Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 92

 

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 7, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 11, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 15, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 9, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 13, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collectionPage 17, 1929 Edition, Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 92 of the 1929 volume:

1-ff ,Y , . , , M A 1 1--.. ,.- ,, , ' ' ' -' If f-'fi' 2' :?,ap:5::2:-1 ---5,-.1-,.:.. ' -- ..., f ' ...-.-.. . - . . -. , , - ,. ,. V , ..,, ., ,..,....u+:.,-.Q-ra:-. , Z-:1:1::,+:-ysesm-:gn-.f-:4-:Q-f A ..-M ,,,, , .. ... - rf '::-.- .-ffx-1?41I1':?f2ff.':Ffs:'v::N- :ff-.-Y.-. .,,.- - - --.'.N-va-.:,f.-1-W -., ,.,,, 'I'l1e 1995 Corvette Yearboolr QDPEYIYG- CX X3 A - fi X3 ZLX if ifxifif 'XY X7 if ' PEOPLE CX XQX X3 f N7 xy N7 SPUETS Xff-rkiisiilxifky-Rfk-fAXwfAX15Q1i1Xij .A.l.'2.ll.IJEiIC3S Sgxyfxifxxjf'Xfxjfxj? ljf'Qj?'Qjf'kjf'kjf CIE-G-.Ai'IZ.A.'I'ICJK'S C1-QEINYE' fi - - X3 -X 13. IZX .f'iX A ' Y! Xi! Xi! Xi! Ng? . ?.i,?f, . I if ' 'r ' fi , fffiffkffif -ei vb 0 la ,g 8, 10360 20 ffz 51' 55 Rogers 7425, J-3074 f701Q 646-6202 if 5 O 5 ' Qpening Q3 Chuck Brandenberg testing the thermal expansion of copper. Danny Swenson hits a homer during reccess. Emmy Heinze gives smile while waiting for the bell to ring. Brandon Mueller jumps to block a shot against MVO. X. X 'XI xfxflfifififxfli here are a lot of thrngs here that make up the Corvarr Mystrque The place rs something dnt erent lt may be be cause It rs rn h mrddle of n o w h e re maybe because rt was bullt way backmthe 60s But theres no place luke thrs place so thus must be the thmg drstrmctrve Theyareavarled group oftalehts and char acters Ahdthenthere s the mascot Talk about umquel Ahatronal poll shows that there rs no other schoolmAmerrca vvrth a Corvarr for a mascot' Thus vol ume of the yearbook attempts to solve some of the mystery behlhd the Corvalr Mystuque XIXIXIXIXIXIXIX XIXIXIXIXIXIXXX 't . - . . . t 9 . place! And the people are some- 1 i 1 1 i ' 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 if Mr S. wrwarwvef M' Stefvsofv and Mr L New at one Q! vwafwl, excu- Sfve teacher 5 meetfngs Where are the kids, anyway? W JJ Makmg Joe into a Corvafr was no easy task Yeah. nght. Kamf' 'X fifkfxf ff eww z,c... 1 .A 540- '42 ,...f Q Linda Da vvson prepares The Las1Dm The slrangest trucks make deliver ner She retrred Ihrs year res at NC He who has the keys rules' The Hidden Camera catches fm In Englfsh class' ' fl Znrvrzir Ls... 1' MX uhm. C7,1n.1M.S ' j' I I, 1- N, A- ' 1- . Qui N Q. :N ' 'Te W , an 5 sua ,, r, , ,ir ' gg ' H L 4 , 2 1 5 T . iii' i . N X K 3 . X g 1 is 2. T 9 Javelrn used rn NCS best sport Javeltn Catchtng Harmful lt swallowed North Central Library Card blue and whrte and used for 9'9 lnstrument for band a Corvarrs favonte acttvlty Cheerleadtng skrrt worn at banquets and other formal oc castons School racket place to hang all those annoyrng med Bare legs cuts down wand reslstanoe tn the 2 mule run Werghts fun to drop on hands and toes Very popular wrth many students as paper werghts Volleyball the only thing thats allowed to be sprked but never ts Bag: used tor clutter- lng the main hallway. 6 ' lqfhatfs A Gorvnirlf RVA YR- P f twat gl Graduatron hat the only hat that s allowed to be worn tn school Basketball gersey to tell what team to play on Carryrng loads of books to look smart A vacuum stan dard equrpment for Marshall Arts Class lvlountarn Dew gotta have that trrst hour sugar buzz Encyclopedras best bathroom readtng around Macintosh com puter nobody knows howto use IT butrtmakesthe school look good Papers stuffed rn a book he Corvarr Frlmg System Basketball: it's supposed to go IN the red hoop. 'f fi Nan' ff' L. fginhi J w V4 'K W XX ,px 1 1 'U x ,x yi H' Z 1 5 5 ,fri 2,5 1 diff lfqflmfs A Qmmrb ' 7 THE SARA Ill? SMIEBHIISH Sill, nder the direction of Beth Undem. the senior class put together a great play called The Saga of Sagebrush Sal. lt was a humorous western play with lots of music. singing and dancing. Previous to the actual night of the play. the cast and everyone else involved in the production had a lot of work in store for them. They had to make all the props. learn their lines. and of course do a lot of rehearsing. When the big night was finally here. it was time to get up on stage and make the audience enjoy themselves. It was time to relax after everyone had taken their bows and they were applauded by the crowd. The Saga of Sagebrush Sal was a big hit with everyone, young and old. L --IIA 1-li iiii sifiiiii Hiiiifiisii Sli Sa Karren Johnson Aaron James Tami Jorissen Joe Gallagher Brent Klein Misty Barnett Jake the Snake Hazeltine Heanbleed Haymeadow Indian Chief Yocksee Mommy Indian Squaw Melissa Jorissen Indians Jose Ausin 81 Bret Stringer Cowboys Shane Everson Brent Wendel St Ben Lokken Can Can Girls Kari Lettenmaier Typhanny Quick 8t Missy Altringer Barmaids Louetta Paulson 81 Brenda Hannenberg Minister Travis Kunz Narrator Michael Elliott Music Jodi Heinze Stage Hand JeriAnn Charboneau Hostess Christina Rogers 'br 4-fb 8 -230115 Missy and Brenda tdireotly belowi are preparing the background for the piay. Jodis satisfied with her piano accompaniment, Pictured rrniddle right! are Brett, Melissa. Aaron. Jose. Misty. and Brent. who are trying to negotiate a pian to get rid of Sagebrush Sal. Bottom ieft. are Karren and Tami finda preacher to tie the knot. Bev. Kunze tbottorn photoi stops to visit with Bloody Turnip hostess Typhanny! Y'Y1 V' 902 Easm Maw vm U Cn ND yyw 011843 A425 'U Chfef Klem proudly displays hfs ffrst scalp as fndfarrs Breft. Melissa, Mfsty. ana Jose celebrate Mfke the Nafrarafor breathes a sfgh ofrelfefafrer me performance. 'Q af ' Jg'?1 ', U' - ' f'?i a4iUf 1 X g Sages Sa cm oo don vw Jaw he Snakef me dfspos PQ N3 convoys wwf' a sfvgfe src! L em ea nw e e H 9 oe '7'SugH! 6'WH s ' 7 At NC s l-lomeoomrnq A.:::.3rt1'.l.111g Gi-oes' A--HM M-ala omeoomlng 94 was an anythlng goes klnd of week The week conslstlng of themes and actrvutes for each day featured a Clothes From the Past Dayon Wednes day and a Dress Up Day on Thursday whrch was also Coronatron Day Shane and Karr were chosen on Thursday Nrght to rergn as kung and queen over the remarnder of the Homecomlng Week actrvltles Everyone showed up rn blue til srlver and whrte to cheerthe Barnes County North Brson on at the football game Frrday nrght The Bison however fell to defeat at the hands of the Hankrnson Plrates In overtime The weeks actrvltes also rncluded some bllndman and powder puff football a tug o war and gurls basketball 7777 7 f a'r !':p ,Pr lfvs ...kg F uv v-. 'nf.fvf Top everyone lines up for an lce cream treat on Wednesday Rlght The Marr Chuck Brandenberg who lS hanging out and bemg hlmself gives us a look lnto the past during l-lomecomrng Week Above the hlgh scnoolglrls lrght It out rn a tradrtronal game olpowder puff football Dakota Industrial Supply Coca-Cola Bottling Company 'C ' HW'M 4 'f? Computerland of Fargo , . I I ' I , A f Wm, ,,,,, M-- ' a ,frtr T , A--'ff ' W ' H N ' I I sk .9 I 4 V l , L N 8 ' A , ' , . W I '4 ff v-'. A L T Qi ur to T V I JF? Nr . t, , R Y 90 D t ' 'f W - 5 X t , .. f I :F , s M ' A .AJ Pl ffm X ax sv 1 N i 'X 3 .L Q. L -l, A l r tr' rf' ' KVM :Mm 1' L wiv. .af Q J- X c 1' 1... 'T' 'Sv sq- I QQ U ' 1 ,L J, , ' ' x ,A :M ' ,nf 'f' ' 11' f-I sf xQfq'3 ,PCA 3 1 - ., 'v Q 49 Q majority vote of the junior and senior classes determined that instead of a prom. the junior class would provide a banquet to honor the departing Class of 1995. The Jr. - Sr. Banquet was held on April 28 at City Lights in Valley City. The Class of 1996 invited all the seniors and many of the high school faculty and staff to share an evening of good food. fun. and reminiscing. A choice of chicken on rice. Alaskan cod. and prime rib was served for the main course. Mr. Eriksen welcomed the group to the semiformal occasion. Then. as the guests awaited the food. uproarious laughter accompanied the reading of the senior will by JeriAnn Charboneau and Jodi l-leinze. More laughterfollowed when Nicole l-lovda and Jessi Stringer read the senior prophesies. Brent Vlfendel lrightl smiles as he looks forward to the post-banquet party. Travls. Jodi, and Mike. below. pose for a picture at the JunlorfSenlor Banquet. Y-I Dielrith 84 SOIIS Valley City. ND 58072 8-154590 75? may ZIIZIQZT- 6121614 Zyanyrfeff 'M M.: l Joe Gallagher stares down the camera. JeriAnn, Tami. and Ryan musthave been warned before this picture was taken hgfflhflhff ' 15 Joe and Aaron discuss how much homework theyre really NOT going to do. The Kindergarten Class, below. enjoys an ice r cream treatafter making clown hats and bow ties. fl, Far right, Allison Jorissen races lagainst the -2' rulesj down the hall from an class. g h 0 ...if 1 l . Q r ' KJQW H A motley crewoffootball friends labovej. Paul. Shane. Travis. and Jose. hanging aroundthe watering hole. Tiera lrightj hurrying to science class. 14 ' jnffixlidnnfs t :!'nA!!x:f 'I -6 qi f 2' i ,wi:,ur.Yg.J1 X !1X IZX !1X!lX !iX !iX !iX !iX Xi! Xi! Xi! Xi! Xi! Xi! Xi! Xi! xj' -,73e05vfe Part ofthe mystique of Nortn Central is its people. Everyone of us has our very own unique personality. individualism is definitely a word that can be used to describe the unequaled characters at NC! Aww, quityour whininl Lucas, a paper cut ca t hurt that much! Disco Dave Har leftj showing f his patented moves! tip iz K Undem. somebodys little brother. and Layne Egan are stuffed and ready-to-go' ,,,Ni-h X Heres iookinatyou. Tamil is your nose clea ,711,'lPvP,'l11f1f.S ' if ,A we moweht f Stfmgef 'H deep thought Far hghryou rely' 6f77Bf6'l7f'fl7!UC1f9 hgh! ff rhe ha! ffts wear fr Traws Aaron and JehAhh. Jose fbefowy Studyfhg for Calcu- lus class Yeah. hghtf .ff ', ' xg. X s T' I 'SN ff Misty fabovew rockfn' to Ihe musrc Typhahhy frfghw always did have as dffferehr ouzfook on Me. Enterprise Sales Company V 2, . . Valley Cfty, ND 58072 0 , ,I . fr' Lgwffr 5 ,nf,if,1J 7-800-532-8683 845-1272 fr'- .gf 'X Neff X S! v Q' Y- 'M 741 f155nAr1neAffr1:1q Y gm 'M11-114 KAIISIPI A 'Vl11.st R1 A KE 1r-mtt 1 1U41r6rn 1:1 741 61 K Qt ,uhm ffzrft 61111 T4 ll 1,4 rg A gf.SIl1A741fl1fCVJ1f1f4 H41 1 1 :mr frkgn f Hn? rg 11 A Y-'5 1rr.H 'Winn :An.scn 741 !1.s.sf1 mf cr1.s.s H Tamar: ff: nfztfn N155 H Brent 'I41M!m 5 7-Cfem K 4 1 A fl :MA gmrnae-1: Any 2,4 the Ilhlffdff ,scttbfg bln i1 :Ka.s.9 f.:6:tc. lfqfharfs ,Laid 'Z'rm1.s 251154 Kunz 1.51511 Zbnrf ,L Karr Wlnrze ,Ltttenmmer N fm Zbnwf Mk ,Ln tra Rfta f5anK.scn 64m1v,L Qin L C16r2,gr?n,1kQ4:6,1 Rr-gang Brut ,Lu Liprinqar ZZvcuffIn.sr2u Lqfgurlef 'if -af air' M I ,, Qf Left Louetta Brenda Shane Typh Mlssy Ben Brent 8 Kan take advantage ofa pre play photo op Below Joe 8 Tarn: ready to elope' X13- fx - .ei Travls proudly dlsplays hrs NEW underwear' Chrrstlna needed extra clearance most other senlor year' Brenda Aaron and Travls enjoying the nollday festlvltles Clearlng tne hallways ol NC are Brent and Ben' I B . Y' 5 ' i i . ,A NX h ' B ' t q . ' I - ' 5 B , l Q ihpp . Q t K . 