Thursday, May 21, 2009

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST




BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

The school was transfixed for four nights by the Footlighters' all-singing, all-dancing production of the musical Beauty and the Beast. A cast of 45 romped through the two-and-a-half hour Broadway show, backed by a 10-piece orchestra. Whirling 24-student choruses of enchanted flatware in the Beast's spellbound castle supported the speaking-singing roles. The show sold out two nights and almost sold out the other two.

Among the many stars were Molly Shimko as Belle, Tony Salvatoriello as the Beast, Marc Whittington as Gaston and Eric Meade as Lumiere. The director was English teacher Alan Haehnel. Jane Woods led the orchestra and Denise Frawley choreographed. In the 13-student production crew, Nick Sinnott-Armstrong designed the sound and Taylor Hornig designed the lighting.

Photos by Nick Sinnott-Armstrong.


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Monday, May 18, 2009

STUDENT OF THE MONTH: NATALIE DONNELLY

Senior Natalie Donnelly from Norwich, VT is Hanover High's May Student of the Month. Natalie is an honest, open student who speaks her mind. As editor of the Inde she has spent the last eight months utterly devoted to creating the yearbook for her classmates. Natalie is a visible leader who sets high standards for everyone. She excels in foreign languages and is captain of the tennis team. Natalie is infectiously cheerful, works hard and always supports her classmates.

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Sunday, May 17, 2009

THE BRISIAD: THE EPIC STORY OF FAIR BRISEIS



Libby Tolman, class of 2011, wrote this poem in Ms. Alsup's Greek Mythology class. In Homer's Iliad, Briseis was a woman taken by Achilles as a prize of war, then later seized by Achilles's commander, King Agamemnon.

Sing, goddess, the rage of Briseis
Snatched from her safe-hearthed home.
Sing of a rage forbidden, a rage constricted
Confined to a turbulent mind in a cage of beauty.
Sing of a rage that never broke its chains,
A rage that threw only itself to the House of Death.
Begin, Muse, when she first left her island and father,
When the will of Zeus had not yet begun.

What god drove her to such a fury?
Eros, son of Venus who drove men to desire
When the Black Achean ships hit the island shore.
Picture a thousand ants alighting on sugary fruit.
So were the camp-weary Achean soldiers
Voracious, devouring. Nothing they left in peace.
The men tore the island apart for gold, women, and food.
Godlike runner Achilles got the best,
That his powerful build and commander status might be honored.
Bright Briseis Achilles tore from father Briseus’ loving arms.
Picture a starving beggar’s grasping attack on nourishing bread.
So was Achilles’ attack on innocent, beautiful Briseis.
And she thrilled at heart, afraid, unknowing, unsure of her destiny.
But hostile Ares made godlike Achilles end her confusion
As Briseis watched her father killed on the son of Thetis’ spear.

And the rage…
The rage that pounded on her mind
As the foam-capped breakers pounded on Achean ships
Cutting through the storm-tossed seas to foreign Illium.
The rage that lasted as the swift runner Achilles led her to his tents, not running now.
The rage that lasted through that night and the next in Achilles’ lodge,
Making her yearn for a spear to bury in the godlike hero’s chest.

But Thetis dove down from lofty Olympus,
Looking for all the world like another of Achilles’ prizes,
But Briseis knew her at once.
“Child!” White-armed Thetis cried. “Take heed of the all-powerful goddesses!
Obey our words. Do not harm brilliant Achilles.
Do not tempt Olympus’ deathlike wrath!”Picture a snarling, drooling dog held back from the kill,
How it frets and starts, only to be held by a chain,
Until it calms, resigned never to see the dark blood of its prey.
So was Briseis’ rage calmed by god-given acceptance and duty.

Sing, Muse, how then she wept and prayed to Thetis by the turquoise salty waters.
Tell of how Thetis did not rise for her as for godlike Achilles,
But let fair Briseis cry until her dog-like rage died,
Parched by the empty Trojan surf, replaced by carcass-like despair
Sing now of Thetis’ rage.

