Caimans Turn up the Spirit during the 2016 Homecoming Spirit Week

The Homecoming Spirit Days let students express themselves for fun or to win the Spirit Cup for their grade. In order to win this cup, students earn points for their grade by winning games that occur during lunch and dressing up for the Spirit Days.

On Tuesday, the halls of CAHS were filled with teenagers wearing crazy hats and funny hairdos. The PSAT was on Wednesday, so no spirit day occurred. On Thursday, students rolled straight out of bed and came to school in their pajamas. Friday was School Spirit Day. The following Tuesday was Twin Day.

 

Crazy Hat/Hair Day

Many students displayed kooky hats and hairdos on Tuesday to kick off Homecoming Spirit Week. This allowed students to share their funniest hats and hairdos to show school spirit and make their friends laugh.

 

Senior Megan Oakes was walking around outside during lunch dressed up in pajama pants with a flip flop pattern and a Captain America shirt. Photo taken by Rylie Pepper.
Senior Megan Oakes was walking around outside during lunch dressed up in pajama pants with a flip flop pattern and a Captain America shirt. Photo taken by Rylie Pepper.

Pajama Day

This day seemed to invite the most student participation, most likely because they could “just get out of bed,” as expressed by junior Chad Keefer. Many students wore their comfiest, wackiest and fuzziest pajamas.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Caiman Spirit Day: Red and Black

Caiman Spirit Day invited all students to come to school totally decked out in CAHS colors: red and black. During the Homecoming Pep Rally, senior boys in white tutus rocked the house with their dance moves, making the student body roar and laugh with amusement. Sophomore John Melton said, “I thought it was funny … I didn’t think that [the senior boys dancing ballet] would happen. The best part was the white tutus.”

 

Twin Day

On Tuesday, October 25, “twins” roamed the halls of CAHS. Many students planned identical outfits with their best friends to wear to school.