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Page 11 text:
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PLITTY IN HER HANDS. Preparing to Ceramics was one of the most popular throw a pot on the wheel, Laura Arbiz- art classes in the curriculum.(Photo by zani kneads the clay one more turn. Keith McBride) People Division
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Page 10 text:
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PAVEMENT PICNIC. Students gather outside the northeast en- trance of the school to eat their lun- ches in the sun. Sharing noon- hour conversation are Zana Mote, Mike Fox (backs to camera), Jim Wagner, Trevor Cunningham, Matt Keck, Kristai Mohan, Charlotte Reynolds, and Michelle Placek. (Photo by Chris Chakos) PEP PAINT. Orange and black horseshoes painted on faces added color to students and dollars to the Pep Club treasury. Donna Miller, Pep Club adviser, adds the finishing touches to Jannine Wagner’s face before school on B-Day. (photo by Keith McBride) People Division ust about vferyone was there Senior High without people to run the halls at night, fight for the last parking space, or eat lunch op, the front lawn. It wc another h d be just n set :tud ol it body ality A'ere were i without tl to give it ivie and class. Some o ten cowboys, o lers jocks, and still Others were granoias, but all of them carried with them a personality uniquely their own, and that gave Senior High the perfect blend of people an original school should have. Some people tried to carry that blend to West High in 1962 and then to Skyview High in 1985, but the blend fad- ed. Only Senior High preserved those special ingredients and per- sonalities that separated us from the rest. With diverse types of people creating “the best,” it was easy to hold our heads up dur- ing the “down” times. Each year, like each per- son, had its own per- sonality, and when we came to school, we knew just about everyone was there.
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Page 12 text:
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ly moved to Kansas. Han- nah wanted to complete her senior year with her friends in Billings instead of starting over at a new school. (Photo by Shan- non Johnson) FOSTER FAMILY. Sarah Hannah shares a home with the Doug Osbourne family because her fami- Home isn't always where the parents are The excitement I of living on your own usually over- rides the respon- sibility, but neither are typically available to high school students. “Living on your own is very hectic I because it's hard adapting to the way other families live, senior Sarah Han- nah said. When Hannah’s parents moved to Kansas, she decid- ed to stay behind to complete her last school year in Montana. Hannah lived with the family of junior Angie Madel for the first four weeks she was in Billings alone. She then moved to live with the family of junior Holly Miller for three weeks while she found a perma- nent home. Han- nah’s final move was near her old house with a family that she babysat for when she was younger. Angela Marshall left Senior High her sophomore year and returned as a senior. She was liv- ing with her family in Miles City, and her parents thought it would be good for her to move back to Billings to keep an eye on her grandmother. Mar- shall also needed some classes that were not offered in Miles City. She liv- ed in her own apartment most of the year. It’s a big respon sibility. You set your own hours, but you have to make yourself have a lot of self- discipline,” Mar- shall said. You don’t have to make your bed though.” Although these students were responsible when they were living with their parents, they said it taught them about being in charge of their actions. “I’m not as well- accepted as other family members,” Hannah said. They don’t trust me as much.” Even though students were away from home, they found themselves following the rules their parents set for them. » —JoEHe Zartman Matt Agnew Lexi Aleksich Andrea Andrew Marc Andrews Kristy Annecharlco Debra Kay Apedaile Laura Arbizzani Kathy Arledge Aaron Arredondo Alicia Arredondo Shane Atwell Shanna Auer
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