Joni Tickel DID Have Big Hair; PE Uniform Girls Identified

When I ran the photo of Coach Jane Womack and two girls in Central High School PE uniforms, I said I didn’t know who the girls were and asked for help identifying them.

The electrons had barely enough time to go squirting down the Internet pipes before the answer started coming back.

I was right about Coach Womak, said Libby Koch, who had her for PE and Government.

Bill East said the girls were Rosanne Hecht (center) and Joni Tickel.

I made the mistake of questioning his judgment by saying, “I’ll concede that MIGHT be Rosanne, but I don’t recall Joni ever having Big Hair.

Almost immediately he fired back, “Check out 1964 Girardot, p. 106, bottom, and p. 107, top.

Bill East must have the doggone Girardot memorized

Joni looks more Frizzy than Big Hair in this homeroom picture, but her hair color looks close to the PE photo. It certainly moves her into the realm of possibility, particularly when Sally Bierbaum Dirks chimed in to support Bill.

Patti fisher Caid, who was a Notre Dame student and shouldn’t have a dog in this hunt, posted, “There you go Ken, two against one! The odds are not looking good.”

By the time Jane Neumeyer and Sheila Hopkins Phillips weighed in on Bill’s side, I gave up.

Here’s Page 107 of The Girardot showing Roseanne Hecht

I ran the bottom of the page because it has a picture of Bill and Terry Hopkins on it. Both of them are frequent contributors to this site, so you might want to know what they looked like. OK, and the Barringer Twins are in the picture, too. That, of course didn’t influence my decision to run the picture.

Bill’s easy to pick out. He has the same expression in the picture I shot of the Teen Age Club dance that was moved to a bank parking lot. He’s in the right center of the first picture at this link.

Joni Tickel and Bill Withers as Royalty

I checked my 1965 Girardot and Wife Lila’s 1966 yearbook without seeing this picture, so I don’t know what the event was. Since she’s wearing short sleeves, I’m thinking it may have been a spring event that happened too late to make the yearbook. Ideas, anyone? Bill?

Girls, Did You Have the Ugly Phys Ed Uniform?

There’s been a lot of discussion on the alumni newsletter email lists about the “ugly” (OK, I think someone called them “hideous”) uniforms the girls had to wear for physical education class.

I found this picture of Coach Jane Womack demonstrating the finer points of serving a volleyball to a couple of students. They have their names on the uniforms, but I couldn’t quite make them out. Maybe someone can identify them.

Those uniforms aren’t exactly “hideous”

These must have been a later, more compassionate version, because even I remember something that was a cross between bloomers and a bag that the girls were forced to wear.

I’ll keep looking for the other uniforms. Ladies, how much would you pay me to lose THOSE negatives?

UPDATE! UPDATE! UPDATE!

The girls have been identified. Here’s the whole story.

By the way, it wasn’t just the girls who had wish-to-be-forgotten experiences. We boys had our share of PE tribulations, too.

Charles Dockins, 12, Rescued 2 Girls 50 Years Ago

Bill East sent me a clipping from The Southeast Missourian’s Out of the Past column Saturday, Feb. 20, 2010.

50 years ago: Feb. 20, 1960

A tour south, having traveled some 5,000 miles since leaving on Jan. 27, was completed by Mr. and Mrs. L.V. Steinhoff and sons, Kenny, David and Mark, of Cape Girardeau, when they returned here late yesterday; their itinerary included many cities, including Miami, Silver Springs, Cypress Gardens, St. Augustine and St. Petersburg, Fla., and New Orleans, La.

That was a trip my brothers and I will never forget. I’m sure you’ll hear a lot about it one day.

Chuck Dockins was a hero

What I didn’t see until later was the item under that one:

Charles Dockins, 12, rescues two small girls from a burning car in Cape Girardeau in the evening; Dockins, a Boy Scout, notices the fire in a car parked on the National Food Store lot and goes to the girls’ rescue; they are unharmed.

Are we talking about THIS Chuck Dockins?

The one who was playing in the 1965 Central High School Red Dagger play with Sally Wright and Sherry McBride?

Here’s the Google Archive story from the Feb. 19, 1960, Southeast Missourian.

A Cape Girardeau boy, 12 years old, who happened to be nearby at the time, rescued two small girls from a burning car in Cape Girardau early Saturday night. The girls were not hurt, except that they inhaled some smoke.

The lad, a Boy Scout, is Charles Dockins, a son of Mr. and Mrs. P.L. Dockins, 1807 Bloomfield St. The fire was in the parking lot of the National Food store on Sprigg at William, and it was about 7:15 Saturday night. The car which suddenly caught fire was on the west middle section of the parking area.

The Dockins family had stopped at the store and Mr. and Mrs. Dockins had gone into the store to make a purchase. Charles remained in the family car to mind a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dockins, Wendy Louise Dockins, 20 months old.

The car that caught fire was that of Mrs. Christine Petty of Cape Girardeau.

The Dockins car was near the Petty machine in which the two girls were seated. Charles said he noted a flash suddenly appear in the back half of the other sedan. He left the baby in the Dockins car after closing the door as he got out, and ran over to the other car.

One girl, about 5, was seated on the front seat, and the other was there too, by that time, and Charles said she evidently had just climbed from the back seat.

The boy said he first opened the door and pulled out the smaller of the girls, with the fire getting pretty hot by that time. He then took the arm of the other girl, about 7, and got her out of the car. He led them to near the door of the store and asked people to call firemen. He then checked back with the baby. The rescued girls were crying a little, but the Dockins baby seemed merely to be entertained by the whole proceedings.

Follow the Google Archive link to read the whole story and to see a photo of 12-year-old Chuck.

Mystery Cheerleaders

This is going to be one of my mystery posts. I don’t know who these girls are, what they are doing or even what town they were in.

I know that the house they’re practicing in front of is numbered 121. The trees have plenty of leaves, so it must be late summer or early fall, particularly since most of the girls are dressed in shorts. The year is sometime between 1963 and 1967.

Since these girls don’t look like anyone I remember as being Cape Central cheerleaders, I’m guessing that I might have shot this while cruising Jackson for The Jackson Pioneer. Of course, they could also have been from Notre Dame or College High.

Let me know if you recognize anyone.

Photo gallery of mystery cheerleaders or wannabe cheerleaders

(Click on any image to make it larger, click on the left or right side to step through the gallery.)