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Page 22 text:
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S). IV !. Bobby Addison Show, Senior Play. 2. Terry Allamong, Baseball, Track, JV Show, Senior Play, D E. V Bruce Allen, D.E. Club. 4. Gregory Ray Anderson (Doc), Senior Class Pres., SCA Senator, Key Club, Pep Club, Beta Club, Senior Play. Rx is forever. 5. Mike Anderson (Miguel), SCA, FCA, )V Show Some people think I ' m fickle but ther ' s nothing like hair-lipped ripple.” 6. Bob Anderson (Sue), Beta Club, Key Club, FCA, Vice. Pres. Senior Class, Co-Chairman Prom, Football, JV Show, Senior Play. 7. Susan Archambeault, French Club, Spanish Club, Beta Club, FHA. 8. Elizabeth Armentrout (Ann) 9. Lesa Arnold, Sr. Class Sec., Sr. Comm., Soph. Class Treas., Beta Club, SCA, Spirit Squad, jV Show, Band. 10. Wendy Atkinson, D.E. There are only two Mounkeys in the shole world. 11. Charles Baker (Chomp), Var¬ sity Track, Senior Play, )V Show, FCA, Drama Club, One Act Play Festival, Concert Choir. 12. Sharon Baker (Sponge), Beta Club, Keyette Historian, French Club, Pep Club, GPG, FT A, IV Show. Sponge works best with Drano and stop signs. 13. Susan Baldwin, Cheerleader, Pep Club, FSA. 14. Gary Banks, D.E. Club. 15. Christine Baugher 16. Guss e Bellamy (Lesa), )V Show, D.E I, II, Negro History, Sen¬ ior Play, FSA, Library Club, Spirit Squad, Drill Team. Live while you are living cause you are a long time dead. We ' ve only just begun to live Each Senior always regards his high school career with some kind of nostalgia. We, too, have had many moments of memories — SOPHOMORES: ori¬ entation, our first steps within the cold, disciplined walls of Waynesboro High, our first embarrassing attempts at spirited pep rallies and assemblies, the tragedy of an empty treasury, the joy of block par¬ ties and road rallies and week-long romances until we were JUNIORS: Frenzied class meetings about THE SHOW with several directors, much chaos, and a muddy cast-party or two, or three . . . Longer romances and college to think about, a new self-awareness with underclassmen to tower over and SENIORS: to look up to. When we got there not much had changed. A play, a party, and we remem¬ bered that we were almost through with Saturdays of college boards and 3:15 releases. 18
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Page 21 text:
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Tired students, thoughtful students, Students with lollipops. Students that are . . . It’s raining today, Your slip is showing! Did she really say “quiz?” Awareness that is . . . Colonnades of sleepy smoke rings, A time-worn stage of dusty echoes, Two sets of fifty breathless stairsteps, The campus that is . . . A year of learning new words; Eight months of finding significance; Thirty-two weeks of Isaac Newton, Sine cosine, Frank Lloyd Wright That are laughingly, uniquely, undeniably . . . US! School life is a twelve year apprenticeship that binds its students to the task of finding themselves — of enlarging the experiences and understanding the chemical reactions that produce what we term “age”. Each of us forms a single brick in the wail of individuals that constitutes WHS; all of us share in the delightful taste of life which learning brings us . . . the challenge of competing with others, the satisfaction in making a step toward maturity, and the sheer fun of socializing with our friends. We “goof off”, we study hard, we cry, and we laugh a great deal, for high school is at once a teddy bear and a preface to adulthood — a chap¬ ter in which we grow. Sophomores, spinning a web of dreams for tomorrow, contribute their hesitant smiles and eager attitudes; juniors light each day with a free-flowing confidence and industry typical of the “middle rung”; and seniors prepare for a giant step, their thoughts lost in reverie of the fleeting past and anticipation of future worlds beyond. We form the “breath of life” which makes our institution significant — we breathe the hopes, industriousness, and frolic that render our high school years a bittersweet reality of experience. 17
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