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Page 30 text:
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Page 29 text:
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THE STATE CAPITAL in Austin was the Headquarters for the Texas Sesquicentennial com- mittee. This committee was in charge of organizing the various celebrations marking Texas’s 150th birthday. MILLIONS OF PEOPLE, along with the families of the seven crew members, watched the devastating explosion of the Challenger on January 8. This space flight had the first civilian aboard, Christa McAuliffe, schoolteacher. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, ALONG with many other stars, sang their hearts out for the cause of starving people in the world. Live-Aid, Band-Aid and Farm-Aid were celebrity groups who helped raise money for causes all over the world. Student Life Mm 25
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Page 31 text:
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“T like biology because it’s in- teresting. We learn about different species of life and that’s fun to me. But, projects are my favorite because they’re a challenge.’’ — Dusty Flanagan, sophomore. a Back to Basics By Suzanne Moye 66 eo 8 ® nd for tomorrow, read pages 96 through 108 and answer the questions on page 109% “Yeah right, thanks,” you say to yourself, “like I didn’t have anything else to do tonight.” But, it’s all part of the “essential elements”! Just think about it. If you take away the talk between and during classes, pep rallies, notes to your best friend and dates for Friday night, you know, the real “‘essentiahelements” to high school life, what have you got? Academics. Governor Mark White and friends gave us “72” which called for tougher standards and concentrating more on the fundamentals. Teachers were fac- ed with the TECAT test and the anx- iety of “No Pass, No Pay”. And for the first time, juniors were required to take and pass an exit test in order to receive a diploma. DID YOUR MOM ever tell you where text books come from? If not, we’ll tell you. It’s the book room in the library. All the books are kept there during summer vacation and during the school year, all the extras just sit there waiting to be issued. So, now that you know where text books come from, don’t tell your mom who told you! However, Texas Education Laws didn’t change everything. Sopho- mores could be found skimming pools, cleaning light fixtures and mastering the art of fly swatting all to get an A from Mrs. Celia Pyle on their bug collections. Seniors, evident by their note card boxes and two packages of note cards, spent precious hours in the library researching and re-researching their chosen profession. And, of course, every English stu- dent could be found taking a “novel” approach (usually the night before the book test). Students this year were faced with more classwork, more homework and more strenuous requirements in the state-wide effort to get back to basics. Mr. Oscar L. Newton, a nationally known speaker for the life insurance industry and the guest speaker at the Rusk County Chamber of Com- merce’s 60th annual banquet, summ- ed it up when he said,“‘Excellence is a lofty and admirable goal; today it’s a one word synonym for survival because the age of mediocrity is dead.” Academics ge 27
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