To: encinaupdate@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, July 26, 2002 10:43 AM Subject: [Encina Update] Encina Update (mcguire, reunions, siblings, yearbooks, 67, bios, humor, internet, whats new, homecoming) ENCINA ALUMNI, Barbara McKee Craig 65 is the sponsor of this week's update! The class of 77 has invited the classes of 76 and 78 to attend their 25 year reunion. The class of 87 also invited the surrounding classes this year. I think this is a great idea as we all had friends in other classes. I encourage other classes to do the same. Like the annual homecoming party, it's a chance to see folks you may not have seen for ages. Great idea folks! Next up is the class of 82 reunion in two weeks! SUSIE MCGUIRE Bob Pasley 85 wrote... "Susie McGuire was an English teacher at Encina while I was there (81-85) She ran the school newspaper and was involved in student government. I thought that those who knew Mrs. McGuire might appreciate this article from Saturday's Sac Bee." Teachers step out Roseville Union instructors working as interns hope to bring back new insights and skills to the classroom By Jennifer K. Morita -- Bee Staff Writer Published 2:15 a.m. PDT Saturday, July 20, 2002 Culinary arts teacher Susie McGuire was barely five minutes into her summer internship at Kelli's Cookies when she saw something she says will revolutionize the student-run cafe at Woodcreek High School in Roseville. "I found out they use scales to make their bulk recipes, instead of measuring cups and spoons," McGuire said, watching one of the bakers sift flour into a large mixing bowl for gingerbread cookies. "Our school is going to get a scale now. This is why I'm here. I'm learning so much that I can teach the kids." More than 20 Roseville Joint Union High School teachers will spend part of the summer working at internships as part of a new program to bring real-world skills into the classroom. After four years of building an internship program for students, district officials decided to spend roughly $20,000 of a $2 million federal grant to put teachers out in the local business community. "The grant gave us the opportunity to take a look outside the box. We came up with the idea of providing teachers with real-world experiences," said Steven Lawrence, assistant superintendent of curriculum and assessment. "It gives teachers the opportunity to learn some things that will allow them to reflect on their curriculum and think, 'Am I doing a good job in creating pathways for these students if they choose to go this route? Is there something I'm not emphasizing that would be a good skill for them to learn?' " Teachers will spend up to two weeks working in television studios, print shops, restaurants, nature preserves and major corporations before heading back to the classroom later this summer. After only three days at the Effie Yeaw Nature Center, Woodcreek High School science teacher Kendra Grinsell said she has already learned some valuable lessons while helping a park ranger give guided tours to kindergarten and third-grade students. "I've always worked with high school kids and seeing the younger guys out on the trail, I realized there's only so much information you can give them before they don't care anymore. And if it's too hot, they can't handle it," Grinsell said. Next year, Grinsell and her students will be creating a nature center on 75 acres of preserved wetlands behind the campus. "Our goal is to have our high school kids become the nature center docents and take elementary kids out to our area and teach them the same things that park rangers do at Effie Yeaw," Grinsell said. "It's given me a good idea of what our high school kids need to do to be able to take elementary kids out there." Grinsell also spent a few days following an environmentalist with ECORP Consultants, a wetlands restoration firm. "She took me through different preserves and showed me the things we can and can't do, what type of plants we can plant, where we can plant them, how close they can be to the trails and vernal pools," Grinsell said. "I've been in this district for 15 years and this is the first time we've had an opportunity like this. This is the first time they've said, 'We want you to get out in the real world, and we're going to pay you to do it.' " In many ways, Oakmont High School teacher Kim Richards and the students who run Viking Printing Press have been immersed in the real world of small business for several years. In addition to printing teaching materials, district mailers and course catalogs, students can also design and manufacture plaques and mugs. Last year Viking Printing Press billed $20,000 in jobs, and with business booming, Richards knows she and the students are going to have to expand soon. "If our demand keeps rising, which we think it will, I want to know what we'll need in terms of equipment," Richards said. "Although that may be a little ways down the road, I wanted to see what kind of equipment other printers are using. "But if anything, we're hoping this will affirm that what we're teaching our students is going to be