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The Rural Voice, 1995-12, Page 31time the first snow came the schoolteacher had been reminded by mothers, school children and all the eligible bachelors in the community that they were interested in the Christmas concert. By the first of December, when the snow was usually deep, the poor teacher became aware that in the eyes of the school trustees, the concert ranked next in importance to having her entrance class pass all their exams." Rehearsalsbegan in early December and became increasingly frequent and intense until the big night arrived, he recalled. Now the teacher in the one - room school may not have had to dress and parade pupils downtown to the town hall as my teacher did but the situation may have been even more chaotic in the improvised theatre that had been created in the classroom. W.G. Strong writing in Village Squire magazine in 1980 recalls a concert of an age earlier than the one I experienced, but it sounds very similar. "An improvised stage of rough planks, loaned by the local sawyer, raised on blocks of wood across which two-by-four scantlings formed the base, was set up by a couple of farmers living nearby. Make -shift curtains of bed -sheets were fastened by safety -pins to a length of stove- pipe wire some six feet above the floor attached by thumb -screws to the front window frames. "On the front blackboard, in large capital letters, executed by the teacher with coloured chalk, were CHRISTMAS GREETINGS. Along the top, bottom and sides, forming a colourful border, were stencilled designs of mistletoe, holly and poinsettia in red, white and green. "At times, the side -boards were treated likewise lavishly. The stencils belonged to the teacher who carefully saved them from year to year." I don't remember much about the performances at the concert, only the great difficulty with which the teacher opened and shut the makeshift curtain. What I do recall was the grand finale when there was a banging from the front porch, a hearty "Ho, Ho!" and Santa arrived. He had a pack of presents over his shoulder and a place was quickly made for him at the front near the Christmas tree and he took out presents for each of the children, calling them by name to come up and get something. Being a guest, there was no present for me. I wondered why Santa was discriminating against us kids who went to school in town because he didn't bring presents to our concerts. School concerts are back in favour again now, although political correctness has got in the road of "Christmas" concerts in city schools and certainly killed off the staple of every Christmas concert of times past: the re-enactment of the stable scene of Christ's birth. Teachers no doubt still dread the day the calendar turns to December and they must plan their class's contribution to the annual event. They should take comfort in the thought, however, that they are creating memories for a future generation. And if things go wrong, well they probably just make for better memories.0 rP ) i4 MITCHELL COMPUTER �`...' `:. SEFtvICE SINCE 1977 OFFICE SUPPLIES & STATIONERY MORE THAN JUST A COMPUTER STORE IBM APTIVA "Magic" Touch New Worlds .. . ... your gateway to exciting new worlds of vibrant videos and dynamic sounds. It's your connection to entirely new worlds of people, places and Information. IBM Aptiva M40 • Pentium 75 • 1 Gig hard drive • 8MB memory • Quad speed CD-ROM • Wavetable 16-bit with MWAVE • 28.8 data and 14.4 fax modem • 3 year Express Warranty IBM Aptiva M50 • Pentium 100 • 1 Gig hard drive • 8MB memory • Quad speed CD-ROM • Wavetable 16-bit with MWAVE • 28.8 data and 14.4 fax modem • 3 year Express Warranty vaLaL."r+l..r.r FlReinstalled Software: OS/2 Warp; IBM PC DOS 7.0; MS Works 3.0; Quicken Special Edition; and Aptiva Communications CTR Includes an exciting multimedia collection: Corrpton's Interactive Encyclopedia'" ; The Discoverers; Undersea Adventure'" , Music Theatre (WIN); Music Mentor", ; Recording Session" ; and Aptiva Audiostation Ilii is In 1 in' l Ytflr. LI fi � L'.. — .-.. Whera the information highway ,11: • TEL (519) 348-9336 63 Ontario Road, Mitchell, Ont. NOK 1NO FAX (519) 348-4413 DECEMBER 1995 27