3 ' ' h I' 1 , B Lf 1 U 1 D.,-I . 4 ' B B. 3 ' X- .4 ff , ! A B I 1 A ' ,, I .E Jodf jus! hangm around and Mike teffmg ft like rr IS All ev- Q 19 -.1 i 1 W7 E2 Ladera Mfesx Karfef' 3f1df'.1e!feei Net fp af ambuw m mmf gfme '12'P'0Q'v There s Lobe' LQ.111.'r 52 In,f1,f.: ' f'7 . M 'VZYJQV xx V V Q JW! 2 ff I u A -my A ' V fm ' V - Y , ' 'J Y - 34 A - 9 . 5 ,V .. ' :?.' g . ,, f B C I . ,A f .' ,v ' 4 I 2 'g 1 ' 1 ,V V r . ' lu r .-. . , . T' -ff .,.. ' I 9 W W V . 4, I Faculty W 5 lfflyff Lee Kelm Superrntendent Clyde Errksen Hugh school Prrncrpal Donna james Elementary PrrncrpallLrbrarran Mary Broadwell Englrsh Tracy Hernze Home Ec Charlotte jorrssen Computers lerrr Krueger Busrness!Fhy Ed Bonrta Paulson Scrence judy Tltus Musrc Beth Undem Englrsh Dale Undem Scrence!Math Dianne Becker lllndergarten Connie Corbrn lst grade Deb Brandenberg 2nd grade Duane llracht 3rd grade Crndy Berger 4th grade Becky Ust Sth grade Larry Coles 6th grade Edna Anderson Basrc skrlls Robyn Borg Learnrng drsabrlltles Marshall jacobson Head custodran Faculty and Staff not prctured rnclude Lrnda Dawson cook Al Schumacher math teacher Bonnre Hare cook Ann Lloyd art teacher Mary Ann Rerdman speech pathologrst jeanne Schnerder socral worker Murrrel Wreland assistant custodran Kurt Wagner rndustrral arts teacher Harold Stenson socral studres teacher School Board Members Back Flow rl to rl Terry Bryn Melvrn Bus Drrvers Back Row!! to rl Scotfflnderson MarshallJacob5on Wendel Front Row Charlotte Jonssen rbusrness managerl Pnl! Brll Cruff Shane Gerrnann Harold Srenson Front Row Cecelra Mueller and Susan Jorrssen Maoifadgen and Duane Undem Valley Lumber Valley tlty Veterinarian Clinic Vafncru Valley Drug . , V C l ' fjzfg, . , i Margaret Doyle, drug counselorg Delores Manson, vocational counselorg Maria Rredman, elementary phy edg Donette Rassmussen, counselorg - l e L: C-I . r - ' ' Q I L znflergarten, .S if Zn rfwle BIOOII1 'I cl'3ffS Flbral ndergalt e Helnze Ashley ern Teresa er Sara Omdahl V essa Omdahl Ka a Rhone A rey Rr er Zachary Sather Ro Swenson st r D In hr: I Travis ulfy Lane gan Jessica Hernze G ss Henderson Mind Hollins ad oe lor: ovel Geoffrey Quick Trevor ulck Ash ey Ryerson I Schnel e Sk r Da lel Un m Sh ena Un m Mandy Vogel Nrck Wleland 2ndGrade Dustin Amann ven K IE Everson ner orr Shannon Koebernrck unze ell r a M er ane Omdahl el Bryan Trlebold L gel Kirk Wie and 3rdGrade La e Anderson Haylee Baumann Courtney Becker Central Avenue Pharmacy Kf fsf fr H nc Broten Charlie Clyde erek Dehofl jacob Elston josh Engle Brlttanle Field Brnan Harstad Mike Hayes Katt Helnze Kevm Hovda llarcle Lovell Courtney Peter Kollyn Quick Casey Sadek Adam Wleland Mirah jeff Altrlnger john Deholl Dusty Dldler joEllen Elston Kassre Everson Lindsey Gulllckson Chrls Hemze Sarah james Becky johnson Allison jorlssen Natasha jorlssen Sheena Koebernuck Brandon Lettenmaler Mellssa Lyter Tabltha Oftelle Danny Schwehr joshua Steckroat Angela Steen Ashley Stranger Danny Swenson Not plctured josh Webb Tum Webb Chrrs Weller Brnan Wleland DeAnna Youle Sdfnab Robbre Arbuckle Ton: Baumann jessica Broten Tfmvl W Fourth grande Q Fll'Sf laflillal BBIIK D3ll0f3 RCXBII DYIIS rxfhm mud! T S l 4 '1 ' v ' . 5 A ll A A J' 5' ,e n A N A , , A 'L as c .. ,W k if l ff1,6 . 1 f . V I l f l I Gfrftlr grade Klds Love New Playground Equipment ,L ug i'- t ww-fwMvef ' Q-fa, We Left Courtney Becker and Courtney Peter having fun on the playground equrpment which was purchased last spring through the fund rarslng efforts ofthe Playground Equipment Commlttee Above frfth and srxth graders enjoy the new atom splitter swrng Roy Dehofl jessle Harstad Melnnda Hayes Tracy Hollrnshead Randy Hooey james Hovda Sally jewett Llndsay johnson josh jonssen Steph: llunze Tyler Langer Evan Legge Kal: Lettenmaner Lund: Lettenmaner Holly Lolcken Hat Lovell Steve Oflelle jason Omdahl naC.S Lallnse General 'fading galllpany , Q 1 . ' , V yr . 1 rf' , , Xls, J A V!! , 55 4 I . , 4 , , . .h -,- .,, - ' 1 4 nr. T4 ff ' M, J ' , - , -. ',. - '- t ' ' ' , -.Ya - r . . j-1,--5-4, 7 few' ,,,.,:. a:-yy Ij.'Q , - ,., -, ,. -, - . .I ., Q, 1 4.7 ,..h.., ,- ..,,,v., -' 4', I A.. , i. -N -f ' . 1,.,,, - W , e -ffy - . ' '. fd kr ' '. . 1, , gr, ,we -.,-' ,',,.1 f, Y- , - , 71, s 4. . , ' f. H, 1-H.. W 4 ' M eee31f,t !, ? v'W. S r asf f r' , ,,, r r r- iw: T' ve j. ,' . W A R:4.9e1iW,,s, Q SM --i' w ,...,,.s:..,, m.-v1'fAk.'u-rwn.n4a. x 1-7. Je ff a fvwsdsvw.-.,.. V PRACTICE IN THE GRADES LEADS TO PEHFECTION IN THE HIGH SCHOOL Corvairs in the Making... Pictured right are Santa. Sarah James. and his her elves in The Night the Reindeer Hooked . the 3rd and 4th grade play. Mrs Corbin lrightl gets herstudents ready forthe bus ride home The kindergarteners lbelowj and the first graders sing Away in a Manger at the Chrlstmas concert 'FK 6th grade band members Back row Jason Anderson Billy Quick Chad Farnquist Aaron Koebernick Kody Amann Jonus Elston Front row AdamJohnson Nicole Swenson HeatherMueller andDannyl-lollinshead 5th grade band members Tyler Langer Adam Undem Third row Randy Hooey LIndILettenmaier Evan Legge James Hovda Marty Undem and Rob Arbuckle Second row Matt Lovell Steph Kunze Sally Jewett Lindsey Johnson Melinda Hayes Toni Baumann Front Jessie I-larstad Jessica Broten Tracy Hollinshead Holly Lokken and Kali Lettenmaier llevl York Life Insurance Go. James Jensen agent 22 . gfemenmry Qzmture Olson Lovaas Sad Legion Post Farmers 81 Merchants Bank ... YQ?Q1 Q4 fQ4 ffQ1Q?lfYQ4 ,,,,,x,x,x,x,x,x,xf,x,x,x, ox , fs: ' I I . . . - 'ss Y! Q lil ve? Q 'fZf 'B 5' M41 .L Q w X W y K n if ,., Az Q, X, 1 A' wer 'A 1 bl5w ' '5 48 p w 'U .9 v If Ps . K 5 9 7. -Z V 1 ' I, 1. i..v. ' 'W-3-'v rv . X 4. ? V' Q 5 2 v zz 54- B VH I , ' V Q ug v :fi 9 ,. gk ' - L 1-4 ' rex' V' w 'K-- IJ 1' ,, K' mug sqm 1 'Q 6thGab jerod Altrlnger Cody Amann jason Anderson Ashley Becker jonus Elston Chad Farnqulst Tera Freld Tyler Hare Danny Holhnshead Cole jorrssen Not pictured Adam johnson Aaron lloebernrck pnl Muller Heather Mueller Bully Quick julre Schrebe Casey Skjeret onathan Steen justln Stringer Amber Webb 7tl' jlm Altrrnger Ryan Bryn Aprrl Davres jenny Elslon Ryley Elston Bobby Engle llonrca Hayes Martrn Helnze Andy jewett jamre johnson jessica Klern Glen lloebernrck Nrcolette Lettenmarer justm Mueller Brntanr Qu ck jerry Ryerson Linda Sablnash jody Sadek Kane Schnerder Matt Sreckroaz jon Undem Amber Weller A . . I , Nicole Swenson A I 8hGa:b Michelle Aus Lacey Baumann Natasha Dahl Tera Didier Tyler Elston Ryan Engle Kylie Everson Morgan Foster Nicki Hare Michelle Hayes Mindy Heinze Nancy Hollinshead Scott Hovda Matt jensen Peter lewett Brady jorissen james jorissen Travis orissen Deedra Lolcken jessica Lovell Kim Schiebe Melissa Steen Chanda Triebold Rachel Triebold Seventh graders April Davies 8 Monica Hayes participate in the traditional yunior high ritual of studying during study hal! Older students however have outgrown this and found better things to do instead 7111166 grade The Top 5 excuses why NC students sklp class The dog died Alarm dldn t go off W !t's strll the weekend Car problems as Bad halr day was ave you ever wondered why some NC students are always sklpplng class'7 Well we searched through the halls of NC school flndlng many stu dents wlth good excuses to sklp class and we then narrowed lt down to fave answers lasted mostcommonly used to the least Freshman Heather Anderson Rob Aus Kary Duffy Mlndy Duffy jason Elston Brandy Hanenberg Chad Helnze Bully Herman jeff Holhnshead Bobbl jo johnson Davld johnson Corey jonssen What? Tfm sleeping an again l Mindy ftopj IS experiencing a bad half day . P? l0l'fllY6Sfel'll IIIUIISCIWES 2,5 . gm llorwest Bank wilhllleddll Grail! CO. YOLPL DIA S I Q., 3 'A I l l - . , ragga? I ryye ' 'pgs ,Qi A 'X giwfl -1 gig giw K ,i mari ga. gWg,5g5?,Q,5.a,QQ , - 1 5 7 Y 7 V v Y M? , N r . 4 r s IH: Yfjmtfi Tenth if feventfi male Ryan Legge Brandon Mueller joanie Pesek Tiera Quick jenny Rondestvedt Michelle Schwehr Wyatt lulp Stacy Wendel Sophomores Kami Bryn Mark Davies Dan Elston Kristie Everson Emmy Heinze Sara jensen Paul llunze Tim Lettenmaier jenni Lovell Kellie Ryerson llaneia Schaefer Corey Schneider Chris lriebold Ryan Tulp Louis Wieland lm Chuck Brandenberg josh Dahl Laura Davies Benjy Duffy josh Elston Amy larnquist Lee Gregerson Nicole Hovda jenny jewett Ryan jewett jody johnson Amber Killoran Doug lettenmaier jaoa Neto Amy Peselc Dean Piatz Ron Rogers jessi Stringer Lucas Triebold Valley Cnty Equipment y ,L M ,mg XIZX I-X IAX IZX. IAX I-X I-X IAN. 1 X11 xjf'xjf'xjf xjfxj!'Xjf'xjf'xj, 'I LS ports The road to success is never easy. Although the scoreboard wasn't always on our side we've felt pride in the hard work, determination, and improvement we've shown throughout this past year. Dean ltop rightj a junior end on the 1994 BCN Bison football team takes a second to give us a smile. Aaron and Travis labovej two of the basketball captains for the Corvairs discuss the quickest way to Gackle. Travis lfar rightj makes sure he has a good grasp on the ball during a punt return. Kami lrighlj warms up before a game using two balls? 25 ' ggfznrts ,vw Wf 59? ll -eff Shane lleftj rsn t leftlng thls opponent get a band on the ball durrng Blson football aotron Brenda lbelowj eyes up the court before powerrng the ball over the net .90 Karl labovel practroes her freethrows before a borne game Ryan lfar leftl shows hrs stuff as he vaults over the bar during a mee! Chuck lleftl drrves rn and takes the one handed shot ,jlvcrfs ' 24 A' fy , ff r Ni 0, ffyvf , f , W ,W V V M 1 af ,lg - ,QQWGZTN Z i' ,L,Q:?, 'p f 4.. M riff' X1 5 ' ME v , ! '! gg., 1 , V vw ' ff 4 52,5 X ily, 1 atoll 'I'1':.is ! ! fyou wanted action in 1994 you shouldve checked out the BCN Bison football team. ln this, the fourth year of consolidation headed by Coach Paul Kvisland and assisted by Coach Dale Undern and Coach Kurt Wagner. the Bison pulled through the season with a roster of 22 players. With a record of 3 wins and 6 losses the guys rounded out a good season. Travis. Shane, and Brent the three senior captains kept the Bison working hard toward playoffs. Although the team loses some key players they will be a strong force to reckon with next year. Varsity football team back row Coach Kvlslen Travis Kunze Josh Elston Brandon Wanzek Brent Klein Bob Aus Paulk inze Coach Wagner Coach Undem Mlddle row Nlcole l-lovdalhead trainerl Chad l-leinze Jason Sangralt B andon Mueller MattSarnek Doug Lettenmaier CoreySchnelder Laura Davlesltrainerl Frontrow Brian Darni Dan Elston Pete Soupir Dean pl3lZ Shane Everson Jav Schloleldt Photo tot Shane doing some fancy footiiork to get around the defenders SCOIICC Ross F0l'd 1345 West Main Valley City ND l701l8451671 Barnes Gonnfy March gisan ,'g:.,.u..,.3, 1 fx.