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For several years the increasing scope and excellence of the Dramatic Club productions have been attracting consider-able attention and favorable comment outside the University. In Cambridge, however, students make up but a small part of its audiences. As home-made performances the Dramatic Club plays have to overcome the prejudice against unpaid good acting. In their present form they are amateur only in the fact that the club members stage, manage, and act the plays without compensation.
If, with the added attraction of a fifty-cent reduction in the price of tickets, "The Perverseness of Pamela" does not score a success, it will be a decided sign of the perverseness of undergraduate dramatic taste;--and in all probability there can be found something that will amuse even the "tired undergraduate."
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