Table of Contents Table of Contents
Previous Page  11 / 264 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 11 / 264 Next Page
Page Background

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