Wiz Discovery
Wiz Discovery
he story begins in a small, ramshackle farmhouse in Kansas. Dorothy, remote in hand, is sitting surfing the television. Aunty Em and Uncle Henry enter, disappointedly looking at the unfolded pile of laundry. Aunt Em and Uncle Henry attempt to tell him that she needs to start helping out around the house. As Aunt Em folds the clothes, Dorothy helps her. She gives Dorothy two or three years until she must leave the house and make her own life out in the world. Uncle Henry suddenly rushes in with news of a tornado. Em and Henry make their way to the storm cellar as Dorothy runs to grab Toto. Dorothy and Toto make way to the cellar but the wind is just too strong. She desperately holds Toto as they rush inside the house. The house is picked up, spinning and flying through the air. Evvamene, the Wicked Witch of the East is seen tumbling through the sky. When the storm clears, Dorothy and Toto are far, far away from Kansas. The house has come to rest in a strange field of gigantic sunflowers. Dorothy calls for Aunt Em but hears echoes of her answers coming from hidden Munchkins. Toto appears, only now in human form. As they are trying to take in Totos new self, the munchkins quietly appear and stare at them. They draw back in fear from these strange people. After the Munchkins welcome the two to Oz, the group notices two feet sticking out from under the house- it is Evvamene. Dorothy is very apologetic while the Munchkins seem to be unphased by the tragedy. Addaperle, the Good Witch of the North, appears through the cloud of smoke and is swarmed by the Munchkins, who are the fans to her celebrity. The Munchkins reveal that Evvamene is dead, Dorothy done gone and set her house down on her sister. Once again she apologizes and is surprised by Addaperles indifference. Addaperle explains that there are only 3 witches left in Oz, including Evillene. The Munchkins shiver at the name as they trash talk her. After a game of name guessing, Addaperle is unimpressed by Dorothy. Dorothy finally has a chance to plead with Addaperle to get her and Toto back home. Addaperle cannot help her. She must go see The Wiz in order to get back home. Before Dorothy leaves, Addaperle gives her the silver slippers Evvamene once wore and makes her promise not to take them off before she gets home because of their magic powers. With a final warning to stay out of the poppy fields, avoid the Kailas and flying monkeys, Addaperle disappears and Dorothy and Toto ease on down the road. The two approach a cornfield, with a Scarecrow perched high on a pole. The Scarecrow starts to move and speak, starting them. He asks for some spare change-hes saving up to buy brains so that he wont have to sit up on a pole any longer. When the Scarecrow notices the silver slippers, he knows shes the girl that killed Evvamene, and he believes it is the beginning of change in Oz. Dorothy releases Scarecrow from the pole and he reveals the story of how Evvamene and Evillene stuck him up there as a warning to all the Munchkins who slack off on their work. Dorothy invites Scarecrow to join their group and travel to Emerald City to see the miracle working Wiz. As the group is heading down the road they hear groans all around. They notice that they are now in a large, dirty, smelly junkyard. Searching all over for the source of the groans, Dorothy and Scarecrow discover a Tinman. He pleads with them for more oil. Dorothy grabs the oil can and Scarecrow gives Tinman the once over before she continues. As she oils him all over, he becomes looser and looser. The Tinman explains that he used to be a real woodchopper and he built all of the Munchkins houses. One day, Evillene put a spell on his axe and he ended up cutting off different parts of his body, resulting in his all tin self. He also reveals that is without a heart and Dorothy calls a meeting of her group. Scarecrow is hesitant to bring Tinman along with them, yet Dorothy invites him to join the group anyway. Down the road, the friends find themselves surrounded by garbage cans and hobos. With a big ROAR! the Cowardly Lion appears, falsely courageous, trying to scare everyone. Tinman and Scarecrow are frightened. Lion dance comes to a halt when Dorothy sucker punches Lion and he drops to the floor crying like a baby. The Lion cowers as Dorothy scolds him for scaring people. Lion proceeds to tell his story- his Daddy left when he was a lion cub and Evillene took his Momma away from him. He had no one, was left to fend for himself, so he became a sissy. After a group discussion, Dorothy invites Lion to join them to see The Great Wiz. It is getting darker and the group finds themselves lost somewhere in a funky part of the Urban Jungle. The Kalidah leap onstage intent on destroying Dorothy and her friends. The Lion faints. Luckily, the friends trick the Kalidahs into falling down a chasm.
