Word: lets
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Leonard Hatch-'05 of Thomas Hardy's tale of the same name will be given as a curtain-raiser. The piece deals with a battle of wits between a sheep-stealer and a hangman, and the special feature of an old English reel has been interpolated. The second play, "Let's Get Married," by E. L. Beach, 1G., is a farce-comedy in three acts. It deals with the attempts of two college chums to elope, not suspecting that their plans are doomed to be thwarted by the complication of a third elopement in the same house. Suitcases become mixed...
...Dramatic Club will present "The Three strangers" and "Let's Get Married" for the first time at the special undergraduate performance in Brattle Hall tomorrow evening. The coupon system heretofore used has been done away with and special tickets for this performance may be purchased at the Cooperative Branch or of T. W. Swett '15, Brentford 21. $1.50 tickets are reduced to $1, and $1 tickets to 75 cents for students, each of whom are allowed two tickets...
Posters are heralding the coming of the Dramatic Club's plays, and Sock and Buskin themselves will soon be here. "Let's Get Married" and "The Three Strangers" were written by Harvard men and will be played by Harvard and Radcliffe students. They are, therefore, truly representative of Harvard. And so the University should give all the encouragement it can to the work of the club. If in past years undergraduates have stayed away from the plays for fear of being bored, we assure them that such a fear has never been realized. If they have been harrowed...
...sphere of life, the man is abler in proportion as he can express himself more clearly and fluently in his mother tongue. The absence of a course in English. Composition which C men in English A can take during their Sophomore year is a gap which should be filled; let the average man feed upon jam if he likes...
...Dramatic Club has chosen "Let's Get Married," a farce by E. L. Beach '13, for its fall production. The play is built around a number of couples who conflict in their arrangements to elope. Two college chums, who have gone to the home of one of them, suddenly decide that they will marry the girls of their choice. It so happens that the sister of the chief figure has also arranged an elopement on the same evening with her fiance. The situations that follow, with a humorous mix-up of couples and motor cars, furnish adequate means...