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Page 17 text:
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During the three-day registration ses- sions, faculty members were busy on the fourth floor. Stacy Fillmore and Audrey King tote an ice chest filled with soft drinks and goodies for the registration -bound teachers. Coach Johnny Jernigan receives a sophomore ' s registration card for boys physical education. Registration 13
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Page 16 text:
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R egistration 44 As summer comes to a close, students come hack to school, ready to renew old friendships and organize class schedules Ican t believe school is star- ling already . , . Did you go to the beach . . . What period are you tak- ing English . . . Between the greetings and questions of one another, students ' voices once again filled the halls of the third and fourth floors beginning Monday, Aug. 20, as seniors, then juniors and, lastly, sophomores lined up to check schedule boards and then design class schedules for the new school year. After figuring out their schedules, whether based on preferred lunch times, classes with friends or a certain teacher or subject, students enrolled with each specific teach er personally, giving a schedule card and having his or her name added to the teacher ' s roster. Since this was the third year that registration has been handled in this manner, students were at ease and, on the most part, liked the idea. My friends and I really tried hard to work our schedules so that we could be together in class, said Tracy Moreau, senior. After all, this is our last year, she said. It got a little tricky for me, said sophomore, Brian Berkman. I was locked in- to specific periods for G T English and golf, so I had to work around these classes, he said. This type of registration is great for teachers of extracurricular activities, said Susan Bauer, choir director. With this type of registration, we are flexible enough to get the students we need at the right times, she said. However, because of enrollment changes and the addition of the third lunch period, some classes didn ' t make while other were Gail Deuel, drama teacher, finds theater arts to be a popular course among register- ing students. crowded. For several weeks I had to meet with one of my English classes in a double room, said Le- moine Lane. Counselors were kept busy registering new students, enrolling others in proper classes and leveling teacher loads. After all I did to get the schedule I wanted, it was completely changed, said Jeanne Timme, junior. However, by the third week of school, students were caught up in the activities of the Registration operates smoothly for basketball coach, Carolyn Dornak. Coach Dornak signs up her twenty-fifth student for one of her classes. year, including all the changes that greeted them at the school door — closed campus for the first time, passing grades of 70 instead of 60, and six-weeks grading periods instead of nine-week periods. School had begun. nris Smith and Kathleen Tutt enroll sophomores for physical education and girls health. Jan Claussen assures students that reading improvement will be beneficial to them.
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Page 18 text:
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Debra Gar .a was elected Homecoming queen by her fellow students and was crowned at pre-game ceremonies by last year ' s queen, Liz Hernandez. Mike Filla really knows how to mix and match his wardrobe. His impeccable taste adds flavor to Mix- Match Day. Wrapping her glasses with tape and becoming a nerd for a day is something new for Theresa Miller. Many students participated in the first Homecoming Nerd Day.
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