Plays, Published
The Girl in the Freudian Slip, 1967 A Single Thing in Common, 1978 The Wiz, 1979 (with Charlie Smalls)
Television Shows
Silents Please, 1960; Max Liebman Specials (1960-61) The Jackie Gleason Show, 1962 That Was the Week That Was, 1964-65; The David Frost Revue, 1968 World War II: G.I. Diary, 1980
Books
Tiger Tiger, 1950 Beat Beat Beat, 1959 The Girl in theFreudian Slip, 1959 The Abominable Showmen, 1960 The World Is My Yo-Yo, 1963
Charlie Smalls
Charlie Smalls (October 25, 1943 August 27, 1987) was an African-American composer and songwriter, best known for writing the music for the 1975 Broadway musical The Wiz. A musical prodigy, Smalls attended Juilliard at age eleven in 1954, staying until 1961. After Graduating from the High School of Performing Arts, Smalls toured as a member of the New York Jazz Repertory Company before beginning work on The Wiz. He won the 1975 Tony Award for Best Score for his work on The Wiz, which was later adapted into a feature film, starring Diana Ross and Michael Jackson, by Motown Productions and Universal Pictures in 1978. Smalls died at age forty-three in Belgium, during emergency surgery to repair a burst appendix.
The Wiz is a musical with music and lyrics by Charlie Smalls and book by William F. Brown. It is a retelling of L. Frank Baums The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in the context of African American culture. The original 1975 Broadway production won seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical. The musical was an early example of Broadways mainstream acceptance of works with an all-black cast. The musical has had revivals in New York, London, San Diego and the Netherlands, and an off-Broadway Encores! concert version was staged in June 2009. A film adaptation was released in 1978. The Wiz originally opened at the Majestic Theatre and later moved to The Broadway Theatre. It closed on January 28, 1979, after four years and 1,672 performances. The most popular song from the production was Ease on Down the Road, sung by the characters as they dance down the Yellow Brick Road. Along with other musicals like Purlie (1971) and Raisin (1974), The Wiz was a breakthrough for Broadway, a large-scale big-budget musical featuring an all-black cast. It laid the foundation for later African-American hits like Bubbling Brown Sugar, Dreamgirls and Duke Ellingtons Sophisticated Ladies.
Recommended Reading
Oz books by L. Frank Baum :
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz The Marvelous Land of Oz Ozma of Oz Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz The Road to Oz The Emerald City of Oz The Patchwork Girl of Oz Tik-Tok of Oz The Scarecrow of Oz Rinkitink In Oz The Lost Princess Of Oz The Tin Woodman Of Oz The Magic of Oz Glinda Of Oz Check out the following website for the complete text of all of Baums 14 novels about the world of Oz: http://www.literature.org/authors/baum-l-frank/
Pre-Show Questions
1. Dorothy gets caught up by a tornado, which lands her in Oz? If you heard about a big storm coming, what would you do? Does your family have any drills or procedures to prepare for a tornado? What about at school? 2. Since the moment Dorothy arrives in Oz, all she wants to do is get back home. She has to go on a long journey and she confronts many challenges along the way, but Dorothy stays positive and never stops pursuing her goal. What is a goal you have for yourself, either a short-term or long-term goal? What are the steps you plan to take to achieve your goal, and how will you handle the challenges posed along the way? 3. The Cowardly Lion believes he has no couragehe is afraid of everything! What does being courageous mean to you? Have you ever had to be courageous in a tough situation? What happened in that situation, and how did you feel after performing this courageous act? 4. Dorothy meets the Scarecrow, Tinman, and Lion along her journey to the Emerald City. Although they are all very different, these four become best friends. They learn a lot from one another, and it is their differences that end up helping each other. How are you and your close friends different from one another? What have you learned from your friends, and how have they supported you through tough situations?
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T ornadoes
AUNT EM: Henry, look! Come hug our girl! HENRY: Got no time, Em! If we don t watch out we could all get caught up in that twister!
