Page 98 - 1988
P. 98
RIGHT- Sara Freudeman and Rose Brown adore that large, stuffed bird which we fondly refer to as 'Ozzie "
BELOW - The Prefects may be our most famous grads. Here sit Dean Lockhart, Mark Eagles, Fred Folliot, Kim French, Rhonda Mc- Clure, and Trish Wilde. OPPOSITE P AGE - Mike Aikens. There's no use crying over spilt milk!
RADUA TES
DECISIONS! DECISIONS! DECISIONS! Do I Leave C.C.I. after grade 12 or do I take grade 13? Will it be Western or Waterloo? Georgian College or Seneca? Will I study biology or sociology? Do I stay in residence or do I share an apartment with 8 others? How often will I get
home and how will I get there? Can I afford to eat out or do I have to eat 'Kraft Dinner' again? Should I phone home and tell them I've run out of money even though it is only the first of October? These are only a few of the questions that the grads of C.C.I. will have to answer in the next few months after they leave these hallowed halls of learning to embark upon their next step in education. Next year at this time, many of our former " Fighting Owls" will be far from C.C.I., associating with new friends, studying new topics and adjusting to a totally different way of life. Perhaps too, there are some who will choose to travel or go directly into the work force.
Wendy Ward anticipates majoring as a chartered accountant at the University of Waterloo - a fitting position for our Coun- cil financier. Although she will be living in residence, she'll still miss that good home-cooking and her C.C.I. friends. The first thing that this lady will do when she arrives in Waterloo is meet the other people in her building. Her greatest fear of university is th~ amount of studying required and her ability to get high marks.
Next year, Seneca College will be home for Katherine Lovell as she enters into a programme in Hospital Administra- tion. She will be sharing an apartment with some of her C.C .I.
DARE •TO •BE •WISE 94 DARE TO BE WISE