It’s time to ban yearbooks. Those things are dangerous.
Links no worky.
Good grief. My high school’s yearbooks from the 70s and 80s have lots of things that were funny then but would be banned by the PC police today... like putting “Say there!” under a picture of a known gay kid... or a picture of the guy and girl voted class clowns and the guy is holding a water pistol to the girl’s head.
Tell the SJWs to go do something to themselves which is anatomically impossible.
Man this took longer to happen than expected.
But did he ever dress up in KKK robes, put on blackface or claim to be an Indian to get a job?
Fixy Wixy.
By today's standards, all the good comedy and classic movies would be impossible.
It's a humorless, soulless world today. I'm glad I'm checking out now, not getting born into it.
1966 Northwest Classen High School -- Oklahoma City, OK
Under Homemaking there is THIS award
Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tommorrow ... Elizabeth Herring (Warren)
LOL
Problem with your link. It says Fox but the URL isn’t Fox and it doesn’t link anywhere.
Never mind. The correct link has been posted on post-9
This is why Republicans should stay away from this hot potato and let Democrats stew in their own hypocritical juices. They are desperate to switch the narrative to attack Republicans.
Oh thank goodness we found a republican to blame!/
Gotta take this Republican out so the state senate will revert to ‘rat control and they can take over the governor’s office when the other three Democrat bigwigs quit......
All yearbooks have staffs, editors and faculty advisors. It shouldn’t be too hard to find out who they were
The one line written in everyone’s High School Yearbook way back when, “have a bitchin summer”.
Does he actually say he was not the editor, or just that this ancient history has been dredged up to distract from Democrat woes?
When are we going to stand up and say “I could care less about any of this garbage”?
I remember reading in our English class the story, “Black Like Me” by John Howard Griffin. It was a story about white journalist John Howard Griffin who who darkened his skin temporarily to pass as a black man. He traveled for six weeks throughout the racially segregated states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, and Georgia to explore life from the other side of the color line. “Sepia” Magazine financed Griffin’s project that was reported in this documentary.