The National Weather Service defines a tornado as a violently rotating column of air pendant from a thunderstorm cloud and touching the ground. Each year, about 100,000 thunderstorms form over the United States. In an average year, between 600 and 1,000 of those thunderstorms generate tornadoes. Although most U.S. tornadoes occur in only a handful of states, tornadoes can -- and do -- occur in every state.
Tornadoes are the most destructive of all weather-related events. On average, a tornados path is 4 miles long and 400 yards wide but can be as long as 100 miles and as much as a mile wide. Tornadoes can reach heights of 60,000 feet. The average tornado travels at a speed of 25 to 40 mph., but tornadoes can reach speeds up to 70 mph. Winds inside a tornado can swirl at close to 300 mph. Tornadoes stay on the ground for an average of four to five minutes; however, a tornado can touch down several times. Building damage during a tornado happens when high winds cause a buildup of pressure on building surfaces. This pressure is related to wind velocity squared. Tornadoes occur throughout the world; however, the greatest number of tornadoes and most intense tornadoes occur in the United States. Half of all tornadoes occur during the spring months of April, May, and June. Tornadoes can form in any state but they occur most frequently in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, I owa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Texas. On average, 100 people are killed by tornadoes each year.
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T ornado in a Bottle
Materials Activity
Two empty plastic soda bottles Water Tape
1. Fill one bottle 3/4 full with water. 2. Tape the other bottle on top of the one with water in it. Make sure the spouts are lined up. 3. Turn the bottles over so that the one with water is on top. See how the water has a hard time going down. 4. To make the water go down into the other bottle, swirl the bottles in a circular motion really fast. Dont shake it up and down or it wont work. The water should swirl into the bottom bottle. This is why it works: When you swirl the bottle, the water starts to move in a circle. When the water moves fast enough, it pushes out against the bottle and leaves a hole in the middle. Theres no water in the hole, only air. The hole allows the air from the bottom bottle to come up to the top bottle. When the air moves, theres then space in the bottom bottle, which makes room for the water from the top to flow into the bottom. This sort of water movement, with the special hole in the middle, is usually called a whirlpool. A tornado happens in air and a whirlpool happens in water. So, it is really a Whirlpool in a Bottle.
http://www.fema.gov/pdf/fima/fema431_ch2.pdf.
Afterwards, have them work in pairs to design a house that could withstand a tornado.
DOROT HY: Whats that old witch got you doin? LION: Carrying all the water outa this place. Shes got the Scarecrow and the T inman doin it too. DOROT HY: I heard about Evillene and water. LION: Child, you know that lady is so afraid of water, she dont even take a bath?
Materials
6 clear beakers 6 teaspoons Cold water Hot / warm water 3 different substances (eg: instant coffee, sugar, hot chocolate, jello, etc) Measuring jug Paper and pencils for recording Paper towel for any spillages
Activity
1. Introduce the lesson by talking about the process of dissolving. Ask the students if they know what this means. a. Provide a simple definition by giving an example, for instance, when we add sugar to a cup of tea. Explain that both water and substances (for example, sugar) are made up of tiny shapes called molecules and that when added to each other the sugar dissolves. The students may see this as disappearing. b. When something dissolves in water this is called a solution. When it doesnt dissolve it is called a suspension. 2. Have each station ready with all the equipment laid out and ready to use. First have the students in each group predict whether they think that any of the powders will dissolve in cold water. a. Have them write down their predictions. 3. The students then measure and pour 150ml (5fl oz) cold water into each of three of the beakers (label these #1, #2 and #3). 4. Next have them measure 1 level tsp of coffee powder and sprinkle it into beaker #1 - be careful not to stir! a. The students should make careful observations about what they see in their beaker and record what has happened on their chart. 5. Repeat this process with the other two powders. 6. Now ask the students to predict what the results will be if they use hot/warm water instead of the cold water. 7. Repeat the experiment using warmer water this time labeling the beakers #4, #5 and #6. a. Make sure that each step is observed and recorded. 8. Have each group discuss the findings that they recorded with each other and compare their results. a. Did they all end up with the same results? If not, why? Were their predictions correct? Do they think the results would be different if they used water at different temperatures or different amount of the powders?
