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                  <text>����ONE ~ORE TI~E.

For the last time ...
Our seniors walk
these halls.
One more time ...
The juniors roam
this school.
One last time ...
Sophmores are
underclass.
One more time ...
Freshmen look
from below.
For the first time ...
We realize
how precious,
Our times have been.

Casey Conner gives one
of those timeless smiles.

Hobby Chapin, Wolverine
inspirationalist, fires 'em up.

Title

1

�Moving On and Up.

Times, They Are a Chang in' ...
Bob Dylan probably said it best.
Times are a changin'. The more

'"We had great
school spirit

things change , the more they

this year. Our

remain the same. Looking foward to

school unity

tomorrow. Faces of yesterday will

was the best

always be remembered. Memories

ever."
Mandy Martin

of this building will never be
Senior

forgotten. As we approach the next
century, the Bayfield High School
student body and staff will move on
to bigger and better things, and a
bigger and better building. Change
is inevitable.The question remains.
Will Bayfield lose its small town
flavor? We hope not.

2 Theme Page

�THUMBS UP: feb Taylor

says, 'you're theman'.

SMILE:
The
sentor
cheerleaders , Maggie
Clendenning, Dawn Fahrion,
Cierra Clapp, and Megan
Backer, enjoy their last year
together.

HURRY: Enid Lasater looks
up from her locker as she
rushes to class.

BONDING: Liz

ewby,
Jennifer Neptune, mzd Hilarie
Moore don't mind showing
their feelings for one another.

Theme Page 3

�··:

Friends Play an Important
Role
... at B.H.S.
Living in Bayfield i not always the mo t exciting thing in the world, but there' one thing
that makes it worth wild, FRIENDS! Being
together all their live , it ha , finally come time
for the enior to part. But they know they
will remain friends where ever life after high
school take them. Being with your friends is
where the fonde t memorie of high chool
come from. No matter what. a g od friend is
a friend for life.

mile! Phobe Percell, Sarah Joswick, Jess Macklin. Heather Haga,

and Mandy Martin say cheese.

4 Seniors

Where are we again? Bokevy Varal]at, Alfredo Villagomez. and
Zoltan Hi.das, Bayfield's exclumge students. look totally lost.

Vogue. Aaron Hamilton, Reuben
Crossman, and Harold Smith
strike a pose.

�Fiesta! Hobby Chaptn, B.J. Monger.and
Mike Srruthwtck stage Manachees for
speech class.

Friends. Kimber Thompson
and Tegan Corlies slww their
spint during homecoming.

Duh? For feb Taylor. Brand
Demlllg, and Hobby Chapm
bemg a semor IS [llllllly sink111g 111.
The Mac! Cannon Ivers allempts
to pursue Angela Natzke and
Theresa link.

Seniors 5

�MS.

WOLVER-INE

"Believe in your ·elf ;believe in your abilitie ;believe in
hard work, and you can achieve
great things."
Enid Lasater has lived in
Bayfield her entire life. She is involved in many chool activities
such as student council, F.B.L.A.,
F.C.C.L.A., basketball, cross
country, and track. Enid ha.s also
received a 3.6 G .P.A . throughout
her high , chool career. Enid is a
three ume league am1 regwna1

track champion. She i al o the
1995-1996 cro s country state
runner up along with league and
regional champion.

"With ambition and determination, one can overcome
any ob tacle."
Jes ica Macklin moved
to Bayfield in the fourth grade.
Since moving to Bayfield, Je ica has become very involved in
school.She i active in National
Honor's Society, Thespians, studeAt
council,
F.B.L.A,
F.C.C.L.A,volleyball, basketball,
and track. Je ica has maintained
a 3.8 G.P,A, i a four- year varity letterman, has two all conference titles, was M. V.P her
ophomore volleyball ea on, received be t defen ive player in
basketball, and carries an all state
track title.

6 Ms . Wolverine

~ESSICA MACKLIN

ENID LASATER

�MR.

WOLVERINE
"Marshall ha the de ire,
and the ability to uccced." Thi ·
is the opinion of orne of the
many friend Mar hall ha at
B.H.S.
As long a anyone can
remember, Mar hall Hahn ha
attended Bayfield chool . He
ha been involved in many extra
curricular activities, and he has
lettered in wrestling, football,
and ba eball. He ha gone to
tate four time in hi wre tling
career and took the 1993-1994
tate champion hip. Thi year he
lead the way to a state championship victory in fnothall.
Marshall ha.s al.so ma1nLamel1 a
4.0 G.P.A, while taking an active
role in tudent council, national
honor ociety, and F.B.L.A. "No
matter what you do, give it
100%," are the word that
Marshall live by.

Mr. Wolverine 7

�Nicholas Andrews

Megan Backer

Kate Bartmann

Hobby Chapin

Cierra Clapp

Maggie Clendenning

Kacy Conner

Tegan Corlies

Rubin Crossman

Jesse Cummins

Jimmy Cundiff

Brand Deming

Jusfill Donaldson

Dawn Fahrion

8 Seniors

�Maleah Fanzam

Ben Ford

Miguel Gomez

Mandy Gosney

Heather Haga

Marshall Hahn

Valerie Hahn

Aaron Hamilton

Zoltan Hidas

Craig Hoback

Cannon Ivers

Judd Jenkins

Sarah Joswick

Daniel Kennedy

Seniors 9

�For some years we
thought it wouldn't
end

It's time High School is
over, yet new things begin
-like college, military, marriage, and careers
We'll leave, achieve our
goals and live out our
dreams
May we remember the
good times
-in class, in the halls, and
after school
The world will surely
change,
let's hope we don't, forget
not those we've grown to
know

��Patrick Kilgore

Nicholas Kimball

Matt Kugle

fohn Lancett

Heather Larimore

Enid Lasater

Tara Linfesty

Lloyd Lucero

Jessica Macklin

Amanda Martin

B.J. Monger

Paloma Morales

12 Seniors

Kristy Miller

�Olan Morriso11

Allgela Natzke

Phoebe Percell

Joel Priest

Kevill Prior

Jody Rustmmz

Reggie Sanchez

Michael Schockaert

Harold Smith

Mike Smithwick

Kelly Steinbacher

feb Taylor

Kimber Thompsoll

Bokevy Varaljai

Seniors 13

�...... or a good time ...
Visit BHS Seniors in the Summertime
SUMMER saw the
cia of "97 involved in
many different activities.
When the clas i not inval vcd in , port,, cla
work, or other activitie, ,
they liked to do more relaxing activitie . Summertime
activities arc more relaxing. This clas did many
different thing during the
ummer. Some people

went to the lake. At the ba eball, ba kctball, bowllake, people learned to do ing, swimming, and many
many fun acllvltlCS. other~ . Still, there were
People learned to ki, and people who did thing like
do new activitie like fundraisin£..... carwashes. In
wak:eboard. AI o at the between sport and other
lake, people did activties activities, mo t people had
like riding Jet Ski and jobs and worked for some
Seadoos. Some of people extra ca h.
did lots of ports during the
summer. A few of these
sports included oftball,

Sarah Joswick takes a
break from all the hard
work and enjoys a nice
piece of watermelon at
the volleyball car wash.

Jimmy Cundiff proves he
can stiLl pick on people
not quite his own size.

14 Seniors

Peter Lott and Kacy Conner sit back and take it
all in.

�B.J. Monge1; Kevin Prim; und Ben
Ford show off B.J. 's sistet; Me gun'
summer time shades.

Jess Macklin and Enid
Lasater spend their summer at Lake Navajo on
the Sea Doo.
WHOA! There -a Zmk

trips over two fnmds

Seni.ors 15

�Alfredo Villagome::.

Heidi Wilbourn

Jesse Wray

Tyler You 11g

16 Seniors

Steve11

Williams

Theresa Zi11k

Clayto11 Wilson

��For A Good Time ...

........ VERYONE MUST GET LEI'D
Life was like one
big Luau. Party and celebration overcame BHS
for one memorable
week. With a pep assembly, student games,
a parade, a bonfire, and
football, volleyball, and
cross country victories,
the Hawaiian homecorning was a hit.
The games consisted of a pineapple
toss, a hula hoop contest, a row your boat
race, and a pass the
hoop contest. The students were pumped up
for a great homecoming
week. The seniors won

the games and provided
excitment throughout
the year.
A beautiful afternoon set the tone for a
Hawaiian celebration
parade. A very decorative float won the seniors bragging rights .
Judging was hard however because of the
many creative floats.
Team leadership
helped achieve an important league win over
the Del Norte Tigers as
the girls volleyball team
defeated the tigers
handly in two games.
The 1996 2A football

ECSTATIC: Homecoming King candidates Marshall Hahn,
John Lancett, Ben Ford and Kevin Prior try 1wt to show too
much mwtion at halftime festivities.

ROYALTY: Homecoming King and Queen, Hobby Chapin
and Enid Lasater circle the track waving for the cameras.

18 Homecoming

champion Bayfield
Wolverines set the tone
for the season early
with an important
league victory over
archrival Ignacio Bobcats 47-0. Bayfield
scored on their first
drive of the game and
did not look back as
they crushed the Cats .
The Bayfield cross
country team traveled
to Cortez, Colorado
during homecoming
week. It was a tough
course but Bayfield
pulled through with
some of the best course
times this year.

�BREAK THROUGH: Smior Marshall Hahn rips through
a Hawaiian Homecoming banner just efore game time.

.1
What did you enjoy the most about this
year's Homecoming festivities?
"All of the athletic competition was
won by Ba)field. "- John Lancett
"How they.had nice and shiny trucks
for the homecoming parade."- Jeb Taylor
"It wa great because everyone had a
lot offun."- Jodie Natzke
"It was great and very enjoyable beacau e everyone worked together a a school
to make it fun and exciting."- Pat Kilgore

TOUCHDOWN: Kevin Prior stretches over the
goa!ine for six points against Ig~zacio. Bayfield defeated
the1r cross-county rival47-0 in the second consecutive
blowout.

ELEGANT: Homecoming Queen ca1ididates Dawn Fahrion, Heather Haga, Kacy
Conner, Enid Lasater and Jess Macklin pose
for the last picture of the Homecoming dance.
Homecoming

19

�Life is like

NEBIGLUAU
FIRED UP: Bayfield High
School 's crowd gets pumped
dumzg the homecommg pep as
embly
STRIKE A POSE: Damd Greer
gets his kicks off as a Powder
Puff cheerleader just before the
game.

BOOGIE ON DOWN: Rian
Roderick hula hoops while
standing on one leg.

20 Homecoming

SPLAT: Hobby Chapin focuses
on an incoming pineapple durmg one of the homecoming
games.

�DUDE LOOKS LIKE A LADY:
Peter Loft poses as a drag quem
cheerleader at the Powder Puff
game.

INFERNO: A silhouetted Wo/verille i~ boosted up in [rv11t of
the bmzfire homecmni1lg Hight.

Homecomi.ng

21

�·FORA GOOD TIME ...
Hang Out With The Crowds At BHS
Peeking inside the
classrooms, you might
notice a wide variety of
activities going on. There
are so many things happening within the wolverine
crowds that there is never a
reason to be bored. One
of the great things about
living in a small mountain
town is you have a chance
to get to know everybody's

name and can build great
new friendships.
Here
at Bayfield, people are
involved in several different activities. Some play
sports, some are involved
in after-school acttVltles,
and some just have fun.
Where ever people go or
whatever they are doing,
everyone finds some way
to have fun.

Sav Cheese! Josh Walcott
refuses to smile for the
camera.

Somewhere? Tim
Eckerdt dreams of
a better place.

Confused! Jeb Taylor
and Pat Kilgore wonder how to use those
string things.
St ude n t Life 22

Macarena! Holly Lucero teaches
Breclw Ricthie how to do this
popular dance.

Con centration !
Sanchez is hard at
work.

�Whew' Jenny Brittian and
Gina Ochoa take a time out.

Oh Baby.! Ryan McLaughlin
thinks he is ju. I too sexy.

Hula! Rian Roderick
shows her Homecoming
spirit.

Hamilton proves to his classmates that he can pell.

Deep Thoughts! Jody Natzke
is off in her own little world.

Out There! Alike SlwL.f..aert
wi hes that he wa else where.
~tudent Life 23

�MY, HOW TIME FLIES
Almost Over? It Seems like Only Yesterday . ..
With only one year left,
laughs, friendships and fun
was a big priority for the Junior class. Not only did they
raise all the money for a good
prom, but they managed to do
well in sports and in academics. Class president Clayton
Stephenson said, ''I'm proud of
what we've accomplished and
I hope next year is as much

fun." The concerns and fears
of their upcoming senior year,
never kept these students from
making the most of the year.
"The Junior class has demonstrated their energy, enthusiasm and ski 11 by meeting
double
their
goal
in
fundraising within the first
three months of school, telling
me that there's plenty of heart

HUH? Kevin Me Williams hears his name
ALMOST: Ca ey Potter trie to dig a hole.
STICKY: Chad Cole discovers glue.
STUDLY: joe Stewart shows his style.

24 Juniors

and talent in this group of
young people." said Principal
Jim Ewing.
The class of 1998 will
also be the first class to graduate from the new high school
currently under construction.
The new facility will be a great
reward to this class of athletic
leaders, academic scholars and
all around good students.

�ANDREWS, JORI
BACA , ANGELO
BAIER, JON
BASSEIT. BROOK

BECK, BEAU
CATRON, ASHLEY
CHAMBLEE,
AARON
CHAVEZ, SELINA

COLE, CHAD
CRUMBA UGH,
SARAH
CUSICK, HEIDI
DAVENPORT,
BETHANY
DIDIER, ARYA
DONOHUE, RYAN
DUDLEY, DAN
DUNAVANT,
GRADY

DURAN, NICK
EVERS, JENNY
FOSTER. MICAH
FRIJZ, DOUG

GINGERICH, JESSICA
GREER, DAVID
HEIRIZLER,
JAMIE
HOFFMAN, WILL

Juniors 25

�Tr-IE CLASS OF r9B
HOWARD, RYAN
H UTMACHER,
HEATHER
JOHNSON,
JEREMIAH
LARSEN, JOHN

LEWIS, ROBBIE
LEWIS, TRISHA
LORENZINI,SAM
LOTT, PETER

LYALL, ERIK
MMG, RACHAEL
MAC ELROY,
SEAN
MAULDIN, TIM

MCCARGAR, TONY
MCDONALD,
KAYMA
MCWILUAMS,
KEVIN
MESSAMORE, JEROD

MOORE, HILLARIE
MORELU, JESSICA
MORLAN, AMBER
MORRISON, ADEN

NATZKE, JODIE
NEPTUNE, JENNIFER
NEWBY, LIZ
PHELPS, WENDY

26 Juniors

�POTTER, CASEY
PRIOR. KIZZI
RHODES, CARL
RODERICK. RIAN

SALAZ4R, JOLETTA
SANCHEZ, JODI
SCHOLZ, AUSHA
SHARR. SAMANTHA

SCHULTZ, TIM
SIR/OS. JILL
SISCO£, JEREMY
SOWER. BOBBIE

STEPHENSON,
CLAYTON
STEWARD, CORTNEY
STEWART, JOE
STONE, TRAVIS

SUCATO, THERESA
SUTHERUN, J.R.
TATUM, CHARUE
TAYLOR. WHISTY

TIDRICK, KRISTIN
TRABING, AARON
VALENCIA, TRAVIS
WALCOTT, JOSH

Juniors 27

�WALTERS, JESSICA
WIEBE, SC07T
ZWISLER, ROSS
ANDREWS, KYE
WEBB, EMILY

WHAT? Casey Potter,
Angelo Baca and David
Greer, try to figure out a
customers change.
BURR! Scott Wiebe puts
on his coat in Mr. Keirns
freezing room.

CONSENTRATE: Jodi Sanchez ·works diligently
on a masterpiece. SEXY: Aaron Chamblee shmvs
his feminine side during homecoming.
28 Juniors

�Question: What was it like switching
schools half way through high school?
Where did you move here from? How do
you like Bayfield?
Kye Andrews: It was hard to
switch schools because of all the
work I had to make up and not
knowing anyone. I moved here from
Sheperd, Michigan. Bayfield is not as
big as my old school, but it's alright.
Jessica Gingerich: It was hard
because I had to leave friends.
Although, I did not like my school at
all, I was very involved and it was
hard to leave. I moved from Lillian,
Alabama. /like Bayfield. It is very
different and real small, but /like that. The sports
are much better here and most everyone is very
friendly.

CLOSE UP: Some junior join
as one. HOW? Alisha Scholtz
is puzzled by Emily Webb's work.
HOW CUTE! Grady Dunavent
wants just one dance from Jess
Morelli. HOT! The junior
float is full of volcanic activity.

Juniors 29

�IJUST NOT ENOUGH TIME tl
I Lunch Cut Short At B.H.S. I

Where Do You
Go?
Percent of
Students That

Go There

Even though the places to go are limited and
the time to go there is even more limited, stu

Conoco

7%

Mini Mere

12%

Home

24%

Cafeteria

26o/o

lunch periods, maybe the future students of

Grocery Store

3%

B.H.S. will have more time for a better lunch.

Other

28%

dents at B.H.S. try to make the best out of their
25 minute lunch period.

The survey shows

where students go in the small town of
Bayfield . With two successful trial extended

Slurp! Kelly Baker gets a

giant sodafrom Conoco.

Relaxatio11! Tyler Young and

Phoebe Percell kick it outside
of the Grocery Store.

3@ Student Life

�Tannin 'I Sarah l~dwards, and Brekka
Raclue spend tlietr lunch catclun' some
ran

Eww! The absence in the cafeteria shows the food is still not everybody's favorite.

Yummy! Some of the freshmen girls enjoy a lunch from lwme in the hall with
friends.

Smile! Jeb Taylor seems content with

lunch at Mini Mere and enjoying it with
Angela Natzl&lt;.e.

Student Life 31

�Lower-Classmen ..... .

.... OR THE TIME BEING
Sop homores Look To Move Up
The wait is over! Fi- the begining of the fied. Their interests
nally g\!tting your year this class was ranged from sports to
&lt;:!rivers license is not lost, they knew FBLA and drama. So
p:·) bably the most an- their way around, what does the future
tic~_:_:.. ated thing a!.Jout
knew the teachers hold for this, the
J OUr Sophomore and knew what high Sophomore class of
='ear. However, a well school was all about. 1997? Besides, of
deserved sense of be- But best of all they course becoming uplonging was pretty had a wh:Jle new per-classmen. Only
~igh on the list for
year in front of them. time will tell.
this class a s well. A year : ull of new
The/ wen: :::~ J lon~er experinces and new
at the bottom of tne fri~nds. Like all
social chain; no classes, the class of
longer the babies. At 1999 is very diversi-

SHOCKED: Melanie
Cramer's blank stare shows
that she has NO idea what is
happening.

32 Sophomores

ROUND AND ROUND:
Angi Young wins the
homecoming hula-hoop
contest for the sophomors.

�TYPICALLY: A group of
sophomores sociali::e in the

SIMULTANEOUSLY:
Roland l)rianto n111f

commons area

David Valmciu 7t'lllk dml'll
thr hall

DEEP IN THOUGHT:

Nikki Evans concmtrates on
her work.
FREEZING: Heidi Luter
and Ashley Burleigh wait for
the bell to ring after a fire
drill.

