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Page 20 text:
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if fb 1 6 r 0 Q , s.,,,,. , . J yvv' W ' 'K17c:Yi':: I M. A xj,a,.. ,f W ,f ii, L THE CLUTCHTNG CLAW Along about the middle of October, an aura of mystery began to descend over the school as the Senior Play took its place at the head of most conversations. CSenior conversations any- way.j The play Hnally chosen was a mystery by Ralph Kettering entitled The Clutching Claw. The cast was chosen by Mr. Dodds. Bud Bud- inger played the part of John Thornton, a wealthy business man. His daughter, the only other member of the family, was played by Diane Parker. Mrs. Midgely, Thornton's house- keeper, was ably portrayed by Ibby MacKinnon, and the part of the butler, Clauson, by Bill Mc- Gregor. Gwen Hamilton played the part of Sally Bland, and Betty Lou Bogie that of the lisping Sada Sewell. Sophisticated Peggy Boland and Agatha Hayden were enacted by Barbara Barnes and Joyce Kleine. Sonia Parton as Madame Lane- ski, Park Honan as Police Chief Donnely, and Roger Sherman as Officer Hand all kept the au- dience in hysterics throughout the play. Gil Bryan was Jerry Hayden, Randy Amis was George Gordon, Don Farrell was the mysterious CLAW. The next job was that of selecting the var- ious committees. Thanks to the many volun- teers, however, this proved to be no great prob- lem. Joan Mariner, Bill Andrus, Nancy Lowrey, Joe Holmes, Tom Davis, and Chris Clark were chosen the committee leaders. As soon as the groups had been formed, things began to hum with Andrus' stage crew madly swinging ham- Page sixteen mers and saws, Lowrey frantically begging, bor- rowing, stealing props, and so on. The rehearsals were really something to see- and hear. At first, of course, there was no scenery, school desks, folding chairs, and vari- ous miscellaneous relics made up all the props. For instance, the setting called for a telephone. Since there was no such convenience available for practice, a substitute was used. In the wings of the stage were hundreds of pieces of straight pipe and pipe elbows. Two elbows plus one piece of pipe equalled one telephone. But here is the unusual part about it all. Day after day the pieces of pipe kept getting bigger, until finally the phone must have weighed twenty pounds. Diane Parker, supposedly a glamorous debutante, began to get muscle-bound from picking it up. One time Farrell and Budinger were going through the scene in which Budinger is strangled by Farrell. The two succeeded in knocking over everything on the stage except a chair which was supposed to be knocked over. Not only that, they ended up with Buddy winning the battle! The props also called for three guns. When the day came for them to be used, there were no fewer than fifteen of them on hand, ranging from Colt six-shooters to snub-nosed detective revolvers. Despite mishaps, practical jokes, and last- minute jitters, the play itself was a tremendous success, playing to a packed house on both nights. The Senior Class had made another hit thanks to the efforts of our own Mr. Dodds.
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Page 19 text:
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Page 21 text:
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