applicable and that what we set up really mirrors what's happening out in the community." Mark Andreatta, a history teacher at Roseville High School, just started his two-week stint at Hewlett-Packard. "I have several acquaintances who work at HP, and they're always saying what a great place it is to work there," Andreatta said. "I wanted to find out why ... There's not a big correlation between working on the computer and teaching history. But I'm hoping to get a sense of what their corporate community is like, how it's different from the academic world and try to bring some of that into the classroom." Andreatta will work with program engineer Tony Cervone compiling and editing a manufacturing manual for one of Hewlett-Packard's newest products. "Hopefully when all is said and done, Mark will have learned a lot about Hewlett-Packard and I'll have a finished document," Cervone said. "I don't think we can lose with this. Even if he does a lousy job, HP has made a new friend." And for Kelli Ridenour, owner and founder of Kelli's Cookies in Sacramento, having McGuire spend a few days learning the cookie trade isn't just about getting free labor. "I thought it was a great idea," Ridenour said. "I'd like to share my knowledge with other people and help them learn the tricks of the trade that I had to figure out on my own." About the Writer The Bee's Jennifer K. Morita can be reached at (916) 773-7388 or jmorita@sacbee.com The online article and pictures are here: http://sacbee.com/content/news/story/3649995p-4675842c.html REUNIONS Just two weeks to the class of 82 reunion! The next reunions are: Class of 82 - August 9, 2002 Class of 77 - August 17, 2002 (last week I had typo which said 87) Class of 62 - September 28, 2002 Class of 92 - October 19, 2002 For those who have reunions this summer, I encourage you to RSVP as soon as possible. Having worked on the last 73 reunion, I know that you must let the caterers/hotel know early on how many people you expect. In some rates, the room charge depends on the number of people. Give your reunion committees a break and RSVP now! Reunion committees, I suggest you publish lists of those who have rsvped so far to the class mailing lists. I'll be glad to publish these lists on the class homepages and keep them up to date. Also, encourage your classmates to submit their bios. Knowing who's going and what classmates have been up to help folks to decide whether they will attend or not. Get conversations going on your class mailing list too. CLASS OF 1962 Event: Bicycle ride Date: Friday morning, September 27, 2002 Where: American River Bike trail Contact Randi Muller Kemper at randikemper@earthlink.net or Barbara Rea Fuller at BarbieJo44@aol.com Event: Alumni only pre-party (*** class of 61 *** is invited) Date: Friday, September 27, 2002 Place: Mace's Format: No host cocktail party Event: Golf tournament Date: Saturday, September 28, 2002 Place: Haggin Oaks Contact: Bill Corrie Event: Reunion party Date: September 28, 2002 Place: Del Paso Country Club Contact: Alice Braio Bogert 62 at ajbogert@yahoo.com CLASS OF 1972 *** UPDATE *** Craig Moseley has published some pictures from the class of 72's 30 year reunion here. So far the Grads-Only pictures are online: CLASS OF 1973 *** UPDATE *** The first reunion committee meeting is next Monday! Diane Schoenborn Kelly 73 wrote: Jolie and I are the contact people for the Class of '73 and part of the reunion committee. We are both teaching summer school, which makes me doubly grateful to her for offering to host the first planning meeting. Our first meeting will be: Monday, July 29 7:00 PM Jolie (Ostrow) Baron's house 3109 Kadema Drive Sacramento, CA 95864 (916) 489-0488 jb6197@aol.com I'll attempt to contact all known committee members with this information. Prove me wrong with your response: I have always been of the opinion that summer (August) is the best time for a reunion party due to the fact that classmates who live out of Sacramento have to worry about their children's school and sports schedules more during the rest of the year. Remember that our classmates have children ranging from newborn to adult, with the majority still in school, following a traditional school year calendar. Remember that planning a reunion party is like planning a wedding in that it takes about a year. It is probably already too late to get a place in Sacramento for next May. We welcome suggestions for dates, types of parties, and places to hold our reunion. We also would welcome any help you would like to offer. In the past, we have had a Friday night grad-only gathering, a Saturday night dinner party, and a Sunday picnic in a park. Diane (Schoenborn) Kelly CLASS OF 1977 (*** and 1976 and 1978 ***) *** UPDATE *** Greetings classes of 1976, 1977, and 1978! Members of the reunion committee for the class of 1977 met last Saturday to discuss our upcoming, August 17, 2002, high school reunion. Recognizing that we spent at least 3 years in the hallowed halls of Encina with members of the classes of 1976 and 1978, we talked about how much fun it would be to see those alumni, and teachers