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Page 20 text:
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lover don’t eat lunci LEFT: “The Wall’’ outside the music room is the gathering spot for junior notables, Brian Sullivan, Elaine Dan- forth, John Taglieri, Paula Surette, Ann Davoren, Sherri Leeman, and Clare Donaghue. It has often been said that what you eat is what you are, but in the high school world, where you eat is what you are. If one eats in Mr. D’s office and races out to watch the scenery pass by, no doubt he is a Senior. With little further doubt, he is a Jock. Similar is the situation of the Junior, who is not necessarily a jock, but is involved in every aspect of Junior life. The Music Room is his cafeteria. There are those students whose outdoor or music spirit qualifies them to eat with the Camping Club in Mr. Coomb’s room or with the Band in Room 108. To complete the 11:14-11:44 categories, there is that remnant - of-the-past group who eat alone in their homeroom with a bologna sandwich in one hand and Shakespeare in the other. Last but not least is that category that comes in pairs, lovers don’t eat. Room 108 is the gathering place for the band. Cheryl Pearlman, Valerie Pastore and Robyn Broady enjoy their dessert. Camping Club members can be found in Room 211. Susan Paino, Mr. Ray¬ mond Coombs, Ed Arbo and Brooke Marshall relax during lunch. 16 essay
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Page 19 text:
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ij BOTTOM: LIBRARY CLUB: Front Row: James Madden, David Smith, advisor John Sadler j! Back Row: David Franzese, Jay Primak, Michael Glazer, Kenneth Babin V Preparing for the first quarter teacher’s tea are USONA members Marianne Dunn, ajoanne Ricciardone, Virginia Jones, Lisa Goffredo, and Donna Grenier. SERVICE CLUBS For some reason that no one can quite identify with USONA seemed to be the happy execution to declining memberships. It was a dramatically bigger crowd that showed up for the group picture but an officer who ought to know claimed that meetings were never like that. The clubs tended to follow the same patterns in activities as well as membership. USONA collected for Globe Santa and the March of Dimes, Tri-Hi for the Cerebral Palsy Fund. CAM contributed to the International Save the Children Foundation. For the clubs, what they did they did well. It ' s just that no one seemed to identify with the clubs in the way they once did. they all show up for the picture clubs 15
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Page 21 text:
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BOTTOM: Lunch time finds Joe Lauria cramming for a test. Lunch time is an opportunity to do more than eat lunch. essay 17
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