-.ss 1 xt it .Qi Ibm 22 Hatton F-S 42 18 Hope-Page 48 30 FCT 20 36 Lakota 12 6 Edgeley 50 Hankinson Sargent Central MNS Enderlin Gnptazns Brent Klein Travis Kunze Shane Everson A dd Reg on Brent Klein Travis Kunze Shane Everson Honnrdffe Mlerzfran Chuck Brandenberg Josh Elston Senior captains Brent Klein Travis Kunze and Shane E verson stop in the hall to pose for the camera Grrctftff ' 21 36 38 0 27 17 8 6 ' 28 - 2 .- , X , it . 7 A f . A i ,, is iv! i 4ii f 4 ' lf Hi' , ' ' 2 a 1 . Q qw 42' ' 'iw mf M' 1 49 nf ! Tfgrrwf' ' 'YS gg . 4' . 5' 2 39,2 I UK It 1 . g lwimi 3 tic , EH' ,lflgsv 'Isa 'g'aGl431G xv N if f QW ,. V i M 1 A Break for the Basket emit em he 1994 girls' basketball team was very persistant and worked hard all season long. Although the girls didn't have as good a season as they had hoped for yet they managed to have a lot of fun. The team went into the 1 994 season with many younger less experienced players, but much improvement was seen throughout the year. The had its ups and downs and the girls ended out the year with a record of 10 wins 12 losses. Jenny. waiting to break to the basket. was the lone junior on the team. Jodi eyeing up the basket and ready to shoot the perimeter shot, Kari making ner way past two Edgeley defenders during the district tournrnent, DIICKOIYS 'RUBY Gallery 256 Central Ave N Valley City ND t701t 845-3390 fgnsketiall Q Them 54 Midkota 65 66 Maple Valley 50 35 Tolna 68 56 W-C 38 46 LaMoure 36 60 Oriska 32 36 Gackle-Streeter 61 37 Hope-Page 52 57 Kulm 30 56 Oriska 31 32 Hope-Page 66 38 LMM 40 58 Sheldon 47 47 Edgeley 43 48 McVille-Aneta 47 44 Griggs Co. Cent. 69 33 Ellendale 39 53 PBK 65 40 LMM 47 45 Edgeley 43 49 Gackle-Streeter 68 33 LaMoure 45 Gnfztazns: Misty Barnett Jodi Heinze Kari Lettenmaier A fl-Zistricb Qegion-5 Wife Teams Kari Lettenmaier Seniorcaptains Jodi Heinze, Misty Barnett. and Kari Lettenmaier, 1rf.S Bfisketfdff 35 1 x.,N A AF: Z ,v r fn I A . ,, Ji, gf U QAQWN , rl I rx I 1'5 I JK V, 4,740 ff If - W9 ,,..., , AMA , 'I Us , I 1-NW 4' w vi 1 Z 4' X Q W 2 In h I 6 U' 5 1 W 3. 19 Z f, 'f 0 A U N W APPR' f, QW? E ,,, Mak A I W 3 Q' 13? 'W f tl 33 my Q 7 6 ,559 Q? 1 0 M rf fz S A Jt 'W n K Q JW , my zu M , ,MQm,g'zfyn, , ' 4 f hx y ff M A ,f,' , if ' ' ff 1 ,Qi 6 , . - M W 'fb Q A? 0 I 'fil- CHEERING 0 II M 1 Sophmore Kami Bnrn getting the crowd s support by cheenng fn a pre game cheer -05. WHS 9? av SHE! af-3 Cheenng them on are front row Tera Drdler Michelle Aus and Joanre Pesek Middle Jessie Lovell and Jenn1Love!! Back row Lacey Baumann Tonya Wreland and Kami Bryn The cheerleaders are posfng A Veryexcned Tera Dldlerscreams fn their new outfits They performed their half time dance routine fn these for her team from the sideline s Computers 81 More I 'l'ony's 'Icons 53 ' Gaeffffafffng Valley Cnty, ND tn V ' ' M f rm 2? fx, 'Q f' f- t ' l n 7 QQ Q ,T A 3 , ,Q K, at A T N, A 4 'n.hWM,, :iz?4i2-it g T': t in? J i' M ' 7.21 K 'L 4- ,i', 'Eir- R 7 , I '. nn.. f A All fired up for the spfnt cornpetrtfon the varslty Cheerleaders do tnerr tnrng on the sfdelrnes dunng the Barnes County Tounament Varsrty cheerleaders Karnf Bryn Tera Didier Jenn1LovellandJ0an1e Pesek on x i 1 A very supportrve Corvarrs crowd B squad cheerleaders Jessie Love!! cheers the boys on at Wfmbledon Lacey Baumann Michelle Aus and Tonya Wreland PECEPSOII IOIIIISOII slhllldf Fllllel'3l H0016 515 N Central Ave Valley Cnty ND 4701x843 3232 C 4..r!. 141111 ' 24 '. . 2 , 1 ' I 3 45 C aff, I . .. .- A' V Yu' V A 4 , E . ' P Y ,-at 5 , fu N x r . N... . - L ' .- .i , ' I . L -1 Run Just For the Fun 0f It'P'P Imagine that!! rack What an expe nencel Getting up at 7 O0 am Saturday mornlngs for track meets runnlng an belowfreezlng weather and staying after school on Fr: days for practice are just some of the downfalls track has to olter There are good sldes to track too such as energlzlng runs gettlng your lVlcDonalds suppers The flrst part of the season IS pretty much agonnzlng paln used to It and It becomes fun Thereareusuallymany meets held across the tn county area butthe weather dldn t cooperate The track season started with two ln door track meets ln Fargo Moorheadandthenthe sea son was puton hold as BON tracksters had thelr flll of tn door practlce and no meets team was coached by Mr Undem and he was assisted by Mr Kvlslen and Mr but after a whlle you get Samson Stacy and Jenn: shed thelr fackets as they make thelr way around the track Girls varsity team back row Kanela Schaefer Katle Goehnng Emlly Slzer Kathy Click Shauna Plckar Sarah Lloyd Bobbl Jo Johnson Jenn: Lovell Joanle Pesek Stacy Wendel Heather Anderson Kaml Bryn N1coletteLettenma1er Natasha Dahl Jenny Ftondestvedt Michelle Schwehr and Jamie Johnson Guys track team lback rowl Kurt Barnes Chuck Brandenberg Brent Klein Rob Aus Ryan Tulp Wyatt Tulp Peter Jewett Tyler Wanzek Taylor Plckar Casey Floaldson Jon Undem Jerry Ryerson Bllly Oulck Adam Johnson Jason Cherney Jon Steen Enk Bredeson and Justin Cherney Girls funlor varslty team back row Melissa Steen Ann Undem Jessle Lovell Lacey Baumann Sarah Zehar and Nlcolette Lettenmaler Natasha Dahl Jamle Johnson Amber Weller Katle Goerhlng and Tara Schlecht Valley Heat Supply U . k 1269 West Mann Valley Cnty ND 58072 4 Trnf 1 800 752 5142 1 I l body into shape, and This year's 44-member -ZW'-1 Chuck Brandenberg the hurdler hurdles a hurdle Whewf Say that three times fast Nrcolette Lettenmarer farleft a varsity and lunror varsrty team member runs frantically to keep ahead of the pack dunng the 100 meter dash at a Valley City meet She Oualrfred for State ln the two mlle relay this year We are clear for takeotfll Pole vaulter Ryan Tulp middle narrowly escapes hrs demrse durng an unsuccesful pole vault attempt Jennl takes her turn at the two mrle relay 'frank ' 4f Michelle Schwehr gets some work done before a basketball game, Jose' lbelowj visits with 3rd graders about life in Spain. Seventh grader Monica Hayes learns what study hall is all about. 42 ' ,A cnfiemics X!iX!iX!1X!iX!1X!iX iX!iX xy xy yy xy xy xy Xi? gy X5 A cflrlemics One of NC's most distinctive differences is it's exceptional academic performance The hard work put into all of the classes pays off not only in competition but what is Danny Swenson lrightl buildsa volcano during learned here can be Used Qui Bobbi Jo Johnson gets some help from Sheryl Sabinash during a math excursion this past fall, fourth grade science class. in real life. ,af vi pp Rfk Kim Schiebe takes a time out from her school work to test her Magic Eye ability, 'Afar4lH12L',S . Acadenucally Inclmed NC students work hard to rm rooe thezr ocodemzc skzlls student needs chal lenges for the mund as wellasthebody NorthCen trai offers nts students that plrshments are addrtronat proof that students here are among the best when rt comes to academrcs' challenge andthey have ac cepted It becomrng known for therr math abrlrttes and computer excellence Corvarrs are more than ath Ietes This years accom Mina.. Jenny and Aaron lfar nghtj use their toy cars rn physics to prove that velocrtyxslant+ force b o r 1 n gl Lucas lrrghtj scopes out the anrmal lrfe at NC' Algebra lll stu dents tbelowj working on therr English assignment i l. 19 Members ofthe NC Eleventh and Twelfth Math Team that took tlrstplace at the Mrnot Math Meet were Nrcole Hovda Ryan Jewett Chuck Brandenberg TyphannyQu1ck Tam1Jorlssen andJoseAusrn lndrvrdual winners were Nrcole Hovda 1st place Jose Ausrn 3rd place and Typhanny Ourck 4th place Twenty one students represented NC at the annual VCSU Busrness Day cornpetltron Place wrnners were Chuck Brandenberg Business Math Aaron James Computer Literacy Jenny Jewett Busrness Math Karren Johnson Prepared Speech Misty Barnett Accountrng and lback TOWI Mike Elrott Desktop Publishing Nicole Hovda Business English . GJ-I. Carpenter Lumber 44 .A Mfffrvlff-S 202 2nd sr NW Valley cny ND 0019845 3042 Q O Q , C . ' 7 ' Q ' I I . - I . ... '4- . . . 2 . I- 1 I 2 - - - ,Yr , Wm 2 Q Y 0. 7-4 1 4 haf' . f. V2 53 QB Qs 25 14 Q3 Q2 Li I 9 w S 5 ' -3 3 1 2 4 -3 4 3 2 'Y , .. L- . , Tami's checking to see how she measures up in a special calculus class project! Mr. Undem testing out bridge strength! ww? This years speech team Consistedofj Ryan Legge, Aaron James, NiC0l9 Members of the Junior High NC math team that took fourth place at the r region Hovda. by M s. al meet held in New Flockford. Bobbie Jo Johnson. Karren Johnson. The speech team. coached MINOI Math Meet were: Bobbi Jo Johnson. Ryan Legge. Dan Elston. Broadwell, participated in four meets in preparation for the Michelle Schwehr. Jenni Lovell. Kami Bryn. lnduvidual winners were: Michelle Schwehr, 4th place: Jenni Lovell. 5th place. Wimbledon Grain Leal. ND 8 l701J646-6457 flfMfmff.S ' eff Outdoor Dhvred Uasses prowde reffef from the regufarcfassroorn Rrght Trrntettenrnarertosses a horse shoe. Marshall Arts ss part of the curnculurn that has been offered here at North Central fora fewyears now. Students are always eager to join Below, Brent Klern pushing a broorn 4 W? -9 Jessie Stnnger and Josh Dahl. above. were the frrst two students to take a forergn language wa TV at North Central. Missy Altrrnger. Melrssa Jorrssen, and Chnstrna Rogers rrrghtr practrcrng therr Health Oc L I 1' ' I-N 1 ii' if-4, . iw' -9943? day? ww, A lf- 4 Q.. ll' ' pn: 4 . 'aa-olur Q Q Homespun Charm , 0 g xg Q 341 N. Central Ave. Valley City. ND 40 f71Mf L-S 17011845-3147 tl - www 'mmf Q ' 'p Deedra Lokkeh Kbelowj changes classes at the sound of the bell Rrght Sheena Koeberhrck enfoyrng a book durlhg the Readrng Month Beach Party if 7orke lf 5065! f'75'w ,1 O Kool Teachers from the K1cl Zone 0 Mrs Berger and Mrs Kracht are North Centrals flrst Kool Teachers ool teachers Mrs Kracht and Mrs Berger were selected thls year by Pralre Publlc TV as extraordl nary educators The award was glven to onlyfourteacherslnthe entlre Chan nel 13 vlewlng area There were 570 entrles and a teacher from Wlnntpeg and one from Blsmarck were also hon ored The KldZone Kool Teacher Con test helps students recognize thatteach ers are dolng a great job and play an Important role ln thelr llves Both teach ers and thelr klds were rewarded wlth a plzza party and speclal televlslon ap pearances Nomlnated by fourth grader Sarah James her entry sand they are cool teachers because they plan lots ofthlngs for our two classes to do two gether' They are cool to the max First Community Credit llnion 250 Central Ave S Valley Cnty ND l7o1t 845 4647 f7r '4f L5 ' 47 I 1 v' L ' ', 25,1 J .,' 'I so 5 ' '5 0 , ,Q ,Vg ,I r 'J Y xt' lags' ' if T 8 V f V T Y- 'M' .4 x ' f' V2 K t 1 g X f Q L .J ' ' 2. 