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Page 24 text:
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— Zr VJOR G ' -- ' led Cha° W»y . P- ° la each o . encevn e ' ufoKav ° ° ' : .Uas eeP The , kinds ' . Greetings o .HeV. saS ' U v V o needs ' vesuU. ,,e enerQe ' Some o KnocW ng ° oceduve. % erush nt e , . - on9be ° The Not oo ony „,pcome. r ' ngs, ho can the 9ro P ' jdiing i° ;. ° r ««■-:«; UP »v evr P °, l ano ev daV the ha »s begun. AnnaBerg You Know it ' s True When . . . True love. Really, really, true love. To a freshman it means going out to pizza with your girl and leaving notes around about how much you like each other. Seasoned sophomores can be found drooling over each other in the hall and cuddling at foot- ball games. The more ex- perienced juniors trade class rings, buy matching sweat suits and skip the football games. Seniors-well, some are starting to mature and make commitments. On the other hand, some are deciding its their last year to be kids, have fun, and make fools of themselves. But whatever year you ' re in there ' s lots of time to find that special someone and just have fun in the meantime. — Sylvia Gordon 20 Small Change
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Page 23 text:
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no ' ° ' and P°P orn . ' mayfap , a Pepsi tr. shotp.. J you see , n c.e.3Po?°;; ' ' ' a.e t ' fs a • y and f ' s „, ' ' ember w,as , ' Teresa Srh - T ' ' n and , V ' f o P ' nto fh °PPed fh eefo.e; ' ' popcorn to ° ' ' get, ' onebe. ' e |Se|,tout.- ' ' ' ° e eo fated ct. barrac ' ie a A , sed,- ' - Shyly, nerve fo ' ' y 9ot T ' ' ' She fod ' erforVe ° 9 assed ' ' as;ut ' ' he - ' ado, ' ' ' ded ea.,e;.° a. 3,? fe. Most e ' ' 3rees tn ' r ' ' co, ' has enr ' ' ave m ' ' ' f nost e ■■ c ' f ' le p e c ose to h ' ' fofners eemsV ° ' stoc l ' ' ' - out n ' ' f PoDo ' ' ' f° ■::3--ttt --T n e. ' - ' c.be.t ' ' ce. One , ' ' ' ' ' ' 3 : ? -::- - o. sa ' : ' ' 3tod ' !: j ' s4 ' e time I , ' ' e at fK The Qf , ' nr ■ Jt as Mr p 0 ' stjch ebod . P° ' nfed lass Clowns: The Capers of Joel Bob ■In every school you find llowns and pranksters. Well, ' irroll is no exception. Seniors Joel Young and Bob xell carry on the tradition of e ever-popular cut-ups. Yes, as one might know, Joel d Bob are CHS flashers, ley received this title by corn- to school in nothing but ;nch coats and shoes. Sorry the ladies, but they were nt home. That did not stop them, they returned back to school dressed as FBI agents searching the halls for some underclassmen to pick on. Joel Young likes to act as if he possessed authority over fellow students. One incident occurred when he wore a suit to school. While walking down the freshman hall, he grabbed a freshman and took him to the office. He told the student to stay seated until he returned. But then who knows where Joel went? These two men created more pranks than one would ever think they could create. What urges them to do this? Bob Boxell explains, It helps break up the monotony of school, but mainly it ' s the pride of leaving our mark of recogni- tion at CHS . And who wouldn ' t remember them?! — Terry Meehan Small Change
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Page 25 text:
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rom Fruitflies to Hupcaps rhe Pick of the Flicks Teacher T; e fk , It begins freshman year with rilling Biology filmstrips on l|e sex-life of a fruit fly, and en railing English 9 films on Ivorite authors. Sophomore ar provides a short reprieve students view only a few lliglish movies and exciting id realistic films in Drivers ' Ij. Junior year, however, the ication is over. Charles ijrault flicks, the blaring ens of the classic Anne ank, the realistic Hindenburg mstrip, and dramatic por- ayls of outstanding moments Dm the past fill the days in S. History, Once one gains e privilege of becoming a nior, he also has the advan- ge of seeing less movies. On- the occasional trial film )out 52 year-old hubcap ieves or reputed wife-killers I in the intermittent boring spaces in Government. Though most students will agree that movies can often be boring, they also feel that the films shown in class every once in a while can be enter- taining and interesting. — Susan Lovjery Discovering The Truth of Fiction the sophomore English students view movie during class. — Lisa Konger November 6. jggp ° ie ' ar, ' - , ° f memorable H ' ' Patrimony at q ' ' ' rch n Deflan ' even ' s ' - ' eriance, Oh o number of r ' ° ients occurr ° ab ' e -rer.on r ' - ghout ' 9 Picked un ' ed- --a ' -on between 2 ' ' ' ° - . ' - e to run for It ' . ' e ' ' ° ' y anhou ■ f ' ' ine ' ' -in.ster ;: ' ' ■ ' ■ - - ed f ' - ' dtos Cffl ' T - ' ' husbands ' dy hand h ' -gedtosaveh7 ' ' ' -- ' o emba att -- a Prom CHS t ' ent. , ' r9 - ' - at,onslT ' ' . ' ' together be ' ° ° edd,ngday ' ' ' ' PP as ' ce at a L ' Eng e nro S ' M cu.; ' ' a,.C -e. a , -Lisa Konger ' ' ' ' s Candlelight and Romance for you? Webster ' s Dictionary defines date as a so cial engagement ;tween two persons of op- osite sex, yet I found that a t of times there is more to ating than that. But if andielight, starry skies and jmance all fit into your defini- on, you may be disillusioned, ake, for example, those unex- ected yet always memorable vents such as those oh, so em- arrassing moments . . . It was the first time I dated certain girl, and as I rang the oorbell-l forgot her name. While taking off his coat, (we were in the movie theater) he accidently hit me (in an unmentionable place) and then when he went out to get a pop, he stepped and tripped over my feet into the aisle . . 1 was getting out of the truck . . . and I fell and sprained my ankle. Junior Sue (Jnderwood stated that her most embar- rassing time was when she, ran out of gas . (Sure. Sue!) And then there ' s senior Rich Snavley who literally LOST his date at last year ' s prom. Some people ' s embarrassing moments embarrassed me too. Like the anonymous person who accidently wiped snot on his date ' s face during an allergy attack. Realistically there probably are more pleasant experiences while dating than bad. When asked what they like to do or where they liked to go on a date, a majority said that they enjoyed just being with the other person . . . I like to go over to my girlfriend ' s house, relax, drink Pepsi, eat pizza, and watch M A S H. —Todd Gross ' . . . just be together and talk . . . — Tami Richard Make my date happy — Cheryl Balser Whatever a girl wants to do is usually okay with me. — Mark Schroff Maybe Rich Snavley puts it best (?) as he replies: I like to go many places on a date, but there is only one thing I like best. Kinda like Kentucky Fried Chicken. — Stephenie Kiess Small Change 21
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