The Centurian Yearbook 1968

Page 1





Champaign Centennial High School Champaign, Illinois Volume I



I

Out of a brush-covered field grew concre e walls, surrounded everywhere by a conflict of radi ions a d loyal ies

3


The seal on the gym floor was made permanent. Three blue C'slncorporated into basketball games, pep assemblies, P.E. classes forever. The football field, the lights, the empty stands symbolized the newness. The image was bare ond incomplete until cheering crowds were added to serve as a bac drop bordering a string of blue jersies. The students were the real proof of a unified school. An architectural plan on blueprint paper became a reality at last. The seven year building process terminated. End ProjectBut the growing, expansion. development process is endless.

1968:

4


5


b


lmoges of desks piled high with boo s ond popers eoch doy of the school yeor. Troditionol courses ore toe led by modern me hods¡ the reol creotivity is between teochers ond students.

7


Shouts of Victory from cheering crowds will echo through the stonds for mony yeors. The enthusiostic support of Centenniol's othletic teams will never be equoled in Chompoign-Urbono.

8


9


Contents Academics ................ . .............. 14 Organizations ............................. 46 Sports ................................... 86 Student Life ............................. I I0 Underclass .............................. 122 Seniors ................................. 150 Advertising .............................. 175 Index ................................... 180

10


Endless class periods and he u "formity of an 8:30 o 3:15 five-day world are forgotten as the las tone sounds. and o ly the weekend ball game remains important.

II


"Birth" wos the key word os students spontoneously orgonized over forty groups whose occomplishments now Centenniol troditions. ore

12


13


14


Academics

15


New Equipment "Happiness is fin'shing o 350 page Spanish novel." wos o familiar cry of a few s-eniors, with this year's addition of fifth year language classes to Centennial's academic program. Fifth year Spanish, German and French students were not codd ed by English speaking and translating, but rather studied the native culture in the native language. The e pansion of audio equipment in the Foreign Language deportment increased the likelihood of more students achieving the advanced levels. The broad heme of "man and his world" sometimes meant discussion of hippies, and at other times the Romanticism of

he nineteenth century. Re-

gardless of the where or when, the emphasis in the English department was always on people. The reality and fantasy of the world merged as Drama and Speech s udents lost their inhibitions in the spontaneous approach to communi¡ cation,

16

Even shoving o bolloon hos i s ploce in e new ocodemic curriculum. His speech doss only

hopes thot Steve Smi h's"coreer"doesn't blow up in his foce.

A new opproech to leorning o foreign Jon¡ guoge moleriolized with the oddit'on of o per eb!e longuoge lob including bottery-

operoted microphones end eorphones. Once the technique of using the equipment wos

mostered, the hord st port of th over.

lesson wos


Breaks Language Barriers

r'al defendant Ras olni ov more re¡ contly nown es Randy Moncrief, is swor" in on Eng Is s udent's 'bible"-Webster's Third . IGHT: B'g C ief C arl e Porker pr ac es peace o speecf, cl ss


Speakers, Mock Convention Mark Social Studies Program Yesterd~y is not gone! It lives in the cl~ssrooms of e history h~ll. Psychology, hum~nities, ond contempor~ry history provide ~ lin between the p~st

ond the present. Discussion periods in psychology brought ~bout probing ~Miysis of everything from study of neurotics to n~r­ cotics. The study of the mind-its hum~n ond ~nim~l ch~r~cteristics-stim­ ul~ted en hus·~stic response. Even ~s news is be"ng m~de tod~y. it becomes ~ port of he p~s . Conempor~ry his ory provided ~ perspecive in continuity. Ex~mined were the modern trends of socie y-their origins ond results. There w~s ~lw~ys on ~bun­ d~n supply of topics for deb~ e or ~r­ gumen ~s students pursued ~ f~s p~ced world wh'ch never stops-no even for semester bre~ks. Ac ivi ies of e Hum~ni ies progr~m -which, for the first time in Centenni~l's his ory, included sophomores, juniors, ~nd seniors-extended from field trips to Kr~nnert Art Museum ond University pl~ys o rousing discussions of he unsound economic bosis of M~rx's communism. The well- nown pessimistic, ony hing-but-idle Hum~nities s uden s spent ~ lot of ime on momentous theoretic~! questions, such ~s: could the United S ~tes survive world pe~ce? D~ys p~ssed in ~ccumul~ting knowledge of the swift years and heir effec . All of the urmoil, dabbling and bustle in o the p~st w~s direc ed toward a be er unders ~ d'ng of our own "yesterd~ys."

THE EXPLORATIO oro'ec.

18

of Lew's o d Cor

presen+od by Tom Boe•wcld os his

i~de

'lden+ s udy


THE MOCK Republicen conve"tion in Mr. Lehman's contemporary history class chose a promis' g presidential team of Daryl Bartelson and Fra k Russell.

ogy c' asses.

uses for e bnc ' a e o 'sc:o ered by

e

J~

'or

me ni ies s uden s.

LEFT: J,._N RATHBU seel"ls o be d scoveri~g e answers for the cons¡ ufor test hidden in he map w e Pa y Gensemer ITlUS e'y on les n'gh 's s udy''lg.

19


EXPERIME TAL BIOLOGY mouse seems to h11ve some objection being known llS "mouse under gl<'lss" es studen s study him.

o

GEOMETRY POSES problems, though not insurmounteble es Mr. Lllng offers essistence to C11role Wellner.

Science Students Ignore Textbooks, Experiment on Their Own Amoeb~ r~n

wild in the Biology rooms this ye~r. Students went wild ~!so, trying to identify the "millions" of p~rts of ~ ' simple" cell. Adv~nced courses in Chemistry, B'ology, ~nd Physics were offered for the first time. They were enriched by the ~ddition of new f~cil­ ities such ~s the anim~l c~re c~se, where students could observe he h~bits of many different kinds of onim~ls. A speci~l ~word w~s given to the person who cleaned the c~ges. Introductory Physic~! Science w~s ano her course new o Centenni~l. Students m~de their own dr~wings ~nd observ~tions based on experiment~tion. For those who had br~ved the first two yeors of m~th, ~ new course-An~­ lytic~l Geometry-w~s offered. A new course in te~cher educ~tion m~th w~s ~!so ~v~il~ble to those students who felt they might enter the feld of element~ry educ~ ion. But even the traditionol courses in ~lgebra and geometry were t~ught wi h ~ new twist.

MR. CASTEEL'S clllss leerns t et emez'rg d'scoveries cer be m<'lde if ore looks closely enough hrough 11 microscope.

20


SELDO ends i I.

WITH COMPASS in ~end Charre Tic~e or works dilige~tly on his enely ic gao e ry co s rue· t'ons.

ARE

e c e is ry labs es d •

ed


Students Race Against Timers 1n Practicing Efficiency ' Rocing he clock" wos one of the moin go es" ployed in typing end shorthend closses. There were meny new courses ovoiloble for the student desiring o business coreer. Subject metter voried from toxes, insuronce, consumer educotion, business low, solesmenship, end bookkeeping to menuol skills such os shorthend, typing, end operoting office machinery. The emphosis wos on efficiency. A new development in the business deportment wos the use of oudio secretories. The voice on the recording dictoted

somple letters, end students diligently put their nowledge of shorthend outlines end forms to use. New electric typewriters spoiled students for monuols, end odding mochines mode pencil wor obsolete. Future so'esmen procticed soles echniques os the bookkeeping students try in vein to find the fif y-cent error in their oddition. The deportment plo s to expend, odding occounting end dote processing, os bus'ness closses eep in step with the busy world of todoy.

MATH PROBLEMS are easily overco e as Ga'l Kempe learns to use e calcula or.

AUDIO-SECRETARIES cha' enge Barb Bi ch a"d Darlene Dexter to write at top speed.

SECRETARIAL PROBLEMS are s''Tlpler for Janet Soloman as she employs mod rn eq.ipmMt.


ABOVE: THE MANNEQUIN gets her Bonrie lrskip before she goes irto the duplic~tes keys ~~ p~rt of his C.V.E. job.

fin~! O.K. showc~se.

from Jim Cline ~nd RIGHT: Doug Dazler

Students Combine Education, Jobs for Practical Experience The Co-operative Vocational Education and Occupational Exploration programs combined classroom nowledge wi h an actual five-day business world. S udents ga ¡ ed experience for future careers and learned a specific trade or s ill. Offce Occupations, Home-Econom"cs Related Occupations, Distributive Education, and Diversified Occupations gave a wide choice to members of the program. Participating studen s received prevocational guidance. A desire to learn a ski! and apply oneself was not enough. C.V.E. s udents found tha the most important requirement was the ability to get along with others. Occupational Explorations gave special education students a chance ~o fu 1fill post-graduate opportun ties. lndividt..al talen s and abilifes were uflized to prepare the student for Ia er job openings.

TOP BOY'S C.V.E. worker tomer's ch~r>ge.

Sh~ror

Fehrenb~der

pr~ctices

correct procedure of returniMg cus-

23


Needles, Nails Prove Essential Materials for Students

-

CAREFUL SELECTIO of cenned goods by quelity, weig t end cost ere import nt homemeking responsibi!i ies precticed by Merilyn Hunt and Kethy Petton.

Future homemakers ond mechonics hod oil the odvontoges of new equipment ond exponded facilities. Cooking end sewing were emphasized es two very importont skills of the modern housewife. but the "stitchin' end s irrin' " course of yesteryear wos developed to include the moder~ princ~­ ples of clothing core end reperr, nu rrtion, end efficien.t buying. Additional consideration wos given to family life ond the ort of getting olong with people-certainly useful nowledge to onyone. The sound of modern electrical Machinery cutting wood or grinding me ol filled the new Industrial Arts heodquerters. Bewildered mo'es weded through o seemingly endless see of greased ports os they tr'ed to locote o mechanic's best friend-o bobbypin. Whether the finished product wos o successful souffle, wor oble engine, or shiny tobletop, it reflected the hours of skillful potience ond sotisfoction in o job well done.

LEFT: DOWN IN the dark room, Steve Willey, a photogrephy student, leerns how to seve money by d veloping his own pictur s. ABOVE: John Perry eccuretely angles and meesures before putting the newly corrpleted shop's bench sew to use, while Bill Bates waits his turn.


precisio!l ere precticed by Tim Messeneri end Greg Mills

THE HOME Ec. unit on child development i'lcludes Veo Gogh technique observed by Jo Anne Adeir.

JODI D'URSO, Cherlie Prough, end Dewn Heston t y strenuously to bele'lce en enythirg-bu • bulging budge in femily living cless.

25


Creativity Excels 1n New Atmospheres of Music and Art Dirty smoc s ond t.~rpentine on one side of the second floor, and ofter school bond sectionols vs. chorol practice ot the other end, indicated that both the ort ond music departments wor ed hord to brea in new heodquorters. The music deportment happily populo ed, for the first time, its three large rooms-choral, band, ond ensemble. Practice rooMs, instrument storage rooms, and a music I brary were also added. The ou standing acous ics and IT'odern recordi~g facil"ties gave a new dimension of sound to Mr. Olson's vo"ce and to the tap of Mr. Anderson's iny wooden bator. A solid wal of windows bounded the art deportment on one side. Portable s orage islonds subdivided the Iorge room into three semiprivate classrooms. The pound"ng in leotherworks, he whir of the pottery wheel, ond pain spec s on the floor were evidence of studen s exploring the bounds of crea "vity.

ABOVE· ART STUDENTS leo•~ to use tl-eir i-nogt of o~s ir- their cloy creations. LEFT: A wine bott e o~d e piece of chel ere o'l Doug Roesch needs to create h·s still rfe mos+erpiece.


Fl

E LEATHER crof ing requ'res

e s illful honds of To y Poyne.

THE HALL rings wit Coppello choir under

the voices of he A e direction of Susie

Don~ert.

CENTE

IAL'S BAND ch rgos up t"e Homecom'ng Assembly wi h o chorus of the' Cer enn'ol

Rght So g.~.

27


-

_,.,,

creo ive

HAIR FLIES o d sods foil os L!!identified Ce~tenriol s+er shows proper (7) besketbell form.

28

1n er-


New Gym, Pool Supplement Physical Education Department

PROPER WRESTLI G technique is difficul to mes er wi hou

th

firm guide'lce of Mr.

ecek.

Long-haired boys struggled wi h sw'mming caps, and g'rls argued over the merits of bikinis over drob onk su'ts. The new olympic size pool, encosed in gleaming fie, highl'gh ed P.E. closses his year. Superior gymnost'cs equ'pment mode mony new courses possible. Golf was offered to the girls for the first time, ond the boys had o chance o wor ou on universal we'ght ro'ning moch'nes. Completion of Centenniol's gym wos he moin contr'bu ion to he P.E. deportment. At los , regular cot.rses such os bos etboll ond volleybo I could be fought. After wo yeors of pushi g bock choirs in clossrooms ond dropi g clo es over desks, seniors reodily accepted loc er room foci!' 'es ond e boundless gym floor. The P.E. departmen also offered boys' ond girls' in ramural sports o those students who would I' e o spend more ime in he gym. Senior girls were a so able o assis a eacher in classes other han their own, a d unde oo he tash of urn'ng on e new wal -through showers, and counting he towels as eoch period ended.

LEFT: BOYS Fl D e mu purpose re n ~g mach es i vclueble. op. ABOVE: Bonr'e 'nsk'p execu• s e b ¡ d 'ump c'ld comes ou o

29


Dr. Berner Brings Many Changes to Unit IV Administration Dr. Morsholl Berner assumed the position of S~..operintenden of Schools this year, os Dr. E. H. Mellon too leove of his coreer in educotion for retirement. Keeping in mind the post gools of the school board, Dr. Berner continued to wor for the best educotional curriculum possible. Program~ for the mento'ly ond physico!ly handicapped, for those students enrolled in vocational training, and for both the gifted ond average pupil were broadened. Taking advantage of the e cellent educofonal fac'lities, the Unit IV School Board formally ded'cated Cen enniol High School in the new school's ouditorium in November.

MISS ELSIE Erge hewp dirac s p~b ic rele ons for the Un' IV sys e . Per ene t che'rme of +he f Cl' y cu•r ::ulum boerd Dr. Rober Cooley cts es Ass' +ent Superir e dent of II'S rue ion.

MR. GEO GE He l'rs " ¡s r sp IV school budg t

be f r

e

drno 's ret' n of

e Ur'


DUTIES OF tne School Board included the pre$entation of the dedication ceremonies.

DR. MARSHALL Berrer finds the posi 'oft of Scperin ender of schools difficul bu cl.alle girg.

BOARD MEMBERS: Mr. Franc's Barer Mr. J. Wallace Raybcrn, Mr. Donald Porter (president), Mrs. Dorotl,y Wilsor, Mrs He en lafeer, and Mr. Richard Foley. (Not present: Richard R. Edwards.)

31


German Exchange Principal Shares Centennial's First Year If o student soid thot onywhere he turned he would bump into one of Centenniol's odMinistrotors, it is very possible thot he wos not exoggeroting, for it wos not unusuol to see Mr. Lonqenecker, Mr. Dahl, ond Mr. Mclure talking with studen s ond teochers os they possed to classes. With the utilization of the entire building, their paths increosed, ond it was rumored thot Cooch Quinlon would put them on his cross country teom if their administrative duties did not require full-time devotion. A pedometer proved thot twenty miles wos their overage distonce traveled in one doy. In order to broaden vistos ond promote understonding between countries, on exchange wos set tJP between Mr. Longenecker ond Dr. Blasius, who come to Chompoign from Germony. Dr. Blosius spent four months ot Centenniol studying school procedures and meeting i s students. A new odd'tion wos mode to he stoff os Mr. Mclure begon his first yeor ot Centenniol. The students were osked to help design such things os the Centenniol coot of or s, doss rings, choosing groduotion gowns, ond o flog for eoch doss. The chollenges of forming o unique school were fored through the willingness ond enthusiosm of the odministroPRI CIPAL R CHARD Longenecker teckles first yeer problems.

FOREIGN EXCHANGE principel, Dr. Blesius, finds new coun ry

exciti~g.

fon.


MR. LO GENECKER ta~es on 'Master of Ceremonies" posi io at the dedication progr&'ll, MR. DAHL sops to give seniors P4m McEvoy and Marc Colbert 11 word of advice.

THE POSITION of Assistant Principal requires Mr Jo~n McL1.o•e +o handle

any proble s at orce.

33


Seniors Look to Counselors for Help 1n Planning Futures The first few wee s of each quarter invariably brought an overflow of studel"+s to the counseling offices. Schedule mix u s were effic"ent y taken care of and perso'lal problems were pafent 1y loo ed il" o. Mal"y future careers and co'lege pions were carefully plotted out between student and counselor. To aid s udents in selecting the profession st.ited to their abilifes and tas es, the coJnselors worked with the Chamber of Commerce on the "Coreer Showcase" program. Inside nowledge was imparted to s uden~s on every job-from careers in the world of fash"on des"gr to the dar interior of Africa w"+h the Peace Cofps

COU SELO S RELY on Mrs. Mo n for 1-er org n"ze'"o

Willard F. Berger: Counselor I d s r"el Ar s . . . Kay Colldeweih: Counse ::~r . . . Robert Davenport : Cou se r . AI Davis : Counse1or Foreign Exche ge Comm" ee In erect . Cleveland Hammonds: Cou se or, Pep Club Aho A..,.,erice Cub . Donald Shuman : Sc!lool Soc"el Worler . . . Mrs. Wilma Tin ham : es rce Teec!ler for +he Bind ... Mrs. Bonnie Youngberg : Co rs 1 '¡

FEW PEOPLE ree l"ze ~de go.

34

e "erd wor

e~d

effor

he cou se1ors must

'ld effc"e'lcy.


Library Offers Quiet Refuge to Students Seeking Knowledge Who con rer>'lember he ti le of the book wher~ nine figt..re Dewey decimals are rushing hrough the M. d? libraria s found tha h's was a com on d'leMma eas'ly solved. Less simple probleMs were finding s ude ts who belonged to o erdue books, or locating e r'ght con ainer for agazi e microflm. ListM'ng boo hs, priva e d"scl.ission rooms and apes of music and poe ry selec ions con r·b.~ted o he col'ec 'on of nowledqe. The edd' 'on of ma!ly new boo s proved he e library had no lost s"gh of is radi io al role.

L B ,A..RY SECRET,A..RIES: a d •s M'dey Dorsey

Mrs . Maurine Ligget: Libr11r"~n • Co-Ord a or.

. Mr. Robert Wade: ,A..ud"o Vis~~~

,A..SOVE: I D VIDU,A..L BOOTHS g"ve ~rth~ 0 'ver11 11"d Joh" u ~1 ~ pl~ce o s+udy. lEFT: ,A..s Golish elper' e s rs. P u'~ S OiJd of ers edv' ce

35


Language Teachers' Enthusiasm Extends Beyond Classrooms

MISS THORP welcomes Bo F11 xen e Pe Evere 's,

ll

11

open ho se Mrs. Charlotte Anderson: English . . . Mrs. Gissela Berner: Germ n . . . Mrs. Dawn Elkin: English, Junio r cless ... Mrs. Barbara Fletcher: Spenish Spen's Honor Soc'ety • . • Mrs. Carol Jasnow: French French C ub, Pep Club Stuart Jenkins : Eng! sh CE TINAL • . . Mrs. Marcy Kelly: Engl'sl- Hurreni 'es . . . Mrs. Sandra Ketter: Engl'sf. S ude"t Co~"c I As is+ent • Mrs. Marietta Lamar: Fr rei, Frencl- Club, French Netiona Hono r Society . • . Mrs. Karen Liethen: Engli h Humanit es . • Mrs. Mary Lou Miller: Eng 'sh •.. Mrs. Rita Miller: Spenisf. Spanisl- Club. LEFT: W EARY A D ' el'lder-footed" Mrs. E end M•s. Anderson re ax ef r clenes.


MR S. J AS OW e d Mrs Fe c e• f"nd e for qw e s udy

ABOV E A TE SE momerre hee rsel. RIGHT: M S.

~or

Mrs. Sm

s she v

we c es

mome~t

ewey from stu de s

p ey

g i~ h r speech cess.

Mrs. BobeHe Pippenger: (.., · •• Mrs. Vida Rimes : Gefrnen Germe~ C ~b • . • Mrs. lynne Siegel: E g 's , C E TU lA • , • Mrs. Mary Ann Smith : Hu. e · 'es Speec Dre me, Debe e C lu b , Ore e Club ••. Mrs. Linnea Thorp : Eng lis Psyc o ogy S uderCow c'l,

37


Peter Lee Abell : H'slory . . . Mrs . Lou ise Ba er: 1-!os ory . . Gail . Wally Lehman : H's o y 1-lumcnities Hu on KiHelson : H's o Mrs. elc 'ons C lub •. Joseph F. McGuire: H"s•ory 1-iuf'l'lani es . . Joanne Starkey: Hu lin 'es, Social Stud'es • . Mrs. Caryl Willis: H"s•ory, Social Stud es Sop omore Cheer eaders . . . Gary W iseman : Soc'ol S• ud es.

Social Studies Teachers Find Casual Atmosphere Stimulating

BELOW:

S. W LL S ecds d scussoo

IG HT: TH E MOME T of r t '" "· • rt+le pi~ boo~·.

38

I"

err'ves as

re axed a mospl-ere.

r. Leh ma" p1cces g •ad es


Mice and Compasses Enrich Math and Science Departments

HE OPAQUE pro ec

r

o s

eoc

·~g

du es.

David Alan Casteel : Sc'e'lce Conservo ion C .b. House of Represen o 'ves . . Mrs . Joyc Hill : o , ofoool Ho11or Society . . . Mrs. Rena Kir~patrick: Science Varsity CheerMrs. Eleanor Knight: Scieftce Libroricn . . . leoders . . Lawrence A. Lang : cth ••• Mrs. Audrey Lindsey : Sciei'Ce . . . Robert C . Nelson : Mo Ass·s~art Sophomore Footbo!l Coach, Heod W res~lirg Cooch ... Paul W. Ra iney: Mo f. •.. Mrs. Martha Schuh : oh a h Cub . • . John U. Spoonamore: Sc'ence As ro o"'ly C .b.

39


Business Teachers Train and Instruct Tomorrow's Executives

EVER A mo e~ of rest for Mrs P !mer in her typi"g class.

Mr. Thomas Boyd : Busi ess . , . Mrs. Donna Hathaway : Business, FTA .•• Mr~ . Bette Justus : Business SophoMore Class Off'ce Occup ions Club , .. Mrs. Marilyn Metcalf: Business , , . Gerald O 'Bryan : Busi'leSS DECA . . . Don Overton : Business, C ENTURIA Business Adviso r Mrs La Vonne A. Palmer: Business FSA.

HARD AT wo :

40

hese studen s do loeir deily cless exercises.


E. Allan Boehm : Industrial Arts . . • Gerald Goodman: In· dus•r· I Ar s Earl Jones: lndu riel Ar s . . . Claude Murphy: lnd11s ri Ar s CVE

MR. JO ES costs o watchful e e wh e T m We +e" teg·ce ly placed hoe ·,.. the eg of e tab e

ve

dr s e s ro

Home Ec, Industrial Arts Offer Practical Ideas Mrs. Lila Eichelberger: Horr.e Ec CVE Fu ~re Homerre ers of America Sop omore Cheerleaders . . . Mrs. Marilyn Sinder: Home Ec Mrs. Betty Walker: Home Ec . . . Carole Berg: CVE Ergl s .

MR. MURPHY explo'ns to J1m H n"is the u e of

r>ew equipment.

41


Teachers Find Days Too Short to Sponsor Enough Activities Robert J. +y B

sr

Mrs.

Pr

Avery:

PE

Mary

ro

LEFT: WI-! STLE A D stop wotch ore two of he mo importon+ ingredien s in 11 P.E. class show by M'ss Fry.

BELOW: B AVI G THE cold wea her coaches Johl' Mac !!I'd Wes Dovis.

42

re


Music, Art Programs Find New Home in Modern Addition Glen R. Anderson : M~s·c E c re C b • A t .. William W. Olson : s'c od r Raney : Ar .•• William Silham : A•

M

RA EY S f.e

pf~

in

"s s

Kenneth B. Cottingham : usc o ers . Lynn

de~

s' or wo .

43


Centennial Secretaries Fulfill Indispensable Duties Daily Experts a• copi'lg with u scheduled d sesters, Cent rniol s secretaries were indispensable. Mo'linq grode cards, translating the CO'If,JSing phroseology of college opprcetiors o"d forever e"d corstantly f ling out passes we•e a few ways n which t~ey flied up their days Any club wh'ch hod somethirg to sell, Invariably headed for •he office first thing. Secreter'es ere notorio s for word of mowtl1 edvert sing. AI hough eutomefion wes en important foetor in the off'ce, secre eries egree the• mech'nes will never be eble to replece hem. Mechires co~ 1 d rever cope wi h the urpred'c eble studert.

0

E OF

rs. Musgrove's mony chores is typing a~d runni g s enc'ls. tion business.

44


CAFETERIA STAFF: ROW I: Rose Downing, Helen Sq 'res, Pet Knowles, Maxine elson, Margaret Deer' Munds, Barbera Swinford, Mone Varga Evelyn Molen, Dorothy McKinney, Ru h Paul, Lee Merri .

Service Staff Aids 1n Daily Routine

THOUSA OS OF pieces of bre11d go into sendwic es' every day.

Aromes of pee'lut butter coo es a d brownies greeted s udents as t ey err"ved o begin he'r 1-unger-creeting days at school. Servi'lg on the Un t 10 food serv'ce steff t e fourteen cafeter"a workers cree ed nutr" 'ous llS well as savory meals. 100 pounds of flo r ll'ld o'l resulted i e ro s 'c" s pp em ., ed every eel. 1., ~tddi 'on to ~t'd' g t e cefeter"a wor ers the n'ne member staff of cus od'a s preserved he new ess of Centennial by eep'ng the yellow 1-a Is tl-ae g'ga fc gym 11s'um a"d "a thous11nd a d o e" classrooms i'Tlmacula e.

CUSTODIA S: ~OW I: Weier Bean, Joh'l Sweet, Lindsey Roy, Jesse W11t s Deve McDowe I. ROW 2: Bobby Lee Hunt, Fred Max Turner.

eal, John B ding,

45


46


Organizations

47


CENTU RIAN EDITORS: OW I: Kathy Scr bner, ency Greenstein. ROW 2: Berbere Heywood, S"san Trimble Bonn Schreiber Jill Dins. ore, erc"o H"xson, Sue Bergs rom e i Zerbuc , Cerol Hutchinson.

