Multi-Page layout -MUST USE MASTER PAGES (two different layout designs) -MUST include a graphic on your master page -MUST USE AUTO PAGE NUMBERING -MUST include all text (heading, body, captions, etc) and graphics _MUST use column guides (at least 2 columns) somewhere in your layout -MUST set up "STYLES" for sub-heading, and captions -MUST use "text wrap" around one of the pictures. -----INTRO----- George W. Norris (heading) Senator George William Norris was a man of vision who was dedicated to the common man. He was a fearless speaker whose integrity could never be doubted. Yet he always spoke in a conversational fashion without fancy oratorical effects. His manner was likable and mild, and he knew that he could be mistaken. Norris was widely looked upon as an idealist who would fight for his beliefs to the bitter end regardless of a person or political party. -----BODY----- Norris School District 160 was formed as a result of the merger of the Roca, Hickman, and Firth School Districts on June 1, 1964. Three more districts (Cortland, Panama, and Princeton) joined Norris the following year. On June 15, 2006, portions of the Rokeby and Cheney Class I districts officially became part of the Norris School District. The Norris School Districts consists of approximately 225 square miles --about 40 lie in Gage County, 3 in Otoe County, and the remainder in Lancaster County. Nine small communities are within the boundaries of the Norris School District: Roca, Hickman, Firth, Cortland, Panama, Princeton, Holland, Cheney and Rokeby. The Norris District is bordered on the north by the Lincoln Public Schools, on the west by the Crete and Wilbur School Districts, on the south by the Beatrice, Freeman, and Tri-County School Districts, and on the east by the Bennet-Palmyra and Sterling Districts. The 2006-07 total enrollment is 1,927: 750 in Elementary, 592 in the Middle School, and 585 in High School. The school campus is centrally located with the district on 160 acres at the intersection of 68th Street and Princeton Road, twelve miles south of Lincoln. The site consists of the Elementary, Middle School, and High School buildings; bus barn, paved parking areas, outdoor athletic and activity fields, cross-country course, and all-weather running track. The school district is divided into six wards with approximately 1250 residents per ward for a total school district population of approximately 7500. Candidates file by ward, to assure representation from the various geographic areas on the Board of education, and are elected by the voters of the entire Norris School District. The Norris School District is primarily rural residential, small town, and agricultural in nature. Many Norris residents are employed in Lincoln. As the Lincoln area continues to grow to the south and east, the population of the Norris District is expected to continue to increase steadily. The racial and ethnic background is predominately white Anglo-Saxon. Many of the original inhabitants of the southeast portion of the district were of Dutch descent. There is a fairly strong religious influence in the school district which includes Dutch Reform, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Catholic, and several other denominations. Site (sub-heading) The school site is centrally located with the district on 160 acres at the intersection of 68th Street and Princeton Road, twelve miles south of Lincoln. The site consists of the Elementary, Middle School, and High School buildings; bus barn, paved parking areas, outdoor athletic and activity fields, cross-country course, and all-weather running track. A parent volunteer group, with assistance from a matching grant from the Arbor Day Foundation, planted and labeled over 300 trees and shrubs in an effort to improve the aesthetic appearance of the school property. Facilities (sub-heading) Before construction of the present facilities, grades 10-12 were held in Cortland, grades 7-9 in Hickman, and the elementary grades in Firth, Roca, and Panama. A bond issue was passed in April of 1967 to build an elementary and junior/senior high school building. The elementary building was ready for occupancy in the fall of 1969. Classes moved into the new junior/senior high facility in February of 1970. Six additions have been added to these buildings since the original construction was completed: A 14,000square foot addition to the junior/senior high school which included more area for industrial arts, music, and family and consumer science classes plus several additional was constructed in 1974. A middle school addition consisting of office space, library, gymnasium and locker rooms, faculty room, and ten classrooms was added adjacent to the north side of the secondary building in 1979. Another bond issue was passed in the fall of 1988 to add five additional classrooms to the elementary building, expand the high school industrial arts area, and add five additional classrooms to the high school building plus a 700 seat auditorium. Outdoor athletic improvements including an all weather track were approved by a bond issue in 1990. The Board of Education used building fund money to finance another addition to the southwest corner of the elementary building in 1993. This addition houses pre-school and special education programs and includes several office areas. Two more bond issues were approved in the fall of 1996 to add a gymnasium and art room onto the elementary building and 6 classrooms, central office space, distance learning laboratory, and industrial technology facilities to the east side of the high school building. In the fall of 2000, another bond issue was passed by residents of the district to add 10 classrooms onto the north side of the elementary building to house an, all-day everyday kindergarten program as well as additional classrooms for primary grades and interior remodeling of the library/media and office areas and original kindergarten classrooms. Norris District patrons passed an $8.6 million bond issue on May 11, 2004 for the construction of new Middle School. That building was completed in the summer of 2006. The Norris facilities suffered a devastating blow on May 22, 2004, when an F4 tornado tore through the campus. Reconstruction took more than 20 months, at a cost just over $35 million. Through rapid reconstruction and use of portable classrooms, the schools were reopened the day after Labor Day in 2004. Despite the sacrifices and inconveniences, the Norris school facilities ultimately emerged better than ever. Outdoor stadium facilities, rest rooms, concession building, and the bus barn, all destroyed in the tornado, were rebuilt as great improvements over the previous facilities. The school buildings themselves, during reconstruction, were totally rewired with all-new lighting, new ceilings, new floor coverings, and much more. The auditorium was expanded to include a storage/set construction area. Space usage in the Secondary Building was reconfigured to mesh with the changes that would be coming with the completion of the new Middle School and conversion of the existing facility to a High School. The music rooms were reconfigured and enlarged. The destroyed parking lot lighting was replaced with much improved lighting. Most of the trees were destroyed by the tornado, and are being replaced via a new landscaping plan and program. The technology available to students and staff members within the school district is excellent. There are two technology coordinators, one computer for every 3-4 students, all classrooms have one or more computers which are Internet accessible, a new distance learning laboratory provides access to instruction from outside the school district, all staff members have ready access to an enhanced phone system with voice mailboxes, a local area network provides numerous software programs to all employees and allows easy access via e-mail, an extensive district website (www.norris160.org) provides valuable information to parents, district patrons, and other interested persons, and the availability of digital cameras, portable distance learning carts, scanners, video production classes, graphic arts classes, web publishing classes, Cisco Academy, Palm Pilots all enhance the educational capabilities of the school district. Organization (sub-heading) Today, the Norris School system is organized on a pre-school-4, 5-8, 9-12 basis. As the district grew from 1970, the elementary and junior/senior high buildings became overcrowded. The addition of the middle school facilities in 1979 allowed the 6th grade to be moved from the elementary building and the 7th and 8th grades from the high school building. This created more room in both the elementary and high school buildings and allowed the district to implement the middle school concept in grades 6-8. With the addition of the middle school in 2006, approximately 600 students, grades 5-8, are housed in this new building. The Elementary now houses grades PK-4, and the former secondary building, (6-12) is now a 9-12 High School. Accreditation (sub-heading) The Norris School District is accredited by the Nebraska State Department of Education. All three builds are also accredited by the North Central Association. -----Norris CAPTION ------ Senator George William Norris ` -----orig_drawing CAPTION ------ Architectural renderings of the Junior and Senior High Building that was ready for occupancy in February of 1970 -----elem_drawing CAPTION ------ Architectural renderings of the elementary building that was completed in 1969 -----elementary CAPTION ------ Norris Elementary School entrance -----middleschool_06 CAPTION ------ Norris Middle School after its completion in August 2006