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Page 19 text:
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SADIE HAWKINS “Dogpatch, here we come” was the word given out by the S. C. A. in reference to the Sadie Hawkins Dance. This special dance gave all Annandale’s girls the chance they wanted—they could ask for a date! Armed with a corsage from her own herb garden or one purchased from the Keyette Club, An¬ nandale’s typical Daisy Mae went to pick up her very own Little Abner. To conclude the evening Marry’n Sams Ellis, Wade and Albro placed the curtain rod rings on the fingers of the newly-weds and fired off the shotgun to formally conclude the ceremony. Mike Pederson shows Barb Scherer he has the fastest bottle in the East. Mike Albro stares incredulously at Neal Ellis’ jug of “White Lightnin’.” The Crypt-Kickers, too, go Dogpatch.
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Page 18 text:
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Vance Veynar prepares to get his crazy- foam football from fellow cheerleader Gary Grayson. The cheerleaders look anxiously on as the girls do battle. 14 STUDENT LIFE POWDERPUFF FOOTBALL Under the able leadership of their coach¬ es, the Junior and Senior girls met on the football field once again for the annual Pow¬ der Puff game. Numerous, long after school practices (made even more numerous by several postponements of the game due to bad weather conditions) paid off for the Sen¬ iors, who, urged on by their enthusiastic cheerleaders, battled their way to a tradi¬ tional victory. When all the dust had settled, the scoreboard read Seniors 21, Juniors 6. The Senior defense digs in to halt an underclass drive. Don Hayes, Doug Arthur, Bob Dawson, Jim Root, Dan Dobson, and Monte Willis coached the senior girls to their traditional victory.
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Page 20 text:
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MAGAZINE DRIVE Bruce Elliot, chairman of the Mag Drive, sits astride the Honda everyone hoped to win. The Seniors invest their hard earned cash in finan¬ cially sound periodicals, as evidenced here. “Come on, please buy a mag. I gotta sell my seven dollar quota to win the Honda.” This must have been what Annandale’s stu¬ dents did this year; they went over the $10, 000 goal. Surprisingly enough, the senior class pushed itself and sold its quota for the first time in years, and, by doing this, outsold the hustling Class of 1968. Bruce Elliot, the Mag Drive Chairman, found that the extra $1,500 for the general activities fund more than made up for his strenuous efforts and those of his fine staff. Steve Oliver checks out comely Greg Brock in that riotous assembly. 16 STUDENT LIFE
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