Home
Guest Book
2005 Non-Reunion
Directory
Obituaries
Other News
Missing
2000 Reunion
Editorials
Memories

Best viewed with Internet Explorer



Traffic Counter


Memories




Do you have any special "Memories" you'd like to share with us?

Send them to Sheryl B. for posting here!



Our "Non-Reunion" this summer prompted John Bylin to get these out of his own memory book. Has anyone else saved their Junior High pics?




And then Joel Lazinger sent this one to us to enjoy. We have ID'd most of them -- still have a tentative in Row 4. Can you help with any corrections?

Front Row:
Delbert Most - John Pfeil - John Peters - Jim Christenson - Keith Krommenhoek - Denny Wurster - Wayne Taylor - Louie Pfeister - Ben Pettersson
Second Row:
James Carmen - Denny Hogan - Bob Wang - Otho Fulton - Peter Nassiff - Bob Holscher - Paul Hutchins - Tim Torkelson - Rex Wood
Third Row:
John Morrisson - Rodney Kent - Jeff St. Cyr - Richard Mills - Tim Morin - Erroll Reiner - Jeff Pill - Tony Schroer - Larry Taylor
Fourth Row:
Dennis Morgan ? or Kenneth Baker ? - Jeff Sanford - Vern Messersmith - Jim Jacobson - Terry Michalosky - Larry Bryce - Bob Erlanson - Leonard March - Dave Mahling
Fifth Row:
Coach Darold Sea - Jim Schill - Jack Holmes - Terry Clemens - David Nelson - Jerry Pickering - Jerry Andersen - Allan Cohen - Doug Dicus - Joel Lazinger - Joel Cracraft - Coach Maurice Rawlings




OK, here's one sent to us by Paul Hutchins. These are the Hunt School teachers in 1948, when we were just beginning our school experiences. He dubbed them "The Hats." Can you name them all?
How about ANY of them?



We've let you wait long enough -- here are the names:
Left to right, Back: Mary Frances George, Shirley Verstegen, Norma Myer, Musetta Whitford, Lucille Miller, Opal Porter, Elizabeth Smith, Violet Green, Harry Foster, Principal
Front: Linda Jacobsen, Amie Nixon, Helen Kay, Edna Stauffer, Grace Bingaman, Anna Donery, Elba Miller, Alice Kugel, Helen Willenberg


If teachers still dressed up like this, would there be more respect in our schools today?
Food for thought, isn't it?

And while you're here, you might want to take a look at Paul's pics:
"Photos by Hutch"




Want to take a trip back in time?
Turn up your speakers & check this out!
Memories of the 50's



Larry Newman - larrynewman@webcountry.net - just sent in his favorite teenage slang expression:
"Going ape over you!"
He says, "I think originally it meant to explode - 'My parents are going to go ape when they see my report card.' I think a better meaning is how much we went crazy over the opposite sex, especially a new girl in school!"

Anyone else want to add their favorite?



Memories --- and MOORE!

If you knew Denny, you remember him as a "gearhead".
Well, he hasn't changed!
He's selling cars, and along with son Bobby, is running Interstate Speedway and competing -- obviously successfully -- at
Park Jefferson Speedway.
Looks like he's entered that next decade, too
CONGRATULATIONS ON BOTH MILESTONES!



REMEMBER....

When the worst thing you could do at school was smoke in the bathrooms, flunk a test or chew gum. And the banquets were in the cafeteria and we danced to a juke box later, and all the girls wore fluffy pastel gowns and the boys wore suits for the first time and we were allowed to stay out till 12 p.m.

When a '57 Chevy was everyone's dream car. . . to cruise, peel out, lay rubber and watch drag races, and people went steady and girls wore a class ring with an inch of wrapped dental floss or yarn coated with pastel frost nail polish so it would fit her finger.

And no one ever asked where the car keys were 'cause they were always in the car, in the ignition, and the doors were never locked. And you got in big trouble if you accidentally locked the doors at home, since no one ever had a key.

Remember lying on your back on the grass with your friends and saying things like "That cloud looks like a..."

And playing baseball with no adults to help kids with the rules of the game. Back then, baseball was not a psychological group learning experience-it was a game.

Remember when stuff from the store came without safety caps and hermetic seals 'cause no one had yet tried to poison a perfect stranger.

And...with all our progress...don't you just wish...just once...you could slip back in time and savor the slower pace...and share it with the children of the 80's and 90's .....

So send this on to someone who can still remember Nancy Drew, The Hardy Boys, Laurel & Hardy, Howdy Doody and The Peanut Gallery, The Lone Ranger, The Shadow Knows, Nellie Belle, Roy and Dale, Trigger and Buttermilk as well as the sound of a real mower on Saturday morning, and summers filled with bike rides, playing in cowboy land, baseball games, bowling and visits to the pool...and eating Kool-Aid powder with sugar.

When being sent to the principal's office was nothing compared to the fate that awaited a misbehaving student at home.

Basically, we were in fear for our lives, but it wasn't because of drive by shootings,drugs, gangs,etc.

Our parents and grandparents were a much bigger threat! But we all survived because their love was greater than the threat.

Didn't that feel good, just to go back and say, Yeah, I remember that!

And was it really that long ago?



Home     |    Guest Book     |    2005 Non-Reunion     |    Directory     |    Obituaries     |    Other News     |    Missing     |    2000 Reunion     |    Editorials     |    Memories


All material herein © 1999-2007 "CHS Class of '60"