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FACES Left: Kelly Jo Edick: a splendor in the grass. Above: Jordan Wessels: Aaaayyy! Below: A flirtatious look by Sara Pegg. 4
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Page 7 text:
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A Unique View Of G.H.S.
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Page 9 text:
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Above: Dave Bakyta studies the slant of the green. Below: Star field hockey player Phyllis Nicolella is surrounded by her fans: lenny Sonn, Laura Merwitz, and Becky Carguilo. WE KNOW . . Identifying Unerclassmen What's the difference between a freshman and a sophomore? Between a sophomore and a ju- nior? A year, some might say. Others don't know. Actually, besides a year, there are other important characteristics. Consider the freshman, the easiest student to recognize. Looking somewhat like E.T. , the freshman has big, bulging eyes that never shut, a long neck that never stops rotating from side to side, and slippery hands that books continually fall from. It's no wonder he looks like this; no fresh- man wants to look uncool by carrying around a map. So he perks up his eyes and his neck and becomes vulnerable to the learned underclass- man who tells him that the gym is on the third floor. Now, the sophomore is a bit tougher to spot. No longer the youngest of the school, he is like the middle child of a family-not too heavily pam- pered or too heavily stressed into leadership. His eyes, now no longer too enthusiatic about the hallways and classrooms of G.H.S., look forward to the coming months and years and to the viscera of the Drosophila melanogaster. The junior is by far the most optimistic of the underclassmen. With a Prom to look forward to, the junior's eyes seem to dance and he walks through the halls observing everyone, as though wondering who his (or her, of course) prom date will be. The junior never refers to his time left at G.H.S. as two more years, but a year after this year we'll be seniors! And being a senior-well, that's the best there can be. Above Left: Freshman Lori Filipelli and Colleen Sullivan pre- pare to wash Mr. Ffarris's son Daniel. Above Right: Mary Jo Maynard finds the perfect setting for an artist. 5
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