Memories
In my ongoing quest to declutter my home, I was turning out a box in my workroom when I came across this, my elementary school yearbook, class of 1959. Looking inside, I was surprised to discover that I had been our class vice-president. That can't have involved doing anything in particular, or I would remember it. It's odd to read the inane things that 12-year-olds wrote in yearbooks back then - how completely unsophisticated we were.
It was my job during sixth grade to read the morning announcements over the PA system each day and I enjoyed being special in that way. I was generally recognized as the smartest kid in school, which, while it could be problematical, got me some great opportunities - participation in an educational radio program called "Science at Our Door," and a wonderful free month at a science camp in the Berkshires. That kind of recognition made up in some way for the awfulness of home. A really shy girl, I learned that school was the one place where I could shine and fit in - maybe that's why I got a BA, MEd, and a PhD! I would have been happy to go on being a student forever. I wonder what became of my classmates.
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