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Page 27 text:
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The place where no student goes. . . Mr. Warren, Mr. Lyons, and Mrs. Whitesell hang out in the teachers’ lounge between Classes. Enjoying a hot dog at a Cross Country meet Reid Spice and coach O'Brian prepare for the run. Hanging out in his own way, Mr. Lowe draws a cartoon during his planning period. Hanging Out 25
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Page 26 text:
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The Place To Be Hanging out is the one vocabulary word that every American teenager knows inside and out. Every high school student has his own clear def- inition of “Hanging Out.” To hangout, in general, means exactly what it sounds like. Agroup of kids pick a place that is either quiet or noisy. This place must be a central location where their everyday problems can be ignored or washed down with a coke. Lexington High School kids are under a lot of pressure to be the best that they can be. Preparing for SAT’s, sending out college applications, fin- ishing their homework before ‘‘Family Ties” etc. etc. take time. They almost. have to have some time off to catch a breath or enjoy small talk. Most kids go to the river and lie out, or some meet 24 Hanging Out in front of Dwight Inman’s house. Other locations are The Subway or even something as simple as McDonald's. The conversations span from who's going out with whom to the final score between the Keydets and ECU. Some kids choose occasion- ally to sit back by themselves and just think. Gahl Nir, a foreign exchange student from Israel said that the most extra- ordinary things about American cul- ture are the teenage customs. These are the things of our adolescence that we will always remember — just hang- ing out. — Nathan Heatley Steve Ludt knows nobody will suspect him of hanging out in the library. enero
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Page 28 text:
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26 Senior Trip Carolyn Smith, Kim Hostetter and Christie Bowl- ing laugh a sigh of relief after their long tour through the Supreme Court Building. The great white hunters, Scott Slusser, Allen Hostetter, Chris Higgins, Chris Staton, Patrick Gordon, and Harry Teaford, pause for a moment to have their picture taken with three elks be- fore they finish their tour. Inside the Capitol under this precious dome, the Senior class learns about the government and history of America. After the long walk the Senior class members stand patiently awaiting the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
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