Retro evening “Let’s sing, friends!” educational manual on music on the topic


New Year in the USSR (scenario)

First, you need an interior in the style of the USSR. You can decorate the walls with New Year's cards from the 80s, remake posters of those times to suit our problems or the theme of the New Year, draw the coat of arms and flag of the USSR (you can find samples on the Internet).

HOST Dear comrades, how wonderful it is that everyone would gather here today and make the first toast... The main official New Year's Soviet toast: “To the great Soviet people! For the Communist Party! For our beloved socialist Motherland!”

You drank juice at the grocery store. The most delicious was tomato, and the spoons for salt were in a glass of water. Delicious “Crispy Potatoes” for 10 kopecks, and for 1 ruble you could buy 10 bags. And where is she now when you sometimes want her?

“Soviet Adidas” sneakers are cool. They were almost worn with elegant dresses. Chewing gum "Donald" - 1 ruble from speculators. But there's a picture inside! A tram ride costs 3 kopecks. And your girls' Songbook... An ordinary student notebook (usually 48 sheets), where the words of your favorite songs were written. Pie with jam - isn't it a miracle? You'll never guess from which side the jam will come out!

and remember the boy pissing on the toilet door... TV “Rubin” - you take the pliers and tink-tun-tun! and so on. (people themselves begin to remember what happened and how)

HOST: Fewer and fewer people in Russia know about the state of the USSR. Let's read excerpts from schoolchildren's essays..... “The USSR had a red flag, so red was in fashion. The color red represented the blood that must be shed when you work hard. Children wore red ties, women always wore red dresses on holidays, cars were built in red, houses had red wallpaper.” (Petya Kozenkov, 5th grade) “All people dressed the same. There was a form. At that time, children wore uniforms: girls wore dark brown skirts, blouses and red ties, and boys wore dark trousers, white shirts and also red ties.” (Masha Petrova, 3rd grade) “The products in the USSR were not of very high quality. There were 20-kilometer queues for sausages. The sausage from one factory was sometimes even green. People didn’t have televisions.” (Daria Rakova, 5th grade) “People in the USSR always worked and refused to rest. They came home from work and went straight to bed because they were very tired from work. People didn’t dream.” (Yulia Ostroushko) “In their free time, people went to the Mausoleum. People met there, drank tea, exchanged news, and hung out. Lenin lies dead in the Mausoleum. The Soviet people really liked to look at him.” (Sveta Kamynina) “They say that the USSR collapsed and no longer exists. But I don't fully believe it. Maybe this country still exists? People work there, May 1st is celebrated every year. ” (Sveta Kamynina)

Competitions should be related to the USSR (who can tie a tie faster, who will better accept Santa Claus as a pioneer, if you think about it, you can remake many competitions for the USSR, if you want an erotic competition. Let’s call it “There is no sex in the USSR” and that’s it)

FOR EXAMPLE COMPETITION: name six Soviet socialist republics: RSFSR, Ukrainian SSR, BSSR, Azerbaijan SSR, Armenian SSR, Georgian SSR and two Soviet people's republics: Bukhara (former Khanate of Bukhara) and Khorezm (former Khanate of Khiva) continued their rapprochement already in peace. Economic and political ties were strengthened.

You can arrange a vote on which is better, the USSR or the RF HOST: The USSR died 17 years ago. However, the debate about whether life was better or worse in the late state has not yet ended, and will not end for a long time. In this regard, I would like to build a small comparative scheme: to compare the classic late USSR of 20 years ago, which we all remember at least a little, and the current state of the “RF” according to the main social positions. And - using a simple majority of indicators, determine where life was better.

Styling the room

Start with the indispensable wardrobe at the entrance, which allows you to immediately immerse guests in the atmosphere of the past: a sign with the inscription “Wardrobe”, a hanger with numbers. Mat “Wipe your feet”, posters:

Posters and slogans can be used to decorate walls, furniture, napkins, tablecloths and other paraphernalia. A USSR themed party is unthinkable without posters and Soviet advertising, because at that time posters were literally everywhere - on the streets, in catering establishments, in shops, schools, clubs. There are many directions: general slogans about labor, political appeals, reminders of a culture of behavior, patriotic statements. If there is a person in the company who knows how to work in Photoshop, replace well-known faces with the faces of friends - it will turn out unexpected and funny.

