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Page 37 text:
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FAR LEFT: Sue Sendlebach eyes a five minute time-out from practice of The Old Lady Shows Her Medals. Sue merited a gold medal for her perform- ance as Mrs. Dowey, and the play it- self merited an L'excellent rating dur- ing the Genesian One-Act Play Festi- val. FAR RIGHT: It's dress up day for drama club president Bob Hurley. A bronze medal was also awarded to Bob for his portrayal of Kenneth Dowey at the Play Festival. LEFT: Lindell Stover, Sally Lewis, and Carol Couzens offer a popular ren- dition of Scarborough Fair. BELOW: Rose LaChance canlt make heads or tails of the dragon played by John Nloran and Chris Jensen, so she chooses to take the middle slice.
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Page 36 text:
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Singers, drama award winners struggle into talent spotlight 32. Staging dramatic demonstrations and protesting sore-throat aggression, drama and choral students pop into the spotlight with award-winning showmanship. Best One-Act Play: Old Lady Shows Her Medals Best Supporting Actors, Actresses: Harlequins Best Director: Sr. Marie Dorothy Best Music Director: Sr. Catherine Camille Best Male, Female Vocalists: Choral class Staying off hoarseness and spring fever, the Choral class embarks on a rockumentary of soul, pop, and folk tunes. A motion picture motif inspires the song- sters to strike up current sounds, selecting The Gradu- ate as most likely to succeed. Masking set-backs with clever costuming and make-up, dramatists compile play-production booklets with imaginative overtones. Cardboard set pieces and a motley collection of personal props make the scene in student directed one-act plays. Drama students make the most of their classroom stage where imagination steals the show.
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Page 38 text:
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ABOVE: Eyes on copyln Typing I students learn that Heyes on the keyhoardl' constitutes a capital crime of typing. ABOVE RIGHT: Business instructor, Sister Jean Ellen, in- vestigates a scourge of mistakes which Rosie Monaghan would like to claim are the fault of her typewriter. FAR RIGHT: To shorten a pattern you simply follow the directional lines on the patternfl lvliss Mary Ann Eichmann demonstrates one of the essential fine points of dressmaking for Debbie Dowdall. RIGHT: Even a sewing ace like Mary Lauer must occasionally face the terrible truth that a seam just isn't right. 34
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