A look back to how a book saved Earth
Suzie Harrison
Oh no, it seems that aliens have landed on Earth and are trying to
eat library books. This concept is quite peculiar, except to
fifth-graders in Rosy Haynes’ Top of the World Elementary School
class who watched students perform the play “The Book That Saved the
Earth.”
Haynes explained that the play was a multidisciplinary activity
provided by their language arts “Open Court” series.
“It goes across the board,” Haynes said. “It is science, drama and
language arts, and we’re teaching across the grade levels --
fifth-graders performing for the second-graders.”
The aliens, called Macronites, were visiting from a planet called
Macron. The play is set in the year 2543 A.D. Looking back on the
20th Century, the historian explained that in those days there were
books about everything from anteaters to Zulus.
“Books taught people how to, and where to and why to,” Austin
Schlatter, 10, said. “They illustrated, educated, punctuated and even
decorated. But the strangest thing a book ever did was to save the
Earth.”
To learn the story, Austin invited the audience to travel back
through a “historiscope” to the time in 1988 when it really happened.
Think-Tank (played by Brooks Freeman, 9) was the ruler, who in his
mind was the most intelligent ruler. But truthfully his apprentice
Noodle (played by Louis Brown, 11) was the brains, but he continued
to stroke his ego.
“My character, Think-Tank, thinks he’s the smartest in the
universe,” Brooks said. “He’s just a glory hound and tries to make
himself seem smarter. But really it is his apprentice Noodle who is
smart.”
Other cast members included Jordan Glenn, 10, who provided the
offstage voice; Daniella Crivello, 11, as Captain Omega; Alex
Kempler, 10, as Lieutenant Iota; and Chantel Ebrahimi, 10, was
Sergeant Oop.
“I loved the character interaction with each other and everyone
acts the right part -- it’s a really good story,” Daniella said.
Alex said she learned that other people have different ways of
thinking and the students learned the key point that books are
invaluable.
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