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Show CORA LEE JOHNSON MARCH 6, 2002 specialists and they put her on a machine, a table, and they stretched her every day. And she said she could remember her bones crack. BEC: COR: BEC: COR: Oh. And they stretched her an inch. No, really? That's just exactly what she said. She was darling. She got married after and had twins. We used to correspond. And another girl, her name was Enid Joan Scott, they called Scotty, but she was Scott, and she went to school at Corvallis, Oregon. And that's the first time I ever heard of that. But that's where she went to college. She went there and all of her letters that she'd send home, she'd make a cartoon on the outside. BEC: Oh, she's an artist, then? COR: Yeah. BEC: And I liked her: Enid Joan Scott. It was an experience. There was three LDS girls. One was a Westwood girl from Provo; one was a girl I went to junior high school and grade school with. Her father was a roundhouse operator in Thistle. And my sister, Claudia, and I and Melba and Clea Merritt used to sing together. And they had little ukuleles, those two girls, two fingers, then we moved to Springville and we didn't see them anymore, only maybe on the Fourth of July or something like that, or they'd come up in the canyon. But they called the three of us and they took us to the LDS Church, which was up above a business place right down in downtown Palm Beach, and it was just a little branch there. But they took pictures of us-took a lot of publicity pictures of us, the three ofus. The Westwood girl had blonde hair. Now later on I met 32 |