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Tonight and for two days following, the Dramatic Club produces in Cambridge those four plays which it has developed to a high state of perfection. The ability of the Club is remarkable; its productions represent the final culmination of a long period of exacting and uninspiring work.
The plays of the Dramatic Club have always been welcomed before for their intrinsic worth and the high quality of their presentations. This year, according to advance reports, will prove no exception to the rule. The plays which have been selected are interesting in subject-matter and adequate in treatment. The standard of acting, the general quality of the production, can best be measured by those who attend tomorrow night.
For those who are expecting calls to join military units in preparation for war, the plays may prove a replica of the great ball in Brussels on the eve of the battle of Waterloo. If they do, if war is declared, may the Dramatic Club's endeavors prove an omen for us as the festivities at Brusseis did for the British in 1814.
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