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Page 27 text:
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Fourth Grade-Oh, lucky, lucky us! WVe had homework for the first time. We also learned to use pen and ink-a very messy process-and to identify birds in our Audubon Club meetings. The girls chose sides for the Campfire Girls and the Girl Scouts, and the rest of the class chose for the murderous game of Red Roverf, Fifth Grade-The Friday Frolic Club was the center of our social life. Spelldowns, geography lessons, and School of the Air classes over WOSU kept us busy when we werenit making water colors of common wildflowers in Ohio. After school hours we took to the wheels and skated on all the smooth sidewalks in Grandview. Sixth Grade--Our dramatic talents came out in Brave Lord Lovel, Christopher Columbusf, and Robin Hoodf, At the Stevenson school, the Grandview Grease Collectors Clubii aided the war effort but the Gay Gremlinsn at Edison just hid fun. Our favorite sport at recess was jump the brooki' with three deepv running a close second. Most of the boys were sporting Scout uni- forms and planning summers at Camp Lazarus. Seventh Grade- just like the high school kids we changed classes, had regular study halls, came to high school assemblies, and got to vote for Old Fat Neckf' The change from rhythmics to gym was a big event in our lives. We all learned to ride horseback and to take bike hikes up along the river-for picnics. ' Eighth Grade-We spent our school time memorizing cabinet officers' names, learning Indian leg- ends, and practicing first aid, but this was definitely second to our outside activities. We went to the games every Friday and the show every Sunday, planned the V-3 dances, and organized the Eta Bita Pie and Amie Clubs. We enjoye.l the big assemblies-a swing assembly with Don Crawford and an Armistic Day assembly with Roger Youngf' Freshman Year-Within two weeks we learned to act superior toward the little kids,', our former junior high friends, and to be properly respectful toward those impressive mighty seniors. The boys went out for reserve football and the girls for hockey-equally brutal sports. The mys- teries of Latin conjugations and algebra problems filled our evenings. We went to the Fresh- man-Sophomore Party and dreamed of the Booster Dance. Sophomore Year-From late summer on, the girls practiced the hitchkick and the Grandview reg- ular looking toward those fateful cheerleader tryouts. We went to spreads, joined the Y-Teens, and let down our skirts to get that New Look. The girls thought that the boys didnit get around very much and the boys didnit care-they were busy with their own important affairs and spent much of their time turning down girls humbly asking them for dates. junior Year-What wheels we were-blowing up hydrogen generators, spouting whole sentences in French Cfentre dans la . . .Q and even earning our drivers licenses. Everyone, except those dratted seniors, and they'd be leaving soon, thought that we were so grown-up and enviable. We shared the illusion, and wasnit it fun? Even our class play Spring Fever fitted in with the madcap junior so Hightyw mood. Senior Year-We returned from wonderful summers at camp or work, planning to show this school a thing or two. Civics, bookkeeping, and Macbeth dampened our spirits only slightly as we tore around busily running the school-ragged. We cheered ourselves hoarse for our C. B. L. champs, uohedv and whistled at Homecoming, worked ourselves blue over the Booster Dance and Tal- ent Show, and struggled through stacks of college applications. VVe laughed when they told us weid keep getting busier and busier but they were right. And even while we enjoyed our exalted position and its responsibilities and looked forward to Commencement, we had al- ready started to be a little homesick for Our high school, our dear alma materf, Twenty-three
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Page 26 text:
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IXXH' S I HOV XS Vl III l 1' MAIUOHIE JEAN NVOODRUFF qmsurs X usih sports lout Boosters-representative -lg Y- 3 X Us Teen lg Class play crew Il. cast 4 lntrmuunl his 1 mi 45 Hilllllilllflvl' Slilff 4- rrs 1 1 I 1 . l.l.l ' Y' .l.l.'. . .'z ional '.' ' jg Sc in f .' up -4 .' ' 'L lloosh-rs -in-seulative . 1 au 'e eunnni - .1..f. ale: :.ke a -lg Intramural s 11 r W' ruvrf - lm e .., Z, 3 l - SlllRl,EY ANN YVlllCllT ml ' ' V' 'i Vilrgll' Boostersg Xlixed Chorus l. 2, lim-key 2. fl, 41 Y-'l'm-en l, 2. -lg 3. 4. BUIWM staff 4. Clier-rln-aulr-r Il. 43 Class play erew 4. east 3g l.1-arlers Club fl. 'll Mixed chorus 534 llobeat stall 3, :. -lg llmnneeornirug qrweu -lg junior- ' Senior eornmittec rl: Tal:-nt Show -1 'Y east l. 2. Il. Q' 'ii'- NIARK SHEIIDON YATES l'l.fXlll'lAllA ll0l,'l4SCllUL'l'l'1 Igomwrsc Highlumivr SMH ,gg South Broward. Miami, Flor- B.,bl.m ,ruff 4: 5L.iL.m... Club 4. idag Cheerleader 1. 2, SQ Mixed chorus l, 2. 735 Bulldog Society Editor IZ. lNot picturedl Glafu Jlula First Grade-Barely bidding good-bye to our tearful mothers and our dogs. we set out to get edu- cated. This is Alice was the first hurdle in our path, but before we left the first grade we were nonchalantly tossing olf gems like 'iAlice's dog Spot goes bow-wow. how-wow, bow-wow. VVe had the first of many Valentine boxes this year. Second Grade-Now We, too, could taunt the little kids with that first grade babiesv song and pelt them with ice-balls on the way home from school. Our fund of knowledge was growing bv leaps and bounds-we could add and subtract Qif the problems weren't too hard? and read reallv hard books like Hound Abouti' and ones we got on our weekly jaunts to the library. Third Grade-This was a busy year-the mysteries of multiplication were ours. and we even dab- bled in division. Spelling tests-with toughies like Wednesday and opera -were the bane of our existence, but daily story-sessions on NIL Popperis Penguins made up for almost any painful learning. Twenty-two
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