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Page 5 text:
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Changing Times ■tea Luminarian 1985 Volume 33 ■ v:7 ' cordia Lutheran h School 1 St. Joe River Dr. Wayne, IN 05 As pan of the school since 1963, the Student Lounge has seen many students, initiations, Homecomings, and graduations along with being a place for those every day gatherings. 4 )PENING pp. 2-5 STUDENT LIFE pp. 6-43 ACADEMICS pp. 44-79 t the 50th Anniversary Service, Ptincipal Guenthe [erzog addresses friends of Concordia. Find out what Her Dg was speaking about in the Opening pages as we begi ie look at out Changing Cadet Times. There was more to life at Concordia than just books and Cementing bricks together beneath the arcade, fresh tests. See the costumes people wore for Homecoming John Daenzer, Mart Christlieb, and Peter Barney work i Week. Find out what made Cadets tick and kept them busy World of Construction assign: after school hours memories of h to the Academi d favorite teachers. PORTS pp. 80-117 PEOPLE the SAC cross country meet at Shoaff Park, junior ?lly Beck runs for her time of 16:14, which placed her on ; All-SAC team. Recall how the teams finished and find t who is featured in the Sports section Find yourself and your friends in rhe People Luminarian. You ' ll find features about what people think on issues and how they fill their spare time. pp. 118-161 BOOSTERS INDEX CLOSING pp. 162-176 Our Boosters are listed to show our appreciation for their contribution to our yearbook. In the Index, you can find out what page you are pictured on and read our Senior Ads. We ' ll close our Changing Cadet Times with those final thoughts and memories on pp. 172-176.
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Page 4 text:
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Changing Concordia Lutheran High School has gone through many changes since its beginning in 1935. The 1984-85 school year represented the 50th anniversary of our school, an important event. For that reason, the choice of a yearbook theme weighed heavily on the minds of the editors and adviser. We needed to tell the readers what was so unique about our anniversary year. And we needed a theme to fit. Somehow, after what seemed like years of brainstorming, we came to a decision — Changing Cadet Times. Through the years, Cadet lifestyles, opinions, spirit, and attitudes have all changed with the times. The Luminarian has tried to accomplish the goal of showing these changes throughout the book by changing the format to a more magazine design. In order to make the yearbook stand out and be set apart from earlier editions, we decided to change the book to 9 by 12, a larger size. Now we can see that not only are times changing, but Cadets are changing with the times. This book is to hold the memories of the Changing Cadet Times. COVER: Heading c ver to Z ollner Stadiun i for Anything Goes, Cadets and members : f the marching banc parade on tc the bonfire. A ecord nur nber of students attended and par tici- pared. Pho o by Kur t Salomon f the 1941 Cadet Marching Band stand ai ide of Crull Hall at the former school campus eJ et - Times School Officials Principal Mr. Guenther Herzog Assistant Principals . . . .Mr. Paul Buetow Mr. John Marks Mr. Glenn Parrish Director of Guidance . . Mr. Carl Gallmeier Director of Development and Public Relations . . Mr. Richard Katt Media Center Director Mr. Raymond Pasche Director of Athletics Mr. Edward Brackmann Student Activities Coordinator . Mr. Fred Weiss Book Store Manager Mr. Fred Weiss Cafeteria Manager . . .Mrs. Doris Weisheit Auditorium Manager . . Mr. John Schamber Number of Students 701 Present Building Built 1963 Luminarian Staff Adviser Mrs. Linda Schwartz Co -Editors -in -Chief Susan Wade Cheryl Engebrecht Copy Editor Laura Abdon Photo Editor Kurt Salomon Darkroom Manager Don Nord Business Manager Michelle Motter Photographers Randy Patterson Brent Smith Steve Wagner Staff . . . John Bakalar, Heidi Bieberich, Chip Evanson, Scott Hille, Tim Klage, Julie Klaus - meier, Susie Lytal, Karla Maraldo, Anne Nobis, Mario Odier, Rachel Peterson, Kim Schenkel, Katie Wasson Colophon Printer Josten ' s American Yearbook Company Clarksville, Tennessee Sales Representative Mr. Mark Childs Cover Four-color with a Tempo 540 (Navy) background Cover Title 60 point Souvenir Bold Endsheets Snow White Paper 176 pages of 80 pound gloss Number of Copies Made 725 Body Copy 10 point Garamond Caption Copy 8 point Garamond Headlines 36 point Times Roman 24 point News Gothic 36 point Souvenir Bold
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Page 6 text:
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Allen County Public Libnay Ft. Wayne, Iwtono Cadets Set Goals Rising at 6 a.m. Rushing to school. Lectures and labs. Assignments, pa- pers, football and play practice. It seemed summer had just begun. Now it was gone and all that remained were those memories of fun in the sun. A new school year. A new begin- ning. New classes. New teachers. New faces. New opportunities. New chal- lenges. And a new set of goals — to aim for and to reach. For some, these goals meant study- ing harder. Applying themselves more. Striving to get an A in English, or making the honor roll. For athletes, reaching new goals meant conditioning themselves in Au - gust heat. Suffering through agony and frustration. Sweating. Forcing themselves to practice in order to give their absolute best performance. For band members, new goals meant sacrificing countless hours of vacation to go to band practice. Calis- thenics in the hot sun. Standing at attention while mosquitos bit. Waiting In appreciation for his leadership in teaching active survival at summer JROTC camp, Majot Bierbaum is named honorary ' Kentucky Colo- nel by Colonel Clark of Kentucky. patiently for new members to learn to march. Being disciplined. Working on each piece until it could be played perfectly. Once school started, prac- ticing late hours to be ready for half- time shows and competition. ROTC members had their own goals. Developing precision and tim- ing. Hoping to keep the tradition by performing well in the Clendenen drill meet. Still others had personal goals. To reach out and be a better friend. To get asked to the prom. To be involved in Student Council. To grow closer to God. To make plans for college. Goals were important. They devel- oped character. They made us unique. They helped us strive and improve. Most of all they allowed room to grow. To start again or change. The administration always worked for improvement in all areas, including curriculum, faculty, and school cli- mate, said Guenther Herzog, princi- pal. If you ' re always satisfied at where you ' re at you ' ll slip backward. During shop class, Adam Hahn, junior, uses a wood lathe as Todd Clark, sophomore, ob- serves. Hahn was making a fruit bowl out of walnut wood. 2 Opening
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