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Page 19 text:
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Antonio Posse Costas and Callie Householder lead the traditional Homecoming King and Queen Dance. These underclassmen sit excitedly but wonder- ing when the fun will begin. HOMECOMING DANCE I5
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Page 18 text:
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And we danced ... in “The City of Lights” It was October |7, 1987 at 8:00 p.m. The decorations were finally up, the food and drinks were arranged on the tables, and students, grades nine through twelve, were beginning to stroll in. The band, “The Press’, was warmed up and ready to go. People were talking, sitting, dancing, eat- ing, having pictures taken, and even get- John Brickley, Leigh Meyers, Missy Wilson, John An- derson, Weez Taylor, Sean Cattie, Kim Oliver, pose for pictures at the Homecoming Dance. Students enjoy the refreshments at the dance. The students enjoy the dance as the evening dies down. 14 HOMECOMING DANCE ting together. This was not an event for couples alone, those who came stag were having just as much fun, if not more. Even the teachers enjoyed themselves. The 1987 Homecoming dance will be long re- membered, especially by the seniors who were experiencing their last Homecoming at Clover Hill. “The Press” performs a song during the dance. Mr. Black wants “YOU” to come to the Homecoming Dance.
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Page 20 text:
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Drama club captivates audience The fall production presented by the drama club was “Our Town’. The play “Our Town” took place in a period of twelve years, from I901I to I913 in Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire. This production emphasized many as- pects of life that people no longer prac- tice. For example, the complete innocence and separation from the entire world was felt in Grover’s Corners. Another aspect that was established in the play was that everyone in Grover’s Corners knew ev- eryone else in the town. “Our Town” was centered mainly around two families, the Webb family and Mrs. Gibbs, played by Nancy Carlock, fixes breakfast for her children. A moment of silence was shared for the dead Emily. Stage manager John Anderson narrates“Our Town”. I6 DRAMA the Gibbs who were very close neighbors in Grover’s Corners. The plot of the play was divided into three acts, entitled the Daily Life, Love and Marriage, and Death. The play depended entirely on the ac- tors’ abilities and the audience’s imagina- tion. The stage was bare, only containing a ladder and a few chairs. The stage man- ager, played by John Anderson, was the main character of “Our Town’. He re- mained on the stage throughout the entire play analyzing, explaining, and foretelling what was to come. CLOVER HILL HIGH SCHOOLS CAVALIER PLAYERS PRESENT THORNTON WILDER'S and 5. 1987 DECEMBER + 4:00 PM H.00 PY CLOVER THLE HIGH SCHOOL
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