Up now Thetis flew to mighty Apollo and held his knees.
“Apollo, powerful Apollo!
Look how defiant Briseis disrespects swift runner Achilles!
Show her how lucky she is to have Achilles!”
And Apollo took these words and held them close to his heart.
He turned them over, wondering how to bring them to effect.
When lord of men Agamemnon, most unkind and abusive man alive,
Grew to a height of fury, great Apollo saw a way.
He placed the name Briseis in grasping Agamemnon’s mind.
Picture how a small, smooth dandelion seed grows,
Becoming a large, wicked garden weed.
So “Briseis” lodged in furious Agamemnon’s mind
And grew to the idea to take her of all Achilles’ prizes.
The cruel-to-women lord of men Agamemnon raged at questioning Achilles,
“I will be there in person at your tents
To take Briseis in all her beauty, your own prize—
So you can learn just how much greater I am than you
and the next man up may shrink from matching words with me.”
And Apollo knew that Briseis would see so much more—
She would shrink to think she had raged at kind Achilles,
Achilles gentler than great Agamemnon.

So Agamemnon sent loyal Talthybius and Eurybates along the beach,
Where towering waves drag sun-baked sand to stormy seas,
To fetch fair, clear-minded Briseis.
Achilles offered her forth resignedly,
But Briseis’ mind was full of worry.
Picture a black-grey storm cloud coalescing on an already-cloudy day.
So was Briseis’ unease,
For she had heard of ruthless Agamemnon,
Agamemnon crueler than great Achilles.
Patroclus obeyed his great friend [Achilles’] command.
He led Briseis in all her beauty from the lodge
And handed her over to the men to take away.
And the two walked back along the Argive ships
While she trailed on behind, reluctant, every step.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

HHS FOOTNOTES SING AT NOTRE DAME AND IN JOIGNY




Chorus Director Jane Woods writes: Over April vacation the HHS Footnotes completed a fabulous weeklong vocal-performance tour in France. We were based in Joigny, Burgundy, a twin city with Hanover, and we stayed with local families. Twenty-eight sophomores, juniors and seniors were accompanied by four chaperones.

We performed several different types of concerts: first, a cafe evening in Joigny featuring our solos, duets and trios; second, a concert-hall performance in Joigny including classical, multi-cultural, Broadway and jazz tunes; and third, cathedral concerts of sacred and classical acappella music in Joigny; in Auxerre; and in Paris at Notre-Dame de Paris (definitely a wonderful experience!) Our songs at Notre Dame ranged from 13th-century polyphony through contemporary pieces. We also had permission to sing informally in two other cathedrals just for fun, to try out the acoustics.

We received overwhelming enthusiasm for all our performances. The students had a great time singing in places with such historical significance and amazing acoustics.

The photos show a sacred-acappella performance at Notre Dame; the weekly Saturday market in Joigny; and Bekah Schweitzer, Rebecca Whittington and Marc Whittington rehearsing their acappella trio in Pontigny Abbey.


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Monday, May 11, 2009

HHS WOODSHOP: TWO SOPHOMORES SHOW THEIR WORK



Aaron White and David Waste, class of 2011, have been working with Mr Holloway in the Industrial Technology shop on their first high-school wood projects. Aaron's table has a maple top and a pine body. Check out the grain and the cool icon. David made his left-handed electric guitar with an ash body, a steel-reinforced maple neck and a rosewood fingerboard. In four months he designed and turned the wood himself, seated the frets and fret-markers, and applied the finish to the body.

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Monday, May 4, 2009

SENIOR CASSANDRA HAMEL: PARLIAMENTARIAN, COMPETITOR, FUTURE TEACHER


Senior Cassandra Hamel, parliamentarian of her local chapter of Future Business Leaders of America, won prizes at the organization's spring state competition in Burlington in April. She took second place in Desktop Publishing for a digitally-made poster and other materials, and for her performance on a test about desktop publishing. In the Business Ethics competition, Cassandra and a partner explained what they would do on the job if a co-worker said that he had falsified his resume. (Their decision: make sure of the details, then tell the co-worker that if he didn't tell the manager, they would.)

Future Business Leaders of America is a Virginia-based nonprofit association whose high-school members are preparing for business and business-related careers. Its National Awards Program recognizes and rewards excellence in its state competitions.

At Hanover's joint program with Hartford High School, Cassandra chairs the Community Service Committee which helps retirees at the Brookside Nursing Home at the holidays. On the Human Services Committee she introduces younger students to computers while showing them how to make birthday cards. Cassandra will go to Community College of Vermont next year and plans to major in elementary education. She is shown here with HHS educational assistant Teresa Drelick.

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