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Nil .F.HUJTE
Vol. 27 — No. 14
Tuesday, June 15, 1965
Niles Township High School East — Skokie, Illinois
Sixth Annual Senior Issue
In This Issue...
Page 2
Senior Sur v ey . . . .
. . Page 5
Graduation News . . . . Page 3
College Plans . . . .
. . Page 6
Sports W rap Up
. . Page 8
Editorials..........................
Senior Memories
.
.
.
. . Page 4
�Page Two
Tuesday, June 15,1965
NILEHILITE
B i 1 b o a r di
1
w*
y
s
«by
m
LJt
BILL NIGUT EXPRESSES
his personal views on the often discus
sed subject of the nature of the real
world.
THE NATION WAS AMAZED
last week as it watched American
astronaut Edward White leave the
relative security of his Gemini
Four space capsule to step into the
boundless eternity of space for a
walk among the stars. For 22 min
utes White was a part of the mag
nificent scheme of the universe,
and the only residues of civiliza
tion for him were three tiny cords
attached to his suit which served
to remind him of his helplessness
in infinity. For he was small, and
the miasma around him was im
measurable.
When the members of the Class
of ’65 receive their diplomas to
night, they too will have stepped
into a vast and strange world of
obscurity. And w h i l e Edward
White’s walk gave him escape from
the uncertainty and severity of to
day’s earth world, the graduating
seniors will tonight be thrust head
long into that world, and the reali
zation will come all too quickly, and
will be all too apparent.
The graduates will be offered the
opportunity to become members of
•
Class Legacy - Apathy, Confusion
the world as adults tonight. And
speakers will point out the limit
less horizons open for the gradu
ates. But when their elders do of
fer them their world, the gradu
ates must be careful to realize that
theirs is a legacy of delusion, con
fusion, misplaced values, and start
ling individual oblivion.
The world is there for the seniors
to take, but will they, would any
one, really want all that it consists
of?
The seniors will be offered a
world in which conformity is a nec
essity for survival; where graft
and corruption have become almost
acceptable. It is a world in which
our values have been kicked in the
dust and half buried there, show
ing themselves only when the rare
breath of conscience disturbs them.
The people in this “gift” are indif
ferent to each other, care only for
themselves, and as Shakespeare
said through Hamlet so long ago,
“even actors on a stage would have
more compassion for their fellows.”
Our world is one in which:
A man can order a powerful rifle
through the mail, and on Novem
ber 22, 1963, kill a President of the
United States. The weapon was
sold by a man who didn’t care who
bought it, bought by a man who
cared nothing for the victim on
whom he used it, and fired at a
man who died.
Screaming for help, and desper
ately fearful for her life, a 43-yearold woman is raped in a park while
at least 10 people, sponges, look
on but don’t interfere. The woman
is killed, the onlookers’ peaceful
afternoon in the park is momentar
ily interrupted by the wail of the
ambulance taking its passenger to
the city morgue.
In the North Carolina legislature,
a senator proposes to make the bed
bug the “state bug” because, “it
has left marks of distinction on the
people of the state for years.” And
he — a government employee, a
representative of the people — was
100 per cent serious.
Three small children, ages three,
four, and six, are burned to death
in a fire in their Boston apartment,
because somebody forgot to turn off
the gas range, and because babies
like to play with fire.
And if apathy didn’t cause enough
harm in this world-gift, then fanat
ical devotion to or hatred of people
and institutions more than picks up
the slack. For instance:
In Crawfordville, Ala., a Negro is
abducted and beaten by three
whites in a restaurant because the
Negro is trying to be served. “What
do you think of this act?” the own
er of the restaurant is asked by
newsmen. “Well, they sure messed
up my place,” was his candid re-
ply. The Negro spends six months in
the hospital, the restaurant is back
to normal in a week.
Because they were disturbing him,
a 28-year-old man murders his es
tranged wife and her girl friend
by bludgeoning them with a bottle
and then sets fire to their bodies
in his car.
A 19-year-old boy and his 15-yearold girl friend join in a suicide pact
after finding that they are too much
in love with each other to be sep
arated by parents who didn’t want
them to be married. The two sit
down in a New Jersey field and set
fire to the high grass which sur
rounds them, waiting for the flames
to consume them.
A Frenchman, feeling complete
remorse for having told his wife to
leave their car because she was
talking too much, drives his car off
a bridgé in Paris and commits sui
cide — his wife walked home.
This great gift also includes the
warped values of our people, es
pecially in matters concerning
money:
The House Appropriations com
mittee votes 2 to 1 to spend two
billion dollars on our foreign em
bassies — a large part of which
will be used to tear down walls of
these embassies to search for hid
den michophones.
New York’s World’s Fair fiasco
has not relieved any poverty-strick
en areas, given aid to the aged, or
fed the starving people of the
world, but is built at a cost of more
than 20 million dollars, and fair of
ficials expect to take in over 80
million in the two years which the
fair runs.
A baseball diamond in Houston,
Bill Ni gut
for that is all it essentially is, costs
more than 33 million dollars to
build, and according to many base
ball players, it is bad for baseball.
A famous actress sues her studio
for $100,000 because she wasn’t cho
sen for a part in a movie in which
she wants to star.
And we are told that there isn’t
enough money for research to find
a cure for cancer.
And although these may appear
to be isolated instances, they are
representative of this world-gift.
This, then, is one look at the gift
which is offered to this year’s grad
uating class, and it isn’t much of
a present. Perhaps, however, there
is one good gift which the members
of the Senior Class have been re
ceiving constantly for the past four
years unknowingly. It is that gift
which can be the key to accepting
the world as it is and building from
that point. It is that gift which can
be as far reaching as Edward
White’s walk in space — it is the
ability to think for oneself.
To see the delusions of the world
for what they really are, to avoid
confusion, to properly emphasizi
the right values, and most impor
tant to have the courage to be an
individual — these are inherent in
the gift of thinking. They are tho
buds of maturity, the aids to under
standing. Thinking for oneself is a
boundless region ready for explor
ation. It is through it that we can
root out many of the flaws in our
gift of the world. And it is through
thinking as individuals that we
stand above the rest and become
a part of that magnificent scheme
of the universe.
•
minority report by ken seeskin
H . D . T.