DETERMI ED U DERCLASS edi or selec "on enythi"g but "fun end gemes".

et y Scribner

finds

ROW 3: SllSII" Buschbech, Nency Huxteble, John Smelling Greg Hetch, J.Jdy 'ir wood, P ule Mor on Joan Dixon, Kore~ Her men.

p"cture

NANCY GREENSTE N pleys king on the mou~ ein" w~il to get e good 1hot of Chris R1err>er for the CENTURIAN.

e

tempti~g


CENTURIAN Staff Cuts Ribbon to Open New Tradition

BUSI ESS STAFF: SEATED: Dione Dahl, Mr. Don Over+on, Be y E ner lNG· Ad11 Trov r J n Le•eer Lynda Terrell Po y Gen erner le ee Key

ABO E: THE by Co Ed' rs S~;e Bu chbach e d De d "OS w •e f"le' m re

~e

ST

D

d pr d + e CE TURIA w s c rr'ed ass ed by •s Lyllne S ege Sponsor. RIGHT· Fran and G rge A der o n foe d r room

Fifth hour wos no joy r' de for unsuspecting yeorboo s aff members. T e first probleM wos naming he boo , os ed ors puzz ed over he crea ion of new s yes and rad· ions wh'ch would be fo 1 owed for years. A pan·c-s r'c en s aff morn'ng hours o mee poss'b e deodlines. Los rn u e corrections (ond wha s worse, los m'nu e m's a es!) cho enged he po 'ence of rs. S'egel, sporasor, Sue Buschboch and Koren Har mon, co-ed ors."n chief. o rna er ow mony p'c ures were a en here were ever e oug o fil up he layou s. The copy was a woys too shor or no ye wr' en. T e shor age of pho ogrophers forced sec ion ediors, ond even rs. Siege , to learn o randle a comero. St.ddenly, s off members could laug ond dismiss the hard wor ond d sappo'ntme s. The re urn o he · s proofs convi ced hem ho Cen e nial s firs year oo was a semi ('f no full-fledged) rnos erp'ece. ( odes y come lofer.) A possessive p ide of ow ers ip w'l be imprin ed forever in he IT'i ds of e peop'e who gave b'rth o he blues.


CENTINAL Reports Weekly Activities, Happenings at CCHS The CE Tl AL staff constantly used the trial and error method of improvemen . ew concepts in features and type styles were tried. The paper reported school news and other regular madness ha went on at Centennial. Typewriters were olways clicki'lg os stoff members put in ime before ond after school, during lunch, and the one production period eoch day. There were so mony jobs in getting the poper o the press-wri ing good copy ond headlines wos only o part of it. There wos good-notured r'valry between the newspoper s o f and next neighbors, CE TURIA S off. Bo h were plagued by he elemen of time, and competed to see who would miss a deadline firs .

CE Tl AL STAFF: SEATED: Mo<c Colbert Julie Stinson. Barb LeRocqo.~e Tom Baerwald. STA D' G: J rn Cooper Jo~~ Smel 'ng Deve Brown, Jeo Ret~ bun, Joy Lewis.

STAFF ASSISTA TS: Berboro .Holdren L'"de Bennett, Barb Du~" Pe~ C"s' Pe+ Stone.

Swzenne lgno

THE CE T AL OFFICE 's Ire for"led ¡~ o the rrbod'menl of the hol'dey seesor>. Ron Ker slro,., end Jey Lewis edd e'r touch to l,e

k

ree .

50

,


Diversified Opinions Amplify Human Relations Interests Members of Human Relatto'ls Cub tried always to disploy the va 1uoble quality of diplomacy, so important in effective commun'catio . Bu th's did no in My way retard fran discussiors with gJes spea ers. One of he main functio'ls of the club was to present several view points on d fferent notionol and locol s'+uations. Conservatives, liberals, rad'cals, ond in-betweens were invited to give their C!lPdid op nions O'l cer ain events. MaPy debates were broug~t on by he provck'rg questions raised ot these sessions. The club also provided service to he communi y. Wor ing closely wi h the Champaign You h Council, club members a'ded in find'ng summer employmen for community youths, and participa ed 'n o her You ~ Council activi ies such as t~e Pal Program.

HUMA RELAT 0 S¡ ROW I: Conn'e F zgerold Sue Z mb emon Joo" D xon. ROW 2: Morgore Ph ps Bee y Rou Pom Be ROW 3 Mr. Lehl"lon Don S vermon Sorb Coy Debb'e Brown.

LEFT: ARGARET PHJ .. L PS oftd Bee y op'n'cn o be pre e d o• e L "'THin

0

d r. '

51


Student Council Initiates Year With New Constitution

BARB LaROCQUE end Seve O'Byrne discuss Meters irvolving House of Repres 'ltetives while Bill Harris, lntre-State excl.engee froM Gra'l· e Ci~. s ud'es Cowncil procedwre.

ir

52

IAL'S FOREIGN EXCHA GE s+udort Bo Faxen, adds • a 'o al touch to the p anm g of Ce Iennie We

~e

Student Cour.. cil was t'le n<1c et.s of Centennia . It co ord noted with House of Represen a 'ves and Elec ion Board, as well os eod'ng the school il" ctivi ies. Foculty were represe'l ed os well os the s udent body. Members welcomed new ond returning teochers w'th 1->e foculty tea in tre fol . Al"other serv ce wos g'ving encoJcogement ond quidonce to lost p rents ot he Open House. HoMecom'ng act vities occup'ed he outt.mn mon hs. ' Reflec ions" comple e w th psychede ic s 'des, ond o huge boll of mirrors tru y d d reflect the tireless energy of council members. Council boosted the raturol rise 'n sp"r t owocds Chr'stmas. Hoi s were decoro ed with bells ond wreoth. The so 1e of condy cones plus dono "ons helped to support Ce'l e'ln"ol s fos er c~ild in Viet Na'Tl. Amid he turMo"l of approv"ng consti u iors, pos ers, ond so 1es, members too tiMe to perfec a s i for he Centenniol Charger Spectru'll. Even spring fever did not halt he activities of Council. Centenniol Wee (o now established rod.tion) prov"ded enjoyment and voriety for studen s os well as funds to sponsor the fore"gn exchange progrom. Orientotion for incoming sophomores was the last officio! program, but Student Council had olready begun work on next year's events.

APPROVI"'G POSTERS end d c d ng where •o herg them is taken care f by + y E: r.


CAREER SHOWCASES or

e ter. Co

A VARIETY of sc oo supp 'es ore sod by S ude Cou c member He en Barnes.

B rger.

L d11 Sco Cor 11 Cosebee• Po Evere . ROW 2: Jon Barb L R cque Debb e Selvey ROW 3· Po+rc'o il er S11undr Arms rong e ry .. be. ve 0 Byrne He Bernes Pe cBrde, C uc Luc menn. ROW 5: Greg

53


Tri-Hi Grows to Inter-City as Annex Becomes Centennial Re resen af es of the ·s·g 4 were responsi le far the exchange of ideas (as well as sf\Jde ... ts) betweel' the schools. Centen ·al s nine members plus Jon Ko ernof, secretary, and Mrs Kel y s onsor, shove to contribute the r first irrpress'ons. Ci y wide pro·ec s and the lr.ter-Hig~ Dance cl maxed the year of '68 for he organiza ior. Ho(,se of Represen a ives improved comrrlinications also. S1x h ho r classes we•e occasio'la ly tur'led nto "gripe-ins.'

Representafves took ~.;omp mts Md sugges ons bac o tne House. Centennial remained spotless as a result of the ' tidiness training" of clean-up wee . Pos ers altered ma'ly accident prore students to safety hazards. The arithme ic of Election Boord members was faultless as ballots were counted. They became masters ot ne art of paper foldi'lg and unfolding while assuring he studen body of honesf e ections.

HOUSE OF REPRESE TATIVES: ROW I: Sara Majors, Janis Cormichae, Faye e'lt 1t Br c et, a thy Scr·bner, Patty Genserner, Eleen Ne s Mr. Ces eel. ROW 2: Pem yho t Debb·e Bolden, orme Beker Berb LeRocq~e Bob St'c len Col een DeWitt, Lone Worden, Ron Kcr strom, Tony Audret • ROW 3: Jo n E rs Rondy s~·, Keviro McCer+y Ad FroemMing, Steve 0 Byrne Celes~e Cosey Peige Metthews, Chris Ki ZM.Ier, Chwd luckmonn.

I TER C TY COU CIL: OW I: Pe·ge Mat hew Pe y Ge semer Ncrocy Greenste·~. ROW 2: Collee'l DeWit, Suscn Mye•s Tr~d Jol-" so . ROW 3· Er rogh Joe Trerno·ne Jc~ o erne Mrs. Ke y.

ELECTIO BOARD CLOC WISE: E I ~ 0 Byr"e C dy Sto e D b bie Kor strom, Me<c Colbert, Jene Leteer Mike R~-ner Susa'l Myers, lyrdo Te••e Bee y Ge liven.


HONOR SOCIETY: ROW I: John M ffer, More Co bert Chr's emer Koren Hermon, Carole McH.1g~. ROW 3: Randy S ick Debb'e Borres

a y Ruber~c e•. ROW 2: Becky Routh, Bo~nie Schreiber, Debb'e Brown, om Boerw11fd S erry Vog , Steve O'Byrne, Shirley Reyburn.

~-......:mr

Seniors Honored for Scholastic Ability by National Council Scholars~ 'p, leadershi , a d serv'ce were he co b' ed qual' 'es of s de s in Ce, enn'al's a 'ona Honor Socie . reserved for ou standing sophoiT'ores were apped or prov'sio'lal al · · 'a ion o ho or

ro;ect of

DR,A.WING UP the'r own cons 1 u 'on w11s the m r pro ec Honor Society. John Mi er, Presiden , e11ds d'scus on before

ew

"led c

p er o~

e

es i g oo over. These Mas er 'rds pooled t eir 1 • e ec ual abl he creation o a versa 'le co s · u 'o . T roughou e ear embers a so ser ed on he C a g· e Cum Laude Co ee.

55


MAD WOMA OF CHAILLOT ren~formed he nocess' y for flats into more then that. Backstage the crew tediou~ly join+ed nei ed, end covered flats in e hurried effor to Me e the deadline.

THE HARSH Ll ES of ins ~~~t wri•k es ~often under stage lights. Jim Schlorff contemplates his me e-up job cs cur e'n tirne for the play draws near.

DRAMA CLUB: ROW 1: Nancy Edward~. Joy Gardew'ne Den S lvermen V'ck'e Foyd, Tom SrT'i h. ROW 2: Debbie Chew, Sue Zimbleman, Connie Fitzgerald, Nancy Greenstein, Pam Redfeer , Jan Ra rbun lynda Terrel ancy Curtis, Debbie Nelson, Mrs. Smith. ROW 3: Anita Hankinson, Pat Humphreys, Becky Linder, Laurel Ziebell, Barb Fie be lorn Keren Andor~o~ Judy Wh'tes'de ethy Scribner, Kelhy Samuelson, Gail Froemming, Cele~te Casey, Ann Roach, Becky Colbert, Mr. Cottingham. ROW ~· Marc a Hi,son, Ca•ol Cler e, Diane Drollinger, Jantce Woody, Susan Ferehat, Pat Harlan, Judy Griffin, John Streh 1ow, Randy Shick Tom Cempbell, Pet Rour e Sue TriiT'b e, Kathy Galliven, Nancy Thirion, Julie Ryan, Annette Boresi. ROW 5: Barb Bolender, Diane Weissman, Vidy Diener, Jay Lewis, Greg Chew, Ron C•a'g, Sheron Rettberg, Stan Herrin, Ada Trover, Mark Boke kamp, Debbie Brow , Mer Osbor , Edwin Had ey Nancy Wor er, PoM yho Susan Dillabough, Judy Lateer, Diane C in, Doris Price.

56


Drama, Debate Overcome Tens ions 1n Public Speaking M~my

obstac es in pt.b ·c spea ngforgo en l"nes, foot shu f "ng an I hrough may drop dead before I ge h"s a i ude, were overcome by Drama o'ld Speec~ Club members. One of he rna·n goa s of Speech Jb was tra"n"r>g rr>err>bers for o·str"c and Sta e Speech Co'l es s. Rod"o annou'lc"ng, af er d"nner spea ng, ar>d po · ·cal debo es chol erged he endless resources of s uden s. Fresh cu p'ne wood s ale Tom Boy' french fr"es, ar>d sp•aw "ng frames of new fa s mode he bac s age of Cenen'l"ol s new audi or"um a I'T'·n·a ure cbs c e course. Dro-na Cub members c•ea ed h"s cor>gen"o a IT'IOsphere as hey few abou he"r "cbs. T~e f rs produc ·o'l preser. ed a Ce e'l'l a, "Madwo'Tla'l of Chai o , ' fot.rd members rusf'lg o he "po e Md ho e" heory of esting ligh s dt.r"ng •ehearsals. They rema"ned undau'l ed hrough -ninor d"soste•s of eo ing ceilings and s or ed out l"gh irg.

c

C

u= Sp

TODAY S C UC L

c

b

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Jay L

f J

w

L w

<:TA D G· Mr

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w ~a • a

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to

57


Conservation Club Crusades, "Preserve Allerton Park"

CONSERVATIO CLUB: ROW I: Steve Petry, Hugo DeVries Mc•y Ann Albright, s~ en Zimb omen, Ccro Wellner. ROW 2: Shcron Fcrrugg'c, Lynn Dcvidson Pcm Bell, Mr. Cos eel. ROW 3· Chcrles Pecrsof' Mcrgc•et Phi ps, Terry Gicclle to, Becky Routh, J'm Hcsbcrger. ROW -4: Corwyn Z'mb emc.,, B' I Bow!"''cr Bob Ph'l ips. ROW 5: Roger Applegate Jo Shcplond, Dove Brown, Ron Jewell.

CO SERVAT 0

CLUB

Co'lscrvafion 'sts become chomp'on crt.saders this year. The tnree main goals were: to eep Allerton Par above water· to reserve tl-ae ll'no's pro'r e chic er, and to abol'sf. costly state bounties. Profits from donut soles car w hes, and soc hops mode it possible to advertise these goals to the pub'ic as well as studen s. A donation was mode to the Prairie Grouse Foundation o help f nance the'r wor to save the di'n1nishing numbers of pro'r'e chic ens. 0'1e of the ey speo ers this year was Dr. Lew:s s~annord of the Natural History Survey. He spo e on the classifcation of plants and animals. Conservation Club mert"bers were able to ta e field trips to Allerton Par , Roc y Branch, Por land Arch, and Waconda Boy, to observe wildlife ;n their na ural surroundings. Sandwiched in between these busy activities was he creation of a homecoming float-"Cast aside conformity; the lion is no longer ing." It won first place honors to the delight of he en husiastic creators.

i g

wrth

s winn'ng Homecomhg fool.

LEFT: F ELD TRIPS prov de c ~<b members w I, o chcnc their own. 0 whot discover'es wer Medel

58

to explore on


ASTRO OMY CLUB J'" Mcttl,eos John Beovers Chor s TiciJenor Mr. SpoonofT!ore Gre Chew.

perfec for C cr es A FROSTY co d ss n"g ond G orge B• 'legor to ob erve the

Star Gazing Scientific, Not Romantic to Astronomy Club A clear s y ond o full moon mean o good night for s or gozing-scien ifical speo "ng, of cot.rse. Ce Jenn"al s newly organized As ronomy Club provided members wi h an oppor unity o learn to operaJe severa new p"eces of observa ional equipmer . A twe ve-"nch refrac ing telescope wos an add"tionol help in s udyi'lg he composifon, motion, rela ive posi "on, ond size of certain stars and constellations.

AS T ME progr

es th

'T1

Astro-photograpry wos ar~otl,er new area of irte•es . Some membe·s were able to pho ograph he lu ar eclipse wh"ch occurred "n Oc ober, ma'"ng the moon and galax"es more famTar. S uden s used he"r ·'l· ia ive in ga"n"ng 'now'edge from these personal exper"ences. The club corT'b"ned he bas"c fundomen als of astra omy with observa "or>al e per"men s.

wones

59


Future Teachers Gain First-Hand Job Preparation Wi h expanding membership, Centenniol's newly formed FT A began making preparations for the future early in the year. The gathering of students who felt a teoching career wos heir l"fe's wor was organized by parliomentory procedures and commi tee reports. In ovember, after sending two student representatives to he Sta e High School Convention for Special Educaion, members elected the club's first officers. In the following meetings, the purposes of FTA were drawn up--purposes such as fomiliorizing students with the eoching occupotion, olerting studen s to e diverse scholarsh'ps and colleges, and exploring the different oreos of teoching through guest speokers from all oreos of the occup ion. Many members were able to gain firsthand experience in he field of eaching, before entering college, os a result of the Cadet Teacher Progrom. Being on educationol club, FTA members performed mony services for teachers. Li e oil he orgonizations of Centennial, FT A wos octive in decorating he halls for Christmos. Af er o yeor with FTA, the members felt thot their succeeding steps to teaching were more clearly defined.

FUTURE TEACHERS Chris Riemer end Sue Bergstrom 11nist in the Chrisfmlls decorlltions.

FTA: ROW I: Mrs. Hathaway, Lind '.I Coffin, Barb LaRocque, Sharon McG'nn is, Ann Becker, Martha Oliveirll, J11ne Mitchell, Jea., Mitchell, Mr, Jo es. ROW 2: Sue Smith, Debbie Hump reys, Celeste C11sey, Ann Foley, Ruth Reeder, Shirley Rllyburn, Gail Froemming. ROW 3: Visiting FTA member from Joliet, Linda Schwe'ghllr!, Chris Riemer, Sue Bergstrom Kathy Rube.,ecker, Cerole McHugh, Becky Routh, Cheryl Shaw.

60


CARRY

G

OUT

Goo Secre

JOA GU posifons.

BEL die o e

o yp s L rdo Be ne

o

o

'

prepare for t e"r fu

•e secre oro

res ce ebro e

Future Secretaries Prepare to Attack Business World Young peop e were g"ve on opporo be er unders ond he poof a secre or"ol career in he 9!1 Chap er of he Fu ure Sec re ar"es Assoc"a "on. The organ"za "on he d jo"n mee i gs w· h club members from Cet' ral once a mon h. oney-mo "ng pro"ec s of candy a d ba e sa es ep Fu+J•e Secre ar"es bus a e beg·M·ng of the year. They also par "cpa ed in the decora "ng of he hal s ar~d pre pored for fu ~.ore office parres w" h a r"s as ge - oge•her. The rno ey f O'TI he c Lib reasury sen en hus"as "c I"T'embers o he S.A. I a ·o.,al Secre aries Assoc·a "on) wo shops ard mon hly d"nners. Members learned that here was much more o e"ng a secre ac hon pe c"l sharpening. The benefi s of he club be er equ"pped s ude s for fu ure pos· io s.

c

FSA: ROW I: Mrs. PI! Mer oo~n l ey Koy Turn • Pam Gorr ncy H x ob . ROW 3· J B Mett, A~ne Ro cl, Janet Robe• s lono Pe rson Terrj Wo off Pl-y s

s

rry b n Gumb

OW 2· L do Peggy cCo

61


Speakers Enliven Medical Careers' Monthly Meetings Future urses of America suddenly hod a new loo -and o new nome. Members of he club decided thot he name was m's eading. They encouraged studer~s in erested in ony field of medicine o join. It was re chr,stened Medical Careers Club. Pedia r cians, rurses, lab echn 'ciMs, an social wor ers were gues spea ers throughout the year. The club p•ov'ded service as we I as informa iol". Members ook frequent field rips to areo hosp'tals. MEDICAL CAREERS: ROW I: er n Boker, Mery Meli es Polly Colson Dione Fe~cher Helen Balding. ROW 2: Mercia Fogel, Joyc Lybergor, Dieno Berh i o, Peule Morto!l. ROW 3: Merlhe Clerk, Nency Dey, Dianne Shedenhelm, ethy Hodson, Meri e Smith.

POTE TIAL THERAPISTS end mcd col pro¡ leern he b.- 'ness froM e g<~csl spee ker. fessio~o s

62


Initiation, Sales Highlight Year for FHA Members "Toward ew Horizons,' this year's mo o for the F1.o ure Homema ers of America, rem nded members hat heir col" ribu ions today will 'nfluence he inds of homes the w'll have tomorrow. One of he f'rst as s awaiting FHA was t~e creafon of a time-serving cons i u ion. Bringing Than sgiving to nurs ing home pa ien s. members made favors for Greenbrier Manor. Many coo boo s were found under Chris mas trees as a result of one of he money-ma 'ng projects. Much o the delig~t of studen s, members oo adva'ltage of heir talen s and held numerous ba e sales hroughout the year.

63


FOREIGN LA GUAGE dubs celebrated the C~ristmas season with a join par y. Here German club entertains with their sk't.

PREPAR'NG THE German room for Christmas, Mrs. Rimas supervises as Chris Ki zmiffer decorates the tree.

Students See Foreign Life Through Eyes of Exchangees "Achtung!" The magic word for set+ .,g German clubbers down to business. Business ranged from German "getting-toknow-each-other" games to the serious and complex affoir of wri ing a consti ufon. Memorable discussions with guest spea ers; lise Ruhmkarf, Central's German exchange studen , Dr. Blasius-visiting principal from Germany, and Bo FaxenCen ennial's exchangee from Sweden, provided first hand informa ion abou customs and daily life. Members made Centennial aware of their many hidden talents. Creative artists consul ed with eager architects o

construct a homecoming float. "Sanket Nikolaus" led the way in overcoming the pitfalls of dramatics. German Club produced a holiday s it for the language clubs Christmas party, but the most appreciated talent was the cooking ability of the frauleins. The who'e school was benefitted by the contagious enthusiasm of this first year club. Pocemaker traditions were incorporated into he club's constitution os preceden s for following years.

GER~AN CLUB: ROW I: B~rbara Fiebe 1kor., Chr's Kitzmiffer, Patty GenserT'er, Janet Fox, Susan Dankert, Barb Ducoff. ROW 2: Corof Davis, Lynd Te!re I, on~y Edwo!~s, Debb1e Selvey, Voler1e eot~orT'mor, Rusty Schrur, Jane Koz:kowski,, Becky Rout~. Lindo Schforff, Efono Hanson. ROW 3:

Al.ce Schre1ber, ~l1c1a Horpestod, Kathy Rubenodor, Kathy Somuelson, Po'll Nyholt, Judy Griffin, Jane Letoor, Kathy Burger, Susie Trimb!e, Lencre Hanoko, Pooge Matthews. ROW 4: Rob Brown, ToM Sm'th, More Colbert, John KitzrT'iller, Bill Brod'e Bo Foxen Tom Baerwald Steve O'B r~e Charles Pearson, Lee Tuc er, Tern WeissrT'an, Ric McPhee. ' ' ' Y '

64


Customs Learned Through Songs, Games, Current Events M o r o t h o n tete-a-tetes echoed through the corridors os French Club members met to discuss pions ond projects. Severo! boke soles ond o slove morket were some of the results of these meetings. Profits ,were given to the foreign exchonge committee. French Club olso sponsored o homecoming floot, but it never mode it to the ossembly to be judged. An unexpected bump overturned the floot ond the members' frontic efforts to restore it were in vain ''C'est lo vie!'

The hol,doy rendezvous wos the highlight of o busy yeor. All of the foreign lonquoge clubs porticipoted in o festive Christmos revue. Coroling ond skits were port of the entertoinment. Fifth yeor students stoged severo! presentotions of French ploys for the club. Emphosis wos on culture this yeor, ond students leorned customs the fun woy-through songs, gomes, ond discussions of current news events in Fronce.

FRENCH HONOR SOCIETY: ROW I: Kay Se onin, Barb L.,Rocque. ROW 2: Kare Baker, Joan Gu bel, Mar 11 Clark, Chns R'emer, Debbie Karlstrom, 11 cy Gree s ein, C arole McHugh. ROW 3: Bo Fa•en, Mike Holverson, Kathy Wise, Ann Foley, C eryl White. Not pic ured: David Hamburg, Sharon McGinnis, Debora Brow , Becky Rou h.

Charles de G ulle, Suzanne

~g­

e part of his Christ as tree.

FRENCH ClUB: ROW I: Ellen O'Byrne, Becky Linder, Paige Mat hews, Kathy Scrib~er, Barbara LaRocque, M rgaret Phillips, ecky Routh, cy Thirion, Patty Sui :van, Patty Cosgrov . ROW 2: Suza'lne Ignasiak, Ellen Dowell, Martha Clark, Carole McHugh, Pam Redfear , Sara M jors, ay Semonin, Kathy Wise, Joan Gumbel, Joan Di•on, Bubar Y nney, Teresa 0' eill. ROW 3: Randy Shick, John Jones, Tom DeWi . Be sy E's er, Jud Kirkwood, Pat H;~mphroys, Diane Weissm~~n, Celeste Casey, lani Macleod Sharon McGi nis, Debbie Brakebill, Ann Foley. ROW 4: De is A derso , Tom Shi Ids, An"ta Hankinson, Diane C in, Doris Price, Mary Maliskas, Karen Baker, Ka y G !!ivan, Julie Rya , Carol Un eed, Ci dy S oklose.

65


EXAMPLES OF ican era ere shown to Spanish students by Mexican tr11velers J11'1 Koker o 11 d P11 Eve ett.

SPA ISH CLUB: ROW I: 11thy Dawson, Kit Brock t, Alen Diener. Joy Gerdewine. ROW 2: Jean Mitchell, Jene Mitchell, Leur I Ziebell Terri Gi ch I o. ROW 3: Susan Smi h Betsy Burwesh, Pet Evere Je"' Ko~erno Li'lde cF I Bob S id en. ROW -4: M ry Fritz Lil'lda Bennet , Celie Forst r, Sh rry Vog , Linda Schweigh rt Susan bray ROW 5¡ Susen Hern check Mershe Eridso~ Rey Harper, B rb11re Heywood, Pe r Tich ~or.

Summer Vacationers Bring Mexican Customs to Centennial

ENJOYING THE festivi "es 11

66

e Foreign Lllnguege Perty ere

Broc elf end

s~

en Mabrey.

