EDUCATION Head of the Class Staff Writer raduating seniors at Southfield-Lathrup High School have taken over the principal's corner office. Neil Yashinsky, 18, plops into James Smyth's brown swivel chair. Jason Ostro, 17, hits the floor, legs cross- ed. Alex Franklin, 17, sprawls out in front of 30 bottles of Faygo. "We're dying of thirst. Can we have some of this pop?" Alex asks. "If it was up to me you could," Mr. Smyth says, "but these are for a luncheon next week." The boys remember the ex- istence of nearby pop machines. "I need 15 cents," wails lex, fishing through his pocket. "Can I borrow 15 cents, Mr. Smyth?" "If you can find it, you can have it," Mr. Smyth says, pointing to his desk drawer. "But I think I gave away all my . change yesterday." It's June 3, the last day of school for seniors, and just 11 days until high school graduation. These guys, part of the class of 1992, are the 25th set of graduates to leave S-L. Neil and Jason will attend Michigan State University in the fall. Alex, S-L valedic- torian, will be a freshman at Harvard University. Accor- ding to Mr. Smyth, almost 90 percent of the graduating class will attend a two-year or four-year institution. But this morning, all these seniors are thinking about is the end of final exams. Earlier, about 350 of them ran wild through the halls. Janitors still clean a hallway mess that passes for a New York City ticker- tape parade. "Pandemonium," grimaces Sue Munnings, high school secretary, who has witnessed thousands of seniors erupt on the last day of school. "You know, I always thought that graduating would break my heart," says Alex. "But today, I'm just really excited to be moving on." Photo by Glenn Triest AMY J. MEHLER Southfield-Lathrup High School students reflect on their school's 25th anniversary. As the year ends, Jason Ostro, liana Rosenbaum, Neil Yashinsky, Joanne Brooks and Alex Franklin look back. That makes Mr. Smyth really happy. "That's how I know we're doing our job," he says. Mr. Smyth, principal at S-L the last 25 years, has guided thousands of students through the school's doors. He tries to remember them all. "He's not the kind of prin- cipal who sits in his office all day," Jason says. "He's out there in the halls, talking to kids. He knows what's going on." Steven Kaplan, the only S-L graduate to become a trustee on the Southfield school board, said Mr. Smyth was always accessi- ble. "It was a young staff and everyone seemed excited about the school," said Mr. Kaplan, 38, class of 1973, about his days at S-L. "It was the good taste I got from S-L that made me want to work for the district 16 years after graduating," said Mr. Kaplan, school board president. During Mr. Smyth's . tenure as principal, S-L has won many state and nation- al competitions in theater, debate, forensics, music, art, journalism, math and science. Last month, Red- book Magazine selected S-L as the "Best of Michigan." Mr. Smyth joined S-L in 1967 after teaching business five years at Southfield High School and after working two years in the district's central office. "That was a real growing- up period," Mr. Smyth said. "We were the brand-new school, the experimental school." S-L came into existence when the student population at Southfield High School, on Lahser and 10 Mile roads, was filled to capacity. Today, students at Southfield High number 1,400. Students at S-L, at Evergreen and 12 Mile roads, number 1,350. Steven Lebowski is a graduate of the class of 1970, the first class to graduate S-L. "It (S-L) was positive for me," says Mr. Lebowski, 40, a certified public accountant and lawyer. "It helped me define my career goals and I'm still friendly with many S-L graduates." So friendly, that Mr. Lebowski sold his accoun- ting practice a few years ago to a former classmate and her husband, another S-L graduate. Jane (Kosydar) Brodsky, S-L 1970, and her husband Barry, S-L 1973, now rent of- fice space to Mr. Lebowski. "It was a special honor to be part of that first class," recalls Mrs. Brodsky, of West Bloomfield. "We were a small class and have stayed close." Mr. Brodsky, quarterback of his football team, enjoyed the benefits that came with an experimental school. "We were the first students allowed to leave high school grounds during lunch," Mr. Brodsky said. "We used to hang out at the Burger King or Big Boy. We were also the first to use a variable time schedule, which meant we could schedule and pick our classes." Mostly, said Mr. Brodsky, S-L prepared students for what's out there in the real world. "I grew up in Oak Park and lived in a pretty - sheltered Jewish envi- ronment," he said. "It wasn't until high school that I met non-Jewish students, also Arab students." Mrs. Brodsky, who is not Jewish, said world events, such as the 1967 riots in Detroit, and the Six-Day War in Israel, had little af- fect on relations between Jewish and non-Jewish S-L students. "Sure we discussed the issues, but those issues didn't pull students apart," Mrs. Brodsky said. "There were no outward signs of conflict." "Of course, S-L isn't nearly as diverse as it is today," Mr. Brodsky said. Diversity, the term on which S-L has built much of its reputation, was just THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 55