Before you start decorating the room, think about what it will be - a grandmother's apartment, a cafe, a children's party, a meeting room or a pioneer room.

In addition to posters, flags and banners with slogans, use ribbons, balloons, carnations, lilacs or wildflowers, lacy napkins, old newspapers and magazine clippings, and candy wrappers. Pioneer attributes - bugle, drum, ties. From wrappers, old banknotes and labels you can make garlands, paper flowers and entire compositions that will become a decoration or part of a party scenario in the style of the USSR. You don’t even need to buy all this “tinsel” - find suitable images online and print them.

In the most prominent place is a comic honor board: photographs of friends (sepia or black and white) and signatures at the bottom “For contribution to the general fun”, “For showing ingenuity”, “For knowledge of the history of the USSR”, etc. Photos can be placed on the board immediately or filled in gradually, thus rewarding the most active participants - competition winners, entertainers, and best dancers.

To create an atmosphere of the past, decorate the room with old interior items - a reel-to-reel tape recorder, a carpet with deer (one of the most famous symbols of wealth in the USSR), a tube TV, a radio, a samovar, a wall barometer, busts of leaders. Organize a mini-exhibition of old badges, stamps, postcards, Soviet toys, etc. Place mannequins dressed in period clothing against the walls. The best option is to rent a soda fountain or a film strip projector.

Back to the USSR, or New Year's party in retro style

In Russia, which has already given birth to and formed one post-Soviet generation, there is a tendency to resurrect not-so-old holiday traditions! Moreover, a whole fashion line associated with the Soviet period arose in the country. Retro-style holidays (including New Year) are a good folk pastime that attracts more and more attention and fans every year. So what was so special about this mysterious Soviet New Year?

History of the Soviet New Year holiday

From 1918 to 1935 New Year, like all other “remnants of the tsarist era” were banned in all countries of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. And at the end of 1935, a resolution was adopted by the Komsomol Central Committee: “students can cheerfully celebrate the coming New Year.” For the first time in the USSR, the resurrected New Year holiday was celebrated in 1936. Although, as historians now testify, they were secretly preparing for the New Year of 1936, because immediately after the decree, Christmas tree decorations, greeting cards and other holiday paraphernalia appeared on the shelves.

Soviet children made paper Christmas tree decorations during labor lessons and signed New Year's cards with touching wishes. For example, in one of the Moscow museums there is still a postcard from a granddaughter to her grandmother, in which the child congratulates the old woman on the New Year and wishes her to live to see bright communism. Such were the times then!

What if we, too, celebrate the New Year by organizing a retro party? For real, in a Soviet way? Attention! Everyone who has already begun to be tormented by nostalgia for the white dance to “These Eyes Opposite”, cognac for 4 rubles 12 kopecks, and “Triple” cologne - join us! Let's start preparing!

PREPARATION FOR THE NEW YEAR IN THE SOVIET STYLE

Retro style New Year's party invitations

Dikmi: In Soviet times, the system of “ideological stimulation” worked clearly (in our opinion, the “carrot and stick” method). All excellent students in studies, work, and social activities were given a New Year's present - an invitation to the Kremlin New Year's tree (since 1954). Every schoolchild, at least once in his life, dreamed of visiting there! So, invitations to your retro party can be issued in the form of an invitation “ticket” to the Kremlin Christmas tree.

Or you can look for your childhood collections of greeting cards (my mother still keeps a brightly decorated cardboard folder in the attic with my treasures - cards, stickers, labels). You can make wonderful invitations based on sweet, dear “news from childhood”!

The text also needs to be made in the spirit of the era:

“Dear comrade! We invite you to become an honored guest of the Soviet New Year's holiday, which will take place _____! Event starts: ______, address:___. Entry is strictly with party cards!”

Ready-made postcard templates for printing (click to download the postcard)

Decor and decorations for a New Year's party in retro style

The central object of the Soviet New Year holiday was, of course, the Christmas tree! Residents of the great country celebrated the first New Year, 1936, by decorating Christmas trees with the simplest toys made of cotton wool, cardboard, fabric, and paper. Stampings for origami were popular: paper sheets, cut, glued and assembled, which can be used to hang wonderful cars, houses and snowmen on a Christmas tree (as a cherished New Year's wish).

