Word: cast
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...presenting "Tiger Rose" as its offering this week, the St. James has undertaken to do a very difficult thing. Two groat factors in the success of this play in New York were that Lenore Uirich was cast to perfection as the French Canadian girl, and that David Belasco, in his scenery and scenic effects, had left nothing to the imagination. Take away the charm of Lenore Uirich's acting and the perfection of the stage settings, and you are hard put to it to find a substitute. If the theatre-goer is sensible enough not to expect...
...competition for designs for "Pastora" last year. Miss Eleanor Dunn will have charge of properties. W. A. Pallme '24 will be stage manager, assisted by P. W. Barber 1G., the assistant stage manager of the 47 Workshop. Lighting effects will be arranged by S. R. McCandle 3A.S. The complete cast follows: Effle, Miss Edith Noyes Ma, Miss Doris Halman Jenny, Miss Mary Secoy Ruth, Miss Verna Barr Slug, J. J. Collier '23 Rat, Conrad Salinger '23 Happy, L. M. Pearson 2G. Big Bill, Robert Levin ocC. Nels, Stuart Marten John, H. W. Bates Shiney, E. P. Goodnow '17 Butch, Alexander...
...elections for officers of the Junior Class which were held yesterday, an insufficient number of votes was cast, and, therefore, no returns can be announced as yet. A disappointingly small number of men voted according to an announcement made last night. Only about 200 men out of the 670 enrolled in the class cast their ballots...
...class which is required-to make the election valid is reckoned on that basis. The election committee wishes to emphasize the fact that it is highly necessary for all such men to vote, and it suggests that all men who are in doubt regarding their present standing should cast their vote anyway. The question of the validity of the vote will be settled by the election committee and the College Office. It will make the work of the election committee easier and quicker if Sophomores will cast their votes on Wednesday morning on their way to or from classes...
...Allen chose a text as follows: "Where there is no vision the people perish; but he that keeneth the law, happy is he". To interpret his text he restated it. Where there is no vision the people cast off restraint; where there is no restraint the people perish". He stated as his belief that there was a breaking down of moral standards which could not be accounted for by the war or by the heterogeneity of the United States. "The only safeguard of any country", he stated, "is the respect of the people for law. We cannot expect a future...