''We'll Fiesta While They Siesta," this year's Spanish Club entry in the Homecoming float compe ition was one of the first projects of the Spanish Club. After wor ing with chicken wire, members were truly ready to siesta. Jon Ko ernot, this year's president, possessed some first hand knowledge of the life in Me ico as she and Pot Everett spent the summer in Saltillo. Slides, pomphle s, and accounts of heir persont~l experiences enlightened members to Mexican c.Jstoms. Conti uing the tradition of a combined Spanish, German, and French Club Christmas party, Spanish-speaking studen s produced ' Vispers de Ano Nuevo' for their part of the entertainment. Af er numerous rehearsals whether during on activi+y period or on after school practice, the cast perfec ed the skill of eating twelve uvos (grapes) to the ime of a s r'king cloc . Members become even further acquainted with the Iberian cui ure as meetings featured talks by Linda Salazar, from Bolivia, a d Sandy Dowers, of Panama. Films of bullfiqhts, the favori e sport of he Spaniards, illustrated the ad and techn'qt.e of the sport as well as adding color ard variety to the mee ings.


Red and Gold Ribbons Signify Superior Spanish Students On the night of February 7, Sp~~nish students who had illustrated an enduring interest in he l~~nguage were ini ia ed into the Pardo Bazan Chap er of Sociedad Honoraria Hispanica. Ta i g the oath, he newly eligible me bers promised to devote hemselves o e study of Sp~~nish. One by one, he "ni iates lighted heir candles which symbolized life's course. The following day, he new members wore to school r'bbo s of red and gold-the chap er's colors. Meetings were spent in planning mo eyma ing projects and holding se i ar d"scussions.

PRESIDENT PAT Everett lights the perpetual "Mother Condie" to begin ceremonies of the Spanish Notional Honor Society.

he initiefon

EW HONOREES receive t eir indiv'dua1 co • des from Sue Smi h es t ey ewa" e'r h" ietion.

SPANISH HO ORARY: ROW I: Cindy Werstler, Diene Bruce Debbie Chew, Linda Benne . ROW 2: Pet Harle , Barb Bolender, ncy Cur is, Evo Fidle, J n Kokernot, K ren Hertmen, P t Everet, Judy W it s"de Jen"s C rmicheel Serb re Dunn. ROW 3: L rry Greenste' , John Je cox, J' Cooper, Mersh Eridso , Serb Heywood, ethy Musgrove Susel' Smi h, Sherry Vog Jeen Mi chell, S erry irby, Linde Gerd er, Leurel Ziebel, Sendre Dowers, Mery Fritz.

67


A MEDIEVAL CASTLE is Her ct's woy of st~yi~g Merry Chris mos.

ABOVE: Les flews of he inge 'ous In ered irsp:red ' Spectrum" ere eresed by producer Tom Beerweld Md direc or Tom Smith. RIGHT: A s u t of 'Speclrum" is spo ed stege lef es Mike Shelby, Rt~ndy Moncri f, t~nd M ke Bolin employ t"e well·kno.vn Pt~cker loc er room spoof.

68


INTERACT: ROW I: Tcm D Wit, John Jaycox, Mar D~~n. Mark So enkamp, Tom Smi h, ROW 2: John Hoppe, Mike Bernardi, Greg M"lls, Ron Karlstrom, Gerald Per 'ns, Ray Herper Bo Fexen. ROW 3: Mr. Dehl, Mike H lbl"ng Ron Jewell, Mere Colber , P il Troehler, Denny Grider, S eve Pe ry, Deon Messinger, Doug Roesch, 8"11 Bredle, Mike Bolin, Jemes Beerwo Tom Baerwald Greg Hetch. ROW 4: Sco Devis, Mere Czejkowski, Sta" Herrin, Cempbell Smith, Tom Abe 'm Kenney, Mi e She by.

Interact Projects, Spectrum Help Finance Foreign Exchange

CENTENNIAL CHARMERS decisively defeat St. Via or VIOLETS '" the Homecom·~g Side Story, Interact style.

1

't Wes·

T is organizo ion cer a· nly a +rae ed the often ion of femo e students-its membersh'p wos oil boys. Mr. Longenecker, along wi h the Rotory "Educotion" Commi ee, es oblished o chop er of In eroc Inter o ional at Cen en iol in he fall of the '66 school yeor. T e Ro ory-sponsored group wos ded'co ed to offer' g serv'ce and pro o i g u ders a d' g. Leoding the projec s, lnteroc roised over SO% of the costs for the foreign exchange progrom. Members were conston !y involved in donees and hops, cor woshes, ond other money mo ing projec s. The librory pi became a cas le o eright. In eroc 's festive decoro ions co tribu ed to he rois"ng o Chris os spirit a school. They olso conceived, produced, and direc ed 'C Chorger Spec rum '68", he varie y stunt show. Hours and hours of wor' were devoted to this project os boo s ond homewor popers loy scottered abou the loor, woi i g for o spore momen .

69


t\FRO-t\MERICt\ CLUB: ROW 1: Patricia Miller, Tobo Stor Ern sline Butler Volerie Bor'les, Joyce Smith, Faye Kert, Oneda Huff Lindo Posey, Carla Marion, Bernice Herring on. ROW 2: Sandra Shelton, Debbie Bishop, Olivio Harmon, Cynthia Horris, t\rlt>ne Kindle, Sue Burton, Dorothy King, Sh'rley Gray Bunnia DeShong. ROW 3: Claude Roebuc James Chipman, Eugere Brown, Herb LeShoure Jerry Exum, Robert Brown, Thomes H11llimon, Wo! er De't\rmond, David Bu ler, Gory Clements. ROW ~: Bill McCutchen, Sylvester Montgomery, Charlie Herron, Roneld lewis, Preston Winfrey, Eddie Groy, John Butler, Robert Winfrey. ROW 5: Ed Jen ins, Leroy Burton, Devid Seyles, Vernon Sterling, Robert Welker, Hershel Sri , Bill Dorsey, Michael Devis, Jemes Wood lincoln Huffm11n, W11l er Welker, Terry Jones, Mr. Hammonds.

t\BOVE. T11gged for friends' ip, t\nn Seder relies on Terry Brownlee's friendly shoulder to sign up. RIGHT: It's up, up, 11nd 11way to victory for the t\fro-t\meric11n dub over the previously undefeated f11culty team.

70


Friendship: a 10 Cent Tag, a 2 0'clock Hop, a Constant Smile The Afro-Americon Club wos creo ed this yeor by egro students to promote involveme t in school octivi ies. Members wor ed to encouroge eodership, communicotion, ond fellowship omong oil s udents. Friendsh路p wee wos one of eir projects designed to breo down borriers between studen s. Togs were sold to s udents who hen hod people they did no now sign em. The wee cu miro ed in on of er school hop where e frie'ldl"es people in he school were recog "zed. Boke so es ond soc hops provided cosh owords eoch quorter o he me ber wi h the h"g es grode overoge ond for the student who showed the most improverpent. Severo! "Outstond"ng AfroAmericon Awords," bosed on oil ospects of studen life were presen ed. The club's yeor-round pro"ec wos he s udy of egro history. It provided o sense of pride in he"r Africon heri oge ond o purpose for he fu ure .

.AFRO-AMERICA fr"endship ewerds ere presen ed +o Bruce Shumc C ndy So lose Whi e, Sel y Good end Mrs. Elki'l by Terry Jones end spo or Mr. Hammonds .

Cheryl

.AFRO-A ERICA OFFICERS: (Cioc wise. seeted) Honorary embers Se~drc Dow rs 11 d ende Wee erspoon路 (sta di g) Mr. Hem路 Roselyn Souri 路 Terry Jones, Connie Fitzgercld, monds, C eryl Wh" e, Lincoln Huffmon.

R. DAHL doin y du ps faculty defeot.

eo

in

71


A CAPPELLA: Pie no: ency Griggs. ROW I: Susen Gi more, Vic ie Floyd, Jill Di~smore, Judy Kelsey, Merk Fouts, Mett Noffke, Sue Zimblem !I, Jerry We ore, Cleudie Culv r, Berb Burns, Jen Rethbun, Sue Denkert. ROW 2: Cerol U'lte d, Anne B hrens, Donne Erickson, Sheryl Seiger, Ron Jewell, Dave Hemb rg, Chuc Perker Becky Brendriff, Con'lie Joyce, Mery Ann Albright Pam Re:Heern, M Iinde Adems. ROW 3: Mercie Hixson, Debbie Gelvin, Mergeret Phillips. Tom Pforr, Peter Tichenor, Tom Campbell, Keren Her men, Keren McGehe, Julie Stinson, Ly"de Terrell, Geyle Singleton, Berb Scoggi . ROW 4: Judy Kir wood, Diene Dehl, Cerol Hutchinson, St ve Flynn, Mike Weever, Re( Dunlep, John Strehlow, Bruce Lowstuter, Deb· b'e Brown, Debbie yholt, Bonn'e Schreiber, Lane Peerson, Pe 911 Beker, S~sen Tul y.

ABOVE: Excedrin heedeche #I ,968 strikes Diene Dehl es performence time drews f'eer. LEFT: Mr. Olson's robust voice resounds througho t the choir room cs h morning werm·up exercises.

puts express'on i o


ADRIGALS: ROW I. lono Peorsol' Rov Durlop J dy irkwood, Corol Un+eed Cloud'o Culver, Sheryl Beige , Sue Dankert, Judy elsey. ROW 2: nrie Schr 1b r, orcio Hixson Noncy Grigg Rerdy onch"ef, Peter Tichenor Tom Compbe Bruce lows u f Deve Hemb~>rg, Chuc Per er. ol picture~: J&n Rathbun.

A Cappella Dons Flowing Robes, Helps Dedicate Centennial Centennial sings! A Cappello's first performance was on informal one ot the opening ossembly in the foil. They led the student body in the newly cre~!ted Centennial fight song. Certainly, they never hod hod such o captive audience. The formal choir robes, light blue satin against flowing navy blue, gave the choir a more uniform appearance in concert. Hours of rehearsal led to o ovember performance, o combined Christmas program wi h the bond, and the spring concert.

A Cappella also so g at he official dedication of Centen iol Senior High School. This large group, and wo smaller, more selecfve groups, o ten performed for service dubs and outside events in Champaign-Urbana. Madrigals and he Girl's Chorus were se 1ected on the basis of auditions of A Cappello members. Bo h groups were featured wi h A Cappello in the cancer s. Madrigals, the most ac ive group, song at numerous dinner and luncheon engagements.

VOCALETTES: ROW I: Sheryl Be'ger, Judy Kels y, Suson Zimblemen, Zoe Hood, Sue Do ker. Die"e Do I. Lynde Terrell ROW 2: Deb?"e Bra eb"ll, Cerol Hutchinson, Anne Behr ns, Ani e Hankinson, Nor me Baker, Pegg Boker, Koren McGehe, Carol Unteed. ROW 3: Borb Scogg1 • Judy Leto r. Judy Kirkwood, Mercio Hixson, Karen Hertmen, Bonnie Schreiber, Lane P orson, oncy Gr"ggs, No cy Worner.

73


BA D COU CIL: SEATED: Cheryl Wi'lget, Leslee ey, Debb'e Bro.... n. STA Dl G: Tom Pforr, Bob Sfckle To We"s e~'l Jirr~ Seley Joh Miller. To DeWi , Seve Fly .

BA D MEMBERS weke up to tt.e sou11d of f"rs

74

our prectice.

DIRECTO , R A DERSO I eds t e s ude'l essembly in t~ Chorger "Fgllt Song".

BAND: ROW 1: Jim Cooper Jenn fer Moseley, Doug M'lls Sheryl Seiger, Bob Stic en, Kethy W1se. ROW 2: Shelly Legere, An" P~~r 'n· son, Kethy Hoffmen, Steve Flynn ethy Petlo'l Go Goff, Jonet Fried· erich, Pet y W'koff. Meri yn Peecod Mik~ Polmer, Cerol Well11er, Jemes Freme, C"~dy Geringer. ROW 3: Ketf.y Cromlich, Linde Schlor f, Cethy Clowe•, B rb Spregue Cerl Tipton Dot ie Tud r, Cheryl Winget, Peul Se<~ders Lynde Brown, Joen McCie.,ry, Tom Pforr, Vicki D1en r, Sten Herrin, Tor<~ DeW, , Bruce Young. ROW <4· Nency Worn r Cerol Phil-


Band Members Guide Students Through School Fight Song Pep ~ssemb ·es provided ' Ch~rge! his ye~r ~s ~ resul of selec ions pl~yed before ~nd ~f er e m~in progr~m. I w~s especi~lly esse r~l in gu"d"ng s uder> s hrough he school song. The fMs ~ b~s e b~ I g~mes recognized he b~nd ~s ~ essenf~l mor~le r~iser.

Members were dedic~ ed to pr~c "ce, ~s hey prep~red for e Illinois usic Educ~ ors Associ~ ion Festiv~l. T e 11l"nois High School Associ~ ion Solo o d

WITH A WA CHFUL EYE on "s rrwsic, ToJ'I"l Erg e edds bee

o

e be d.

Ensemble Con est ~so require extro drill"ng for i d"vidu~l par icipon s. The bond joined A Cop ello for e Chris m~s Concert ~ d the Fo mol Spring Co ce . T e dedico ion of he school brought e wo groups oge er in o sole sa!u e tofu ure yeors.

MOR I G PRACT CES of he dence be d enerte"n clessrocms neerby.

lips, Geil Froemming, Keren McCleery, Terry Brownlee Ed Melcl,i, Greg Bolton, Steve Hell i~e Wr Den"el Welch Lye o " Judy Kelsey, Allen Friedericl- Mer 0 borr Johl'l ill r, Rob Brown Pem Nyholt, Ed Je" i~s Deen M o • Scott erlstrom, John Do evou Tom Weissmen, Joh~ Wert Jim S e ey. ROW 5: Petti Hilger Deline Wrigh , G "I Ru Leni M11c oo M Crewl rd De" Tuff rd D bbie Brown, Cherles Tichenor, C I s e Cesey Cre'g Eccles L slee y Lerry Fredrickson, Rendy S O"e, Don cCe I.

75


Marching Band Braves Cold To Perform at Homecoming The strains of Sousa morches pierced the cold, drizzly fall mornings as the seventy-four members of Centennial's morching bond sloshed oround the field. The late orr'vol of uniforms and adverse weather conditions kept the band from marching until Homecoming . •~fter the football season was over, the bond moved indoors where o Dance Band was created. The group played several engagements and was featured at the Spring Concert. Its main purpose was to ertertoirt s uden s and acquaint them with the music of the big bonds.

DA CE BA D: ROW I: J'm Frome, Tom Pforr, Joeo McCleery, Cheryl Winget, Dottie Tucker. ROW 2: Seve Flynn, Jim Stoley, John Wert, Deen Messinger. ROW 3: Allen Friederich, Rob Brown, Donie! Welch, Ed Melchi, Mer~ Osborn.

MARCH G BA D: RANK I: Jim S eley, John Wert, Tom Wei sme , f'em Nyholt, Celeste Cosey, Scott Kerlstrom, John Dillevou, Dean Messinger, RA K 2· Peul Se ders, C~eryl Wirget Dottie Tucker, Debb'e Browr- Do"na Gent, Ka hy Cromlich, Suzie Trimble, Marilyn Peacock RANK 3: Bruce You 9 Tom DeWi , Stan Herrin, V'c:ki Diener, Linda Schlorff, Joo'l McCleary Lindo Brow'l, Tom Pforr. RANK 4: Jomes Cooper, Shelly Legore, Potty Wi~off, Ann Por 'nson, Ko er& McCleary. La"i Macleod Co•heron Clower, Berbero Sprogue. RANK 5: Mike Crowford, Lorry Fredrickson, Leslee Key, Cre'g Eccles. Don McColl, Tom Engle, Kelhy Wise, De" Tucker. RANK 6: Jim Frome, Delir&e Wnght, Allen Friedench, Den Welch, Steve Hall, Ed Melchi, R6ndy Stone, Ge'l usk. RA K 7: Gail Froemming, Cindy G&ringer, John Miller, Mer~ Osborn, Judy Kelsey, Rob Brown, Bob Stick· len, Sheryl Seiger. RANK 8: Steve Flynn, Jonet Frieder'ch, Lyle Mole , M 1'.1 Wrig t, Terry Browrlee, Greg Bolton, Jill Henne, Jen'lifer Moseley. RA K 9: Gail Gof, Carol Wellner, Ke hy Po on, Cerol Phillips.

76


ENCORE: ROW I: Keren McGehe, Mery A n A bright Susen blemon Bonnie Schreiber Debb'e y ol , Sus e G''rno e, V'c 'e F oyd, P m Red· fearn, Pam Nyholt, Vicki Diener, Carol Untoed ROW 2: Cathy Clower, Deline Wrigh Judy Kelsey, Connie Joyce Coles e Cosey Ji I Dinsmore Linda Schlorff. Lynda Terrell, Kalhy Wise Sue Trimble Cheryl Winget. ROW 3: Carl T p on, Ron Jewell, Carol H.-tchi son, D'a'le Dohl, Judy Kir wood, Barb Scoggin, Marc'a Hixson, Patti Hilger, Carol Phillips, G e Si~gle on ROW ~: Jo n Jones, Mi e Pa'mer S eve Flyr De 'el Welc , Randy Moncrief, John S rehlow, Jol- Miller, Bob St'dlen, Ann Par ·,.son. Ja"et Frieder c leslee ey. ROW 5: Mr. Ande so Margare P i ps John Wert, Doug Mills, Tom Weinm11n, Jim Staley. S~ ryl Seiger, Tom Pforr Miche e Legare.

Encore Members Pool Creative Efforts To Produce Vice-Versa A cold, bitter Dece ber evening fou d Encore members spreading Christmas througho t Champaign. They all ga ered oge her to dec the city wi h carols. By February, s udents were hawed ou enough to wor on the music club's main projec • Cente nial's first Vice-Versa Dance was he result of hours of he creative abili y of Encore members. T e theme "Foun ai of Dreams" was a challenge. Finding a sui able f9u ain for the cen er of attraction was the bigges problem. The climax of the evening was the crowning of Vice-Versa i g by his date. One of the purposes of the club was o adver ise upco ing musical eve s and increase attendance a concerts. Students ushered a he various presentations by cho'r a d band throug ou the ear. Chocola e bars and o er good'es were sold by the club o help fi ance ne.x year's our. The invigora · spri g weather was a sign for A Cappel!<!! and ba d members o ye I for ap y, in any ey. The club's spri g p"c ic e ded e year with a smash. ENCORE OFFICERS: S eve M'ller.

ynn, Ann Parkinso

lesl e

ey, Bob S ic e

Lind

ScHorff. John

77


Centennial Guard Lends a Hand to Beginning Swimmers Saturday mornings found members of Centennial Guard back at school. i'l a classroom situation. This time, however, they wore tho teachers. A new program was set up to teach third through ninth graders the basics of swimm'ng. Members learned new styles of swimming and gained a better sense of rhythm as lessons progressed. A row of red Centennial G..rard Tshirts were seen at each swimming event. The girls participated in the meets as timers. This gave them a chance to become familiar with the rules and regulations which govern swim meets. Being closer to tho ac ion had its drawbacks. Every time the teams lined up and dove in, the girls would be eng..rlfed by the splash. Most of the boys, so often submerged in the water anyway, were members of Centennial's swim team. Extra practice each wee with Centennial Guard added valuable streng h as hey s rove for perfection.

I STRUCTING YOU GER children o sw'm filled member Ann Foley.

a~y

Saturday morni gs for

Cente~n¡al

Guard

CE TE IAL GUARD: ROW I: Evo Fie el, Melanie Ozier, Dieoe Bruce. ROW 2: Bee y Wet. ey Cummings. D"ene ebergall ROW 3: Ann Foley S on Kromer, !<'a y Goll"von, Terese Petry. ROW ~:Tom Pforr Mle Belin Jim R llberg A "cia Horpested. ROW 5: M ke Rumer Mr. Frederichs.

78


NO THIS IS NOT a girly-girly thow; the Dolphin Cl~b eefTIS to be trai-ling ' Flipper' standns.

GIRLS' LEADERSHIP: ROW I: Cndy Sto lose Mer he 0 "ve"re Ar'l Bee er. ROW 2: He en Belding, Debbie KorlstrofTI Cheryl Wh"te. ROW 3: Ann Fo ey, Lynde Terr I She y Legere, D bbie &reus. ROW 4: Ele~ne Wi liems Jene Lo 4eer Mary Lou Gre~·ng Diene We" rren.

Leadership Program Promotes Physical Health for Girls Cente niol s Physico! Educotion Deportrnent added extra-curriculor acfvities his year. The Dolphin Club and Girls' Leadership Progrom were two new organ 'zations which mixed s ill wi h voriety and instruc+'on. The Leodership Progrom gove selec ed junior ond senior g'rls o cho ce to "blow the whis le" on g'rls' P.E. classes. The gym leaders usually were roined as juniors ond par ·c·pated in teach'ng as seniors. Tl,'s ac iv'Jy provided on opportunity to practice guidance and deve op spec'ol a h'etic abili ·es. Water-logged, chlorine-eyed s uden s congrega ed a Dolph'n Clu prac 'ces. It was o co-educa io al, sync ronized sw'm teom. embers wor ed oge her in produciPg d'fferent formotio s. T e teom presen ed o sw'm show in he spring fea ur'ng wa er bal et and s un diving. DOLPHIN CLUB: ROW I: Den Welt, Be·b LeRocque, lana Word 4: Eile ~ Mulv hi I.

~

e l)y R

a y Pe ~- ROW 2: Bee y • Ce ·a Fors er. ROW

be~ae

79


IN A TICIPATIO of the coMing even, Donno Eric son leods the PepeHes in o pre-go me rol y w th re bond.

PEPETTES TRADITIO ALLY eld por "es before the gemes to boost the"r own enthusiesm. Suson Myers end Judy ir wood we"! O'lxiously os Donno Eric son cuts the victory ce e.

PEP CLUB: ROW I. Connre Joyce, Sus"e G"lmore, V"c ie F yd Ko y S robner Pe ge Melt ews, Joen Dixon, Shoron McGinnis, No"ICY Thirion, Ju'"e Ryen. ROW 2: Geyle Singleton, Pom Redfeern, Kore'l Shoemo er So•o Mojors oy. Semonin, Debbie Kerlst~om, Joon Gumbel. Len; McLeod A~n Foley, Celes•e Cosey. ROW 3: Corol Un+eed, ly de Torre Morcio H xson Petly Sui ivon, Potty Cosgrove, Diene Weissrnon, Mery Mo "s os, Keren Bo er Potty Row• e, Kethy Gollivon. ROW 4: Be•b Sc gg n ~erose 0 eill Elle'l Dowell, Joon TroMoine, D bbie Brokebill, El en O'Byrne, Dione Co"n, Dor"s Price, Swe TriMb e.

80


PEPETTES. CLOC WISE AROU 0 THE C: jlre!l Ha.-t!"''j!r Susa" Myers D'ane Barhi e, L 'Ide Coffin, Barb Wahl, Pc Cusic , s~e B sc bach, S e Bergstrom, Peggy McCcll, Linde Schweighcrt, Bonr'e Scl-,re'ber, Terri w· off, c hy Rube~ec er, Serb LeRocq e, Co-ol S e Hutchinson, Sherry Vogt Cheryl Shew, Mergare Brcsh, Jene So'oman S 'rley Reyburn Debb'e H~'Tlphreys Sue Smi h, Jill Dinsmo e, De ise Elder, Sendi Arms rong, D•on Dch, Bet y Eisner, Pcm 0' ei I, Ccrolyn Curtis, E een e· s PcM Ge-rison, Mcry An" Albright, Sharon Fcrrugg'c, Sue Zimble en, Bee y Routh, Terri Gicche• o ar n cGe~e. Nancy Greens•e·n, J dy 'r wood Jodi D'Urso, cncy Hux oble, Donr !=,ic • .., •

Senior Girls of CCHS March Under Flurry of Pom-Poms

UPO THE E TRA CE of our ChMg'rg •eom xu! a\ion end joy.

f.e pepo+ es le d the crowd in o c"'eer of

Pep Club provided e ra Charger Power for a I Ce ennial's a e c teams. They con r bu ed o he overflow on he bleachers and were expert a e'evoti'lg e sou d level. Af er-school poster sessions resul ed in colorful mas erpieces decora ing he walls. A enda ce a at leas wo away games of foo ball and bas e a , and two o her spor even s was required. The sale of boos er bu ons spar ed school spiri . Mo toes such as "Eat 'em up, C argers!" flashed from blue lapels and swea ers on Friday game days. Pep Club also sold large wh' e mums for Ho ecom'ng. Bedraggled pom-poms and Charger sweatsh'rts were proof that seniors had a special funcfon in Pep Club. They marched in cod, drzzling s owers and minor blizzards during e foo ball season. Several rou ines were organized for bas e ball, also. Pep Club suf ered the nor al highs and lows of a first year club. There were short periods of apa hy between games when it all seemed li e sue' a 'g job. Bu he sigh of he ha d-wor 'ng eo members and anxious coaches ever fa 'led to crea e lo .d a d si ce e support.

81


Varsity Cheerleaders Sound Off for "Charger Power" It was pride that lif ed six cheerleaders and one moscot into +he a'r for far+astic ¡liMPS. Achirg 'lluscles from long rours of proc+'ce were forgot en in t~e exhi arat'on of a crowds roor, or a fral cr ~iol score. Tfoaey wor ed las yeor Md d~.~r rg he SU'll'ller o eorn money for r.ew un'forms afld Cheerleaders Comp. Profits from car was"aes, b e sales, and a sock hop swelled the treasury. Th squad members were abe to hold a ere r leader cl'ric during he sumrrer for you'lger girls. The c~eer eaders ro' ed tre sp'r'+s of s uden+s w h the'r uneq1.1aled pep enthusiasm.

JAN RATHBUN

CAROL DAVIS

LEFT: LANA WORDEN


LINDA

scon

MELISSA ADAMS

CINDY STOKLOSA

SAY BlUE 1 Soy wl> e' S y y o

e ,.. f"

+I

SALLY GOOD

83


Sophomore Girls Add Vivacity to Winning Season Sophomores rna (. ed Versi y Cheerleaders in en husiasm and co-opera ion to raise spirits. A tradition of elecfng S,opho ore Cheerleaders early enough o support fall sports as we I as win er and spring sports was ini iated. Six g'rls and an alternate were chosen early in e year. Between regular prac ices and allimportan Friday and Saturday night games, he girls were busy ba ing cookies and blowi g up balloons. In February hey sponsored a hop jointly with the Varsi y Cheerleaders. Most of he money went owards new u iforms. By e end of the year, hey real'zed he sacrifices of a cheer eader, bu remeMbered IT'ostly he warm h aPd exci ement of e game.

