Word: stagings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...novice must fly a mile in this and bring it to a landing with the engine shut off. The fifth class is the same machine, but with it the aviator must learn to turn corners and execute other more difficult moves. Vol-planing is attempted in the next stage of development, which calls for a Caudron biplane or a Bleriot monoplane. A height of 2000 feet is attained. Next the candidate takes an 80-horsepower model and flies as far and as high as he wishes. He is now ready for his brevet, for which he must undergo three tests...
Four one-act plays from the 47 Workshop are to be produced in the near future by the Little Playhouse of St. Louis, a theatre in size and purpose similar to the Bandbox Theatre in New York. Among the plays are two which were first given stage presentation by the Dramatic Club, "Good News," and "Five in the Morning." "Good News," by J. F. Ballard '12, later a winner of the John Craig Prize and a member of the Graduate Advisory Committee of the club, was produced in the spring of 1913 together with two other notable plays. "Five...
Competitions for acting, business managership, publicity, stage, and electrical departments will be outlined by the president, J. W. D. Seymour...
...last act takes place in an ante-room in Hampton Court Palace. King Henry is here seen at his best and kept the audience in high good humor over his buffoonery. The act closes with the heroine in the hero's arms and a ridiculous clap-trap stage device showing the Celtic shores appearing through the royal tapestry on the walls...
...Heart o' th' Heather", which opens its second week at the Plymouth this evening, is a clean wholesome comedy of Scottish life with the estimable George MacFarlane in the role of a rollicking soldier of fortune. Although he has had considerable experience on the concert stage, Mr. MacFarlane is comparatively new to the drama, his role of the "Laird" in Trilby, seen here last fall, being his first venture in that line. As yet he has attained no great degree of merit as an actor, but his personality is so pleasing that one is inclined to overlook his histrionic short...