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Page 116 text:
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l'm in hot pursuit of the suspect at Mr. ' Warren takes a stroll with his trademark walkie- talkie in hand. What did you say to me Lewis? . . , Dr. Mara- ble chats with Shanta Manning and Kim Lewis about who knows what. , ,mm f I, W5 tw' N W n 1 - h . y ' A' 'i.E, ' Y Z M.. -N,..,.w..,WM.h,,.. uiuswelvv -, 4 g B gg il 5 uwuuv-umm 0 0 faculty . v What's your excuse this time? . . . Mr. Norris looks up from a busy day of writing. V T Ira' iff? :nu gym is ,r,, rt ,...4u1 VV
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Page 115 text:
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Michelle Wooster Richard Wray Edward Young Lori Young Son Ho Yun Tvlclanie Zolock If ry fd M... cmfmff 4 P Some Things Never Change l wasn't late, the bell was early . .. Sorry, teach, but my dog really did eat my homework . . . l thought we had to do page 71, not ll. Your sevens and ones look just alike . . . Excuse me, but you're sitting in my seat . . . Get out of my way, Sophomore, move it or lose it . . Everyday we go through the same routine. A new school means new things. All the rules have been changed on us, just when we were getting used to the old ones. The people in high school are more observant oi' the way we dress. We must now carry l.D. cards. We have to go through an initiation to get into a club. We are promptly and unceremo- niously escorted away when we try to sit in the Senior Deck. There are new stu- dents, new teachers, new books - but there are some things we can always count on to stay the same. We, as students, have always tried to mislead our teachers when we don't have an assignment or when we're late for their class. The teachers are never fooled: they tried the same things with their high school teachers. Another ageless event is when we try to go to our lockers and a group of Seniors is stand- ing in the way. We can't exactly tell them to move it or lose it, since there's maybe a one-in-a-million chance that they'll actually move or we'll actu- ally carry out our threat. Everyone thinks their class is the best. Of course, when Sophomores start yelling 90 at pep rallies, we hear from upperclassmen their exact feelings for us. We don't mind, for two reasons. Firstly. we'll do the same thing in our Senior year. Secondly, as Sophomores, we form a special bond that the other classes don't really have. Meeting new people, we are mostly unsure of how we will get along with them. We are thrown together by cir- cumstance, united by the fact that we are Sophomores and generally terror- ized by upperclassmen. We start to trust one another, forming a unique bond that doesn't exist in the higher classes. We have a lot to do and learn, but we're getting there. Though there are many changes, not all for the better, there are many things we will always be able to depend on. Friends Forever .. . Cathy Burrcss and .len- nilier Collier show that friendship will never cha nge. sophomores
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Page 117 text:
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Busy, busy, busy and so much more ffilingj yet to do . . . Mr. Warren stays steadily at work with mounting forms and documents yet to sign. PRINCIPLE PEGPLE They walk the halls, patrolling cau- tiously like policemen on their beat. They lack the nightstick swinging casu- ally from its strap, but our principals do have their walkie-talkies. Beam me up, Scotty! It's rather eerie how they seem to teleport magically from place to place, but this is their function as principals: To be everywhere at one time. Mr. Har- old Warren, the head principal of Pine Forest, and his able assistant principals, Dr. William Marable, Mr. Jim Simp- son, and Mr. Julian Norris, keep the peace in our school. They are the fig- ureheads and the spokesmen for Pine Forest. Mr. Warren, as Commander-in- Chief, is in charge of just about every- thing. Without his stamp of approval, there are no school activities or events. His commanding voice echoes through the corridors at announcement time as he addresses his faithful subjects. Dr. Marable has two overwhelmingly tough jobs - discipline and buses. Go ahead, take it - I DARE YOU. ' . . , Mr. Simpson patiently takes time out of his schedule to pose for a picture. Imagine the anarchy if Dr. Marable weren't here to supervise the discipline at our school - but we wouldn't even be here, with no buses running. All dis- cipline cases, on board a bus or here in our halls are dealt with as fairly as pos- sible by Dr. Marable, and even those big yellow buses would be lost without him. While Dr. Marable gets students to school, Mr. Jim Simpson keeps track of them once they're here. As supervisor of attendance, he takes care of the check-ins and check-outs every day, and rest assured that heill find out if you're skipping or not. Mr. Julian Norris, our athletic direc- tor, has a hectic schedule of all kinds of sports events. He purchases new and better equipment for the Trojan teams, and supplies them with sodas after hard-fought games. So now you see: Our principals rule our scholarly lives. It is doubtful that they actually travel from place to place by magic for by Scottyj, but by making it seem like it they are quire effective in their jobs. faculty
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