FUTURE VARSITY cheerleoders o~d ust future c •leoders o from eir s'de ne c eers o we ch the gllf'1e ·~ pr gr ss

84

me

SOPHOMORE CHEERLEADERS CLOC W SE· Sue O'N 11l R•to Forrester ncy Ed words El ., D we Soroh Pr w I, J ~ Tr ..., e Cor in11e Dz~ •


Top Athletes Honored With Triangular "(" A"' orqon rot the s uden s though highly of was mode up exclusively of boys who f.od performed o spec'f c erv e for he school. Through victor'es and 'os es, o ~·e 'c teams ro'sed the presfqe of C nterria . The boys who hod mer'ted f.e C~orqer "C were offered s"'1ce•e respec• by the s•udent body. Numerous n uries from forcef.1 footboll toe 1es the frus•ra iol' of dieting for he first .+'me to eep we"ght dowl' for wre tl" '1q: hese were some of the th'ngs Mernb rs wen hrough o get the"r 'C. ' Top o he e 'n o spor s were awarded le ers for a"d rq he team in s'tuotiol's which co ed for fos thin ing and tenoc"ous s I Co c~ John Mace sponsored he club and l)elped let erme'1 form on orgon'za•ion hey could be proud of.

"C" CLUB: ROW I: l.erry Schwe'gJ.,ert C c Per r Jo Hoppe M e Bernerd". ROW 2: Cre'g Stinson T"m Ke n y Mike Pi •ce. ROW 3: Bruce Swer z B B xen Dave Ray.

"C" CLUB: ROW I: Ron mann ROW 2: S vo To Darr I Fillenw11rth, Howie M"ke Bo n, Scott D11v s. RIGHT: "C C .Jbb r, Mike

Bo<~11rd"

h Ips eep t e f oor cloa• d-r g h11 f

t 11"'8.

85



Sports

87


BILL WOLF smashes hroug" a Lakeview defense to score the tying toucl•dow".

Chargers Spell Trouble for Previously Undefeated Tearns HEADS CLASH before oppos· ·o falls.

FROZE A D sideli ed ill a"xOwS lo wi~.

S

L-Rhea

Cogga~

is


SETTI G A Cen enniol r cord for most yordoge go'ned Lincoln Huffme~ dodges toe le ofter todle.

EARLY PRACTICE offors co ches Wes opporknity to fore ee e opef seeso,. f r

89


COACH WES Dcv's hs ruc•s Chargers in besic fu~dcme~ cis duril"g ell practice.

Varsity Chargers Prove Rookie Teams Often Underrated As t~e season began, two problems faced the new Charger ea . One, wou d he studen s su port this ew eam· and two, could the team compe e wi h veteran teams well enough o deserve school support? Any hough of lad of spirit was comple ely d'spelled when at the firs pep assembly Coach Davis received a sta ding ovafon from I, I00 proud students. The tea carried e studen s' enthusiasm with them that nigh as ey upset S . Joseph-Ogden, 13-6, end'ng their 33 game winning streak. After his upse , he supposed 'exper s' bega o rea'ize tha some imes a hing called earn pride could overco e a lack of experience. Wi h he exceptio of he Springfeld Griffin and Peoria Bergan games, Cen ennial remained within one touchdown of winn'ng all games. The home own fans had to wai until almost t e end of September before hey were able to see he Crargecs ir action. H•e first ree quarters of the Decatur La eview qame lacked the t.sual Charger excitement, but he fourth quar er proved to be an exciting see-saw ba le. Both teams had exce 11ent opportunities to score, but bo h failed to

capi alize on hem, so the game ended in a 7-7 tie. The Chargers bounced back after this disappointing tie ond trounced Fairbury Cropsey, 33-7. The Chargers' next two games brought about wo e rernes of emotions. One of disappointment as he Chargers fumbled on a crucial play in the Deca ur Eisenhower game a'ld one of imiT'erse pleasure as the Chargers played an almos perfect gaone against a sound Rantoul team. The Chargers' Homecomif'lg was spoiled by a close 13-7 game in which St. Viator came out or top. The final game of the season proved to be the Chargers' finest as hey thoroughly domina ed he Mt. Zion Braves, who had the'r 18 game w'nning s~reak ended. Outstanding seniors on the squad were Mi e Bernardi, Randy Gotschall, Cra'g Mannering, Jerry Mortensen, Chuck Par er, Bruce Swartz, and Chuc Temple. The future loo s bright with returning le terme'l Jim and John Hoppe, Lincoln Huffman, Ed Jen ins, Greg Mills, Perry Siler, Wal er Wa er, Larry Wilson, and Bi I Wolf.

Football Score Board CE TE NIAL OPPONE T l3 ...•........... St. Jo-Ogden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 13 .............•. Springfield Griffin ................ 24 7 ..•............ Decatur Lakeview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 33 ............... Fairbury-Cropsey . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 7 20 ............... Decatur Eisenhower ............... 26 26 ..•..........•. Ra oul ......................... 0 7 ............•.. St. Viator .............. : .......• 13 7 ............... Peoria Bergan .................... 26 9 ............... M. Zion ........................ 7

90


A QUICK pun+ is required es Bruce Sw11r z is rus~ed by 11 per of B ' 11

tee ers.

o{ Peorie s ce •e· L ncoln HuHm be e hezerd 0 Ll!rry w·ls

0

rds.

ft

91


CHARGER'S DEFE SE re es on

ggress've pursui

ARSITY SQUAD: ROW I: e Bolin Tom e ly Dave R~mer, Rardy Craig R'ck Kidd, B'll Bates, Steve Pierce, L-Rhea Coggan, Roger Biles. ROW 2: D rre F lenwarth, L rry Wi son Greg M' Is Dav'd Ray, J'rr H ppe Perry Siler, Ch~c Temple B Wolf, Ra~dy Got c"all, Craig a~ner'ng M" e Bernardi Je,ry Mor e~sen, Chw~ Par er ROW 3: Jo n Hoppe How'e Ke per M' e Pierce, Randy Moncrief, Bruce

92

Swartz Ed Je i~s Wal r W ker L con Huff,.,on, Cra'g S no~ ToM Baerwald Jan Youn T·m Mas a'lori ROW 4 v·ct r Toews, J'm B a ley, or M rr w R c McPI>ee Sc 4t Radc iffe. Bill Do c~ M' e Birtcher Gary Swinford Steve O'Byrne coaches Joh~ Macek Paul MeG -vey and Wes Davis.


'68 Chargers Look Bright as Sophs Compile 5-l Record The Cen enn'ol Sophomore foo boll earn o oi e o h'ghly year which was highligh ed by o 61-6 massacre o{ Oecat~.<r La eview. Under the direc ion of coaches Robert elson and Ed Frederic s, the sopho ore Chargers won fotJr ;n o row before bow'ng to Deco lir Eisenhower, and hen finished the season wi h o victory over Ran oul. As he season progressed he earn ga'ned exper e ce and loo hopeful as fu ure Varsity players. The earn fea ured good-sized, agile linemen, and fast bac s. Some of he ou s ondi g team members who may become f<J ure Varsi y stars are Ric Kidd, Seve P'erce, Don Gr'der, Dove Rumer, Eugene Wash'ng on, C .1ck Herring, o d Jeff Coombs whose i 'ury ep h'm from pia ing t e who'e seaso . Tl,ese, and other team members should provide a good s1..pp y of a len for he 1968-69 Vars'ty earn. successf~.< f rs

Sophomore Football Scoreboard CE TE

IAL

14 ............... a oo 14 .•..••.•••.•••• Do vii e

61 ............... Deca ur 20 ............... Urba'la 6 ............... Deco ur 21 ............... Ra'10li A R'c

U SUSPECT!

beh'~d

by Ce

OPPO E T ........................ 6 . . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 La eview ................. 6 ......................... 7 E'senhower ............... 21 ......................... 14

en~'el's

idd. of' on ~ s we

for

no ~er

A ATTOO pie er finds help s he ru"S '" o s~one w

'nd ers.

'm

•e of lit e

93


WITH MOST of he roce beh"nd tl>em, top r~~n rs Gerold Perkins ond Rodger Borr rou~d t e I s c rve on tl•eir wtJy o vic ory. 50 .•. ~0 . . 30 yo•ds left tJs S+eve Petry cn"d RtJndy Fletcher ne r the fi~ish line.

COACH ROGER Qu len c xously surveys

94

~is

first yecr ecm.


STRIDERS .ARE: ROW I: Tim Kenney, Ger11ld Per ins, l11rry Schweighor, Maurice Snoo , Chuck L ckm11nn, Bruce Shuman, Rodger Barr. ROW 2: Bob McEIIigot, Tom We"ssmo , John Jaycox, Steve Pe ry, Ron Jewell, Rordy Russell, Jim Kresco, Greg Hate , Randy Fletcher Co rod Sty c ulo, De r.y O'Connell.

Centennial Striders Capture Surprising District Seventh As the seoson began, first year cooch Roger Quinlan had only three runners with any previous cross-country experience. But after many ours of grueling practice ond running experience, the Striders surprised many people by achieving seventh in the district meet. The S riders had more success on the rood thon at home. The team won two out of three meets held away and one ou of the four they hosted. Two lote starters, Rodger Barr and Gerald Perkins, enabled the team to enjoy late season success. At the fino! meet of he season, the Centennial Striders were able to give the home fans something to cheer abou . In spite of a muddy course, most of the runners ran their best race of the year. Senior le termen were Rodger Barr, Gerald Perkins, Tim Kenney, Randy Russe I, Ron Jewell, and Ron Karlstrom. Junior and Sophomore lettermen, Larry Schweighart, Bruce Shuman, and Chuck Luckman, will be the nucleus of next year's team.

D of he gu

.•. he •wo

ile rel begi s.

Cross-Country Scoreboard OPPO E TS CE TE IAL 16 ................ R'dgefarm ...............••..... 46 20 ................ Eisenhower ...............•..... 38 36 ................ Ra ~oul ..............•......... 19 35 ................ Mattoo .........•......••..... 22 21 ................ Argenta Oreana ...•......•..•... 34 47 ................ Danvi 'e •.......•..•...•..•.•... IS .....................•..• 33 25 ................ Leroy 31 s at attoon lnvitafonal 5th a Capi al Co ference ?th a D's rid

95


CHA GER RA DY c e be •

96

0

CRIEF be

c Sp ngf e d GriHen plcyer f r

1-erd lor o rebound owo•t developrT'ents.


Centennial Places Third 1n Charleston Holiday Tournament With the first jump ball, Ce ennial cagers fou d e selves lac~'ng he height end experence requ'red for e winning season. Coac Avery, in his firs season as ead me er, found t~e year d shear eniflg b.J loo ed o e fllure. ed year looks promising, es .,·ne le ermen will be returning. The Chargers were pieced in he Cap' al confere ce with compe i 'on equelly os ough os ho of e Big 12. e ber o y previous Mox Harvey wos the only eom vorsity exper'ence ye he roo 'es improved wi h eoch gome. Eoch ployer wos placed where his s ill could bes be used, but oc uol gome experience was necessary a d Mt.ch ore voluoble thon long ofter-school prac ices. d followed The Chargers' fons w o remoined foi hful he cagers o o.Jt-of- ow games were de ig v'c ories bu he wins were olwoys eway. To i g h'rd ploce in the Chorles on Tourname , e earn brough e firs rophy o he Ce ennia showcose. Herb LeS oure was no ed the "most voluoble ployer' of he tournamen ond ax Har· vey, an oll-confere ce pia er, brough ur er honors o C.C.H.S. DESPITE the ou stretc ed he b e+

o•.,

of

e defense Ch • e Brown t es

m

ALL CO FE E CE Mo• Ho-vey cores wo,., re poi" s f rhome.

Basketba ll Score Board CE TE IAL OPPO E T 46 ................ Paxor> ....................••.•. 50 58 •............... Thorn ridge ..................... 69 40 .......•........ U i-High orma .............•.. 44 32 ................ Springfie'd Southeas ...•..•...... 58 54 .............•.. Jac so vile ..................... 69 72 ................ Gri in .................•...•... 80 59 ...•...••..••... Deca ur ocAr hur ....•...•..... 50 45 ................ Unity ........................•. 68 67 .........•...... Deca ur E~enhower ...........•.. 90 49 ........•....... Springfield Lonphier .............. 80 40 ......•...•..... Charleston ...................... 45 49 .....•.......•.. Ron oul ........................ 66 66 •..•...••....... S . Anthony Ef i gha ........... 86 55 •.......•..•.... Spr'ngfield Sout eos ............. 54 49 ................ Jac sonvi 1 e ..........•..•....... 69 53 ................ Griffin ....................••... 62 48 ..........•..... Decotur MacArt ur ••...•........ 74 78 ................ Deco ur Eisenhower ......•...•... 81 59 ................ Spri gfield Lonph'er ............. 87 56........ ..Urbo o ......................... 76 Charleston Holiday Tournament 55. . . . . . • . . S . Tere so ...................•.. 77 55 .......•........ Weogo ........................• 35 66 ................ Oa land ...............•........ 52

97


Varsity Chargers Find Opponents Worthy Competition

Vt\PS ITY SQUt\0. ROW I: Coach t\very. Herb LeS o"re D11ve Ray TiM errey, Jim Evons, Fr11n Br dford, Mex H rvey, Co~ach Wi rsteed. ROW 2: Rick Kidd, Randy Moncrief Don O'Conne I Ed J " ir Ch rl e Browr Ver Of' Sterlir ROW 3: Bill Doesch, Jim V nc Jan Young Roger Bi es Cherlie Tic eror R11ndy Russell Bob S ic en.

ABOVE: T e teem loo s 01' es coach Avery etcl,es a new play. RIGHT: To Langlois "d J' Evens ter e y cwci• tre ip froM Cr rlie Brown.

98


IT'S A YBODY'S b!!tl es cen+er Mox H rvey spri g

or a rebound.

SHORT MA on the team Herb LeSflouro stretches o narrow t e d f. ference be ween hirT'self od his towerin opponor-t

WHILE LOOKI G et he sco eboord Cooch Avery co e pletes game stra egy

99


Centennial Sophomores Achieve Successful Beginning Season Opening the seoson with o victory, Centenniol Sophomores mode their initial seoson o success. Their dribbling power improved ond field goal overoges increosed continuolly under the instruction of Cooch Goodman. The sophomores defeated powerful teoms such as Springfield Lanphier, Griffin, Md Springfield Sol.itheast. Their long hours of procticing poid off os the underclossmen won 12 out of the 19 gomes, many of them on their opponents courts. The Chorgers, with their impressive blue and white uniforms loo ed promising. Varsity Coach Avery feels sure thot our second season will for outran our first year.

WITH THE

'wmo

b111l,

Ce~

e ni11 Sopho ores begin

~~no

her g11me.

ED JEN I ~S ot empts 11 t e breo R11ndy Loqon loo c:n on>iously

CHARGERS DA rebound.

roo

GRI DE

11nd R d Kidd fig"

furiously for 11 o her

i~g

free throw os D11v

Bouch o"d


SOPHOMORE SQU.A-0: ROW I: Bill McC tchor Bob Brownl e Wei er De.A.rmord, Deve Bouc , Randy Loge", Coach Good en, ROW 2: Bob S ro .. l, Andy G1 'TlOre, Mike M ci e'l Ed Jenkins. ROW 3: Mer Pritcherd Rendy Creig Rid Kidd, Greg Horreday Den Grider, Steve Pierce, Will Stone ocker.

Basketball Score Board

OPPONE, T IAL CENTE 41 ...........•.... Pax on . : . ............•....•.... 35 54 .........•..•... Thornridge .....•...••...•....... 47 48 .....•..•..•.... Uni-High ormal •............... 52 65 ................ Springfed Sou east ............. 54 50 ..•.......•..... Jac sonvil'e ..........•.......... 53 90 ................ Griffn ....................•.... 50 37 .......•........ Decatur MacAr hur .....•....... .47 54 .•.•............ Uni y ••....•.••..•..•.....••... 57 43 ......•......... Decatur Eisenhower ......••.•••. .48 32 ................ Springfield Lanphier ............. 52 63 ......•......... Charleston ...................... 50 53 ................ Rantoul ...•...•................. 49 57 ................ S . An hony Effingham ........... 50 60 ................ Springfield Southeast ............ .47 58 ................ Jacksonville ..................... 33 49 ..........•..... Griffin ......................... 42 47 ................ Decatur MacAr hur ...•.......•.. 55 56 ...•...•...•...• Decatur Eisenhower .............. 66 85 ................ Springfeld Lanph'er .............. 66

101


Centennial Tankmen Take First 1n the Capital Conferences A splash, a bang, and the often repeated hilarity of o false start are proof to the world that mon con find o release of excess ension as long os he doesn't let it happen too of en. Centennial's Swim Teom coached by Ed Fredericks could always count on giving the opposing team o good score; and with good reason. Co-coptoins Mile Bolin, and Reid Wilson, Steve Toc , Jim Rettburg, Jerry Tippy and All-American, Allan Dilley did o pre ty good job of mo ing the Centennial olympic pool o ve eron. Unused energy and o won meet often combined to put Coach Fredericks in a position somewhere below the wo er's surface, but it was o position he came to enjoy. Swimming Score Board OPPONE T CE TEN IAL 36 ................ Donville .........•.....•........ 59 20 ................ Bloomington ....................• 25 58 .•.......•.....• Urbana ...................•.... 37 76 •.•••••..••..•.. Gri in ....................•.... 19 46 ......•.....•..• ormol ..•...•................. 49 40 ................ Danville ........................ 55 72 .............•.. Gr'ffin ...•..•...•......•....... 19 83 ................ Southeast ...................... I I 67 •..•......•..•.. Pekin .......•.................. 28 86 ...•............ Woodruff ....................•.. 9 49 ........•....... Urbana .....•.................. 46 AFTER EVERY Cherger vic cry Coec Fredenc s te es e sw' .

SWIMMI G TEA : ROW 1: Don McCe Dave Joj,l'lso" Rendy Johnson, St"' Herrin D ~ Smith M k Beiley Br~.oce Kelso. ROW 2 Art Aderen , Bruce Lows ute, R~.o s Bebb e'd w,lson Mike Bol n Steve Sirron. Seve Toe . RO V 3: Chuck Hoch Richard Pontious Jerry Tippy, Bn.. ce Brow , Alan Dilley, Steve Freric s Bob Silverma Jim Re b~.org Chuck Schwer+z B Bi•en Coech Fr deric s.

102


ALL-AMERICAN Alon Dilley, pieced 5econd n 5lo e coMpel! ·or.

THE SOUND OF A GUN, o bi breo•h, o cold splo5h end I, roce is off

DIVE in pi e posi ion is execu ed by Ric ord Por •ous.

103


THE BAT of on eye a Cen+ennial grappler d> himself cough ·~ ~e foremen's carry.

U DER THE r feree's w11tchful eye Jay Folding wrest es a powerful U•bon opponer .

Grapplers Place Third at Mattoon Invitational Tournament Wrestling Score Board A lac of experie ce resuhed in a disappointing season for the firs year wres lers. Wi h only one returni g letter en, the grapplers were forced to develop their s ills from scratch. The Chargers offered good competi ion o he older, more exper'enced opponen s and lost mainly by poin s, ra her than pins. The high poin of the season w s the third place rating a he Mat oon lnvi ational Tourna ent. Junior Jay F'elding placed 3rd in Dis rid compe ition, and he and wo other le er en w'll be re urning for an improved season nex year.

CE TE NIAL OPPONENT 14 ........•....... Springfield Southeast ............. 33 13 .......•..•..... Danville ........................ 39 22 •............... Bismark ........•..••.....•...... 25 16 ..............•. Urbana ..•.....•...•............ 32 21 .•.............. Springfield Lanphier ...•.........• 29 13 •............... University High ............•..... 37 I I ................ Danville ...•..•...•............. 31 9 ................ Urbana ........•..••..••........ 33 5 •...•........... Rantoul ....•...•...•............ 37 23 ................ Unity ............•............. 29 8 ..........•..... Eisenhower .....•................ 39

WRESTLI G TEAM: ROW I: Daryl Hottman, Jay Frelding, Chuc Parker Gerald Perkins, Chuc Tempel, Greg House, Tim Morrow John Miller, Garry McCain M ke Pierce ROW 2: David McNamara Larry Schweighart, Doug Mi Is L e Smith, Matt NoH e, Ed N ley, im Pickens, Mike elverson, Ro Meister, Steve Redmon, Jim Schultz. ROW 3: Bob Nelson, Jerry Sullivan, Steve Dennis, Charles Prowell, John Johnson, Mark Dun David McCionnohan, Greg Bolio~ Tom Hess, Mike Wrig". John Farrar, Bill Vance, Bon Kirk

104


CCHS Golfers Eye Debut on Local and Foreign Links With the final green in view and the game com·ng to an end, Centennial golfers hoped for fewer po.nts than eir opponen s. With a loud "fore" the tee· ing off was underwoy and the Lin men began their 18 hole walk, driving heir balls across wa er, over trees, and out of sand traps. Savoy Golf course be· came a second home for Coach Mace 's crew as practicing every night for sever· al hours was enioyed by all. Practice in their form and stye could also be seen in some classrooms, minus he dub and ball. Compe i ion for top men was heovy yet during a game, he boys stayed toge her using earn wor to de· eat eir oppone s. PRACTICE MAKES perfect is Bob McEIIigo 's slogan

ABOVE: TRYING FO A PAR, Johr> Beevers li.,es up his shot. RIGHT: WITH DEEP CO CENTRATION, C ris Woj"u tees off.


AFTER SCHOOL PRACTICE on frigid nig Is r w rd d th

lr11c te m wi h

11

first pi ce t E11slern's Indoor lnvitetionel.

ABOVE: THE RRST FEW s eps of the querter mile put Eddie Bridges in the le11d.

..

ABOVE: A DEEP BREATH and 11 strong erm give R~~ndy Gohch111l the dre gth to put the shot the decisive foot. RIGHT: CAPTAIN JERRY MORTENSEN is reedy to spring from the bro11d ju ping bo11rd.

106


Trackmen Open Season With Victory Over City Rival They soid it couldn't be done, but conquering the next to impossible is o job Centenniol's Troc Teom seems to pride itself in doing. No one ever denies temp o ion onymore, so Cooch Jester ond his boys weren't on exception when they proceeded to whomp our neorest, (blood-bro her) rivol in the first meet of the seoson. The hope of mo ing his ory repeot itself, even recent history, provided the omount of incentive needed to keep the teom working together. Speedsters Bill Wolf, Tim Mossonori, ond Jerry Mor ensen ron owoy with enough top ploces to help he teom win the Eostern Illinois lnvitotionol Meet. f..FTER f.. LONG MILE Conlenniol's boys come weorily to the lope.

f..

re

WITH THE F f..L hurdl bcl-ind l-im, Tim Masson ri runs for

EXTRA PUSH puts L Rhee Coggon ove! 12'8 orl:.

e fin's".

107


Baseball Team Begins Play With Strong Hitting, Few Errors The r_,ar.ng wind, the bitter taste of dirt, the scrape of on iron cleat, and the sting of a fast boll ore all port of baseball. So are the scratchy, mudcoked uniforms, the shinskinning slides, the crunch of a foul boll hi ting someone's cor, and he never forgotten yell: "Is he Ump Blind? ' Centennial's Baseball Team, coached by Bob Winstead, was ready, willing and able to begin it's first and challenging season.

A OuT IS end ird.

eor f r

ore Cz11'kow5 i 1u he i5 cough

betw

n second

ABOVE: OUTFIELDE JIM KRESCA co+ch t~e grourder thot mokes t~ree outs lor the oppo5ing te11m. LEFT: PilCHER RANDY RUSSELL fires 11 ,,g\,, hord fos+boll.


DURING A PRACTICE me ch, Tom Bar wold lines "P o retur01 shot.

TE NIS PRACTICE fird> Daryl B rtelso cooch'ng his teem otes.

Avery's Net Crew Bolstered by Seniors 1n Opening Season To the female sex of the older ge eration hey appeared to be "gentlemen"; to a certain cult of hippies they seemed li e ath'etic flower children; but he average Charger observ¡ er new t at he cries of "love: Love" and" 5: Love" belonged to Cen ennial's smashing ennis eam. Coached by Bob Avery, our netters loo ed forward to a winning season. Preseason prllcfice found he team plagued by soggy balls, squea y shoes, ond drooping laces, but thi gs too " turn to he brigh er side wi h he coming of spring. Coc!!ch Avery expected seniors Marc Colbert, Daryl Bllrtelson, ond Tom Bllerwc!!ld to put up " good fight and underclassmen Mar Morrow, Bob Brow , lind especially le ermon Bruce Shuman to eep the eam in " winning posi ion.

DRESSED FOR ACTION, Bruce S umo'l practices for the upcoming season.

CALLING IT A DAY, strenuous pr cfce s ssion.

ore Colbert is i'l need of rest of er

109


110


Student Life

Ill


A World of Blue Shadows Welcomes Centennial to Inter-High Love is blue ond Centenniol loves blue. Studen s were oelighted with the theme of the Inter-High donee. It seemed especiolly oppropriote for the newest member of the Big Four to be welcomed into Urbono Junior High School's gymnosium omid light ond dor blue swirls ond streomers. Blue lights added to the romontic otmosphere. Four queens, one from eoch school. reigned over the donee. Centenniol wos represented by moscot Lindo Scott. After he crowning, she took her throne of blue disploying the speciol Chorger "C". The orchestro ployed Poul Mouriot"s current number one song "Love is Blue" os the coronotion morch. The lost winter donee of the yeor wos the project of InterHigh Council, composed of students from University, Urbono, Centro!, ond Centenniol High Schools. The donee wos just onother woy of providing for more co-ordinotion ond communicotion between the schools.

ABOVE¡ AFTER CHEC I G co11ts couples begi on eve~ing v"siling wi h c"ty.wide friends. BELOW: EMERG G THROUGH 1-e blue 11rbor Sue Trirnble end 11rc Sims g ze into t~e decor11led gym w lcom"'lg the new Cen¡ ennio.


THE FOUNTAIN proves to be the center of ettrection es couples gether eround.

REFRESHMENTS A D BARE FEET prove relex'ng for t 's group dur'og e Vice¡Yerse breek.

Girls Turn Tables at Encore's "Fountain of Dreams " The long awaited event finally Mrived. After buying tickets and ordering pic ures the girls v.'ere ready to chauffeur their dates to the Encore sponsored Vice-Versa dance. An old-fashioned par setting with a dominant fountain created the atmosphere for ' Fountain of Dreams". Over the weekend, the gym was converted into an appropriate illusion of sparklin~ water and haze. This was the night he girls could show the boys a fe male concept of the ideal date.

WHILE CROWNING Vice¡Yerse King Tim Morrow, Donne Eridsor gives her own nod of epprovel.

"FOUNTAIN OF DREAMS" reflects romence.