I WENT TO THE WOODS be
cause I wished to live deliriously. I
wanted to be a lunatic and be hap
py. After all, the universe is lighter
than our views of it. I left the town
to look closely and do 1001 other
nonsensical things. After a short
time in the woods, I perceived how
wonderful it would be if men took
advantage of their liberties, left
their jobs, and all went a-huckleberrying in the summer for their
abusement. Bedlam is under our
feet as well as over our heads.
my stomach and said, “I think the
deepest pain is somewhere herea
bouts.” So I left the town to get
away from my mother’s lousy cook
ing. Cooking is very important to
me because the esophogus is but
the outside of the earth every
where. Give me the poverty that
enjoys true health.
Bleeding
I was glad to be alone and away
from my mother’s kitchen not only
because it made me sick but be
cause it gave me lacerated legs.
We met at meals three times a day,
and under the table gave each oth
er a new paste from those old
trusty pairs of knees that we have.
I understand that the artist in the
city of Kouroo had the same trou
ble. In fact so did Brahma, Buddha,
and the rest of the guys.
Where I Loafed, and
What I Loafed for
I left the town on April 1 and set
tled about a mile and a half from
the nearest drug store. I didn’t
want to be like all the other towns
people of Concord. The mass of
men lead lives of quiet indigestion.
What is called agitation is con
Cute Neighbors
firmed regurgitation. One morning
Of course the first thing I no
I was awakened, and to be awake
is to be annoyed, and I looked at ticed when I moved to the woods
was that cute blond who lived close
by. Her name was Simplicity Flint
Letters to the Editor and she was the daughter of Sham
Flint, the farmer.
DEAR EDITOR,
Flint’s Blond! Such is the poverty
Sometime last week I suddenly of our nomenclature. What right
found myself in the inexcusable po had that stupid, tax paying, news
sition of having attended Nües paper reading slob to name his
East for almost four years and not, gorgeous daughter after himself. I
as yet, having written a letter to the live in infinite expectation of the
NILEHILITE. Therefore, may I day when he’s gone. Because of him
take this opportunity to congratu I had to date White’s Blond instead.
late Mr. Frey, Nigut and Co. on a And how does it look for a man like
job well done. Also, I would like to me to be dating one of John Field’s
wish my friends and classmates, old flames?
the Class of ’65, the best of luck in
Higher Flaws
whatever they choose after gradu
ation.
One day while looking for some
Sincerely,
slimy seaweed at the bottom of the
m
I
Rides Again
of, I came across the question, why
are men sensible? All sensibility is
bad, and it makes many norms, all
folly is divine. It is the same wheth
er a man eat, or drink, or cohabit
sensibly; he is out of harmony with
nature. If you would be base, you
should be temperate.
*
m
•'
One day I decided to break one
of the norms made by sensibility
and not pay my taxes. I thought it
would be a neat thing to be in jail,
for crime is but the dream I go aand keep your thoughts," thinks Ken See
wishing in. And anyway the excuse
skin as he inhales a draught of undiluted
for not paying I gave them was so morning air.
silly that I thought it would be a
good subject for a humorous pam
is the nature of that sorrow which aquariorum edition for ichthyolo
phlet called something like “Quib
mere lapse of time can never make gists, the dairiorum edition for
ble Disobedience.”
to be gone. Everyone, especially milkmen, the hairiorum edition for
Yet much to my disapproval a teenagers, should leave their troub musclemen, and the fairiorum edi
friend paid my taxes and got me les and come to the woods; it is tion for male ballet dancers.
out. It is not only the bailer that is strife about the phone that is mean
est. Come and be happy, for too
the ninth part of a man.
many people seem to go around
k i l e H I l it e
Faker Farm
with a draught of undiluted mourn
I had always maintained that ing air.
1963-'64 First Place Awards:
phoniness and sycophancy are eColumbia Scholastic
If a man is out of step with his
vils worse than my mother’s cook
companions it is probably because
Press Association
ing; our lives are flattered away
he’s a little dumber. But so what?
by detail. But I had never realized
National Scholastic
Mentality is not needed to have one
how much phoniness there was a- essential of the soul. Nay, be un
Press Association
mong that species of life that had
conscious to whole new continents
Vol. 27 — No. 14
Friday, June 15, 1***
never followed its genius too close
and worlds within you, closing new
ly. Even some of the people I met
channels, not of trade, but of
Published 14 times during the school
in jail were phony, and there is no
year by the students of Niles Township
thought.
odor so bad as that which arises
High School East, Lincoln and Nilei
If you have not lost your mind by Avenues, Skokie, Illinois. Printed by
from hoodiness painted. It got so
Ithat on long, lonely nights when I the next morning you are waiting Lawndale Lithographing Co., Skokie, H
heard noises outside my door I too long. Be a madman by the next Editor-In-Chief ............................ Bill Nigut
could almost say, “Holden, is it sunrise or you may never have a- Page 2 Editor ............................. Ken Seeskin
nother chance. There is more day Feature Editors ...................... Gail Shapiro
you?”
Anita Weintraub
to dawn. The sun is but a warning
Confusion
Staff
Sue Schatzman, Al Spector
Business Manager .................... Joanne Sonn
I do not say that John or John star.
Photographer
Jim Rathmann
athan will realize at once how wonNOTE
"SELL YOUR CLOTHES
Artists
...............
Sue Swartwout,
Ird Upin
�Tuesday, June 15,1965
NILEHILITE
Page Three
4 3 2 Seniors Receive Diplomas
HEADING FOR small college campuses in the Midwest,
or to the hurried atmosphere of a Big Ten University, others
heading for marriage or terms in the service, the members of
the Class of ’65 will receive their diplomas tonight in gradua
tion exercises to be held a t 8 p. m. in the football stadium.
The smallest graduating class in Niles East history, 432
graduates will hear an introductory address by Superintend
ent of Schools Dr. Clyde Parker, speeches by class valedictor
ian Sherry Ferdman and class salutatorian Gilbert Rotkin.
Senior Class president Marty Chalfie will deliver the opening
r6inRrks
EACH GRADUATING SENIOR will have five tickets
for the ceremony. Four are gold, one is blue. Gold and blue
tickets will be honored if ceremonies are held in the stadium.
If the ceremonies are held in the gymnasium, because of in
clement weather, only the gold tickets will be honored.
Although ceremonies don’t start until 8 p. m., seniors
are asked to be at the school by 7 p. m.
The invocation will be made by the 'Rev. Sauer of St. Pet
er’s Church in Skokie. Also on the program will be the East
choir who will sing the traditional “Gold and Blue” in addi
tion to other selections.
