

Involvement merges
1979-80
Student
No student, teacher, or
parent could deny that
extracurricular and
personal activities vied for
the students' attention.
Student involvement did
increase as more and
more students became
involved in their
community through work,
shopping, or representing
their clubs and
organizations. Most
students still found time
for leisure activities to
enjoy a movie or favorite
television show. Whether
students participated, or
practiced, or watched,
they were involved as
the new decade emerged.
OPPOSITE PAGE: TOP
LEFT: For the backdrops
in the homecoming
assembly, Rick Pettis
helped cut out signs
denoting perennial teen
hangouts. TOP MIDDLE:
Mr. William Hundley,
attorney for Mr. Tongsun
Park, listens as questions
are presented to Mr.
Park. TOP RIGHT: After
each halftime
performance, Debbie
1n
Life
Lawrence, feature
twirler, waits with the
band before leaving the
field. MIDDLE LEFT:
Earning and spending
money for desires and
necessities was a
situation confronted by
many students; among
the early expenditures
was underclass pictures,
as Allison Bennett and
Kayla McKee take up
money for the packets.
LEFT: To escape the
sun's brilliance, Dawn
Kyle props against a
post outside the annex
during lunch. BOTTOM
LEFT: Relatively new but
quite popular area is
Lazarre Point, where
swimming, skiing,
sunbathing, and people
watching are standard, as
Tammy Adams, Lisa
Mitchelson, and Alison
Counts indicate. THIS
PAGE: ABOVE: From the
sidelines, senior tightend
Brian Bernard watches
the action of the
Huntington game, which
was the first home game
of the 1979 Rebel
season.
Student Life/7