Later, glass balls, snow maidens, bear cubs, snowflakes, fruits and vegetables (a sign of the growth of the agricultural industry) and ruby ​​races (a symbol of the supremacy of communist power) appeared on the Soviet New Year tree. Such toys were usually carefully stored and passed on from generation to generation. So it’s quite possible that you’ll find a box of Christmas tree decorations at grandma’s house!

And under the Christmas tree, be sure to place (cotton or plastic) figures of Father Frost and the Snow Maiden!

If we’re going to recreate the Soviet era for the New Year, it’s true in everything! To be honest, apart from the Christmas tree, there was nothing in the house of a Soviet person that reminded me of the New Year. More likely, not even that. There was nowhere to buy any New Year's decorations for the interior. And it wasn’t even the global deficit that was to blame! The industry simply did not envision such “excesses.” Although, many citizens, in order to make their home more elegant and luxurious, resorted to some non-standard solutions.

Snowflakes on the windows

If they managed to get hold of foil, they made shiny snowflakes; no, they made do with white “snow” from paper napkins. And making such a snowflake is very simple! You cut out a circle, fold it several times, randomly make cuts, cuts, unfold it and voila - an absolutely original piece of Soviet-style New Year's decor is ready!

Or download a design for a snowflake sticker and you can decorate everything around

Paper garlands

The walls were decorated with lush paper garlands of rings, lanterns, and flowers. Although, colored paper in abundance for such decoration was an expensive and scarce pleasure. Most often we saw garlands made from old newspapers and other previously used paper.

Serpentine and rain, electric garlands

The “golden shower” invented in the USSR has become a “talk of the town” among emigrants from many countries. This is done simply: you need to take a small piece of cotton wool, wrap it around the edge of the “rain”, moisten the cotton wool and throw it to the ceiling. In an absolutely incredible way, the fleece sticks to the ceiling, and threads of beautiful rain flow, pleasing the eyes of guests and owners of the house!

True, in order to replicate such a Soviet “trick” in modern conditions, you need to have a lime-bleached ceiling. Otherwise, the rain will have to be secured with more durable adhesives! And a few words about electric garlands. Garlands in the shape of airplanes, spaceships (the era of space exploration and new aviation technologies) and flowers were very popular in Soviet times.

If they managed to get hold of several of these garlands, they decorated the entire room where they planned to hold the celebration.

I think that in our time there will be no problems with electric lights! At worst, if you don’t find “pre-revolutionary” ones, you can use simple, Chinese ones. Although, of course, it’s worth looking for a “Soviet brand”!

Costumes for a New Year's party in retro style

As a rule, in the USSR the carnival was associated with a children's matinee or a student skit. The most popular children's costumes were: dresses of snowflakes and fairies made of gauze and wire, costumes of snowmen, bunnies, bears and foxes. Although, some parents took a very unusual approach to the issue of a costume for their baby: they made koschei, wizards, firebirds and even robots with blinking lights!

The adults tried to put on their most beautiful dresses, shirts and suits. In the post-war period, men also decorated their clothes with military awards.

When planning to recreate the Soviet era on the eve of the New Year, dear men, make sure that your wardrobe includes: a checkered shirt (or white, cotton, with a starched collar), a tasteless, dull tie (preferably blue), a gray suit.

With a women's New Year's costume, everything is much more complicated. Soviet young ladies began to prepare for the New Year several months in advance. Everyone wanted to look extraordinary, and therefore showed supernatural ingenuity. For example, they knew where they “threw away” kremplin dresses, where they sell jacquard trouser suits from under the counter, and how much a chiffon blouse costs among gypsies. And they all unanimously argued that nothing makes a woman look better on the eve of the New Year than hydrogen peroxide, and nothing makes a woman look fashionable and more impressive than a perm. On New Year's Eve there was a queue at the hairdressers so thick that even mercury would be jealous!

Let's draw conclusions, dear ladies! To be like a Soviet fashionable girl, the appearance of which will cause the entire numerous hall of the House of Culture to noisily exhale an enthusiastic “Ah!” Complete your look with trendy suede shoes. Plus to everything - hairstyle - fresh “blonde” chemicals, bright makeup (a mixture of Leningradskaya mascara with flour) and the aroma of Natasha perfume.

The house is decorated, the hard-won dress is hanging in the closet, you can start the New Year's menu! In difficult Soviet times, this was even more difficult than with outfits!

