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Page 26 text:
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SPECIAL RIDES Young Drivers And Fans Hit Tine Road students came to school on bus- es, walked, drove their cars, or rode their bikes. Yet, they needed trans- portation for other things once they got there. For instance, many people took advantage of the opportunity to ride the fan buses to the out-of-town football and basketball games. Members of the girls block section were the most common fan-bus rid- ers, but the cheerleaders, boys and girls who weren ' t in block rode along as well. The trips to North Montgomery and Rensselaer proved to be very rowdy, as the ju- nior girls initiated the freshmen on the bus, by dusting them with tal- cum powder. Other times, the fans practiced yells they would be doing at the game. Frequent cries of Who are, who are, who are we . . . bounced off the windows of Mr. Ray Loepker ' s schoolbus. The caravan to the West Lafayett — CC football game was a great deal of fun for the students. Twelve people crammed into the back of Mike MacDonald ' s Ford pick-up; others squeezed into cars. The cars were decorated with blue and white crepe paper, and the students could be seen hanging out the windows yelling, Knights are NUMBER ONE! On the way to the game, Mike MacDonald got lost. A policeman pulled him over, and asked him why there were so many people riding in his truck. When Mike got out to talk to him, the policeman questioned whether he was old enough to be driving. Finally, after an explanation about the caravan, he let them con- tinue their trip. The students also needed trans- portation to go on field trips. When the seniors went to Indianapolis to view the state legislature, and when the juniors visitied Conner Prairie, they rode on the Lafayette Catholic School buses. Transportation was a necessity in the lives of CC students. If it hadn ' t been for buses, carpools and sym- pathetic friends, a person could have missed much of the fun of be- ing in high school. 22 transportation
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Page 27 text:
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B I 1: Lori Klinker has to rush to catch the city bus because for her, it ' s a long wall home. 2: The bus ride to conner Prairie was an eye raising trip for Ken Benkeser and Todd Reifel. 3: For the freshman and sophomores, bikes are their only set of wheels. 4: Without a I licenses to drive a car, Cora Regnier finds hitchhiking an economic means of transportation, 5: A ride home from school is sometimes a long wait for Celeste Ewalt, Michelle Nelson, and Kirston Klinghammer. 6: It ' s another regular day for Cathy Driscoll as she draws her own lines for parking. transportation 23
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