Sophomores 33

�ADAMS, DENISE
ALLEN, SIERRA
ANDERSON, TED
ANDREWS,
CHRISTOPHER

BAKER, JUS fiN
BALES, ROBERT
BLACK, ERIN
BROWN, NICOLE

BURLEIGH. ASHLEY
CHAVEZ, ERIC
CLOUDT, KALEB
CRAMER. MELANIE

CROSSMAN,
JENELLE
DALLISON, LAURA
DAVIS, AMANDA
DOUGLAS,
MEREDITH
DURAN, CHARLIE
ECKERDT, TIJ\1
EDWARDS, SARAH
EVANS, NIKKI

34 Soohomores

�FERRIS, ADAM
FIELDS. FA VYN
FREEMAN, BRYCE
FUNDINGSLAND,
EMILY

GOLDMAN, ANDREW
GRILLOS, MARSHALL
HANNA, JOHN
HOMER. SHIANN

HOOS, CUF
HORTON, SHANE
HUNTER,
JENNIFER
!BERG, JACOB

JANUS, BRENT
JONES. RUTH
KILBANK, MARY
LARSEN, STEVE

LASATER, JESSE
LEWIS, USA
LUCERO, HOLLY
LUCERO, MELANIE

LUNA, AMY
LUTER, HEIDI
MALOY, JOHNETTE
MANZER, GINNY

Sophomores 35

�MCGIMSEY,
BRANDON
MClAUGHLIN, RYAN
MILLER, TIM
MONGER, KENNIE

MORALES, ELISA
NELSON, BEN
PARKER. JOSHUA
PERCELL, DANIEL

PICCOLI, MATT
PORTER, AMBER
POWELL, PHILIP
PRIANTO, ROLAND

PRIEST, MICAH
PRITCHARD, JESSICA
PYLE, MONICA
RITCHIE, BREKKA

ROBINETTE, MALISSA
RODERICK, BJ
SAMPLES, RYAN
SANDERFORD, SANDI

SHONK, CLAYTON
SMITH, ELIZABETH
STEINBACHER,
JERRY
VALENCIA, DAVID

36 Sophomores

�VAN DEN BERG,
BECKY
WASHINGTON. MARY
YOUNG. ANGI
ZWISLER. AMY

ALL TANGLED UP: A

group of sophmores participate in a hula-hoop passing
game during homecomi11g as
Marshall overlooks this
chaotic endeavor.
BEST FRIE DS: Angi

You11g, Jessica Pritchard,
and Amy Zwisler cheerfully
pose in the commons.

ENTHUSIASTICLY:

Kemzie Monger fla shes his
cheesiest smile.

Sophomores 31

�On an average about four
hour and thirty-three minute are
pent in the school halls in one c:oeek.
Breaks and lunch are a time for the
tudent at B.H.S. to take a
breather. That i , of cour e, unless
the ever- a-popular homework rush
is being done.
Four hours and thirty-three

minute may not seem like enou~h
time to spent socializing with
friends, but ·when you put tf in a
year's perspective, that's 144 hours
and 40 minute of go sip.
CAPTURED ON CAMERA/
Jessica Pritchard wanders the halls
aimlessly dur;ng /unc/7 Tim Mauldn
is about to get mauledby a bunc/7
olgiis

•

sURPRISE' Keri Car/sOil was tricked tnto getttng her picture taien.
DON'T BE SHY! Ryan Samples
smt!es ICY the camera.

38

Student Life

�JUST KICK'N IT! Jerry Steinbacher and Micah Riest relax donng break

BUSTED! Robin Crossman, how
ARE WE THRILLED OR WHAT? Angi YOl/ng and BrandDeming look like
many times have yov been told not to they eYe having a wonderfl/1 lvnc!J freak.
eat in the commons 'tYea?

Student Life 39

�A JUmp up and down,
a shout "hello!", or just
an all around giggle is
how the freshman
made their year go by.
With the thoughts of
new faces, new schedules, and new buildings, the freshman had
many things to adjust
to, for instance the four
period day. Xochitl
Garcia said "The four
periods help the day go

by a lot faster. "The rest
of the high school also
had to make a few adjustments of their own,
like no "hasing" the
freshman, they also
had to get used to the
LARGE numbers of
them in the hallways.
All in all the freshman
turned out to be okay,
and the rest of the student body adjusted
quite well.
CHEESE! Sara Beckler and Lacy Williams are happy
to see a camera in their faces.

ABERNATHY, EDDIE
ANDERS, DUSTIN
ANDREWS, KATIE
BAKER, KELLY

BASSETT, SUMMER
BECK, SARA
BECKER, NANCY
BECKLER, SARA

BLACK, BEAU
BLAKSTAD, PORTIA
BODIROGA, HOLLY
BONDS, CHRISTIE

4e Freshman

�BRITTAIN, JENNY
BROUGHTON,
MORGAN
CAPALBO, JILL/AN
CARLSON, JONATHAN

CARLSON, KERf
CARRON, DOUG
CARTWRIGHT,
JOANNA
CASPER, CHERI

CHAMPLIN, WILLIAM
CHAPIN, HOLLY
CHAVEZ, AMY
CLEMENT, AMY

CLOUDT, TYREL
CORLIES, TARA
DAVIS, JULIE
DONOHUE, CASEY

FISCHER, DANICA
FLEENER, ISAAC
GAMBINO, JESSICA
GARCIA, XOCHITL

Freshman 41

�GEI~BER, DYLON
GINGERICH, JUSTIN
GONZALES, l~AQUEL
GOODWIN, JODY

GOSNEY, J.D .
HANNA, CECILIA
HARRMANN,
HENESSEY
HEAD, BRANDON

HORTON, SAI~AH
HOWARD, AARON
HUMISTON, ERIN
JACK, WILLIE

JOBES, ADAM
JOHNSON, J.D.
JOHNSON, KIM
JOHNSON, KRISTINA

jULJANO, MJCHfAL
KENNEDY, SARAH
KIMBALL, TONY
KOHLERSCHMJDT,
AILEEN

42 Freshman

�LANGI~ELL, £/~IN

LEWIS, JOSH
LOPER, NATHAN
LOWTHER, CLINT

LUCERO, LANCE
LUDWIG, CHAD
LUZAR, KI~ISTY
MAGILL, AMANDA

MARS, I ESSICA
MARSHALL, JACKIE
MATHIS, JESSE
MC CLINE, CRYSTAL

MILLER, HEATHER
MILLER, LEAH
MILLER, PATTI
MONGER, RICHIE

MORLAN, KINSEE
OCHOA, GINA
OURGANIAN, CHRIS
PARRISH, RENEE

Freshman 43

�PENNINGTON,
MATTHEW
PERCELL, TOMMY
PHILLIPS, LEAH
PICKETT, KRIS

PORTE!~, LON!

POTTER, TIFFANY
RHODES, CHRIS
RICHARDSON, TAMES

RUGGLES, CHAD
SCHAAF, ANDY
SHARR, HEIDI
SINCLAIR, T.f.

SIR/OS, JAMIE
SMITJ;f, JODY
STEELE, RACHEL
STEWART, MATT

THOMAS, JENNA
TODESCHI, NICK
TURNER, BRIANA
TURNER, CASSANDRA

44 Freshman

�TUSSING, BETHANY
VANABBEMA, MAI~IE
VICENTJ, ANGELINA
WESTMORLAND,
CHARLENE

.

WIEBE, BRIAN
WILLIAMS, LACY
WILSON, [OLEN£
WRAY, JENNIFER

GEE WHIZ! fody Goodrl'ill, Josh

Lewis, and Matt Stewart, all look
up from their hard rl'Ork.
OH NO! Kris Pickett remember
where he left hi mi11d.
BROS! Richie Mo11ger, La11ce
Lucero, a11d Tommy Percell show
their versimz of brotherhood

Freshman 45

�Strike! Jon Baier hows
off one of his out ·tanding
pitches.

Wolverines pause in confusion.

Rah, Rah.' Cheerleaders
show their Homecoming
!;pirit.

Get Set Go.' Cross Country mem-••Lim
ber take off for another long race . ...;...:;;;......-....-

!l!:iJ!£! Kristy Miller moves in for a shot.
Spor t s 4 6

�Unity! Stale Champs show that they can work
just as hard at friendships as they do on the field.

Take That! Whi ty Taylor
serves for another ace.

Lhampion! Marshall Hahn

ri es hi hand in glory after
another win.

Side Bv Side. Beau Beck and
Lance Lucero race ide by ide
to the finish line.
Sports 4 7

�SMASHING!
What is volleyball? According to the dictionary,
vollyball is a game that is
played with a large inflated ball
that is hit over a net before it
hits the ground. Now in
Bayfield, volleyball was more
than a game. It was a time for
the lady wolverines to show
their school's domination in all
that they did.The theory that
history repeats itself was
Ia unched out the window as
the team improved their season
record from a no-win season in
95-96 to second in the league.
Longtime Bayfield rival Ignacio
was not only beaten, but blown
out the door by our varsity
team. A tremendous comeback
from last year's unpredicted
defeat. In another memorable
match, the Centauri Falcons'
talons failed

Wendy Miller smiles for the camera
after a game.
There is no way Thereasa Zink will let
the ball get past her.

48 Volleyball

to even scratch the surface of
the mighty wolverines. But,
unfortunate] y, they fell short of
their long term goal of state.
However the team should still
be proud. They practiced almost every day with the intentions of a win in the games to
come. And when it all came
down to it the entire community was proud to have the
Bayfield volleyball team represent them in all of their games.
Next year is sure to be a better
season for our wolverines,
With hard work and practice,
mixed with a little determination, there is nothing they can't
accomplish.

POW! Heidi Luter snwshes the ball
over the net to gain a point, some
might call that an explosive perfornwnce.

�Whoa!There is a distinguished
difference between Coach Holt, off
arul on the court.

All rise, volleyball is in session. The
team lines up in the back court to
begin another game.

Mixed emotions: Wendy Phelps,
Jessica Gingerich, Amber Morlan,
and Jessica Walters watch the
action.

Volleyball 49

�v
A
R

s

I
T
y

BAYFIELD VARSITY VOLLEYBALL: 1st Raw; Sarah Joswick, Heather Haga, Mandy
Martin, Kacy Conner, 2nd Raw; Coach ]ana Pickett, Kristy Miller, jessica Macklin,
Whisty Taylor, Theresa Zink, Amber Morlan, Jessica Walters, Coach Beverly Hott

SEASON SCOREBOARD
PAGOSA 9-12-96 LOSS
CENTAURI 9-14-96 WIN
NAVAJO PREP 9-17-96 LOSS
MONTE VISTA 9-21 -96 WIN
IGNACIO 9-24-96 WIN
MANCOS 9-26-96 WIN
DEL NORTE 9-28-96 WIN
DOLORES 10-1-96 WIN
PAGOSA 10-8-96 LOSS
MONTE VISTA 10-12-96 WIN
MANCOS 10-15-96 WIN
DEL NORTE 10-17-96 WIN
CENTAURI 10-19-96 WIN
IGNACIO 10-22-96 WIN
*2ND PLACE IN LEAGUE
*2ND PLACE AT DISTRICTS

JUNIOR VARSITY

ALL CONFERENCE
THERESA ZINK - 1ST TEAM
SARAH JOSWICK - 2ND TEAM
JESS MACKLIN - 2ND TEAM
KRISTY MILLER - 2ND TEAM

50 Volleyball

BAYFIELD JUNIOR VARSITY VOLLEYBALL: 1st Row; Ashley
Burleigh, Wendy Phelps, Ruth Jones, Heidi Cusict 2nd Raw; Jessica
Walter, Jessica Gingerich, Coach Bev Hott, Coach Jana Pickett, Heid1
Luter, Becky Vandenberg

�BAYFIELD C TEAM VOLLEYBALL: 1st Row; Ceczlia Hanna, Erzn
Langrell, 2nd Row; Amanda Magill, Kristina Johnson, Sarah Horton,
Kinsee Morlan, Sarah Beck, Christie Bonds, Shiann Homer, 3rd Row;
Coach Jana Pickett, Jaimie Sirios, Charlene Westmorland, Kate Bartmann,
Heather Miller, Alisha Scholtz

Kacy Conner

Jessica Macklin
Heather Haga

Sarah Joswick

Theresa Zink
Mandy Martin

Kristy Miller

Volleyball 51

�un For Fun?
Cross Country Runners Do What
Most People Think Impossible
Why would someone run 3.5
miles for fun? Thats what
many people may wonder
about the cross country runners. Joel Priest said that he
runs" To build indurance for
other sports." "I enjoy running and when you sprint the
last 100 yards you get a big
rush" said Erin Black.
Bayfield hosted their first
cross country meet ever this
year. The runners started at
the Bayfield High School
baseball field and ran 3.5
miles to finish back on the
baseball field.

INCH BY INCH: Erin Black sprints to
catch her opponent. With Enid Lasater
out, the burden of carrying the girls team
fell to Erin and her team mates.
CRUISING: J.R . Sutherlin, Mike

Smithwick, and B.J. Monger running in
Bayfields first cross country meet.

52 Cross Country

Unfortunatly there were not
enough girls to have a team
this year. But, there were
many successful individuals,
Enid Lasater, 1995 state runner-up, took seventh at
regionals qualifying her for
state. But, due to illness she
was unable to run in the state
meet.
The boys team had a very successful year as well. J .R.
Sutherlin
and
Mike
Smithwick placed 13th and
15th at regionals qualifying
them for state as well.

�FANCIFULLY: Ria11 Rodrick appears to
be raceing through the clouds on her way
to the fi11ish line.

X-COUNTRY RESULTS
Pagosa invitational Aug. 31
Boys- 5th, 76 points
Girls- Enid Lasater, 1st
Montrose invitational Sept. 7
Boys- 6th, 133 points
Aztec invitational Sept. 14
Boys- 3rd, 69 points
Centauri invitational Sept.21
Boys- 2nd, 43 points
Cortez invitational Oct. 4
Boys- 1st, 37 points

Bayfield invitational Oct.12
Boys- tie for 2nd, 38 points
Sargent Invitational Oct.12
Boys-5th, 94 points
Regionals (Pagosa) Oct. 19
Boys- 5th, 68 points
State QualifiersEnid Lasater, 7th
J.R. Sutherlin, 13th
Mike Smithwick, 15th
State (Pueblo) Oct. 26
Mike Smithwick, 54th
J.R. Sutherlin, 59th

AS A TEAM: J.R. Sutherlin, B.]. Monger and Mike Smithwick race past their
opponent to a victorious finish.

Cross Country 53

�BHS CROSS COUNTRY Top to bottom: Tony Kimball, J.R. Sutherlin, B.J. Mon·
ger, Nick Kimball, Mike Smithwick, Joel Priest, Coach Kimball, Grady Dunavant
Rusty Sanchez (Mid School), Richie Monger, Kennie Monger, Clay Stephenson, Erin
Humiston, Marcus Kimball (Mid School), Erin Black, Enid Lasater, Adam Jobes.
--,

GUDEING: Joel Priest races toward
the finish line. Joel preformed very well
for his first year running cross country.
AT THE STARTING UNE: BHS boys
cross country team gets off to an
excellent start.

54 Cross Country

.-

-·

-

. -

~-, ~

~ ~

-~~
·~.

�Mike Smithwick
Senior

B.J. Monger
Senior

Nick Kimball
Senior

Joel Priest
Senior

Enid Lasater
Senior

INTENTLY: Coach Kimball watches

the hari::.ion for his first namer to
appear.

Cross Country 55

�3-A STATE CHAMPS
There is a first tim for every- the trophy go to Bayfield hut also
thing. WHAT A FIRST IT saw the Wolverines exact some
WAS~~ B HS' first ever state
revenge. It was the Meeker Cowchampionship in football came hays who ended the Wolverine
at the expense of the Meeker season and dreams a year before
Cowboys. Actually everyone with an upset win. This year,
who faced the Wolverines this however the boys would not he
year did so at their own peril. denied. Rolling like thunder the
BHS put a balanced offensive Wolverines picked up momenattack and a devestating defense tum, fans and believers along the
on the field for every game. Not way to a perfect 13-0 record.
only did the Wolverines win ... Not often do things come tothey won BIG. Most games saw gether like this hut hard work and
the starters on the bench for the detirmination payed off this time.
second half as each game ap- BHS is proud of the accomplishproached a blowout. The starters ments of this years team. This is
still managed to rack up some big the stuff LEGENDS are made of.
numbers. The final game at Right: Ryan Ho~'&gt;·ard makes a crucial
Meeker's home turf not only saw stop against Meeker

Tiro time All-Stater Senior Ben Ford intercepts a pass in a pl'ayojfgame against
Holyoke. Ben led the -Wolverines with
Ius stellar defensive play.
All-State Quarterback is swarmed by a
host of defenders in the state finals at
Meeker. Marshall led BHS as QB for
four years.

�PERFECT 13-0 IN '97

Above: The Wolverine defense dommated opponent~
~..·alz hard luttzng.
Left: Senwrs, Kevm Pnor. John Lancett, and Manlw/1
Hahn d1splay the State tropllr as Phoebe Prece/1. Aaron
Chamblee and John Hanna look on

�WOLVERINE FOOTBALL: 1st Row; Marshall Hahn, Angelo Baca, Kevin Prior, Ben
Ford, Peter Lott, John Lancett, Reggie Sanchez, J.D. Johnson, 2nd Row; Shane Horton,
David Valencia, Beau Beck, Jesse Lasater, Ryan McLaughlin, Isaac Fleener, Andy
Goldman, Jeremiah Johnson, Ryan Howard, Lance Lucero, 3rd Row; Asst. Coach Marty
Moon, Josh Lewis, Dan Percell, Clayton Shonk, Tommy Percell, Jerry Steinbacher, Steve
Larson, Casey Potter, Ian Rose, Scott McAlvaney, 4th Row; Asst. Coach Butch Prior,
Jackie Marshall, Ben Nelson, David Greer, Steve Williams, Justin Donaldson, John
Hanna, Micah Priest, Jimmy Cundiff, Head Coach Jon Keirns, Manager Phoebe Percell,
Asst, Coach Brett Nickerson

First team
*John Lancett LB
*Marshall Hahn QB
*Ben Ford DB
*Jimmy Cundiff NG
*Kevin Prior RB
IML player of the year
*Mar hall Hahn
Rocky Mounain News player
of the year
*John Lancett
All-Conference
John Lancett
Marshall Hahn
Ben Ford
Jimmy Cundiff
Kevin Prior
Steve Williams
Re ·e Sanchez ustin Donaldson

58 Football

�Marshall Hahn #1
QBILB

Kevin Prior #3
RB/LB

Ben Ford#4
WRJDB

Justin Donldson # 76
OUDT

John Lancett #8
OTIRBILB

Reggie Sanchez# 9
TE/DE

Jimmy Cundiff# 52
OUNG

Steve Williams # 72
OTIDE

Zoltan Hidas #5

PK

Football 59

�CHEERING IN PRIMETIME
Real athletes? Some people don't the girls reach several goals such
recognize all the hard work that as the State Cheerleading Chamgoes into cheering. The '96, '97 pionship, where the girls took
Bayfield High School student 2nd in class 2A, and the National
body has been influenced by the Cheerleading Championship
pep and energy demonstrated by where, unfortunately, they did
eight talened young women on not place. Jill Sirios, however
several occasions, including pep was chosen to compete in North
rallies and sporting events.
Carolina for a cheerleading scholMegan Backer, Jill Sirios, arship.
Sarah Crumbaugh, Maggie
Not only have these outClendenning, Dawn Fahrion, standing young women proven
Bobbie Sower, Ashley Catron and themselves in front of their peers
Cierra Clapp have worked to the and in state competition, but
best of their ability since 1994 to they have lit up the hall with
put together dance and cheering their bright faces, and they reroutines that are much appreci- main active in positive commuated at the sometimes lifeless pep nity involvement.
rallies. Pam Catron has helped

SISTERS! Cierra, Dazo11, Sarah , Ashley, Megan, Bobbie,
and Maggie take time for a quick picture at Nationals ill
Anaheim California.