New Year's table like in the USSR

The best treats were saved for the New Year holiday in the USSR! Every family tried to celebrate the New Year richly and satisfyingly (even if before that the whole year they had to live very modestly and from hand to mouth). The New Year's table was a kind of sign of the future prosperity of Soviet people, which was strictly believed in both the village and the city. What were they preparing then? Of course, salads: “Olivier”, “Herring under a fur coat”, “Mimosa”. Well, also cutlets, chicken, jellied fish, sandwiches with sprats, and, of course, jellied meat! True, for “rusty” herring and green peas for “Olivier” you had to stand in huge lines, and buy it all at least two weeks before the holiday (just before the New Year, huge shelves in grocery stores were empty).

Those who managed to get red or black caviar, bananas, oranges, balychok, chocolate and cervelat for the New Year's table were considered lucky. These products on the New Year's table were considered a sign of wealth and influence of a person!

It’s good that we don’t live in that era, but are just recreating it! This means that you can buy fresh products, and without problems, you just have to figure out the New Year’s menu!

New Year in the style of the USSR: history, photos, script, menu, clothes, competitions

November 18, 2014 11:22:10

Today it is very fashionable to organize themed parties. We invite you to plunge into the past and spend the New Year in the style of the USSR . We will tell a story, show a photo, offer a script and menu, select clothes and fun competitions.

Before organizing the New Year in the style of the USSR , you need to remember the history of how it was, how it all began.

New Year in the style of the USSR: history

The New Year in the USSR was somewhat different than today, more general. If you had the opportunity to visit several hundred apartments scattered throughout the Union on New Year's Eve, you would be amazed at how equally the holiday is celebrated everywhere. Everyone who remembers how the New Year was celebrated in the USSR knows this atmosphere of a universal holiday, the smell of tangerines on the balcony, optimistic programs on TV, Olivier salad and chocolates on the Christmas trees.

Officially, the tradition of celebrating the New Year was returned to Soviet citizens only in 1935, and became widespread only 20 years later. After all, January 1 became a day off only in 1947, and only then did residents of the USSR have the opportunity to properly celebrate New Year’s Eve. And since an indispensable attribute of any holiday in Soviet times was a rich table, the majority of citizens of the Soviet Union began to truly celebrate only when the card system was finally abolished, and a sufficient amount of food and New Year’s food sets appeared in stores!

In addition, the New Year in the USSR is, in fact, a city holiday. This is understandable: for a villager, December 31st and January 1st are no different from other winter days. Even if it was possible to refuse to perform obligatory daily rural work, it was not for the sake of an annual holiday - but only for a much rarer occasion, for example, for the sake of a wedding or the birth of a child.

Therefore, it is possible to talk about the Soviet tradition of celebrating the New Year only from the beginning of the 1960s, when the share of the urban population in the country exceeded the share of the rural population. Moreover, it was in the 60s, with the beginning of Khrushchev’s “thaw”, that the right to private life and private holidays began not only to be recognized, but also to become part of the official ideology. And the stream of young specialists who poured into previously purely rural areas of the country to build new cities and factories, brought with them the urban tradition of celebrating the New Year.

New Year in the style of the USSR: traditions

The first main tradition is “Blue Light” . Since 1964, it has become an annual New Year's program, and for twenty years it was the songs and jokes from this television program that accompanied the Soviet New Year's holiday.

The second tradition is the film “The Irony of Fate, or Enjoy Your Bath.” Eldar Ryazanov's comedy was not only firmly associated with New Year's Eve (it was shown annually, only the start time of the show changed), but it itself served as the source of some traditions of decorating the house for the New Year.

New Year in USSR style: menu

The third tradition was the food set for the New Year's table - the so-called “order”. Since the heyday of the national New Year celebration occurred in the mid-70s with their beginning shortage, the main source of products were “orders” that were issued at the place of work (by the way, such sets were issued almost exclusively in cities, which also worked to consolidate the image of the New Year year as a purely urban holiday).

Traditionally, the “order” included one or two jars of sprats, a box of chocolates, a bottle of “Soviet champagne”, a loaf of boiled smoked or raw smoked sausage, a pack of Indian tea “with an elephant”, “Lemon drops” and sometimes a jar of red caviar. At the same time, tangerines began to be perceived as a purely New Year’s delicacy: the USSR received the bulk of these fruits in the form of exports from Morocco, where the main harvest ripens in November-December.

New Year in USSR style: photo

However, it’s worth correcting yourself: perhaps the earliest New Year’s tradition - not new, but revived - was the custom of placing a live spruce in the house for the New Year. After the anti-religious campaign of the late 20s and early 30s, it was only in 1935 that the Soviet government again began to promote this custom. Since Christmas trees for sale were specially grown, they were also in relative short supply, and therefore were bought at the first opportunity, and not at a convenient time. A common sight, for example, in Moscow was people who, one and a half to two weeks before the New Year, carried Christmas trees tied with twine into the subway, bought for the occasion.

And of course, the famous phrase “Here is a gift (food, souvenirs, etc.), but this is for the New Year!” can be attributed to the New Year traditions of the times of the USSR. The same total shortage taught Soviet citizens that they need to buy what they need not on the eve of a holiday, but when the opportunity arises, it’s better to let it sit. Food was stored in the refrigerator or on the balcony, things were stored in closets or pantries, Christmas trees were hung outside the window or on the same balcony. Almost all family members knew what would be given to whom for the holiday, but this did not diminish the joy: the very opportunity to receive a new thing made me happy!

New Year in the style of the USSR: how it was

... The final credits of “The Irony of Fate” are floating on the TV screen, the champagne is sent to cool outside the window or in the refrigerator, vases with the indispensable Olivier salad (quick, satisfying and almost without the use of scarce products!), “custom-made” sprats and sausage are placed on the table. A few minutes later the doorbell rings: the first guests have arrived. Surely they brought with them a jar or two of salad for the New Year's table or homemade pies: a table put together by contribution was also a Soviet New Year's tradition.

Retro evening “Let’s sing, friends!” educational manual on music on the topic

Retro evening “Let’s sing, friends!” Presenter 1 (B1) – Razborskaya E.E.

Presenter 2 (B2) – Frolova N.I.

1 slide

Q1.Good afternoon! Hello, dear comrades! This is exactly how, in the spirit of that time, we decided to address our audience today

Q2.: Friends, do you remember your first impression of watching the well-known film “The Irony of Fate, or Enjoy Your Bath!”? Or, as Khrushchev firmly promised to build communism in the USSR by 1980, but, as one joke says, the Olympics got in the way?

IN 1. And a touching song about a bear for the closing of this Olympics? Tonight is for those who remember the country where gasoline was cheaper than soda with syrup!!! We invite you to return to the USSR again! Visit a festival of memories and nostalgia...

Q 2: Feel the time of change, the first freedom and the spirit of pioneering! Plunge into the golden time! And, of course, no evening will be truly bright without a good mood. So, are you ready?

B 1: Then we start our concert. And Maria Postnikova, a 6th grade student, will open it with the composition “Blossoming May.”

Q 2: Let's plunge into the not-so-long-ago 90s...Do you remember how everyone lived then? What did you wear, how did you get food? Yes, everything was different before.....

In 1: Perestroika, new Russians in crimson jackets with gold chains on Mercedes, Chewing gum “Turbo” and “Love is”... let’s remember some things from the 90s: Adiki - Adidas sneakers, Soap dishes - Rubber sandals . Palm - Women's hairstyle. The hair was gathered into a ponytail at the crown of the head, secured with a colored elastic band(s), then fluffed out in the shape of a palm tree. Laces are parents. Bicycle shorts are short, tight pants. Kapor is a women's headdress-hood (the fluffy form of an angora). Varenki (jeans that were specially boiled in bleach) Zuko, Yuppii, Invite - dry drinks. What products were included in the food order? (packages of “Buckwheat”, Tea “With a Baby Elephant”, sausage “Doctorskaya”, jars of “Riga Sprats”, “Bulls in Tomato”)... And what films were broadcast on TV! “Belorussky Station”, “Moscow Doesn’t Believe in Tears” and of course “Only Old Men Go to Battle”. Let's remember together the famous song from this film.

2 - 4 slides Song “Darkie” - Lyubina I.P.

In 1: we continue the excursion through the years... we move to the 80s... remember how they rolled bell peppers into jars... And what queues lined up in Fabric stores for the fashionable Boston cut for a dress!!! Let's remember the 80s with the song "Boston Waltz"

5 slide Performance of the song “Boston Waltz” - Razborskaya E.E.

Q 2: Yes, they used to do a lot of things that you wouldn’t even think of doing now. Well, for example, we drank juice in a grocery store. The most delicious was tomato, and the spoons for salt were in a glass of water. A pie with jam – isn’t it a miracle? You'll never guess from which side the jam will come out!

Q 1: ...Smoke is pouring out, there is an acrid smell throughout the apartment. Are the pioneers learning to make a fire? No. In fact, this is a process of you-zhi-ga-ni-ya. The usual thing!

Q 2: Just millions of Soviet children burned out postcards for their beloved mothers - bouquets, fish, houses. Let us also remember the song about the high tower.

Slide 6 “My joy lives on” - Lyubina I.P.

7 slide film, film, film

Q 2: You remember Soviet films well, don’t you? And now we will check this.

Q 1: Say the famous phrase from the movie “Ivan Vasilyevich is changing his profession,” which Ivan the Terrible said when he saw the newly built Moscow. Answer: What a beauty! Babble!

Q 2: List all the positive qualities of the main character Nina from the film. “Caucasian captive”, which Comrade Saakhov described at the event. Answer: Komsomol member, student, athlete and simply beautiful.

Q 1: Who did the main character work in? “Gentlemen of Fortune” before he became a notorious prisoner nicknamed Associate Professor. Answer: the head of a kindergarten.

Q 2: Sing your favorite song by Semyon Semyonich from the film. “The Diamond Hand”, which he brilliantly performed at the “Iva” restaurant. Answer: A song about hares.

Q 1: Where did Evgeniy Lukashin go every year on December 31st with his friends from the film. "Irony of Fate or Enjoy Your Bath!". Answer: To the bathhouse.

Q 2: “What disgusting, what disgusting this is yours...” - what did Ippolit mean from the film? "Irony of Fate or Enjoy Your Bath!" calling it “disgusting”. Answer: Jellied fish.

Q 1: “Georgy Ivanovich, aka Goga, aka Gosha, aka Yuri, aka Gora, aka Zhora, lives here?” – from which film? this quote. Answer: “Moscow doesn’t believe in tears.” Let's listen to a song from this movie.

Q2: - He has a nice open face. - The opponent's open face is nice for a blow to the jaw. It's clear? Everything requires dexterity, hardening, training... - from which film. this quote. Answer: "The first glove." Let's listen to a song from this movie.

8 slide Performance of the song “On the Boat” - Razborskaya E.E.

Q2: And VIA of those times... After all, it was Vocal-instrumental ensembles that became popular in those years... Pesnyary Cheerful guys Singing guitars Earthlings Gems Flame Flow, song... The list can be endless... Let us remember one wonderful song of that time...

9-10 slide “The blue ball is spinning and spinning” - Lyubina I.P.

11 slide old songs about the main thing

Frolova N.I.:

The rhythms of the new songs are beautiful, Love them and sing them, But the years test the word, And in their hobbies.

Don't forget the old songs, They will tell you a lot, They were sung with an accordion and a guitar, And just like that, and just like that.

They were blown around the world by the wind, But in our years, in our days, For joy and bright sadness, They will come to you as friends.

12-13 slide “Old maple” - Lyubina I.P.

Q 1: In the 50s and 60s, a large number of musical comedy films were created. The songs that sound in them become, one might say, “folk”.

14 slide song stays with the person

Razborskaya: Let us go over the songs. I name the phrases of the songs - you are the film in which it sounds • And a smile without a doubt will suddenly touch your eyes - “Carnival Night” • In the dark blue forest where the aspen trees tremble - “The Diamond Hand” • Happiness suddenly knocked on the door in silence - “Iv.Vas” • When spring will come, I don’t know – “Spring on the street beyond the river” • Somewhere in this world – “Caucasian captive” • Your honor, lady separation – “White Sun of the Desert” • What were you like – “Kuban Cossacks” » • If you don’t have an aunt – “The Irony of Fate” • Rise and Shine – “Gentlemen of Fortune” • There are so many golden lights – “It was in Penkovo” • Fatigue is forgotten – “New Adventures of the Elusive” • Hey, sailor! - "Amphibian Man"

Bogdanov. Residents' response. Thanks to the parents!!!

15 slide song “Our Guardian Angels”

Q 2: Our dear friends! Our retro evening has come to an end - “Let’s Sing, Friends!” . You sang wonderfully! We want to thank everyone who helped us hold this meeting!!! And we’ll end our evening with the song “Moscow Windows”

16-17 slide “Moscow Windows” - Lyubina I.P.

Slide 18 THANK YOU

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