George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines)

 - Class of 1988

Page 100 of 160

 

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 100 of 160
Page 100 of 160



George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 99
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George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 101
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Page 100 text:

JUNIOR SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES SYMPOSIUM PARTICI- . PANTS. Janel Guglielmetti, Jason Schatz, John Parry, Doug Burbey, Mi- chelle Beaver, Don Gabriel, and Ms. Zody Qadviserl. ACADEMIC BOWL. FRONT.' Dana Barkdoll, Ruth Villanueva. Peaches Villegas, Mary Maningas, Caroline Styffe, Clyde Valdez, Berry Villcgas. MIDDLE: Andrew Shifrin, Don Gabriel. Liz Ahl, Nona dela Rosa, Mark Samara, Stephen Cash, Keith Fernandez, BA CK: Paul GrifHn, Dennis Ellard, Brett Bormann. GRAND MASTERS. School champi- on Monty Collier ponders how to de- fend his king against the onslaught of his teammate and opponent, Toby To- lcntino. SEA TRIALS. irightj Don Gabriel works the bugs out ofa program on an Atari 800. The computer team is al- ways strong in programming competi- tions. MICKEY OR MINNIE MOUSE. Icenterj Ninth and Tenth Brain Bowl members hold up nonsense an- swers to questions they were unable to answer against other PSSAA teams. I 96 ,, V It 5 AN ii t nwsxsssl 5 xx BIS-Q we its t A s Na f xii LR . ,. X N X it

Page 99 text:

W' h Q I S5008 ,, m Q0 1 A 1 , g, ,arf QW:-w -fl T gi 'Q fi IT RITES OF PASSAGE. Sally sailors Leah Caldwell, Miehele Henderson, and Ricky Kighllinger discuss with new recruits Brian Oakland, Tina Jones, and Anna Lizan, on how to design und plan 21 double-page spread. .lelTMarlin. Copy-writer searches for inspiration. Q 5-'lef' . WORKI G RELATIONSHIP Dennis Ellard awoke to the buzz of his alarm 8 a.m. Satur- day and hurriedly dressed him- self. He buttoned his shirt half- way, splashed on some Brut Faberge and headed off to GDHS. Moonlighting on the weekend has always been es- sential in making a yearbook, but this year something new was added - the partnership of co-editors, Pattiee Aqui and Dennis Ellard. The staff followed the trend and everybody had a working partner. Mark Santero, who preferred working with Mae Mangohig and Robia Semkow, said, I like to work with girls because I'm more serious with the opposite sex. Sam Simbulan, who moon- lighted with Barbara Lopez, was invaluable as a photogra- pher, and took a whole slew of pictures for Seaborne '88, So what happened when he made a mistake? Sam confessed, I try to blame it on someone else . . . But Co-editor Dennis El- lard, responded, I never hear good excuses. People had lots of reasons for joining the staff. Brett Bor- mann, who teamed up with Paul Griffin on the Seniors and Sports said, I was interested in what goes into a yearbook. Boy, did I find out! The staff of Seaborne ,88 worked during class, and on weekends, but they did exper- ience some setbacks. Mae Mangohig recalled, . . a roll of film which I took . . . came out clear - no pictures or im- ages - nothing! Nobody is perfect, and even Pattiee Aqui admitted, I'm kind of afraid we screwed-up somehow ... Ms. Spalding, the witty and cultured yearbook adviser, cor- rected most of the mistakes that the staff tried to slip by her. When Erlinda Batac fin- ished working in the faculty section, she said, I loved it . . . I felt a great sense of ac- complishmentf' As 3 p.m. drew night and the afternoon sun beckoned cap- tion - weary workers, Dennis Ellard packed up the closing section to be express mailed to Jostens in Visalia, California. As Pattiee and Dennis trailed out of room 418, Pattiee said, Aren't you fulfilled from working on the yearbook?,' Fulfilled'? No, I'm still hungry after lunch, aren't you?,' K, -YH IU 'QU THE SEABORNE '88 YEARBOOK STAFF: TOP: Heather Sehindell, Sandra Morpus, Erlinda Ba tae, Matt Houllion, Brett Bormann, .lon Mozo, JeffSehultz, Carolyn Sehull7tBusiness Mgr.J. and Paul Grillin. STAIRS: Joy Hubbard, Leah Caldwell, Michele Henderson, Lisa Rem!! Pattiee Aqui tCo-editorj, and Mae Mangohig. BOTTOM! Mari Santoro. Ed Slonsky, Barbara Lopez, Sam Simbulan, Timmy Mendoza, Rica Venable, Theresa Wundcrly, Dennis EllardfCo-edilorj, and Ms. Spalding iAdviserJ



Page 101 text:

THE COMPUTER CLUB. Juan Elegado, Mr. McCullough, Don Gabriel, and Carlos Delgado CHESS CLUB. Sl TTI NG: Richard Veneracion, Toby Tolentino, Brian Oak- IandS TA NDI NG: Juan Elegado, Don Ga briel, Michael Osborne, Mrs. Stone MANKIND, MINDS, MICROCHIPS SL MATES Doug Burbey made a lei- surely underwater tour of the reef. But the damage caused by blast fishing disturbed him so much that he decided to re- search its effects on the ecol- ogy. Doug was one of the seven students who participated in the JUNIOR SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES SYM- POSIUM. In a Pacific-wide competition, researchers pre- sented their projects to judges in Japan. If chosen as finalists, they gave another, more de- tailed presentation. '6Who is the president of Egypt? BZZZZZZ! Hussein Mubarak! de- clared Bill Wright. Point for George Dewey. The ACADEMIC BOWL, or Brain Bowlw, team consisted of members handpicked by Mr. Scales, adviser. Competitions were held at home and away, with l.S. the team to beat. Teams answered questions on every subject from art to cur- rent events. The most exciting round required buzzing in with the correct response. It helped our team a lot because we have quick recallf' said Paul Griffin. The two teams, C9th and 10th, llth and I2thJ, combined their brains for the championship at Wagner. Tap tap tap Flash! BEEP! BEEP! Oh, no! I pushed the wrong button and it erased my whole program!,' The COMPUTER CLUB competed by solving five prob- lems with various difficulty levels in two hours. Each pro- gram was scored according to the results and creativity. lim gonna beat you, man, Brian Oakland psychs out his opponent. Richard Veneracion only smiles as he moves his white pawn to King Four. Adviser Mrs. Stone oversaw CHESS CLUB practices and competition with master Monty Collier gaining first place in the PSSAA. 9 7

Suggestions in the George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) collection:

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 8

1988, pg 8

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 127

1988, pg 127

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 126

1988, pg 126

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 84

1988, pg 84

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 140

1988, pg 140

George Dewey High School - Seaborne Yearbook (Subic Bay, Philippines) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 53

1988, pg 53

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