23:5 f I ft l X X K t z 1 2 l lt ' C me Z l '45 A wants Academic Letters Ryan Legge Kami Bryn Nicole Hovda jenny jewett Misty Barnett Tami jorissen Kari Lettenmaier Typhanny Quick jodi Heinze Louetta Paulson jeriAnn Charboneau Travis Kunze Perfect Attendance jon Undem Melissa Steen Michelle Aus Ann Undem jenny Rondestvedt Rob Aus Ryan Legge jerry Ryerson Linda Sabinash Amber Weller Tera Didier April Weller Constitution Award Tami jorissen Scholar Athlete Award Kari Lettenmaier Travis Kunze Vocational Awards Karren johnson Lee Gregerson Dale Engle Science Award Kari Lettenmaier Bausch 8: Lomb Nicole Hovda Senior Athlete Award Travis Kunze Kari Lettenmaier Outstanding jr. Hi. Instrumental April Weller Outstanding Instrumental jason Lee Outstanding Vocalist Karren johnson Best Supporting Actress Tami jorissen Best Supporting Male Role Mike Elliott Best Actress Karren johnson Best Actor Aaron james NC Fitness Award Nicolette Lettenmaier Stacy Wendel Kari Lettenmaier Double Vrctoryl Karl and Travls recelve Senlor 8 Scholar Athlete Awards Drarna award wrnners Karren Johnson Aaron James. and Tarnr Jonssen 'iv A Honor Roll. back row: Misty Barnett. Nicole Hovda. Ryan Legge. Scott l-lovda. Ryan Bryn Jodi Hernze T Jonssen, Louetta Paulson. Typhanny Oulck, Karr Lettenmaier, Karnr Bryn, Melrssa Steen Not pictured Altnnger, Jenny Elston and Andy Jewett, Harvest States Cooperative 48 a lAu,nrA.S Sanborn. ND 58480 l701J 646-6400 A Tune For Recogmtton of Accomphshrnent he annual awards nlght was held on Thursday May 18 Many students were recognlzed for thelr partlclpatlon and numerous awards were presented Awards were glven for both academlc and athletlc achlevements Wlnners from the evenlng recelved medals plaques and certlfrcates A4 Mlssoun Bound' ' ,J in Karren lolmson and Lee Gregerson represented thexr school and state at the natlonal VICA contest ln Kan '51-.-x Na. Above left seven of the 12 stu dents who were recognlzed for Outstandlng attendance J Undem F? Legge R Aus Front rom J Flondesttedt A Undem M Aus M Steen Top Math stu dents recognlzed for tnelracnle ve ments tnroughouttneyear Above Kan Lettenmaler Typnanny Oufck and Tamnlorlssen recelved sas Clty They earned thls honor by scormg hlghest 1n all of North Dakota Karren III Baslc Health Care Skxlls and Lee 1n Resxdenttal Wmng Skills IOYISSCH 53.85 the Educatlon Fltness Award 41 A Wards Gxrls Basketball MVP Kart Lettenmater Hustle lod1 Hemze Most Improved Sara Iensen Outstandlng Defense Stan Wendel loame Pesek Spark Plug Nllstw Barnett Kaml Brvn MVP IV Heather Anderson MVP Traus Kunze Hardest Worker Aaron lames Most Improved Corev SClll'lElCltl Outstandlng Defense Paul Kunze 1002 Award Trax 15 Kun7e MVP IV Ron Ropers Football MVP Trax ts Kun7e Best Defenslve Player Corex Schnelder Most Improved Trax ts Klllllt Hardest Worker Corex Schnetder Top Lmeman Brent Klem Top Freshman Rob Aus Volleyball MVP Kart Lettenmner Most Improved lmdw Sadek Best Defense 'vltssx Xltrmptr Sptrlt Award lxarren johnson Most Blocks kart Lettenmuer Most Kllls karl Lettenmner Most Asslsts Brenda Hanenberg Best Servlng Percentage Nllssx -Xltrmger 2215104th Ave SE Rogers ND 38419 A , 1800 2271161 A r'l'5 4 7 o 0 0 I . 1 0 . Q C ' ' I 1 1 - A E' W4 1 3, WM, A M., 'atv 1,,,,fC,, 'f f 1 Q - . - Boys' Basketball + 'D ' . 'I ' rt -10 4 fi 5 . 1. , MIM I la I i ' I ,V W - . 1 ' H ao, Ama . 'r b 1' A u g ,, I l V I . ' l . ' I A n 1. ' . ' s , I 1' C I C b X '. ' 5 . ,L . H C , ld l . - A. . A . Karrcn lohnson talws a break from her POD assignment to posc for this picture during the Student Council sponsored Homecoming Week Everyone had a gooCltin1eattl1eFH,-X Christmas party! Brent Klein, above, defending himself against lata--nightycarbookand PJPUI'5t?lfflI1SFll1llf'. Kari frowns hcr disapproval! Bobbi ,Io and Nliclwllc, troop leaders tor the Lock ln, pose for a dress-up glamour shot! fa ' Qrganizntians 4 z wg' Q 2' 'lvl M, v -1, 2 , J in fl i J Q will i ima ' 's-we 6 9 af. inn by ..f u 1 A p M0154 --,, , A .imtif mundane: VI Q-if' swf XIQX IZXIZX IQX !iX IZX IZX !iX.1 X7 xy xy xy xy 'xy 'xy xy Xi, if Qrgflnizflfions ltis no mystery, part of the glue that holds a school together is the organizations and all of the activities they sponsor. FHA president, leri Ann Clmrbonenu, gets A bouquet ot flowers ready for delivery. A part of the lfllA Week .ictivities includes deliverx ot flowers .ind balloons tor Y.1lentine's Day. gbugyivu msvrysvgw MTI Horne games provide opportunity for lots of fund raising, l,1ndi Letteniniuer, Xicoleiivenson, lhx id lohnson, .ind Ryan legge are doing iust that Lett, Xlnrslmll gets A quick peek at the school paper while Nicole rushes to complete it. Band isn't always hard work. The band students .ind Xis. Tlllls are caught relaxing, on the iob Qrffanizntiams ' ff Mrs Helnze lfar rlghtj fixes JenAnns dress before the style show Karren Johnson and Nrcole Hovda lbelowl havrng fun alter the FHA Style Show Laura Dawes fflghfl serves Ice cream at a Ice cream socral put on by the FHA .v 5' M-if Karren Johnson Nicole Hovda Kan Lettenmarer Jenny Jewett and Mlsty Barnett showing off the banner made forthe meetrng rn Mrnneapolrs Servtce provnded by 2-mn Sara Jensen models a lovely 1970 s dress at the FHA Style Show Grotberg Electric S T Valley Cnty ND f2 ' 17013 845 3010 l1 800 378 3010 . I. 4 . I . Q , H D 1 AW 5,9 WA Vi ,. , 1 J 1250 y 1 ,Q 1 J 5 'R l J 'ffm' f f Q -9 I it ,., A4 Wm ao, 5 ' 5 i Q '3 XJ Sli SF' ut Tlme Jn he NC Muslc Department had another fun fnlled year In addltlon to all of the music events the kids got a chance to break ID two new dlrectors The students started out the year under the durectton of Ms Tttus With her the band and cholr prepared for the Barnes County Mustc Festtval and put on a Chnstmas Concert The cholr also dad some traveling ln De cember as they headed to Valley Clty to sung at many places around town lnclud Ing Mercy Hospital and the Barnes County Courthouse When the muslctans returned from Christmas vacation they were greeted by Mr Monllaws Under has dlrectton a jazz band and swung cholr were reorga nlzed Flnlshlng off the year the students performed a sprung concert and competed at reglonal and state music contests The 3rd and 4th graders forn forces and srng a song for the 1994 Chrrstmas concert The boys of band take a break after a grueling practice Solorsts thatcompeted at the regional musrc contest were Karren Johnson vocal solo Joanre Pesek flute solo Stacy Wendel trumpet solo Amy Pesek piano accompanrment Karren recerved a star at regions and honorable mention at state Joanle and Stacy both recelved honorable mentrons at the regronal level we fl B-1 -TT 'Kb fo 00:17 Members of the trrple trro were back row Brenda Hanenberg Missy Altnnger Karren Johnson JennyJewett Amy Pesek Brandy!-lanenberg Joanre Pesek Jenn: Lovell and Kamr Bryn They recerved an honorable mentron at the regronal muslc contest Amy Pesek Karren Johnson and Kam: Bryn were also members ofa vocal trlo that received a star at the regional contest and a honorable mention at state sllilfh Llllhbel' COIIIPBIIY 309 NE 4th Street Valley Clty ND I4 ' EAM f Gfwff 47013 845 2135 l 1 G ' I 1 . . . . l X g ' ' ' - is , g k gg - , s The NC Concert Band. frontrow. M. Schwehr. K. Ryerson A. Killoran. L. Davies. A. Peseki J. Peseki J Rondestvedt, T. Quick. Fi, Jewett. K. Schaeferi H. Andersoni J. Jewetti M. Barnetti K. Johnson. K. Lettenmaier. T. Jorissen, M. Elliott. C, Triebold. B Johnson. L. Gregerson. C. Brandenberg. D. Johnson' B, Leggei S. Wendeli N. Hovdai A. James'. B. Klein Typhanny Ouick, 'Jazz Band The NC Concert Choir. back row, B. Hanenbergi K. J0hnson'. M. Altringeri T. Ouick. K. Lettenmaier, Fr' Tulp '. L. Wieland. D. Johnsoni B. Legge '. Mr, Monila ws M. Schwehr. K. Schaefer. A. Peseki J. Bondestvedt. J. Jewetti J. Charboneau, J. Lovelli J, Peseki S. Wendel, B. Johnson, H. Anderson. B. Hanenberg, K. Duffy. L, Paulson. K. Bryn', K. Ryerson. S. Jensen. 'Swing Choir IIBVBI' hall Il S0 The saxophone ensemble competed at the regional music contest and received an honorable mention Members were Kaneia Schaefer April Weller Heather Anderson Jenny Jewett and Misty Barnett I K Flute trio members were Tiera Quick Joanie Pesek and Jenny Flondestvedt They received an honorable mention at the regional music contest seillflfy S1310 BSIIII of l0l'fh D3ll0f3 6 South 8th Street New Rockford ND 47011947 2421 BW4 7' CIM ' If 2 - 4 A 74' l Z 4 L. Wielandi Mr, Monilaws. and J, Lee'. Not Pictured: The Jr Hlgh Band back row M Hayes G Koebernlck A Wleland A Weller C Tulp T Drdler J Undem P Jevvett M Steen C Tnebold L Baumann J Kleln B Gulck M Hayes M Aus A Undem N Holllnshead K Schneider A Weller H Trlebold Jazz Band Brass sectlon practlclng Pornp 8 Clrcumstance Heather lbelowt gets lnto her music Leftl leftl left right left the fr hlgh band practices their marching on a warm spring day '. flu- if' W' ,RW A - A T wwftm' ' A A ll Transfer . Federal l.D, No. 45-0414863 O ff Band 7 GM Box 36 Hannaford. ND 56446 Pm. 76962269 x 4 'K -, sig 5' 'Y f Q my it in I H 3 , is 2 I , P. by Mfh, ' 5 22 , , ,W ff I , fm? W R W' . 'X -99 w, E? , f JSC' MJ' fi rug U A.. 2 U I -un N ,ff . 43 L. THE EEN TS MTGHTTER THAN THE SWORD ong hours and late nughts are whatthe Nonh Centralyearbook and paper are all about' Thus was the furst year the yearbook was done enturely on the computer the pages were laud out usung PageMaker 5 O and sent un on dusk The yearbook us a very unuque organuzatuon because ut usayear round project Advertusung sales start before school un August and the last pages are funally mauled off un early June ln addutuon to each page takung 8 10 hours to complete the staff puts un many other hours rausung the money needed to publush the yearbook The yearbook staff raused money thus year by sellung advertusements to local busunesses sellung wreaths and Chrustmas deco ratuons and the major event Lock un' The actual cost to make one year book us about S51 OO so all thus fund rausung us necessary to make them more affordable to everyone Just thunk thus book us a great bargaun at S25 00 venthoughthe gurlsspoutsteams have lost theur orugunal name The Confettes the North Central School Paper has kept uts orugunal name The Confette Thatsuustone of many thungs that makes ut unuque' The school paper one of the very few un the state put together on a desktop publushung program us prunted four tumes a year The paper staff us always un a hurry to get the paper out un as short a tume as pos suble to keep the unformatuon current To umprove the qualuty of the prunted photographs thus year the paper staff sent several ussues to a professuonal prunter But that meant of course more fund rausung' All paper staff members contrubute lots of tume to keep the student popula tuon up to date Fluchelleul1839j act ll sc 2 J Mike The Corvette editor works on the paper after school The Yearbook Staff uncudes Ryan Legge Muchelle Schwehr Sara Jensen Kamu Bryn Jennu Lovell Joannue Pesek Stacy Wendel Mrs James ladvusorj Dave Johnson Deedra Lokken Typhanny Ouuck Kan Lettenmarer Aaron James Muke Elluott Laura Davues IOPISSGII .iSfl'ibllflllS Route 1 Box 60 Rogers ND 58479 ff? ' Ye '5'7'7k 7 '? FH 17019646 6347 55 T ,W V T f X 'P P u u u u L, X- L .J J r 1 1 O u 1 ' u 1 1 1 1 - f ' ,aff . - 4 X ' M, . . 'T we ' u - 1 ' V wg ff . A 1 ff! 1 r 1 ., . . , . , . u 1 1 . , . . , . 55.4. if l The paper staff includes, Nicole Hovda, Mrs. James ladvisorj, Josh Dahl, Jody Johnson, Aaron James, Mike Elliott, Deedra Lokken, Laura Davies. Not Pictured, Dave Johnson, ' X 4 1. S . . J X x 5-sy, . A M ,,. , p PTO 2. 