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Show " - i-'vr?"' "L - UJ 1 1 1 H If 1 piir m w J?$W Ay) by. Wfflfy wi i SHAKESPEAR AT GIRLS' STATE. Girl's State officers, offi-cers, Peggy Erickson, governon; Wendy Broadhead, senator; Linda Bussio, senator; Sue Harley, seated, secretary of state, try out Shakespearean finery during dur-ing week-long stay on SUSC campus. Girls State action, Shakespearean Festival preparations exciting Shakespeare at Girls' State? 1 Why not? Especially when both events took place in the same location at the same time. Many of the 339 delegates and 30 counselors attending the 25th annual American Legion Le-gion Auxiliary Girls' State at Southern Utah State College have expressed interest in contsruction taking place adjacent to the SUSC Auditorium, Audi-torium, center of Girls' State activities. They learned that the rising building is the new permanent home of the Utah Shakespearean Festival. Each day as the girls passed ' the construction site, they were able to observe some new developments in the Elizabethan tiring house which will soon take shape above the newly installed platform base. During the past week, members mem-bers of the Festival company have begun to arrive on campus and the tempo of Shakespearean activity has very noticeably accelerated. A special Shakespearean costum presentation prepared prepar-ed for Girls' State by Phyllis Davis and Norman Roibinson provided first hand involvement involve-ment and interaction among two of the major annual events ev-ents at SUSC. Girls' State officers became so enthused with Festival preparation that they selected select-ed costumes from the famous Festival wardrobe stock and became, for a day, actual participants. ' The Utah Shakespearean Festival will begin its tenth season July 15 with a Festival favorite, "Taming . of the Shrew.". "King Henry IV, Part I" and "The Tempest" will round out the three play season, sea-son, which runs through August Au-gust 7. |