>
“There should be plenty of parkmg for the ceremonies,” according
to Mr. Andy Maggio, Senior Class
sponsor. “We have arranged for
cars to park in the lot of Peter Epstein Pontiac which is located just
south of the football stadium.”
SENIORS WILL TURN in their
caps and gowns in the cafeteria
following the ceremonies. At that
time they will receive their diplomas,
The exercises were planned by
the senior cabinet under the direction of Marty Chalfie.
‘We have tried to arrange the
exercises this year so that they are
smooth and shorted than before,”
said Marty. “We ask only that the
graduates cooperate with us in
making this a fine ceremony. Sen
ior cabinet also asks that no pictures be taken at the exercises.
'6 5 Dance Now M em ory;
Students Discuss O u t -P r o m ...
IT’S ALL OVER. Niles East’s Was the out-prom worth the five
first out-prom is now history, and year wait?
“The atmosphere of the Pickwhat was once anticipation, then
realization, is now a memory.
Congress Hotel was perfect,” com
mented Senior Don Seigel. “It made
But what will East students re the whole evening more impor
member of East’s first out-prom? tant.”
Senior Laurie Baron also liked
the hotel but noticed one thing.
“They made absolutely no attempt
to decorate the room to look like
a gym disguised for a dance,” he
noted, tongue in cheek.
“The dance at the hotel made the
prom much more odjilt and sophisJan reminisced. “Having the prom ticated,” according to Junior Reriee
at a hotel made the occasion seem Porter. “The room at the hotel was
so much more festive and special, much more conducive to tuxes and
But of course the evening was spec- formal dresses.”
SOME STUDENTS felt that the
ial for Glenn and me anyway
After the prom the royal pair room at the Pick-Congress was
went to the Edgewater Beach Hotel “just beautiful,” while others cornand then to Lake Geneva the next mented that they felt out of place
day for water skiing and a picnic, iu such a “sophisticated setting.”
Do the students hope that the outSaturday night was spent at River
view, culminating an exciting but prom will again become a tradition
at East?
exhausting weekend.
“Yes,” answered Junior Greg
“We were so tired, but we were
too excited to notice,” they laughed. Rabin. “An out-prom will be looked
“I think that our most memorable forward to much more by students
moment of the prom was the coro- in the future. Also more students
nation,” said Glenn.
might attend.”
“Being crowned king and queen
“I liked the in-prom more,” said
was such an exciting way to climax Senior Mike Strieker. “I think that
our four years at Niles,” they the prom should be held at school,
That way the juniors will have the
smiled.
. . . Royal Couple Reminisces
About Memorable Evening
WHAT A WONDERFUL way to
end senior year!” sighed Janis
Kamps and Glenn Paul, this year’s
prom queen and king.
Not unaccustomed to her royal
role, Janis was a member of the
1963 Homecoming court. And Glenn
is familiar with the spotlight, too,
having been a star of this
year’s Varsity Football team.
“When we decided to run, we nev
er dreamt that we would win,” Jan
remembered. “We just ran for the
fun of it. And we did have so much
fun building our float and making
up our skit and just being part of
the suspense and excitement.
“When they announced that we
had won, we were stunned. We just
stood there !” the couple recalled,
’t
“We couldn’t believe it.”
Jan and Glenn especially enjoyed
the out-prom this year.
“IT WAS JUST BEAUTIFUL,’
Microscope Peeks
At East Specimens
A GROUP OF AMERICAN scientists in Skokie last week for
some high level discussions at Searle Institute passed Niles East
and came to the unanimous conclusion that the students at the
school, much like California Redwoods, are growing in size but
remaining essentially the same. According to the scientists, moss
like formations are likely to appear on the north side of the stu
dents, within 10 years, because the students have a tendency to
stagnate like dirty pond water.
The group cited as examples a number of East girls with
hair piled three feet above their heads, sitting on the steps of the
school discussing such important issues as, “Did you see the Ani
mals last night on TV ?” “Got a match?” According to the sci
entists, the girls seemed in need of a general overhauling.
In another part of the campus, the scientists found a herd of
wild underclassmen skateboarding down the flag pole in the court
yard while humming “Surfer Baby.” One of the scientists estimat
ed that the herd probably had been grazing in that location for
the past three years, having migrated from the playground at Lin
coln school where they had contented themselves with hula hooping.
During their observation, the scientists also noted what they
believe to be inorganic rock formations with some type of oil or
grease on top. These formations seem to somehow gather in Room
120 every Monday and Friday at 3:20, apparently drawn there by
some strange force. Scientists believe them to be inorganic be
cause the formations have not moved from the room in the past
four to seven years.
The scientists also observed a number of students attached to
clipboards which were wandering through the halls apparently
without purpose. These clipboards stopped occasionally in large
study rooms where the clipboard asked the large brown folder at
the front of the room how many students had he aUowed to cut
study hall. Most of the clipboards, however, were found clustered
in a small office which was noticably cooler than the rest of the
school. Scientists were surprised at the temperature difference of
the room, but noticed that this didn’t seem to bother the clip
boards who didn’t seem to care about anything.
Most of the scientists agreed that nothing could be done to
correct the situation, as man’s knowledge of such stagnation is
limited.
Officers Begin Planning
For New School Year
opportunity and fun of decorating
the gym.”
Did the location of the dance
make after-the-dance entertainment
more convenient to reach?
“WE WALKED DOWN the street
to eat at the Conrad Hilton—it was
very convenient,” commented Sen
ior Audrey Rosenfield. “We didn’t
have to rush out and drive a long
distance.”
“We were able to stay at the
dange a lot longer this year than in
the past because we were so close
to the restaurant where we ate,”
said Senior Steve Gold. “The con
venient location of the dance to the
downtown dinner spots made the
whole evening much more relaxed.”
Class G iftNew Showcase
THE CLASS OF ’65 bid a final
farewell to the school and the faculty this morning during the annual
Senior Class breakfast held in the
cafeteria. President Marty Chalfie
reported that senior cabinet had
been working on the program for
the breakfast since April.
A showcase, to be placed in the
boy’s gym foyer under the clock,
will be presented to the school by
Senior Class President Marty Chal
fie, according to Mr. Andy Maggio,
Senior Cabinet sponsor.