from that time span as well. As a result, we are inviting all members of the classes of 1976, 1978 and any teachers to our reunion. The information for attending is as follows: Date: August 17th, 2002 Time: 6:00 p.m. - ?? What: Dinner and a chance to catch up Place: The Doubletree Hotel Sacramento 2001 Point West Way (at Arden Way) Cost: $45 per person/$85 per couple To RSVP send a check no later than August 10, 2002 made payable to Herbert Niederberger for the appropriate amount to: Encina 1977 Reunion c/o H. Niederberger 5339 Par Place Rocklin, CA 95677 Please remember to list name(s) and year of those attending. We look forward to seeing you there! Sincerely, Theresa Hyland Bober Class of 1977 Reunion Update Date: August 17th, 2002 Time: 6:00 p.m. - ?? What: Dinner and a chance to catch up Place: The Doubletree Hotel Sacramento 2001 Point West Way (at Arden Way) Cost: $45 per person/$85 per couple Contact: John Hyland at johnthyland@hotmail.com Sue Levy Joslin at Jos964@attbi.com To RSVP send check, made payable to Herbert Niederberger, for appropriate amount to: Encina 1977 Reunion c/o H. Niederberger 5339 Par Place Rocklin, CA 95677 Please remember to list name(s) of those attending. CLASS OF 1982 *** UPDATE *** Well I am on my way to the bank. everything is coming along very well. I have the jumping balloon reserved. We have a beautiful spot for the picnic. We will have flyers at the party on friday night with directions to the picnic. here are the most recent rsvp'rs Atul patel Tim Schott Moya Watson Tricia landers Flynn Colleen Carey Wilemon Michael Moore Vijay Gounder Christy Clark Darcy Selk Skala Angela Metz Sayles Charles Fees Cathy Kelly Jesse Canales Telly Tasakos Christine Hill Kauffroath Amy Boss James Alexander Sam Bess Laurie Nevin MacNeill Keep those responses coming !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Soames Date: August 9, 2002 Place: Croatian Hall Contact: Soames Funakoshi at alexusfr@yahoo.com CLASS OF 1992 *** UPDATE *** Hello Everyone, I am writing to all of you because of the recent problems that Jannell and I have experienced with the reunion planning. The place that we had decided on has CLOSED its doors. Therefore, we are forced to basically start over. The chances of getting a place, and on the same date, are VERY slim. And considering that we have received few rsvps, I have decided to re-evaluate the plans. Elk Grove Park has wonderful areas to have a reunion, BBQ, games and we can bring the fun. We can lower the price of the tickets significantly and still have the event catered. Or we can supply the meat and the drinks and the people who attend can bring a side dishes. KIDS will then be WELCOME to attend and we will probably be able to supply many different things for them to be entertained. So please get back to me with what you think we should do. Or if you have any other ideas, we would love to hear them, too. Get back to us ASAP, our decision is going to be ma Rochelle Laun (Karrick) Date: Saturday, October 19, 2002 Place: Park TBD Contact Rochelle Karrick Laun at RochLaun@yahoo.com or Jannell Penney at penneytax@msn.com CLASS OF 1993 *** NEW *** To the clas of 1993, I would like to apologize for taking so long to get a message out about reunion lately. I have been thinking about a date for those that want to get together and pitch ideas for the reunion. I have a very busy schedule this month. I thought I had time but it turns out I don't even have a weekend in July open. So I hope to have the get together the first weekend of August. I hope those of you who are interested in helping or just want to see everyone to e-mail me and let me know if that is a good date. Once again, I am so sorry to keep things on hold. Let's try and get this reunion on the road. I hope everyone can make it. Date: Saturday/Sunday,August 3rd/4th, 2002 Time: TBA (I am thinking early dinner @4 or 5pm) Place: any ideas(I am flexible) RSVP and let me know what you think. Thanks so much for your patience, Laura Bui c/o 1993 SIBLINGS George Rogers 67 wrote: Mike Rogers 61 Gordon Rogers 63 Joyce Rogers 65 George Rogers 67 Joy Pritchett 70 is married to Ken Percifield 70 Joy Pritchett 70 wrote: Chuck Percifield 68 Ken Percifield 70 Jearl Percifield 71 YEARBOOKS Thanks to Merri Sue Goff Brown 72 for scanning pages of her 71 yearbook for me. I'll be adding the 71 pages sooooon. I've made an Adobe Acrobat PDF file of the entire yearbook which has a table of contents. If you have a duplex printer, you could print the entire yearbook from this PDF file. Unfortunately, the PDF file is about 160mb, but that shouldn't be a problem for those with broadband connections. CLASS OF 67 Class webmaster Kathie Kloss Marynik wrote: Good news! Our senior yearbook pictures have been added to the '67 pages. Thanks to Harlan for scanning the pictures to CD for us. If you haven't already done so, please consider submitting your Bio as well as visiting the In Memorium page to leave a memory for a late friend & classmate. http://www.encinahighschool.com/class67/index.html BIOS KRIS GLASS 96 Occupation: Pastry Chef Bio: schooling, working, kickin