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Carnival ................... 77 Parties ................... 78 Prom

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The junior—senior banquet, held in Notre Dame's cafeteria and catered by Brandeis was one casions of for the the important dress—up ocupperclassmen. Juniors (from Rose, right to left) Kathy Bodnar, Pat Rimington, Linda Wolf, Connie PeggyPeers and Diane Sempek enjoy the dinner in the new atmosphere of formality.

Mrs. Enarson, president of the Friends of Notre Dame, proudly admires the silver coffee urn purchased by the Madonna Guild, a group of Notre Dame alumnae. The silver service was used forthe firsttime at the Valentine tea for eighth-grade girls of North Omaha.

For the Send—Off the gym a candle—lit garden. Here,touches is the decoration was transformed into putting up the finishingchairman Mary Ellen Reeves and helper Chuck Seaman.

All and agreed by no that the Senior Send—Off means last on the list of was great, enjoymentsthat night was the entertainment by Rich Clayton and the Rumbles.

Miriam Boysen, Myrna McColley, and Carol Christensen hang poster decorations forthe promannouncement while Janet Tworek and Katherine Jankowski prepare more carnival designs.

What's a party without good Wolf, Mary Ellen Reeves, and the punch and cookies. food? Here Terrie Blessie,Denise Thorntonprepare to Linda serve JSr. Barbara supervises the assembly of one of the major decorations, a crepe paper ferriswheel. Her helpers are Mary Emmanuel, JudyHudecek, Miriam Boysen, Terrie Blessie, Demi McDevitt, and Rosemary Bodnar.

An astonished Terrie Jirovsky receives the puppetthat shows she was picked as prom princess for 1965. The other princesses were: Julie Dostal,Maureen Fitzgerald, Mary McGinn, and Susan Williams. The presentation of the puppets fits in with the prom skit, written by Sue Vosik, in which members of the junior class acted as live puppets.

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