60

Cheer l eodi ng

PUCKER UP! Ashley Catron and
Megan Backer get ill the spirit for
Homecoming.

WIN! Bobbie, Dawn, Megan, Sarah, Ashley, Cierra, and Maggie
relax after their perfonnance at Nationals.

�TOP ROW: jill Sirios, Cierra Clapp, Bobbie Sower MIDDLE ROW: Sarah Cmmbaugh, Ashley Catron
BOTTOM R OW: Megan Backer, Dawn Fahrion, Maggie Clendenning

IN STEP! D11rl1lg the Homecomi11g parade, the cheerleaders
marched to the beat.

AIR TIME! Sarah Crumbaugh gooes up in a stu11t

at the Homecoming pep rally.

Cheerlead i ng

61

�The end of a dyna. ty. Coach
Butch Prior ended his final season as head ba~ketball coach with
a 13-6 record. He has been
coaching basketball for 21 years.
He coached the Wolverines from
a 1-19 record in 1972 to a pot in
the state tournament four times.
His 19X6 squad tinished third in
the state toumament. Coach Prior
accumulated a lifetime record as
Bayfield head caoch of270 wins
and 122 losses, includung winning 114 of his 130 home games
at BHS. The 13-6 record for the
"97 edition of Wolverine baskethall brought the team close to
another state berth. The season

Air Time! Ben Ford jumps for
the cha11ce to :;cure.

62 Boys Basketball

featured several stellar performances from the nine seniors on
the team. Mike Smithwick was
named IML Co- Outstanding
player for 1997. The nine seniors
have played together since the
fifth grade, including spring and
summer programs. This was also
the last year for the BHS gym.
Coach Prior coached in the gym
from the first year to the very end.
Fan saw many fine performances from the Wloverines
over the years. Next year will be
the start of a new tradition as the
Wolverines will play in a new
gym. BHS will miss the leadership of Coach Prior.

�Time! The Wolut•rines take
a break to fi1cus.

Up a11d Over. Clind Colc'
shoots aboPt' Jgnru io

SCOREBOARD
Team

us/them

Cortez
Pago a
Bloomfield
Aztec
NewcOJrtb
Sanjuan
Monticello
Shiprock
Pagosa
Centauri
Monte Vista
Ignacio
Del Norte
Pagosa
Centauri
Ignacio
Monte Vi ta
Del Norte
Del Norte

60-81
61-48
55-56
76-63
71-60
47-49
54-51
69-48
54-45
61-64
7 -70
56-46
65-64
77-68
69-64
65-42
63-66
53-86
65-70

evin Prior- 3rd Leading Scorer
Mike Smithwick- lML M.V.P.

Easy Sl10t! No defe11St' tries
to block Mike S111itl17uick.
Swooslt! Kevi11 flrior scores
with ease over fg11acio.

Stretcll! Micnh Fo ·ter strives
to make a baskt•t

Boys Basketball 63

�B

OB
y
S' A

s
K

E
T
B
A

L
L

VARSITY: Coach VanDenBerg, Jimmy Cundiff, Ben Ford, John Lancett, Jeremiah
Johnson, Chad Cole, Nick Kimball, Reggie Sanchez, Mike Sanchez, B.J. Monger,
Brand Deming, Kevin Prior, Coach Prior.

IBrand DemingJ

64 Boys Basketball

fMike SmithwicM

I B. J. Mongef'l

[FJhn Lancett I

�Kevin Prior

V?eggie Sanchez!

(liJnmy Cundiff'!

I Nlck Kimball I

JUNIOR VARSITY First row: Coach VanDenBerg, Jeremiah
Johnson, Matt Piccoli, j .R. Sutherlin, MicahFoster, Ryan Sample ,
Tony Kimball,Coach Prior Second Row: Ryan McLaughlin,
GradyDunavent, Tim Scholtz, Beau Beck, Peter Lott, Doug Fritz.

C-TEAM First row: Coach Phelps, John Hanna,Eric Chavez,
Matt Piccoli, Ryan Samples, Tony Kimball, Jeny Steinbacher,
Coach Talbot. Second Row: Ryan McLaughlin, J.D. John on
Adam Jobes, Kenny Monger, David Valencia.

Varsity Coach Butch Prior

I I Mngr. Jeb Taylor

Boys Basketball 65

�ONE LAST TIME. . • • • SCORE
BOARD
HOME GAMES
Seniors Play in One Last Season
With two wins and
seventeen loses, ready with
a new attitude Bayfield loses
four seniors. But, up and
coming class men prove
worthy for their spots.
Caoch Tina Jones tates that,
"We've got a lot of talent if
they've got the same work
ethic as the seniors, we will
do really good." Senior
Phoebe Percell also states

66 G :ls Basketbal:

her views on leaving the
team and the up and coming
classmen. "I'll miss playing
with all my friends," she
says, "but the freshmen that
we have now have a lot of
potential, and if they work
hard they'll be a really good
team." A new chool, team,
and eason may bring better luck to the lady waivermes.

Jrot! Bayfield's c-team tries to score a amsl the
f.«anczo Bobcat's

Bayfield 35 Montecello 44
BayJield 47 Del Norte 29
Bayfield 52 Ccntaurri 53
Bayfield 36 Mancos 31
Baytield 46 Ignacio 73
Bayfield 60 Bloomfield 85
Bayfield 43 Aztec 68
BayJ1eld 35 Pagosa 66

AWAY GAMES
Bayfield 24 Monte Vi ta 3
Bayfield 54 Ignacio 65
Bayfield 35 Pago a 62
Bayfield 49 Del Norte 61
Bayfield 36 Aztec 66
Bayfield 37 Bloomfield 68
Baytield 25 Centaurri 53

Down Court! Sarah Horton looks 11 p to pas .

�Slow Motim1! Kristy M1ller take., a
stroll durillg pre xamc

In? Shia1111 Homer waifs to see if her

free throw mnkes it in.

Not Happenin'! Whl':&gt;ty Tavlvr goes up tv
block a shot, while other var:,ity members ·wait
for a rebound.

I'm Open! Ruth j01zes wait · a11xiously
for Cecilia Ha1111a to pass her the ball.

Jump Ball! Lady Wolvrritu':, hapr for
fir~f posse~icm.

Move! Hilaric Moore tries tv drive
around mz opponC11f
Girls 8 sketba l 67

�TOP ROW Coach Stephanie Childers, I feather Miller, Xochitl Garcia, Cecilia Hanna, Wendy Phelp. , Shiann
Homer, Kelly Steinbacher, Jennifer Neptun, Manager Johneue Maloy, Caoch CatJ1y Dabovich ECON D R OW
Coach '!ina Jones, Manager Aileen Kohler ·chmidl., Amber Morlan, Amy Clemel., Phoebe Percell, llccky Van
Den Berg, Jess Macklin, Whisly Taylor, llilary Moore, Laure Dallison BOTTOM ROW Kristy Miller, Je ica
Walters, Sierra Allen, Sarah 1lorton, Sarah Deck, Jessica Mars, lara Curhe

68 Girls Basketball

Kristy Miller

�Phoebe Percell

Kelly Steinbacher

Jess Macklin

JLVERI

-

Girls Basketball 69

�ANOTHER TITLE FOR BHS,
Five Wrestlers Qualify for State, Hahn Wins His Second.
With loll\ of intensity, hard work,
and dedication, this year's wrestling program was a success. A
total of five wrestlers, Olan and
Aden Morrison, Cannon Ivers,
Nick Duran, and Marshall Hahn
all made the trip to McNichols
Arena in Denver, Colorado for
the state tournament. Aden won
his fir t round match while his
older brother Olan lo t in the
quarterfinals. Cannon and Nick
both won their first rounds but
each suffered lo , ses in the
quarterfinals. Cannon won two
more before losing in consolation

semifinals. However, Marshall
Hahn regained his state title that
he won his freshman year to win
it all. The Bayfield Wolverines
as a team faircd pretty well. They
ended up eighteenth overall at
state.
Considering a few season ending injuries by Scott
Mcilvaine, Tommy Percell, Tim
Miller, Ben Nelson, and Miguel
Gomez, the season was an overall succes for the Wolverines.
Head coach Rick Edwards said
this about his team, "Success is
elusive. You really have to work

WHOA! Cannon Ivers pe1jorms a move that helped defeat most of
his opponents this year.

70 Wrestling

for it. We had a lot of success
this year despite all of the tough
breaks. We also worked hard for
it. I am very proud of this year's
team."
All of the things that an
athlete must sacrifice has its rewards, and that is also true for
wrestlers. "The personal rewards
arc very gratifying in the end,"
said Sophomore wrestler Ben
Nelson. All of the extra running,
dedication in practice. and extra
weight a wrestler must cut all
pays off at the end of the season.

HEAVE! Aden Morrison lifts his
opponent off the ground at the
state tournament.

�Top row, left to right: Mngr. J&lt;Ulelle Cro sman, Mngr. Sara Edwards, Tommy Percell, Marshall I Iahn, Ben Nelson,
Dave Fontenot, David Greer, Olan Morrison, Aden Morrison, Tim Miller, Robbie Lewis, Coach Rick Hahn, Coach
Rick Edwards. Bottom row, left to right: Mngr. Daniel Edwards, Lance Lucero, Clayton Wil on, Cannon Ivers,
Aaron Howard, Miguel Gomez, Brandon Head, J.D. Go. ney, Clayton Stephen on.

Wrestling Schedule
DATE

EVENT

1211196
11./12/96
11114196
12120/96
1Z/21/96
1111197
1116197
1117191
1124191
1/25191
1J1191
218191
1.114191
1115191

Shiprock Invite
Kirdand Dual
Cowboy Invite
Warrior Classic
Warrior Classic
Rocky Mtn. Invite
Pagosa Dual
Ignacio Dual
S.and Devil Cla&amp;'iic
Sand Devn Cla~ic
CenWiri Invite
IML League Tour.
Regional Thur.
Regional Tour.
State Champ.
State Champ.
State Champ.

1J2(}{97

Z/21191
2/l2197

Marshall Hahn

I I Miguel Gomez
Wrestl i.ng 71

�VICTORY! Mar. hall Hahn
poses for pictures after ~vin­
ning state his second time
as a high school wrestle1:

FINESSE! Tim Miller di plays his wrestling talents at the Page
Invitational early in the season.

72 Wrestling

HUMPHH! Tommy Percell bear hugs
his opponent j(n· the eventual win at the
Page Invitational.

�YIKES! Miguel Gomez attempts ro pin his opponent on the mat
while the referee looks on.

OUCH! Olan Morrison buries hi.\ chin
into the opponents back at state in
Denver.

BOOYA! Nick Duran prevents his oppWOW! Marshall Hahn's unique style of wrestling often left opponent wondering "how did he do that?"

onent from getting up on all fours so
he can get the win.
Wrestl i.ng 73

�]T'S ALL ABOUT THE FASTEST TIME
I B.H.S. Track Be~ter Than Ever! I
With an all time high turn
out of 70 athletes, B.H.S track
had a very good ea, on. Succc
and determination reigned
throughout the whole sea on,
from the first meet when the athlete till couldn't sec their own
track, until regional where they
qualified
many
for
tate.Breaking school records

thi year were: Cecilia Hanna tn
the 100 meter hurdle , John
Lancett in di cu , Tyler Young
in the ll 0 meter high hurdle ,
and Eric Lyall, Kevin Prior, Ben
Ford, and Brand Deming in the
400 meter relay. Al o taking
overall team titles were the boy,
at Mancos and Ignacio, and the
League champion hip tile. The

How Far Can It Go? Tony Kimball takes
llis .first attempt at the javelin.

All Smiles! The girls 4 x 100 team ojTegan Corlies, Kristy Miller, Jill irios, and
Trislza Lewis take time out for a vic:ture.

Go! Hiede Cusick receives a
and sprints down the track.
74 Track

Over! Cecilia Hanna takes another successful attempt at the hiRhjump.

girl took econd at League. Not
only did the ahtletc of B.H .. S
compete mostly again t 5 A
school , they did it succe, fully.
"Senior leader hip has been a key
to ucce thi, year," said coach
Vernon Kimball. Although he is
losing 14 seniors, he hopes next
year will be just as succc sful.

�Run Hard' Holly Bodtro'?a runs the final
stretch of her 400 meter dash.

It's Clean.' 1ettan Corlies and .lt/1 Strws
have a good lwndoff

Lunch Break! file ll H ..~ track coaches
take a little time to ~it sl/11.

Throw Far! Jessica Mars throws her
first attempt at tlze di cuss!

All For The Team! J.R. Sutherland
mns for his relay.

Look Behind You! Jesse Lasater jig/us
to stav ahead of a Pagosa runner.

Catch Her! Ruth Jones moves in to
pass a Scorpion runner.

Almost Done! Grady Dunavent runs the
ji.nallaps of a grueling two mile.

Flight.' Tara Corlies jumps tlze hurdles,
about to catch an Ignacio runner.

Track 75

�1997 GIRLS TRACK TE AM

Top Row: Dr. Dan,Coach Callies,Sarah Beckler, Lacy Wi/liams,Mandy Magili,Kate Bartman,Jessica Macklin,Danica
Fischer.Aileen Kohlerschimdt, Cecilia Hanna,Erin Langre/L, Wendy Phelps, HollyBodiroga,Erin Black,Angi Young .Jill
irios,Heatlzer Miller. Coach Chandler.Coaclz Kimball. Middle Row:Heidi Cusick,Rutlz Jones,Becky Van Den Berg, Kristy
Miller. Heidi Luter.Ashle.v Burleigh,Jamie Sirios, Trislza Lewis, Courtney Steward, Cheri Casper.Marie Van Abbema,Hilarie
Moore.Coach Kimha/1. Bottom Row:.lesstca Pritchard,Saralz Horton,Jolznette Maloy,Cizarlene Westmorland,Tara
Corlies,Jessica Mars.Sierra Allen,Enid Lasater.Tegan Corlies, Amy Zwisler.

I

Tegan Corlies

76 Track

( Kristy Miller

I

Enid Lasater

Jessica Macklin .

Valerie Hahn

�1997 BOYS TRACK TEAM

Top Row: Dr. Dan. Coach Callies. Eddie Abernath_v.R.van Samples. Clwd Cole. Justin Donaldson.Nick Kun/Jall,J.J&lt;.
Sutherland.Jullmy Cundiff. 7)·/e r Young.llrand De1111 n ~.John La nen. Coach Chandler . Coat II Kun/Ja II Muld/eRm' A11n
Zwis/er, Clayton Stephenson.Je 1·se Cummin.1.Steve Larsen. Cia ton .\lwnk.Beau lleck.Lnk Lyall.Ben 1- ord. 1J J Mon ~er.l ony
Kimbali,Scott Wie/Je,Coach Kimball. Bottom Row:Je.mca Pntchard.Ciwd Ltulwtg,Fool#l,foo/#2 . 1-oo/#J , LJa~td
Valencia,Kenny Monger. Lance Lucero,Fool#4,Foo/#5,Fool#,Fool#7.

IJinuny Cund~ffl

BenFord

IBrand Deming!

IHobby Chapin I

s

E
N
I
0
R

s

Track 77

�w 'VE GOT T HE G OOD STUFF
... GOOD HITTING, PITCHING, AND TEAMWORK
Good Luck? Not hardly, luck had
nothing to do with it. This years
baseball team was successfu 1 because they were full of talent. The
pitching wizardry of Reggie
Sanchez, jeremiah Johnson, Jon
Baier, and Mike Smithwick,
helped them take wins over most
of the other league teams. Not to
mention the help of numerous
homeruns, triple , and all- around
good plays by the entire team.
"Strong hitting, good solid pitching, and a good attitude were our
strong points." Said Coach Keirns.
With sweeping victories over
Monte Vista and the defeat over
Moriarty N.M. in the Aztec Tournament, at the beginning of the
season, the team felt confident
they could make it to the top, until their ten game winning streak
ended in districts against Monte
Vista where they fell short of the
ability to bring in the people in
scoring position and lost 9-8.
Coach Keirns feels" This year was
a great year for us. You always feel
you might have done more, but in
spite of the last loss it was a very
good season." But next years team
has a lot of potential. "A lot of
good players will be returning
next year in only our 5th year of
playing, so we will continue to
improve." Said Coach Keirns. The
team ended their season with an
overall13-S record.

PHEW! Marshall Hah11 takes
a break after a long in11i11g.

78 Baseball

�BALL! Mike Smithwick thmks smart and doesn't swing.

TOUGH! Jon Baier throws a nasty fast ball.
GOOD JOB! The team congratulates Jeremiah

fohnsoll on one of his mmzy hoiiWI'IIIIS.

OUT! Peter Lott makes a quick tng at first .

Baseball 79

�Top Row: Coach Keirn , David Greer, Jeremiah John on, Reggie Sanchez, Mike Smithwick,
Jon Baier, Ryan Howard, Peter Lott, Coach Howard, Coach John on.
Second Row: Casey Potter, Mar hall Hahn, Ryan McLaughlin, Shane Horton, Aaron Howard,
I aac Fleener, Tim Eckerdt, Cannon Ivers.

ALL-CONFERENCE
Jon Baier
Reggie Sanchez
Jeremiah Johnson
Mike Smithwick
Marshall Hahn

Infield
Pitcher
Infield
Outfield
Catcher

M.V.P.- Jeremiah Johnson
Co-Coach o f the year-

Jon Keirns

Marshall Hahn
8@ Baseball

:I

Cannon Ivers

�J

v

Top Row: Coach Johnson, Casey Donahue, Beau Black, Alfredo Villagomez, Ben Nelson
Ryan McLaughlin, Shane Horton, Will Chaplin, Coach Keirns.
Second Row: J.D. Johnson, Tim Eckerdt, Justin Gingerich, Jillian Capalbo, Aaron Howard,
Jessica Walters, Danny Renteria, Coach Howard.

T
E
A
M

SCOREBOARD
Team

Reggie Sanchez

Mike Smithwick

Dolores
Durango
Moriarty
Sterling
Aztec
Dolores
Pagosa
Pagosa
Centauri
Centauri
Monte Vista
Monte Vista
Durango
Ignacio
Ignacio
Del orte
Del Norte
Monte Vista

Us / Them

16-2
3-16
5-4
3-11

3-14
16-9
5-15
10-8
20-3
14-0
13-5
10-1
14-5
15-5
17-3
15-0
26-2
8-9

Basebal Z 81

�Faces

C'mon Baby, Let The Good Times Roll
Hoo Boy, have

I
'

I SCHOOL

"This time, like all
times, is a very good
one, if we but know
what to do with it."
-Ralph Waldo
Emmerson
"Time is a flowing
river. Happy those
who allow themselves
to be carried,
unresisting, with the
current."
-Chris top her
Morley

there been some
good times! Not
to mention lots of
other times too.
Whether one is a
freshman or a
junior, the times
they experience
in high school
will not be
forgotten.

82

Faces

Type, Type, Type. Some freshman are more than happy to
take a break. Weeeee. Some sophomore football players ride

on a homecomiJZg float.

�Grin and Bear it! fori Alllfrews and Kayma
McDollald smile thro11gh another year.
Sweaty Fun! Some jllllior buys pick a fine t1me
to take a break in the gym

Mmm ... Christie Bo11ds a11d Leah
Phillips enjoy lu11ch.
Fire Drill ' Sarah Edwards a11d Ruth
]o11es wish there really was a fire.

Faces

83

�F~CLA MEMBERS=~: SUCCEED BY

GAINING Goon
LIFE SKILLS
Want to have fun? Want to
make a difference? Anybody
can join FCCLA. It's a great experience. "I think that someone
shy should join. I would want
to be able to watch them open
up and bloom in front of me."
says Mrs. Conner.
The expectations of Family,
Career and Community Leaders of America are to concentrate on skills that will help
with families and careers.

