High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 13 text:
“
Fashion lives, despite the dress code Navy blue. Top button buttoned. Oxford cloth. Polyester plaid. Doesn't seem to leave much room for fashion statements, does it? Somehow, though, students manage to add a personal touch to the dress code. Jewelry, ties, bows, shoes, socks, coats, sweaters, and haircuts are used to spice up the fashion life at Spalding, both legal- ly and illegally. Tennis shoes, sweaters in colors other than navy, and socks in colors other than blue and white are the most common ways people ignore the dress code. lf successful, these efforts enable people to exhibit their wardrobes and to be com- fortable, as well as to defy authority. Failed attempts can result in financial loss due to confiscated sweaters and Ctopj Junior Mary Kate Riddell's hairstyle isn't tabovel A student takes advantage of the dress common, but it shows some popular features in code's flexibility on shoes by wearing spotted hair: layering and spiking. socks with flowered slippers. loss of time due to detentions. The more faint-hearted often choose to go the law-abiding way and stay within 'the code.' Jewelry is a prime area of di- versity. Earrings range from single pearls to long dangling arrangements. Thin gold chains adorn some necks: others support heavy rhinestone necklaces, recently purchased at Goodwill. Hairstyles exhibit the same difference in tastes. Buzzed heads are every- where. Even the flat-top has been re- vived. Girls wear short-short cuts, bobs, long braids, and shaved portions. At a glance, students may seem to dress exactly alike, but, whetherthe style is classic, punk, or Madonna-wear, no one is totally the same. Sophomore Michelle Peeples wears jewelry typical of fashionable students: an elaborate pin and more subdued earrings in her double-pierced ears. SpaIding's Choice 82010 LaGondola 'I 7 Ofc Battle of the Gondolas The rivalry between two Italian restau- rants, LaGondola and Spaghetti House and Avanti's, became more serious than the usual who makes the better gondo- la? question. Avanti's began a legal bat- tle to force LaGondola to stop using the name gondola for its submarine sand- wich. Eventually Avanti's won the suit, and LaGondola began calling its sand- wich the torpedo lt was also required to drop the and from its name, making it the LaGondola Spaghetti House. Avanti's came out on top in a student poll, despite the fact that it has only two locations, both in Peoria. LaGondola has locations in Peoria, East Peoria, Bartonville, Creve Coeur, and Morton. 9
”
Page 12 text:
“
Life in the Irish Lane A student's life doesn 't stop once he or she leaves campus for the day. Television, travel, fashion, music, food, and entertainment help fill up the remaining hours. - You're never too old for Bugs Bunny Remember when you were five or six, and you would sneak downstairs at about 6:30 A.M. to watch cartoons? It was the highlight of the week. Five straight hours of cats being hit over the head with frying pans, Superheroes saving the world from destruction, and Scooby Doo begging for Scooby-snacks. High-school students, mature young adults, would seem to be too old for car- toon-watching. They're not. What better way is there to unwind after school or to waste a Saturday morning than watching Land of the Lost? There is one significant change in the way high-school students view cartoons, as opposed to six-year- olds. No more do they get up at six o'clock in the morning. Ten o'clock is the time a mature adult gets up to watch the Saturday morning cartoons. SpaIding's Cartoon Favorites Bugs Bunny 260lo Smurfs 140lo Flintstones 1496 G.l. Joe 12010 Jetsons 1O0lo Transformers Solo Dungeons and Dragons 80lo inspector Gadget 40lo Scooby Doo 396 Spalding invades slopes Ninety-nine bottles of beer on the wall. Ninety-nine bottles of beer. If one of those bottles. . . The song is a sure indication that someone is having a bus trip. Two bus trips to Wisconsin ski slopes were organized by the senior senate members. One was for seniors onlyg the other was open to all classes, as long as the student could survive the five and a half hour bus ride. The bus and admission to the slope were included in the cost of the trip. Ski rental was extra. Expert skiing was extra, too. Falling down was part of the fun. Senior Tom Gor- man said, They all liked the Chinese downhill. Everybody piled up and crashed. 8 Father George Wolf does some exhibition skiing - going down the hill backwards. Senior Jeff Boundy gathers up his skis and poles after getting off of the bus.
”
Page 14 text:
“
Tell y'all a story 'bout a man named Jed . . . l l ' 7 ,. Do you know the theme song to The Spalding Re run Beverly Hillbillies by heart? Can you name Favorites I all the members of the Brady household, including the dog? Can you describe ten The Brady Bunch QSQ6 specific episodes of Gilligan's Island? What do the names Lumpy and Eddie Haskell mean to you? Leave It To lf you can answer these questions, you Beaver 21Qb are probably a cult follower of the after- noon re-runs. During the day you may seem intelligent, well-read, and cultured, Dynasty 1696 but when you get home after school, you regress into a more primitive state. The Munsters causes you to laugh wildly. WKRP 1Oqb I Even though you've seen the episode be- fore, you become involved in the melodra- Mork and Mindy 8136 ma of Dynasty. The dumber Mork s jokes ' are, the more you laugh. You can spend I hours talking about your favorite epi- GfllfQ3I7'S lSf8I'Id 796 H- s ss ss as sedeseFH9ream-efde-anrrie.You1:an re- s- W-sf-as as sssss As sas+s-s-++dM- peat from memory lines of dialogue from . television shows made before you were Dncferent Strokes 3qb born. Although not everyone is a cult follower The Jeffersons 3196 of afternoon re-runs, almost everyone has one favorite show. ln a school poll, stu- dents were asked to name their favorites. Dallas 396 See the chart for the results. www-A Jim Toftie, a member of the Breakfast Club morning radio team, is pictured in the WWCT 106 studios. N 10 Spalding's Radio Favorites WYE! 66 Gio WKZQZ 31 Glo Others Ofo Spalding is rockin' with the best Not the same song every time you turn on the radio. Those are the words to a commercial for WWCT 106. Their arch- rival radio station, WKZW 93, promotes itself with a flashy television commercial featuring sultry models drenched with wa- ter. In a school poll, a majority of Spalding students chose 106 as their favorite radio station. Sophomore Lori Kingery said why she prefers 106 to KZ 93: They play different songs all the time. Other radio stations named as the fa- vorites of a small number of students were WXCL, WGLO, WSWT, WBMQ, WLS, WCCI, and WBMX.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.