1 's ...f,,-vb Bobbie Jo, Aaron and Sara look through page layout lor their yearbook pages. Lea'-ROSEYS Gllll Club Rogers. ND Aaron and Kari discuss the computer layout. I IZ' 5 Kami picks out pictures for the band- choir page. Yearbook members are assigned pages by the editor and puts a lot of time into each page, YCHTHDCQ fr -?a7Jar ' 16' Ryan Legge and Kari Lettenmaier lLeltl entertain the !stand2nd grade girls with the school parachute. Fourth graders all dressed up lor some Lock ln fun are JoEllen Elston and Sarah James, Ch no, not another LUCK I . 60 ' ,Lark yn he yearbook and paper staff co-sponsored the second annual NC Lock In during March of this year. Over 90 kids stayed and played the night away. The most popular things to do were play Sega, Flashlight Tag, and basketball. Also available was dress up. bingo, an electronic Aladdin coloring book, computer games. and food! Attitudes about the event vary, depending mostly on age: The elementary kids say tLet's do it again next year! and the high school kids say 'tOh, no! Not another Lock ln! Left. fifth grade girls grin at the camera. Tirne: 3:45 am. Lock ln brings out the scariest in everybody, Above Courtney Becker. and Kati Heinze pose in their Halloween fine-ry. Vx 3, , A ww -.v Qt o I Looks like Chrls Weller enjoyed the Lock ln! Jesse Slqeret cooked up hrs own s'more and ate lt, tool 9 .wg rfq fl W, .J 2 fl 'H .5 15 Karl. at 3:47 am. Enough said! Dress up fun was part of the nlghts aCflVIYl9S, Thrrd graders and therr troop leaders. left. are: Brrttanie Field. l-laylee Baumann. Mlchelle Sohwehr. Kollyn Oulck. Marcfe Lovell. andBobblJoJohnson, Back row, Lacey Anderson. Courtney Becker. KatlHe1nze, and Courtney Peter, ,Lark 71901 23 seniors have prepared forthis day since kindergarteng after years of work. play, and memories the classmates of 1995 jay Qoofliye he moment 23 people had been waiting forfinaily arrived on May 21st, It marked one of the most im- portant days in their lives so far, a day that found most of them experi- encing mixed feelings of happiness and sadness. All eight honor stu- dents spoke giving an invocation. benediction, honor student ad dresses, a poem, and a class fare well. xvfix-fjxvfixvfi X! X! X! X! f wzmzfew 'f't f fi 521: 3 ',,',, Q?i?k7v1?U fl' :uf , v,,, v,w.rrNrff ,, , V , iiiitt i w use Mike lhelovv leltl takes his diploma in hand and is ready to lace anything Brent ibelovvl gets the lowdown on exactly how to receive his diploma. ,gun -'tbl Q, vi, 4 -'rr-wr'W Christina. Brenda. and JeriAnn enjoy themselves after the graduation ceremony. 62 ' Qrniinntion .143 .f .2 1 I 1 r I :.., Melfssa happffy walks down me afsfe during the REAL THING. The Glass of '41 n n n e Typfmnny Quick Kari ,Lettcnmaicr 'Zami gnrissen 'lfhisty Barnett P1 H K C QM? Heinz: ,Lanztta -Panfsan K K UMM nn eidrfvnmn Travis Kunz: er Vfiite Rose r Raya! Blue, Black y Silver QL4.u.'U1.Lm Ramcmfcr yesterday: Zream of tomorrow: ,Live for thinly. The senfors wave goodbye as may :awe the fma! pfacrfce march to me stage fifrf,flt,lf2f!I ' F93 7l1R1Q15?1fEff gRg3131fk1fS3 Pictures and Words, 'I'i.:rr:Le and Effort, -AEIEAYQJ Beginnings and Endings. All of this oa.:l:l:.e together to rrl.a.l:e tIlr.l.l.s yearbool: 'We hope you enjoy this bool: for r.:1.a.:::.y 'UXJXJX fifflffiffiffiffi, years to cose fx x x xfifff ffflfiflfxgj Q4 fm V jk-ffk-XXX XX, Busters Eff E75 ff? f1uBn6.sHa nu: wclrydtaffl ,v tm L 71,1 Afltn-ibut: LS41f Qpt t 164741409 g.zA 7rE1rT IE 7 L! fl! Mkzsnze 7fnzf14ufHe..zz3.wme,4nq7fn EAL4 7 2347 waz XXXIXX Gfoszng 64 ' I ' - - - - - - - A - - I f '- ' '-- - I ,T v - - ' - A 1 - ' - A - ' - ' - ' v ' e 1 , , X , Ll' -f if u his :ra run cu ' r ' irtscrviu 'H n n' gr ' an r venus UAH: r11.'fi1'kQfur1uAne 5 Ears 'dgrnqk .Efrrerv ' Zbnzcy duff ' Xfdffitf V?,4ca ' 3.6.-Penney 0'at4f0g!Qr4n1lm4's,Att2c ' Zakota R556 F7!:mf 'A H1171 'Z'r:,v4y 'flppfinnff Uiry ' TA: Fair Stn: ',C'Kc'.sEn uv' 25 n r ' cr nm: ric' n ng' n ir' 1- iw . 4 mv: ' uf f 7,111 ' in ' v llllslgllikfv :r ' r. if mmf.2mg.s ' 7 er r ' 2 n r n iinin ' :vie an '2, ar ' e :ss vu ' f- Km r :mfr 'fmjnvls ' o I'- ,-aux 3' i--l Elyihlihl iyiiilli IHUIEIDLHIMIIIQ eceaodlymolagnhbnnw lldlllldlltlkl IIIIIIHUIHIILHIII lilllltdlliylhllllllnslo CllIIlNlllUllJlUll'l1KlR UiQlKllllIQIllllI rivers. Dlltcltlullltllllttlvlctlale 250,Illllpl0pIelr0mlM lovllillds. Camilla Parker Bowles, allegedly Prince Charles' mistress, announces her divorce hom ber husband, Andrew Parker Bowles. Princess Diana is said to be negotiating a divorce from Charles, who will be tree to remarry without giving up the throne- unless unhappy subiects torce a referendum on the monarchy. More than 900 passengers die, 140 are rescued when the Estonia, a 15,500-ton Baltic teny sinks otl the coast ot Finland in a violent nighttime storm. The storms 30-loot waves swamp the ship which lists and sinks in a matter ol minutes. 3521 CD lter a peasant uprising in Chiapas and two major political murders, Mexico gets a new president. Ernesto Zedillo, an economist, assumes nttice only to lace a stockmarket crash, a ruined economy, and a loss ot international conlidence in the wake nt the North American Free Trade Agreement. n July 25. U.S. President Bill Clinton welcomes King Hussein ot Jordan, right, and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin to the White House. where the two sign a historic nnnaggression pact that ends a 46-year state ot belligerency between Israel and Jordan. jig-an ii . A A' 'H N 15. ' ., '.rr ff 15. ii' Q E551-iri! ?fp, . . , , jsi?t.',x5,C1Qqff,Yj n ry V' 'H'if itwtfifrl' 'ri rf i 191 ' c., .rt-to .15 3 , , - ', K ' tb Ill!! t -V, i -- f ,,. f R, X A i. , X 1:5 ,Ov iv -' t i-EI I r-.rr if or slr' - Conservative religious groups and those who believe in individual rights clash over issues of education for women and family planning at the U.N. International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, Egypt, September 5. oytul residents ol Belfast celebrate atter the Irish Republican Army ilHAi announces an end to its mili- tary operations in Northern Ireland as ot August 31. After 25 years ol British military presence and over 3,000 killings, the IRA says it will now seek Irish union only through political channels. hen their Army helicopter acciden- tally strays into North Korea in December, Chiet Warrant Utticers Bobby Wayne Hall and David Hilemnn are shot down by the communists. Washington does not admit to espionage as the North Koreans want, but negotiates tor survivor Bobby Hall's release by expressing its sincere regret over the intrusion. lg A ' K I ipper Gore, wile ol U.S. Vice President Al Gore, visits Rwandan relugee camps in Zaire in July. Thousands ol relugees, lleeing ethnic conflict in Rwanda, die ol cholera, dysentery, and other inlectious diseases. Fresh water supplied by the United States military greatly reduces the number ot cholera deaths. alestine Liberation Organization Cll3ll'lTl3l'l Y8SlI' Arafat returns to Palestine in July 1994 after 27 years ol exile in TUlllSl8. Afafal kisses the ground in the Gaza Strip, now a Palestinian autonomous zone under the terms ot a 1993 peace accord with Israel. I f illions ot South Alricans travel weary hours and wait in mile-long lines to vote in the lirst all-race elections. Alter more than a century ol white rule, the voters choose lormer political prisoner Nelson Mandela to preside over the dismantling ot apartheid. Jimmy Carter, former ,pf U.S. president and self-styled global K- J ii Q, troubleshooter for , peace, negotiates ' J ' ' bhlf fun 4.1 if on e-a o . e A F Jim' i 1 U.S. in Haiti, 'gf 'na-I ' -I Bosnia, and North N- Korea. He even offers to help settle the baseball strike. en- n Japan, an earthquake with a magnitude 017.2 collapses buildings, derails trains, buckles elevated expressways, and causes tires throughout the city ol Kobe. Over 5,000 people are killed and 26,000 iniured. The Japan quake occurs January 17, 1995, one year to the day alter a quake devastated Los Angeles. 4 1 .S. President Bill Clinton, right, and British Prime Minister John Maior take part in ceremonies in June 1994 ata military cemetery during the 50th anniversary commem- oration ol the Allied D-Day invasion ol Europe, the event that sealed the late ol Nazi Germany during World War ll. lf. 'SS W , Qrvag Q a 5 4 hinese school children, dressed to look like Colonel Sanders, welcome the president ol Kentucky Fried Chicken to Shanghai in May 1994. Few ot the country's many loreign business ventures thrive, but KFC becomes a Chinese lavorite. The finger-lickin' enterprise makes plans to expand its outlets from 28 to 200. triumphant Jean- Bertrand Aristide reclaims his position as president and restores democracy to Haiti with the help ol U.S. troops. Haiti had sultered under the rule ot a military iunta led by General Raoul Cedras, who goes into exile alter , reaching an agreement with U.S. mediators. 5 In one of the most 4 successful antiterrorist Xt, operations in aviation ll' X A history, French commandos fa-QE f.-f ff storm an Air France , Q t ' f 'QQ get-iiner and kill C7 Q at four Algerian 5 lg ,kit hijackers, freeing hh C3 lr the p1ane's 9 'A L5 ,- 175 passengers 'J and crew. C ' i or 53 1, Q A , Q 4 T? India suffers an outbreak of pneumonic plague. carried by flea-infested vermin. Workers in Bombay earn five rupees for each exterminated ratg one thousand rat-tails earns a color TV. housands ot Cubans tlee their economically depressed l homeland, hoping lor a better lite in America. Many set 5 oll on homemade rafts and other small vessels only to l be intercepted bythe U.S. Coast Guard. The United States and Cuba reach an agreement in September that allows 20,000 Cuban immigrants to enter the United States each year. ' lmllfmll lugalalalkhdh soharllilnrlalllillot lmjdulnlurpsrlsncas Klilill l11'lQlilll eanlllsehlliilctt poaplladllanel.D0sn henrsten.Hselallnebl0 lr8alalarbll,ln-ssellng lniragorxlvoolaheny llrlrpassllnihdollrhr. Prasldorntllrhrrdeslarlnl U1lll lll8. un...u....n.....aan.-ea ln1!!4,lhnU.s.nglstma one-your population growth ot 2.7 minion. omline more umm ls an m immignuan, the umm !lldlll1flIIlSll'lGO 1914. ....................-...U Author and humanities prolessor, Ralph Ellison, dlcs at age 80. llls 1952 novel, Invisible Marr, has been called the most powertul novel written about alienation, Identity, and racism In America. ......................na... A huge increase in killings by 14- to 24-year-olds raises the nation's homicide rate, while violence blamed on preteens rocks communities nationwide, A boy, 13, is sentenced to lite tor strangling a tour-year-old. ln Chicago, an 11-year-old boy kills a 14-year-old girl and is then executed by his own gang. In Washington state a pair ol 12-year-olds shoot a migrant worker. he death ol Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in May 1994 marks the end ol an era. a time when America was prosperous. lighting lor civil rights. and heading lor the moon. The lormer tirst lady is buried next to her husband. President John F. Kennedy, in Arlington l National Cemetery, 1 Washington, D.C. 4 i l l l 1 Called the Republican revolution, November mid-term elections put the Republican party and its anti-big goverment platform in control of Congress for the first time in ALO years. Georgia'a Newt Gingrich, author of the GOP's 'Contract with Amer-ice, is the new Speaker of the House. Wy , l. at f 4 . . so M' 1 : f' A 'fx , if wtlxkj ' l ' ' .J F: X '. iygf , LL. . 