113


Psychedelic World Reflected

SE lOR GIRLS 11re c]'ven 11 chence to portr&J' the members of the footbell teem. De~ise Elder Beerweld es her vict'm. chooses To

CROWD FORMS the royelty.

11

BLUE VELVET thrones ere the set ing es Homecomirg royelty Lena Worden ~~~d Rendy Gotsch reign over Cente"'liel's f rst dence.

ring of dencers, e'lcircli~g CROWD-PLEAS! G floes accent ti-e Hcmecom'ng es embly.

1


1n First Homecoming Centennial's first homecoming pro· mo ed unlimited school spirit. Blue crepe paper streamers and floating balloons hovered over studen s as they dashed down the corridors. The walls were plastered with posters as the three classes compe ed for decorating honors. The excitement grew each day, and by Friday was at its peak. Skits by Senior girls and In eract Club were featured in the assembly. Organizations overcaMe technical engineering problems by getting top heavy floats on tiny wagons. The results were paraded before an en husiastic audience. Homecoming finalists were announced at its conclusion. A steady drizzle did not dampen spiri s at the game. The cheers were loud and long as he Charger defense ran on t e feld. They were even louder and longer shou ed through ears, when the team ran off. The defeat of Friday night was softened by a journey into a psychedelic world of reflections. large eyes projected on he wall followed the dancer!O everywhere as stars flew overhead. The hum of ele!=tric guitars bounced off aluminum foil and echoed through the gym. The evening culmina ed in the annot.ncement of Centennial's first roy· alty, lana Worden and Randy Gotschall. The band played; lights changed colors- he ime was now, even as traditions were being set which would belong to the past.

COACHES RELY on Cheerios for Charger pow r

SE IORS CA

Y ou

e theme "up e

HOMECOM G COuRT· OW I: Sus OW 2: M ~e P"erce C uck P r er H Wllrd

as tre team exercises i s at letic ab"IJ!y.

e Lion ' wh" e dec ra ing the r award Buschbac So y G od L"ndo Sco e!"'per Cr g annenng

Jan

o er o+.

115


Dramatic Efforts Result 1n Three Distinctive Productions Wos the modwomon of Choillot reolly mod? Dromotis Persona Excelsior under the direction of Mrs. Mory Ann Smith presented the foil ploy, Madwoman of Chaillot, in which Countess Aurelio and her eccentric friends endeovored to free Choillot of evil represented by the wic ed finonciers. Februory 7 ond 8 were the nights of one·octs os Centro! and Centenniol previewed their con est ploys. Centenniol's one-act, The Marriage Proposal, depic ed o Russian marrioge proposol made between orguments of who owned the fields and whose dog wo ·• uperior. Ce enniol's spring plo A Raisin in the Sun, touched the roo of Americon Neg o fe. The entire Younger fomily hod a dreom of o new life based on Momo's inheritonce. THE CONCERNED PEOPLE of Chaillot watch as Dan Silverman, a prospector, delivers his ultimatum.

AS THE MADWOMAN, Cheryl Whi e tr"es to bring bad Bob Doty's interest i life.

lib

KLEENEX COLD CREAM, and shoe pol sh add to the chaos behind the curtain.


AS TOM CAMPBELL reveals that Sue Zimbleman passed up a marriage proposal, he tries to calm her.

REHEARS! G FOR Raisin in the Sun, Bu~ny DeShong and Ed Jenl:ins go over eir lines.

ADDING TO THE ARGUMENT Tom Campbell informs Peter Tichenor and Susan Zimbleman of the true land owner.

PLA S OF MARRIAGE give Peter Tichenor a throbbing heprt and flutter"ng nerves.

117


Fashions, Sports, Songs Blend To Make Successful Spectrum

EXCEPTIO AL GUITAR TECH IQUE occompon'es tl>e vo'ces of

Mi~

Good end Jon Rolhbun.

"C. Chorger Spectrum '68" wos o fitting title for the lnteroct-sponsored student stunt show, os the nights of Februory 21 ond 22 illustroted the Chorgers' voried tolents. Director Tom Smith, Producer Tom Boerwold, ond Student Council commerciols, such os "HoiKorote" kept the show running smoothly. Folk, folk-rock, ond populor songs were prominent omong the acts. C. W. Moss ond the Borrow Gong olso mode on appeoronce. S its such os ' Oemor ond Teiluj," o sotire on Romeo and Juliet, ond "Drop Out or Cop Out," o bas etball satire, odded humor to he show. C Club presented o foshion show with models ranging from Adam ond Eve to Miss Minis irt and Mr. Hippie. The oudience wos oble to wotch spoce girls as portrayed in a modern dance, ond a gymnostics routine was demonstrated. The effective use of lights and boc drops brought a new concept o the fresh variety octs.

ABOVE: 'I THE BEGI I G' foshions ore P11r er 11 d Rondy "Eve" Moncrief.

ABOVE. THE SCENT of H11i K11ro+e is Clluse 'lOugl- for insonity. Bruce Shum11n v11inly see~s to esC4pe the clutc.,es of the overwhelmirg Ada Trover. LEFT: IN PORTRAYAL of 'Bonn'e" end 'Clyde," Chuc Howerd Kemper 11re interviewed by Mi~e Bern11rd .

Tempel 11nd


MUSIC MAKERS Scott Devis Pe Spectrum.

TOM "OEMOR" ABEL mot..rns h"s beloved T · u" {obv" u ly}.

McBr"de end Jeff Coombs edd

e" te ents for e successful

"PLAY FOUR" sho~ots arc"e Hixson es HurT'm"ngb"•d Hervey end the eeF'I give Coach Ly de Terrell eno hor heedeche "n he s if "Drop Out or Cop Out'.

STUDE T COU CIL poll proves g"rls ere swell!

119


hrough lif "foro Cornel".

SHOWING SKILL end correct form o the shot¡put, Bo Faxen enjoys keepi~g in shope.

120

BO FAXEN hos o spcciol visit with his porents, Mr. end Mrs, Tors~ " Foxen end brother Lars i the home of his host fomily, the John Boerwolds.


Swedish, German Exchangees Bring New Ideas, Personalities Centennial's foreign exchange took place on the administration's level as well as on the student level this year. Dr. Theodor Blasius, our exchange principal from Germany, spent four months studying the educational practices used by our school while Mr. Longenecker will spend the summer months in Germany. Presenting numerous lectures to classes-whether the subiect be note-taking, German, or sociology-Or. Blasius explained some of the major differences in educational procedures between the two countries. Students were surprised to learn hat co-education was not the normal practice in German schools. Students also gained insight into life in Sweden as Bo Faxen of Jonkoping spent the year at Centennial. Like Dr. Blasius, Bo learned about the running of an American school (from the student's point of view) as he served on Student Council. One of the main differences Bo found between the two curricula was the greater emphasis on foreign languages in Sweden. Participating in the Charger Spectrum, Bo learned what the students of Centenn"al en"oyed in the way of good entertainment. And according to Bo, Swedes do a lot more running and walk"ng than Americans.

lEWSPAPERS OFFER Dr. Bl.as"us relox.a ¡a he librory fro his busy schedule.

"n

IN HIS FAVORITE spot in Centenniol"s librory. Dr. Blos"us cotches up on the lotest ews.

E JOY LISTENING to Dr. Blesius's lect res exploining some of the primery

educ.atio

between Germ.any end

e Uni ed

S eles.

121


122


Underclass

123


Sentimental Past, Promising Future Symbolize Sophomore Year Confused, lost sophomores stored enviously os juniors ond seniors breezed dow he long ye'low halls, in o ond out of iden "col clossrooms. But day by doy hey became more odapted to their surroundings and hemselves. As individuals, then as a group, he sophomore class of '68 e'Tlerged. I was all so dif erent. Sophomores welcomed brea s joyously as they became accustomed to seventy minute per"ods. ew courses ond facili :es mean double homewor as we! as double ac ivi "es. The pressures and responsibili ies of young adul s were soon apparen . Compe ition was much more intense. Athie ics offered just as m ch i volvemen as chem"s ry or A Tale of Two C ities. Sophomores shared the excitefT'Ient of pep assemblies, decorating the ails, ond ou of own bus trips o see he C argers in ac ion. owledge from these experie ences was learned, not augh . Getting along in a large group, connecting names w· h faces, faces wi h people, ond people wi h occomplishments, was part of o he"gh ened aworeness t at comes wi h the s a us: sophomore. There was more to loo back on than mad exam cramming, nerve racking rides wi h the dr"ver's license examiner, a decaying pom pom, or worn out lab manual. And here was more to look forward to than jus return"ng.

ASCE1 Dl G THE FIRST s eps of high school lif ere sopho ore cless officers: Pres. Greg Horn· ed~y; Trees .• Leuro Yexley; Sec., Cindy He•e; Vice Pres. Er"c Eggleton.

SOPHOMORE CLASS PROBLEMS employ d:lubla duties of spo~sors Mrs. Anderson end Mr. Nelson.

124


HEADS UP! S uden s stcy loose end limber over the Chr"stmes vecetion.

ABOVE: Scddle s oes edd o fhe e es Ron erls~ om blows ·s · d.

osphere

LEF : A dey of schoo "s wo .. nd "P wi I, less 1-c lu•ur"ous bus ride hoMe.

11

125


Activities Range From the Ordinary to Extraordinary Poul Abbu 1Joonne Adoir Po~lo A be•s George A ders

'l

L.~nce

App egote oger App egote Joh~ Arro m ~ J"m Boerwo d

Jim Bo Norrno Mors o Vo ere

er Bo er Bor er Borras

Jim Bossef+ Bi I Bo es Keith Boles J~dy Bennett

Debboro B, hop Gory Boqord Mer Boken omp Debb"e Boden

BROKEN DOORS prove no prob e'n for solesmonsh'p c oss.

Be rb Bolende• Greg Bolton Dove Borc~ers M e Borchers

Annette Boresi Dove Boud Bi Bowmen Debb"e Bro eb

Bor on Bro~dr ff Lwlz Broun ng Broc ++ Lyn~ Br qu s

Chor s Brown Eugere Br wn othy Br w Lynde Br wn

SOPHOMORE GIRLS

126

voge y ottoc

Gionno M rzet i.


Robert Browr'ee K11ren B... d~er S11~dy Bur on B tsy B rwesh

D11v d Bu er Je11n Bu er Chr"s Ceq e D·e~e C11 n

Doug Ce n Bev Cempbe I D11 ny C11r Jtt •s C rrr chttel

Chuc Ca•on Sherry Cttrpenter 01 vtt Cttrler Fra'l Cttsey

Deb" Chew Suse,. C ark Bob Cere Carol C ttr e

AT HALF TIME re cone ch ~ges fro, the besletbell court to the refrosh'l'len e d. Gery C eme'l s Bee v Co ben P11 Colson C~rs Combes

Jeff Coombs B11rbe•e Cooper Dev d Cooper Dev d Corbett

Jane Cornet R11ndy Craig Debb"e Crttwford i e Crawford

Roqer Crawford 11 y Crom "ch Dave Cro Is Barb Cum~·ngs

IIY Cwrnrr ngs

Bo I

Cunn·~gl-,llm

locl"e Ct.rnm·~ghllm J.D. Cupp

127


Cutest Babies Become King and Court at Valentine 's Hop Proud owners of the sweetest boby foce were honored at the King of Hearts hop. It wos held after o Fridoy night gome :~nd sponsored by sophomore and vorsi y cheerleaders. The hop, celebroting Valentine's Day, wos one of the most suc::ess ul. Baby pictures of selected sophomore, junior, ond semor

boys in winter sports were on disploy for one week. Students voted by dropping pennies in o contoiner by their fovorite picture. The presentotion of the crowns resulted in o contogious blush spreading from the three sophomores ond two juniors to the one Senior-King of Heorts.

THE CORONATION of the l<ing of ,He.,r!s .,nd his court W-'S the highlight of tl>e y.,lentine hop. T e sophomore represent.,tives ere Jim B.,erweld, Ed Jenkins, Ed Neeley, King Me• Hervey, ""d junior representatives Steve Tock end J.,y Fielding. Ne cy Curtis Mike Cze' kows i Scott D vis Sue D.,y Donn" Deen w.,l er Deerrnond Willie Deshong C eryl Dev.,l Jo.,nn Devore Tom DeWit Donn" Didey AIM D'ener Sus"n Dill_,b.,ugh Jol.n Di!l.,vou Steve D'llm"n Bi I Dorsey Bob Do y Kcren Do11gles Ellen Dowell Patricia Dr.,go Jenn'fer Dresselh.,us Dianne Droll"l'lger a.,rb Dun~ Mer Dunn Corinne Dzi~k Wende Eeds Jcmes Eorl Craig Eccles Nancy Edwards Ke hy Eggers Eric Eggleton Sel'ldr" Elliot

a, I Estergerd Myrno Evens Tom Ev.,ns Jcn Everett Dicnne Fancher Suser F"re~et John F.,rror Parl'ly Ferruggie

128


Evon Fdel Borbere Fiebel ern Dorr I Fillerwerth Gwendolyn Fillenworth

Anthony Fitzgereld Kevin Flescher Rod Fletcher Rite Forrester

Dele Forste Celie Forster Flint Fo+hergill Brent Fou ch

Mor Fouts Jenet Fox To'l'l Frenk Lorry Fredrickson

Corolyn Frerichs Anne Friedberg Tom F "ese Mory Fritz NOBODY CAN do the Bugeloo I k Centenniol kids do.

Goil Froemming Kothi Fry Pem Fuller v¡c i Golordy

Debb1e Golv"n Bedy Gallivan Joy Gordewine C ndy Geringer

D"eno Gees Fred Gauble e y Getz Pem Gifford

Dennis G"lbert ency Gilbert Dorinda Ginis Ardy Gilmore

John Glad , Morc"e Goddard Ge Go{f Peme!e Gooding CLAUDIA CULVER demonstrates successful denci~g.

he techniques of

129


Footsore Sophomores Welcome Breaks, End of Day Ruby Gordon Lorrie Go5netl Debbie Graning Shirley Gray

Larry Greenstein Ric Greever Dan y Grider James Griffin

Judy Griffin Warren Grob Jim Gumbel Gayle Halcrow

Cindy Hale Debbie Hall .Anita HankiMon Jill Hanra

O.H.I.M.! Even G ritol can't combat spring f v r •

Mike Hannan Lenore Hanoka Bob Harkins Pa Harlan

Olivia Har o Roy Harper Cydhia Harris S eve Hartrc

Dau'la Haymes:~ T o as Helbi'ng L' da Henager Debbie Henley

Steve Hensen Sue Her echeclc Stan Herrin Charles Herron

Tom Hess Jim Hildwein Kat y Hodson Jane Holland

RECEIVI G CLASS Rl GS is one of the many highlights of the junior year.

130


Petricie Holm Zoe Hood Greg Hornedey Deryl Hottmen

Fred Howe Jim Huddlestone Onede Huff Bruce Huffmen

P tricie H mphreys Merilyn Hunt Donne Hu chcreft Suzenne lgnesiek

Den Irwin Steve Jecobs Mery Jemes Velerie Jones THERE ARE NO heppier feces then those seen in he hell et 3:20. John Jeycox Jim Johnson Rendy Jo nson Trudi Joh son

Scott Kerlsfrom Bill Keegle Bruce Kelso Cerole Ke per

Rick Kidd Arlene Ki die Dorothy King Roberte Kinkede

Bon Kir June Koz' owski Susen Kremer Eric Krogh

Judy Le eer Penny Lewheed Beverly Lewler Berbere Lewis

lvon Lewis Roneld Lewis Becky Linder Rendy Logon TOM ABEL end Jim Hesbergen look on epprovingly es thet dey finelly errlves.

131


Sophomore Year Is Filled With Various Highs and Lows

OUR CHEERLEADERS will try anything ••• even 11 snow dance.

Martha Lohmeyer a cy Ludmann Lesslie Lybarger Susan Mabray L'nda Mad L11ni M11cLeod M11rgie M11nkey Fred M11 nthei C!!rll! M11rion t\nn M11rtin John M11t eson C11rl M11t hews G11ry McBride P11t McBride Don McC11!1 Chorles McC11rthy Kevin McC11rty David McClann11han Joan McCleary Bill McCutc en Jim McGinty D11vid McN11marl! Ed Melchi Bruce Miller Moke M er Pat Miler Roger Miller Steve Minnick Mike Mocilan Lyle Molen Marlyn Moeller Brian Monk Dav'd Mon gomery Sylvester Montgomery Bill Morgan Cynt ia Morgan Herb Morg11n Jeff Morgan Jennifer Moseley Colleen Mulvihill

132


D~~nny

Murphy Barbara Nance Valerie Neathammer Diane Nebergall

Ed Neeley Debbie Nelson Janet Nelson Lerry Nelson

Peul Nickell Petty Nic elson Gery Nordling Sendy o men

Matt off e Ellen O'Byrne Chris 0 iveria Kevin Olson

Sue O'Neal lerese 0' eill Thomes Ordeal Mark Osborn

Ror 0 is Sheri O'Sullivan Kathy Patton Roberta Paul

CHERYL HOPKINS endures e heir rasing experience at the atomic assembly.

UNDERCLASSMMAN TOM SHAPLAND discovers high school life has its ups and downs.

133


Centennial Students Host Their First Intrastate Exchangees Tony Payne Marilyn Peacock Pam Pence Josie Petry

Teresa Petry Dit~ na Peyton Bob Phillips' Ca hy Pidle

Gene Plt~ce Richard Pontious Lindt~ Posey Doris Price

Lost minute detoils such os stuffing one more skirt in on overflowing suitcose or forgetting deodoront ond o toothbrush did not diminish the excitement of lntro-Stote exchongees. This yeor Centenniol porticipoted in frequent exchonges on the stote ond loco! level. Vorious schools in Illinois sent two students to Centenniol, while they hos ed two of our representotives. A week of octivities resulted in on exchonge of ideos ond personolities. Visiting students were impressed by the bright newness of the school ond the liberol dress code. Centenniol wos olso port of the Inter-City exchonge progrom. Students corried good will to rivols: Urbono, University, ond Centrol High Schools. The troding of ideos ond opinions resulted in o new perspective of studen life ond ocodemics.

Mt~rk Pricht~rd

Sarah Prowell John Regnell Sharon Rettberg

Cat y Roberts Mar Roberts Terry Roberts Clt~ude Roebuck

Randy Rose Connie Sadewater Paul Sanders Victorit~ Sayles

Jennifer Schmidt David Schoening Ct~thy Schowengardt Larry Schweighut

Marsha Seeber Debbie Severns Tom Sht~pland Randy Sheffer

S6ndra Smith Betty Smith Da ny Smi h Duke Smi h

134

EXCHANGEES FIND Champaign life much akin to their own,


Joyce Srni h Libbie Smi Debbie Spi ler Don Spin

Serb Sprcgue Debb'e Stelter Tobc Sterk Bryen Stevens

BILL HARRIS, exchcngee from Grcnite City, finds lounging in the CENTI AL office one of the less confus.ng activities of the dey.

Pc ti Stone Rcndy Stone Will Stonehocker Bob Strohl

Alcn S nc ule Jerry Sui ivcn C eryl Swirford M. e Tober g

Gory Tcylor Tom Tcylor Joyce Ter yson Tom Thcdy

Cc hy T ornh"ll Peter Tic e or Gcil Timmer en Koren Topp"ng

Jocn Tremcin Den Tufford Shcron Vc Wi He Debby Verge

Jo n Victorson Tom Vinson Robert Welker Rebeccc Wctt

Donnie Webber Roncld Webber Pc ty Welch Cerci Well er JAN STEWART, Ecst Leyden, enjoys Simon end Gcrfunkel, as Sue Busc~bach, her hostess, makes the next selection. Cindy Werstler Tom Weste heven Frcn We more Fred Wheeler

135


Grace and Humor Combine 1n Centennial's Underclassmen Trevis Wheat Petty Wi~off Cethy W illiems Sem Williems Williem Wilson Robert Winfrey Den Winer Toni Wisher Jenice Woody John Woolerd Nency Worner Keith Wr"ght

Mi~e Wright Joen Yenney Leurie Yexley Lerry Zehnd Leurel Ziebell Corwyn Zimbleme n

LOYAL CHARGER ft~ ns combet the cold

136

liS

they help to cheer thei~ te em on to victory.


IMPOSSIBLE? No, no never, never, uh, uh, uh •.•

Sophomores Not Pictured Micheel Be ey Suse'l Burto John Butler Jemes cr- pmen Semuel Cullop Solly Eek"n Cerolyn Frerichs Mery Her e'{ Edwerd Je"kins Dev'd Johnson Kevin Kipp Steven Me lei!· lrvirg Morgen

Jeffrey eel S even Pierce Cha<les p· mart D bbre R derbaugh R'che•d Schaffer Joh11 Selender L'nde Siegmund Susen Simmons Thomes S ig II Patty Teylor Gary Welch Richerd Willis Jecqueline Wilson SOPHOMORE COLLEE

MULVIHILL exh'bi s olymp'c form.

137


Camelot Becomes Juniors' Utopia as Prom Draws Nigh A jun"or year-the irresponsibility of security. The inbetween stage: leading sophomores, bu waiting to follow seniors. T e big projec , Prom, was characerzed by mara hon indecision: Where to hold i , decorations, and most important-how to ma e money to finance it. Jun"ors spent breaks giving sophomores and seniors sales pi ches about boo mar s. Af er school candy sa 1es and a soc hop also added to the treasury. The streets surrounding Centennial were twice as full his year-double confusion? One of he big thrills was still ge ting tha precious driver"s license. Luc ily, ¡uniors switched from hamburgers and drive-ins with skinny par ing places o pizza places wi h plenty of wide ope spaces. Grades were al-important to juniors. ACT and SAT ests gave the first hint as o wha i oo o en er the col'ege of your choice. Some had to decide on early gradua ion. For juniors, he presen was close and he u ure far distan . It was a carefree fme when e immediate reality of a college or business world could be put off for one more year.

JU lOR CLASS OFFICERS: Vice¡president Jerry Tippy, Treosurer Koy S monin, Secre ory Debbie Selvey, ond Preside t Jo n Ki zmiller proudly d"sploy the Junior "'C'".

THE HARDEST TASKS befoll the sponsors, Mr. Dovis ond Mrs. Elkin.

138


STUDENTS VIEW the lunch menu with m·xed emo ions.

THE BEST PART o{ ony meeting is well·epprecieted es the first wove of 1-wngry s uden s otted the refreshme s.

AT THE FIRST, ~~~ her 1-ectic, doss meeting Mrs. Col deweih rem· ds Jo n Kittm• er of lest mi".J e onnounce'Tlen s.

139


Juniors Spend Leisure Time 375

A WINTER of snow finds Kothi Zorbuck end Pem Redfeorn in e vicious snowbo f g~t. AFTER SCHOOL "obs prove demending for undercleumen sue" es Celeste Cosey. Tom Abel Mef"nde Adorrs Me "ue Adems Terese Albe¡s Dione Alford Bred ey Anderson Oen"is Anderson Keren Bo~ r Hole., Ba1ding Debb"e Bercus Dove Betemon JiM Beosley Anne Be~rens Sheryl Beiger Lindo Bennett Elo1se Berner Barb B"nc" DoMid Bi hop Bill Blixen Alex Bohlon Don Bortner A en Bremer Bob Brown Bruce Brown Cro"g Brown Dave Browning Terry Brownlee Dione Bruce Kothy Burger Jonet Bur~ Barb Burns Georgie Burton Welter Burton Joe Busch Ernestine Butler Roy Campbell Tom Cempboll Shelly Carpenter Celeste Cosey Jim Cathey

140


Different Ways Cothy Cower J '11 Coble L•nda Cole berger Robert Co 'ns

L ~do Coney D•1.1 Corbe+t Potty Cosgrove Ke'th Crawford

Rose e Crawford R cl>ord Croz er Doro Cur+'s Sue Donker

"Y

Corol Dov s Lynn Dov's oncy Doy Dio~e Deoton

S eve Dern's Jim Dente Hugo DeVries Co een DeWit

Do• e Dex er Vic i D'e~er Alo., Di ley Joon Dixon

Steve Dorsey 8'11 Dosch Steve Doug os Joon Dow

Borb Ducoff S o•o Dunowoy Ron Eogon 'c Eos ·~

Cheryl Edwards Brendo Eggers Joh,. Ellis Mo •sho Eric son

CHRISTMAS DECORA T 0 S pr v de on odequote b ground for this couple's qui t moMents tog her.

J '11 Evons Joy Fe dirg Seve Fn Conn'e Fi+zgerold

141


Boxing Gloves, Bobby Socks Buy Tearn Blazers Fr1doy, Januory 5, was more than jus a T.G.I.F. Tearn members organized a special event o raise money for bosetboll blazers. The first annual faculty bas etball champ"onship game alienated students in a bi er contest. It was the men teachers against the women teachers-a hordfough game. Stunning uniforms were a b"g part of he a roction. To even the sides, the men hod to wear boxing gloves, ond some unusual fouls were called on their team-roving eyes and breach of gen lemonly conduc . The women were able to wor their woy around most of the rules. They did awoy wi h many trodi ionol regulotions ond created the"r own, such as corrying insteod of dribbling the boll ond hiding it ofter free throws. They mode o voliant last effort, but the men proved thot women reolly ore the weoker sex.

t\BOVE: Ft\CULTY members put he"r heeds together end os is he custom, the female outwits the me e i~ o tie bo I situation. RIGHT: Free¡lhrow ne o~es o~ o feminine touch, os Mrs. Wi "s uses p~ychology to w"sh on exlro point.

Vic 'e Foyd More o Fogel A~'li Foley Barb Ford More o Fo ch

Stephen Frer chs AI Fr ederch J en Friederich Con'l'e F nnemon Ko hy Gel ivon

M e Go von T rry Ge~nowoy Lirde G~~rdner Robert Garrett Pot y Ge~semer

Conn e Ge•tel Sus'e G'lmore Ted Gledhill Perry Good C ndy Gosne I

Howard Gourley C ark Grody Cor Gror ng. Edd e Grey Mer 'l Green

142


Potr c

Groen Griggs Joon GuMbel Edwin Hodl y Steve Hal O'ICY

Dove Homburg Ju e Homo on Elc 11 Henson Lorry Hcrp r Roy Horpor

A c c Hcrpestcd JeH Hortmcn Jim He bc·g • Joh Heeler Co"'l e Hegenbcrt

Pet y He er Don He n"er ds Mer H"eronymws Pe y H ger Ronde Hitch"'ls

Rcndy H" cl•ns Mcrc"c H~>son c+hy Hoffmc'l Serb Ho dren M Hoverson

Jirn Hoppe John f-toppe Greg House Linco n Huffmc'l Rog r Hulfmc'l

Stcn Hurder Bob ld er"lan ty Jodie Jesse Jcrnes S eve Jc'les

G or"o Janovetz John Johnson R"d Jof.nson Tom Jot.nson Terry Jones

Co"'lie J~yce Debb e Korlstrom Jo n ely cncy Kelley Doug endcll

143


Junior Leaders Spend After School Hours on Their Heads To"' Leng ois Jene Lete f S~elly Legere Jerry lenz

Herb Lesl>oure Jey Lewos Mose Long John Love I

evon Luces Chuck Luckrnenn M'ke Lu e Joyce Lyberger

Sere Me'ors Mery Me iskes Ket~y Mennering Mery Margreve

Peige Metthows Dera Ma•ey Nency Maxey Gerry McCein MRS. GOUDIE instructs Ann Foley on the finer points of voulting.

