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Page 26 text:
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Students share good times as best of friends Recognizing importance in friendship can be special if you appreciate its value During the school year you were too immersed with just being a friend to try to figure out what friendship meant. Someday, you would look back and make your own mental lists about what made some people special to you. You would remember the times someone sat on the other end of the telephone for an hour and a half, sharing homework answers or deepest feelings about a certain person. The memories of smiles and cheers that followed a perfect touchdown pass, or the upsets and tears that came with a lost romance, all became easier to handle when shared with someone close. Then there were the crazy, silly times when being a friend meant sharing your last roll of toilet paper during a teepeeing spree, or rescuing an innocent victim from the midst of a lVlcDonald's ice fight, or pretending not to know who it was that just drove by mooning the choir car wash crew. This business of friendship was serious stuff, but you were too preoccupied at the time to realize it. After all, you were too busy being a friend yourself to somebody else. ll f
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Page 25 text:
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Recipe for cold misery Mother Nature cooks up mixture for winter blues Recipe for making a Minnesota winter: C1 5 Take a month, preferably January, and put it in lvlother Natures deep freeze until properly chilled. 41 below zero will be just about right. C25 Throw in a dash of wind, just enough to bring the wind-chill factor down to 100 degrees below. C33 Overuse a supply of fuel oil and simmer indoors at 65 degrees during the daytime, and 60 degrees at night. C45 Cook the ingredients for a blizzard during 4 school days a week. C53 Stop all weekend activities in order not to disturb the previous ingredients. C65 Take away thousands of jobs from people and subtract the destroyed crops to get just enough misery to make the winter right. C73 Finally, declare the winter a disaster, wrap it in a sweater, throw it in the oven, and wait until the warmth of spring comes. PAGE 20 - Top left: Taking a rest after a walk on a cold winter day is Tom Barry. Top right: The cold is no obstacle for skiers Dave Oster and Pete l-lerbst. Lower: A student peers at the empty halls on a Monday when school was closed. PAGE 21 - Top: A milk can is buried in white dust following a heavy snowfall. Lower: After a walk to the bottom of the lvtinnehaha Falls, Brenda Stephenson and Jackie Quist take a rest on the ice.
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Page 27 text:
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PAGE 22 - Top left: Jeff Tarh'5'n5r1V54iQH:eitSa:d off the field by Mark O'Brien andCoach 1 Qf Jim Klaseus. Top right: Thefriendshipj tw -A between coach and athlete is shown by John Sulack and Blair Meyer. Lower left: Unity among members of the student body is found ata pepfest. Lower right: Nola Berger and Blanche Magness celebrate a birthday with all the trimmings during the lunch hour. PAGE 23 - Top left: Give me ten is a way of expressing fellowship between teammates Kevin Stoa and Dale Forslin during a volleyball game. Top right: Friendship is something that is not limited to people of the same sex, as shown by Lori Gaughran and Scott Juengel. Lower left: During the soccer team's trip to Duluth, friends get together for some swimming. Lower right: Laurie Brose and Lisa Carlson show that closeness can be found during sad moments, too. 4- as GFS f!,', ... ',: .,W,iE g ',,,..w...,- ,-1N,,...,,....... ,A ..., mb K gy ,..-11 ' ' ' ' -ffl tg I
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