1. ffm -- .-.. 411- t ,Q V. u 4. XYFDIQW ' I I x 'I S: i 4 2' ---if W N l Q- iii uf 1 55 1 fs I --jj it l l eat. drought. and , lightning combine to ' set Western states ablaze in late June and July. j Fires consume 2.000 acres in Colorados South N Canyon when 50 mile-an-hour i winds whip the llames into a ' tirestorm. killing 14 specially trained tirelighters: 10 men and tour women. he volunteers tor Silent March bring shoes lrom every state for one ol the quietest demonstrations to ever take place in Washington, 0.0. Each empty pair ot shoes repre- sents one ot the more than 40,000 Americans who have been killed by handguns. he prosecution seeks the death penalty in the case ot Susan Smith, who dupes the nation with a lrightening tale ol the abduction ol her two little boys. The community's early support grows quickly to hatred when Smith conlesses to murder- she sent her children to their deaths at the bottom ol a lake. Je-spite powerful National Rifle 1 - - - K1 V' ' congress passes a crime b111 Q 1 f banning the sale of 19 types of - fu 'Jil X s 1, srady Law goes Xi X V 1 into effectg in N A If jf A A l one month 25,610 A .153-'-L rg ' 2 l people with 24: criminal records 9 ' 'seg v -ag.,-s P2 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration blasts the tobacco company executives at a congressional hearing in March 1994 for denying that nicotine, a drug found in cigarette smoke, is addictive. Tobacco industry workers fear losing their jobs if the FDA succeeds in classifying and he 37th U.S. President, Richard Nixon. dies in April 1994. Nixon was responsible tor restoring normal tres with the Peoples Republic ol China tollowing the signing ol the Shanghai Communique in 1972. ,- -w rare white buttalo named Miracle draws crowds to the humble Wisconsin tarm where it was born August 20. Native 1. Americans believe the call is the tultillment ot a Lakota Sioux prophecy. Five hundred years ago. White Buttalo Woman told her people that i she would return as a white call to usher in a new age ol harmony between all races ol mankind. he Flint River overtlows, washing collins out ot a Georgia cemetery atter torrential rains lrom tropical storm Alberto tlood Georgia and the Florida-Alabama panhandle. Thirty-two people die, 40.000 are temporarily homeless. and 10,000 square miles are underwater, causing S100 million in crop damage. ormer lootball star 0.J, Simpson is restricting cigarettes as a drug. charged with the June 12th stabbing death ot his ex-wite Nicole and her triend Ronald Goldman. causing a non-stop media avalanche. The resident Clinton, with Republican leader Bob Dole, signs legislation implementing the U.S. role in an expanded General Agreement on Taritts . and Trade iGATTl. one ot the most sweeping trade liberal- ization pacts in history. The legislation makes the U.S. a 1 member ot a new 125-member N World Trade Organization. X Protectionists worry that GATT 1 may promote world trade but X A won'tsul1iciently protect f American iobs. Nw, MGX ..-.h sensationalcasetamil- i E , X , 3 iarized watchers with XX d '33-- X spouse abuse. atele- . ' 3 R gt' X visad ride in a white ' , J -gf. If ' Ford Bronco, Kato ! V'-3' 4 I T il Q z:::.:::zL':.'f::'g'i., s ' im' 1i 'f M 1 : 2', in January. 5 s ,4 r - PX? 'em ' u-E. Qiii '1 J x g -ii' I ' 4 I f CH ' met! i Ihe Secret Service considers restricting p'::'ic access tc the White House after a gunman fir-- rcxds at the bui1ding's facade in October. In Qe e'oer, a small Cessna airplane crashes C2 orc... south - wn and comes to rest at the base cf se elow President linton's bed cc -sg .n A .. Tllliiii Ddhiilhl lliih lslli lil kllhfi llild'lQiUltllel ihitlilhhhhll RQIQQIIHI1 ll1lXhHlQhgln hifi. e-nun.-nunnu--.nan nllldldllldldy U1KlllUIItl,lhZ5-lIl0t- lllghyttlqhlatllslllidtlt lhllllhlldth. Despite I so-called lttneas craze the ltattonal Center lor Health Statlstlcs eonllnns the American nverabundanoe o1 lood comblned wlth a sedentary lltestyla is creatrng an epldemlc ot obestty Since 1980 the number ol over werght adults has ballooned to one thlrd ol the populatlon wrth an alamnng Increase among chlldren Some ol the 599 newly revealed secret lngredlents mayor cigarette makers add to Improve taste and texture beeswax butter carrot orl crtronella orl cocoa shells com sllk dandallon mot extract 31 chemrcals that start wrth ethyl oak chlp ml vlnegar and dlmethyltetra hydrobenzoturanone Three planets are drscovered orbrtmg a pulsar star3 000 llght years away In the constellatron Vrrgu One rs the slze ul the muon and huo are three trmes more massive than Earth all are rocky worlds wlthout an atmosphere ASAs space shuttle mlssron 64 tests the operations ol a Srmplllred And For Extravehrcular Actrvrty Rescue tSAFAHl devlce Crew member Mark Lee maneuvers successfully outsrde the Drscovery whrle Carl Meade photographs hrm agarnsl the background ol Earth Martln Rodbell and lfred llman are awarded the M394 llooel P1-lze ln Physlology or Med1c1ne for 'iff 'IQ W Q C C developlng a , model of cell fl ' ' S' communlcatlon A X' fl utostereograms popularly known as Magrc Eye cause legrons ol people to stare cross eyed lor long periods ol trme Based on a mystery ot neurology and 3 D objects pattern elements luse rntu left eye he century s greatest chemrst and antrnuclear actrvrst Lrnus C Paulmg wmner ol the Nobel Prrze lor Chemrstry ln1954 and the Nobel Peace Prlzern1962 dues at the age ol 93 Hrs work on DNA lard the loundatron 1orCrrck and Watson s discovery ol the double hellx n Ethropra anthro pologlsts discover the skull ot a human ancestor Australoprthecus ramrdus 4 4 mllllon years old The new species has teatures midway between apes and humans and promises to provrde clues to strll earlrer evolutronary stages SEQ ,Nr f 5 l I 'Eye E JeJllleulullleoullelueenneeu U, 1 I .. , . , V ,Xu - . : .XXV X3 ' , ' 1 ' l so , . ' . . A f,.z r as l . . 1 A, ' ' 1 I ' I h . Z Q ,f I 5 Q l . ' , W ' - ' ' ffl . v . I . W I ' ' fb. ' ' l K 5 I 1 I 9. , . I .V - N W N y I D 5? 2 I A . ' wx J , . , V 10 wr Q 3 that 1135 A qw 3 kk 'Wx l I .u ' X'p 1 . l - - , - - , and rrght-eye Images ofa in 311 f . - , - l .- ' ' ' ' l -rw ,gf l I- ,TV y o Y -5,4 K , 'Vi A Y. V xt, utxs--V4 , ' , '.,J in X 'st ' , l,.-, . I I l LP 'I c 'L - J , , . n 'b,,.N .' 5 Q . . ' . Nztrigsees , ' n .Nh X' r . ,' - - - ' I W - Hui -,K V Sr' u 'r ' any I A . 4 I ,, 'gYI, V ffl- ,, A 4 Z ,lf Chic., H I 'lfeuepfgffs medlcal lmpllcatlons from cholera to cause he Food and Drug Admrmstratlon Institutes new lood q labelrng on almost all loods rn response to consumer protest agalnst the many mlsleadlng clarms ot lood producers The new readable labels provrde reallstrc serving srzes llst calories lrom tat and allow you to compare dlllerent nutrrent values Hone Umar If-1 pf slngle hldden object whrch appears to be tloatrng I Turkel 'Qg:L.,x. .e Q DNN. 'Ip Pr acg 1505-cg. Etdda bw., :shalt rn N75 f I i 9' apan I Love Smulatijq computer progrel Allows couples to take a ron sc1entiI1c look at future offspnng y d1g1ta11y ccmolnlng then' our ,no os to predlct a lc s appeara ce 't fs X X A . i t . i -o 'IIA yu P lm 1 new NN-ill!!! long-term study of radial keratotomy linds it generally sale and etlective. For the nearsighted, tiny spokelike incisions into the eye improve locusing ability and eliminate the need lor eyeglasses. The patient is awake tor the procedure. stronomers wait at every major telescope in the world to see the historic cosmic crack-up ol the 21 big lragments ol Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 as it smacks into the atmosphere ol Jupiter at 134,000 miles an hour. Plumes ol tire shoot up hundreds ol miles, high enough to become visible to telescopes on Earth. Internet activity rises sharply as surfers find their V. V N if ' .Q way around the A K, ff fhQlQQf he non-violent information G , ,, Q fx XlGffq'f'AYLf CD-ROM game Myst Superhighwayl ' ,. L h - .Luk ' by 0yan,lnc. becomes Advertisers, V . 1, -- X X abest-selling phemmenog. rock : Q lS'll'L?.1 23333, rilfaim reviewers, ' 4 ' M - ff, cave is tound in southern France, lull ot 300 vivid Theiamasy-advemumrs ' the worldly I IL , ' paintings ol woolly-haired rhinos, bears, mammoths, graphic visuals are hyper- Voice of America, is r ff .. A- K -2- panthers, and owls made about 20,000 years ago. The real. the wrmen word is me and Others decide Stone-Age artists also lelt behind bear skulls, tlint knives, I key in the mystery' itrs time to jump On. Looilpgiggsmarrgd hreplaces. Experts callrt the archaeological lrnd l l . .g ' . l X ,- if f 5 X V, v iii -gi-'fif f ' 1 E -..' T' i I ' ' - A l i . H utbacks in military spending lorce the U.S. Navy to ne ot Lake Superior's enduring mysteries is solved by scientists and marine historians who reduce 'fs ellie 10Q'U0'l1hl0 UCB' 'famed 'U' USB in explore the wreck ofthe Edmund Fitzgerald, an ore carrier that sank with its crew in a 1975 Sona' feseamh' mme ,5 9eP '9' and Underwater mov' storm. The ship, overused and in poor condition, was ripped apart by 90-mph winds and BTV- T00 time 'Q be released 'll Uh? OPEN S93-The VBYBYHHS ol 30-loot waves. Most ol the 29 crewmen are entumbed inside the wreckage, well preserved in the Collnlcfs 'mm Vlemam to me Peman Gu 'emu to aquamms 3g-1 waters- and water parks. r--I unu-.uu--un--.