Many people have joined
FCCLA. Ashley Burleigh says
"I joined because it is a great
opportunity to meet new
people and have fun." It is a
excellent opportunity to learn
about families. A lot of people
compete at districts and many
go to state. To get to go to state
you have to talk to judges, with
your group, and it is a really
good experience. And it is a
blast.

FCCLA MEMBERS Top: Sarah Horton, Al isha Scholz, Clayton Shonk,
Angelo Baca, Favyn Frelds, Holly Lucero, Heather Huthmacher, Mary
Kilbank 2nd row: Sarah Kennedy, Nancy Becker, Liz Newby, Ashley
Burlergh~ Be_
n Nelson, John Hanna, Steve Larsen, Ryan McLaughlin,
Brekka Rrtchre 3rd row: Mrs. Conner, Jodie Natzke,Kacy Conner, Mandy
Martrn, G1?ny Manzer, Kayma McDonald, Jessica Mars, Cecilia Hanna,
Mrs. Blatmck Bottom: Monica Pyle, Jessica Pritchard, Amy Zwisler,
Angr Young, Tara Corlies, Xochrtl Garcia, Wrsty Taylor, Jessica
Walters, Amber Morlan

R4

FCCLA

OFFICERS Top row: Ben Nelson Bottom
row: Amy Zwisler, Kacy Conner, Mandy
Martin, Jessica Mars, Tara Corlies,
Heather Huthmacher

�HOT!! Kacy Conner, Steve Larsen, Xochitl Garcia, Ben
Nelson, and Jessica Pritchard strut their stuff at the
prom fashion show.
SMILE! Cecilia Hanna, Kayma McDonald, Xochitl Garcia,
Steve Larsen, and Clayton Shonk smile for the camera.

STATE QUALIFIERS Top row: Jessica
Pritchard, Ginny Manzer, Kacy Conner,
Mandy Martin, Amy Zwisler, Sarah
Edwards. Bottom row: Heather
Huthmacher, Holly Lucero, Mary
Kilbank, Alisha Scholz, Sarah Horton,
Brekka Ritchie.

GRANT WRITERS Alisha Scholz, Jessica
Pritchard, Ginny Manzer, Amy Zwisler,
Sarah Edwards

FCCLA

85

�Do you have what it takes to be successful? Those ilz FBLA do. They are polishilzg up 011 their skills for their futures.
Someo11e might wolllfer what exactly is
FBLA. Well as the spo11sor, Mrs. Haga
said, "FBLA is a11 orga11i::.atio11 for high
school students who wa11t to gain leadership skills by traveli11g to collfermces alld
beillg part of a11 actwe orga1Zi::.atio11
that cah~rs to studmts. ". FBLA stmzds
for Future Busilless Leaders of America.
"1 hope that it teaches sh1dmts to be more
responsible, respectful, a11d to be aware
of the COI1Wlllllity needs a11tf haw they ca11
serve it. I also wa11t it to teach them to

TIME OUT! Spo11sors Mrs. Haga and
Mrs . Hott take time for a quick pose.
LOCKED UP! Medevil torture makes a
came back at BHS as Heather Haga a11d
Kristy Miller are slapped i11to the stocks
at Nationals .

86 FBLA

trive to be the best they ca11 be," added
Mrs. Haga. It is a really good experimce
for high schoolers to be involved ill a
club like this to improve thier busi11ess
skills. This year 55 students became the
11ew members of FBLA,showing that they
are wrious as to what they can do to get
ready for their futures . 43 of them went
to districts in Febmary at Adam' State
College. Out of that 43, 11 of them qualifie
for the state competitio11 held in Vail i11
march. Some of youstill might ask
yourselfs if you have what it takes. If you
U'allt to find the a11swer to that question,
then joi11 FBLA.

SMlLE! Ruth Jo11es displays a cheesy
grill for the camera.

�··:·:

FUTUJ&lt;E BUSINESS LEADEI&lt;S
Sarah fos1l'lCk, Xod11tl Carew, He1d1 C
uszck, PortUI Blackstad, Ken Carlson, Chen
Casper, Kznsee Morlan, Wendy Phelps,
Cecilia Hanna, Andy Schaaf, Ruth Jones,
Dou~ Carron, Beau Black, fames
Rzchardson, Jon Carlson, fenny Brittan,
Kristy Miller, fody Rustmann, Knyma
McDonald, Becky VanDanBerg, Ashley
Burleigh, Cas andrn Turner, Heidi Luter,
famte Smos, Mesan Backer, Bt,blne Sml'er,
Maggze Clendenning, Maleah Farnam,
Dawn Fahrion, Renee Parish, Brandon
Head, Am/ler Morlan, fusfzn Czngrich,
Heather Hasa, Aaron Howard,Azleen
Kohlerschmzdt, Ben Nelson, TylerYoung

FBLA DISTRICT PLACER : Heuiz Custck,
Portia Blackstad, Knsty Mzller, fody
Rust mann, Becky Van Dan Berg, Jon Carlson,
Heather Haga, Hwz Luter, Cassandra Turner,
Aaron Howard, famze Szrios, Wendy Phelps,
Megan Backer, Beau Black, Maggie
Clendening, Mnleah Farnam, Andy Schaaf,
Dawn Fahrwn, Amber Morlan , justin
Gzngnch, Sarah Joswick, Ben elson, Tyler
Young
FBLA O FFICER S : Sarah Joswick,
Heather Haga, Megall Backer, fody
Rustma1111, Bm Nelso11
FBL A 87

�Have you ever wanted to he a
pirate, a hillbilly or a, tar-crossed
astronomer? Forty-four, tudenL'\
of Bayfield High School became
all of these characters and more.
Many people came to escape reality for a few hours and to enjoy the scenes hefore them.
From "Treasure Island" to "You
Were Born on a Rotten Day" to
"Lil' Abner" the actors and actresses put on a great show for
everyone. BHS theater production showed the community just
what kind of hard work is involved in pulling on a high quality performance. Everyone must
put in a lot or time and effort
from Sherry Kimball, the director, to the actors themselves.
There i scenery, costuming,
make-up, memorization, lighting, pecial effecL~. mu ic, timing, chorography, and characteriJ.ation all needed to make a production come to life.
~·

L-

Top Row: Kate Bartmann, Paloma Morales, Fourth Row: Ryan McLaughlin, Shane
Horton, John Hanna, Ben Nelson. Beau Beck. David Valencia, Leah Phillips, Sara Beckler,
Mand.v Magill. Sherry Kimball, Third Row: Tony Kimball. Jesse Wray, Nick Andrews.
Justin Donaldson, Nick Kimball, Kenny Monger, Laurie Kinneson, Rian Roderick, Jess
Macklin, Jori Andrews, Seco11d Row: Angela Natzke, Sarah Horton, Lacy Williams,
Bethany Davenport, Rachae/ Maag, Brook Rassett. Mand_v Martin, Amber Porter, Jessica Pritchard, Erin Humiston, Jamie Sirios, Holly Chapin, Bottom Row: Erin Black,
Megan Raker. Sarah Cmm/Jaugh. John Lancett, Hobby Chapin, Tyler Young, Maleah
Farnam, Plzeobe Percell. Sierra Allen, Summer Rassell. JoAnna CartwriJ!Izl

..,

..
.

•

L

·-

~~

BACK OFF! Sarah Crumbaugh,
Rtta11 Donohue, and Hobby Chapin,
b~ck away from Long John Silver.

88 ACTIVITIES

John LAncett, as Long John Silver, tries to itttimidate the cast of
Trea. ure Island.

AAARG!!!
11

II

�AI

As one of the biggest
classes, the Art program
needs expanding. There
are 25 in Photography club
and about 44 in JUSt two
Art classes. This year we
were lucky to have
Mehssa Baxter as a student
teacher.
When asked
what she thought of Ms.
Baxter,
Charlene
Westmoreland satd, " She
is mce, and really fun to
work with."

••

Top Row: Jennifer Neptune. Morgan Broux!uon. Nick Duran. Aaron Chamblee, Tommy Percell, Second Row: Ntkki
Evans. Jodi Sanchez. Ru/Jin Crossman, Patti M1ller. Kuuee Morlan. Third Row: Roland Pnanw. Paloma Morales. Kate
Bartmann, Courtney Steward. Jolm Larsen, Doug fritz. Bottom Row: Aaron Hamilton. Harold 5inuth. Rvwz McLaughlm

S/1001: ara Beck allempts o basket
during Activit.v Period.
DUH. Ted Anderson teams to vacuum
durint: study hall.
INTRN11VEU~ Ryan McLaughlin and
Roland }Jrwnro are in awe in what Kate
Bartmonn has to sav.

Every \N ednesday the bell
schedule is a little crazy.
Activity Period this year
has left many people
confused.
Each student
must attend an Activity.
It can range from F.B.L.A.
and Study Hall A.K.A.
Social Hour, to a Thespian
meeting. Activity period
may seemed rushed, but
since first hour ends ten
minutes early, and second
hour gets out ten minutes
late there is plenty of hme
for clowmng around.

ACflVITIES 89

�1996-97
Student Council: Top Row: Nick Kimball, Tyler Young, Marshall Hahn,
Student Council Officers
Tony Kimhall. Charlene Westmoreland, Sara Beck, Aileen Kolerschmit,
Co -President:Marshall Hahn
Sponsor M.s. Mericle
Middle Row: Mandy Martin, Kacy Conner, Megan Backer, Kenny
Monger, Ruth Jone~. Hiedi Luter, Jessica Prichard, Amy Zwisler, Angi
Co -President:Mandy Martin
Young
Vice President: Enid Lasater
Bouom Row: Enid Lasater, Angela Natzke, Maleah Farnam, Hiedi
Cu~ick , Cia Stevenson, Ros Zwisler, Carl Rhodes, Jarod Messamore
Secretary: Angela Natzke

Treasurer: Tyler Young
Parlimentarian: Nick Kimball

Student Council Officers:
Top Row: Nick Kimhall ,Marshall Hahn, Mandy Martin, Tyler Young
Bottom Row: Angela Natzke,Enid La ·ater

90 Student Council

Stuff your face! Kevin
McWilliams and Aden
Morrison participate in game ·
activites sponsored by Stu. Co

�STAND Members:
Davd Fontenot, Adam Ferns,
Sponsor Mr . Hicks
Middle Row: Bethany
Tussing, Marie Van Abhema
Bottom Row: Jenelle
Cro sman, Melanie Cramer,
Kellie Baker, Jody Smith
National Honor Society:
Top Row: Maleah Farnam,
Nick Kimball, Jody Rustmann
Middle Row: Joel Priest,
Phoebe Percell, Je sica
Macklin
Bottom Row: Marshall Hahn,
Mandy Martin, Sarah Joswick
Spon, or Mrs. Cashio
Ea~lc Win~s:

Top Row: Spon or Mr . Guy,
Valerie Hahn, Craig Hoback,
Nicole Brown
Bottom Row: Ju tin
Gingerich, Lloyd Lucero,
Spon or Mr. Guy, There ·a
Sucato, Jill Sirio

Achvi.hes 91

�GOOD TUNES
M-l-C -K-E-y M-0- -, -

II

BHS Choir got to mis~
week of school to go
compete at a national
competion. In Florida, they
placed fir t. Both BHS Ban
and Choir placed fir. t at the
Fine Art competion All in
all, it wa a very , uces:ful
year for the Mu ic
Department at BHS.

Choir:
Top Row: Portia Blakstad, Andy Goldman, Joel
Priest, Erin Humi~ton, Sarah Crumbaugh, Jill
Sirios. lluhh) Chapin, Jt&gt;dy Smith
Second Row : Jolene Wilson, Kelly Baker,
Libby Smith, Hencsscy Harrmann, Ben Nel on,
Megan Backer, Travi~ Valencia, John Hanna,
David Valencia, Ruth Jones, Holly Chapin
Third Row: Jamie Sirius, Sarah Beck, Trisha
Lewis, Rian Roderick, Joletta Salazar, Je sica
Morelli, Brooke Bassett, Wendy Phelp , Liz
Newby, 13 'Lhany Davenport, Erin Black,
Ca, andra Turner
Bottom row: T1fl"any Potter, Mandy Magill,
Kri tina J~&gt;I1Jlson, Chri~tie Bonds, Amber
Porter, Hiedi Luter, Beky Van Den Berg,
A hie Burlci!!h, Juri Andrews, Sierra Allen.

Band:
Top Row: Erin Humi~tun, Tony Kimball, Steven
Williams. Danny Percell, Chad Ludwig
Second Row: Sandy Sanderford, Amber Porter, Aileen
Kohlcrscmidt, Jenny Britian , Tyler Young, Nathan
Lopez
Third Row: Jesse Cummings, Brooke Bas ·ett, Summer
Ba ett, Sherry Casper, Chri tic Bond , Johnette Maloy
Bottom Row: Bethany Tu ing, Laura Dalli on,
Kathleen Andrews. Jolelta Sala;.ar, Jori Andrew , Sierra
Allen
92 Mu. ic

l3HS Band tuot~ their hums to rev up the crowd
~t a pecial a~~emhly.

�Mu:ic 93

�ACTIVITY PERIOD
New Activitie at BHS j

Sara! Crumaugh,
Hobic Chapin, and
John Lancett are
The Photot club is workin!!.... hard
trying to understand the camera.

Mr. Brush toltl a runny joke, and thought ot was funny but no one
got the .joke that Mr. Brush told. (CRATIVE WRITIING)
~

!activity period 94

I

Justin Mcs ·ier. Mogan Broughton are playing real good atentiun
to Mr. Edward. (PHOTO CLUB)

�Kn-.tina Johnson, Tifany Potter arc workiing hard in study hall
in here home work.

Ju t111 DonaldsPn. There. a Zink arc real intra. ted in Mr. Leland
nut door cdacal

b. Milln~:r is \ ~ry intrcsted in the camara in ted nf the clru :.

I The Knowcltlgc Bowl cla,s look like they are real nlre ted in thi

tKNOWELDGE BOWL)

cia·: he , itlc Jeh Taylor.

195 activity periou l

�"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder." With many students involved and lots of good talent the
Art program is one of the fastest
growing at Baytield Schools. The
program went from one K-12
teacher to one teacher at U1c Middle
and Elementary Schools to one Art
teacher, a Crafts teacher, and a
Woodshop teacher. Classes of-

fered range from Crafts, Housing
and Interior Design, Graphic Media, Art l &amp;2, Art 3&amp;4, Woods hop
and Drafting. For the fall of I &lt;1&lt;17,
new classes will he added on, such
as: Sculpture, Painting and Photography. Not only arc there outstanding... student that add to the
program hut there is also outstanding teachers.
Food fun!!! the finis clnss lllflkcs trendy

food des(~'11S
Found It!! Jodi Sanche: i:&gt; h Jidns jiw ilh
right tntoo.

Mela11ie Cramer and jenelle Cmss111an Slllilefur the camera as EmilyFundingsland tries to hide.
Rubin Crossman, Amvn Hamilton, and Hnrold Smith all u'Ork hard fur Mr. Edwards.

96 Activities

�Yes!! Morgan Broughtcnz is 111ore than happy to be in class.
Just Working!! Jen11i[er Hunter, Fm•y11 Fields and Li:: Newby work hard i11 Hmtsin~
a11d llllerior Design.

Smile!! Mrs. Conner gives the cmnem a
quick smile.
Caugltt Ya!! Sarah Ethmrds is m11~ht
diligmtly at 1mrk
PLAY TIME!! Kewn Pnor tnes to h1de f rom the camera as Brand /)emmg and Iyler
Young play with thierfood.

A&lt;. ti\·itie:. 97

�Chuck Sanchez

SCHOLAR I ATHLETE AWARD
MARSHALL HAHN
Four Year Lei Ierma 11 I· oohall
3 x All Confcrcm:c
All State (2B
All State Gcame 97
Four Year Letterman Basehall
3 x All Conference Catcher
MVP 1995
Four Year Letterman Wrestling
4 x Regional Champion
4 x State Qualifier
4 x State Placer
2 x All Conference
2 x S~tte Champion
Out-.tanding \Vrestler State Tournament 97
MVP 95 &amp; IJ7
2x

IISCA All American

I

1996 3A State.. Champions

FOOTBALL
MAR .. IIALL IIAIIN
JOI IN LANCET!'
KEVIN PRIOR
BEN 1:0RD
JIMMY C'UNDIFF
RECiGIE SANCII EZ
JU TIN DONALDSON
STEVE WILLIA 1S

VOLLEYBALL
ALL CO FERENCE
JESSICA MACKLIN
KRISTY MILLER
THERESA ZINK

CO-MVP
J

KRISTY MILLER
I AMA KLIN

CROSS COUNTRY

ALL STATE
BEN lORD
MARSHALL IIAIIN
JOliN LANCETJ'
KEY! PRIOR
JIMMY CU Dill ·

STATE QUALIFIERS
ENID LASATER
MIKE MITHWI('K
JR UTHERLIN

MVP

GIRLS MVP
ENID LASATER
BOYS CO-MVP

KEVIN PRIOR

BJ MONGER
JR SUTHERLIN

�GIRLS BASKETBALL

WRESTLING

ALL CONFERENCE
JESSICA MACKLIN
KRISTY MILLER

ALL CONFERENCE
OLAN MORRISON

MVP
WE DY PT IELPS

BOYS BASKETBALL

REGIONAL CHAMPION
MARSHALL HAHN
STATE OUALIFIERS
CANNON IVERS
NICK DURAN
MARSHALL HAHN
OLAN MORRISON
ADEN MORRISON

ALL CONFERENCE
KEVIN PRIOR
MIKE SMITliWICK

STATE CHAMPION
MARSHALL HAHN

ALL STATE
MIKE SMITHWICK

MVP
MARSHALL HAH

MVP
KEVIN PRIOR

TRACK
STATE QUALIFIERS

BASEBALL
ALLCONFERENCE
JEREMIAH JOHNSON
REGGIE SANCHEZ
JON BAIER
MARSHALL HAHN
MIKE SMITHWICK

JESSICA MCKJ I
MARIE VA ABR EMA
RUlli JONES
HEm! CUSICK
CECELIA HANNA
VALERIE HAHN

ARAI I BECKLER
TRICIA LEWIS
ENID LASA1ER
KEVIN PRJOR
ERIC LYALL
BRAND DEMING

IML PLAYER OF THE YEAR
JEREMIAH JOHNSON
MVP
JEREMIAH JOH SO

NICI lOLA KIMBAL
TYLER YOUNG
BJ MONGER
JR UTHERLI
JE~ ~ E LA A1ER
ANDY GOLDMAN

MVP
CECELIA IIA

BEN FORD
NJE~ SICA M CKU

�Unavoidable 1 !"he teachers at HilS were everywhere you turned ennchmg our lm:~
w1th knowledge. Teachers arc the educators. ~umulators, fnend~. cncm1e~. problem solvers. and
111 ·ome C&lt;hes fmntly of all olour ltvcs. Some how the teachers and staff seamed to come Ill work
everyday wllh a poslltvc
alllludc allll a
fnendly sm1le.
edlltons to our facTh1s year new
vtou ·. Just take a
ully have been preuy obHas
Ewing
lik~d
Srunantlla Camack
look 111 the office. Mrs.
JOmedour chooltofillthe
being principal? . 1tVecy posttton of secreway ready to help
~~;;~~~~~n~~~~~·~~~~ :~;
a l(Jt
expenences as ·ccretary ·he S&lt;lld "marvelpeople, j'aacu/ty~ Sfaft. ous! " The best

Mr.

