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Golfers must run to earn place on team B unning 3,000 yards in fifteen ■■ minutes qualified golf players to be on the golf team. This condi- tioning was the new approach prov- ing whether team members wanted to really play golf, according to Coach John Ireland. Nine qualified to be on the golf team, but only six attended the nine meets. These meets included travel- ing to Haven, Chase County, twice to Chase, twice to Centre, twice to Hesston, twice to Marion and the State Meet in Peabody. The golf team placed third at re- gional held in Centre qualifying them for state. Kevin Strotkamp was the only medalist at state, plac- ing tenth out of eighty-one golfers. ABOVE: GOLF TEAM: How 1: Coach John Ireland. Vincent Saenz, Cory Foth. Row 2: David Maples, Brent Windsor, Brad Glover, Will Mellott. Row 3: Kent Arnett, Charlie Rich- mond. NOT PICTURED: Richard Bass, Kevin Strotkamp. BELOW: After getting onto the green, Charlie Richmond, junior, uses all of his golfing tal- ents and concentration to putt the golf ball into the cup. BELOW: Chipping onto the green, Brad Glover, junior, tries for perfect form.
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ABOVE: Carol Swan, senior, receives her senior memory book from Secre- tary Lynn Riggs. One of the joys of being a senior is receiving your book. Seniors surveyed agree; pictures are major expense Along with the joys of becoming a senior, comes the problems of extra expenses. Most of the seniors who were polled agreed that the senior pictures were their greatest expense. According to Dan Bergen of Schmidt Studios in Goessel, seniors spent an average of $220 on their 1984 senior pictures. Ordering caps, gowns and announcements were expenses that all of the seniors had to con- tend with. Memory books for $6.95, packages of twenty-five thank you notes for $6.25 and senior keys for $6.95 were some of the popular items that were ordered. Any senior who planned to go to college had to take the ACT test. To take the test, a $9.50 regis- tration fee, plus mileage to the test sites, was required. In April tuxedo rental for Prom was an expense that some males choose to pay. A complete tux- edo was rented at a cost of $45-$50. Shoes were $6 extra to rent. Dresses for girls were bought or made at an average cost of $50. BELOW: Not knowing what to expect, mg his senior pictures while classmate Stephen Gillet opens up the box contain- Frank Glenn tries to peek inside. ABOVE: Excited about ordering her class ring, Mar- cia Thomas, sophomore, tries one of the sample rings on for size while Bridget Brooks and Patricia Kasper look at other choices. ClaAAeA Viv-iA-ton Page 17
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