 Price, Beverly: 112 Prior, Mary: 112 Puchstein, William: 112 Quam, Richard: 33,92,105,112 Raymond, Michael: 112 Redman, Steve: 112 Reed, Dennis: 112 Reed, Peggy: 112 Reedy, Wayne: 112 Reeves, William: 112 Reisch, Mary Jo: Richey, Emilie: 113 Rieffenberger, John: 113 Riley, Laurie: 113 Rindfleisch, Michael: 113 Ringer, Mark: 113 Rittenhouse, Linda: 113 Robbins, Kathi: 113 Robbins, Richard: 99,113 Roberts, Richard: 113 Robinette, Diane: 113 Rohde, Barbara: 113 Rooney, Patricia: 72,82,83,113 Rose, William: 113 Ross, Dale: 93,104,113 Rossetter, Thornosine: 113 Roush, Donald: 113 Rudinger, Rodney: 113 Rush, Connie: 113 Russell, John: 113 Russell, Stephen: 99,113 Ryder, Larry: 93,104,113 Sams, Van: 93,105,113 Sandberg, Cheryl: 113 Sanner, Robert: 113 Sarris, Michael: 113 Saunders, Susan: 113 Saup, Brendan: 113 Sayre, Robert: 99,102,113 Schafer, Eugene: 36,113 Schieve, Christina: 113 Schiller, David: Schmidt, Hilarie: 115 Schmitt, Mark: 93,104,115 Schmitter, Steven: 104,115 Scholer, William: 115 Scholl, Deanna: 115 Schoyer, Charles: 104,115 Scott, Jerry: 115 Scott, Paul: 115 Scott, Sam: 115 Secrest, Susan: 115 Sellers, Patty: 73,115 Sells. Robert: 33,105,115 Serif, Sam: 115 Shaw, Charlene: 115 Shearer, Patricia: 115 Sheridan, Steve: 33 Shindle, Karan: Shipley, Deborah: 115 Shober, Jenifer: 115 Shrewsbury, Stephen: 115 Siegwald, Kathy: 115 Sillick, Barbara: 115 Simon, Jim: 115 Simon, Lynn: 115 Simons, Vicki: 75,115 Sinzinger, John: 115 Skeele, Thomas: 115 Smith, Dennis: 115 Smith, Laurie: 115 Smith, Teresa: 115 Sneed, Carolyn: 115 Snyder, Rebecca: 115 Souders, Donald: 115 Speelman, Steven: 115 Spence, Pamela: 115 Spencer, Jack: 115 Spitz, Janet: 115 Sprague, Nancy: 115 Steele, Felicity: 115 Steiger, Ralph: 115 Stein, Penney: 115 Stilwell, Allen: 115 Strasser, Thomas: 105,115 Strauss, Marguerite: 115 Stromsta, Scot: 115 Stuckey, Sharon: 115 Suarez, Helena: 115 Summerson, Henry: 115 Syfert, Stephen: 115 Tetrick, Daniel: 49,115 Tevlin, Linda: 115 Theiss, Kathleen: 115 Thomas, Gerald: 105,115 Thomas, Patricia: 57,70,82,83, 115 , Thompson, Cecelia: 115 Thompson, Deborah: 32,115 Tigner, Mary: 115 Titus, Lydia: Traphagen, David: 115 Trout, Deborah: 73,115 Trout, Gregory: 34,35,115 Tyler, Ricky: 104,115 Velzy, David: 104,115 Volkerna, Colette: 115 Voris, Shelli: 115 Waldo, Dana: 115 Walker, Kathleen: 115 Ward, Sue: 69,115 Warren, Stephen: 104,115 Wassmuth, Roberta: 115 Watson, Marilyn: 115 Webbe, Caryl: 115 Weber, William: 115 Weimer, Richard: Weisent, Janet: 115 Wenger, Susan: 82,115 West, John: 115 Westerviller, Linda: 115 Westerviller, Steven: 115 Wheeler, Susan: 115 Whitcraft, James: 115 White, Donna: 115 White, Richard: Whitsel, Earl: 115 Williams, John: 115 Williams, Judith: 115 Williams, Keith: 115 Williams, Mike: 105,115 Williams, Nancie: 115 Willierd, Gregg: 115 Willis, Barbara: 115 Wills, Mike: 93,104,115 Wilson, Ruth: 115 Wolfe, Diane: 115 Wolfe, William: 73,93,105,115 Wood, Bruce: 33,110 Woodyard, Keith: 32,110 Yasko, Pete: 115 Yorde, Robert: 93,104,115 Young, Elizabeth: 32,115 Zartman, Leslie: 29,33,110 Zientek, James: 115 Zimmerman, Kathleen: 115 Zook, John: 99,100,115 159 vgy .XV N Es.. ' 'W dbgdi' vw.-Q13 51 , ,Q,if1L-i5g'4ff'i: A. 'S pxlrn -4? if-5 Nh' it If 15'-'i' -- e-.. . :- .- V ', . 3 . 'Z Q-AI, 'dig -. .J A . up ' 'u . 'QV '. . . .. . . . 