1

mualt

of very nice

thmg- "the ktds."
teachers, a.ndja1nilies~. =.==&lt;
Mr. l:wtng ~~
the new pnnc1pal
th1 · year. Mr. Ew111g was
'
a ked what h1s
overall unpressmn was of
the students. "The
maJonty of the students
are trong acadcmtcally and have a health} level of cunostty. motivation. and ohd family value ."
"I got htrcd. I was workmg part tunc at the JUnior lugh 111 IgnaciO. In New York I was
workmg as a counsler. so when the JOb opened there 11 was what I was lookmg for, " Say Mrs.
Avet-. our new counsler.
Not only have the new teachers done well. but the rest of the BI IS faculty alway
worked hard. to make our hvcs better.

Jim Ewing
Samantha Camack
Shelly Avcis
Betty Magill

Barbara Jaques
Peggy Beckler
Carol Blatnick
Gerald Brush

Ginger Conner
Theresa Cashio
David Gleason
Rick Edward

100 Faculty

e/lo! M1: Edwards displaying h
photogenic side with a smile.

�Denise Haga
Susan Hicks
Beverly Hott
Tara Henderson

Tina Jones
Jon Keirn~
Sherry Kim ball
Vernon Kimball

We. Leland
Robert Mann
Diane Milner
Sandy Mericle

Ed Marty
Marty Moon
Joe Pyle
Butch Prior

Su an Bailey
Melli. sa Baxter
Tara Howard
Carolyn Rains

Faculty 101

�Business As Us~tal
The Workers Of BHS

Do I dare? Mr. Ewing stares out questioningly.

102 Staff

BOARD MEMBER ; from left Bill Green, Kay Phelps, Becky
Ken Beck, and Barb Hoback (not shown).

�Tommy Brown
Supenntendent

Debbie Walter
Executive Secretary

Tom Horton
Activitte Dtrector

Nancy Dunlap
Program Cordinator

Benny Coffey
Bu ine. Manager

Marsha ilva
Bookkeeper

Mike Roggero
Admini tratJve A si tant

Tim Walter
Maintenance

Gary Maestas
Cu Lodtan

Ralph Bowers
Maintenance

Sandra Tucson
B H Lunchroom/Ma.tl

Bert Roberts
Grounds Mamtenan c

TRANSPORTATIO
From left to right
B clcy Cannon

Bonnie Jone
LouDa
Pam Talley
Gene Chapin
Ro e heridan
Barbara heridan
Not hown:
Robin Duffy-Wir
Annie Jone
Ralph Tierney
ta1ll03

�(Maggie Clendenning I ( Marshall Hahn

Jody Rustmann

104 Awards

Nick Kimball

Jesse Wray

�'•

SALUTATORIAN

Jessica Macklin

I l Steve Willian1s

HONO.R
n · l P·J1. 0 M.·.A S'
MEGAN BACKER
HOBBY CHAPIN · ,
MALEAH FARNAM
NICHOLAS KIMBALL
JOEL PRIEST
STEVE WILLIAMS

Awards 105

�A T1ME FOR US,.
Junior, Senior Prom 1997
With a Pari · setting, the Junior, Senior prom of 1997 was defi
nitely a night to remember. Senior made their la t trip to prom while
, orne juniors made their fir t. After getting dre sed up and having a nice
dinner, the B.H.S. studenL~ made their way to the Iron Horse for the
actual dance. Couples danced and friends took pictures together all
enjoying it to the fulle, t.. The girL looked beautiful, and the guys
handsome to attend this one night where hard feeling are put aside and
everyone ju t has fun.

Get Down.' The Dance floor is full as
everybody has fim!

Studniowka! t:xchange students and B.H.S students alike enjoy prom.

Did You Hear? Jill irios gossips witlz
her friends as they all dance.

106 Prom

�Prom Queen: Jessica Macklin

One Last1ime' The senior girls pose one Last time together at tlzeir last prom
before graduating and going their seperate ways.

Prom King: Marshall Hahn

8 isters! The cheerleaders have one last picture together before half the squad
graduates.

Cwies! Kayma McDonald and Jon Bmer
look cuter tiTan ever tor:etller at prom.

�"Our destiny exercises Not only have they accomits infulence over us even when, plished great things while in
as yet, we have not learned its high school, but they have
nature: it is our future that lays within them the drive and integdown the law of our today." rity to become leaders and reThis senior class of 1997 has the formers and all around outpower and desire to succeed, standing citizens." So much pobut they don't just succeed. tential lies within this class, not
They excell above and beyond even the sky's the limit. And to
what is asked of them. Senior close we have a few word from
English teacher Theresa Cashio Senior Jeb Taylor. "It's not
has this to say about the class of whether anything is half-full or
1997, "The class of '97. If I could half-empty, it's whether or not
choose one word to describe you have a glass to fill.
them it would be winners.

108 Graduati.on

�N

E

N

Graduation 109

�CLASS 0:3 '97'
ANDREWS NICHOlAS 88
BACKU? MU1A 3, 60, 61. 92. 8 7
88,90
HARTMANN KATr,· 51. 76. 88. 89
CHAPIN HOBBY I. 5, 18, 20, 77,
88, 92, 9-1,
CLAPP CIERRA 3, 60. 61. 118
cu.; Dl I G MAGGI/~ 3, -16,
60. 61. 8 7. /0-1
CONNJ.;R KACY I. 1-1. 19. 50, 51,
8-1, 85. 90. 116
CORLILS 1/~GAN 5. 21, --1. -5.
76. 116
CROSSMAN RUBIN 5, 39, 89, 116
CUMMINS.ff-_'..")SE 77. 92, 11 7
CUNDIFF.JIMMY 1-1, 58, 59, 6-1,
65. 77
DIMING BRAND 5. 39, 6-1, --.
Il-l
DONAUJSON.J(!STIN 23, 58, 59,
77, 88, 95
FAHR/0 I AWN 3, 19, 60, 61, 8 7
I·ARNAM MALEAH 8 7. 88. 90. 91.
105
FOR/J BEN 15, 18, -16, -17. 58, 59,
62, 6-1, 77
GOMr-Z M!Gl/D, 71, 7 3,
GOSNf:Y MANDY -1-15
HAGA HEATHER -1, 19, 50, 51,86,
87
HAHN MARSHALL 6, 18, 19, -16,
-17, 58, 59, 71, 2, 73, 78, 80. 90,
9/, 107
HAHN VAI.f;JUE
91
HAMil_ TON AAR
-1, 23, 89, 96
HIDAS ZOLTAN -1 .J9,
HOBACK CRAIG 91, 119

/1'/.RS CANNON 5. -o. - I. 80
./0,\'W/CA. SARAH -1. 15. 50. 51.
8 .... 9/, 115
KJ..NNI·J&gt;} J&gt;AN/1~1 I f.l
KIMBAU NICHOlAS -16, 5./, 55.
6-1, 65. r. 8R. 90, 91. I 0-1
K(!&lt;JU,_ MA II 96. 115
/.ANC/·." /'1 JOHN 18. -16. -17. 5R.
59. 6-1, 77, 88, 9-1. 118, 19 quote
I.ASA ID? /~NIIJ 3. 6. 15. 18. 19.
52. 5-I, 76, 90
1/Nf&lt;/-_SrY lARA -1-15
U /CJ,_R() /.LOYD 91. II .,
LUDWIG JOSH -1-15
MACKIJN.II~·ss -1. 6, 15, 19, 50,
51. 68, 69, 76. R8, 91. 105. 10 ...
MARTIN AMANDA -1. -19, 50.
5/,R-1. 85. RR. 90. 91, 115. 2 quote
MILLr,R KIUS I Y -16, 50, 51, 6 7,
68, 7-1. 76, 86, 8 7, 1/8
MONGER B.! 5. 15, -16. 52. 53. 5-I.
55, 6-1. ......
MORAJ.r:S PALOMA 88, 89. 119
MORRISON O!.AN 7 1. 7 3
NA IZKE ANGFJ.A 5.31. 88. 90.
II
PF.RCFJJ PHOEBE -1, 30. 68, 69,
88. 91
PR/E\' F./01~1. 5-I. 55, 91, 92
PRIOR KJ,_·V/N 15, 18, 19, -16, -17.
58, 59, 63, 6-1, 65, 77

RUSTMANN JODY 8 7, 91, 10-1
SANCHEZ RJ.;GGI/.; 1-1, 58. 59, 6-1,
65, 80, 81
SCHOCKAERT MICHAf;J, 23
SMITH HAROLD 5, 89, 96
SMITHWICK MIKE 5, 21. 52, 53,
5-1. 55, 63, 6-1. 79. 80. 81
ST/,_iNBACHf..R KEU, Y 68, 69,
117

lA Y1 OR .11·: 8 3, 5. 31. f&gt;5, 115.
I 08 quote. J&lt;) quote
IHOMPSON KIMHIR 5
~ JlRAIAJAI BOKI~N} -1
~ 'IU.A ( IOMI~Z A I I·RUJ() -1. 81
Will JAMS Sll-.1"I~N 5~. 59 92.
105. Il-l
Wli.SON C1.A YION ... I
WRA} .JL\'SI~ 88, I 0-1
YOUNG FYU~R 30. ... 7. R-. 8R. 90.
92. 11-1
Zl K I HUU~.\/1 5. 15. -18, 50. 51,
95. 119

CLASS 0:3 '98'
ANDREWS .lORI 25, 83, 88, 92
ANDiu.;ws KYE 2 7, 29 quote
BACA ANGf.'JD 25, 2R, 58, 8-1
BAJf;R .JON 25, -16, 79, 80, 107
BASSr,·n BROOK 25. 88, 92
BFA ( I BECK 25. -17, 58, 65, 77, 88
CATRON ASHu.;y 25, 60, 61
CHAMBLEI._· AARON 25, 28, 89
COLE CHAD 2-1, 25, 63. 6-1, 77
CRUMBAUGH SARAH 25, 60, 61.
88, 92, 9-1,
CUSICK Hf..'IDI 25. 50, 7-1. 76. 8 7.
90
DA Vf,NPORT BETHANY 25, 88,
92,
DID/1'-'R ARYA 25
DONOHUr,· RYAN 25. 88
DUDLEY DAN!f,L 25
DUNA Jill NT GRADY 25, 29, 5-I,
65, 75
DURAN NICK 25, 73, 89
EVf.l~S JENNY 25
FOS71'-' R MICAH 25, 63, 65
FRITZ DOUG 25, 65. 89

�GINGEJUCH .JE~'.~1CA 25, -19, 50,
29 quore
GREf.'RDAnJJ20, 25, 5/?, "'1, 88
HEIRTZLf.'R .JA!'vffl,_· 25, 83
HOFI·MAN WIU, 25
HOWAJUJ RYAN 26. 58, 80, 83
HUTHMACKI·..R H£4 7HI.."R26. 8-1,
85
JOHNSON Jf.RFMIAH 26, 58. 6-1,
65, 79
KJLGORJ.;; PAT 22, 26, 19 quote
LARSF.N.JOHN 26, 77, 89
u;WIS ROBBI/,_· 26, 71
Lf.WIS TRISHA 26, 7-1, 76, 92
LORENZINI SAM 26
LOJ T PETER 1-1, 21, 26, 58, 65,
79, 80
I.YALL f.RIK 26, -MAAG RACHAEI, 26, 88
MA('f;f.ROY SF:AN 26
MA UI.DIN 17M 26, 38
MCCARGAR TONY 26
MCDONALD KA YMA 26, 83, 8-1,
85, 87, 107
MCWIUJAMS KEVIN 2-1, 26, 90
MI. :~·SAMORE
.
.Jf._ROD 26, 90
ME\'Sfl. .R .JUS77N 9-1
MOORE HILARJE 3, 26, 6 7 , 68, 76
MORELLi Jl;,~'SICA ~6. 29, 92
MORJ..AN AMBF..'R 26, -19, 50, 68,
8-1, 87
MORRISON ADEN 26, 70, 71, 90
NATZKE JODIE 23, 26, 8-1,
19quote
NEPTUNE JENNIF"'E'R 3, 26, 68,
89
NEWBY MARY 3, 26, 92
PHELPS WENDY 26, -18, -19, 50,
68, 76, 87, 92
POTTER CASEY 2-1, 27, 28, 58, 80
PRIOR KIZZI 27
RHODES CAR/. 27, 90
RO!Jf.RICK RIAN 20. 23, 27, 53,
8, 92

SAlAZAR JOUJ7A2 7 . 92
SANC'Hf.Z.JOIJ! 22. 27, 28, 96, 89
SCHO!.Z AUSHA 27, 29, 51, 8-1,
155
SHA/U? SAMANIHA 27
SHW./Z 7/M r. 65
SIR/OS J/1 1 27, 60, 61. 7-1, 7 5, 92,
7 6, 91
SISCO!'... .INU-l'vfY 27
SOWJ..1?. BOBBIJ. . 27, 60, 61, 8 7
S77;,PHENSON (1.AYJON 27, 5-1,
71, 77, 90
STf:WARJ) COURINJ.·y
. 27. 76.159
S7/;'WARTJOt. .· 27
SJ'(JNt. . TRA ~ 1S 2 7
SUCA 70 lH!'..l?f.SA 27, 91
SU7HERIJN JR 27, 52, 53, 5-1, 65,
75, 7", 83
TATUM CHARUE 27
/AYLOR WH!SlY 27. -17, 50, 66,
8-1
77/J/UCK KRISTIN 27
TRABING AARON r
~'ALJ. .NCIA 7R.Ar?S 27,92
WALCOTTJOSHUA 22, 27
WAI.71'..R .JJ. .SSICA 27. -19, 50. 68,
8/

WEBB fMILY r. 29, 8-1
wtrJJt.;; scorr 21. 28, n
ZWISI.!'..'R ROSS 2 7, 90

ClASS O:J '99'
ADAMS DEN/Sf; 3-1
ALU'-N 1ERRA 3-1, 68, 76, 88, 92
ANDERSON Tf.D 33, 3-1, 89
ANDREWS CH/US 3-1
BAKAR JUSTIN 3-1
BALES ROBE"RT 3-1
BLACK ERIN 3-1, 52, 5-I, 76, 88,
92
BROWN NICOLE 3-1, 91
BURLEIGH ASHLEY 33, 3-1, 50,
76, -1, 87, 92
CHAVEZ £RIC 3-1, 65
CLOUDT ('ALf."'B 3-1
CRAMER MElANIE 32, 3-1, 91, 96
CROSSMAN JENEU.f; 3-1, 71. 91,

96

/JAUJSON LAURA 3-1, 615, 92
IJA 1'/S AMANDA 3-1
JJOl!GI.AS MNU. 'JJI!H
.
3-1
/Jl IRAN CHAJU.J. . s 3-1
U'KJ•,'RIJ! liM 22, 3-1. 80, 81
t... IJWA/UJS .\'ARAH 31, 3-1, 71, 153.
85, 96
I·:l 'ANS NIKKI 33, 3-1, 159
1-/jUUS A/JAM 35, 91
FID.DS I·A 1TN 35, 8-1
FON!l. .NOIIJAl'IIJ "'/, 91
I·RJ._EMAN BRYCJ. . 35
NINIJ/NGSI.ANIJ IMILY 35, 9-1
GOlDMAN ANDRJ. . W 35, 58, 92
&lt;i!U!.LOS MARSHA II 35
HANNA JOHN 35, 58. 6-1, 8-1, 158
HOMI. . R SHIANN 35, 51, 6", 68
HOOS CLIF 35
HOR ION SHAN1 . . 35, 58, 80, 151, 88
HUNTER .JF.NNIF'f.1? 35
/BD?G JACOB 35
JANUS BRF.N7 35
JONf.:~· RU7H 35, 50, 67, "'5, "6,
83, 86, 87, 90
KII.BANK MARY 35, 8-1, 155
LARSEN STF.:J 'E 35, 58, r, 8-1, 85
LASA fER JESSI:· 33, 35, 58, "5
Lf,'WJS USA 35
LUCERO HOLLY 22, 35, 8-1, 155
LUC/;,"RO MI:i.ANIE 35
UlNA AMY 35
LUTER HEIDI 33, 35, -18, 50, 76,
8"', 90, 92
MALOY JOHNETTf. 35, 68, 76, 92
MANZER GINNY 35, 38, 8-1, 85
McLAUGHUN RYA 23, 36, 58,
65, 80, 81, 8-1, 88, 89
MILLF.."R 17M 36, 71, 72
MONGER Kl'.NNE7H 33. 36, 37.
65, 77, 88, 90
MORALES 1'..1./SA 36
ND.SON BE 36, 58, "1, 81, 8-1,
85, 87, 88, 92
PARKERJOSHUA 36
PERCELL DA IE!. 36, 58, 92
PICCOLI MATT 36, 65
PORTER AMBER 36, 88, 92
POWELL PHILLIP 36
PIUANTO ROI.A D 33, 36, 89
PRIESTMICAH 32, 36, 39, 58
PIUTCHARIJ JESSICA 36, 3", 3 ,
76, 7 . 8-1, 85. 88, 90
PYLE MO IKA 36, 8-1
RITCHIE BRJ:.ICKA 22, 31, 36, 8-1,
85
ROB/ ETTE MAUSSA 36
RODERICK BJ 36

�COHJ II.S lARA .JI. 68....5 ....(), 8.J
f)(}NOHll/c. CAS/~'}· .J I. 8/
1-!SCHU? DA ICA .Jl. ...,()
ru~·~~· J~R ISAAC .Jl. 58. 80
( iAR('JA XOCHI/1. .Jl. 68, 8-1. 85,
8..,

SAMPJ.Ef) RYAN 36, 38, 65, 7 7
SA 'IJI~IU·O!W SA f)l 36, 92
SHONK CIA YTON 32, 36, 58, 77.
8-1, 85
S!vf!TH UBBY 36, 92
Sn"f BACHM~ .Jl~JU?Y 36, 39, 5N,
65
I'AU~NCIA IJAIJD 33. 36. 5N, ()5,
7 .... 88
I 'A 01~· Rl-_R(i BJ:[KY 3 7. 50,
68, 76, 8 7, 92
WASHIN&lt;jJVN MARY 37
YOU GANGI 32, J7, 39, 76, 84,
90
ZW!SfJ-_R AlvfY J7. 38....6. ....... 8./,
'5, 90

CLASS

og '00'

ABf.RNA IHY UJD//~· .JO, ..,7
A Dl~RS DUSIIN .JO
A DREWS KA I HLEf; .JO. 92
BAKJ;;R KJ;;U .Y 30, .JO, 91, 92
BASSI~ ! f'SUMMlJ~ .JO. NN. 92
HH'K SARA .JO, 51, 68. 89, 90, 92
HITKr:R A CY .JO. 8.J
BH'KIER ..\'ARA .JO, 76, 88
RI.ACK Hl--AU.JO. 81. N7
HLAKSTAD PORf!A .JO. 8"'. 92
HODIROGA HOLLY .JO. 75, 76
BONDS CHIUS!ll~· .JO, 51, 8 7, 92
BRIT11AN 11~· Y 23, .JI, 8 7, 92
BROUGHT() MORGAN .Jl, 89,
9-1, 9 7
CAPAI.HO .Jli.UAN .Jl, 81
CARI.SO .JO A THA 71. 87
CAJU.SO KEJU 38, .Jl, 8 7
CARRO DOUG .Jl, 87
CARIW/UGHJ JOAN A .Jl, 88
CASPER CHERI.Jl, 76, 87. 92
CHAMPLIN WJUJAM .J1
CHAP! HOU Y .JI, 88, 92
( 'HA I 'f~Z AMY .J 1
CUMJJAMY .JI, 68
CUJUDT IY/U~I. .Jl