-... A survey ot college kids reveals their tavorlte sources ol sugar and eallelne during Mmmmwmmm powdered Iced tea, peanut butter mixed with marsh- mallow cream, baby lood, ramen noodles, raw cookie dough, and trail mix made lrom chocolate chips, graham cracker blts, and minl- mamhmmmws SI! Oi-A lively new cafe society centers around the 5,000 gourmet cotteeshops which spring up around the country. To the often young and trendy patrons, the social interaction is just as important as the espresso. Some cales otter lull-time Internet links so patrons can sip and chat with other Internet latte-drinkers. -I is , G, l i ' f ff X JR C.. Yoga, a Hindu system of stretching exercises for well- being, surges in popularity, mostly because the older generation seeks a technique for alleviating stress . L1 ' B ish.. 6 .se erobic boxing, with boxing-style leg and arm work, turns out to be one ol the year's hot exercise trends, showing and finds yoga better up in workout studios and attracting those who want to than aerobics. work ott their aggression by throwing a right and a tew jabs. Besides recycled clothing like license- plate buetiere, bottle-cap Jewelry, trash-bag and duct- tape dresses, fashion trends include the schoolgirl look with thigh-highs, and the grunge-turned-beatnik look of long, straight hair and a goatee. new survey shows that over 12 million Americans are vegetarians, choosing , the no-meat lifestyle rg because' ol concern flaw, cigi-Tuigfgfliiclusfy' Mx '07 N friendliness andlor My it - ,lnffligy improved health and fIm8SS. 5 i l 7 'i c f er e ,'i Q . he hottest merchandise around is Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, so hot Cabbage Patch dolls pale in comparison. Parents criticize Fox's super-violent TV show, but their kids crave Dragon Daggers, Megazords, and the 4-loot, S230 battery powered car. Go, go, Power Rangers! ' :- AMA 1-1 'Y .A-1-tu -. fe. I ,.4I 1 , 1 ax gg M61 . -1. - ' - 51731,-few F ? hot new collectible derives from an old household item. Milk caps, known in some regions as pogs, originally capped the bottles left by the milkman but have now gone lunky with colorful printed designs and variations that are traded and used in games. lthough most are forced to settle lor Oakley wrap- arounds, stylin' kids. like in-line skaters and urban youth, clamor for Arnet's S80 Ravens with the silver- Dl'lI'0fl1BfI'3l'l18S. ed by brash young skate and surf types, two million snowboarders nationwide discover the toy of swooping down slopes on one board instead ol two. No hard boots, no poles, no crossed tips, make it easier than skiing. Since their giant frozen wave is a ski hill, snowboarders annoy old-style skiers who want their slopes left undisturbed by shredders. ,1- 5 5 ly, u 'Hz he lirst generation to ignore colas in lavor of fruit drinks, today's young people give Snapple popular cult status. The trend breeds iuice wars as Snapple imitators like Fruitopia vie tor youth market shares and inundate the ainivaves with Generation X-type advertising. 'Ill li 1 I lllf if v-,Q lf npe John Paul ll authors Crossing the Threshold af Hope, a blend of theology, evangelizing and personal remininiscene. It becomes a best-seller in 35 countries. Y-ur ' Q emaining a virgin in the lace of peer pressure linds new respect among teens who defend their freedom to lorgo sex in a sex-crazy world. The movement is both a demand for real love and a reaction against unwanted pregnancy and health risks, since today one out of lour kids are infected with sexually transmitted diseases bythe age of 21. ool-Aid makes a cheap hair-dye. an alternative to bleached hair with, say, Prizm Blue added for sheen. The city fade shaves the sides of your head and leaves the top longer, and the matted hair look is achieved by leaving the soap in and forgetting to comb. It's called the year of the cottage industry' as more Americans adopt different work arrangements in response to corporate downsizing, either by teleconutilg or businesses homes. out ot .Q ,4- he designer pets of the year are African pigmy hedgehogs, and some 3,000 find homes with humans. They are gentle, like to be petted, and need a once-a- day feeding of pet food or mealworms. They don't smell and will even eat your roaches. C Q m E L R E , E fs :J l ith a tried-but-true storyline, the TV show Me and the Boys, becomes an immediate tamily lavorite, with stand-up comic Steve Harvey playing a widower who's Iett to raise three lively sons singlehandedly. Q cn 4 Reality-based tele- vision programs rule the tube with Cops, American Detective, FBI: The Untold Stories, Top Cops , and Rescue 9'l'l. America's Most Wanted' and Unsolved Mysteries' enlist T viewers' help in Lt U 0 tracking down ite is like a box ot chocolates, says its title character. I fugitives. Forrest Gump, starring Tom Hanks, surprises everyone T fx with its popularity, attributed to the audiences' thirst W , lor the tilm's theme ot simple values and good intentions. ff H gm, LE. Fascinating special eltects place Gump into real news Ty I K 1 , , footage with U.S. presidents. I l ' Vg 1 Ef- is J very Tuesday night 20 million , homes tune in to I Home lmprovement, television's No.1 show, starring comedian Tim Allen as Tim Taylor, the how-to host ol Tool Time, with his wite Jill and three kids. Fans love this tunny real-lite rellection ot middle-class tamily lite. 5 omedian Jim Garrey's career is s-s-smokin'. In The Mask, Carrey plays shy Stanley lpkiss, who discovers that a mythical mask can turn him into a very cool green-laced cartoon-like dude. While waiting tor sequels to The Mask and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, Carrey lans enioy current hit Dumb and Dumber. l l l l i l 5 i. it nameless prime-time soap opera Melrose Place, co-starring Heather Locklear and Grant Show, attracts legions ol lans with its silly-sensational plotlines and shallow-hul- beautitul characters. Fans even buy the TV show's soundtrack and MP clothing. om Cruise bites as the elegantly evil vampire Lestat in the lilm based on Anne Rice's novel Interview With the Vampire. Brad Pitt costars in the story that's been a lavorite with millions ot readers tor twenty years. omic Margaret Cho stars in the lirst all- Asian sitcom All- American Girl, about a college girl who's not making enough money to move away trom home and has to live with her rigidly traditional Korean immigrant parents. T 1.0 he animals aren't cuddly, but Disney's 32nd animated leature The Lian King is still a box-ottice smash and a sure classic. The story ot a young lion, Simba, on the path to maturity combines tive Tim RicelElton John songs with comedy that leaves audiences roaring. Just say Hakuna matata, Swahili lor no worries. ' iving Single is hailed as a New York City version ot Designing Women. The comedy is about tour women who share a big apartment, and teatures Kim Fields and rap star Queen Latitah, whose quiet presence and dignity singles her out as a star. f J, I rg I, ,L Lf , s' 1 A ,gal alented young Claire Danes stars as a sawy 15-year-old conlronting adolescent anxieties in the ABC television series My So- Called Lite, which receives critical acclaim. Danes also stars inthe movie Little Women, with Winona Hyder. his year's Emmy tor best comedy series goes to TV's Frasier, the story ot a radio psychi- atrist with a dystunctional tamily. Star of the critical and main-stream hit. Kelsey Grammer dedicates his -' best-actor award -1 to the dog Eddie ' whose ott- screen name is Moose. tter his villain in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing and his title role in Bertolucci Little Buddha, actor Keanu Reeves butts up to play an action star in Speed, about a bomb and a runaway bus, one ol the year's biggest box ottice hits. with the first female starship captain, TV's Star Trek: Voyager is the newest offshoot of the enduring Star Trek phenomenon, after Deep Space Nine, The Next Generation, and this 's lthough his action tans may preter True Lies, Arnold Schwarzenegger, with co-star Danny DeVito. cracks up audiences in Junior, where the strongman plays a boringly-serious scientist who tests a lertility drug on himself, learns the ioys ot motherhood, and talls in love with the baby's mom, Emma Thompson. aywalch, the world's most-watched syndicated TV show, is a leel-good actionladventure about a Malibu lileguard, played by David Hasselhott. Sunny beach scenes take the pressure ott plot or character development. ln tribute to its popularity, Mattel, lnc. creates Baywatch Barbie. length Star ou Gehrig's last day, Sandy Koutax on the mound, and Jackie Robinsons arrival are all part ot the Ken Burns A lilm Baseball, an 18 112-hour historical mini-series on ' PBS. Baseball touches on American issues ot race, labor. - immigration, the role ol women, urban renewal, popular media, . and the nature ol heroes and mythology. . N nap Dreams is a documentary about two young Chicago athletes who dream ot playing in the NBA. Arthur Agn and ltlllllam Gates soon nallaa tha dream will attho expense ...ae--.-eoe-aqea-aea-aaeeaa Llz Phelr tollows up Edie ll Guyvillo with Wlrip-smart and songs lllre 'Super ttova' and 'Jealousy' Her music ls Sold to be about salt-parody, iletenelvaness, benutltul llawe, and cluetessness. ..-.....-..-....-.........-- Futuristic noise mavens Nlne inch Nails and singer Trent Reznor drive home a polnt with their Closer single and hit video, trom their album The Downward Spiral. Mosh pit heroes Bad Religion get plenty ot play with 21st Century Boy and their album Stranger Than Fiction. Beastie Boys release their tourth hip-hop album Ill Communication on the heels ol their highly popular Check Your Head, Superunknowri, a 70-minute. 15-song opus, debutes at No.1 on the Billlmardcharts. Fans and critics say it's the best record ol metal band Soundgardens career. .,..iU3 EQ inger Sheryl Crow hits paydirt with her debut album. Tuesday Night Music Club with the seedy- but-upbeat sounds ol Leaving Las Vegas and All I Want to Do. odeci, two pairs ot brothers whose lunky ballads coined the term Feenin1 bring gospel harmonies to their new album Diary ofa Mad Band. which goes platinum, hey dress alike and rule Motown. It seems like Boyz ll Men only makes mega-hits, like On Bended Knee and l'll Make Love to You. Their second album, ll. goes straight to No.1 onthe R818 charts. f 1 C xjgg Aixahd VQY 2 gee? X 9-' i 3 9 , Q11 -, ' , ith quirky lyrics and bass-voiced singing on hits like 'tMmm, Mmm, Mmm, Mmm, the Crash Test Dummies' album Gnd Shuffled His Feet, becomes a chart-topper in the U.S. and Europe. Although Madonna's bad-mannered appear- ance on Letterman begets criticism, her album Bedtime Stories with hits Take a Bow and Secret, is a solid chart-topper. eattle rock band Pearl Jam and lront man Eddie Vedder give youthtul angst a good name as they rock hard with their third album. Vilalogy. considered their strongest yet. usic. moshing, and lots ol mud deline Woodstock '94. The 25th anniversary ol the original 1969 summer ol love has ATMs, Pepsi, and '90s prices: S135 tickets and S4 hamburgers. Alter happily grooving to every- thing from Bob Dylan to Nine Inch Nails, 350,000 lans depart peacefully. op-siren Janet Jacksons body language and lyrics draw large concert crowds to see her perform hits like You Want Thisf70's Love Groove. Jackson wins an MTV Music Award for her video ll, inger Vince Gill makes country music history by winning the Country Music Associations award lor top male vocalist tour years in a row. The CMA also awards him 1994 Entertainer ol the Year. fi -9. T2 ominated tor best temale vocalist, country singer Mary Chapin Carpenter croons at the Country Music Awards ceremony, but loses to Pam Tillis. Carpenter's album Stones in the Road tops the country charts. t's a year ol hits tor buzz band, Gin Blossoms. Their top- selling album New Miseratile Experience. covers Hey Jealousy,' Found Out About You, and Until I Fall Away. 1 ailed as the crown prince ot reggae. Eldl Records releases Live at the BBC a two-disc set of radio concerts recorded by the Beatles in the early '60a. 