it gettin drunk and partieing, working on getting my masters within the next five six years in pastry arts Trivia: Im still a FOOL and loving it. Friends: Twins/luigi-my roe dawgs, D.Larr...., D.Dyste, N.Allen. ,N.Nunez., F.Campos, J.Fisher, C.Johnson, and if i forgot u sorry. Have lost contact with everone. Hobbies: Working out, getting tattoo's i have 10+, Cooking, B.Ball Kids: If they were born i'd explain they still look like pollywogs Grade_school: Northwood Elementary Junior_high: Martin Luther King Jr. High Junior_high_friends: Luigi G. Memorable_teachers: Hib-dog of course hes was a perfect role model to all of us. Nobody could ask for a better teacher ever. Favorite_memory: The riot of course..........and wait to explicit never mind. Story: They all made me who i am today a great big ole' FOOL HUMOR >From Harry Cavaiani 62... TO: Honorable Secretary of Agriculture Washington, D.C. Dear Sir; My friend, Ed Peterson, over at Wells, Iowa, received a check for $1,000 from the government for not raising hogs. So, I want to go into the "not raising hogs" business next year. What I want to know is, in your opinion, what is the best kind of farm not to raise hogs on, and what is the best breed of hogs not to raise? I want to be sure that I approach this endeavor in keeping with all governmental policies. I would prefer not to raise razorbacks, but if that is not a good breed not to raise, then I will just as gladly not raise Yorkshires or Durocs. As I see it, the hardest part of this program will be in keeping an accurate inventory of how many hogs I haven't raised. My friend, Peterson, is very joyful about the future of the business. He has been raising hogs for twenty years or so, and the best he ever made on them was $422 in 1968, until this year when he got your check for $1000 for not raising hogs. If I get $1000 for not raising 50 hogs, will I get $2000 for not raising 100 hogs? I plan to operate on a small scale at first, holding myself down to about 4000 hogs not raised, which will mean about $80,000 the first year. Then I can afford an airplane. Now another thing, these hogs I will not raise will not eat 100,000 bushels of corn. I understand that you also pay farmers for not raising corn and wheat. Will I qualify for payments for not raising wheat and corn not to feed the 4000 hogs I am not going to raise? Also, I am considering the "not milking cows" business, so send me any information you have on that too. In view of these circumstances, you understand that I will be totally unemployed and plan to file for unemployment and food stamps. Be assured you will have my vote in the coming election. Patriotically Yours, Dogbyte P.S. Would you please notify me when you plan to distribute more free cheese. INTERNET >From the New York Times, this interesting article about privacy (or the lack of it) on the net... July 25, 2002 Net Users Try to Elude the Google Grasp By JENNIFER 8. LEE The Internet has reminded Camberley Crick that there are disadvantages to having a distinctive name. In June, Ms. Crick, 24, who works part time as a computer tutor, went to a Manhattan apartment to help a 40-something man learn Windows XP. After their session, the man pulled out a half-inch stack of printouts of Web pages he said he had found by typing Ms. Crick's name into Google, the popular search engine. "You've been a busy bee," she says he joked. Among the things he had found were her family Web site, a computer game she had designed for a freshman college class, a program from a concert she had performed in and a short story she wrote in elementary school called "Timmy the Turtle." "He seemed to know an awful lot about me," Ms. Crick said, including the names of her siblings. "In the back of my mind, I was thinking I should leave soon." When she got home, she immediately removed some information from the family Web site, including the turtle story, which her father had posted in 1995, "when the Web was more innocent," she said. But then she discovered that a copy of the story remains available through Google's database of archived Web pages. "You can't remove pieces of yourself from the Web," Ms. Crick said. The gradual erosion of personal privacy is hardly a new trend. For years, privacy advocates have been spinning cautionary tales about the perils of living in the electronic age. But it used to be that only government agencies and businesses had the resources and manpower to track personal information. Today, the combined power of the Internet, search engines and archival databases can enable almost anyone to find information about almost anyone else, possibly to satiate a passing curiosity. As a result, people like Ms. Crick are trying to reduce their electronic presence - and discovering that it is not as simple as it would seem. The Internet, which was supposed to usher in an era of limitless information, is leading some people to restrict the information that they make available about themselves. "Now it's much more common to look up people's personal information on the Web," Ms. Crick said. "You have to think what you want people