( iU?HI~R JJYJ 0 .J2
(/1 (Jl~RICH .IUS/JN .J2. 81, 8 ....
91
(i() ZAJ.r:S l?A(}Un. .J2
( IOODWIN .JOJJY ./2, .J5
(i()S I~T .JD .J2. . ., I
HA A CH'JJ lA .Jl. 51, () .... 68.
7{ 76, 8.J, 85, 8...,
HARRMA
HJ·; J~Ssl~Y .Jl. 92
H/01!) HI?A DO ' .J2, . ., I. 8...,
HOR/0 SARAH .J2, 51. 66. 68.
76, 8.J, 85. 88,
HO~VARIJ AARO .Jl.... I . ( I. 8..,
HUM/SIVN J;;JU .Jl, 5.J, 88, 92
.JOHJ~s ADA!vt n. 5-1. 65
.JOH SO .Jf) .Jl, 58. 81
.IOH SO KIMHI~RI. Y .Jl. 65
JULIANO MICHI01L -12. 51. 92. 93
KE Nf.i )Y SAJ?AH .J2. 8.J
KIMHAU. TONY n. 5.J, 65, 7-1.
....... 88, 90
KOHI.D?.S CHIMDT AIIL"f~· .J2,
68, ...6. 8 7, 90, 92
IANGfU-_' ]j_E/UN .JJ, 51, 76
I r:WJS .JOSH .JJ. .J5, 58
U)Pf.R A f'HAN .JJ, 92
UJW7HER CUN/'.J3
I UCU?O fA Cf-_· n . .J5, .J"'. 58,
71, 77
LUDWIG CJIAJ) .JJ, 77, 92
U !ZAR KRIS7Y .J3
MA&lt;IILLMA IJY .JJ, 51, 76, 88,
92
MAR,S JESSICA .JJ, 68, 75, 76, 8.J

MARSHA! L .JACK/I• .JJ. 58
MA 7HIS .JESS'!:: .J3
Mc:AIXANI~Y SCOt /'58
M/LU~R H/01/HI~R .J3, 51. 68, 7()
MJLu~·R U01H .J3
MILLU~ PA rn .JJ. 89
MONGER JU7CH.JI~· .JJ, .J5. 5.J
MOIU.A Kl su~· .J3, 51, 87, 89
OCHOA Gl A 23. .J3
OURGA /A CHJUS .J3
PAJUUSH REN/~1~ .JJ, 87
Pic. NJN&lt;i/0 MA II .J.J
Pf.RCU.L TOMMY .J.J, .J5, 58. 71.
...2. 9
PH!LUPS LFAH .J-1. 83, 88
PICKr:T KRISTOPHU~ .J-1. .J5
PORTJ-_'R LONI .J.J
POrn;;R 17rFANY .J-1. 92, 95
!U~'NTJ~JUA DANNY .J-1. 81
RHOD/~S CHJUS .J.J
RJCHARIJSON JAMr:S .J-1. 8 7
ROSI~ IAN 58
Rl/GGU~~s· CHAD .J.J
SANCHr:Z MONICA .J.J
SCHAAF ANDREW .J-1. 87
SI~D WI( 'K Sll·:P H f-_· .J.J
SHAAR Hr:JDI .J.J
SINClAIR TJ .J.J
SIR/OS .JAMiE .J-1. 51. 76, 8 7, 88,
92

�SMI'lH JOD/1~· -1-1, 91. 92
S IU.JJ~ RA( 'fl/~1. -1-1
sn.;WARTMA 7T -1-1, -15
!!lOMAS .lf~NNA -1-1
IOIJEW 'HI NICK -1-1
IV RNER CASSA IJRA -1-1. 8~. 92
TUSSING Br. IHANY -15, 91, 92
I'AN ABBI·MA MAR/I~· -15, 76, 91
Wr:S7MORJ..1AND CHAR!.r,NI~·
-15, 51. ~6. 90. 89 quote
WIEBE BJUAN -15
WJUJAMS lACY -10. -15, 76, 88
WILSON JOJ J..NE -15. 92
WRAY .!I; IN·,R -15

�SENIO ·J~
TC) ~e I':, Tha_l1.{
to\'" \Jll \1 C
0L C \u_ ~~

T

J~~ c1

'

M

c.
T
Love, Mom and Sarar

0

c.
M

c.
M
B

c.

Steve,
You have made us proud!
As always.
Love, Dad, Mom, and John

Dedications 114

�1997 ....

..•
.•
••.
.••
1l

Jeb,
Success is a journey,
not a destination - enjoy
your trip! We will always·
love you best!
Dad and Mom

•••
•••
•.

.....
.•.•
•••.
...
..

~·····················~
•
Dear Sarah,
~
We could not have
! custom ordered a more won-

Jess,
We have shared every tear, every smile,
every win, every success, every loss with you.
Now we are about to share you yourself with
the rest of the world. We do this with pride and
love, and we miss you already! Go Jess!
Love,
Mom and Dad.

il
~
il

~

•.
•.

-=ierful daughter! Wherever
you go, whatever you do,
you know that our love goes
with you.Love,Mom and Dad.

•
ic

!

..•
...
...
••
•..
...

t ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••J •

Matt,
Never give up, Pook.
The big one is still in there.
We love you!
Mom and Dad.

Dedications 115.

�Dearest Kacy,
Wherever you go, whatever
you do, we carry a part of you with
us in the center of our hearts.
Always remember .... Friendship is
having a shoulder to lean on. You
have our hearts forever.
Mom and Dad

**················~···········
~

··························~
Rubin,
As parents, there is nothing more
rewarding then to watch your child grow
into a responsible , caring , adult. Contiue to pursue your dreams with those
around you, and your life will be
pleasurable and fulfilling . We love you
very much!
Love,
Mom and Dad

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Tegan,
Take a bow, you deserve
it. We love you, and are very
proud of what you have accomplished .
Congratulations on
your success, and for never
giving in no matter what the
hardship was!
Love,
Mom, Dad, Tara, and Ashlyn

�Kelly ,
Watching you grow into the
wonderful young lady you have
become, has been a joy for us to
treasure. Your path has not always
been easy, but your determination
and curiosity have always seen you
through . We are very proud of you
and your successes. Believe in yourself, and believe in your dreams.
God Bless You. Mom and Dad

Jesse,
Always remember .... You will
never walk alone. We love you ,
and are so proud of you , CHA-CHA!
Mom, Dad , and the Cummins Clan.

Lloyd,
We knew you could do it with
all the hard work you did. We are
very proud of you always working
towards your goals in life. Remember
who you are, and what you are. Life
is tough, but remember this ... Winners
always win, quitters always lose. Never
quit in what you want to do, or succeed
in doing. Work towards your goals in
life.
Love always,
Mom and Dad

�John,
CONGRATULATIONS !!!
We could not be more PROUD !!
We love you !
Chris and Mom

Kristy,
From the time you
were just tiny, we knew
you were someone very
special. You have become a very strong young
woman and there is
nothing you can not accomplish if you have the
desire. We are so proud
of you!
Love, Dad and Mom

Angela ,
From the time YOL
fell out of your first treehouse, you have always
proved to be ambitious
and pursued your goals
We expect nothing less
throughout your years
ahead . Keep up the
great work and enthusiasm you have dem.
onstrated so far! We
love you lots,
Mom, Rob,and your
sisters.

�....
...
....
...
...
.•...
.....
...
...
....
....

"

Craig ,
Oh, what a smile! We are so
very proud of who you have become .
You are so strong in what you believe
and what you stand for. You are always
there for anyone who needs a helping
hand and an encouraging word . The
smile on your face and the light in your
eyes says so very much. Thank you for
all the love you so willingly share and
your faith that keeps us all going and
that will get you where you want to go.
Love, Mom, Dad, and Brad

Theresa,
May all your dreams come true .
Mom and Dad

•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Paloma:
1
Reach high, for stars lie Paloma:
Se hace camino al andar....
hidden in your soul. Dream deep
for every dream precedes the Caminante: No hay comino, Sino
goal. We are so proud of you! estelas en Ia mar... Te queremos
With all our love, Congratulations, mucho.
Mami y Papi
Paloma.
Derlications 119
Mom, Dad, and Granddad

���Mandy Martin
We arc so proud of you, we're about to bu t.
You've exceeded all of our expectation and you
are ju t about the perfect daughter. Now if we
can just get you to clean you room ...

Bayfield
Chiropractic
Dr. Daniel J. McClure
chiropractic
Certified chiropractic sports
physician
Extremity practitioner
1327 highway 160B
P.O. box 738
Bayfield

All our love,
Mom and Dad

(970)-884-2082

Bayfield Wolverines
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs
vs
vs.
vs.

SOROCO
SHIPROCK
DELTA
WINDOW ROCK
IGNACIO
PAGOSA
DEL NORTE
CENTAUR!
MONTE VISTA
CLEAR CREEK
RYE
HOLYOKE
MEEKER

TOTAL

44 0
55 12
7
6
36
0
47
0
50
0
49 12
42
0
27 7
15 0
7
6
28 13
14 0

421

63

Congratulations!
BAYFIELD IDGHSCHOOL
FOR

Taken Ca-re of Business [

Duh! Designs
970-884-1319

Graphic Arts &amp; T -Shirts
&amp;

~J~~ (Bennett
Gary &amp; Connie Bennett

�STAY AHEAD OF THE REST
WITH GOSNEY AND SONS
Hats Off
to the

Class of

Thank you to all
our Patrons and
Advertisers

1997

o

1199 Main Avenue

(970)247-5151

o

City Market at Town Plaza

BURNS

www.bumsbank.com

NATIONAL BANK
_

,.EMIIERFD c -

1997

�TATTOO STUDIO
James (Shamus) Wharton
2143 Main Ave. Durango, CO

970-3R2-X421

LEWIS MERCANILE
BILL STEWART

~ N FER

0

271 NO. MT. VIEW DR.

BAYFIELD CO, 81122
PHON[:.-259- 66&lt;J

FAX 247-812
Megan Bacher

How the angel~ 111 he a' en must have danced with
·oy on that preclllu~ t.ht. 'A hen God smiled &amp;
brought )llll tnll&gt; lHtr \\ &gt;rid~ It ha~ been a joy

&amp; privik g~ tl&gt; ha\e bL-.· n &lt;t part of your
mett.tm.&gt;rp.,l&gt;'&gt;i~ t"wm a heutifultiny wrinkled
"Cind; Lnu Who " to a heuliful strong, talented,
detennin ·d. &amp; hu~y; &gt;ung woman. Alway~
remember that wll~rL'\ , r )llll are, you're never
alone because God ne\ er leaves us or forsakes

u &amp; that\ tth him all d1ings are possible. May
you al\\ a;" . . hare yolll wonderfu l 1est for life,
courage &amp; t.kterminauun with thoser around you,

&amp; ner er slup singing 1

Lm e &amp; TlH&gt;dle ·
Dad. Mnm &amp; Your Lovely
Brothers

884-4376

�Local Presence, Global Power.
Local Presence, Global power.
Local Presence, Global power.
CWT Discovery Travel
1101 Main Ave.

phone 970-259-2900
fax 970-259-2908
TO THE CLASS OF NINTY SEVEN

Centnnial Savings Bank
1101 East 2nd Ave.
Durango, CO 81302-1590

phone# 247-4l83
Fax# 970-247-0224
contact Laura F. Vinson

�Premiere Home
Theatre

Will Construction,
LLC

WILL Do Custom Homes
WILL Do Addition
WILL DO remodel

TERRI \\'ILL
BOX 438

VIDEO RE~T ALS
381 -3 Pine River Plaza
Bayfield, Colo 81122

884-4285

"Your Quality Home is
My Commitment,"
Kurt Will

Box 438
Bayfield, Colo 81122

884-9830

1)em«f'a

SOUTHWEST
SOUND

SON"Ve

~~~
NUMBER 6058
JIM AND
CHRISTINE COOPER
FRANCHISE OWNERS
666 CAMINO DEL RIO
DURANGO, CO 81301

TEL 970-247-1512

922 Main Ave
Durango, Colo

259-5896

�.P.U EBLO

-OMMUNITY

Durango Herald

"ServingThe Four
Comers Daily"

Durango
970-247-2929
Pagosa Springs 970-264-2835
Cortez

the

970-565-8440 Ext.152
970-564-1584

Susan Mott
1275 Main Ave.
Durango, Colo 81301

Box 1720
Cortez, Colo 81321

BURNS
NATIONAL BANK
"Look To Your Future,
Stay in School"

247-3504 Ext. 212
Fax 259-5011

Lori's Family
Dining

Congratulations '97
Graduates!

900 Main
Durango, Colo

247-5151

2653 Main
Durango, Colo 811 22

247-1224
259-6288

�Jeff Brown
Branch Manager

C. W T. Discovery Travel

Acordi a

Local Presence,
Global Power,

Western Slope In urance
890 Can1ino Del Rio
P.O.Box 2488
Durango, CO 81302
(970)247-2457
FAX(970)247-0D 16

llOIMain Ave.
Durango, Colo 8130 I

One of the A cordi a co mpanies

Mdl $buud ~IU«J S~

Baskin (J/) Robbins.

SERVING THE PINE RIVER VALLEY
Mary O'Donnell

q.~$/alz.e

Owner/Pharmacist

Bayfield, CO 81122

P.O. Box 110

Corner of Mill &amp; Church

~

970-884-9133

~

I 0 111 1/arllll',l, I r,/1/l h1~ecl Jlure IJIIII &lt;''
jl (uull 1'/o:o /Jurclll,l/u Gulorrulu 'iljiJI
}J/J(J/11' (JIJJJ J'li·/231

. .. .. . . . . ..... .. . .
Ice Cream · Yogurt · Custom Desserts

•

•

•

'

•

•

.

•

•

•

t

..

¥ •

"

•

•

..

• •

•

•

•

.

•

••••

A.9 .E. CerliOed
M o~ ler Techntcioro

BAYFIELD TIRE &amp;
AUTO REPAIR, INC.

Womt n
For Ap[&gt;Oontme nl

P.O. Box 248

626 Buck Highway

BaiJOeld , CO 81122

Churloe &amp; Dennis
Mol..ley Owne r&amp;
(970) 88 4 -96 17
Emergency No. 269 -6636

1011884 9078

',', 7 ( olorado Dr

h•yl •1&lt;1 CO 8 I I 22

Choldrrn

�Ed MORLAN
Good Luck Class Of 1997!

At
Bayfield
970-884-952

381 Colorado
Bayfield, Colo 81122

From: Ed, Jackie, Amber, Kinsee Morlan

P.O. Box 721

884-048

Bayfield, Colo 81122

K-Mart

Floyd Smith Attorney At Law

800 South Camino Del Rio
Durango, Colo

357 Mountain View Dr.
Bayfield, Colo 81122
970-884-9531

970-259-3990

Inferno Snow

Board Co.
900 Main Ave. 205f
Fax-970-247-8612 Durango, Colo

970-259-8669

3529 Main Ave.
Durango, Colo 81301

970-259-1702

SOUTHWEST
AG. INC
"The Affordable Alternative"
Gem Village--Bayfield, Co

SOUTHWEST 970-884-4101

f.jg

Steve Martinez
1201 MAin
Durango, Colo

970-247-0900

Local Motion

ft l

f-:--;~

.c,/\"
r :z··.-j ~··
a 1
. . . :ll
t i )

I

!

, ,

t

.

MA

..Jill[_

~

E\ FERGL 0"'

Kubota

INC

I ~] ~~~Jr.~~~
.., 0

ZETOR

Tar~et Rental

and Sales
*We rent quality equipment
*We sell and service Makita tool .
*We sell contractor supplies.

17 west Mill St.

P.O. Box 618
Bayfield, Colo 81122

Will 0' Crotty
970-884-9179

*We deliver.
1205 Camino del rio 970-247-0161

�J/P Tire
Jill Kneeland

"Home of The Sudden
Service Boys"

Apparel &amp; Merchandi ing Specialist
Office &amp; FAX 970/247/4327 • Store 970/247/9519
742 Mam Avenue • Durango, Colorado 8130 I

*Professional Alignment
Computer Balancing

BY PAM TAYLOR

1776 Main Ave.
Durango, Colo 81301

247-9068

1323 E 2 0 A E

• 0

RA GO CO 81301 • (970) 247·5660

f. (s
~~s.

Mike &amp; Sharon

rf\c'\.

•

HESPERUS VIDEO-DURANGO

Wr: Treat Yo~J R..ighc'

40 Town Plaza
Durango, CO 81301

247-93 2

Call To Reserve A Movie Tonitc
ALL DOOR SYSTEMS
OFC. 884-5464
FAX 884-7334

175 S. Clover Dr #2
PO BOX 874
BAYFIELD, CO 81122

Wayne Dalton garage Door
General Aluminum Window
Therma Tru door Units
BEN BURRESS

Ander on Windows
Fiberlux vinyl Window
Prehung Int. &amp; Ext. Door
BOB GRAVES

CONSTRUCTORS INC
Bill McComas
Vice President, Four Corners Region
1108 S. Alton Way, Building II
Inglewood, Colorado 80112
970-884-6166

434 Corner Drive, Unit 1-A
Durango, Colorado 8130 I
970-259-1218 FAX 970-259-3808

ALA.. &amp; SHI KLE Y P·'\ !'/. t: R
2817 MAl AVE
DURANGO, CO ol3U
(970) 247-1881

=

f:

Farm Bureau

Family of Insurance Services

STEVE MARTINEZ
AGENT
Colorado Farm Bureau Mutua/Insurance Co.
Western Farm Bureau Life Insurance Co.
1201 Ma1n Ave . Su1te D • Durango, CO 81301
OFFICE (970) 247-0900 • FAX (970) 247-8712

�CHRIS MARTINS

ML.

~;FFICE
OU T F I T T E R S , I N C.

Nortllrolllt Mall
LOWI'-:f{ LEVEL

1129 MAIN AVE
DURANGO, CO 81301
FAX (970) 247-5670

PHO E(970)247-1828

MEDfC'AL SECI JRfTY r DUSTR!/\L
llO'Tl·J. RES 1'/\lJR/\NT

WINE BEER SPIRITS
381-2 E. Colorado Dr.
Bayfield, CO 81122
970-884-2243

259-1813

1315 MAIN 1\YE., #105
Dl fR/\NGO, CO R130 I

Nit THAN HANN~S

I] MAIL BOXES ETC
Kent and Lois bingham
Owners

CAROL BARNES Owner

Store # 285

TEL 970-3 5-5506

361 So. Cnm1no Del Rio

FAX 970-385-4404

NIEL V. HIEB

BRENDA J . HIEB

Brenda's Home Cooking
"True Home Cooking"
CATERING AVAILABLE

Durango, CO 81301
An Independelntly Owned and Operated Franchise

399 Mountain View Dr. Bayfield, CO
970-884-7340

Acordia Wester11 Slope

D-0ffDffifFIJCNlS
828 Mam Avenue • PO. Box 598 • Durango, CO 81301
boots (970) 247-0446 shoes
sportswear· western wear - casualwear - workwear - etc.

M1ckey Hogan

COMMERCIAL INSUMNCE &amp; BONDING
PERSONAL INSURANCE
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

J1m Hogan

TheTravelersJ ~/lA C'NA
~...

A'

AlbBrtSOI'\S

Albertsons

~ordia

. . 247-2457~
~

~ ~

~~~

FAX 970-247-001&amp;

JOE LEDER
Store Director
ALBERTSO 'S INC 4311 WEST COLLEGE DRIVE
DURANGO, COLORADO 81301 I 303-382-2224

.....

