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Page 28 text:
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ART It is not unusual in the late spring or early fall, when the weather is favorable, to see art students sally forth with drawing boards, water colors, chalk, charcoal, and other implements of their trade to transfer a bit of the landscape to paper All the art classes, including the first semester, the second semester, and advanced art classes, have the op ' portunity to enjoy this type of work at least once or twice , , n r , , during the course. In the Art Room after school ° These out-of-door expeditions are, however, only a small part of the varied program arranged for her classes by Miss Helen Sawyer, director of the art department. Sometime during each semester the Art One students study the great American artists, modern illustrators, commercial artists, and also the most important methods of reproduction. Art Two people take up the lives and works of eminent European artists; and the Advanced Art classes study various phases of art or architecture, perhaps carving skyscrapers from Ivory soap, or constructing intersecting vaults to make the study more vivid. At Christmas time there is remarkable activity in the vicinity of the printing press, for hundreds of linoleum block prints are produced for greeting cards, to say nothing of the prints obtained on various parts of the printers anatomies. At other times there have been many people in the art room expressing a strong desire to dye. However, life, it seems, is not always so undesirable, for during the deepest de- pression many of these same art students were making purses, which suggests that they must have had plenty with which to fill them. Aside from their craft problems and their regular class work, many of the Students have shown initiative in art work for various other departments and activities in school such as making posters for advertising purposes, all the art work m the Kipi, and a frieze that it is hoped will in the future adorn the walls of the sewing room. Printing Christmas Cards, Miss Sawyer, Inkin» a Linoleum Block ■nri ■
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Page 27 text:
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DRAMATICS All dramatics students, numbering some one hundred and thirty are instructed by Miss Cape. The purpose of the Dramatics Department is to present to the students the fun- damental principles necessary to acting and play production. Two semesters of dramatics are offered, during which both text book work and acting are done. The stage areas, the art of make-up, and various bits of information useful to the adta ' i are studied. This year all students in their first semester of dramatics were placed in casts which presented one act plays before their respective classes. A dramatics tournament was also held during the last year in which three dramatics classes competed, each class presenting a play. The plays were given during three assemblies, and at the end In the Zone was -elected as the winner. Medals were given the cast and pro- duction workers in the winning class. A Senior Class play, Little Women, all of whose actors were seniors and whose production workers were taken from the dramatics classes, was presented May 19 under the direction of Miss Cape. Mr- Pelten Little Women was presented with the following cast: Mr March, Rudolph Mikus; Mrs. March, Anita Marcussen; Meg. Mae Lembke; I Dorothy Raftenburg; Beth, Mary Rowlands; Amy, Arliss Larson, Aunt March, Evelyn Matson; Mr. Laurence, Fred Cape. Laurie. Morris Shovers; Professor Bhaer, Walter Mickelson; John Brooke, Alvin Hen; burg, Hannah Mullett, Mabel Draves. %M
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