'Free as a Bird, an original unfinishod trick by the late Lennon, is fini ! with L ' Zioicee or Pauli? ' , and Ringo, ', '.gg, 7 ' uded in the aa My lainiii ll 'i or ismissed as kiddie artists, three 12-year- old rappers who go by the name ol lmmature, get a new sound. Album Playtime ls Over and hits Never Lie and Constantly pump them up to stardom. Buju Banton's album. - - it - aunt oanmn- voice at 0, 'lqm?fx EuL'fLps me pany the Year award tor Wm' ,a ,, ' ef singer Steven Tyler and Champion and Mana Look Yoh. metal band Aerosmith, who ride a wave ot success and release their new album Big Ones. he rock-spectacle Rolling Stones tour, named alter their album Voodoo Lounge, combines a light show. computer animation, video blowups, and gigantic intlatable props. Millions watch the Stones prance through their classic and current hits like Love ls Strong. Voodoo Lounge becomes the highest grossing tour in history with S115 million in ticket sales, he Canadian band Cowboy Junkies, whose big hit this year is Sweet James, sings ot isolation and despair on their latest album Pale Sun!Crescent Moon. owered to the top with their pure pop sound, Swedish quartet Ace ot Base tops the charts with The Sign. Their sound is a contagious blend ot reggae-splashed pop known as China Reggae. Mascis emerges as a prolitic and versatile songwriter tor the punk-rock band Dinosaur Jr. with Outta Hand and major hit Feel the Pain, both on their latest album Without a Sound. The Benedictine Monks of Santo Domingo de Silos release their CD, Chant. Heavy rotation on MTV turns the collection of ancient Gregorian chants into an un- expected best-seller. f ,-R l Q9 5 rish rock loursome, the Cranberries, tour the United States playing the sad, pretty melodies trom their second hit album, No Need to Argue. appers with a selt- reliant attitude. Salt-N-Pepa keep their Very Necessaryvibe going this year with hits Shoop and Whatta Man which wins them. along with En Vogue. an MTV Music Award. apper Snoop Doggy Dogg's performance makes the movie soundtrack Above the Rim a best-seller. His video lt's a Doggy Dogg World. which reunites all the '70s black exploitation tilm stars, wins an MTV Music Award. l l nnnlu.lunpqa anruauanunuay ihiii hilli. 'il'i llkishl hlihhbl- :thalamus li!-1111. anunnonnnunqa-nun Slialasapraimadlaa- ailiilddlhj lfhllll caarpasdnrlhaaapesaas- 98.11803 Ciillliililllllll prngramandadasa Gjulllili HIIIIYIIIHHUBBKY lil!!-ldtlllahl. Former Wimbledon champ Andre Agassi llns the 1994 U.S. Open and boats cham- pion Pets Sampras at the 1995 Australian Upon. Called the most popular tennis player In the world, the tannls phanom has a new glrllrland, lomler model Brooke Shields. The National Hockey League plays only 48 ol the B2 games in the season this year due to a lockout. Following baseball's example, hockey owners put salary caps on their players, who strike but lose out to the owner's mle. Track and held star Wilma Rudolph dies at the age ol 54. The 20th ol 22 children, she overcame polio, scarlet lever, and pneumonia to become a basketball star at 13, an Ulympic bronze medalist at 16, and a winner ol three gold medals in the 1960 Rome Olympics, henever the Magic, led hy 7'1 300-pound Shaquille 0'Neal. score 110 points, the Orlando McDonald's restaurants redeem home game tickets lor a tree Big Mac. With the team selling out all 16,000 seats, the Golden Arches supply a massive Mac attack, consoling lans lor the lack 1 ol a playotl victory. 2 ........................ i l i The high rate of . early burnout in women's pro tennis ' from media pressure, trainers, and sponsors causes the parents of Venus W l williams, '14, to delay her pro debut. 1 - W , . Q fi . N ,I 4 J l . 1 ,S ' - ' 11 ' this i , 4' x X 1 itchman George 5 V' f , -. ' Foreman.45. Q, a l 42' wearing the same 'V-14 redlrunkshesported 5601 when he lought Q5 ' Muhammad Ali 20 years 0 ' , - earlier. wins the world's he ' 'Qzw ' heavyweight boxing title pp. M-5 from Michael Moorer with a 10th round knockout. f fi, 7 ete Sampras deleals Gorn lvanisevic in the men's singles tinal at Wimbledon in July 1994. lor his second straight Wimbledon title. ln January, pressure ol detending the title causes him to breakdown in tears at the 1995 Australian Open. aving already announced her retirement lrom singles tennis, nine-time Wimbledon champion Manina Navratilova waves good-bye to an emotional crowd, alter losing to Conchita Martinez in her last Wimbledon match. . ,.....-, Ma. n July. Miguel lndurain ol Spain makes a triumphant entry on the Champs Elysees in Paris to win the Tour de France lor the lourth straight time. He wins the 3-week. 3.218 km contest easily. linishing tive minutes, 39 seconds ahead ot the lield. Greg LeMond. the only American to win the Tour de France three times. retires lrom racing because ol health problems. n June 14, the New York Rangers deteat the Vancouver Canucks 3 to 2 in the seventh game ot the Stanley Cup play-otts, winning the coveted hockey cup tor the Iirst time in 54 years. The Centennial Olympics will be in Atlanta, Georgia in 1996. The city will emphasize its multicultural aspects to honor athletes 'g from around the t world. ii ,N ' ff F6 i t hx J V 5 ara Torres-Gowen ' 3 ' becomes the tirst I ' 2 , Olympic swimmerto 5 'J model swimsuits in the 2 t Sports Illustrated annual swimsuit issue. Gold- , , medalist Torres-Gowen's gf 5 spony looks break the ' waits and glamazons mold dictated by fashion. ans are openly angry when a dispute between players and team owners over salary caps and other issues threatens to shut down baseball. A work stoppage begins on August 12, and no World Series is played tor the tirst time since 1904. onya Harding, barred tor lite trom organized skating tor obstructing justice in the investigation ot an assault on Nancy Kerrigan, is ottered S2 million by the All Japan Women's Pro Wrestling Association to wrestle as a baddie. ffsi In Super Bowl XXIX in Miami, the SBD gh., Q3 .. Q f 'ea Francisco 49ers beat the San Diego Chargers 49-26, in their record-breaking fifth Super Bowl vin. Quarterback Steve Ioxmg passes for a record six touchdowns to vin most valuable player. 2 asketball star Sheryl Swoopes leads V , g the U.S. women's A X basketball team to a gold medal at the Goodwill Games i in Russia. Earlier she led Texas Tech to an NCAA title and signed an endorsement deal with Nike. it ,Q -Q I 4 EEC. tter 52 wins, tour PPG Cup titles, and S10 million in earnings, lndycar champion Mario Andretti races tor the tinal time in his 31-year career,The tour-time Indianapolis 500 champion retires in October 1994. 5 1994 death U.S. Women's golf team, led by Dottie Nochrie, beats Europe for the 4994 Solheim Cup. orld Cup soccer comes to the U.S. lor the tirst time: 24 teams play 52 World Cup games in nine cities to 3.567.415 lans, . culminating in a title match between Brazil and ltaly. Earlier the U.S. upset Colombia, but lost to the Brazilian team. who went on to win the cup. iililhy lil!!! militias. 8 litmus Hyidaia lalrhlhll lhlllihl llxtdruyalx. Tbakhldlhaiy- eakaclillaaln- pqarprhdailnt Plheaktaazhapittdaal eeiadeaaaylllhanovar levodhlawlta Prlooesstllana lssaepochdotrmllngcrarl phorlacallmaneldtrland ctalmstobaharexlovarhalts alrashykls:-and-tallbook Tabitha the cat spends 12 days and 32 llll mlles In the tuse tape ota TowerAlr'l47 latwben she escapes her cat earrler and gets lost ltl the cargo hold Tabitha mins televlslon appearances alter her rescue wlth her aspiring actress ovmer Tabltha lost two pounds durlng the ordeal ber owner lost srx l'l1e Florida lodge would not allow Paul Hlll to use lush ttable homlclde as a detense ln the shootings ol Dr John Bntton and hrs bodyguard outslde a Pensacola aboltlon cllmc Hull IS tound guilty ot murder ln the tlrst degree Anna Paqum 11 wms an Academy Award tor her pertormance In The Prana Says actor Gene Hackman I guess now you ll have nu trouble getting cast nn your school play onald Reagan 83 announces he IS ln the early stages ol Alzheimer s dlsease which wlll cause htm to rely lncreasrngly on wlle Nancy Doctors say the easy golng ex presrdent should be able to tunctron normally tor several more years esplte hurled obscenltles and death threats Shannon Faulkner 19 battles the all male Citadel for the rrght to become the trrst lemale cadet ln the 152 year history ol the state supported South Carolina mllltary school elson Mandela an mtematlonal hem who won the Nobel Peace Prlze writes hrs story Long Walk to Freedom the Autobiography ol Nelson Mandela covers the author s 27 years as a polltlcal prlsoner hrs release and black Atrrcans struggle tor lreedom ending a worthy message to pageant watchers Heather Whitestone a deal Alabama college rumor who works with handicapped klds IS crowned 1994 Mlss Amerrca by her predecessor Kimberly Aiken n Singapore American teenager Michael Fay IS convrcted ot vandalism and publlcly caned tour times by a manual arts master despite pleas trom hrs tamlly and pplylng hrs new tame to good works actor Antomo Banderas ot Philadelphia and lnlerwew Wrth the Vampire spends a week on a goodwill mlsslon helping UNICEF draw attentlon to wartorn Somalia ormer basketball superstar Michael Jordan Improves hls game tor the Artzeoa Seottadala Searplaas a what-laapa baabtt 1 Ib I B la plus I that hhape. n about the most surprtslng event of the year Mlchael Jackson weds Elvls daugh ter Lrsa Marte Presley rn a secret ceremony May 1994 l Journallsts wonder lt the umon rsn t a buslness arrangement or an attempt to pollsh Michael s publlc :mage tarnished by claims ot child molestation Presldent Clrnton arloonlst Gary Larson announces that he wlll retlre The Far Side a teature that began rn 1978 and has appeared m1 500 newspapers THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON Why C711 to eggwizplladrhg Pow' 90 'Une lose your eyes qua K 'fhrnr frvws Md th kf yourself lheres ID pldre ke mme merry 'W We Relate! ee.. F X4 3 far: .W po...-J crulty movre Idol Johnny Depp and wlspy model Kate Moss have a headline rs arrested lor trashing the couple s hotel room odel Crndy Crawtord and actor Richard Gere dubbed the world s sexiest couple announce therr separatlon Hollywood books Crawtord tor her tlrst movre Japanese ahh J Newt pg h J I . . Q 2 . I eg ' E - ' S 0uuialltlllbllilliulliliiclD A - 1 ' - . . . 1 W W . I Y I h P . A ' . - - ' ht h -. . V- . 1 W . l - ' ' h X , ' X . , . . . . . 1 . .. A I ' . W . . .u l Y ' . U 1 . .. Y 1 1 W I u , K. - 1 . ' l ' ' - ' ' l l . 1 I 1 5 A ' making loverStluarrel.Del1l1 A X . . 5 : V L - lb e , rr- uw f ' ' TO N 'Jura , -, ' - nf- 1 , . on 0 , 5 D: 1336 I . . e 1 Q A ' 1 P gb f F ' 'V , gl . . 2 X Viv - - l M '- ' i 'ss V' x r js- t 1 r fe 1 - l A , fr 1 . . v Y i , 1 sf!! K , ' ly . 'a ' U' ,I-I I x Fr 'ffrfb it A ,Q A - j + w h ?Q J i l L K ' LL ,3 7,5 :E kt. N I fi' ,f .-x A V A fi Q, E7 ' fy X f 1 fy 5 to h ,f -f 1' HL 1 A- . , e olarezzex -. -chi- A L 1 ' . Gl'l:':3.e'1'i' - .- 1 f':1-':'1--- -:- - :::-.-X5 V -L1 .A F -'fi-ff-.-L--Y-:xii-.f-'QA--1:--1' Y J.-f - f- . A


Suggestions in the Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) collection:

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Central High School - Arrow Yearbook (Aberdeen, SD) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935


Searching for more yearbooks in South Dakota?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online South Dakota yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.