Pet McCoy Phi McDuffee Bob McE igott Li"da McFell

ShMon McGinnis Jirrt Me ebb Phy1 ss McNemoro David McNattin

R;ck McPhee Deen Meador Sue Mechling Rorald Meister

Dean Messinger Cathy M er ancy Miller Greg M' s

JUNIOR LEADERSHIP d m11nds I me end potie"ce on the p!!rl of its p!!r+ic'pents.

144


Ro er M Is Jone Mitchell Jea~ M" chell Pom Mon gomert

Jeo~ Morgen J Morgen Mo" Morrow LouAn" Morse

Paulo Morton Bob

Debb e or ell Pcm y ol M"ke 0 m Morsho 0 son

Melonie Ozier B" Palrr~er M"ke Pamer Bob Palrr~isa o

SPOTTI G IS as imp r an• as

he s~un s themselves. Roger Pappas Ann Por inson Sue Po el Parr~ Patzw·

Roger Payne Charles Peerson Dennis Peerson Maggie Pelmore

Merle e Pfeifer Tom Pforr Carol Phillips Kim Pide'ls

Goil Piper Ken Pi mon Hot ie Pol Hoyle Pude

Sco~t Rodcliffe Jan Ra bun Henry Rotliffe Ed Rowdin

MELISSA ADAMS conq help of Jane Loteer.

•s •he ba'a ce beam

w"

h

e

145


Indecision, Money Problems

ADDI G TO the lis of the underte ings by the Ju ior cless is the 3 :IS cendy seles to help support the Junior-Senior prom. Pcm Redfeern Ru h Reeder Tory Remesch Jim Re berg Cerole Rider Ann Roech Bernard Rob"nson S e!le Robison M e Rogers Pe y Rou' e M, e Remer Geil Rus Juf"e Rvcn Linde Selezer Ke y Semue son S eve Scrford

Dev"d Scy es Linde Sc lorff Terry Sc neidmen Rusty Schnur Alice Sch•eiber Jim Schul z Chuck Schwartz J"m Seefeld Serb Scogg" Jee Scot S eve Scott Ke y Scribner Debb"e Selvey Key Semc in R"c ey Sever s M e She by TomSieds Jc e sr.·r ey Kcren Shoemaker Bruce S unnen Jec S"mon Mere s·ms Geyle Si gleton Cheryl Smith

146

Memories for Junior Class

THE VOTES roll in es Centennial's ju ... ior clcss decides whether to hold Prom in lincoln Squere or in the gym.


Kam Smi h Lee Sm'th Mari 11 Sm h Stepi-en Sommer

ercy Spo~cer Don Sta~ley Linde S evens J-.~1' Stinson

Cindy Stc lose Petricia Strohl Conred Stynchule Petty Su 'van

Oo~q

Swa k

Lynde Te reI ency T iron o ·x e Hornhill

Roger T pps Jerry Tippy Seve Toe V'c or Toews

Sue rimble Phil Troe ler Ada Trover Do ' e Tuc er

Lee Ric Sue Key

Tuc er erd Tuc er Tuley Turner

Ca,ol Un eed Steve Unz'c er Debb"e Upto Roger Ya I

Joi-n Wa den Eugene Was ing on Jan ce Weat erspoon Joe Webber

Suson Webber Mono Weber Sherry Weber D'ane W ssmen

ASSISTING IN one of the scores of Jun'or cless mo eymoking projects, Morcio H xson se Is Mi e Pierce o cherger book mar •

147


ToM Weissman John W rt Debbie West Jodie W stmen D v·d WestenhGver Jerry Wetmore Gory Wf.eeler Linde Whee! Cher Wh.te Steve w. ey Eler.'le Wil iems B c y WI on Doug Wilson Lorry Wilson Cf.eryl Winget Ke hy w·se w. ieM Woi"er W em Wof B!!rb Y11nney BrtJce Young 11t~i Z11rbuc

Corde z·m'TlermM

Juniors Not Pictured Deboroh Bridges Alon Broqu·s Cf.orles Brown Judy Bryo'lt Wil iom B rgess Evere t Bu ue Lloyd mmings Fronc·s Cunn 'lghom Guy Demoss w, ·om Devore S even Deschene Joon Dorrs B!!r !Ito Dorrs Orvi e E!!ds J!!ck Fairchild

c. .

-

ATE SE MOME T et 11 Che gers' b11 etball geme drews the crowd n+o e fr

148

Perry S er Robert S.lverrren P11trici Smith Rob rt Smith Gory St11nley Micheel T11ylor Lorry Yo., Schoyck We er We ker Annie Wil iems J enne Wilson J11mes Wood Jemes Young

D11ve leriv·ere Donne Lecompte Stephen Legue Jemes L cos Thomes Lunger e•en McC e!lry Scott Mecum Chris Mon Mer he ewbill o.,n·el 0 Co~nell lel!!nd Rexro!!d Do~!!ld Rob·nson Doneld Scf.effer D·en"e Sl>ederhelm

zy of exc·terrent.


SCOTT DAVIS ond ike Helb i"g moke o hondsome po'r os t~ey ovo'd "e choos by resortirg to bock s o'rwoys for their traveling purposes_

ABOVE: A seren' y

CE TE

IAL l>oll os copt~·ed

in

o

rore

momort of

R.GHT ROSELLE CRAWFORD to s her t'me in be' g f led for ol sp i I cl s r ng, D c r wos d ff c t os tl,ere were mO")' d gn end c or to p1c fro"'l.


ISO


Seniors

151


ABOVE: CLASS PRES DE T Chuck P11rler demonstro es his tolents os on or11tor ol o meeti g.

cii!SS

RIGHT: SUCH EAR EST sponsors os Mrs. Kir potrick ond Mr. Frederic s find tho! o first closs co for rrore 0"1 1-e ... suo irre 11nd ent us'osM.

groduo+i~g

BELOW: HARDLY b 'ev'ng groduot'on so neor tl-,e se~ior closs officers o tempt to corrproe'r cl-,o'ces of mor 11rboord ond 11ssel colors.

152


First Graduates Take Charge of Centennial Tomorrows T~ree

yearslong, short years. The firs class to gradua e from a scroo ey helped to build. The s ruggle as ..rnderclassmen be ween loyol ies •o wo scroo s-reso ved. Tradi ons set.

It wos vigorous ond exc· ing, th's las yearSuffering ar.d laugh'ng through e'ldless rorT'ewor ass'gnments, hecfc a+ er-school mee ings, all-'l'ght p'zza parl'esAnd somewhere · n between, origirafng he b ue coors, the Charger symbol, and he power o bac i . School rod much more to offerOr did Sen'ors have more to g've? The re urr of regulo ·on classroorT"s and o rea gym. Life fr'e ds, five-m'nu e brea fr'e ds, crowded oge her be wee'l c asses. The sudde su pr'se of s'lent halls af er scrool. The rag'co ·c a mosp ere of wee e d games, explod'ng vic cries-muffled defeo s e enc 0'1 rT'er.• of far o+f Comelot at Prom, and pos prom-happy ired. These were spec'al in a way on 1y Se ·ors can know.

SE lOR CLASS OFF CERS, V.Pres. on erl trom Pres. Chuc Sec. Sue Bergstrom s art off e year on +ho r'ght +rack. AS A VALUABLE FORWARD for Kir patric exeMp1'fies her technique

Per er Treas. S eve Pe

ho women's team in •he feculty basketba he free· rrow ,. 0

Ill

ry

gcme

end Mr.

The slow doys passed qu c ly, securi y sl'pped q..r'e y away as college and o her words loomed Ia qer. The un'queness of grow'ng as your school grows, leadi g a rad· on--be ng one, will never be forgo en. oth'ng was wasted memory +or fu ure yeors pas : Seniors, 1968.

153


Art Ac ermonn Sa di Armstro g Pegge Be er

Julie Albl" ger Tony Audrieth Ronnie Ba er

Mery Ann Albright Pa'Tl Ayers Diane Barhite

Barbara Allen Russell Babb Candy Bar er

Karen Anderson Tom Baerweld Debbie Barnes

Early Practices Guarantee Reserved Seats at Pep Assemblies MIXED EMOTIO S are revealed in the faces of

154

se~ior

members of Pe Club.


Helen Barnes Rodger Barr

Daryl Bartelson Howard Barth

Ann Becker Jim Bennett LOST POM-POMS could creote o problem for onyone less og"Je ~on Pom 0' ei

Mi e Birtcher Bill Bradle

Mike Bolin Becky Bradriff

Sue Bergstrom Mike Bernardi

Jenny Best Roger Biles

I SS


Margoret Brosh Suson Buschboch

Eddie Bridges Mike Byers

Dove Brown Corio Cosebeer

Debbie Brown Greg Chew

Terry Buchonan Mike Chipman

Shivering Cold and Anxiety Are Part of Football Excitement Bonnie Claar Mike Clorke

PUZZLED EXPRESSIO S of Croiq Stinsol' end Chud: Porker convey htense concern over .heir teommotes' los ploy.

156

Mortha Clork Jim Cline


Lind~ Coffin B arb~r~ Coy

Marc

Cz~ 路

ows i

L-Rhea Coggon Ron Cr~路g Diane D~hl

M~rc Colbert Cl~udia Culver Lynn D~vidson

Seve Comer Caroly Curtis J~cqu路e D~vis

Jim Cooper Pa Cusick Jill o路nsmore

157


Doua Ditzler Ray Dunlap

Rachael Drake Carol Durant

Glenn Duckworth Jodi D'Urso

Ingenuity and Gumption Create an Unparalled Senior Skit Chas. Eichelberger Pat Evere t

158

Fred Eichhorst Sharon Farruggia

Be sy Eisner Bo Faxen

Denise Elder Sharon Fehrenbacher

Donna Erickson Diana File warth


Sheilo Fitzgerold Rondy Fletcher

Borb Flewelling Steve Flynn

SPIRITED "CHEERLEADERS" e•press Homecomi 9 pep in " Hey Coech!"

Ben Foster Joe Fronk BUBBLY SUE Bergstrom reflects teem de ermi otic .

Art FroeM'11ing Porn Gorrison

Chris Getz Terri Gioche to

159


THE FAMILIAR phr~se, 'M~y I h~ve your etten4ion for the morning bulletin?'' is broedcest over the intercoM by Mere Co her

Jerry Gilber Bill Goings Mike Golish Roberta Good

Sally Good Connie Gose Randy Gotschall Mary Graning

Nancy Greenstein Bernice Harrington Karen Hartman John Hartman

160

SPACE-AGE GLASS is the cen4 r of et ention dur'ng ~~~ esse'Tlb y es Lind~ Scott hesil~ntly de:>1onstr:stes i•s f exibili+y.


Max Horvey Tom Henoger J'rn Hoi ingswor h

Greg Hatch Jeff Hirshenson Bill Holm

Roscoe Hovice Barb Heywood Bob Ho 'Tl

Mi e Hebling John Hilderbrond Cheryl Hop i s

Dove Hel er Greg Hill Debb'e Humphreys

Seniors Find Diverse Methods to Apply Their Talents SE IORS MIX educat'on

w1

h pleasure or their Humeni ies f'eld trip to Chicago's Art lnsti ute.

161


Charles Horn

Carol Hutchinson

Nancy Huxtable

Bonnie lnskip

Connie Jockows i

Imaginative Minds Envision Abstractions of Distant Worlds Ron Jewell Judy Kelsey Judy Kir wood

162

John Jones Gail Kempe Chris Kitzmiller

James Joyce Tim Kenney Jon Kokernot

Ron Karlstrom Faye Kent Barbaro LaRocque

Tom Kelly Leslee Key Donna Lilley


Donny Loeschen Ellen Lore Bruce Lowstuter Peggy McColl

Pom McEvoy Koren McGehe Corole McHugh Doug McNottin

ABOVE: THE CHICAGO lrsti u e gu'de's hterpretotion of contemJ'orol'Y works of ort o!ds the ol enlion of on in rigued, but somew ot bewildered M'~e Weover. LEFT: A CAR ATIO ·s frogro'lce br ngs o pensive end rome fc expression to o sen i e tel Suson Mye sonS . Velen ine's Dey.

163


Jac ie Magnuson Jim Ma heis

Cro'g Mannering Scott Mecum

Jo Lynn Mannering Vicki Michael

Bill Manny Carol Miebach

Tim Mossonori John Miller

Long Hours of Practice Rewarded 1n Relaxed Recreation Randy Moncrief Jock Murdock

164

Tim Morrow Ko hy Musgrove

Jerry Mortensen Bee y Myers

Robyn Muel er Susan Myers

Eileen Mulvihill Eileen Neils


Bob Neupauer Porn O'Neill Gerold Per ins

John uttol Borboro Polmos y John Perry

Debbie Nyholt Potti Poppin Tereso Pe erson

Steve O'Byrne Chuc Por er Steve Petry

Mortha Olive'ro Lono Peorson Shirley Peyton

LEFT: LAST MINUTE eyel'~es a"d powd • complete Sue Zi blemen's cherec!er for The Marriage Proposal. BELOW: "HELP SOMEBODY! I'm stuck!" ency Huxteble pleeds, es she discove best piece to sit. ers thet en old beby's cheir is no


Mergeret Phillips Chorlie Prowell

Mi e Pierce Deve Rey

Steve Piper Shirley Reyburn

Deve Pitsch Steve Redmon

Books Pay Off for Some, While Some Pay Off for Books CAUG T at " rare moment, Rodger Barr s'nks into " chair as he 'studies • for final exams.

166

Chris Riemer Doug Roesch

Janet Roberts Bee y Routh

Richord Robinson Jenette Rose


$2.75 IS A LOT o pay for a library fine, especially when Jacquie Dav's '"sis s on se ling t e debt in pe nies.

Tom Rowen Dorothy Schlatter Linda Scott

Kathy Rubenacker James Schlorff Jo Shapland

Frank Russell Connie Schoendienst Cheryl Shaw

Randy Russell Bonnie Schreiber Randy Shick

Tim Ryan Linda Schweighart Dan Silverman

167


seve s¡mon Tom Smith JoneS e"nfeldt

Joh Small"ng Maurice Snook Robert Stic len

Erwin Smith Janet Soloman Craig Stinson

Steve Smi h Bob Sprac len Terry Stoltey

Susan Smith Greg Stayton John Strehlow

Anticipating Tomorrow's Goals Provides Today's Diversions CONCE TRATION, 11 long-lost 11rt for most se!'liors, is 11tt11hed by 11 persistent Eileen Neils.

lb8


Lynn Sutherlond Bruce Swartz

Gary Swinford Sally Sylvester

Chuck Tempel Charles Tichenor COLLEGE-BOU D senior, Dione Dohl, selects luggoge for her opproechi~g trove! to compus life.

Jim Vance Barbara Wahl

Sherry Vogt Lee Walker

Carl Tipton Mike Trau man

Jim Tufford Bill Vance

169


Terry Wikoff Lyndell Wilken

Kathy Willey Reid Wilson

Elaine Washington Ron Westman

Don"el Welch Judy Whiteside

PROM'S E CHA Tl G splendour beque~ths rom~ntic vi¡ sions within t e s ~dows of ~n unforgett~bfe eveni g.

Pot Wingstrom Larry Wooldridge

Lano Worden Deline Wright

Jon Young Susan Zimblemon

170


GRADUATION DRAWS NEARER os Sen"ors finol"ze preporo ions for the ceremony, and times after.

Realizing It's Over, and Yet Just Beginning: Graduation Seniors Not Pictured Richord Anderson Greg Boles John Beovers Pom Bell George Brinegor Clorence Britt Victor DeVries John Fitzpotrick Bob Fry Steve Gotes Mi e Good Joe Holl Down Heston Lenoro Hillord Diono Hop ins Dennis Koter Howord Kemper Bill Kindle Bob Lonce

Alon Lowler George Lipscomb Bob Lucos Hugh McHorry Becky Ohm Pot Reid Rondy Simpson Jim Stoley Vern S erling Dennis Stewort Sue Summers Stonley Truloc Poulo Wotson Wendo Weotherspoon Mike Weover Don Wheeler Jeff Wiese Preston Winfrey

171


Senior Biographies A ACKERMA ART c,~ President 2: C. Club -4: Stud en Cou~cil 2, 3, President 3: Swi ming +· CHRONICLE 2. ALBLI GER JULIE: Pep Club 2. 3 -4 Pep· e tes + Sp~nish Club 3. ALBRIGHT MARY A : Co serv~tion Club +: Er>core +: F.T.A. +: Hum~n Rei~ ions 3. +: Pep Club 2 +, Pepettes 4. ALLE BARBARA A DERSO ARE : Dr~m~ Club 2, 3, +: Pep Club 4· S udent Gu'de -4. A DERSO , RICHARD: Je s Club 3 +: H~m Club 4· Honor Socie y -4. ARMSTRO G, SA Dl: Studen Council 2, 3, + V'ce-Presiden 3, 4· Pep Club 2, 3 +, Pepe es -4· F.T.A. 2. 3, + C~det Te~cher 4· Frenc Club 2 3, 4• Elec ion Bo~rd Ch~irm~n 3: Foreign Exch~nge Ch~'rm~n 3, +· S ~ e S uder.t Cou cil Deleg~te 3: CE T1 AL +· LITERARY MAGAZI E 4. AUDRIET , TO Y: House of Represent~· ives 4. AYERS PAMELA: F.S.A. 3· Office Occu· p~ "ons Club+.

8 BABB, RUSS: I r"c 3 4; Swim ing +· s~seb II+. BAERWALD. TO : Foo b II 2 3, 4· Tennis 2 3, 4· Germ~n Club 3, +: Honor Society 3, 4; I er~ct 3 + Secret~ry +· House of Represent~tves 3; CHRO ICLE 3 CE • Tl AL 3 4 Ed' or 'n-chief 3, 4· S udent Council 4· Spec rum +. Producer: S.A.R. Aw~ d +· Ch~rqer Cum L~ude 4 Co mittee .ot· LITERARY MAGAZI E 4. BA E PEGGE: A C~ppell~ 2 3 4· Or· chem 2· Voc~le es 3 4. BAKER RO IE BALES. GREG BARHITE, DIA E: Pep Club 3, +. Pepe es +· Med'c~l C~reers 4· LITERARY MAGAZI E +. BARKER CA DY: House of Represe ~ ives AI ern~ e 2; G.A.A. 2· S udent Council 3; Tri-Hig Exch~ngee 3; Pep Club + Pep· e es +· Dr~m~ C ub 4. BAR ES DEBBIE: F H.A. 3 4: Pep Club +. Pepe es 4· Ho or Socie 3, +. BAR ES. HELE : S udent Guide 2, 3· French Club 2 3· Pep Club 2 3, 4· Student Cou cil +. BARR ODGER: Stude Counc'l 2· CrossCou ry 2, 3 4• Swimm'ng 2 3, 4; Tr~ck

3, 4 Pepettes 4· Election Board 3; CENTURIA 4 Ac~de ics Co-Edi or +: Clan Secretory +. BER A D Ml KE: Football 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, +· In e•oct 3, + Boord of Directors 3: Stunt Show 3; Spectrum +· lntro-sto e Exchangee 4· C-C 1ub 4· House of Repr sentotiv s +. BEST, JE Y: French Club 2· P p Club 2 3 +· Elec ion Boord 2. BILES ROGER: German Cl~b 2· Foo boll 3, 4; Bosketb~ll +: C-Ciub 3, +: Honor Society 4 BIRTCHER, MIKE: Football 2, -4: Track 2; lntromurol Bo boll 2 4· Biology Club 3, +,Treasurer 3, 4. BOLl Ml E: Swimm·~g 2 3 + Co-Cop+oin +: Baseball 2; Foo boll 3, 4; c.Ciub 2, 3, 4· 1~ erod 3, 4· Cent nniol Guord -4; Semi· Finalist lllirois S o e Scholarship 4; Honor Socie y +. BRADLE BILL: Golf 2 3, -4· In eroct +· Ger· m~ Club+. BRA DRIFF, BECKY: A Cappello 4. BRASH MARGARET: Pep Club 3, + Pep· et es +. BRIDGES EDDIE: Cross·Country 2, 3, -4; Troc 2 3 +· Madwoman of Chaillot 4; Spec rum+. SRI EGAR, GEORGE BRITT, CLARE CE· Bosketboll 2 3, +. BROW . DAVE: CE TINAL 3, +: Conservation Club 3, 4; Wrestling 4; Human Relo· ions 4; Trock 4. B OW DEBBIE: Bond 2 3, + Secretory 4; Wig 'n' Point 2; Contest Pl~y 2: Honor Society 3 +; Chemis ry Club 2. President 2: Bond Contest 3· Wind Ensemble 3; French Club 3, 4· French Ho orory 3 +: L.A.C. 3: Bond Council +, Secre ory +: A Coppell~ +: Human Relations +: Drama Club 4· Madwoman of Chaillot Costume Ch~irmo +· Winter Pl~y Costume Choir· mo +· House of Representotives +. BUCHA AN, TERRY: Footboll 4. BUSCHBACH SUSA : Sponis Club 2, 3; Sp~nish Honorory 2, 3, 4: Pep Club 2, 3, +. Pece es 4• House of Represer.totives 2· CE TURIA + Co.Edi or-in Chief; CHRO ICLE 2; Homecoming Queen Cour 4 Miss Jingle-Belle Cour +· D.A.R. Finolist: Code+ Teacher 4; Semi-Finalist llli ois S ate Scholorship +: I tro.Sto e Host +· Ho or Society 4 BYERS Ml E

c

2, 3.

BARTELSO , DARYL: Sp~ 's Club 2, Sec· re ~ry 2· M~rch'ng s~nd 2: lnter~ct 2, 3, +:Ten is -4. BARTH, HOWARD BEAVERS JOH : M~rc i~g B~ d 2; In er~c 3 4· Golf 3, +· A5 rc omy Club +. BECKER, A : Germ~n Club 2· Pep Club 2 3 +· Fre ch Club 3; F.T.A. 3, 4· MAROO 3 · Gym Le~der +. BELL PAMELA: c~nv~s Boord 2, 3, Secretory-Tre~surer 3; Hum~" Relations 2, 3, +: Co tes Ploy 2; Spring Musical 2, 3· French Club 2 3; G.A.A. 2· Orchesis 2, 3· Or· ches ro 2; Stunt Show 2, 3; Drom11 Club 2, 3 4· A Coppetlo 3; Bato Club 3; CHRO ICLE 3 Co-Ar Edi or 3; F.H.A. 3, Vice-Pres'dent 3: LITERARY MAGAZI E 3, Co.Art Editor 3; Order of he Masks 3, +· Co servation Club +. BE ETT JIM BERGSTROM, SUE: F.T.A. 2 3 4, Vice-Preside t 4• French Club 2, 3· Pep Club 2,

172

CASEBEER, CARLA Student Council 2, 3, + Treosurer 3· Pep Club 3, 4, Pepe es -4. CHEW, GREG: Dromo Club 4: lnteroc -4: Astro omy Club 4: Madwomon of Chaillot 4· L~fn Club +. CHIPMA . Ml E CLAAR BO NJE CLARK, MARTHA: Pep Club 2, 3, 4; Fre ch Club 2. 3 +· French Honorory 3, 4 Hon· or Society 3, +: Pepettes 4. CLAR E, MIKE CLINE JIM: Vocational Council -4. COFFI , LINDA: Pep Club 3 4 Pepettes -4· Spa is Club -4; F.T.A. +. COGGA L·RHEA: Footboll 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3,

+.

COLBERT MARC: Cross-Country 2: Swim· mi g 2 3, +: German Club 2, 3, 4; ' Ten· nis 3 +· I ter-High Exchongee 3, Host -4· In eroct 3, 4, Vice President 3, President +· CE Tl AL 3 +. Business Mo oger 4;

Boy's Sto e 3; Boy's No 10n 3; Stunt Show 3· Honor Society 3 + V'ce pres'dent +: S.A.R. Finalist +· Notional Merit "Commended'' +· Spectrum +· V1c Vers~ i"'g Court 4; Illinois Stole Schol rsh'p Semi·fi· n~list + COMER. STEVE: Foo b~ll 2, 3, 4. COOPER JIM: CHRO ICLE 2, 3· Bond 2 3, 4· CENTINAL 3, 4· Red'o Club 3, +: Orches+ro 4· Spen'sh Honor~ry 4. COY, BARBARA: French Club 2, 3; Pep Club 2; Human Rel~tions 3 +· Frecnh Honor~ry 3, +· Honor Socie 3, 4· Cherg· er Cum Leud +. CRAIG, RO : Ut rery Ar s Club 3: Dr m~ Club+. CULVER, CLAUDIA: A Cepp II~ 2 3, 4; Sp~nish Club 2 3; Vocelettes 2, 3 -4; M d· rigels +; Encore 4. CURTIS CAROLYN: Pep Club 2, 3 4, Pep· ettes 4; Germon Club 2, 3, +· F.T .A. +: ln+ro.S+e e Exchongee +· Honor Society +. CUSICK. PAT: French Club 2. 3; Pep Club 2, 3 4 Pepet es -4; F.T.A. 3, + President +· CENTINAL +. CZAJ OWS I. MARC: Spe~ish Club 2. 3; Golf 2 3 · lnteroct 3, +. Boord of Directors 3; s un Show 3 I roMurel B~ske b~IJ +: B~seb~ll

4.

