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Page 24 text:
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Above: Scott Wright attempts to win a prize for Tete Hanson at one of the carnival booths. Right: Couples at the Spree wait patiently for the king and queen to be announced. S Another guy gets entangled at the marriage booth, which is one of the most popular booths at Spree each year (for the girls). The lucky couple is Reid Strahan and Joan White. Kenny Sheibley mod- els a Humpty Dumpty corsage that his date, Kathy Pratt, has made for him. Surprise and happiness is evident when Joan White and Reid Strahan are announced as the Spinster Spree Queen and King.
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Page 23 text:
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Deanna Cox, senior, is interviewed by KRNT reporter Charlie Lakin for a short television program about East. Other students also appeared on this Russ Van Dyke commentary, along with Mr. Bridge- water, principal, on Sunday, February 28. Above: Mark Kelly, Kathy Pratt, and Carol Kopaska take time out while helping Girls ' Club and Key Club decorate the li- brary for Christmas. Left: Seniors Debbie Beede (foreground), Carol Kopaska, and Dick Eisenlauer take advantage of the heavy snowfall, which kept students out of school for two days. —19—
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Page 25 text:
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Couples enjoy dancing to music provided by ' The Pendletons. ' Fairy Tales Can Come True ' at Spree The theme for the 1971 Spinster Spree was Fairy Tales Can Come True. Spon- sored annually by Girls ' Club, the Spinster Spree was held on March 13 and The Pen- dletons provided music for the dance in the student center. The crowning of the king and queen, Reid Strahan and Joan White, seniors, high- lighted the evening. Other attendants were Linda Rus- sell and Roger Steward (jun- iors), and Vicki Roberts and Tom Swanson (sophomores). Carolyn Enfield, Girls ' Club president, presided as mis- tress of ceremonies. Decorated with the fairy tale theme, the girls ' gym fea- tured various carnival booths. A marriage booth, telegram booth, rate - your - lover booth, Easto, jail, and a stuffed animal walk were several of the activities in which the couples could par- ticipate. The traditional idea of the girl asking the guy to Spree gave the girl the responsibil- ity of driving to the dance, buying the meal afterwards, and making a corsage, which was to be centered around the theme, for her date. Prizes were awarded for the best corsages in the ' areas of orig- inality, beauty, theme, and humor. Wayne Bauman, a senior, attempts to break out of jail (which apparently doesn ' t take much strength). —21 —
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