Elmwood School - Samara Yearbook (Ottawa, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1950

Page 21 of 78

 

Elmwood School - Samara Yearbook (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 21 of 78
Page 21 of 78



Elmwood School - Samara Yearbook (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

SAMARA J9 the Inter-House Sports Cup. The other win- ners were as follows: Senior Sports Cup— Judy A4cCulloch Intermediate Sports Cup— Janet Lawson Junior Sports Cup— Sarita Setton Preparatory Sports Cup— Lee McKay and Eila Stirling-Hamilton. Inter-house Relay— Fry Badminton Everyone this year seems as much interested in badminton as ever. The school tournaments have been completed with the results- Keller-? Fry-5 Nightingale— 3 The senior singles champion is Marion Mac- kenzie, and the doubles, Pat Knowlton and Wendy Quain. The intermediate singles was won by Alison Mackenzie, and the doubles by Janet Lawson and Nancy McAvity. Gym and Indoor Games Our gym has progressed well this year under Miss Overall ' s good teaching. We have the bars this year also, in addition to our other apparatus. We have learned many exciting new indoor games, such as Swedish Dodge- ball and Continuous Cricket, which are fav- ourites. Skiing and Skating Although at the beginning of the winter there was little snow, in February and early March both day girls and boarders went ski- ing in the park as often as possible. Skating was popular all through the winter, especially with the juniors. Diane Boyd, Sports Captain DRAMATICS this year have been under the very able direction of Miss Hull. While all the Intermediates have taken part in various plays, the Matriculation students, due to their heavy curriculum and much to their disappointment, have been unable to partici- pate. On the morning of December 15, parents were welcomed to the annual Christmas pre- sentation by the Intermediate and Junior school. First on the programme was an ori- ginal play by Form I. The children, having read the story of Kiko, enjoyed it so much that they asked to be allowed to present it on

Page 20 text:

18 SAMARA back to England. She says she will write to us all. Lauretta Landymore is another English girl. She came new this year. Diana Lawson and Christina Wijkman are day girls too. Diana laughs at everything. Christina has two sisters in school. Jean Garvock also has two sisters in school. Jean is very good at arithmetic. Sally Douglas, Jana Stepan and Lillias Ahearn are the boarders in our form. Jana is a Czech girl and has learned English very quickly. Lilias is very good at Art, and Sally loves arithmetic. This year we made some puppets with Miss Greaves and gave a puppet show. In March our form acted Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs . Sports Captains 1949-50 School— Diane Boyd Fry— Rhonna Curtis Keller— Diane Boyd Nightingale— Judy Nesbitt WHEN we returned to school in Septem- ber we were very sorry to find that Miss Philbrick, our gym mistress for the past three years, had returned to England. We were very pleased however to welcome Miss Overall in her place. Basketball The sports highlight this year again was the basketball game against Hatfield Hall. We played at Kingston in the gymnasium of the Royal Military College; and although we were defeated 23-6, we enjoyed the game immensely and learned a great deal. After the game, the two teams were kindly invited by the Com- mandant to lunch in the College. Before leaving we were shown round the College by the cadets. On the way home, we stopped at Brockville, where a sumptuous tea was very generously provided for us bv Airs. Mac- Laren. The inter-house matches were played as usual in the Fall. Keller won the senior tourn- ament, and Nightingale the intermediate. Later on in the Spring, we are hoping to have a game against the Old Girls. Last year the game was ended by rain at a 12-all draw. Sports Day Sports Day, 1949, was held on June 6th. It was a lovely day— especially for Fry, who won



Page 22 text:

20 SAMARA the stage. No written script was used, and the attractive sets were made and painted by the children themselves. Their characterizations delighted everyone. Following this a puppet-show was presented by Forms II and III under Miss Greaves ' direc- tion. The puppets, which had been made by the children, provided - much amusement. On the same programme the Intermediates presented the Third Act of the fantasy of Make-Believe , by A. A. Milne. This charm- ing performance brought the morning ' s enter- tainment to a close. At Glebe Collegiate Auditorium, on March 10, the combined Ashbury-Elmwood Dramatic Societies presented their annual play directoil by Mr. Belcher. The following is an excerpt from the Ottawa Citizen: The young thespians kept a large audience weak from suspense and laughter with their present ation of George M. Cohan ' s Two- Act Comedy ' Seven Keys to Baldpate ' . This sprightly drama deals with a success- ful author of thrillers who makes a wager that he can write a novel in 24 hours. He main- tains all he needs is peace and quiet. The wealthy friend with whom he makes the wager grants him the use of Baldpate House which proves to be everything but a secluded retreat. While the author is supposed to be writing his story but isn ' t, a variety of characters includ- ing thugs, blackmailers, a newspaper woman and a ' chaperone ' collect in the house, provid- ing the thread for a loom of complications and thrills that ends with a surprising twist. Although this play was an amateur produc- tion it made up in enthusiasm what it may have lacked in histrionic abihty, and the warm re- ception of the audience was only exceeded by the pleasure of the cast in presenting it. The members of the cast wish to thank Mr. Belcher for his able production and keen understand- ing of their difficulties. In March, Elmwood ' s final dramatic presen- tation of the year was made by the Inter- mediate and Junior Dramatics Classes. The Intermediate group presented Rose La Tulippe , a legend of French Canada. A splen- did background had been planned and painted by Miss Hull ' s helpers, chiefly Mary Burns, Sheila McCormick and Karla Krug, though many o ' iiers lent a hand too. The groupings in the play were particularly good, as the villagers huddled over the fire exchanging superstitious tales, or feasted hilariously at the table. They danced with such gusto and zest that the audience clapped their appreciation. Among individual performances, mention should be made of Catherine Hees who, with fine sense of movement, overcame the diffi- culty that any girl has in taking a male role, and proved a very dashing and handsome Devil. Diana Eraser played the part of the mother, a bustling housewife, very well, while Norma Baird was as sweet a Rose as anyone could desire. Among the gossips Mary Frances Matthewman was outstanding as she whispered confidentially to her neighbours and gave unwanted advice to Rose ' s mother. Of the two junior plays, Snow White was presented by the younger group. The Dwarfs won the hearts of all the audience, and Susan Greenwood made a very charming Snow White, while Judy Mansur acted the Wicked Queen very well. The Pied Piper of Hame- lin , played by the other junior group, was in some ways the most memorable play of the afternoon. It had in its cast two outstanding little actresses, Julie Gibson and Judy Kellock, the former as the pursy, self-important mayor, and the latter as the Pied Piper. With splen- did use of gesture and fine speed in delivery of lines, she gave effectively the impression of being an inhabitant of another world, a creature different from the worthy people of Hamelin. Karla Krug looked perfectly the part of little lame Hans, and others who de- serve mention include Cicely Dunn, Andrea Rowley, Shirley Ann McKay, and Beverley Brown. Sheila McCormick ably led the choir who spoke the narrative of the play.

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