190 Camino DeJ Rto

P.0. Box 2488

Depen.dcWJe &amp;rvice Since 1888

D&amp;arabgo. CD 81302

�Durango Sales and Rentals
Fumiture,Appliances, Satellities
Sheldon Morlan
Manager

RIVERSIDE UPHOLSTERY
AND CUSTOM FURNITURE
Kurt Gerlach • Shop Manager 970·247 1260
128 West Fourteenth Street • Durango. Colorado 81301

248 Town Plaza
Durango, Colo 81301

247-2225
Fax 247-1245

Dorango Meeting Place

"Where Good Fnends and Good Food Come Together"
666 E, 6th Street Durango. CO
(970 )-247-5322

l

I

Doug and Donnn Blcvtn~

\

*

~

M~m Mall Shop.,,
10)
835 Matn Avenue
)urango, CO 81301
Phone 970· 259· 7H08
Fax. 970·259· 7 09

Joan McComas
708 Main avenue
Durango,CO 8 1301

Antma\ V~llcy M~ll . #370
4601 E.lsl Matn

Farmington , NM 87402
Phone 505 · 327 -2189
Fax 505 ·327 · 2191

970-259-3133

R. R. ROBINETIE PAINTING
"

Tape • Bed • Texrure
Wallcovering

Custom Sawing_
• Landscape Ttmbers
• Tumtng Blocks
• Bam Ttmbers
• Log Cab1ns
• Cross T1es
• Fumtture

• Shtngles
• Framng
• Fenc1ng
• Beams
• S1d1ng

Portable Sawmill

FOR FREf EST'MATE CA L

970-884-6125
A. R. ROBI NETIE

(970) 884-6 125

DURANGO LIMITED

D URANGO LIIVliTED

========================~====----

~ Cu::::) :::::t:~ngFAMI~ AEUN~N
I trunk 1 can

DOZER • BACKHOE • BmK,\T
PONDc; • ROADS • DIRT WORK

GENF.RAL CARN:NTRY &amp; PAI,..'TfN( ;

SPECIAL, f,:~ENTS
PARTIES

TURKEY LEGS - l•NKS • CHICKEN • B EEF • HAM

Ask about our Colorado Gun Powder (sauce]

,

, (970) 884-6125 . .

�~~~~~4~~~

··-

Pine River
,~&gt;
VALLEY BANK
P.O.Box 500
Bayfield, Colo 8122
9701884-9583
Fax970/884-0214

"Your Community Owned B ank"

[KJ[BJ~[EJ~[EJ[BJ[SJ
~~
600 E . Second Avenue • Duranco, Colorado 81301

D

Cuoltt JeNe Couch
\)'Ina en
(970) 247·8116

#1 in Hardware
• Electrical Supplies
• Plumbing Supplies
• Paints, Ladders
• Keys Be Door locka
• Kitchen Cabinets
• Power tools &amp; Accessories
• Lawn Be Garden
• Housewares

HEARTH
PRODU CTS
ASSOCIATI ON

The four comers Largest Hardware Store

" Expect the Best"
Intensive Study of the Vidal Sassoon Method
130 w. Eighth S!ICCl

1l1e Grndcn Buil&lt;.Jmg

Duran

247-5620
, CO 81301

Monday· Friday 8:00 • 7:00
Saturday
8:30 • 6:00
Sunday
9:00 . 5:00

8 Town Pfaza
On C.mlno Del Rio
Downtown Durango

247-0660

�Basin

225 E. 8th Ave.
Graphic Desighn
Etched Glas
Custom Handlet
Sign
Banners
Magnetics
Sandblasted
Silk-Screen

950 E. 2nd Avenue Durango, CO 8130 I

Glenda Denton

(970) 2..+7- 5212 FAX (970) 247-1454

McKNIGHT'S

PRINTING AND IMAGING
•

Funtasy Floral

-Jewelry and Sporting GoodsDIAMONDS . WACHES . FINE JEWELRY
SKI AND SPORTS SPECIALISTS
820 Main Avenue . Durango, Colorado 8130 I

(970) 247-0343

Fax (970) 247-0717

SCHAFER ALAN B
1570 E 2 Av Dgo
925 S Broadway Ctz
970-247-329l

381-4 E. Colorado Drive
P.O Box -+68 Bayfield, CO 81122
(303) 4-2160

~oGWss
Complete Glass and Screen SeMCe
Auto • ResldenbaJ · Commercial
Custom M1rror1 &amp; Shower Doors

970-247-5112
JANET AND MICHAEL KUSS
408 8th Ave Durango CO 81301

970-565-3531

Briscoe
APPLIANCE &amp; IT. V CENTER, INC.
1185 Camino Del Rio Durango, CO 81301
970-259-0521
"WHERE YOU CAN SHOP WITH CONFIDENCE

ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR
GENERAL THERMADORE
R.C.A.
SUB-ZERO
MITSUBISHI
JENN-AIR
MAYTAG
KITCHEN AID ELECTRIC

'-"lclJiuw fea~~es high quality gifts, riding tights, equestrian

apparel, nuntatures for Breyer horses, books, and videos.
FUN FOR THE WHOLE HERD!
Cull"' u nte •;,,. )11111 IR/1 '·"' l ·aa .
~"'0 rurncr Dr, Sulte C • Dept. D602 · Durango, Colorado 81301
OR CAll: 800·43~·3633
(0111.\td~ the! US please Slilld J2 00 fur po:;JageJ

�FEDERAL LAND BANK AS SOC OF SW CO

~;t*

"'--L§ERVICE...._ ~,.

7\ BANK 7\

*-¥

Specialist In Long Term
Agricultural &amp; Rural Home Loans

302 W Montezuma Cortez---------------- 565-4228
850 E 2 Av Dgo----------------------------- 259-1540

Durango Bowl
~~:·~ Finer Things

lu&amp;•~r

&amp; Formal Wear

Family Entertainment
Restaurant &amp; Lounge

Durango Mall
Durango, colo

259-1012

Box 1038
134 E. Mill St.
Bayfield, Colo 81122

Sharon Hunter
884-2282

�Time To Move On
13 Years ofNothing But Fun?
Well ! 1997 comes to an end and so does my tenure as Yearbook Advisor. Thirteen years ago I
took on the yearbook only after protesting strenuously. I simply was not given a choice. My
protest was sound and clear. I had as it was no experience or training. My only area of experience
or expertise was in photography but even those skills needed refinement. I had no idea of what a
layout was. My business and organizational skills were areas I had never needed to work on. I
simply had no need. Despite my protests I was given the job. I felt it was the "Kiss of Death". I
got through that year with the help of a great editor,Tere Goldsberry , and proceeded to make
some changes in the years to come. Not all administrators and principals were as supportive as
the current ones in fact most of them didn' t even care. This compounded my frustration but I
trudged forth. What did I accomplish? What guided me?
I found a philosophy of what a yearbook should be and although many of the changes
were met with opposition and some of the direction was unpopular I have always felt the
changes were good, even necessary. The yearbook is after all NOT an autograph book. I do not
create a book so it can be SIGNED! It is more than that. In fact I don' t care much for the things
I see written in yearbooks. They are often offensive and vulgar. I hope what I have accomplished
is the presentation of history, dreams, memories and fact. The yearbook I strived to produce was
one with substance. One with a message. One that said something about WHO WE ARE and
WHAT WE STAND FOR! I feel I have been successful for the most part. My books had style
or at least "a style ".
I know there were things we could have done better but I can rest easy knowing in my
heart that I fought the fight. Isn't that what life is all about? Fighting the fight. Being valiant,
persevering, displaying loyalty, exhibiting honesty, standing for charity, expressing love, all of
these things were part of what we did.
When did it change for me? I suppose it was when I felt violated by the vandalism to last
year's book. That took a lot out of me. I cared so much about my labors that it hurt a lot to see
someone violate them. All in all, however, the past thirteen years were great . The yearbook was
an important part of my life. I will miss it . I will concentrate my efforts in other areas now but I
will always have .fond memories of "The Wolverine". I will miss the close relationships and
friendships that grew out of that labor. Thanks to you all and the yearbook staff of '97, Kayma
McDonald, Editor; Tegan Corlies; Kacy Conner; Angela Natzke; Rubin Crossman; Alisha
Scholz; Emily Webb; Sarah Edwards; Ben Ford; Ashley Burleigh; Ginny Manzer; Shawn Smith;
Aaron Chamblee; Lloyd Lucero; Sean McElroy; James Richardson; Danny Renteria; Charlene
Westmoreland; and others. They have created a book to be cherished. ENJOY!!

THE END?
(Special Thanks to Jostens and Mr Jim Ewing for all their support)

·

.

�ORLD BEAr··
NATI ONAL

__,

W 0 RLD

ENTERTAINMENT

�WORL
K ng Husse n of
J ordan (nght]
VISits the West Bark of
the Jordan RNer 1n
October to show
support for the
Palestlman-lsraeu peace
talks and the
establishment of an
Independent Palestinian
state It 1s Husse1n's
first VISit s1nce Jordan
lost the temtory to
lsrael 1n the 1 96 7 Aratr

flash
In November a h11acked
Ettuop1an a1rhner crashes
after runn1ng out of fuel
The crash occurs near a
resort beach 1n the
Comoros Islands 1n the
lndiBn Ocean At least
123 of the 175 people
on board d1e, 1nclud1ng
the h11ackers
After 36 years, Central
Amenca's longest ciVIl
war ends when Indian
rebels and military
leftists SJgn a truce
1n Guatemala

Israeli War

chaiiTTl8ll of the country's new
three-person preSidency 1n
September The election IS held
1n accordance With prcMs1ons
of the U S -brokered Dayton
peace agreement.

RussiBn

Bntl h Telocommumcabons grees to
purchase MCI
Commumcabons for u
to $21 billion 1n
November The deal 1s
the b1ggest fore1gn
purchase of a U.S.
company ever concluded.
A U .N .-negobated treaty
banmng chem1cal
weapons worldwide IS set
to take effect 1n the
spnng. The treaty
proh1bits the
development, production,
stockp1hng or use of
chem1cal weapons, and
calls for the destruction
of ex1Sbng supplieS The
treaty IS Signed by 160
nabon , mclud1ng the U 5 .

President Bans
Yeltstn Wins reelection 1n
July. despite pers1stent
health problems After
successful heart
surgery 1n November he
returns to work

The Miss World beauty
pageant, held 1n Bangalore.
lnd1a 1n November, ra1ses a storm of

A p1pe bomb explodes 1n

protests, some VIOlent. 1nclud1ng one

Centenn1al Otymp1c Park after
the first day of competition at the

by a group threaten1ng to stage a
mass su1c1de dunng the pageant's

Summer Olynnp1cs 1n Atlanta Flags fly

telecast. A new Miss World 1s crowned

at half-mast to mourn the 1 person

Without 1nc1dent.

k1lled and more than 100 1n1ured

Pope John Paul II undergoes
surgery for an Inflamed
append1x 1n October His ch1ef surgeon ,

Dr. Francesco Crucltb. announces that
the 78-year-&lt;&gt;ld leader of the Roman
Catholic Church 1s flree flrom "preVIously
undiscovered ser1ous a1lments ."

�In a group so
arge rt rould be
tracked by satellrte
hundreds of thousands
of refugees abandon
camps rn Za1re 1n

November and beg n a

tourney home to
Rwanda whrct&gt; thf'Y f'lad
fled to escape a CMI
war Oosrng of the
camps forces the
refugees to flee

Mass graves conta n1ng the
bod1es of Mushms a legedly
murdered by Serbs 1r 1992 dunng the
Bosn1an rMI war are excavated 1n
Bosn1a-Herzegovrna thror..ghou the
year as a shaKy peace '1egot.ated 1n
1995 contrnues

':::&gt;- AntrAmencan Sa
teiTOI'IStS are
blamed for a tru k bomb
that lo s 19 U S serviCe
people on June 25 1n
Dhahran Saud1 Arabra
Mourners gneve at a
memonal sei'VIce held 1n
Khobar, Saud1 Arab1a

More than 300 Tuts1 refugees
1n the Afncan country of
Burundi are sla1n by Hutus a nval
ethn1c. group The covered bodres
mostly women and ch11dren IlluStrate
the ferocrty of the confl1ct

Alone
gunman lolls

16 k1ndergartrners,
the1r teacher. and then
h1msel at a Dunblane
Scotland schoo11r
March 1996 A month
after the tragedy.
offiCials tear down the
school gymnas1um 1n
which the shootrngs
occunred

lsraeh nght-wrng leader
Ben1am1n Netanyahu wrns
the May 1996 electron for
Pnme M1n1ster. defeating Pnme
M1nrster Sh1mon Peres. whom
many lsraehs th1nk IS mak1ng too
many concessions to Israel s
Arab ne1ghbors

�ATIO AL
81nt1 Jua a
gonlla at
Ch1cago·s Brookfteld
Zoo. becomes a hero
when she rescues a
3-year-old boy knocked
unconsctous after falhng
18 feet 1ntD the ape
enclosure. The boy
suffers bra1n contusions
but soon recovers

flash

z
0
1~

The U.S Army ISsues
stnct new poheteS for dnll
Instructors and female
tra1nees. as hundreds of
compla1nts of sexual
harassment are revealed
1n November. Dnll
Instructors are now
requ1red to leave their
doors open if a
female is 1nstde,
and women must
travel 1n pa1rs.

Madele1ne Albnght 1s
nomtnated for Secretary of State by
PreSident 01nton on December 5
Confumed 1n office 1n January
1997, Albnght IS the first INOI118n
tD head the State Department.

........... t - - -

z

After thousands of
veterans compla1n of
Illnesses s1nce the 1991
Pers~an Gulf War, the
Pentagon warns they
may have been exposed
to chemical INeBpons.
The Pentagon reveals
that up to two tons of
sann nerve gas may have
been released
Soc-year-old beauty
pageant queen JonBenet
Ramsey 1s found
murdered 1n the
basement of her parents'
Colorado home the day
after Christmas. Her
death ra1ses a nationWide
awareness of
controversial youth
beauty pageants.
Speaker of the House
Newt G1ngnch [R-Georg1a)
1s fined $300,000 1n a
bt-parttsan vote after the
House Eth1cs
Committee's year-long
Investigation into alleged
finane~al1mpropneties .

r:::J...

_....,l

One of the

Seven-year-old p1lot Jesstca
~ Dubroff IS kJIIed when her
Cessna a1rplane crashes shortly
after take-off 1n bad weather from
the Dleyenne. Wyom1ng a1rport

"T longest armed

Her f!ytng Instructor and her father,
the plane's two passengers. are
also killed 1n the Apnl 1996 crash

members of an antigovernment group
calhng Itself the
Freemen The 81-day
s1ege ends peacefully
1n June.

Theodore Kaczynski, alleged
tD be the ·unabomber," who
killed 3 people and wounded
more than 20 others W1th ma1l
bombs s1nce 1978, IS arrested 1n
Montana 1n Apnl 1996. Information
provtded by Kaczynski's brother
leads tD the arrest.

stand-offs 1n U.S
h1story occurs outstde
Jordan, Montana
between the FBI and

On August 11 , a
boater rescues
1(}year-old Taylor
Touchstone from the
snake- and alhgatDrtnfested waters of a
Ronda swamp 14 mtles
away from where he
dtsappeared August 7
Although exhausted
and badly scratched.
the auttsttc boy
recovers fully

�W1lham
Jefferson O•nton
defeats Republican Bob
Dole and Independent
H Ross Perot to
become the 42nd
pres•dent of the U S
and the last pres•dent of
the 2Ckh centur-t
01nton IS the first
Democrat s1nce
Frank.l1n Rooseve to
be reelected to a
second term

A CMIIUf't finds former footba I
star 0 J Simpson hable for the
June 12 1994 wrongful deaths of hiS
ex-wefe N•cole Brown Simpson and
her fnend, Ronald Goldman In a
unan1mous verd•ct the JUf't awards
$8 5 mdl1on 1n cofTlpensator-t damages
to Goldman's parents The Brown and
Goldman fam•l•es are each awarded
$12. 5 mlhon 1n punitiVe damages

,.J,_

admits four women 1nclud ng
Petra Loventlnska ( eft) and
Jeame Montavlos Mantel/los
and another female cadet later

Topsa•l Beach. a town on an
•sland off the coast of North
Carolina. 1s one of many Eastern
locations h1t hard by Humcane Bertha

drop out, cibng harassment
and "sad•Stlc" hazing

1n July Six powerful humcanes all With
Winds over 11 0 mdes per hour, made
1996 a near-record year domg $3 5
bdhon 1n damage n the U S

NationWide

~ forest fires
blacken more than
twice the acreage lost
to fires 1n an average
year Cahfom•a.
Montana and Oregon
are particularly hard hit

,.J,_

All110 people aboard a

~ ValuJet !JC.9 are killed 1n
May 1996 when a lire brea s
out •n the caryo hold. The plane,
en route from Mlam1 to Atlanta
crashes and d•sappears almost
completely •nto the Flonda
Everglades. mak1ng It d1ff1cult for
workers to retneve wreckage

NATIONAL

�CIENOE
Amencan
astroraut
Shannon LuCid (nght)
spends 188 days 1n
space. break1ng
Amencan space
endurance records
after )01n1ng the crew of
the Russ1an space
station M.r

ash

u

z
w

-

u
Vl

A 9,300-year-old
skeleton discovered 1n
July near R1chland,
Wash1ngton IS the oldest
and most 1ntact set of
human bones ever
d1scovercd 1n North
Amenca Research IS
suspended, however,
as the tnbes from the
Native Amencan
grounds where It IS
found cla1m the
skeleton as an
ancestor and want the
bones buncd
Trauma Seal. a new
med1cal adhCSNe that IS
appbcd hke a hp-balm
stick, IS 1n chn1cal tnals at
1 0 hospttals and health
care InStitutions
natiOnWide. The
biodegradable dhi!SM!
could ehrrunatc stitches
and return IIISitS.
New York Pohce
Department camncs
begtn weanng threepound, Infrared cameras,
scoUting out potentially
dangerous areas before
pohce officers enter the
scene. Handlers are
devcloptng bullet-proof
vests for the dogs
to wear
A new category of ammal
IS discovered 1n the fonn
of bactena that hve on
the tips of lobsters
Symbion pandora, wh1ch
hves on food scraps
from lobster hps, IS called
"the zoolog1cal htghhght
of the decade •

Vodeogame g1ant N1ntendo
releases 1ts long-awaited
N1ntendo 64 a new hardware
system that draws players 1nto the
game and moves three times
faster than any ex1st1ng system

_L

The Mars

"T Surveyor Tro ey
named So1oumer. IS
camed on-board

_.l An exped1t1on to ra se the
~ Tltamc, the legendary

Mars Pathfinder, an
unmanned spacecraft
launched 1n December
So1oumer a free-roVIng

"unsinkable" ocean l1ner that sank
on Its ma1den voyage 1n 1912
from 1ts North Atlantic grave more
than two m•les deep. ends •n fa1lure
1n August due to rough seas

probe the s•ze of a
child's wagon, Wlll
photograph the Marttan
surface and determ1ne
the composition of
rocks on Mars

Satell1te dishes
become one of

In August. sc1ent1sts
d1scover eVIdence of
bactena~1 e llfe on a meteonte
found 1n 1984 and bel1eved to be
part of the crust of Mars 4 5 bdl on
years ago It 1s the f1rst poss1ble
proof that hfe IS not un1que to Earth

the year's hottest-selhng
electronic consumer
products CNvners find
the saVIngs of not
paYing for cable
se~ces cover the cost
Wlth1n a few months

�Cahfom,as
Monterey Bay
Aquanum opens a new
Wing 1n March 1996
The m111ion-gallon 1ndoor
ocean showcases the
manne hfe of the
outer reaches of
Monterey Bay. 5 to
60 m1les offshore

_d_ An oxygen bar 1n
~ Toronto Canada allows
patrons to pay $16 to spend
20 m1nutes breath ng pure
oxygen The owners of the 0;
Spa Bar cla1m the treatment IS
a healthy way to reti1VIQCliClte
the body and offer fruit' flavors·

The Hubble Space Telescope
captures 'lew trnages of
quasars the umverse s most powerful
and baffltng phenomena Prev10usly
thought only to exts 1 collid1ng
galax,es new pictures 1nd1cate
quasars can also ex1st 1n und1sturbed
galax,es-caus ng astronomers to
reVISit the r theones

The Sm1thson1an Institution
celebrates the 150th
anmversary of ItS found1ng With a
nationWide tour of pnze exh1b1ts
1nclud1ng th1s stovepipe hat wom by
Abraham L1ncoln

to liven up the expenence

·,,,

Paleoanthropologtst
Mary Leakey shown w1th
husband Lou1s Leakey 'n a 1959
photograph, d1es 1n December
o,scovenes by the Leakeys
throughout the1r careers are
some of the most tmportant
1n paleoanthropo1og1cal
h1story Her greatest
d1scovery was a trail
of 3 7 -mllliort-yearold footpnnts. wh1ch
proved that

s

�ACES
"The Late Show"
host Oa\lld
Letterman [nght]. who
had been h1nt1ng at
retirement. re-s1gns
h1s contract W1th
CBS, keep1ng h1m at
"The Late Show"
through 2002

flash
Former NFL
comm1ss1oner Pete
Rozelle d1es on December
6. Rozelle 1s credited
With transforming
professional football 1nto
Amenca's top spectator
sport. and With 1nvent1ng
the Super Bowl.

