Word: scarecrows
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Tickets for the three performances of "The Scarecrow" by Percy Mackaye '97, to be produced by the Harvard Dramatic Club on December 7,9 and 11, will go on public sale at noon today. They may be procured in Cambridge at the Co-operative and of S. Underwood '12, Holworthy 10; in Boston at Herrick's and the Jordan Hall box-office. The price of tickets is $1.50 and $1. The first two performances will be given in Brattle Hall, Cambridge, and the last, on December 11, at Jordan Hall in Rosten...
Tickets for the three performances of "The Scarecrow" by Percy MacKaye '97, to be produced by the Harvard Dramatic Club on December 7, 9, and 11, will go on public sale next Monday noon. They may be procured at the Co-operative and of S. Underwood '12, Holworthy 10, in Cambridge; and at Herrick's and the Jordan Hall box office in Boston. The price of tickets is $1.50 and $1. The first two performances will be given in Brattle Hall, Cambridge, and the last, on December 11, at Jordan Hall in Boston...
...Dramatic Club will hold its first rehearsal of its new play. "The Scarecrow," at 7.30 o'clock this evening in the Hasty Pudding Club Theatre. Due to Coach Trader's unavoidable absence, Mr. Percy MacKaye '97, the author of the play, will supervise the rehearsal. Mr. William Archer, the well-known English critic and author is expected to be present also...
...emotion that gradually becomes actual human love. Rachel throws over Richard, her betrothed, who challenges Ravensbane to a duel. In the third act, as the climax of a series of scenes, humorous on the surface, yet large with tragic significance, Ravensbane is suddenly confronted with his scarecrow self, in the the glass of Truth. At the beginning of the fourth act, he is found in the deepest agonies of despair, for his kindled spirit revolts at sight of himself, as he really is. He at last recognizes the fiend in Dickon, revolts from his tutelage, breaks the pipe whose smoke...
...present a play by an undergraduate which would, of necessity, be vastly inferior. The purpose of the Dramatic Club is to give good plays by Harvard men, be they in College or out. This purpose could not be better fulfilled than in the selection of Mr. MacKaye's "Scarecrow...