Extension
Try this investigation with different powders. Investigate whether or not all substances need hot water to dissolve. To help define and illustrate suspension try filtering the solution through filter paper. Corn flour is a good one for this
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Exploring Courage
Adapted from: http://college.usc.edu/vhi/creatingcharacter/docs/LP_Courage_CC_001.pdf
OH, T HERE MAY BE T IMES WHEN YOU WISH YOU WASNT BORN AND YOU WAKE UP ONE MORNIN JUST T O FIND YOUR COURAGE GONE BUT JUST KNOW T HAT FEELIN ONLY LAST S A LITT LE WHILE YOU JUST ST ICK WIT H US AND WELL SHOW YOU HOW T O SMILE Dorothy, T inman, Scarecrow
Activity
1. Distribute the Student Handout: Web of Courage to each student. Ask students to individually think about the idea of courage and to complete as much of the web as possible. a. Allow a few minutes for students to record their responses. 2. Divide the class into pairs. Students should compare their responses and assist one another in completing their individual webs. 3. Conduct a large class discussion using some or all of the following questions as a guide: a. In what ways do people demonstrate courage in the stories you have heard or read? b. In what ways do people you know demonstrate courage? c. In what ways are these demonstrations of courage similar or different? d. How have you demonstrated courage in the past? e. How do these examples compare to examples of courage in stories discussed above? f. Is courage demonstrated in large heroic efforts? Is courage demonstrated in small ways? Explain. 4. Ask for each student to choose one person s/he believes exemplifies courage. This person may be someone they know personally or someone they are familiar with but do not directly know, someone from history, or someone fictional from a book or other piece of literature. a. Students may choose a person they listed on their Web of Courage worksheet, or select a new person who exemplifies courage. b. These chosen models of courage will be put on display on the Classroom Wall of Courage. 5. Students must create a plaque honoring a person s/he believes exemplifies courage. Information on the plaque should include, but would not be limited to, the following: a. Picture or photo of the individual. b. Summary of the individuals accomplishments. c. Explanation as to why this person exemplifies courage. 6. When completed, have students share their Person of Courage Plaque with the class, describing why they chose this person and how they demonstrate courage. Then, post all the plaques on the Wall of Courage for students to examine in more detail, and to serve as a reminder that we all have the power to make courageous choices and display acts of courage.
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Exploring Courage
Web of Courage Student Worksheet
Adapted from: http://college.usc.edu/vhi/creatingcharacter/docs/LP_Courage_CC_001.pdf
Define courage:
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YES, I KNOW I KNOW IM GONNA MAKE IT T HIS T IME WOO WOO WOO GONNA SING ONE SO YOU ALL CAN HEAR IT WOO WOO WOO GONNA LIFT MY HEAD UP WOO WOO WOO CAN YOU FEEL MY SPIRIT? - Scarecrow
Activity
1. Ask students to define the term self-esteem. Write their ideas on the board. Help students understand that self-esteem refers to how we understand and value ourselves. a. People with high self-esteem are realistic about their strengths and weaknesses and are able to set goals and work toward them with optimism and humor. They also feel competent in areas they consider important and do not take other peoples negative impressions of them too seriously. b. People with low self-esteem have a hard time honestly evaluating their strengths and weaknesses and often have an unrealistic, overall negative impression of themselves. They take other peoples opinions of their strengths and weak- nesses more seriously than they should. Also, they do not feel competent in areas they consider important. People with low self-esteem tend to be pessimistic. 2. Tell students that an important first step in building self-esteem is taking a realistic look at their strengths and weaknesses and likes and dislikes.This helps them know what goals are realistic to pursue, what aspects of their personality and lifestyle to seek to improve, and how to identify their weaknesses without worrying about how others perceive them.Tell students that self-knowledge helps lay the foundation for high self-esteem. 3. Then tell students they are going to complete a personal inventory during this lesson to help them achieve better self-under standing. Pass out the Personal Inventory worksheet and have students complete the handout. a. Give students ample time (it should not take more than 10 or 15 minutes) in class to complete the inventory. 4. Once students are finished, have students take the information they learned about themselves and create a drawing, collage, or short essay that illustrates who they are. a. Make available paper, art supplies, and magazines to cut up. Give students about 20 minutes to complete their projects. 5. During the next class period, ask for student volunteers to share their artwork or essays, and their personal reflections, with the class. 6. Hold a discussion with students, asking them what they learned about themselves by going through this activity. Continue the dialogue with the following: a. How can you apply this information to your lives? How does it affect the goals you set for yourself? b. Tell them that understanding their own strengths, weaknesses, and preferences is essential in boosting their self-esteem. 7. Conclude the lesson by asking students what role they think self-esteem plays in leading a healthful life. If students feel good about themselves, do they think they will make good decisions about friends, diet, exercise, and overall work habits? Why do they think this is so? Help students understand that if they feel good about themselves, they will want to take care of themselves.
