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Show Enterprise, Cedar. Schools Stage Big Socialism Program By Xewell It. Frei l'lincipal Enterprise Hi.uh School "One of the most successful so- i cialization programs ever held in I Enterprise," is the opinion of these who attended the program i given by the Enterprise and Cedar j City Junior High school students I at Enterprise, Thursday, March 5. The program opened with a band serenade as an voerture of welcome for the visiting Cedar-ites. Cedar-ites. Following a series of playground play-ground games participated in by mixed groups a competitive basketball bas-ketball game was played. From the basketball game, which Cedar won, the studetns flocked to an improvised lunch room which had been set up by Miss Karma Mc-Grogor Mc-Grogor and her students to feed the hungry visitors. And judging I by the satisfied smiles . everyone was adequately fed. In the evening the Cedar City Juniors staged their competitive play, "Growing Pains." The rendition ren-dition of this performance reflects glory on Miss Vivian Leavitt, director, di-rector, and the cast of twenty who took part. The play was perfectly perfect-ly cast and exquisitely presented. The terminating feature of the evening was a socializing dance. The purpose of this dance was to enable students tcf get acquainted in addition to providing them with an opportunity to have a good time. To accomplish the first objective ob-jective such devices as lemon dances, spat dances, number dances, etc., were employed by the social leaders, Miss Bleak and Miss McGregor. At an half-hour to midnight when Lorin Miles, principal of the Cedar City Junior high, announced that it was time to "break up the party" he made (Continued on last page) SCHOOL PLAY DAY (Continued from first page) himself the most unpopular man Df the evening! All in all this play day was the type of inter-school activity that is destined to become more popular popu-lar in the future. It presages the beginning of the end of the highly competitive "battles" so popular at present and so freighted with i supercharged atmosphere epitomized epit-omized by the old slogan "victory it any cost." Inter-school activ-ties activ-ties of the future, toward which :chnols are working at. present, mist beat down local pealousips, ictty animosities, and provincial ( barriers. It is these little innumerable innum-erable misunderstandings that . stand as a barrier to the united action politically, socially, and industrially in-dustrially of rural Utah. |