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Page 7 text:
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Working 6 Intellectual 54 Sports 96 Faces 126 Community 180 Index 210 “My, my, my!” Mr. Starboard jokes with seniors at the picnic. In his opening school speech. Mr. Star- board addressed the new group of students and welcomed them to Warwick.
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Page 6 text:
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“Good-morning! I want to welcome all of you to the as- sembly this morning. It’s al- ways a pleasure to come before such a fine group of young people. Let’s hope I can say the same thing later. No, really, we’ve got the best student body; I love Warwick High School! Members of the com- munity always ask me to de- fine the typical “Raider”. The following definition is the one I like and it seems to be the one best suited. Responsibility to make the world a better place for the school, for the community and you. Aggressive — always ready for action. Individualism — Warwick stu- dents are known for being dif- ferent (also interpreted as be- ing strange). Dedication to preserve the high standards of scholastic achieve- ment. Enthusiasm which drives our athletic teams onward and up- ward. Right-on — “Cause that’s the way we’re headed!” We are merely a mass of 1600 people, no one more dis- tinguishable than another. Mr. Starboard sees us all as one group. No one has any separate identity; there are no “good students” or “bad students”. His speech is directed towards a conglomeration of students which has not yet begun to distill. In the stands. Basketball fans scream for two points at the regional tourna- ment. A single-minded group backed the team throughout the season. 2
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Page 8 text:
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(Mass dismissed. Dianne McKenny sprawls on the back of a car being driven on t h i? museum grounds dur- ing the Senior picnic. The class was naturally grouped into smaller pic- n ic friends.” 4 4 1 think cheques can be a good thing. Everyone has cer- tain friends that they are close to and spend time with. You can’t be with everyone, so the people you see most of the time are your friends. You get your own jokes and understanding going, something that o her people couldn’t understand. 4 Yeah, there’s cheques in this school; you can tell because if you’re new, no one will talk to you or associate with you. By the time you get to high school, everyone has separated 4 4 I don’t think there are really into little groups, and if you’re clicques at school. I feel that out of it, you have no social I can be a friend to anyone; all life at all. I wish there was no you have to do is be friendly such thing as a cheque. first. If you separate into groups, you miss meeting a lot of people that could have been good friends. 4
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