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Page 26 text:
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Enjoyment and Excitement Stimulated from Devotion Music plays a very obvious part in the lives of our culture today, whether one realizes it or not. Today, we are constantly bom- barded with some type of music, whether it be a jingle on the radio or the performance of an inter- nationally renown band at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, or the support of school spirit at a local basketball or football game. Three groups at East exemplify what music is all about: Reflec- tion, Jazz Band and Pep Band. Jazz Band and Pep Band were independent performing groups under the direction of Mr. Ora Pemberton. Rehearsals were long and hard, but the satisfaction of pleased audiences made all the time members devoted worth it. When the band stepped on stage or climbed the bleachers for a game, the doubts and worries just faded away. Their music brought forth both enjoyment and excite- ment for their audiences. The time put into the bands were all extra, but the feeling of a job well-done made it worthwhile. Reflections is a mirror of some of the best girl singers in the Sophomore Class. All members who participated in the only cho- ral extracurricular choir were also members of the Olympian choir. To polish their performance, they worked outside the school hours, twice a week with the coaching of sponsor Mary Clark. A definite love for the world of music, which has become such a large part of our lives, is evident in these young people, who spent their own time concentrating on one of our culture's finest arts. junior Paul Duncan displays his ability on the guitar during a salute to the Class AAA State Football Champions. JAZZ BAND: Front row: Brent Clem. Row 2: Bruce Zar- Hole and Richard Linn. Back row: Ora Pemberton, Dar- ring, jim Bennett, Paul Duncan, Bill Kazimier, Jennifer ren McDaniel, Lonnie Smith, Tim Coffin and Tony Hood. 22 Reflections, Pep Band, Jazz Band
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Page 25 text:
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As the majority of the American public was preparing for a peace- ful Christmas celebration in De- cember, an angry group of young Iranian militants decided to take things into their own hands by seizing the United States embassy in Iran. Angered by the United States' support to their past leader, the Shah, who was in New York City to undergo surgery for cancer, the militants held the en- tire embassy captive for more than a week. After the initial inter- national shock, the militants re- leased all the women and blacks, but refused to release the adult white males. After his surgery, the Shah was transported to Mexico, where he then offered to return to Iran. But, by that point, the militants were too angered and uncontrolled to accept the trade. After sending all the Iranian natives living in the United States back to their mother country and calling on the United Nations for help, which failed, President Carter made his first real political move: an at- tempted rescue mission in early May. Caught in a sandstorm in the Iranian dessert, the helicopters were brought down before reach- ing their destination at the em- bassy. The mission failed terribly, killing eight Americans in the crash. Because of the attempted rescue, the Iranian militants pro- ceeded to scatter the hostages throughout Iran to insure against future such attempts. At the completion of this book, on june 2, 1980, all fifty hostages still remain prisoners of the mili- tants in Iran. On July 11, Richard Queen was treed by the Iranians because his illness baffled them. On July 15, doctors in Zurich announced he was suffering from multiple sclerosis. Iranian Militants Seize American Hostages Will We Survive the Roller-Coaster Ride? INFLATION, RECESSION and UNEMPLOYMENT: the three fast- est paces factors in the lifestyle of 1979-1980. As prices reached fig- ures never before considered by many of the American populace, unemployment grew and the phenomenon was labeled a re- cession, but more realistically appeared worse than the depres- sion of the 1930's. Due to a degree of inter- national frenzy, oil and fuel prices rose again and again. After stab- lizing for awhile between 70$- 75$per gallon, prices again took off. After crossing over that $1.00 a gallon mark, people prayed for stabilization, but none seemed to be in sight. For periods of time gas was rationed, to some only five gallons each time at the tank and to other only on odd and even days. As prices continued to hike, interstate signs read as high as $1.79 per gallon. Quickly, slo- gans began to pop up: The gas war is over, gas won. In one hectic week, the long surge in gold, silver and other precious metals was also thrown into chaos. With the increasingly troubled world economy, bullion traders across the globe went into a wild pay-any-price frenzy for the touch of these sacred metals. Precious metal ears, coins, jew- elry, trinkets, anything, metal was thrown into the dizziest roller- coaster ride in the memory of even the oldest trade profes- sionals. Prices touched levels that were inconceivable a few months before. Said a New York commodities expert, George Clarke, in a re- vealing if overwrought ex- planation of the market's extreme volatility and nervousness: In my opinion what is happening is that the world is looking at World War III. In a single day, gold climbed $74.50 per ounce more than twice its total value as late as 1971. Dur- ing the week, it climbed to the unthinkable value of $148, to hit $660 per ounce before slipping back to $603 by the end ot the week; an overall gain of 18 per- cent in only five days. Silver, which had climbed more sharply than gold during 1979, leaped by $7 per ounce, to a peak of $41.50 or a rise of twenty per- cent. Even at that figure, silver was trading for more than gold had been worth at the start of the 1970's. Other metals on the market also rocketed. Platinum, which is used in jewelry and manufac- turing of such products as jet en- gines and high octane gasoline, soared from $693 to a record of $870 per ounce before settling at $767. Titanium, which is used in the manufacturing of aircraft and was trading for as little as $3.98 per pound earlier in 1979, steadily climbed and sold for as much as $25 per pound. Even copper climbed nearly 10 percent and set a record of $1.11 per pound. Crisis come and go, affecting some in one area of our country and leaving others untouched; but the economic crisis of in- flation is one that touched all Americans, in every walk of life. Quotes from Time, Newsweek Current Events 21
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Page 27 text:
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PEP BAND: Front row: Cheryl Trowbridge, Michelle Klein, Susan Cobb, Julie Hovden, Karen Fox, Lisa Epper- son, Jennifer Hole and Russ McClure. Row 2: Mike Smith, Tim Coffin, Mike Keck, Jody Pew, Craig Neth, Darrel Cole, Tim Behrman, Debra Wulfhorst, Brian Fox and Gerald Adams. Row 3: Mark Duncan, Bill Kazimier, Mary Ellen Simpson, Holly Green, Regina Walker and Anita Phillips. Back row: David Bott, Joe Bierhaus, Larry Simpson, Les Jackman, Bruce Zarring, Paul Duncan, Mark Fischer and Jeff Gabbard. REFLECTIONS: Front row: Leah Cox, Patty Crouch, Lisa Haas and Tracy Todd. Back row: Jennifer Waygood, Beth Watson, Lisa Lewis, Debbie Clarkson and Jane Lancaster. Senior Joe Bierhaus keeps the beat of the school song during a pep convocation early in the school year. Reflections, Pep Band, Jazz Band 23
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