Yorktown High School - Episode Yearbook (Yorktown, IN)

 - Class of 1983

Page 9 of 192

 

Yorktown High School - Episode Yearbook (Yorktown, IN) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 9 of 192
Page 9 of 192



Yorktown High School - Episode Yearbook (Yorktown, IN) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 8
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Page 9 text:

k i ' k ' What do you mean, borrow a kleenex? ' I gotta tell ya something later! Lisa shouts down the hall. Instantly big thoughts pop into your brain. Maybe Steve wants to take you out! Maybe John wants to take you to the game and told Lisa! Oh No! What has she got to tell you!!! Lisa, what is it? Tell me now!! (you ' re begging) Oh forget it. It wasn ' t anything big. How many times has this happened to you? you wait in total suspense for two hours and they say forget it! This is just one example of expressions used at Yorktown High School. Can I borrow a Kleenex? Now there ' s a good expression. It ' s just one of those things said without thinking. But how would it look if you used a Kleenex and gave it back? Not too pretty. Have you heard this one? Your hair looks good. What did you do to it? That ought to make you feel great. This person is saying you must have went to extreme efforts to get your hair to look good and you ' ve never done it before. You look just like your brother. This statement should boost a girls ' ego. Especially if her brother plays football! This one ' s a favorite of mine You look nice to- day. What the person is saying is you ' ve never looked nice an entire day in life until today. You didn ' t look nice yesterday or the day before but you look nice today. I heard this one the other day: Your sisters are so pretty. You don ' t look a thing like them. Boy if that wouldn ' t give a girl a complex. She might think she has some genetic disorder or something. These are just a few of the expressions people use to unintentionally degrade, insult a nd injure their friends feelings. Maybe you don ' t think you use any of these expressions but believe me, you do — and I ' m dead serious. Amy Hammeraley Consulting a valley dictionary to brush up on their square pegs vocabulary are Freshmen Kelly Anderson and Chris Cle- venger. Also, Juniors Michelle Orcutt and Tracy Etchison display some of their favorite tubular fashions. ft

Page 8 text:

Docott Like, there ' s this really rad song on the radio called Valley Girl and, it ' s like about these girls that live in Encino, in the San Fernando Valley outside of Los An- geles. This song is kind of like, sung by Frank Zappa and his 15 year old daughter Moon Unit. I ' m so sure that this song is really popular, I mean, like, ya ' know no- body ever talked like that before. I guess there are, like, these val girls and val dudes who think that any person who isn ' t like, into the val scene, is like a total geek. Vals think that Tom Selleck and E.T. are, like, totally awesome. They also drive these really tubular Rabbit convertables with, like, their very own Valley-Girl Van- ity License Plates on them. Like, ohmigahd! Some of the flakey things that val girls do totally barf me out. Like, they have this valley-girl diet where they eat things like: one roll of sugarless mints, one can of lobster paste, one head of iceberg lettuce, and some other grody to the max things. Vals also have this totally gnarly club called the Honorary Vals where, like, Princess Di is a Member so is Brooke Shields, Cheryl Tiegs and Olivia Newton-John. Like, I guess if someone wants to be a member they can, like, buy this book called, How to be a Valley Girl and, like, read it and then answer these questions and if you answer them right, you ' re a member of the Honorary Vals. But, like, why would anyone want to be a member of such a grody to the max club. Like I said, nobody ever talked like that before. But, I guess it ' s like, the tubular craze or something. Gag me with a spoon. Kim North All valleyed up and no place to go, is Junior Kris Jacobsonas she wears several of t e pes of clothing that have become a common sight in the Yorktown hallways. A Opening



Page 10 text:

Pkottei and PkoHieA 3-D Secretary Susie Ober discovers that using the new phone sys- tem brought out the split personality in her. Mrs. Ober was only one of the many teachers who found out the hard way that York- town ' s phone system was not what you might expect. To me, a phony is someone who comes up to me at a party and pretends to know me just so their friends will be impressed. — Liz Snider, senior I think I at most phonies are people that are so inse- cure that they Feel they have to put up a front so that everyone will like them. They don ' t realize that by do- ing this, peoplf. like them even less. — John Cargile, senior Hey, look, I ' m not a phony. I mean, gosh, I ' m no better than anyone else. To be totally honest with you, there isn ' t one hood, leech or low-life creature that I won ' t smile at when I pass them on opposite sides of the hall. I mean, gosh . . . Phonies have been around forever, and it ' s doubt- ful that any force will ever be strong enough to remove them from the Earth. Webster ' s Dictionary defines a phony as a slang term meaning sham or counterfeit, but when you ask people around York- town what they consider to be a phony, the answers will be a little different. A phony is someone who is so insecure that they feel they have to put up a front to impress people, stated Senior John Cargile. Junior Amy Goodpaster added, I feel sorry for phonies because they only talk to people who they feel are in the same class as they are . . . they act friendly to you when you ' re alone with them, but then they turn right around and ignore you in a crowd. If you want a simple definition, just ask Sopho- more Todd Walker. Chances are, he will reply, a backstabber. Even if you know how to define a phony, it won ' t do you any good unless you can pick one out. Here are several of the most popular methods around our high school. Senior Sherri Stevens advises, See if they act natural around you. If they do, then you ' ve probably made a friend, but if they don ' t, then chances are you ' ve confronted a fake. Another method, according to Senior Kathy Swin- sick is to See if they try to impress some people and then ignore others . . . also, some of them will start spreading rumors about people they don ' t like, whether they ' re true or not. If all else fails, just walk up to a person that you don ' t know, introduce youself, and kindly say, Par- don me, but you look like a phony to me. You are, aren ' t you? Your immediate lack of teeth will show you that this is a stupid method. Damon Brown Did you see that foxy guy in chemistry class, questions Senior Doranda Hoy as she engages in a pastime which has reached epidemic proportions at Yorktown; a love affair with her telephone. Opening

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