Newton graduate toots horn Vegas style
Scholarships offered to join newly formed
drum and bugle corps
By Melanie Yingst
Staff
Writer Troy Daily News (Ohio)
Randy Warner has a passion for
animal rights, the pomp and circumstance of
marching bands and his "Mayberry-esque" memories
of his hometown of Pleasant Hill.
He also
has the heart (and kidneys) to do just about
anything for his non-profit organization, Las
Vegas Marching Arts Inc., to build the state of
Nevada's first drum and bugle corps.
An
alumni of Newton schools, Warner, 54, of Dolan
Springs, Ariz., always was active in the
professional drum and bugle corps realm. Warner
now is establishing his own corps, the
"LAS VEGAS BLVD," which will be based on the Vegas
strip and hopefully be competing around the world
by 2010.
When discussing the drum and bugle
corps' birth, it didn't take him long to drum up
fond memories of his days as part of the Newton
High School Marching Band, 36 years
ago.
"The most fond memory of my high
school life was at the Bradford Pumpkin Show my
senior year. We beat Arcanum, our arch-rival at
the time," Warner said.
"I will never
forget the announcer saying 'for the third year in
a row, first place goes to Newton Marching Band!'"
Warner said. "It will forever be my greatest
memory that I will cherish until my
grave."
His passion for music and
choreographed marching patterns started at an
early age.
"My first memory at age 3, was
going to the Ohio State Fair with my parents and
I'd wander off to find the marching band wherever
it was playing," Warner said. "Each and every time
I'd wander off, they'd know exactly where to find
me - behind a band."
These days, Warner is
focusing his efforts to pump up his drum and bugle
corps, which is a more disciplined and precise
form of musicians and choreography when compared
to school marching bands that perform at half-time
shows at football games.
It's with his
non-profit drum and bugle corps organization that
Warner plans to give back to his
community.
Five free first-year
scholarships are being set aside to any Newton
school student or alumni, between the ages of
13-21, who has the talent and desire to join the
LAS VEGAS BLVD in Las Vegas, after, of course, an
audition. Warner, who is founder and president of
the organization, estimates the scholarships are
worth $2,000 and may be extended in the future to
anyone from Miami County who may be
interested.
So far, Warner has recruited an
impressive A-list of professionals in the world of
script writing, music aficionados and celebrity
vocal trainers to help pursue his dream of the
LAS VEGAS BLVD being one of the few drum corps that
can survive its first year. Warner estimates that
it will cost $2 million a year to operate a
competitive drum and bugle corps.
Warner is
taking his dedication to the organization so
seriously that it includes potentially donating
his own kidney. Warner's sacrifice was to recruit
Tom Roe, a highly respected drum corps judge, to
sit on the board of directors of Las Vegas
Marching Arts Inc. Warner was found to be a
perfect match.
"He needed a kidney and I
needed him on the board of directors," Warner
said.
"It's a wonderful gesture," Roe said.
"Just him offering to do this is
great."
Warner credits his birthplace of
Pleasant Hill and Newton High School Marching Band
in almost every interview and on his own book
covers since "it's the town that made me whom I am
today."
A nationally recognized animal
rights advocate, Warner has donated approximately
2 million copies of the eight animal rights books
he's authored to schools around the world. His
books also can be found in the Newton school
library.
When Warner said his organization
still has an extensive list of needs, including
monetary contributions.
"I need drill
writers, musicians, legal help, seamstresses and
anything anyone can think of we need. We'll take
anything we can get our grateful hands on," Warner
said.
To contribute to Warner's non-profit
organization, contact him at (928) 767-4895 or
visit
www.lasvegasmarchingarts.org.