Mother Teresa, 1979
Nobel Peace Pnze Winner,
suffers a heart attack 1n late
December It IS the 86-year-&lt;Jid

l.L I----

Basketball megastar
M1chael Jordan
launches h1s own
cologne: M1chael
Jordan Cologne. Demand
for the fragrance 1s so
h1gh that manufacturer
B11an Fragrances limits
sales to 12 bottles
per customer.
The ever-present C1ndy
Crawford releases a
book on applying
make-up. BaSic Face
enJoys a long run on the
best-seller lists.

_d..

Reg1s Phlib1n

"T appears w1th
host Ros1e O'Donnell on
In April 1996. Singer

ABC's "The ROSie

Michael Jackson 1s seen

O'Donnell Show • The

escorting a woman later Identified
as Debb1e Rowe, an employee of

talk show. wh1ch

Jackson's plastic surgeon In

ga1ns qUick populanty

November Jackson announces

and respect.

prem1eres 1n 1996.

that he and Rowe are mamed and
that she 1s carrytng h1s ch1ld

The National Women's
Hall of Fame opens 1n
Seneca Falls, New York.
Inducting 11 women,
1nclud1ng author loUisa
May Alcott, and Dveta
Culp Hobby, the nation's
first female colonel.

Mus1c megastar Madonna
giVes b1rth to Lourdes Mana
Dccone Leon , a &amp;pound , 9--ounce g1rl,
on October 14 Madonna's b1g year
continues when she W1ns a Golden
Globe for her role 1n Andrew Lloyd

Archb1shop of Ch1cago,
Cardtnal Joseph
Bernard1n d1es of
pancreatic cancer 1n
November. Bernardin
was known for be1ng a
reconciler 1n churches
torn between tradition
and modern cuiWre, as
well as for speak1ng out
aga'nst physiciBnasslsted su1c1da

Webber's on-screen rendition of the
mus1cal Evrta

In October, TV talk-show host
Jenny Jones teStifies dunng the
Mtch1gan murder tnal of Jonathan
Schmitz. Schm1tz was accused of killing
Scott Amedure, who revealed romantic
feelings for Schmitz dunng a March

1995 tap1ng of a "Jenny Jones Show.·

~
"'
~.......................................................~ !

�In a small
secret ceremony
or&gt; an ISland off the
coast of Georg1a, John

F Kennedy Jr mames
Carolyn Bessette, a
Calvin Klmn publiCISt, 1r
September Kennedy.
who dated Bessette for
two years had long

been cons1dered one
of the world's most
ehg1ble bachelors

New York Yan ees fan Jeffrey
Ma1er 1nterferes With a fly ball
dunng game one of the Amencan
League Champ1onsh1p Senes on
October 9 The hrt IS ruled a

Slephane

home run. tying the game 4 to 4 1r
the e1ghth 1nmng and making Ma1er
New Yorks hero for a day

4CXXJ
Items owned by f

FII'St Lady Jacq

lyn Ke nedy
Onass1s a d President John F
Kennedy are aucuoned off 1n

April 1996 1nclud ng a
necklace of s mu ated pearls
shown 1n this 1962
photograph The fake pearls.
valued at $5CXJ to $700 sell
for $211,5CD, bnng1ng the
aucuon total to $34.5 mdlion.

Veteran comed1an George Bums
d1es 1n March 1996. 1ust weeks
after reach1ng the age of 1 00 The
legendary Bums won an Oscar. an Emrny
and a Gramrny Award 1n an llustnous
career datmg back to vaudeville

As a stand aga1nst the 1nvas1on
of h1s pnvacy. George Clooney.
star of NBC's "ER. boycotts
Paramount's Enterta nment Ton1gh •
after rts s1ster show Hard Copy" runs
unauthonzed footage of the actors
pnvate hfe

UfiNOfUI Crty kom Slioollll!l SUI

FACES

�Patnck Srewart
[left) and Brent
Sprner (nght) star rn

BER1
DI~ PRINOPl£

Star Trek Ftrst Contact.

IHE

flash

-

Tom Cru1sc stars 1n
Jerry Mogwre a
romantic comedy about a
sports agent who
deCides to change h1s
shallow ways, and
spends the rest of the
mOVIe trying to rega1n hJS
success It 1s a
breakthrough role for
Cru1se, who IS
normally dep1cted as
a cocky Winner
To honor the 20th
nnii/CI'Sllry of Its
release, producer George
Lucas 1ssucs a "remade"
Star Wars With new
scenes, computenzed
speCial effects and
soupecklp ammatlon.
Lucas' grnnd plan calls
for a mne-film cycle,
1nclud1ng prequels

Scott Adams Otlbert. the
com1c stnp about offlce
pohtlcs captures the nation ·s
1mag1nat1on In book form. The
Dibert PnllCiple becomes a

..,d..

Academy Award-

~ Wlnmng actor

Tom Hanks' first effort

A

a directing receMeS

Actors Winona Ryder and
~ Dante! Day-leWis star tn The
Croctble wh1ch opens 1n December
The screen adaptlon of Arthur
Miller's famous play about the

mOVIe about the
mereonc nse and fall of

Salem w1tch tnals 1s wntten by
Arthur Miller himself

a 1960s rock band
opens rn October

Enghsh actor/director
Kenneth Branagh plays
Hamlet 1n ht star
studded remake of
Shakespeare's claSSic
Despite runmng four
hours th mOVIe ts a
cnttcal and box-office
success
NBC s Thursday mght
drama ER" features
televtSton's f1rst HIV
poSitive prom1nent
character Jcame Boulet,
a phyStctan's aSSIStBnt
played by Glona Reuben,
ts rclattvcly open about
her condition and helps
confront the stigma
of AIDS

a mOVIe featunng
characters from the TV
show "Star Trek The
Next Generation

crittcal pra1se when

That Thtng You Do'. a

Model Brooke Sh1elds [cenrer)
moves to t1ei8VIs1on 1n NBC's
"Suddenly Susan," a slt~om prem1enng
1n Septlember Sh1elds plays a column1st
opposrtle magazrne editOr Judd Nelson
(far nght)

Sherry Stnngheld, Or Susan
LeWis on NBC's "ER." leaves
the show at the peak of her
character's populanty In her frnal
eprsode when Or Mark Greene,
played by Anthony Edwards, declares
hrs love for Susan, the show garners
ItS hrghest ratings ever

novel and
moVIe The

new book
promrscs to
generatle JUSt as
much hype with a moVIe
already ,,... the works

�ExplosiVe spec1al
effects nvet
aud ences to the r seats
as they watch
Independence Day
one of summers
blockbuster mOVIes

TorP Cru e stars
Mlss1011 lmposs ble based
on the 1960s and 70s te18VISIOn
senes of the sal"''e name Despite
cnbCa put-downs the mOVIe IS a
huge box-office htt.

..J.._

Bugs Bunny and Ch1cago Bulls
basketball star Michael Jordan
share top b1 rg n Space Jam a
parua ty an mated feature h m that

opens n ~ate November

John Lithgow [front nght]
earns both an Emmy and a
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor
1n a Comedy Senes 1n NBCs 3rd
Roc FroiT' the Sun a Slt-aJm
about a tam ty of ol ens IMng 1n
contemporary Amenca

Actors Brad Pitt (left] and

~ Jason Pat:nc star 1n
Sleepers. a f1lm about four men and
the1r extraordinary scheme to
revenge the abuse they expenenced
as boys. The controvers1al mOVIe
also stars DustJn Hoffman. Robert

De N1ro and Kev~n Bacon

Al"''enca s favor1te Slt-corr
father B1ll Cosby enroys the
success of h1s new CBS show. "Cosby •
In January 1997 however, tragedy
stnkes as Cosby's son Enn1s 1s killed 1n
Los Angeles 1n an apparent
random robbery

Stars B1ll Paxton and Helen
Hunt ftee a tornado of
awesome proporuons 1n Twtster,
another summer blockbuster,
wh1ch tells the story of storm
chasers h1ghty devoted to studymg
the 1nner work1ngs of tornadoes

ENTERTAI

�MUSIC
Bntlsh pop
superstars uam
[left] and Noel Gallagher
cancel the rema,nder of
a U S concert tour 1n
September amd rumors
that their band, Das1s, 1s
break1ng up DerJYing the
reports. the brothers
announce they wtl
release a 'lew album 1n
the summer of 1997

fl sh

-

Folk and blues Orbst
Tracy Chapman returns
to the scene 1n 1996
W1th the Single "GIVe
Me One Reason "
Chapman recrnves fNC
Grammy nom1nat1ons 1n
January 1997

~ The Beatles' Anthology 3.

~the th1rd and f1nal album
from the reunited rema1n1ng
members of the band, 1s released
1n November FollOWing the example
of the1r two preVIous antholog1es.
Anthology 3 sells 1n record
numbers

The arbst formerly
known as Pnncc
releases
EmanctpBtlon, a threehour, thre!H::O album,
1n honor of h1s release
from h1s Wamer Bros
record1ng contract.
GUitanst Slash of Guns
N' Roses forms h1s own
band H1s new group
Slash's Blues Ball, IS a
Six-man blues band
grounded 1n the bluesbased hard rock of
the 1970s.

Bu h a Bntlsr rock group With
an ArPencan "gn._nge sound
tours the U S to promote the1r album
Sixteen Stone They release aneth r
dlart-toppmg album, Razorblade
Sun:case 1n the wtnter

_d._ Kiss bass gultanst Gene

~ Simmons stnkes a fam11iar
pose as the band kicks off a reun1on
tour With a June 28 concert 1n
Detroit The tour marks the first
time the ong1nal members of the
band perform together s1nce 1979

Rocker Sheryl Crow JOins
the ranks of muSICians
who have had the1r
albums banned from
Wai-Mart.. The retail
giBnt obJCcts to a lync
allegmg that k1ds kill each
other with guns they
obta1ned from the store

Heavy metal band Metallica
IS the headlin1ng act for the

summer concert Lollapalooza,
traditionally an altematNe-rock
show MeFJihca rema1ns h1ghprof1le wtnn1ng an MTV award for

Canad1an pop artist Celine
D1on tops the charts 1n
1996 With the album Fal/mg Into
You, whiCh sells more than 16
m1lhon cop1es worldwide

After 1D years of separation, members
of the band Van Halen are reunited With
the1r former lead s1nger. DaVId Lee Roth [nght].
at the MTV Video Mus1c Awards 1n September
Roth later clams he thought he was reJOining
the band. who chose a d1fferent lead s1nger

the years Best Hard Rock Video
1n September

�No Doubt, fronted by lead
s1nger Gwen Stefan1, releases
Trag1c Kmqdom. wh1ch 1ncludes such
chart-toppers as ·Just a Grl •
'Sp1derwebs and 'Don't Speak

Countmg Crows second alhurT'
Recovermg the Satefi11:8S, s
released 1n October The long aw&lt;uted
follow-up to 1993's August and
Everythmg After debuts at number one
on the charts

George Strait 1s honored by the
Country Mus1c Assoc1at1on n
October With three maJor awardsSingle of the Year for "Check Yes or
No • AlburT' of the Year for Dear Blue
Sky. and Male Vocal1st of the Year

The hit
s1ngle
"Where It's At"
Beck album
Odefay. whiCh IS
released to popular and
cntlcal accla'm Spm magaz1ne
awards Beck Artist of the Year

Ton' Braxton s second album,
Secrets, IS released 1n summer
1996 Braxton Wins R&amp;B Single of the
Year for "Let It Flow" at the Billboard
Mus1c Awards 1n the fall

1s often compared to country
mus1c legend Patsy Cline
Alams Monssette's Jagged
Little P1fl re1gns the charts,
becom1ng the all-time to~lllng
album by a female artist
Monssette also dom1nates the
1996 Grammys by W1nn1ng four
awards, 1nclud,ng Best Album

The mUSIC world IS stunned In
September by the death of
rapper Tupac Shakur, k1lled 1n a dnve-by
shooting 1n Las Vegas SpeculatiOns as
to the killers moove abound but the
year ends With no answers and
no arrests

�The New Yorf.:
Yankees wen the
l/\lorld Senes, beat.ng
the AtJanta Braves 1n a
fouriJame sweep after
lOSing the f1rst two
games It 1s the first
senes btle for the
Yankees s1nce 197B

flas
T nms pro P te Sampras
wms th etghth grandslam tit! of h1s career
at the U S Open m
September. Stcffi Graf
wms the U S Open
Women's title, beating
Momca Seles
Pro boxer M1ke Tyson
loses h1s Heavywe1ght
Champ1on of the
World btle to Evander
Holyf1eld m a November
match Holyf1eld, a
form r ~m world
champ1on, recla1ms h1s
title 1n the surpnse wm.
Ch1cago Bulls star
Oenms Rodman furthers
hiS controverstal
reputation by k1ckmg a
photographer 1n the
gro1n dunng a game
aga1nst the M1nnesota
T1mberwolves 1n January
1997 Rodman 1s
suspended for up to 11
games Without pay,
costmg h1m more than
$1 mllhon, m addition to
a $25,000 fme to the
NBA a well as a
reported $200,000
settlement with the
photographer
Baltimore Onoles second
baseman Roberto
Alomar IS suspended for
five games, deferred to
the 1997 season, when
he spits on an ump1re
dunng a h ated
argument over a
questionable call 1n the
Nabonal League play-offs
Controversy ensues over
the lemency of the
pumshment

Team USA w1ns the World
Cup of Hockey. beatmg
Canada 5-2 1n the final E1ght
teams from Canada. Europe and
the U S partJc1pate 1n the
World Cup, wh•ch replaced the
Canada Cup

~

Paul MolitOr of the
M1nnesota Twens becomes
the 21st player 1n maJor league
h1story to reach 3 CXXJ career
hitS The milestone IS reached 1n
September. when M ohtor tr1ples

Twenty-year-old golfing

~ phenom Eldnck 'Tiger"
W oods turns pro 1n August. making
the transition from exceptional
amateur golfer to welt-endorsed
professiOnal. 1nclud1ng a deal
With N1ke worth an estimated
$40 m1lhon

aga1nst Kansas Oty Royals rook1e
pitcher Jose Rosado

Race car driVer Terry Labonte
wens NASCAR's W1nston Cup
champ1onshlp With a total of 4 ,657
po1nts after fin1shlng fifth 1n the
final race. the Napa 5CXJ. at the
Atlanta Motor Speedway

Led by quarterback Brett
Favre. the Green Bay Packers
beat the New England Patnots 35-21
1n Super Bowt XXXI at the Lou1s1ana
Superdome. It 1s the Packers· first
Super Bowl s1nce 1 96B

�TheUS
womens
gymnasucs team ta es
the gold at the SuMmer
OlyMpocs Kem Strug
second from .,ght os
the heroone of the
compet.At:Jon land•ng her
f•nal vault desp1te a
d•slocated left ankle

US swommer
Amy Var Dyl&lt;en
wons the women's
1CD-meter butterfly
event at the Otympoc
Games with a tAme of
59 13 seconds Van
[}y'ken wons a total of
four golds

The Ch1cago Bulls won theor
fourth NBA champoonshop 1n sox
years as they defea the Seattle
SuperSon1cs n game s1x of the NBA

Apnl 1996 IT'arks the
1c:nr nmrong of the
Boston Marathon More than
38.cx:D contenders partiCipate

_J__

"'Jif"" Dolan captures another

Jean Dnscoll (front rogrt) of the
U S takes the s1lver 1n the

gold for the U S as he w1ns
the 400meter 1ndMdual medley
on July 21 Dolan wons w1th a

women s 800meter wheelchair race a
demonstraoon sport at the Summer
OlyMpocs Dnscoll seven-ume worner

bmeof414 90

of the Boston Marathon retires a the
end o 1996. after settong severe
world records durong her career

Olympoc swommer Tom

Basketball star Shaquol e 0 Neal
JUmps from the Orlando
Mag1c to the Los Angeles La ·ers or
July The deal •s the nchest on NBA
1'&gt;1story paYing 0 Neal $120 Ml on
over 7 years

Minnesota Twons star
centerfielder Korby Puckett
announces h1s retirement from
baseball 1n July A seroous eye
ailment forces Puckett to g•ve up
the game, but he manages to
ma1nta1n h1s upbeat atbtUde at
press conferences and 1ntervoews

�flash
1Vl

w

LL.

-

Help1ng consumers
m 1nta1n pnvacy,
marketers promote
home AIDS tests.
Consumers draw the1r
own blood and then end
It away to be tested
confidentially
Advancmg technology
means more options
on telephones.
1nclud1ng Caller 10,
wh1ch becomes more
common than ever 1n
1996 The d1splay unit
allows people to see the
name and number of
the1r caller before even
answenng the phone.
Authors Ellen Fe1n and
Sherne Schneider
release The Rules, a
controversial manual
teachmg women
strateg1es for getting a
man to propose
marnage. While the book
draws cnbc1sm from
both sexes, It 1s a
best-seller

A ''Sesame Street" stuffed
toy causes pan1c among

holiday shoppers. Tickle Me Elmo
sells out 1n stores nationWide, and
has shoppers fighting over scarce
1nventory and paYing hundreds of
times the toy's value .

A

The My TWinn Doll Company

~ offers 1ndMdually crafted

concept-bottled
water With caffeine'
One bottle of the
uncarbonated water
conta1ns as much
caffe1ne as one cup
of coffee.

one for the doll and one for
the owner

The US. Postal SeJVlce
1ssues stamps
commemorating
Hanukkah, the first non
Chnstian rehg1ous
holiday ever featured
on a stamp.
Casual Fndays become
more and more
Widespread 1n Amencan
work culture. Bus1nesses
allow employees who
normally dress in
profesSional cloth1ng at
work to wear more
comfortable, casual
clothmg on Fndays.

The beverage
1ndustry
Introduces a new

dolls that replicate. from a photo.
the eye color, ha1r and fac1al
features of a IMng gwi. Each doll
comes With two match1ng outfits.

01sney·s

Na1l pol1sh colors get darker
and funkier Deep browns
and blues are popular forms of
express1on and style

101
Oalmat:Jans
1nsp1res an
avalanche of
promotional
merchand1se,
fllhng stores
With spotted
toys. backpacks.
games and other
odds and ends

WORLD BOOK
N

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