“This gift will be used to display
the athletic activities for the seaALTHOUGH SUMMtERTIME MEANS vacation from school for most son,” he remarked. “It was chosen
East students, many students will spend the summer of ’65 planning on the basis of what would be most
practical and useful for the school.”
for the re-opening of school next September.
Also on the morning agenda at the
Next year’s Senior Class cabinet will begin work on the Homecoming
’65 dance sometime in July. Under the supervision of newly elected breakfast were numerous speech
president Paul Gustafson, vice president Inger Haualand, secretary es and skits. Among the speakers
Andy Gutter, and treasurer Linda Brown, the cabinet will pick a date were Mr. Raymond Tyler, principal
Marty, and Bill Nigut, editor-inand theme for the dance.
chief of the NILEHILITE.
“We want to get well under way
Numerous seniors and their com
on the dance before school starts Cook, will begin choosing possible
mittees have worked hard toward
in September,” according to Paul. performers.
successful pre-graduation plans.
Rich Gershenzon, Mike Gerber,
The organization plans to “hold The committee chairmen are as fol
and Eliot Hhrtsein — members of a concert which in every way meets
next year’s executive board — will up to the quality of our concerts in lows: Linda Rosen, class break
fast; Karen Novelli, skits; Peggy
pick their individual supervisors the past.”
R o b e r t s , graduation announce
this summer. In addition the three
In addition the junior cabinet ments, and John Davis, picnic.
boys will re-evaluate their own sep
must make some preliminary plans
arate organizations. Hartstein, who
for next year’s prom.
was selected as head of the board,
Examination Schedule
“WE ARE HOPING, of course,
is also head of SSD. Gerber is in
TUESDAY, JUNE 15
charge of SSSH, while Gershenzon
the prom will be held out of
Period 1 — 8:00-9:15 a. m.
will run SSM.
school, and so we want to begin
Period 3 — 9:25-10:40 a. m.
thinking about a hotel. We don’t
THEY PLAN to notify supervisors wan, t0 be rushed
a decision
Period 6 — 10:50-12:05 p. m.
of their selection late in the sum- ¡aje
(be year,” according to
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16
mer, when >they will hold a pre- Daye
Period 2 — 8:00-9:15 a. m.
school mass SSO meeting.
The various school publications
Period 4 — 9:25-10:40 a. m.
Planning for the annual school will also go into the planning stage
concert will begin this summer as this summer although editors for THURSDAY JUNE 17
the junior cabinet, headed by pres- the newspaper, the yearbook, and
Period 7 — 8:00-9:15 a. m.
ident Dave Kroon, vice-president Golden Galleon have not yet been
Period 5 — 9:25-10:40 a. m.
Harvey Look, and secretary Rhona named.
�NILEHILITE
Page Four
Tuesday, June 15,1965
CU PS COLUMN
HI THERE, bet you didn’t kn^W'
that some of our leading political
figures are entering the entertain
ment business. The Empire Room
has booked Governor Otto Kerner to
do his remarkable impersonations
of Mayor Daley. Also of interest is
Richard M. Nixon who will perform his ever-popular
tight-rope walking feats before large crowds at the
Medinah Temple.
ON THE SAME SUBJECT: Former golf star
Dwight D. Eisenhower currently is vacationing in
Chicago by playing 18 holes of President at the Evan
ston Country Club. And speaking of Presidents,
Lyndon B. Johnson has perfected his juggling act so
that he can now keep more than 15 hot potatoes in
the air at once. Lyndon will be starring this foil in
a new play at the Goodman called “The Messiah.”
BROWSING AROUND: Soviet Premier Brezhnev
has replaced Kruschev at the London House and
plans to use his traditional material until he is con
fident enough to try a few new acts. There has been
trouble in some of Brezhnev’s acts because that sing
er at Jimmie Wong’s, Mao Tse-tung, has been inter
rupting some of Brezhnev’s numbers. However, the
International Booking Company has failed to take
action because it doesn’t recognize Jimmie Wong’s or
Mao.
NOW HEAR THIS: The smash comedy team of
Rusk and McCohen will be at the Allerton next week
where they will describe U.S. foreign policy to any
listeners. Another person to watch is Gamel Abdel
Nasser who will open next Monday at a yet unnamed
nightclub on Devon Avenue. And Barry Goldwater
will continue to be down at the Shrine Circus where
his act is introduced by Everett Dirksen who will
continue to be the ring leader.
TOWER OF BABBLE: Moise Tshombe and
David Ben Gurion have worked up an act together
and will open at a new place in Kenilworth shortly.
But most important is the new policy whereby men
tal imcompetents from England are sent to perform
for the Junior Cabinet at Niles East.
Your Write to Sav It
TU C
I n t
DDCCCCC
r lx C jJ t J
D A I I
Ix U L L
tribution seventh period.
| p
JV /C
lir ir n
fV IC IC Ix ,
the N ILEH ILITE’s invaluable
printer, pauses a moment at
the linotype machine to smile at staff photographers.
,
etaioôliruclfu
Printer Chats Press Rolls
by Bill Nlgut
ITS ENTRANCE is a big garage door which leads into an old plain
brick walled building. The odors of fresh ink and gasoline combine and
reach out to you as you stand at the door. Stepping inside, your hearing
is dulled by the sound of clattering and humming machines which seem
to run perpetually. On one side of the big room is a monster machine
which slashes a thousand pieces of paper in half at one chomp. Across
from it is another behemoth which folds paper, one sheet after another.
In the other room is a cell-like photo lab and tables scattered with
typewritten paper. Operating noisily in the corner is an oversized type
writer which spews out metal letters.
And all the time the sound of clattering and humming machines.
The laboratory of an Argentinian mad scientist? No, this macabre
building which is just behind Roundy’s and only 200 feet from East is
the office of NILIHILITE printer,
Mr. Joe Meier.
W est Quad, Here I Come
J
by Steve Gold
English 81
■i n
IV IIx .
furn'ng out a *tack °*
NILEHILITES ready for dis
AS ANY newspaperman worth
his etaioshrudlus knows, writing
a newspaper is only half the job.
The other half, the less exciting but
the more painstaking job, belongs
to the printer. And the printer of a
newspaper, like an editor, can ei
ther make or break an issue.
USED TO BE a senior. I became a freshman (college, of course) on November
10, 1964, when I opened a letter from the University of Michigan and read the first sen
tence: “We are happy to report that your admission has been approved.” As my friends,
teachers, and long-suffering parents will attest, I have never been the same.
