Page 16-SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN DHS Theatre Workshop wows select audience Jenny Kohler Donegal High School's Summer Theatre Workshop exhibited their skills to a small but enthusiastic aud- icncee last Friday night. The group presented a series of skits, dances, and improvi- sations with verve and cxpertisce. Most of the material was created — some of it on the spot — by the performers themselves. It was fresh, pertinent, with lots of local color, much appreciated by the audience. Steve Hassinger and Gary Graybill did a delightful duet, accompanied by Mike Kohler at the piano, in which they saluted one local community after another. Ramona Sell Perhaps funniest of all was their ditty: ‘‘Ch-Ch-Ch- Chickentown.’’ Steve and Gary also brought down the select house with their act with Steve as magician on the stage and Gary as loud heckler in the audience. Tom McCoy had people in stitches with his soliloquy, “The Driving Instructor, sitting beside an imaginary pre-Women’s Lib driving pupil. Ted Hershey, Cindy E- menheiser, Cindy Charles, Wendy Newcomer, Kathy Jones, and Jim Johnson were smooth dancers. Brian Lesher, intentionally, was not so smooth. Brian, in fact, seems to have a lot of clown in him, because he kept the au- dience interested during a long silent period of mis- applying his make-up as a circus clown. Dramatic statements, some comical, others pro- found were made by Rose Livelsburger, Jayne Grei- ner, Sharon Aurick, Ted Hershey, Cindy Emenhei- ser, and Paul Smith, who brought the program to a truly dramatic end with a reading from ‘‘Brian’s Song.”’ Jenny Kohler as a chorus- line cutie flipped provaca- tively across the stage to announce each skit and evoked soft wolf whistles from some aesthetically delighted members of the audience. Steve Eno, working with minimal props, is to ‘be commended for his job of stage manager- Jane Youtz was student advisor. Faculty advisors were: Mary Magaret Peraro, Ro Ann Lau, Linda Mylin, and Glenn Hess. Population gets ready to explode along Route 441 in East Donegal There are signs that the population explosion in East Donegal Township, damp- ened last year by unemploy- ment and high interest rates, is about ready to go off now. There had been rumors that Commonwealth Trust Real Estate of Wilmington, De., had abandoned their plans for Donegal Village, a development with more than Three beauties raised on Donegal getting approval S00 units across from Wyeth Laboratories and was trying to sell what used to be the Sipling farm along Route 441. But last week John Marx of Commonwealth appeared at a meeting of the East Donegal Sewer Author- ity and asked their help in of the Village's sewage plans from the State Department of Environmental Resources. The local authority and Gloria Longenecker the county planning com- mission had both approved sewage plans for Donegal Village, but the state de- partment has ruled the local sewage facilities are inad- equate -for the proposed large development. John Saylor, an engineer for the local sewage author- ity will investigate the problem and report to the authority at its next meet- ing. July 23, 1975 Ken Fuhrman in stocks Primitive punishment now available If you would like to enjoy some old-fashioned punish- ment during this Bicenten- nial year, you could go to Jim Mummau’s Lancaster County Farm Diner along Route 230 between Mount Joy and Elizabethtown — and sit in the stocks or stand in the pillory for a while. You could even have your picture taken while under- going this unusual punish- ment. It’s the shame of it all that makes these devices so painful. Ken Fuhrman, who works soil in Miss Lancaster Co. contest in Donegal Kim Lauver area at the Farm Diner, and who volunteered to sit in the stocks for the above photo- graph, says, “‘I wouldn't mind staying in there all day, but I wouldn’t want to be seen...You feel sorta silly in there. You look silly too.” Fuhrman added as an afterthought: ‘‘Maybe they ought to bring them back to the schools.”’ Ken not only felt silly in the stocks; he felt helpless too, especially when fellow employee Sue Hacker tick- led the soles of his feet while he was in the stocks. to
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