to know about you and not know about you." These days, people are seeing their privacy punctured in intimate ways as their personal, professional and online identities become transparent to one another. Twenty-somethings are going to search engines to check out people they meet at parties. Neighbors are profiling neighbors. Amateur genealogists are researching distant family members. Workers are screening co-workers. In other words, it is becoming more difficult to keep one's past hidden, or even to reinvent oneself in the American tradition. "The net result is going to be a return to the village, where everyone knew everyone else," said David Brin, author of a book called "The Transparent Society" (Perseus, 1998). "The anonymity of urban life will be seen as a temporary and rather weird thing." Some believe that this loss of anonymity could be dangerous for those who prefer to remain hidden, like victims of domestic violence. "If you are living in a new town trying to be hidden, it's pretty easy to find you now between Google and online government records," said Cindy Southworth, who develops technology education programs for victims of domestic violence. "Many public entities are putting everything on the Web without thinking through the ramifications of those actions." Of course, a lot of personal information that can be found on the Internet is already in the open, having been printed in newspapers, school newsletters, yearbooks and the like. In addition, the government records that are moving online - tax assessments, court documents, voter registration - are already public. But much of that kind of information used to be protected by "practical obscurity": barriers arising from the time and inconvenience involved in collecting the information. Now those barriers are falling as old online-discussion postings, wedding registries and photos from school performances are becoming centralized in a searchable form on the Internet. "Google and its siblings are creating a whole that is much greater than the sum of the parts," said Jonathan Zittrain, director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School. "Many people assume they are a needle in a haystack, simply a face in the crowd. But the minute someone takes an interest in you, the search tool is what allows the rest of the crowd to dissolve." As a result, people are considering how to live their lives knowing that the details might be captured by a big magnifying glass in the sky. "Anonymity used to give us a cushion against small mistakes," Mr. Brin said. "Now we'll have to live our lives as if any one thing might appear on page 27 in two years' time." Waqaas Fahmawi, 25, used to sign petitions freely when he was in college. "In the past you would physically sign a petition and could confidently know that it would disappear into oblivion," said Mr. Fahmawi, a Palestinian-American who works as an economist for the Commerce Department. But after he discovered that his signatures from his college years had been archived on the Internet, he became reluctant to sign petitions for fear that potential employers would hold his political views again him. He feels stifled in his political expression. "The fact I have to think about this," he said, "really does show we live in a system of thought control." David Holtzman, editor in chief of GlobalPOV, a privacy Web site, said that the notion of privacy was "undergoing a generational shift." Those in their late 20's and 30's are going to feel the brunt of the transition, he said, because they grew up with more traditional concepts of privacy even as the details of their lives were being captured electronically. "It almost gives you a good reason to name your kid something bland," Mr. Holtzman said. "You are doing them a good favor by doing that." Indeed, a generic name is what Beth Roberts, 29, was seeking when she changed back from her married name, Werbick, after a divorce. A Google search on "Beth Werbick" returns results only about her. But a search for "Beth Roberts" returns thousands upon thousands of Web pages. "I would have plausible deniability if someone wanted to attribute something to me," said Ms. Roberts, who lives in Austin, Tex. Mr. Fahmawi, the economist, said he envied the ability to be a name in the crowd. "If I had a more generic name, I'd sign petitions with impunity," he said. But those who have become more conscious of their Internet presence can find that it is almost impossible to assert control over the medium - something that copyright holders discovered long ago. The debate over privacy is particularly fervent in the field of online genealogy, where databases and family trees are copied freely, with or without the consent of the living individuals. Jerome Smith, who runs a genealogical Web site, recently removed some names at the request of a man who did not want his children's information on the Web. But Mr. Smith noted the information itself had been copied from a larger public database. "Once you put it out there, it's out there," said Mr. Smith, who lives in Lake Junaluska, N.C. Google says its search