It has been a novel, if somewhat my aunt asked me last week what
confusing experience, attending day I graduated, I replied “August
school in body only for the past six 30,” my first day of college classes.
months. The only thing Solid Geom The word “semester” is gone for
etry has managed to teach me is ever from my vocabulary; Michi
that the face of a regular dodeca gan is on the trimester system.
MY ALIENATION from high
hedron bears an uncanny resem
blance to the West Quad at Michi school has become so extreme that
“THERE’S NO TIME for a presgan. The fate of Oedipus reminds I feel guilty every time I wear my ent!” is the anguished lament of
me of fraternity Hell Week. And N-Club sweater. However, it has scores of senior parents who, their
when filling out job applications 1 been no trouble at all learning to misty eyes blurring their view of
keep confusing 1947, the year of m y hate Wisconsin instead of New the calendar, have put off until
birth, with 1817, the year Michigan Trier. In fact, I’ve noticed one dis now the selection of a gift for their
tinct advantage to my mental time- graduating seniors. The NILEHI
was founded.
I HAVE TO WATCH my speech travel: I got over my freshmen- LITE, therefore, in another of its
as well as my writing to prevent year homesickness last March.
series of public services, offers the
Well, it’s time for me to see a following late-date suggestions for
the collegiate influence from show
ing. In referring to our principal I man about a Honda. Underclass- graduation presents.
speak of “Mr. Hatcher” instead of men, teachers, and hallowed highFor those seniors who are ani
“Mr. Tyler,” Dean Hatcher being school halls, farewell! I who am
mal lovers, the Biology Departthe President of guess-where? When about to live salute you!
“A lot of people take the job of printing a publi
cation for granted,” Mr. Meier said above the noise
of the presses. “But printing is really a part of the
graphic arts and is a delicate business.”
Mr. Meier has been in the printing business since
1929, and he began doing work for the NILEHILITE
in 1945.
“Printing is the only love I have,” Mr. Meier as
serted. “I don’t really know what it is about printing
that gets into your blood, but I love it.”
MR. MEIER does the printing for the three town
ship high schools in addition to setting the type for
the Skokie News.
“I really enjoy working with the young people who
write the high school newspaper,” Mr. Meier com
mented. “They have good ideas, and some of them
are good journalists.”
“IT’S A JOB that requires long hours, some de
gree of patience, and a real love of printing,” he add
ed, talking about printing in general. “But I wouldn’t
give it up for anything. There isn’t another business
in the world I would take.”
“I’ve enjoyed working on the NILEHILITE for 20
years,” he concluded. It’s been a successful mar
riage.
Can I Sell You a Vorticella?
Santa Pays June Call on Grads
FLASH!
Nilehilite Reveals
;
Students, Teachers Duped
EVER WONDER WHAT HAPPENS behind the
scenes of the NILEHILITE? If so, here are some of
the secrets about this year that never before have
been revealed.
In the first issue of the year, the letters we ran
from administrators welcoming students to the
school were used in the West Word and the North
Star, only under different names. Dr. Kavanaugh’s
letter, for example, appeared under Dr. Parker’s
name in West’s paper and under the Director of Stu
dent Activities’ name in Northi’s. The picture of Dr.
Parker that appeared was the same one that has
been run in every opening day NILEHILITE for the
past 20 years—his senior portrait.
Didn’t it seem strange when, in the heat of last
November’s election, the two leading candidates took
time off to write letters to us expounding in lofty but
meaningless terms the “challenge of education”?
The truth is that these letters actually were taken
from last year’s graduation speeches. Since nobody
noticed, it shows that either nobody listens to gradu
ation speeches, or nobody reads the NILEHILITE,
or both.
REMEMBER THE ARGUMENT we had with
Student Council over the pledge issue? Believe it or
not, we proposed that recommendation in the first
place to fill a hole on the editorial page. The plan
worked so well that we tried it again with junior cab
inet and even had some cabinet members fooled.
After Christmas vacation there was a long period
when we didn’t publish at all. The reason was that
two reporters were beaten in an alley for not cover
ing the Chicago Crime Syndicate’s annual awards as
sembly, and one other reporter was jailed after the
John Birch Society labeled him “pink” for not cov
ering their decision to support the Homestead Act.
THE BIGGEST SECRET of all, though, is about
this very issue. Last week all those people and or
ganizations whom the NILEHILITE has ridiculed this
year combined and brought the Editorial Board to
court for a law suit. This issue, therefore, is coming
to you from Cell 13, Joliet, 111.
ment offers a virtually limitless
selection of lovable planaria, vorticella, and assorted fungi. All are
gentle, housebroken, and can be fed
at a minimal cost.
Crave ‘Arty’ Look
Parents planning to surprise a
graduate by redecorating his room
will find in the art lab many ideas
for decor. One painting in particu
lar, entitled “The Searle Tower by
Night,” with its lavendar blobs,
aquamarine splotches, and fuschia
swatches, should harmonize admir
ably with any color scheme.
The literary-minded will delight
in SSO’s unexpurgated publication
of the journal of a detention-hall
June 15
Commencement Exercises at 8 p. m.
. June 17
LAST DAY OF SC H O O L
June 19
A C T at West Division
June 21
Summer School Starts
September 7
SC H O O L STARTS A G A IN
supervisor, a gripping expose of
daily brushes with death, a look at
the seamy side of life in a great,
metropolitan high school.
Burgers under Glass
Parents contemplating parties as
well as gifts for the graduates will
be pleased to know that Roundy’s
and Bay’s, in addition to the cafe
teria, now are taking orders for
catering.
But whatever g i f t s parents
choose, they should be resigned to
the inevitable fate of 99.99 per cent
of all presents that teen-agers re
ceive—the exchange department of
the local department store.
�Tuesday, June 15,1965
Page Five
N1LEHILITE
Most Popular
Most Likely To Succeed
¿V
Doug Kornelly
Marty Chalfie
G
HAPPIEST
Dennis Maurizi and Janis Neumeister
BEST SENSE O F HUMOR
Laurie Baron and Janis Neumeister
Most Service
Most Intelligent
Gil Rotkin
Laurie Baron
Sherry Ferdman
Ideal Spouse
Best Looking
B B p ggfS p s
Glenn Paul
Linda Wiehert
Janis Kamps
MOST AMBITIOUS
Bill Nigut and Linda Rosen
MOST MASCULINE - FEMININE
Glenn Paul and Rexene Rasmussen
Best Smile
Most Athletic
Greg Gunderson
Linda Rosen
BEST SPEAKING VOICE
Gordon Hoke and Bonnie Sussman
BEST PERSONALITY
Doug Kornelly and Gail Shapiro
Dennis Berkson
Linda Wolcott
Cynthia Guerrero
Larry Fabian
Peggy Roberts
MOST MATURE
Steve Weiss and Carolyne Waxberg
BEST BUILD - FIGURE
Mark Kaplan and Kathy Svedland
Most Talented
Prettiest Eyes
. '. WÈËS
Si * I
WM
Bonnie Sussman
MOST CONSCIENTIOUS
Jerry Samelson and Sherry Ferdman
Linda Stocker and Gail Shapiro
BEST LINE - CONVERSATIONALIST
Glenn Seiden and Kathy Fleck
�NILEHILITE
Page Six
Tuesday, June 15,1965
Seniors Choose Colleges in 17 States
^ rin w ip
Parks College: Albert Letzkus.
Arizona State University: Gary Reuter.
Robert
Unversity of Arizona: Glenn Jarol, Aud-
Connecticut
Greg
o
.
Bernard
Alan Gerber,
Ellen Holland, Sharon
University of Chicago:
University:
Phil
Saunders.
Susan
Phillips,
Florida
Kornelly,
Fred
Bethel College: Duane Perkins.
Indiana University: John Cech, Lynn Ep
David
Andalman,
ow, Greg Gunderson, Jim Harrington.
Macalester College: Gordon Hoke.
Wisconsin
Beloit College: Linda Wolcott.
Missouri
Indiana
Champaign-Urbana:
South Carolina
University of South Carolina: James Bon-
bara Cahn, Reid Flammang, Allan Ja
Tarkio College: Dave Edelman.
cobson, Barry Korogodsky, Tom Mc
Clellan, Harold Rosen, Robert Schiewe, Washington University: Mitchell
Neil Winstead.
dise.
Carrol College: Barry Schoeller.
Para
Carthage College: Bill Peterson, Alexis
Zabore.
Marquette University: Donna Frank, Dick
Wolf.
New Mexico
New Mexico University: Paul Klein.
stein, Ann Harmening.
Stout State University: Ira Epstein, Glenn
Jurek.
North Dakota
Iowa
Barry Bakalor, Laurie Baron, Rita Beck
Kray.
Doug
Minnesota
Joanne Sonn.
University of Illinois:
University of Tampa: Ed Barnett, Jeff
Illinois:
Manna.
c
Färber, Wright Junior College: Robert Ezra, Bar
, Siegel, Lance Wallach.
District of Colombia
Washington
College:
Washburn College: Jim Esia.
B
u n *
HÜ
Roosevelt University:
Yale University: Bruce Myers.
George
Junior
Western
Rich.
rey Rosenfield, Glen Smith.
7
Morris
Jamestown College: Bill Douglas, Leslie
Cornell College: Doug Anderson.
Riggs.
University of Wisconsin: Howard Bairn,
Drake University: Dennis Dubrow, Burt
Dulkin, AI Feder, Steve Fields, Mi
Tom Coleman, John Davis, Donna HerMeyer.
Ohio
witt, Mary Potter, Bronna Wasserman,
chelle Flicht, Bob Goodfriend, Wayne
Donna Welstein, Joanne Wolman.
Goodman, Mark Kaplan, Renee Kes Iowa State University: Barbara Brown, Kent State University: Steve Rosenzweig.
Robert Machacek, Iris Zamansky.
sel, Hank Kogan, Dale Levin, Ken Lev
Switzerland
er, Andy Cheszek, Janis Dolgin, Linda
Illinois
American Academy of Art: Shelia Sharer.
Amundsen Junior College: Don Lazaar.
Bryant and Stratton Business College: DU
itan, Dennis Maurizi, Mailyn Nieder,
Bradley University: Andi
Brainin,
Iona
Parsons University: Andy Spores.
Vera
ane Applin, Ken Karlson.
University of Iowa: Arthur Berger, Corwyn Berger, Larry Fabian, Sherry Glazer, Roberta Krasner, Andrea Migdow,
Rothstein. Janice Sachs, Jerry
Samelson, Charlyn Shachtman, Phyllis
Evans, Maureen Kleiman, Ronnis Oher,
Schuldiner,
Nancy Schwartz, Lowell Sherman, Met
Bill Stephens, Ralph Stem, Chuck Sur-
ody Soell..
Chicago
Don Siegel,
Ron Siegel,
Waller.
1i
Kentucky
n
Massachusetts
Congress Circle: Sherry Cohen, Jeanette
Chicago Teachers* College: llene Bobren,
Ib v« ." >
*1
Bellarmine College: G il Ravelette.
Wolf, Monica Zaidman.
Duffin, Robert Dworkin, Dick Garbo,
Ecole Hoteliere: Michael Janson.
Glenn Paul, Steve Wolf.
itz, Joan Tanner, Steve Weiss, Linda
Conservatory of Music: Ann
Miami of Ohio: Bill Nigut.
Harvard University: Marty Chalfte.
Reecie
Robert Gardiner, Joel Goldman, Lynn
Nelson, Faith Seidman, Maxine Stam,
Gordon, Paul Hoffman, Barbara Kel
Farris State College: Glenn Welchko.
Carolyn Stauffer.
ler, Judi Klehr, Maurie Knaizer, Robert
m
Hillsdale College: Steve Greenwald.
Lynda
Friedman, Jeff Klein,
Koch, Janeen
DePaul University: Greg Gattuso, Jay
Millman.
Illinois State Normal: Wilma Goodman,
Jeanette Leogrande, Sue Shapiro, Don
Liebenstein, Amy Medintz, Jerry Mey-
ek, Harvey Rose, Judy Rosen, Gary
Kendall College: Joel
Blumberg, Barb
Friedman, Paul Harman, Synthia Har
ris, Carol Morgen, Doug Richardson,
Sheryl Sneider.
Knox College: Steve Lissner, Gerry W al
ter.
Lincoln College: Bonnie Bolnick.
University:
Glenn
Davis,
Joe
Glenn
Balas,
Linda Gale, Larry Gavlin.
Monmouth College: Linda Wiehert.
Moser Secretarial College: Mary Brown,
Geraldine Janis, Mary Luther, Bonnie
Zutman.
