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To: BigEdLB
Was crap like that printed in your yearbooks?

I graduated from Compton High (California) in 1972, and nothing close to that was in our yearbooks.

For all the notoriety of my old hometown, we looked like prudes compared to those prep schools.

91 posted on 09/19/2018 11:42:39 PM PDT by Windflier (Pitchforks and torches ripen on the vine. Left too long, they become black rifles.)
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To: Windflier

I am close geographically and time wise to you and I agree. Nothing like it. Millikan 1971.


93 posted on 09/19/2018 11:53:00 PM PDT by BigEdLB (BigEdLB, Russian BOT, At your service)
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To: Windflier

my cousin teaches at one of those DC schools...I think the Heights....and his wife is at a girls private school.....would love to pick their brain but neither of them are gossipy about that stuff...


94 posted on 09/19/2018 11:57:10 PM PDT by cherry (official troll)
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To: Windflier
I was Editor of my high school year book in 1974. We had a tradition of taking a very informal group picture of the senior class. There must have been about 500-600 kids in the shot, so it actually looked like a sea of faces but you could still decipher who people were.

My yearbook teacher, Mr. K spent HOURS going through the picture with a magnifying glass to make sure no one was flipping the bird. That's how strict and conservative it was. Mr K actually found a kid who was flipping the bird. Mr K was an artist so he drew the kid a full hand so it looked like he was waving. He was so good, that you could not tell that the picture has been modified.

100 posted on 09/20/2018 12:30:51 AM PDT by nicksaunt
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