engine reflects whatever is on the Internet. To remove information about themselves, people have to contact Web site administrators. A disadvantage of instant Internet profiling is that there is no quality control - and little protection against misinterpretation. The fragments of people's lives that emerge on the Internet are somewhat haphazard. They can be incomplete, out of context, misleading or simply wrong. John Doffing, the chief executive of an Internet talent agency called StartUpAgent, is surprised by how many job applicants ask him what it is like to be a gay chief executive in Silicon Valley. He says that even though he is heterosexual, some people assume he is gay because his name turns up on the Internet in association with his philanthropic work relating to AIDS and an online gallery devoted to gay and lesbian art. While this has been more amusing than troubling, he says, such information could be misused. "What happens if I were a job seeker and someone decides not to give me a job because of the same assumption?" he asked. There are also cases of mistaken Google-identity. Sam Waltz Jr., a business consultant in Wilmington, Del., met a woman through an online dating service. Before they met in person, she sent him an e-mail message saying that she did not think they were compatible. She had found his name on a Web site called SincereLust.com, which appeared to her to be run by a Delaware-based transvestite group. "I'm sitting here, reading her e-mail and thinking, `What is this?' " Mr. Waltz said. He discovered that the site was a drama group dedicated to "The Rocky Horror Picture Show." His son, Sam Waltz III, had been a member while he was at the University of Delaware. Mr. Waltz quickly explained the situation to the woman, and they have been dating for 18 months. "Now I periodically do a self-Google to make sure there is nothing else that needs to be challenged or checked," Mr. Waltz said. Some say that the phenomenon of instant unchecked background searches could be manipulated to sabotage others' reputations. Jeanne Achille, the chief executive of a public relations firm called the Devon Group, was horrified that someone had used her name and e-mail address to post racist slurs in a French online discussion group. She has repeatedly had to explain the situation to potential clients who have asked her about the posting. "Whoever did this had to put some thought into it," Ms. Achille said. "Is it perhaps one of our competitors? Is it someone who felt we did something to them and wanted to get back at us? Is it a personal thing? Is it a disgruntled former employee?" The posting has been impossible to remove. "There is no cyberpatrol that you can go to and make all of this go away," Ms. Achille said. "You just have to live with it." WHAT'S NEW 7/24/02: Scott Deason 72, Mike Deason 68, Kris Glass 96/bio, Patrick Glass 95, James Alexander 82 update, Anthony Pelfanio 93 update, Candy Mleczko 94 update, Catalina Diaz 82, Matt Shelton 76 update, George Rogers 67, Gordon Rogers 63, Joyce Rogers 65, Michael Rogers 61, David Wilson 62, Jon McDonald 70, Janet McDonald 68, Kathy Kahl 68 7/21/02: James Catchings 00, Jae Won 95 7/19/02: Patti Duffy 78/bio, Patrick Duffy 74, Maurine Duffy 76, Scott Raley 75, Nancy Raley 65, Beth Raley 68, Greg Freeder 75, William Vinsant 87 update, Patricia Allum 63, Larry Allum 67, Renee Mickelson 72 update, Roger Pham 80 update, Daniel Tremper 98, Susan Funk 73 update, Doug Wilkinson 74 update classmates.com: Gary Kaestner 61, Carol Miskella 64, Bill Page 65, Patricia Cochrane 67, Melitta Welter 68, Janey Alexander 69, Mary Taylor 70, Ronald Starnes 72, Joe West 72, Lillian Miller 74, Valarie Schneringer 80, Tamela Jarmark 82, Gregory Burrows 86, Mike Bigallow 86, SEan Klinger 90, Akhmed Butt 93, Timothy Engwis 94, Stephanie Howard 98, Shannon Lay 01, Tanya Nikitchuk 01, Travis Brink 02, Krystal Perry 02, Allan Rogers 02 HOMECOMING PARTY Barbara McKee Craig 65 and her husband will be attending this the homecoming party. Sue Kehoe Jacobson 72 will also be at the homecoming party again this year. Congratulations to Candy Mleczko 94, who is the FIRST alumni to rsvp for this year's homecoming party! Candy wrote: I've got spirit, yes I do! I've got spirit! How 'bout you?? I can help set-up for rally/party/whatever! Let me know if any help is needed!! I miss those days!! Decorations/whatever!! The current date is Friday, November 1, 2002 versus San Juan. Please make a note of the date of the Homecoming 2002 party! Don't forget to submit your contact information or bio: contact: www.encinahighschool.com/directory/submit_contact.htm bio: www.encinahighschool.com/submit_bio.htm If your class is having a reunion this summer, I suggest you submit or update your bio. This will give everyone something to talk about initially when they see each other at the reunion . If you've already submitted your bio, go to your class homepage and read the submitted bios so you are up to date with what your classmates have been up to... Harlan Lau '73 Encina HS alumni webmaster www.encinahighschool.com harlan@rambus.com