Park .College:
Linda
Akerlund,
Dale Rasmussen, John Smart.
Northwestern
University:
Edelman,
Leon Manelis,
Spagat, Alan Spector, Liene Venters,
Michigan State University: Sandra Kost,
Julian Weiss.
Steve Becker,
Eileen
Greenberg,
Morrene Panitch, G il
Rotkin, Ken Seeskin, Bonnie Sussman,
Anita Weintraub.
Michigan Technological University: Bil
Dowlin.
Unversity of Michigan: Sherry Ferdman,
Steve Gold, Keith Kreft, Phil Rubin,
Howard Schumir.
Northern Illinois: Helen Bricker, Darryl
Cohen, Barry Dragon, Sandi Färber,
Marsha Feldman, Ira Frank, Linda
Grandinetti, Steve Idelman, Dan Jung
wirth, Sue Kearney, Tim Knudsen,
Lynne Kiviluoma, Judi Lawler, Earl
Lichtenstein, Marcia Lome. Sue Marks,
Leslie Melnick, Sandy Minkus, Scott
Ness, Denise Notarius, Donna Orbach,
Sandra Phillips, Arnold Rabin, Linda
Raphael, Ron Roth, Barbara Schneider,
Madeline Smith, Chris Stahlke, Paula
Stiber, Mike Strieker, Stuart Weiner.
Goldstein, Steve Lipawsky.
Mayfair Junior College:
Bob Shamberg, Pamela Simons, Donna
Paul Willner, Kurt Bloom.
na Shavitz, Sharyn von Oppen.
Phyllis
Iris
Ross,. Jean Rudnit, Steve Schlesinger^
Greene.
North
f i! *
erhoff, Marty Robin, Howard Roman-
Illinois Institute of Technology: Michael
Loyola
Koe, Jeff Lange,
Michigan
Southern Illinois: llene Becker, Faye
Bushier, Sue Cohen, Adriane Covitt,
Steve Dahlquist, Sendee Davis, Helane
Diamond, Dan Donite, Gary Edinin,
Linda Färber, Gordon Galowich, Ar
nold Gelfand, Ruth Gelfand, Dan
Greenberg, Linda Grimson, Sandi Gus
tin, Cindy Hill, Susan Johnson, Eunice
Kantor, Raya Konrad, Joel Koval,
Lynne Laskin, Donna Leff, Stew Lipman, Geoff Liss, Robert Liss, Mark
Mailer, Mary Miller, Janis Neumeister,
Karen Novelli, Sandy Ohlson, Carla
Pankey, Fred Poindexter, Andrea Pow
ell, John Powers, Morton Prytikin, Nan
cy Racine, Glenn Seiden, Paul Shapiro,
Mike Snider, Jane Sola, Karen Tankus.
I
T
again, thinks "senior” Bonnie Sussman at
she shops for clothes for college.
NOW I'M A FRESHMAN
The 'Pledge Issue':
to Them
It's Greek (k
30,000 students, and it’s easier to get organized if yen
join a fraternity.” Agreeing with Mitch Paradise thi t
“all good fraternities have study requirements,” Bob
anticipates that fraternity membership will benefit
him academically as well as socially.
NOW THAT MOST SENIORS have made their de
cisions about large school vs. small, co-ed vs. men’s
or women’s college, and state university vs. private
college, there remains still another choice for most
college-bound students: whether or not to pledge a
sorority or fraternity. How do seniors feel about wear
ing the Greek letter pin of a fraternity.
“Security” is Michelle Flicht’s major reason for
her decision to pledge a sorority at the University of
Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. Bronna Wasserman,
whose college choice is the University of Wisconsin,
cites “social advantages’’ as the main benefit of
/
sororities, but is undecided whether she will join.
“I’m rather prejudiced against them now,” she ad
mits, “but I plan to go through rush before I make
any decisions.” Jay Millman, like Bronna, plans to
“see what it’s like at college before I jump into any
thing.”
Bob: Get Organized
Bob Shamberg explained, “Downstate has almost
Sandi Kost, on the other hand, considers sorori
ties “confining.” “I don’t want to restrict my frieru s
to just a small group of people,” she elaborated. Agreeing, Bob Ezra considers a fraternity a “social
crutch” for people who “can’t or won’t try to make
it on their own.”
Linda: Most People Go Greek
Linda Wichert will pledge because “Monmouth is
so small — and most people are affiliated.” Laurie
Baron offered, “A dormitory is just a room, not a
home. A fraternity house has a warmer atmosphere
because you’re surrounded entirely by people who
are your friends.”
Other Seniors Plan Diverse Futures
Many Train For Careers,
Others Join Work Force
Nursing
Ricki
School:
Berke,
Darlone
Caryn
Baumgarten,
Corman,
Jackie
'<x/'
Military Beckons Three,
Others Still Debating
erson, Judee Curtis, Deanna Czerniak,
A ir Force: Ron Shaffer.
Delores Dahm, Jim Ebbert, Larry Ficks,
Army: Richard Meyers.
Rc’ inson, Patricia Smith, Susan Wolo
Linda Frank, Bette Friedman, Harriet
rers.
Friedman, Rita Gilbert, Pete Gabos,
Jim Graham, Linda Grant, Karen Gus
Trade School: Renee Babetch, Linda Belue, Maryann Benjamin. Kathy Fleck,
Kunio
Hagio,
Krammer,
Larry
Eileen
Johnson,
Marta,
Judy
Madeline
Touff, Jan Zehner.
Work: Barbara
Dean
Babis,
Barringer,
tafson, Dan Heeres, Lynn Hoffberg,
Mary Janisch, Bertha Kim. Barbara Korta,
Dennis
Loeser,
Lois
Menhardt,
Sharon Neubauer, Ellen Noesen, Su
san Oehlberg, James Poklop, Charlene
Claudia
Leon
Bilton,
Balkin,
Diane
Rivard,
Carol
Rowe,
Allen
Schultz,
Leone Schwegei, Linda Siegel, Naomi
Carter, Carol Casbarian, Mary Ann
Simon,
Catellier, Barbara Cheney, Jim Christ-
Sandy Vedder, Ron Vidock.
Susan
Stift,
Cheryl
Turner,
Trubakoff, Allen Walker, Steve Weiss,
Rebecca Wexler, Joan Youngblood.
