It was 17 years ago that I started this shindig. It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Since then, I've put up 6,326 posts for you, my handful of readers. Thanks for coming back.
As she turned 17 that fall, the real DN3 was just starting her senior year in high school. She had recently completed drivers' ed, but she didn't get her license until the summer after graduation. She spent fall of that year dividing her time between her small-town high school and taking classes at large public university about 20 miles away. (I've written about that here.)
But after fall semester, I had a light load, which was devoted to turning out a required term paper in English plus another one just for the heck of it, taking first-year Latin on a lark, cofounding and editing a student newspaper, and doing a bunch of other extracurricular activities: French Club, drama club, band and chorus, yearbook, and probably some other things I've forgotten.
I protest-failed gym class for one half-quarter because the teacher required us to perform gymnastics up to a certain standard. This seemed physically unfair to me, and on top of that it was absurd and incoherent to require study hall as punishment to make up for a physical deficit. But I served my five weeks in study hall, nonetheless.
I took the SAT exam early in fall, with scores that fed into confirming the National Merit scholarship I was awarded, based on my junior-year PSAT scores. The funding came from IBM, which almost always provided scholarships for children of their employees who met the National Merit criteria.
My report card shows 0 half-days absent for the first three quarters, but then 8 in the last quarter. Was that senioritis, or was I sick? I don't remember. As on previous report cards, the carbon for the earlier quarters has faded almost to unreadability. There's a class listed for the third and fourth quarters whose name I can't read and I have no recollection of, but I averaged 93% in it... whatever it was.
The school year 1976–77 saw the last few months of the 1976 presidential election — won by Jimmy Carter in November. China's Cultural Revolution ended with the capture of the Gang of Four, and Mao's death in September. By summer 1977, Deng Xiaoping rose to power. Some other notable news events: New Jersey legalized gambling in Atlantic City, the cause of Legionnaire's Disease was identified, the Space Shuttle was in test flights, Spain held its first democratic elections in 41 years, Elvis Presley died (August 1977), and French was made the official language of Quebec.
Here's to another year past, and to the next one ahead.
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My past anniversary posts, each with an age-appropriate photograph: