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Page 12 text:
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Page 11 text:
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After moving to seventh grade we were presented with a lot of new problems. One of our most common, being infamous for seventh graders, was looking up. The class project for this year was selling posters and T-shirts, and we raised 3600. Moving on to eighth grade was an event that we all looked forward to. No longer were we the little kids of the school. We still continued our junior high life with excitement. Our class project this year was the infamous eighth grade supper from which we raised 358384. In ninth grade we were allowed a little more freedom, and we had some say in the classes that we wanted to take. Many of us at that age were still very naive towards life. Our class project this year was selling Kadet Stationery. Our top salesperson was Valerie Miller who sold forty-six items. Our total profit was 31,138.66 ln tenth grade, biology provided us with a lot of interesting activities, such as our fieldtrips to our mousetraps and our stream communities, plus dissecting our very own fetal pigs. This year the Marion Marching Band was able to go to The Gorham Pageant of Bands where we won two second place prizes due to Mr. Thompson's unrelenting patience and our long hours of practice. This year's class project was the tenth grade supper, and we made 3600. We entered eleventh grade with the normal junior fear of failing the social studies and English regents. Even though Mr. Henrie preached on hour after hour that we were the most unprepared class that he's ever seen and our knowledge of current events was pitiful, most of us had no problem in making him eat his words. Chemistry was another highlight of our junior year that many of us think we could have done just fine without. This year's class project was selling chocolate candy bars and we made 31,000. In our final and last year of the high school experience, our year was concentrated on fund raisers for our senior trip. Our first was the senior booth at the Wayne County Fair at Palmyra where we raised 33,000. Next on the list was the magazine and newspaper sale where we raised 35,700. The Senior Play, The Prime Time Crime, raked in 31,200 and the spaghetti supper brought in 3300. We had our senior dinner dance at Marvin's Country Club on March second. The theme of our senior prom was inspiration by Chicago, and our senior picnic was at Darien Lake. Now that all the fun is over, the Publications Club would like to wish every member of the senior class the best of luck always. And to the class of '86, may your senior year be as great as ours was. . . Neal Guthrie and The Publications Club Advisors - J. Ramsey, J. Reinhardt, T. Quill
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Page 13 text:
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