Word: sutro
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Three one-act plays, Pinski's "Cripples," Sutro's "A Marriage has been arranged," and Brody's "Rannzel," will be given by the Harvard and Radcliffe Menorah Societies tonight at 8 o'clock in the Agassiz Theatre. A reception in the living room of Agassiz House will follow the plays...
David Pinski's "Cripples" will be among those presented, and the cast will include the following: A. J. M. Abramson '29, L. T. Hurwitz '30, S. W. Schwarz 2G., Saul Silverman '30 and Norman Winer '29. The second play will be one by Sutro, called "A Marriage Has Been Arranged." In the cast there will be Fay Goell of Radcliffe and R. M. Cushing '28. The cast of the last play, "Rapunrel" by Alter Prody, will be made up of A. J. M. Abramson '29, Bertha Offenbach, and Miriam Berkman...
...heart spontaneously returns to normal size. Heretofore doctors had known that anemic hearts grow large (apparently to drive the thinned blood more copiously through the body), but had never observed the lessening in size. Here again Dr. Weiss refused to believe his senses, and consulted with Dr. Bernard Sutro Oppenheimer of Manhattan, chief of Montefiore Hospital's medical service. Dr. Oppenheimer also was surprised, but confirmed the discovery...
...Nelson Stensland '28 of Chicago; properties, Donald Kuinm Howard '28 of Edgewood Pa.; James Carey Thomas Flexner '29 of New York City: stage, Marvin Fiske Burt '28, of Freeport, Ill.; George Wing Dryer '27 of Birmingham, Ala.; electrical, Murry Nelson Fairbank '28 of Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y.; George Sutro Lowenstein '28 of Brookline; Francis Neilson Rich '29 of West Orange, N. J.; publicity, John Goldsmith Phillips '29 of Muskogee, Okla.; Richard Thomas Sherman '28 of Algona, la.; acting, Clarence Wesley Dupertuis '29 of Somerville; Fredric Hill Rahr '29 of Brookline; costume, George Wales Brewster '29 of Boston; Philip Ives...
...performance of Mr. Clive in the title role. "Uncle Anyhow"; the comedy by Alfred Sutro at the Copley Theatre this week, is hardly worth the attention of the Boston public. The other members of the cast offer sincere and finished portrayals of the lesser parts, a comment scarcely necessary in a discussion of the Copley Players, but the play itself is an inconsequential thing. Mr. Clive is so delightful, however, that he not only saves the piece from mediocrity but even makes it rank as one of the most enjoyable offerings of the winter at the Copley...