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Page 10 text:
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Delighted with her Halloween costumefs versitality, Lisa Swedenborg turns her golfclub into a baseball bat. chdcs Halloween, students dressed up for pride week and class tournaments. Sharing a joke outside the cafeteria. Jim Robinson and Dan Filler laugh about lhcirday. Most students stopped to talk in the halls between classes. most teachers demanded quiet, some peo- . found class to be a time for discussion. Dirk Mulder leans back to catch up on the conversation- bchind him. WDivider
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Page 9 text:
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Although most people watched with regret as September approached and the summer became yet another memory, there were some who looked forward to going back to school. Even those who wanted the summer to go on forever found that going back to the halls of Harbor was not so bad after all. Of course everyone looked forward to fall sports, after game dances, and see- ing friends all day long. As people set- tled into the ttschool mood0 and the year went on, people found themselves get- ting psyched for pep assemblies, plan- ning Harbor Pride Week, and even eventually looking forward to prom wee- kend, the twirp dance, or the combined choir and band trip. Though some still insisted that 7:40 was much too early for human existence, the life of any student was at school. So keep turning these pages, take a look at Harbor High School from September to June, from 7:40 am. to 2:30 pm. and even farther on into the night.
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Page 11 text:
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.u'r'sum intrinifm L V ,r F rom conversations in halls or at lunch, it can be assumed that just about everybody was involved in one activity or another. F rom newspaper staff to special dances, students found an enjoy- able outlet for their time and energy. As tradition called for, juniors and seniors decked themselves out in their finest for the Prom. While underclass- men were not allowed to attend this gala affair, they found solace in the Twirp Dance. Class tournaments proved to be the exciting event it always is, while the newspaper began the year with a bang under editor Tracy Bish and advisor Mrs. Hedberg. The yearbook staff be- gan the year with a workshop at Oberlin College.After such a successful start, the year flew by with only the minimal amount of usual problems. Whatever the occasion, Harbor stu- dents found a way to be involved, mak- ing the year a busy one for all.
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