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Post by TANY on May 17, 2012 19:57:23 GMT -6
Once upon a time St. Trinians was a model school. It had been built in late 1941 with one goal in mind: to teach delinquents and misfits how to behave in society. However, at the time, it was strictly an all-girl's boarding school. St. Trinians accomplished what it set out to do, bettering girls of all ages into model citizens. It could boast that it's women had graduated with top marks and gone on to become members of the government, or schoolteachers, or own their own businesses... But somewhere along the way the students rebelled. It was only a matter of time, after all; you couldn't consciously put together a band of misfits and expect them all to reform! In fact, after only five years, the school shut down! St. Trinians was expected to have been an ideal that couldn't succeed, a wishful thought in the minds of adults who thought they could control children to be perfect, miniature versions of them.
But, of course, one woman knew better. Miss Millicent Fritton purchased the closed boarding school, reopened it to all genders, and boasted that she could encourage students to be the best they could be without shoving them into tiny boxes and expecting things of them that could not be achieved. She offered boys and girls a chance to thrive in their mayhem so long as they could still achieve a certain number of passing grades. She offered a safe haven for the less fortunate student, the one who couldn't be everything daddy wanted them to be, and allowed them to be who they wished.
Her method worked and the school remains open to this day, now run by Millicent's daughter, Camilla Dagey Fritton. However, students of this day and age are quite a bit more... extreme than those of past Trinians! And while Camilla Fritton boasts the same as her mother before her, she's well aware that her boys and girls are far more dangerous than any of their predecessors. In fact, the school board is also well aware of this, and has been working up plans to shut St. Trinians down again. However, this time, it doesn't seem the students are going to let that happen...
On behalf of the boys and girls of St. Trinians: good luck and bring it on.
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