3-' .I - ,. M' , f,- N 1967 egend EDITORS: Jonathan Frost Nancy Needham Sheri Stevenson PHOTOGRAPHERS Jon Bentz John Fulton John Wilson STAFF: Carol Czap Karen Haas Carol Ish Nancy Nye Lynne Penvvell Pamela Phillips John Richardson Patty Rohde Paul Sattler Cathy Schieve Peg Wada Leslee Wilson TYPIST: ' Carolyn Pickering ADVISOR: Dorothy Hill 'I J Y I In . 3 - 4 V - 'F 55325113 N U H - 5 Phone 486-9855 486-4613 1746 west FIFTH AVENUE - coeumsus, omo 43212 mbm 4160 INDIANOLA AVENUE, COLUMBUS, OHIO 43214 nl 1 Compliments of Mablon M axton Chevrolet Worthington, Ohio 1' House Uf ' A EARL V. CARLIN 'EP' L'k:SAa!., AND 1114 Cleaners ASSOCIATES 1 N xx D . b Mak. gm' ' A Quality Insurance Brokers ya mney L' X Sewice TELEPHON . E 486-2457 1605 N' h'9h 4685 N. High Second to None columbus 262-3442 . 1 For Pick-Up and qu Delivery 1630 N. High Street CALL ... 1 - salon ' beaut KINGSDALE PHARMACY 451-1422 R Y d, 1771 KINOSDALE CENTER 976 W Henderson aymon S COLUMBUS 21, OHIO 4444 H high 268-8032 READ , lean wa' rbi, .W um lar 'nw lair un I me wan Katt Bm. ' tazu S Cturml 95 Y i The mu in GW - oc pu C0 ,O eoniixnrenzsxgig j nab, War AF i 1 1' 'U 'lo' D xo... In ar mms bg devoured, - jg N P P . W - ' rad Adeuauer, may Exo' 'Q1 Ky f CL-nl - mmm-CB. law' ' End Ya' ml.CDCAL NEWS EDITCRIALS WANT ADS SCHQOL LUNCH MENUS For Greater Northern Columbus 267-3l75 XQ Clrur lt -L dg s-Cl bs I5 6 B l g Ba q ets G3 x ' I 1 gem 15 Warren s X 4 .va bl. n Q , ' Sandwich jiggjgtmlly , House ' ' ' Catering Service I GARDNER Qi Q Qlcw 258-233 Q QQ r n r ,, H THE ORIGINAL The Green Thumb Your complete garden supply and equrpment center 'lib 4382 I d IQ HAMBURGER mm , , j 'im '13 3 parucular people p1Ck parker s H-V, M sf-2221-i,1 Cousvs 15 FOR IOO HOMEMADE CHILI Compliments of COMO QUICK CLEANERS 3291 North High Street Dale Pasco AM 8-4688 Bud Pasco Complele Insurance Service - Bonds Putnam Insurance Agency, Inc. James K. Putnam 4161 N. High Sl. Off. 267-12 Res. 885-451 Columbus 14, Ohio THE GOLDEN EIGHT BALL Billiard Fun For Everyone 2871 Olentangy River Road Columbus, Ohio li Good Luck SENIORS '67 Bob and Corky Pierce PIERCE BROS. CLEANERS 5205 North High sf. just north of Graceland 888-4225 Columbus' Finest Shirt Laundry Free Pick-up and Delivery we-gk rv Y X K'- , TAKE 'n T0 9 S ISO HANI BU RGERS THIIIFT 'N SWIFT DRIVI IN J 11:- 'E5Ei5i5f:E5 'V-- .--1, 1 .. V ... I- niclln Q V I3 This 13-foot beauty in baked-on car finish alum'num' -t e w' d .1 .gear yp in ows, and matching screens, roomy dinette, built-in sink, 2- burner stove, ice re- STANDARD MODEL 5 00 frigerator. A ple st d izn b' orage an a 1- nets. Keep in gar- age: use as spare bedroom. Available in 3 floor plans, one with commode. Also Sleep: 4 or 5 alvailable in bright WgI.975lb:. 11nish aluminum. Also SCOTTY SPORTSMAN 15 STANDARD MODEL SI 1 6: 00 wsifiifiliipoooibf. sggsirosl Also SPLIT-LEVEL HI-LANDER STANDARD MODEL '11623 ROGERS TRAILERS WHEN YOU THINK OF REAL ESTATE.. . ALWAYS THINK OF MAYER 81 GLOECKNER CALL 885-2255 4950 N. HIGH ST McLoughIin's Pharmacy To Simon and Garfunkel and ro the class of 67: RIGHT! TAT Restaurant and Carryout 4204 Indianola 267-7510 267-7519 FRANKLIN SPORTS CENTER I Athletic Sports Specialists 4606 N. High 268-1294 Wilson Spalding Converse Dunlop I Congratulations COMPL MENTS OF Class of MEEKER SHEET METAL 7 67 Huntington I FAUHIQN J MR. ANTHONY DISABATO Bank WOODWARD PARK CENTER 4844 N. HIGH 1 1234 MORSE ROAD Bccchwold Branch COL, 21, OHIQ COLUMBUS, Or-no 263-8454 888-7794
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