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Post by Timmy8271 on Oct 13, 2008 5:27:32 GMT -5
I remember when I was in high school girls couldn't wear Spaghetti straps because they couldn't fit since they were Pregnant.
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Post by Back to being Cenanuff on Oct 13, 2008 7:09:02 GMT -5
No togas? Call the ACLU! Guess what? You probably got screwed over by a girl who decided not to wear a bra because they didn't have them when people were wearing togas, and then only single-wrapped herself. It's true what they say about teenagers: give them an inch, they take a mile. I'll call you a WAAAAAAHmbulance.
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Post by amsiraK on Oct 13, 2008 9:57:32 GMT -5
And here it is! *points to sig*
As crappy as it seems... welcome to school. I'm still trying to figure out why our schools here have bandanas on the banned list (no gangs in area, so I don't get that), but they let kids come to school in nasty, dirty flip-flops.
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Post by shiranui on Oct 13, 2008 10:02:04 GMT -5
I'm still trying to figure out why our schools here have bandanas on the banned list I totally read "bandanas" as "bananas" and wondered for a split second why they would be banned in your schools. Yes, I'm very, very tired.
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King of Fighters
Unicron
Me and you, we get Superman, were from the streets
Posts: 3,418
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Post by King of Fighters on Oct 13, 2008 10:05:01 GMT -5
Hey, at least your not getting suspended for giving someone the head nod or a high five in the hall. Or being old you can't come to school cause your hair (Dreads) is distracting the students.
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Post by Long A, Short A on Oct 13, 2008 11:22:51 GMT -5
Don't feel bad. In order to prevent kids from picking on each other for being poorer (and to prevent gangs from wearing their colors, despite the fact that we didn't have gangs) my former school district made a dress code where everyone had to wear fairly expensive uniforms. Sort of like that here, when I was still in highschool, only it was just polo shirts and slacks, and was actually more obvious than ever what clothes were cheap and what was expensive. American Eagle and Abercrombie, yeah, that's not gonna stand out against polo shirts that appear to be made out of burlap. It seems like you two went to JCPS too. My cousins went to a khaki and polo school and they said you could still tell the rich kids from the poor kids. I graduated from one of the strictest school districts in the country. The funny thing is all that structured didn't translate to good grades, low drop out rates, or anything else that marks achievement in school. Even though my cousins went to a school with a strict dress code, that dress code only enhanced gang activity. We jokingly call that school Crip High. OP:At least the kids at your school had spirit on spirit week.
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Post by Next Level was WRONG on Oct 13, 2008 13:33:30 GMT -5
When I was Ten, my primary school banned "tig".
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Post by tartsonawire on Oct 13, 2008 13:51:38 GMT -5
I graduated in '99. Then, no tank tops at all where allowed (I'm not even sure they allowed them with an open button-up shirt or something over them). The rule for shorts was the "fingertip length" rule. And no open toe or backless shoes. But then, in jr. high, our pricipal declared that girls wearing scrunchies on their wrists or wearing too dark of lipstick was, and I'm not making this up, "gang-related".
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