Principal Murray is meeping clueless.
The high school kids and this lawyer are meeping awesome.
Principal Murray is meeping clueless.
The high school kids and this lawyer are meeping awesome.
murray@danvers.org
An open letter to Principal Murray of Danvers High School:
Meep.
Sincerely,
Freaking meeping awesome. We sent Principal Murray the meep open letter in solidarity.
Destruction of a civilized nation - there's an app for that.
Oh good grief. This reminds me of the time in high school when I was editor of the school paper and got called to the principal's office over a music review we planned to print.
His complaint - the review mentioned the song Easy to be Hard.
That meeping meeps, meeps! Meep!
If I agree with you we'll both be wrong.
And oh yeah, the same principal once came through the lunchroom and made everyone sitting at the ends of tables move to the sides.
Why? I have no idea. I guess because he could.
Guy was a meepin' idiot. I wonder what the meep happened to him.
I'm sort of half wondering whether this actually is one of those real-life improv pranks, and they've managed to successfully punk the ENTIRE INTERNET by playing out the 'Womps' episode of Recess.
Last edited by Mykhailo; 11-13-2009 at 10:10 PM.
When I was a student at Halls High school a close friend was brought into the office for dressing inappropriately the principal at the time(1982-85) stated that he liked the preppy look.
I love east TN but sometimes, I am glad that I left.
Viva Knoxvegas
I got sent home from high school once for wearing my skirt too short - about two weeks before a friend of mine got sent home for wearing hers too long. This was like 1969, era of the mini, and for a short time, the midi.
In my small town, tho, we were still stuck in the era where every woman wore their dresses exactly the same length. What a pain in the meeping rear keeping up with THAT was.
My AP English class wrote a truly harmless and very clever parody of the "Night Before Christmas." The newspaper staff wanted to print it in the pre-holiday edition. Their advisor questioned publishing the piece because it used faculty names in place of the names of Santa's reindeer and other subversive and dangerous notions. It was eventually published. The faculty and students were amused. Strange times.