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like ______________________________________________________________________________________________________. do not like ________________________________________________________________________________________________. am good at _______________________________________________________________________________________________. am not good at ____________________________________________________________________________________________. am good at this subject, but I do not like it: _____________________________________________________________________.
Activities
I I I I I I I
like ______________________________________________________________________________________________________. do not like ________________________________________________________________________________________________. am good at _______________________________________________________________________________________________. am not good at ____________________________________________________________________________________________. am good at this activity, but I do not like it: ______________________________________________________________________. am not good at this activity, but I like it: _________________________________________________________________________. prefer being involved in individual activities _____ or group activities ___. (Check one.)
Relationships with Friends and Adults (Check the statements that apply to you.)
I am generally well liked: I am generally not well liked: I have a group of friends: I prefer having one or two friends: I am a leader: I am a follower: I prefer people who like the same things I like: I prefer people who like different things: I have the support of significant adults in my life: I have the support of a group of peers:
Food Preferences
I like to eat _________________________________________________________________________________________________. I do not like to eat ___________________________________________________________________________________________. I do ____ do not _____ eat a balanced diet. (Check one.)
Relaxing
I relax by ___________________________________________________________________________________________________. I like relaxing alone _____ or with other people ____. (Check one.) After this activity, I always feel calm and peaceful. _________________________________________________________________.
Dorothy. . . if you want to get back to Kansas bad enough, youre just going to have to pay for it! -Wiz
In each hypothetical case have the class go through the four step goal-setting process given at the top of this lesson. Goal #1: Help a new kid in school feel included. Goal #2: Get a good summer job. Goal #3: Stop violence on the school grounds. Goal #4: Earn enough money to buy a new bicycle. Goal #5: Raise money to buy a new computer for the school library.
Have the class set some group goals. For instance, they could decide they want to achieve a certain average score on an exam. To accomplish this they might set up study groups so they can create structured study time and help each other. Or, perhaps, they will set goals for personal interaction that include standards of respectful behavior and rules for dealing with conflicts. Decide on a reward for achieving these goals, such as a picnic or some other fun payoff.
Have everybody in the class declare two short-term goals that can be accomplished during the semester. Have them present their goals to the class, including their plans, their deadlines, and why these goals are important to them. Then, have them track their progress giving periodic progress reports to the whole class. Set up some kind of a reward for people who achieve their goals.
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IT WOULD SURE BE NICE T O BE BACK HOME WHERE T HERES LOVE AND AFFECT ION _ Dorothy
Activity
1. Divide the class into small groups of 4 or 5 students and give each group a piece of oversized paper or a poster board, a collection of magazines, scissors, and glue sticks. 2. Instruct the students to make a collage of pictures that represent items that can be found in their homes. a. Provide students with some examples to get them started such as tangibles like furniture, family members or pets, as well as non-tangibles such as fun, laughter, and love. 3. After students have had time to create their collages, bring the class back together as a whole and have groups present their collage, pointing out key elements/ideas from their work. 4. Next, have students remain in their small groups, and provide each group with a piece of paper and a marker/pen. 5. Have groups delegate a recorder, responsible for keeping written tabs on their ideas, and a reporter, responsible for sharing the ideas later with the class as a whole. 6. Instruct recorders to divide their sheet in two by drawing a line down the middleone side with the title House, the other with Home. 7. Ask students to brainstorm the characteristics of both house and home, highlighting what distinguishes one from the other. a. For example, a house is a physical structure with a roof, walls, furniture, etc. A home involves family, love, holidays, etc. 8. After students have had time to create their lists, bring the class back together to share their lists. a. One by one, ask the reporters to present the groups list. b. Teachers should create a list on the board that compiles the various answers from the class. 9. Following these two group activities outlined above, pose the question to the class How would your life be different if you did not have a home? 10. Continue the class discussion by asking students to brainstorm ways students can help other people in their community build a home. a. From gathering food for the food bank, to participating in clothing drives, to actually helping build houses. b. Write these ideas on the board. 11. As a class, choose one of these ideas they feel they can actually carry out, and help students fully research and develop their building a home idea, and put it into action.