Navy: Larry Youngkrantz
Undecided: Kurt Bloom, Fred Blumenfeld,
Wayne Edfors, Mari .Gersh, Barbara
Horvitz, Norikc Inoue, Judy Jacobs,
Ted Joseph, Julius James, Judy Kap
lan, Laura Klein, Patricia LaBolle,
Vince Micari, Jim Michonski, Linda
Naftulin, Kendra Nelson, Mike Prousis,
Minna Rafferty, Ed Rakowski, Bill
Reimer, John Scharf, Arnold Siegel,
Mark Siegel, Ivan Sizemore, Meyer
Sokol, Glenn Solberg, Linda Stocker,
Kathy Svedlund, Sandy Thorpe, Helene
ALTHOUGH IT is a violation of
g o o d journalistic practice, the
NILEHILITE would like to wish
sincere good luck to all of the
graduates of the class of ’65 who
have struggled through the past
four years of tests, homework, and
studying. To the underclassmen,
who still have the long road to
graduation ahead of them, we offer
all of our old test answers, notes
from our courses, and our senior
smugness.
I
�Tuesday» June 15» 1965
NILEHILITE
Page Seven
Fall Play Rides Again
Panicky Fun for All
iC T ir i/ /CM I ID
5 I Iv l\
CIV1
U l
f
shoo+" demands this ornery cowgirl in the fall production,
"The Curse of an Aching Heart,"
❖
❖
$
DON'T PANIC!
It's all part of the all-school carnival, Panic '65.
ENJOYING THE QUEEN'S S t & Z A 'S S
Tom McClellan will have many memories of Homecoming ’64.
It's Not Soccer . . .
Jour
l-Jearô
jf^aâô
~So
(q)
CRAZY-LEGS STURGIS
the N-Club player in the Faculty-N-Club basketball game.
mm
I
' i\
Study Builds Minds
.V/SÌ.'.-ì ;-!!';".'’
.
■■■■■■
*
■R)j
w
• 1 H
K
w
mB
in v
I
,
•m
•
I
m mW Ê W Ê S M tm
m è c f\
mmMImmmmmi a i \ !\
GRADUATION HAS FINALLY
_______ _______ I
and homework and tests. That's what senior year is
gowns, they contemplate their future.
u ÌcL
y
(l
�Page Eight
NILEHILITE
Tuesday, June 15,1965
ONE OF THE SENIOR stars of this
' year's basketball team, Doug
Komelty, (below), wracks up an
other of the many points he
scored in each basketball game
this season. The team won five
games this season.
ONE OF NEXT YEAR'S propects,
Junior Dennis Bailen, (below),
shoots a jump shot against High
land Park. Dennis w ill be expect
ed to fill the gap left by Kornelly.
Sports Wrap-up Through Camera's Eye
LED BY hard running halfback
John Smart (center, above) the
East football team broke its three
year losing streak last fall with
a first game win over Niles
North. East also tied one game
with Morton.
SENIOR TOM COLEMAN (at right)
passes during the North game.
Coleman led the Trojan team as
quarterback for most of the 1964
season.
SENIOR STEVE WOLF (at left) goes
through his parallel bar routine
in a meet at East. Varsity coach
John Riccitelli watches (lower left
hand corner).
SOPHOMORE SWIMMER Richard
Miller (below) practices for next
season's varsity team. This year's
varsity, led by Marty Chalfie who
was fourth in the state in the
butterfly, finished fourth in the
Suburban League.
RUNNING against Highland Pari
in this year's 27th Homecomin
is Junior halfback Jim DeGraffer
reid who was the outstandin
junior back on the squad. Jinr
who has played varsity footba
since his sophomore year, is high
ly counted on for next year'
team (left).
SENIOR CENTER fielder Glen
Smith, (lower right), waits for his
pitch. Glen was one of the most
consistent hitters on this year's
team which finished with a rec
ord of five wins and seven loss
es. Along with Smith, Seniors
Mike Strieker and Gil Ravelette
plus Red Shaffer sparked the
squad.
■
mm
W Ê m M Ê lÈ È È Ê È m
■; - .. _ '
.._.....& ■< f .....r v .....■
SSBS
m
m
. m
MÊËÊ
»ili
V
Hi
I» «
TWO MEMBERS of the East two
mile relay team, which took first
at Oak Park, Bill Dowlin and Greg
Gunderson (at left) run together
in a meet at East. Gunderson also
took fourth in the half mile event
at this year's Suburban League
track meet. Both boys are sen
iors. Gunderson will be replaced
by Junior Pete Lanners who is
Suburban League mile champion.
JUNIOR WRESTLER Ira Upin,
(right), one of the big hopes for
next year's wrestling team, pairs
off against an Evanston oppo
nent.
The wrestlers this year
pinned their hopes on Senior
Bob Machacek and Junior heavy
weight Roy Worthington.
Ballili
�
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
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Title
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Niles Township High School Nilehilite, Volume 27, No. 14
Alternative Title
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NILEHILITE, June 15, 1965
Creator
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Niles Township High School, Skokie, Illinois
Contributor
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Nigut, Bill, Editor-in-chief
Seeskin, Ken, Page Two Editor
Shapiro, Gail, Feature Editor
Weintraub, Anita, Feature Editor
Publisher
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Niles Township High School, Skokie, Illinois
Description
An account of the resource
The NileHilite is edited, published, and printed biweekly by the students of Niles Township High School of Skokie, Illinois, also known as Niles East High School. The school opened in 1939 and closed in 1980. Last issue of school year 1964-1965.
Subject
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Student newspapers and periodicals
Niles East High School (Skokie, Ill.) -- Periodicals
High school students -- Illinois -- Skokie -- Periodicals
Language
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eng
Date
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1965-06-15
Temporal Coverage
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1960s (1960-1969)
Spatial Coverage
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Skokie -- Illinois -- United States
Type
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Text
Format
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PDF
Medium
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newspapers
Extent
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8 pages
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No Copyright -- United States <a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/">http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Niles East NileHiLite Collection
Relation
A related resource
<a href="https://skokiehistory.omeka.net/exhibits/show/nilehilite">NileHiLite Digital Collection</a>
Skokie High School Yearbooks Collection --<a href="https://skokiehistory.omeka.net/exhibits/show/yearbooks/reflections">Niles East Reflections</a>
Provenance
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Skokie Public Library
Source
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From the collection of the Skokie Public Library, Skokie, IL
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
Nilehilite19650615
1960s (1960-1969)
1964-1965 school year
high schools
Niles East