Whipped for life

Goodrich – Goodrich High School staff took one on the chin in the fight against cancer last week.
“Got Whipped?”, a whipped-cream pie-throwing event, was held on the high school’s football field to raise funds for Relay for Life, a 24-hour cancer fund-raising relay walk and campout.
Students took advantage of a planned evacuation drill to rally the entire GHS population to the bleachers, where neon-orange stockades were set up for faculty to hide behind.
Students purchased tickets to throw pies at their favorite–or least favorite–teacher.
“Come on, fancy boy, bring it on,” said staffer Roger Conn, taunting his way to a face full of whipped cream.
Students also paid to turn principal Ken Andrezjewski into a human sundae by decking him with the topping of their choice.
The National Honor Society and other students will walk in this year’s Relay for Life event, slated for June 4 and 5 at the Bicentennial Park complex, located at 1505 E. Grand Blanc Road in Grand Blanc. The GHS team is also raising money by organizing a Crim walk at the elementary level, and penny wars in the middle school.
Relay for Life funds, which have totaled more than $212 million globally over the past two decades, are used to fund cancer research, education advocacy, and service programs.
Interesting in donating to Relay for Life? Call Dorothy Schwedler, local community development director for the American Cancer Society at (810) 733-3702, or contact the National Honor Society at Goodrich High School at (810) 591-2251.

Goodrich – Goodrich High School staff took one on the chin in the fight against cancer last week.
“Got Whipped?”, a whipped-cream pie-throwing event, was held on the high school’s football field to raise funds for Relay for Life, a 24-hour cancer fund-raising relay walk and campout.
Students took advantage of a planned evacuation drill to rally the entire GHS population to the bleachers, where neon-orange stockades were set up for faculty to hide behind.
Students purchased tickets to throw pies at their favorite–or least favorite–teacher.
“Come on, fancy boy, bring it on,” said staffer Roger Conn, taunting his way to a face full of whipped cream.
Students also paid to turn principal Ken Andrezjewski into a human sundae by decking him with the topping of their choice.
The National Honor Society and other students will walk in this year’s Relay for Life event, slated for June 4 and 5 at the Bicentennial Park complex, located at 1505 E. Grand Blanc Road in Grand Blanc. The GHS team is also raising money by organizing a Crim walk at the elementary level, and penny wars in the middle school.
Relay for Life funds, which have totaled more than $212 million globally over the past two decades, are used to fund cancer research, education advocacy, and service programs.
Interesting in donating to Relay for Life? Call Dorothy Schwedler, local community development director for the American Cancer Society at (810) 733-3702, or contact the National Honor Society at Goodrich High School at (810) 591-2251.

Goodrich – Goodrich High School staff took one on the chin in the fight against cancer last week.
“Got Whipped?”, a whipped-cream pie-throwing event, was held on the high school’s football field to raise funds for Relay for Life, a 24-hour cancer fund-raising relay walk and campout.
Students took advantage of a planned evacuation drill to rally the entire GHS population to the bleachers, where neon-orange stockades were set up for faculty to hide behind.
Students purchased tickets to throw pies at their favorite–or least favorite–teacher.
“Come on, fancy boy, bring it on,” said staffer Roger Conn, taunting his way to a face full of whipped cream.
Students also paid to turn principal Ken Andrezjewski into a human sundae by decking him with the topping of their choice.
The National Honor Society and other students will walk in this year’s Relay for Life event, slated for June 4 and 5 at the Bicentennial Park complex, located at 1505 E. Grand Blanc Road in Grand Blanc. The GHS team is also raising money by organizing a Crim walk at the elementary level, and penny wars in the middle school.
Relay for Life funds, which have totaled more than $212 million globally over the past two decades, are used to fund cancer research, education advocacy, and service programs.
Interesting in donating to Relay for Life? Call Dorothy Schwedler, local community development director for the American Cancer Society at (810) 733-3702, or contact the National Honor Society at Goodrich High School at (810) 591-2251.

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