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BELIEVE T HAT YOU CAN GO HOME BELIEVE YOU CAN FLOAT ON AIR T HEN CLICK YOUR HEELS T HREE T IMES IF YOU BELIEVE, YOULL BE T HERE - Glinda
Activity
1. Begin by asking students brainstorm their favorite song. 2. Have them write down on a sheet of paper what they believe the song is about and what makes it their favorite song. Teacher check to make sure all songs are school appropriate. 3. Next, go over and define if needed the five poetic devices, and give examples of each of the terms stated: a. Rhyming (sound alike endings of words) b. Metaphors (a comparison of two unlike things WITHOUT using like or as) and Similes (a comparison of two unlike things using like or as) c. Alliteration (at the beginning of words, a repetition of consonants) d. Imagery (the use of vivid or figurative language to represent objects, actions, or ideas) e. Personification (an inanimate object is given human like characteristics) 4. For homework, have students listen to their chosen favorite song and determine what poetic elements their song contains, and write down these specific examples. 5. The next day in class, place students into small groups, and have them share their poetic findings in their song with the group. 6. After students have shown their proficiency with the poetic terms, assign students to write their own set of lyrics, either to an already set melody, a melody they create, or completely without a melody. a. The lyric should include one verse and one chorus, and have three examples of poetic techniques in it.
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1. The tornado is moving at 30 miles per hour. It is headed toward Milwaukee, which is 15 miles away. How long will it take for the tornado to hit MIlwaukee? 2. The city hall building has a large basement and many people have sought shelter from the tornado in the basement. The people in the basement are: 15 staff members from city hall, the mayor and his secretary, 2 from the coffee shop across the street, 4 from the diner next door, 4 members of the Smith family, 3 members of the Gordon family and one policeman. How many people are in the basement? 3. The policeman leaves to help others outside. Two people walking by, a delivery man and three members of the Lee family have now come to the basement. Now how many are there? 4. The tornado hit and luckily no one was injured, but it caused some damage to buildings. This was the damage: $2,346 to the Gordon family house; $11,490 to the diner; $3,421 to the coffee shop and $874 to City Hall. How much total damage . was there? 5. There was also damage to the mayors car, of $973. Now how much damage was there?
Post-Show Questions
1. Along Dorothys journey, she meets the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion. How do her friends help her defeat the Wicked Witch? When have you worked together with your friends to accomplish a difficult task? 2. What do you think Dorothy has learned at the end? What does she have to say to get back home, and why do you think those words bring her back? If you landed in Oz, what would you miss about home? 3. The Cowardly Lion wants to ask the Wiz for Courage, the Scarecrow wants brains, and the Tinman wants a heart. But do you think the Lion shows bravery, the Scarecrow shows brains, and the Tinman shows heart before they gets to the Wiz? How? 4. Have you seen the movie or another theatrical production of The Wizard of Oz? If so, in what ways is The Wiz different from the original version of The Wizard of Oz, and in what ways is it similar?
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1. The tornado is moving at 30 miles per hour. It is headed toward Milwaukee, which is 15 miles away. How long will it take for the tornado to hit MIlwaukee? Answer: 120 minutes, or 2 hours 2. The city hall building has a large basement and many people have sought shelter from the tornado in the basement. The people in the basement are: 15 staff members from city hall, the mayor and his secretary, 2 from the coffee shop across the street, 4 from the diner next door, 4 members of the Smith family, 3 members of the Gordon family and one policeman. How many people are in the basement? Answer: 31 people 3. The policeman leaves to help others outside. Two people walking by, a delivery man and three members of the Lee family have now come to the basement. Now how many are there? Answer: 36 people 4. The tornado hit and luckily no one was injured, but it caused some damage to buildings. This was the damage: $2,346 to the Gordon family house; $11,490 to the diner; $3,421 to the coffee shop and $874 to City Hall. How much total damage was there? Answer: $18,131 5. There was also damage to the mayors car, of $973. Now how much damage was there? Answer: $19,104
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