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Page 101 text:
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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
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Page 100 text:
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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
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Page 102 text:
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HOME QF EZMADMIRALS VARSITY CLUB. CURBSIDE: Dennis Ellard, Caroline Styffe, Mary Maningas, Jon lnfante, Thomas Mills, Robia Semkow, Wendy Bogan, Timmy Mendoza. ZND Row: Peter Newsome, Andrew Shifrin, Marilyn Springer, Beth Tuttle, Michelle Leon Guerrero, John Redmond, Gary Zimbelman, Trent Reeve, Peaches Villegas, Kris- tina Operchuck, Michelle Marcelo. 3RD ROW: Terrence Manning, Angela Anthony, Bill Wright, Dinah Cayabyab, Mae Mangohig, Shannon Lay, Ronda Bayles, Anne Arpon, Debbie Vilayphanh, Crystal Brown, Lori Kellot, Chris Dillon, Mike Dennis, James Slonsky, Emmanuel Scordalakes. 4TH ROW: Edward Slonsky, Janel Guglielmetti, Colleen Ryley, Heather Schindell, Chris Cedo, Paul Plank, Keith Fernandez, Don West, Noel Dahlke, Mennen Perez, Robert Smith, Nilanie Chiong, Tammy O'Campo, Danita Stites, Bingo Shipman, Evan Nazal, Fred Pauley, Toby Tolen- tino, Carolyn Schultz, Ruth Villanueva, Ray McGee, Sabrina Operchuck, 5TH ROW: Philip Ajero, Donnie Floyd, Jason Moore, Bernard Ca- IS FOR ADMIRAL 300 pennies, 60 nickels, 30 dimes, 12 quarters. What about them? They all equal 33.00. For three dollars you can get three spaghetti dinners, a couple of beach parties with water skiing and all the food you can eat, an athletic pin, and, most importantly, an Admirals A . To take advantage of this offer, just join a sport, sweat in the sun for a cou- ple of months and be good enough to letter. Awards banquets, invariably held at the 19th Hole restaurant, are definitely not attended for the cuisine. Though edible, the food is usually forgotten as each team is brought into the spotlight. Letters are then passed out and team awards knew I had already clinched the MVP award before the banquet, there was always a surge when given my plaque in front of all those peoplef, said Dennis Ellard, a soccer player. The most famous of infamous coach at the banquets is Mr. Ferinden, the varsity club sponsor. His claim to fame is long speeches. He says, These nights are for the athletes. They are the ones who have worked for the days and weeks it takes to receive a letter. When I give my letters out I try to say some- thing about every girl because they de- serve it. A is for admiral and for athlete. This is a club for the best. lamug, Eric Yengst, Tim Plank, Steve Jan- kiewicz, Cobahn Hedge, Doug Burbey, Jason Schatz, John Parry, Paul Griffin, Aron Schatz, Joe Brown, Aaron Huffman, Willie Pasco, Chris Smythe, Mark Samara, Chris Salling. ROOF- TOP: Rommel Paat, Brett Bormann, Mike Leon Guerrero, Mark Angelo, Will Ryley. HAIL. HAIL. Qbelowj Becky Moffat and Janel Guglielmetti listen as Coach Ferinden heaps praise and compliments upon the volleyball team at the fall awards banquet.
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