...Just a reminder to send in your LMSAA annual membership dues. Payment of your dues will help your association plan ahead for projects related to preserving the memories and other goodwill initiatives about and for Leavelle McCampbell School.
IF you want to be included in the Alumni/Member Directory, please register as in Step #1 below.
We would love for you to join, become an active member and make it "your" association. Please mail in the application form found on our "home" page with the appropriate annual fee. Once we receive your application your user name AND system generated password will be emailed to the email address that you list on the application form. Once you receive the email from us and "Sign In" for the first time, you will have the opportunity to change the system generated password to one that you will more readily remember.
If you would like your personal contact information to be published in directory form and available for other alumni to see...such as name, phone number, email address, please complete this form... Click the >> to register
Step #2 (confirm listing)
LMS Student Link
Click here for a direct link to your Leavelle McCampbell Directory. Association Members will be identified in Red/Garnet lettering.
Alumni in Uniform ...many former students of GHS have served their nation with honor and distinction...this page is dedicated to their bravery and sacrifice. Click here for a view (updated 10/12/06) of some who have served.
If you have a photo to submit, please send in .jpg format to s.jennings@atlanticbb.net
Over at Herb Padgett's place, on the second Tuesday of the month, you can use the word "linthead" without puzzling or offending anybody.
Some people, who may have been lintheads or who have relatives who are lintheads, may take offense at the word, the way some Southerners do when you imply that they're rednecks.
I proudly claim the right to be called linthead and redneck. I've labored in the fields during the blistering heat of a Carolina summer when my most visible reward was a sunburned neck. And I've labored in the cotton mill when lint filled the air like snowflakes during a New England blizzard and remained in my hair even after several combings.
I didn't have to explain that to the guys who gathered at Herb's place, way out in the country off Rainbow Falls Road, which connects my old hometown of Graniteville, S.C., with U.S. 25 a few miles east of Augusta, Ga.