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Page 16 text:
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Color takes starring role Lights flashed and colors sparkled as more than 70 students presented Horse of a Different Color, a Masquers production Horse of a Different Color, the fourth annual Reader's Theater production, was made up of a collection of materials including song lyrics, poems, stories, and jokes dealing with color in all its shapes and shades. The one and one half hour show had nearly 500 references to and about color. Some were student originals; a lot were dramatizations of excerpts from literary works. The evening started off with Dorothy (Cathy Thompson) and her friends skipping merrily down the yellow brick road and concluded with a thrilling fight between the Gods of Light (Cam Findlay) and Darkness (Scott Siler). The Pink Panther and his female counterparts performed the only dance routine of the performance. For many, the dancers were considered the highlight of the show. Along with the Pink Panther and his Panther Dancers, the stage was visited by the Purple-People-Eater (Todd Torok), Snoopy (Rod Morgan) and the Red Baron (Cam Findlay), the Tidy Bowl Man (Dennis Hacker) and Rubber Ducky (Julie Whipple). The show was arranged by the Acting and Directing classes of last spring. Directed by Mrs. Jack Strain and choreographed by Roberta Litherland, its reader's theater style gave more than the usual number of students, particularly sophomores, an opportunity to take part in a drama production, One of the most colorful parts of the show was the orchestra scene from the story The Phantom Tollbooth. The story centers around a small boy named Milo (Jim Hull) who enters the world of fantasy. In this new world he encounters Chroma the Great (Brian Lough) a conductor of a huge orchestra which plays all the colors of the world instead of playing music. As a drama production, Horse of a Different Color’s wide variety of content gave the audience an appropriate illustration of the Wizard of Oz's exclamation to Dorothy, “Why that’s a horse of a different color.” Gathering around everybody's are the honored favorite silent hero jink panther dancers who gracefully Phim with their sleek eatlike movements.
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Page 15 text:
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rawling out of bed to th at , th student greets the new day with a noticeable lack of enthusiasm. Still asleep, he hardly realizes that he has eaten breakfast, dressed, and gotten on the bus. His eyes blink occasionally during the long ride to school. The bus is crowded and noisy, but it’s better than walking. Entering the doors, he is met by the sound of 1,513 other students trying to get to class in the least possible amount of time. After rummaging quickly through his locker, he gathers his piles of books and totters off to class with the menacing sound of the tardy bell ringing in his ears. After first period classes, students gradually come out of their temporary comas and join the fully- awakened world. They reluctant become part of the flow of living beings between clas: day! Book rental payments are symbolic of pre-school year preparation, Lynn Arvoy hands se .aVonne Unrue the balance of her paym With 372,954 square feet of sp understandable tha Block with B Block to Chuck Brown. 2 it is someone could conus Della DeMetz point the : Straining hours of lectures and homework have taken their toll. Phil Jackson catches a few minutes of sleep before classes start again.
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