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Page 19 text:
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s 1 -bu! '... F' Students collect. classify. und prcscrvc many spccimuns during lhc neck lung murine biology trip. Larry Hoover enjoys thc charlcrcd bus ride on thc way ln Pennsylvania. Thc Capitol Building is one of the many sights thc Crinisonuircs sam in Washington DC
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Page 18 text:
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Students ravel South nd East Students traveled to the East and the South during the spring months. The Crimsonaires took a short L5 dayj trip to the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. and Wash- ington D.C. areas where they performed and toured historic spots. On Friday, the group performed for Indian Valley Junior and Senior High Schools in Saudertown, Pennsylvania. That evening, they present- ed an evening program for the public. This area was the hometown of Mr. Swartley, the director of the group. They then moved on to the Foundry United Method- ist Church in Washington D.C. This church, which is located in an area where riots took place in the 1960s after Martin Luther King's assasination, is a prominent church in the U.S. According to Mr. Swartley, this program highlighted the trip. He said, There was a moving histori- cal feeling among the group as they per- formed. The following day found the group touring the nation's capital. The kids were super, stated Swartley. Accord- ing the the Crimsonaire members, the trip was worthwhile and fun. A small motel in the Florida Keys was where the marine biology class settled dur- ing spring break. Students, who attended classes prior to the trip on Saturday morn- ings, studied the marine ecology in the Keys. Students studied different habitats including channels, mud flats, and la- goons. They collected, perserved and clas- sified marine plants and animals, and took part in lecture and periods. ln between the periods of active study and meal prepara- tion, students took volleyball and sunning breaks. Sue Haney, one of the partici- pants, summed up the trip enthusiastically in a few words. lt was great. Members of the Crimsonaires pose in the National Archives Building. , V' .d 'J' ' Members of the marine biology group. with a backdrop of palm trees and ocean , -V--,455 . . 'YW . '14 ' Y i' '. ff: ,gp , I-fjyf .QU f.-' i fwfga' f-yi' f-1 ' ' y 1,-:,, . v . ,F ' I '44 U' . 3 fav.-.ji , SQ rye' , 1 -- - ' 1. I. fu. l . kr - -'xl Students spent some time in the sun in Florida
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Page 20 text:
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Friendship Week Expires But . A senior citizen joins students and workers in the salad bar line. Andy Stoner helps with clean-up work, Sr. Citizen Luneheor Friendship week no longer existed at G.H.S. in '79-'80. During the previous sev- eral years, one week during the spring was set aside as Friendship Week. During that week, students and staff were encour- aged through class competitions and con- vocations to be friendly and to think about different types of friendship. Some thought the traditional week effective, others thought it not. One effective holdover of that week was a senior citizens luncheon. Senior citizens from various nusring hand retirement homes in the area were invited by the stu- dent council to eat lunch in the school cafeteria. Individual council members helped with serving and cleaning up after the meal. The Crimsonaires entertained the guests and hosts after the lunch. Senior citizens seemed to enjoy the time to visit the high school and one commented that school had changed a lot since he had been a student. Senior .leff Johnson chats with a friendly senior guest before performing with the C 1 The Crimsonaires prepare to sing for the guests after the lunche
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