D DAHL, DIA E:

Sp~n

lub 2 3 · Sp nish +: Pep Club 2 3, + Pepettes +: House of epresen 11fves 2; Voc~lett s 3, +· Encore +: CE TU RIA Business Stoff +. DAVIDSO LY : Conservation Club 4: Pep Club+· G.A.A. +. DAVIS JACQUIE: Frerch Club 2, 3, +: G.A.A. 3 · House of Represente 'ves +· Af. ro-Americen Club +· Hum~n Rel~tions -4; Ch~rger Cum L~ude 4; Miss Jingle Belle Court+. DEVRIES V CTOR Dl SMORE, JILL: Spanish Club 2, 3, +: G.A.A. 2; Pep Club 2 3, 4 Pepe tes 4; MAROO 3; CE TURIA +. Co-Org~n· iz~lions Editor· A C~ppella 4· Voc~le tes 4: Encore 4; CE Tl AL 4. DITZLER DOUG DOWERS SA ORA: Spanish Club 4· Span· ish Honor~ry 4. DRAKE RACHAEL: Of ice Occupotions Club + Secret~ry-Treasurer; Afro·A'Tleric~.., +. DUCKWORTH GLE : Baseball +: lnterect +. DU LAP RAY: A C11ppelle 2 3, 4: Inter· ~ct 3· F.T.A. 3, 4: Stude t Assistant +. DURA T, CAROL· F.T.A 2, 3· Pep C'ub 2; MAROON 3· LITERARY MAGAZINE 4. D'URSO JODI: House of Represert~tives 2, Secre ory· Pep Club 2, 3 4, P p ttes 4, Secretary +. Le~der 4; CHRO ICLE 2, 3. Honor~ry

h

2, 3, -4: A C~ppello 2, 3

E EICHELBERGER, CHUCK: Football 4. EICHHORST. FRED: Wrestling 2. E!S FR BETSY: Student Guide 2: Fr nch Club 2 3; MAROON 2, 3· CHRO ICLE 2: F.T.A. 2; Pep Club 3, +, Pepettes +: Student Council +· CENTURIAN 4, Busi· ness S eff. ELDER DE ISE: Pep Club+, Pepettes +. ERIC SO , DO A: A C~ppell~ 2, 3, +: Pep Club 2, 3 +. Vice.President 3, Presi· dent 4 Pepettes 4 Le11der 4: Vocal es 3: Student Guide 3; Encore 4. EVERETT, PAT: Sp~r'sh Club 2, 3 4 Vice· President 3: F.T.A. 2 3, President 3: Stu· dent Cou cil 2, 3, 4, Tre~surer 2, Presi-


dent <4· lrter High Exche~ge 2; Student Show 3 4· S~nish Honorary 3, 4· IntraStele Excf.engee <4.

F FARRUGGIA SHARON: F.T.A. 2 3, 4, Cede~ T acher 4; Pep Club 2, 3, +. Pepettes +: G.A A. 3 4; GorMon Club 3· Biology Club+. FAXE 80: Foreign Exchenge Student from Sweden· l~terect 4• Germen Club 4; Frond• Club 4· Frenc!l Honorory 4; Golf 4. FEHRENBACHER, SHARON: F.H.A. 3. FILLE WARTH, OIANA: Cooperotive Vocelionel Educe io~ 2, 3· Office Occupetions 4.

F TZGERALD SHEILA FITZPATRIC JOHN FLETCHER, RANDY: Golf 3: Cross Country 4 Track 4. FLEWELLI G BARBARA FLYNN STEVE: Spanish Club 2, 3: Bend 2, 3, 4· A Copp lie 2, 3, 4; Beton Club 3, Dance Bend 3, 4· Encore 4, Pr side~t; Bend Cou~cil 4, Quertermester. FOSTER BE : Amete~or Red'o Club 3: Jets 3, "'· FRA JOE: Wres l'ng 2 3· Golf 2, 3, +: French Club 2, 3; Uterery Arts Club 3; Intra S te Host 3 • Tennis +. FROEMMI G, ART: House of Representetives 3, 4· Dreme C' b 4 FRY, ROBERT

G GARRISO PAM[ iouse of Representetives 2 Alter~ete +: F.S.A. 3, +· Pep Club 4 Pepettes 4 GATES STEVE GETZ, CHRIS: Germe"' Club 2; Tri-High Excha~gee 3; Football +: House of Represe~ a lives 4 · Track 4. GIACHETTO TERRI: Sp nish Club 3, 4· Pep Club 3, 4 Popel s 4· Co~servetion Club

+.

GILBERT, JERRY: Foo bell 2 3, 4. GOI GS E GOLISH Ml E: German Club 2: Audio Visue A'd 4. GOOD MIKE GOOD ROBERTA: House of Representetives 2, 3; Pep C 1ub 2 3. GOOD SALLY· Chee Ieeder 2, +: F.T.A. 2 3· Pep Club 2, 3 4· Spa ish Club 2 3; Sp nish Honorary 2 3; Gym Leeder 3; Student Cou~c'l 4· Homeco ing Queen Court 4; Miss J ngle Belle 4; Charger Cum Leude Commi lee 4 D.A.R. Fi elist 4. GOSE CO IE GOTSCHALL, RA DY: Liberal Ar s Club 3· Foo bell +· Homecoming Ki g 4· S.A.R. Fo~alis 4· C-Ciub 4. GRA I G MARY: G.A.A. 2, 3; F.S.A. 3; Jr Leadersh'p 3; Sr. L adersh'p +. GREE STE, , A CY: F.T.A. 2 3, +: Pep Club 2 3, 4 Pepe es +: LITERARY MAGAZI E +· French Club 3 4· French Ho orery 3, 4· CE TURIAN 4 Co-Senior Section Ed lor; Inter-High Cou~cil 3, 4; Orame Club 2 3, 4; In ra-Ste e Exchenge Host +: Honor Society 4.

H HALL. JAC IE HARRINGTO BER ICE: A Ceppelle 3; Afro-Americen 4. HARTMA , JOH : Audio Visuel Aid 4. HARTMA , KARE : Sophomore Choir 2; Spanish Club 2, 3, 4; Spanish Honorery 2, 3 4· MAROON 2; A Cappella 3, 4; Vocelottes 3, +: Honor Society 3, +: Pep Club 3 +, Pepettes 4; House of Representatives 3; Intra-State Exchengee 4; CENTURIA 4 Co-Editor-i'I-Chief. HARVEY, MAX: Beske bell 2, 3, 4: Ki g of Heeds 4,

HAil.M, GREG: Interact 3, +: House of Rep· r se~~tetives 3; Cross-Country +. HAVICE, ROSCOE: House of Represenle· lives 3; C-Ciub +: Inter-High Council +. HELBLING, MIKE: Football 2, 3, 4; Golf 2, 3, 4; In erect 3 4; C-Ciub 4; In er-High Council+. HELFER DAVE: Golf 3, 4 Interact 3 Sesebell+. HENAGER TOM H ESTO , DAWN: House of Repr senlelives

+.

HEYWOOD BARB: Bend 2: Spe'lish Club 3 4; Spanish Honorary 3, 4; Pep Club 4 Pepettes +· CE TURIAN 4 Co-Copy Ed'tor; Honor Society 4. HILDERBRA D, JOH : Bend 2, 3. HILL. GREG: Footbo'l Menoger 2 3. HILLARD LENORA HIRSHE SON JEFF HOLLI GSWORTH, JIM: Hem Club 3, 4. HOLM, BILL HOLM BOB HOP I S, DIANNA: CENTINAL +. HORN CHARLES: Footbell 2. HUMPHREYS, DEBBIE: Pep Club 2, 4, Pepettes 4; F.T .A. 3, +. HUTCH! SON, CAROL: MAROON 2; Wig 'n' Pei~t 2; F.T.A. 2; A Ceppella 3 +: Vocolet es 3, 4; Sophomore Choir 2; Encore 4; Pep Club 2, 3, 4, Pepettes 4; CENTURIAN 4 Co-Senior Sectio Editor; LITERARY MAGAZI E 4; Contest Ploy 2. HUTCHISO • JUDY HUXTABLE NANCY: Pep Club 2, 3, +. Pepettes 4, Vice-President 4; French Club 2 3· CENTURIAN 4, Co-Orgorizo ions Editor· F.S.A. 4; M'ss Jingle-Belle Court 4.

I S IP 80 NIE

J JACKOWSKI CO NIE: Spo ish Club 2, 3, +: Pep Club + Pepettes 4. JEWELL, RON: B'ology Club 2, 3; Conserve ion Club 4 Trod 3 +: Cross-Country 4; I~ erect 4; Encore 4; Medrigols 4; CCiub 4. JO ES HOHN: Liberel Arts Club 2, 3; French Club 3; Sw'M · g 4; Tenris 4. JOYCE HIM

K ARLSTROM, RO F tboll 2: Cross-Country 3 4· Trod 3, 4; rderoct 3, 4 Presiden 3, Boord of Directors 4· House of Representotives 3, 4; CENTINAL 3, <4, Spor s Ed'tor 4 Ar Edi or 4· Foreign Excf,ange Commit e 3; C-Ciub 4; Cless V'ce-Presidert 4 Spectrum 4, Art Director; lntre-Sto e Exchange Host 4. KATER DE IS KELLY, TOM: Golf 2, 3, 4· Foot bell 2, 3, 4; Interact 3 4; French Club 3, 4 Spectrum 4; C erger Cum Laude Commi ee 4: Foreign Exchenge Commi lee 4. KELSEY, JUDY: Bend 2, 3, 4; House of Repr sent a ives 3; A Ceppelle 4; Vocele es 4; Medrigels 4; Encore 4; Pep Club 4. EM PE, GAIL: Pep Club 2 3, 4, Pepettes 4; F.S.A. 3, +. KEMPER, HOWARD: Football 4; Homecoming ing Finelis 4: C-Ciub 4. KE EY, TIM: Bos e boll 2, 4: nteroct 3, 4: Cross-Country +· Track 4• C-Ciub 4. KENT FAYE: Afro-American 4 SecretoryTreasurer; Charger Cum Laude +. KEY, LESLEE: Germe Club 2; Pep Club 2· Marching Bend 2, 3, 4; Concert Bend 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 3, 4· Bond Council 4; Encore 4, Secretory; Dolphin Club 4. KINDLE, BILL KIRKWOOD, JUDY: French Club 2, 3; Pep Club 2, 3, 4, Treesurer 3, 4, Pepettes 4, Leeder +: A Cepp lie 3, 4; Vocele es 3, 4 ; Modrigels 4; LITERARY MAGAZINE 4, Co-

4, Co-Copy Ed,tor: edi or; CE TURIA Encore 4. KITZMILLER, CHRIS: Exchengee to Ger ony 2; German Club 3, 4, Seer ry 4· LITERARY MAGAZI E 4, Art Wor · In er· High Council 4; lntre-Stete Exchengee 4; Spectrum 4. KOKER OT, JA : Spanish Clup 2, 3, 4; Spo ish Honorary 2, 3, 4; Trl-High Exche gee 3; Stu t Show 3, +· Fre ch Club 3; F.T.A. 3· Studen Council 3, +· lnterHig Council + Treasurer; Dolphin Club 4; Ho ecoming Court +: Miss Jingle-Belle Cour 4· lrtre-Ste e Exchangee 4• S~crum+.

L LANCE BOB LAROCQUE. BARB: Class Vice-President 2; MAROO 2; Inter-High Exchangee 2; Pep Club 3, 4, Pepettes 4; Stude Council 3, 4 Secre ary 3, Second Vice President 4; Honor Society 4; Fre ch Club 3, 4; French Honorary 3, +: F.T.A. 3, 4; Intra-Stele Exchange Committee +. Chairmen: House of Represertetives 4, Specker; Dolphin Club 4; Charger Cum Laude 4; CE Tl AL 4, Co-Ed'tor. LILLEY, DO NA: Pep Club 2, 3, +, Pe~ttes 4: F.S.A. 3, 4; F.T.A. 3. LIPSCOMB GEORGE LOESCHEN, DAN Y LORE ELLEN: Wig 'n' Pein 2, 3; Spanish Club 2 3, +· CH RO ICLE 3 · Spanish Honorary 4· Dreme Club,+: CENTU RIAN 4. LOWSTUTER BRUCE: French Club 2; A Cappella 3, 4; M11driaels +: Interact +: Swimming 4.

Me

MCCALL, PEGGY Pep Club 2, 3, +, Pepet es 4· F S.A. 3 +. MCEVOY, PAM: Cl11ss Secretary 2; Pep Club 2, 3, 4 Pe~ tes 4; German Club 2, 3, +. Secretary 3: Election Board 2; Student Council 3, 4, Treesurer +· F.T.A, 3, MCGEHE, ARE : Pep Club 3, +. Pepettes +· A C11ppelle 4; Voc11let es 4; Encore' Club 4; L11 h Club 4. MCHUGH, CAROLE: French Club 2, 3, +: French Honorary 3, 4; F.T.A. 3, 4; Honor Society 3, 4. MC ATIIN DOUG

M MAG USO , JAC E F.T .A. 2, 3: Pep Club 2, 3. MA ERI G, CRAIG: Football 2, 3, 4; Golf 2· Swimming 2; C.Ciub 3, 4; Homecom' g 'ng Court+. MATT ciS. JIM: Biology Club 3; Co servat'on Club +: As ronomy Club 4. MICHAEL, VICKI: Pep Club 2, 3, +. Pepettes 4; S~rish Club 3. MIEBACH, CAROL: Pep Club 2, 3, 4.. MILLER, JOH : Band 2, 3, +: German Club 2, 3 • Be on Club 3; Encore 4; Modern Music Masters 3, 4: Honor Society 3, 4, Presiden +: D~~nce Band 3 4; Spring Musical 3; Wrestling +. MO CRIEF, RA DY: Basketball 2, 4; Footbell 2, 3, 4• Trad 2; A Ceppelle 2, 3, 4; Interact 3, 4; Stu t Show 3; Spectrum 4; C-Ciub +. MORROW, TIM: Wrestling 4. MORTE SE , JERRY: Football 2, 3, 4: Wrestling 2; Tred 2, 3, 4; Spectrum 4; C-Ciub 3, 4. MUELLER, ROB! : Human Rea ions 4; CE TE AL 4; Dreme Club+. MULVIHILL. EILEE : Pep Club 2, 4, Peppettes +: Germ11n Club 2, 3; Delphi Club

+.

MURDOCK, JACK MUSGROVE, KATHY: Spanish Club 2, 3, 4, Yice-Preside~t 4; House of Representatives 3: Pep Club 4, Pepe es 4; Ora e Club 4

173


YE S 6EC Y: Biology Club 2; Vice 4 Pres'dent 4· Honor Soc'ety 4 YERS SUSA : French Club 2, 3; Pep Club 2 3, 4, Pepettes 4; House of Represenlllives 3; F.T.A 3 Election floerd 4; InterHigh Council 4.

N ElLS EILEE : Fr ~c Club 2 3; Pep Club 2, 3, 4 Pepe es 4; House of Represenlllives 4. EUPAUER BOB UTT ALL JOH : French Club 3, 4; Golf 3 4· CE Tl AL 4; LITERt\RY Mt\Gt\ZINE 4 Co-Edi or; Honor Society 4. YHOL DEBBIE: G'rls' Chorus 2, 3; t\ Ceppel 11 4· G.A.A. 2 Spenish Club 2, 3; Encore 4.

0 O'BYR E S EVE Fo be 3 4; Golf 3, 4; House o+ Represent11l•ves 3, 4, Spe11ker Pro Tem 4· Studen Council 4; lnterect ~- Ger II" Club 3, 4. OHM BEC Y: LITERARY Mt\Gt\ZI E 4. OLIVEIRA MARTHA: Pep Club 2, 3 4 Pepe es ~· Germe!! Club 2, 3; Tri-High Council 2 • Elec 'on Bo11rd 2; Cl11ss Treasurer 3; F.T.A. 3 4· Dolp in Club 4; lnlr11-Stllle Exch11ngee 4· I ter-High Exch11ngee 4; P.E. Student Le11der 4. 0' ELL Pt\M: Tri-High Cou cil 2: Biology Club 2 3, 4; Pep Club 2, 3, 4, Pepet es 4; MAROO 2· CHRO ICLE 2; F.T A 2, 3· Gy n11stics 3, 4; Wig 'n' P11i 3; DoiP i Club 4

p

PALMOS Y, BARB Pt\PPI PATTY: Hum11n Rel11tions 3; Student Assis+e t 4, PARKER CHUCK: President of Cless 4; Foe b11ll 2 3, 4; B11sbellll 3; Wrest!" g 4; Tr11c 4· A Ceppelle 2, 4, PEARSO Lt\ t\: t\ C11ppelle 2, 3, 4; F.S.t\. 2· Vocele es +: Medrig11ls +. PER I S GERt\LD: SPilnish Club 2; Wresting 3, 4· B11sebe!l 3; Cross-Country 4 C11p 11' • I er11ct 4; House of Represenlllives 4 PERRY, JOH : Treck 2 3· C-Ciub 2, 3. PETERSO TERESt\ PETRY. STEVE: Biology Club 2 3; Censervii io Club 4· Cross Country 2, 3, ;4 Tr11d 2 3 4; LAC. 3; lnter11c 3 4; CE Tl AL 4; Cl11ss Treesurer 4. PEY 0 SH RLEY: 0.0. Club 4. PHILLIPS Mt\RGt\RET: t\ C11ppell11 2, ,3 +: Fre ch Club 2, 3 4; G.At\. 2· Hum11n Rele io s 3, 4· Biology Club 3; Encore 4: Pepe tes 4· Conserv11 ion Club. PIERCE. MIKE: B11sketbell 2; Foe bell 3, 4; Wres • a~­ PIPER STEVE PITCH DAVE P OWELL CHARLEY Wr .. <tling 2, 3, 4.

R RAY, DAVE: Footb11 2 3, 4; Sp11nish Club 2, 3 B11sketbell 4; C-Ciub 4: B11sebell 4. Rt\YBURN SHIRLEY: Pep Club 2, 4, Pepe es 4· Honor Society 3, 4: Sp11nish Honorllry 3 -4· F.T.A. -4· Cherger Cum L11ude Co · •ee -4. REDMO STEVE: Wrestl"ng 4. EID Pt\T RIEMER CHRIS: F.T.t\. 2 3, +: Pep Club 2· Biology Club 2· French Club 2; French Honorery 3 -4· House of Represent11tives 2, 3; I ra.S ate Exchange Co mit ee 3; UTERARY CHRO ICLE 3; Honor Society 3, -4.

ROBERTS Jt\NET: House of Represent11tives 3· GAA. 3; F.S.t\. 4. ROBINSO TICHARD ROESCH DOUG: In er11ct 3, 4; t\rts Club 3.

174

ROSE, JANETTE: 0.0. Club -4, Vice-Presi· dent. ROUTH, BEC Y: French Club 2, 3, 4, Pres· ident -4; Pep Club 2, 4, Pepeltes 4; Ger· m11n Club 3, -4; Hum11n Rel11tions 3, -4; Honor Society 3, -4; French Honor11ry 3, 4; Cherger Cum L11ude -4; F.T.t\. 4; Conservlltion Club 4. ROWEN, TOM: Sp11nish Club 2; Tr11ck 2, 4; Cross-Country 3, RUBE AC ER ATHY: Electio Bo~~rd 2; Tri-High 2; Germen Club 2, 3, -4; Pep Club 2, 3, 4, Pepettes -4; Student Council 3, 4. Secret11ry 4; Honor Society 3, -4, Sec· rel11ry -4; Ch11rger Cum Lllude 4; CEN. TINt\L 4; F.T.t\. +: Dolphin Club 4 lntre· S 11 e Exche~gee -4· Inter-High Exch11ngee 4. RUSSELL. FRt\NK: Sp11nish Club 2: Uber11l Arts Club 3. RYt\N, TIM

s

SCHLATTER DOROTHY Uberel t\rts Club 2, 3. SCHLORFF, Jt\MES: Dr11m11 Club+. SCHOE DIE ST. CO IE SCHREIBER. BON IE: Spenish Club 2 3; Pep Club 2, 3, 4, Pepetles -4; Honor Society 3 -4; t\ C11ppelle -4; M11driq11ls 4· Vocelet es 4 CE TURit\N -4, Co-Student Life Edi or; Encore -4. SCHWEIGHART, Ll Dt\: F.T.t\. 2 3 4 Sec· retery 4 Pep Club 3, -4 Pepettes -4 Sp11 ish Club -4. SCOTT, Ll DA: G m11n Club 2, 3· Cheer. le11der 2 Mescot 4 Pep Club 2, 3, -4• CI11ss Vice-President 3 · Student Council 3 -4. SHt\Plt\ 0, JO: Wig 'n' Peint 2· Chemist Club 2; Humen Rel11tions 3 4 Conserve. lion Club -4. SHAW, CHERYL: Pep Club 2, 3, -4 Pep e~ -4.

SHIC , Rt\NDY: Tennis 2; Wig 'n' P11int 2· French Club 3, Preside t. SILVERMt\N, DAN: Hum11n Reletions Cl b 2, 3 4 President 3, +:Spring Pley 3: Contest Pley 3, -4. Director -4; Student Open Forum 3; Dr11m11 Club 3, 4. President 3, -4; Fell Pf11y 4. SIMO , STEVE: Golf 2, 3, -4: Swimming +: Sp11~ish Club 2. 51 PSO RA DY SMALL! G JOH : Germ~~n Club 2, 3· CE Tl t\L 3 +: CE TURit\ 4. SMITH, BUTCH SMITH STEVE: Footbell2; Golf 3, -4. SMIT SUSA : Sp11nish Club 2. 3, -4, Trellsurer 4· Sp11nish Honorery 3, 4; Pep Club 3 4 Pepe es 4; Honor Society 4; F.T.A +. SMITH, TOM: Wig 'n' Peint 2, 3; Germ11n Club 2 3 -4; lr. er11c 3, -4 Vice Presid~nt 4; Ore 11 Club -4; Foreig<~ Exch11nge Committee ~- Spectrum 4, Direc or. SNOO , MAURICE: Germen Club 2, 3, -4: House of Represe 111 ives 3, -4; CrossCountry -4. SOLOMt\ JA ET: Pep Club 3, ~ Pepe es 4. SPRAC LE BOB: Co serv11tio Club 3 4· lnlr11murel Bt~sketbell 4. STALEY, JIM: B11nd 2; 3, +· D11 ce Bend 2, 3, 4; B11ton Club 3; Encore -4; Modern Music M11sters 3, -4. STt\YTON, GREG: Hem R11dio Club 3; Ho • or Society -4, STEINFELDT, Jt\NE: 0.0. Club 4, Vice-Preside t of t\dvisory Council. STERLING, VERN STEWt\RT, DENNIS STICKLEN BOB: B11nd 2, 3, ~; Spenish Club 2, 3, -4; Beton Club 3; Tennis M11n11ger 3; Liber11l t\rts Club 3; B11sketbe!l M~~neger -4; Encore -4, Trei11urer 4; B11nd Council -4. STINSON, CRt\IG: Spenish Club 2, 3: Footbell 2, 3, -4; Tr11ck 4; C.Ciub 4.

STOLTEY, TERRY: Sp11nish Club 2, 3, STREHLOW, JOHN: A C11ppell11 2, 3, +: Fell Pley 2, 3, 4, Cons ructor He11d -4; Con· test Pley 2: Spring Musicel 2, 3; Order of the M11sks 2, 3, 4· Wig 'n' P11int 2, 3; Dreme Club 4; Thespi11ns -4; Encore -4; Sp clrum 4, SUMMERS, SUE: Student Council 2; t\ C11p· pell11 2· Fell Pley -4· Dr11me Club 4. SWt\RTZ, BRUCE: Germ11n Club 3; Footb11ll 4; Honor Society 4. SWINFORD, GARY: Sp11nish Club 2; Fool· b11fl 2, -4· B11sebllll 3; Wres l'ng +. SYLVESTER SALLY

T TEMPEL CHUC : Foo b11ll 2, 3, 4; Wrestlirg 2, 4; 811sobllll 2, -4 Germ11n Club 2, 3· C-Ciub +. TICHE OR, CHARLES: M11rch1ng B11nd 2, 3, 4· Astronomy Club 2, 3, 4, President 3, -4· Pep Bend 2, 3; Bes etbell 3, -4. TRAUTMt\N, Ml E: Chemistry Club 2 TRULOCK, STAN TUFFORD. JIM

v

Vt\NCE, BILL: lnterect 3, -4; CHRONICLE 3: Wres ling 4. Vt\NCE, JIM: B11skelbllll 2, 4; Interact 3: Bes e bell 4: B11sebell 4. VOGT, SHERRY: Sp11nish Club 2, 3, + Secretllry -4; Che is ry Club 2; Pep Club 2, 3 1 Pepett +· CE TINt\L 3; Honor Soc e y 3 4· Spe f rery 3, -4.

w

WAHL, BARB: Pep b -4 Pep ttes, WAL E LEE Wt\SHI GTO , Elt\1 E WATSO PAULl\ WEt\THERSPOO WE Dt\: t\fro-t\mericen Club -4, Secret11ry. WEAVER, MIKE: Biology Club 2, 3, 4; Hu· me Rel11fons 2, 3, 4, WELCH, DA IEL: M11rching Bend 2, 3, 4; D11nce B11nd -4; Encore Club -4; Co cert B11nd 2, 3. WESTMAN RO : Prom Committee 3, .. WHEELER, DO WHITESIDE, JUDY: Wig 'n' P11int 2, 3; Spenish Club 2 3 4; Sp11nish Honorery 2, 3, 4· Orem11 Club 4· CE TURit\N 4. WIESE JEFF: In r11ct -4 Bo11rd of Directors. WI OFF, TER I: Pep Club 2, 4, Pepettes 4; House of Representetives 3; F.S.t\. 3, 4; Honor Society 4. WIL E , lYNDELL: G.A , 2, 3: Junior Le11der 3 • Senior Le11der 4. WILLt\RD, PAM WILLEY, ATHY: Pep Club 4. WILSON, REID: Swimming 2, 3,4 C-Ciub 4 WI FREY, PRESTO WINGSTROM, Pt\T: G.A.A. 2, 3, President 3; Stud nt Le11der 3, 4; Pep Club -4. WOOLRIDGE, Lt\RRY WORDE , Lt\ A: Cheerleader 2, 4· F.T.A. 2; Student Council 3; House of Represenllltiv s -4; Dolphin Club 4; Pep Club 4. WRIGHT, DELINE: Pep Club 2, 3, 4; Encore 4. WRIGHT, LORI: Pep Club 4 Pepettes.

y YOU G JAN: Tr11ck 4.

F tbe

4; Bllsketb111l 4;

z

ZIMBLEMAN, SUSt\N B ogy Club 2, 3, 4, President 3, Treesurer -4; G.At\. 2, 3: House of Represe~t11tives 3; Hum11n Relll· lions Club 3, -4, Secret11ry-Tre11surer -4: T.hespi11ns 3, 4· CENTINt\L 3, t\rt Editor: A Ceppella 3, 4; Liber11l t\rls 3: Dr11m11 Club 4; Vocelettes 4; Pepet es -4; F11ll Pl11y 4: Contest Pley 4; Honor Society 4.


