Page 81 - CBA 1994 YEARBOOK
P. 81
Most teachers are always willing to lend a helping hand. M erritt Kusak- McGuire seems puzzled
by what Dr. Davis is say ing.
Students do many activi ties at school to make life a little more pleasurable. Greg Micale is one such person.
No matter how rough life gets, sophomores manage to find time to enjoy life. A group of sophomores playfully joke with each other.
Now You See It, Now You Don’t
If you took art, you often heard, "Who took all the erasers?”
or ^C^hat happened to all the pencils?”. The response usually
was, " I ’ll just put some back!” . Did the art teacher just dream
of putting out new supplies that morning? Was one of the teach
ers a kleptomaniac who stole her own art supplies? Did Mr.
Mitchell sneak in and steal all the erasers so that he could
complete a gigantic eraser tower in his back closet? Or were the
art supplies just evaporating?
Whatever the exact cause of the problem was, it needed a
solution. Someone could have put up one of those hidden cam
eras in the art room, or we could have set up a group of vigilante
art fanatics to raid Mr. Mitchell’s office. To make sure we didn’t
have a kleptomaniac for a teacher, we could have handcuffed
each art teacher to the steering wheel car for the day, and see
if there was any differnce. Then there was always the normal
search before leaving class for invisible strings attached to the
pencils and erasers that wouldn’t have let them be carried out
of the room, or maybe even exploding eraser tips for pencils
that detonated when you tried to leave the art room with them.
The end justifies the means. Sure, it might have hurt a little,
but if you had gotten your finger blown off, you would have
remembered to put the eraser back the next time. Now think
about that!
By Steve Judge