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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
New
middle school a big improvement As the
Sisters community dedicated its new high school last week, seven-tenths
of a mile down the Old McKenzie Highway (Highway 242) toward town, Middle
School Principal Lora Nordquist was busily preparing for the opening of
her own "new" school, the remodeled former high school.
And she was as happy as if
the building were brand new.
"We were so crowded at the
other site (the old middle school on Cascade Avenue in the middle of town),"
she said. "We were in five buildings there, you know. Here we are all
under one roof. The kids were going outside several times a day in all
kinds of weather...So to have a building that's large enough and all under
one roof with modern facilities..."
The most visible part of the
remodeling at the former high school has been the replacement of what
had become noticeably worn carpeting throughout the building. But other
things please Nordquist, too, including the installation of a modern computer
lab upstairs. In the old middle school "we had a sort of taped-together
lab," she said.
She also noted that during
the coming year the school will add $50,000 worth of books and other materials
for the library.
"We couldn't have them before
because we didn't have room to put them anywhere," she said.
Nordquist is not coming to
the new middle school as a stranger. She taught there during her first
five years in Sisters, when middle as well as high school students occupied
the building that was opened in the fall of 1992. She became principal
of the middle school three years ago.
Both secondary principals
as well as Facilities Manager Bob Martin stressed another feature of their
schools.
Speaking of his building,
Acting High School Principal Bob Macauley said, "Now we have only seven
entrances where at (the former high school) we had 48. So we built it
with safety first in mind. Every person coming into the building will
be coming in through the main two front doors."
At the middle school, those
48 former entrances have been reduced to half a dozen. As at the high
school, during the school day all but the front doors will be on an electronic
card-lock system and can be entered only with a card.
And in both schools -- at
the middle school through remodeling -- the main offices have been arranged
so that those inside can see everyone coming through the front doors.
Even though Nordquist's personal
office is toward the rear of the administration complex, she has a direct
view of the middle school's front lobby.
So, as school began on September
15, both middle school and high school students are in new, more sophisticated
surroundings. |
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