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~ ST U D I 0

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175


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-A-

A Cappelra 2 ~3 ABELL M • PI:Tt: 38 Abb e I, Poul 126 Ab I Thom11~ 69, 119, 131, 140 Ac ern" n, Ar hur I 02, 154 Ad11ir JoAnne 25 63, 126 Adll"''~ Melind11 72, 140 Ad ., ~~~~ 83, 140, 145 Afro-American Club 70, 71

Anderson Den~is 65 140 A'lde ~ n George 49, 126 A D~ SO R. GLE 43, H, 77 A d rson Karen 56 I 54 Ande•~on R'chcrd App ega e, Lance 126 App egcte Roger 58 126 Ar"" • g Sa di 53 81, 154 Arr , John 126 Astronomy Club 59 Audre Tory 54 154 AVERY MR. ROBERT 42, 97 A ers Po 54

-8Bcbb u 2, 154 Bcerwc d Jc~es 69, 126, 128 Boe we d Thomes 18, 50, 55 64 68, 69 92, 109, 154 Bo e M'cl,oel 102 Be er J11mes 126 Ba er 11reo 62, 65, 80, 140 BA E

79, 811 e Gregory Band 74 75, 7b Bare Debor11h 79, 140 B11r · e Oicrre 62 81, 154 B11r er Condy I 54 Ba er, Mcrsh11 126 Bor e Deborah 55 63, 154 Bar es Helen 53, I55 B11rnes, V11 e 'e 70, 126 Barr odger 94 95, I 55, lbb

Berte so Daryl 19, 109, ISS Be ISS Besse James 126 Bo e sn Dav'd 140 Be es, Wr em D. 24, 92 Bo es, Wi licm K. 92, 126 Be11s ey Jo es 92, 140 BEASTALL, MR. TED Beevers, John 59, IOS Bee er, A bO, 70, 79, 155 Besre s, An e 72, 73, 140 Seiger, Sheryl 72, 73, 74, 7b, 77, 140 Bel, Pllmelc 51,58 Ben ett, Jim 155 Be e t, Judith 126 Benne , L"~dll 50, bl, bb, b7, 140 BERG, MISS CAROLE 41

180

BERGER MRS. WILLARD 34, 53 Berg~tro~ Sue 48, 60, 81, 153 ISS 159 Bernardi ichcel bb, b9, 85 92, ISS Berner, Eloi~e 140 BER ER S. GISELA 36 Be~+. Jenny ISS Biles, Roger 85, 92, I 55 Bincl, Barb r11 22, 140 Birtcher Michoe 92, I 55 B'shop Debbor11 70, 126 BLASIUS OR. THEODOR 32, 121 B 'xen, Willi m 85, I02, 140 BOEHM, MR. ALLAN 41 Bogard G11 126 Sol. en, Alex 140 Bo nkc p Mark Sb, 69, 126 Bolden Debr11 54 Bo ender, Barbar11 56, 67, 126 Bolen M'ch el 68, 69, 78, 85,92 102, ISS Bolton Gregory 75, 76, 104 126 Borchers D vid 126 Borchers i e 126 Boresi, Anne e 56, 126 Bor her, Dcn"el 140 Bouck Dcv'd 126 Bowmc Wi liom 58, 126 BOYD THOMAS 40 B 11dford Fr11 Br11d e, Wrl i11m 64, 69, 55 Bra eb I Deborah bS, 73, 80 126 Brandriff, Bar on 126 Brandrff, Bee y 72, ISS Br11sh, erg et 81, ISb Brcunil'lg Lu z 126 Bremer, Alan 140 Bridge C rs Bridges, Deborah Bridges Edwerd lOb, ISb Brinegar George 59 Britt, Cere nee 70 Broc e 54, 66, 126 Broqu"st, Alen Broqu·~ Lyr'l 126 Brown Bruce 102, 140 Brown C ares 126 Brown, C ores M. Brown Cr11ig 140 Brown, Dav'd 58, ISb Brown, Debor11h 51, 55, 56 bS 72 74, 75, 7b, 156 Brown Eugene 70, 126 Brown, K11 hy 126 Brow" Lynd11 75, 7b, 126 Brow Rob 75, 7b, 64, 109 Brow Robert 70 Brow,.,·ng W11rren 140 Brownlee, Robeoi 127 Brownlee Terry 70, 75, 76, 140 Bruce D'c e 67, 78, 140 Bryen , Judy Buchllnll" Terry 156 Sue er oren 126 BULLW LE, MRS. MARY 42 Burger, Kotherine 64, 140 Burgess, Wi iam Bur\e, Jonet 140 Burrs, Barbero 72, 140 Burton, Georqi11 140 Bur on Scrdr11 Bw r on, Susan 70 Burton, Weier 70, 140 Burwa~h. E izabe h bb, 127 Bu~ch, Joe 140 Bu chbact. Suson 48, 49, 81 liS, 135, ISb Bush~e. Eve ett But'er, David 70, 127

Batler, Ernestine 70, 140 Butler J on 127 Butler, John 70 Byers, M a 56

-Cc.club Cagle Chns 127 Coin Dione Sb, bS, 80, 127 Ce'n Do~gos 127 Campbe Beverly 127 Compbe' Roy 140 Cerrpbell Thomes Sb, 72, 73, 117, 140 Carl, Dlll'liel 127 Cerm'cheel, J11nis 54, b7, 127 Coron, Cherles 127 Corpenter, She' y 140 Corpenter, Sherry 127 Corter, Olivi11 127 Cosebe r, Cerlo 53, ISb Cosey, Celeste 54, Sb, bO, b5, 75 7b, 77, 80, 140 Cos y, Frencis 127 CASTEEL MR DAVID 39 54 58 Co hey Jomes II 140 Centennial Guard 78 CENTINAL 50 CENTURIAN 48 49 Cheerleader~ Verity 82 83 Cheerleaders, Soph 84 Sb b7, C w Debore 127 C w Gr gory 56, 59, 156 Ch pMan James 70 ich 156 Ch p"''an Cl or, Bonnie 156 Cor Mer•ha 62, bS, 156 Cor , Susan 127 Cl r e, Cerol Sb 127 Clor e, Michoel ISb Clcr e, Robert 127 Cle erts Guy 70, 127 Cline, James 23 156 Clower Co fill' 74, 7b, 77 141 Cob e, J mes 141 Coffi Linde bO 81, 157 Coffmal'l, enneth C ggar L Rheo SS, 88, 92 157 Co bert, Mer 33, 50, 54, 55 b4 69, 109, I 57, I bO Co bert Rebecco 56, 127 COLLDOWEIH MRS. KAY 34 139 Colle berger, Linda 141 Co ins Rob r 141 Co son P11+ 62, 127 Co best Ct.r's 127 Co er, Steven 157 Conley Judi11 141 Conservation Club 58 CooMbs, Jefrrey 57, 119, 127 Cooper, Barbaro 127 Cooper, David 127 Cooper James 67, 74, 7b, 157 Corbe t, Dovid 127 Corbe+, Dru 141 Cornett J11rret 127 Cosgrove Pot y bS, 80, 141 COTTI GHAM, MR. EN ETH 43, Sb Coy Bcrbor 5 I, I57 Cre"g, R ndy 92, 127 Craig, Ron 56 I57 Cr w ord, Deboroh Crewford, Keith 141 Crawford, Mike 75, 7b, 127 Crowford, Roger 127 Crowford, Roselle 141, 149 Crom1ich, Kcthleerr 74, 7b, 127

Crotts, David 127 Crozi r, Richord 141 Cullop Somuel Culver, Cloudia 72, 73, 157 c~mm"ng~. Barb 127 Cummings, Key 78, 127 Cunn'nghan" Froncis Cun,.·nghcm, Melodie 127 Cunninghom, Wi iom 127 Cupp, J. D. 127 Curtis C rolyn 81, 157 Curtis, Dorothy 141 Curtis cncy Sb, b7, 128 Cusic , p.,tricio 50 81, 157 Czo owski, Mere b9, 108, 157 Czc kows M I 128

-DDAHL M D>NNIS 32, 33, 69, II Do~l Dione 49 72, 73, 77 81, 157, 169 Danl r, Suson 27, b4 72, 73 141 DAVE PORT, MR. ROBERT 34 Dcv d on, Lynn 58, 157 DAVIS, MR. ALFRED 34 Dcl/s Conol 53, b4 S2 1'\ Dov Jocquie 157, 167 Dov Lynn 141 Dcv"s M"choel 70 Dov"s Scott 69 85, 119, 12S 149 DAVIS MR. WES 42, 89, 'fO 138 Dey cncy 62, 141 Dey S sen 128 Dcw~on Cctherine bb Deon, Donne 128 Deormond Wo ter 70, 12S Deo+on Diane 141 Debate Club 57 DeMoss G~y Dennis S everr 141 Den•e James 141 Desche e Stever Deshong Willie 70, 117, 128 Devo Cheryl 128 Devore JoAnn 128 deVr"es Hugo 58, 141 deVr'es, Victor D w· , Colleen 54 141 DeWrll Thomos bS, 69, 74, 75 7b, 128 Dexter Darlene 22 141 Dickey, Donne 128 Diener, Alan 66, 128 Diener, Vic i 56 75 7b, 77, 141 Dr labeugt., Suson Sb, 12S Dillovou John 75, 7b 128 Di ley A on 85, 102 103, 141 Di lmo" S phen Dinsmore Jill 48, 72, 77, Sl 157 Ditzler, Do glos 23, 158 Dirorr Joon 48, 51, 57, b5 so 141 Dolphin Club 79 Dorsey, Steven 141 Dorsey, Williom 53, 70 Dosch, Wil icm 92, 141 Doty Gregory 53 128 Doug 1es Karen 128 Douglos, Steven 141 Dow, Joon 141 Dowell Ellen 65, SO, 84, 128 Dowers, Sandra 66, b7, 71 Dr ~~ P hicio 128 Drcl R heel 158 Drama Club Sb, 57 Dr P o Jennifer 128

Drolling r, Diane Sb, 12S Duckworth Gl 158 Ducoff, Borbcre M 141 Dul'owcy. Shoron 141 Dunlop, Rey'llord 72, 73, ISS Dul''l Barbo•o 50 67, 128 Dun"l Mor 69, 104 12S Ouro11t Ce•ol ISS D'Urso Jod 25 S I, 158 DysO" Barbero Dziuk Corrinre S4 128

-EEod VVendo 128 Eagen Rol'rrie 141 Eok n, Sally Eorl, J 'lles 128 Eos in, Nicl-olos 141 Eccles, Cro"g 75 7b, 128 Edwards Ch ryl 141 Edwards, M'chc I Edwards, cncy 56, 64, 84 12S Eggers, Brenda 141 Egg rs cthy 12S Eggleton, Eric 124, 128 E c elb rg r Ch rles ISS EICHELBERGER MRS. LILA 41 63 E;chor t, Fred I 58 E r Betsy 49 52, 53, bS, Sl ISS Eder Denise 81, 114, ISS Election Board 54 EL I RS DAWN 36, 71 13S El o++ Sa dro 128 E is Cho•es 54 141 Encore 77 &! e Tom 75 76 Erckson Donrrc 72, SO, 81, 113 ISS Erickson Mer he 57, 66, b7 141 Es ergcrd w, iam 12S Eva"1S Jo'lles 141 Evers Myrrro 128 Evo"ls Thomes 12S Everett Jar·ce 53, 12S Evere , Pet 53, bb b7, 15S Evermal' Ronold Ex m Gary 70

-FFoirf'eld Jack Foncher, D'o"'no 62, 128 Forohat Susorr 56. 128 Ferror Johl' 104 12S Forruggio Pe ny 12S Forrugia, Sharon 58. S I, 158 Foxel' Bo 52, 53, 64, 65, 69 120 ISS Fehrenbccl,er, Sharon 23, 158 Fide' Evon b7 78, 129 Feib 1korn, B rborc Sb, b4 129 Fielding, Joy 104, 12S, 141 Fi enwerth, 0 rrell SS, 92, 129 Fr lenwarth, D'oM I 58 Fi lenworth Gwerdolyn 129 Fink Steven 141 Fi sgerald, A hony 129 Fi zgerold, Corn'e 51, Sb, 71, 141 Fitzgerold Sh "lo 159 Fitzpatrick, John Flesher, Kevin 129 FLE CHER, MRS. BARBARA 36 Fl tcher, Rc.,dy 94, 95, 159 Fletcher, Rodney 129 Fl welling, Borboro 159 Floyd, Vickie Sb, 72, 77, so, 142


Flyn11 S• phe., 72, H, 76, 77 159 Fogel M rc'e 62, 1-42 Foley h,n 60, 65 78, 79 80 1-42 145 Ford Befbere 142 Forrester, Rite 8-4, 129 Forst, Del 129 Forster, Celie 62, 66, 79, 129 Fosler Ben I 59 Foth rgi I w; 'em 129 Fou•ch Brent 129 Foutch Merc'e 142 Fouts Merk 72 129 Fox, Jen t M 129 Freme, Jemes H, 76 Freek, Joe I59 Fre11 T'-omes -49 129 FREDERICKS, R. EDWARD -42, 78, 152 Frederichon, lerry 75 7b 129 Fre nch C lu b 65 Frerichs Cerolyn 129 Frerichs Mer er~e Frerichs Steven 102, 1-42 Friedberg Anne 129 Fried •cl, Allen 75, 76, 142 Fried rich Je'le H 76, 77, 1-42 Fries Thomes 129 Fri z Mll<y 66 67. 129 Froemr~~'ng. Art 54, 159 F•oem'Tling, Ge I 21, 53, 56 bO 75, 76 129 Fry thlee11 129 Fry Robert FRY, M SS SA ORA 42 Ful er Pemele 129 Funneme" Co n'e 1-42 FHA 63 FSA 61 FTA bO

-GGele'C:ly V 129 Gelliv 'I e l)le n 56, 65, 78 80 142 Ge I've , ichllel 142 Ge iven Rebecca 5-4 129 Ge v'r Deboreh 72. 129 Gennewey, Terry 142 Ge•dew'ne Joy 56, 66, 129 GIHdner Linde 67, 142 Ge•i'lger, C 'ldy H 76, 129 Gerend Jed Gerre Robert 1-42 Gerrisol' Pemele 61, 81, 159 Ge+es D'ene 129 Getes, Steven Geub e Frederic 129 Gens mer, Petty 19, 5-4, 64 142 Gent Donne 76 G er man Club 64 Ge e Conn'e 1-42 Ge z Chr'stopher I 59 Ge z e t.erine 129 G'eche o, Terri 58, 66, 81 159 Gifford, Peme 1 e 129 Gi bert Den11' s 129 G\lbert Je<ry IbO G ber ency 129 Gillis, Dori'lde 63, 129 Gilmore, Andr w 129 Gilmore, Suser~ 72, 77, Sv, 42 Giord no, Devid G'orde11o, Nenette G irls Leadership 79 Gled Jot.'l 129 Gledhi I, Ted 1-42 Godderd, Mercia 129 Goff, Geil H. 76, 129 Goings. Bill I bO Golish, Mike 35, 160

G od Mi heel 118 Good Perry 142 G d R ber e Good Selly 53 71, 82, 83 115 G dling Per~~ele 129 Go dling V'c ie GOODMAN MR. GERA:..D 41 Gordon, R"by 130 Gose Cornie 160 Gos ell C dy 130 1-42 Gos11ell, Lorrie Gotschel ll.endy 92, 106, 114 160 GOUDIE MRS. SHIRLEY 42, IH Gour ey Howerd 1-42 Gredy Cor I 42 Gren'rg Corle 142 Grening Debre 130 Grening e<y 79, 160 Grey Eddie 70, 142 Grey Sh'rley 70 130 Green Cethy Green Merl'11 142 Gr ., Petrie 142 Gr en tei11 lerry 67, 130 Gr '!stein C'ICY 48, 5-4, 56 65 81 lbO Greever Ric ey 130 Gr'de• De ny 69, 130 Gr'ffin JeMes •30 Griff., Judy 56, 64 Griggs, ency 72, 73, 142 Grob Werren 130 Gu 'ln'p, Cur4is Gu'Tlbel Je'Tles 130 Gumbel Joen 6 I, 65, 80, 142

-HHed y, Edwin 56, 143 Helcrow Gey e 130 Hele Cindy 124, 130 Hell Debb'e 130 Hell Jec Hel Seven 75, 7b 143 He '"'len T"orres 70 He"'lb rg D v'd 65 72 73 1-43

65,

Henso'l Her i"s Herl n, 130 Her ey Jemes Herrron 0 'v 70 130 Herney M ry Herper, ler 51 143 Herper Rey 66 69, I43 Herper Roy 130 Herper, Rus ell Herpe 4ed A cill 64 78, 143 H rr'nglon Bernice 70, lbO H rr' Cyn ill 70, 130 Hllr Men Jeff 143 H r me" John 160 Her mel' Keren 48 49, 55 67 72 73, 81, I bO Hertrid, Steven 130 Hervey Mex 96, 128, I6 I Hesbergen Jll'Tles 58, . 31' 143 Hetch Gr g 48, 69 16 1 HATHAWAY, MRS. DO A bO Hevic , Roscoe 161

Hllymen Duel'le 130 H e er J hn 143 Heg "ber . Connie 1-43 H b ng M' e 69 149, 161 H blong Thomes 130 He fer, Devid 161 H I r. Pelric'e 143 ~eiMerids Done d 143 Henegar l'l'lde 130 ~eneger Tom 161 Hensley, Deboreh 130 H ri, Jem s 41 Henri sen, R'che•d Hen e'l Seven Hernecheck, Sue 66, 130 H rrin, Sten ey 56 69, 75, 76 102 130 Herron Cher es 70 130 Hess Thomes 104 130 Heston, Merle 25 Heywood Barbera 48, 66, 67 161 H ero'ly'Tlus, Mer 21, 143 H derbrend Joh11 I6 I Hi dweir- Jemes 130 H ger Pe r'cie 75, 71, 1'13 H Debre H G•eg 161 HILL RS. JOYCE 39, 55 1-1 lord, lenore H' r her son Jeffrey, I6 I H chi s Re"de 143 H chins Rerdel 143 H x o~ ercie 48, 56, 72, 73 77 80 119 143, 147 Hoch Cherles 102 Hod on Ke4hryn 62 130 H ffmen Ke t.y 74 143 Ho dren, Barbero 50 143 Ho end Je et 130 Ho ngsworth, Jemes 161 H m Bil 161 Hom, Bob 161 Hom Plltricill 79 131 Ho verso" 'chll I 65, 104 143 Hod L''lde 73 131 H p 'rs C e y 133, 161 Ho1= ·r Die'lne Hoppe Jemes 92, 1-43 Hoppe John 69 85, 92, 143 Horn Charles 162 Hor lldey, Greg 53, 12-4, 131 H en Deryl 104, 131 ~o" Greg 104 143 House of Re prese ntat ive,s 54 Howe Frederic 131 Hwdd stone Jer~~es 131 H.Jff Onede 70, 131 Hwfmen Bruce 131 Hwf Men, l'nco'n 70, 71, 85, 89, 91, 92, 1-43 H f Men, Roger 1'13 Human Re lations 51 H~mphreys, Deboreh 60, 81 161 Hwmphreys, Plltr'cie 56, 65, 131 Hwn Merlyn H, 131 Hurder, Stanley 143 H.1 c croft, Do11ne 131 H .. cl,in on, Cerol 48, 72, 73, 77, 81, 162 H"' chiso~. Judy H.Jx+eble, lliiCY 48, 61, 81, 162 I 65

-lId emton, Robert 143 lgne ito , Suztonne 50, 65, 131 Ins ip, Bo"n'e 23, 29, 162 Interact 68, 69 Inter-High Council 54

Irwin

De~'IY

131

-JJec e y 143 Joe ws • Co'ln'e 162 Jecobs s• v 'l 131 Je!"!es Jess'e 143 Jeme Mery 131 Jones Steve11 143 Je Ve re 131 Jenovetz Glorie 143 JASNOW M S. CAROL 36 Jeyc?x J h'l 67 69, 95, 31 J 'I 'ns fdwerd Jr. 70, 75, 85 92 96 117, 128 JEN I S MR. STUART 36 JESTER R. HAROLD 42 Jewell R e d 58, 69, 72, 77, 85 95 162 J ns r Dllvid 102 JOH SO . MRS FRAN John n Jto'Tles 131 J 'lsor John 104, 143 Johnson Re'ldy I02 143 Johnsor R'ck 143 163 J hnson ThoMeS I 43 John 011 Trudi 5'1, 131 JO ES MR. EARL -41 Jo es. Jo n 65. 77, 162 J n Terry 70, 71, 143 Joyce C nie 72, 77, 80, 43 162 Joyce J E '10 JUSTUS ~

-Kor s rom 53, 5'1 65 'f u '13 llt s rom on 50, 5'1, 69, 85 25 I 53 162 or st•om Scot 75, 76, 131

ely, To'Tl 92 162 e sey. J dy 72, 73 75, 76 77 162 Kelso Bruce 102, 131 ernpe Gtoil 22 61, 162 errpe• Cllro e 131 emper Howllrd 85, 92, 115 liB 1'13 85, 95, en+, Feye 54 70, 162 PTER MRS. SA ORA 36 ey le ee 49 74, 75, 76, 77 162 'dd R'c y 92, 93, 96, 13! ·..,ler Ch ••e I43 ind e A·ene 70 131 131 131

lAMAR MRS. A E A 36 llliiCe Bobby llll'ldre Jo 11 LA G MR. LAW E CE 20 39 long o's T omes 14'1 lor v ere Dev d 53 lllRocque Bllrhllre 50, 52, 53, 54 60 65 79, 81, 162 leteer Jtone 49, 53, 54, 64 79 143·145 lll eer J .. d 56 73, 131 lewheed Per-~y 131 lew er A ll'l lew er Bever y 131 leC mp e Do no LEHMA , WALLACE 38, Legere, She y 74 76 77, 79 I« Leq e S+eve l z Jerry 14'1 leS oure Herb 70 I# lewi Berberll 131 lew's vo"~ 131 lewis Joy 50 56 57, 1<44 lew's Ro old 70, 131 LIETHE MRS. ARE 36 LIGGETT MRS. MAU E 35 l'g n Edwerd l1 ey D 'lll 61 162 L''lder Bee y 56 65 131 Ll DSEY MRS. AUD Y 39

lowstu+er, Bruce 72, 73, 102, 163 Luces Kev' 'l I44 L cos Robert Luc men Cker es 53, 54, 85 95 144 13 2 lur~ger T omes lyberger Joyce 62, IH lyberger, Le • e 13 2

-MMebrcv Suscn bb, 132 cBr'de Gory 132 McBride Pto 53 119, 132 McCe'n Gory 104, IH McColl, Donald 75, 76 102 cCe Peggy 61, 81, 163

McCort y, Cher es 133 McCe y, Kevin 54 133 cC en e"en Devid 104,

133

itzmi 162 '+zmi' r John 64, 138, 139 IGHT, MRS. ELEA OR 39 okemot, Jon 53, 54, 67, 66, 115, 162

cCieery Joen 75 76, 133 cCI e<y, ere'! 75, 7b MecL od Le~i 65, 75, 76 80 132 McCoy, Pe+ric 144 cCoy Robert McCu c e~ Wi em 70, 132 McDuffee Pt.1l I#

181


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-TTobe ng Robert 135 Toyor G •y 135 Toy or 'cl- el Taylor, Po y Toy or Thomes 135 Tel""'pel Cl-uck 92 0"1, 118, 169 Tenryson Joyce 135

Terre Lynd o "19, 5"1, 56, 6"1 72 73 77, 79 80, 119 1"17 Tl-edy, Tl,orres 135 Tl- ·ri '1 Nency 56, 65, 80, 1"17 157 To. rnl. II Co•hy 135 T~ rrl.· I, Di<e 1"17 THORP SS L EA 36 37 53 Tich n r Ch rl s 21 59, 72 75, 169 Tiel- n r Peter 66 73 I 7 135 T'rrm rmen Geil 135 TIN HAM RS. WILMA H Tipp Roger I"17 Tippy J rry 102 138 147 Top' n Corl H 77 169 Tme Steven 85 I 02 128 1"17 Toews V'ctor 92 147 T pp'ng ren 115 Tra !'l'lan M e 169 Tr moire J on 5"1 80, 8"1,

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Welc Petree 135 We In ' Ccro 20, 58 74, 76 135 Wer I er, Crndy 67, 135 Wert Jol-'1 75 76 77, 148 West Deborah 148 We tenhcven David I'IS Wedenhoven T omcs .o4 I, 35 Joe ·e 1-48 Rono d 170 Fronk 135

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Tr'mb Sue 48 56, 6"1 76 77 80 147 Troeh er Ph ip 69, 147 Tr po John Trover Ado 49 53, 56, 118 147 Truod Son T c r D 'e H 76 147 Tuc r Lee M 1"17 Tuc er Ri ord 76 1"17 Tufford D n'el 75 135 Tuff rd JaMes 169 Tuley Suson 72 1"17 Turl'er Mor 61 1"17 YMCHYSHY , MRS. PATR C A 42

-Uu,teed Cor I 65 72, 73, 77 80 1"17

W ber Mono 147 Web r Sherry 147 We' rron !)'one 56, 65, 79 80 1"17 We' srron, Thomes M, 7-4, 75 76 77 95 1-48 W r Dcn'el 75, 76, 77, 170 We cJ, Gory

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Acknowledgments Deadline desperation blues were eosed by the assistance end encourogerrent of the follow"ng people: Mr. Bob He ler, of Heller Stud"o, for senior portroi s, group p"c~.Jres, end "always be"ng there when we neeEled him"; In erstate S ud"os, for undercloss portroi s; r. Lynn Roney, for cover design Md special letter""lg; Chompoign-Urbono Cour"er, for picture con ributions; Chompoign-Urbono News-Gozet e, for p"c ure contr"bu ions; Mr. Dwight Parker, Jr., representative of Taylor Pt<blishing Company; Mrs. Lynne Siegel, our advisor, for on untir"ng sp"r"t hrough e"ght months of herd work. Our special than s ogoin. Karen Hartman end Sue Buschboch Co-editors-in-chief of CENTURIAN '68

183


"Wha we call the beginning, is often the end, And to make an end is to make a beginning. The end is where we start from.'' T. S. Eliot Confident-hesitant youth reach through the concrete cobwebs which separate today and tomorrow ...¡ REBIRTH

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