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Show - BYU cast to present popular play here throughout, exhibiting the authors, au-thors, Moss Hart and George Kaufman at their sardonic best. The play will travel to the Orient under the direction of Dr. Harold I. Hansen, chairman of the BYU drama department. He has directed the Mormon Pageant at Hill Cumorah for the past 25 years and has acted on the professional stage. "The Man Who Came To Dinner," authored by the great comic spirits of America, is a broadway favorite, and a most popular title with nonprofessionals. nonprofes-sionals. This play finds delighted de-lighted audiences everywhere and has no other aim than the one in which it succeeds, so admirably, that of making fun-loving fun-loving folk laugh. I The M Men and Gleaners of I Kolob Stake are, going all out 1 to fill the Junior High School if auditorium Saturday evening, i for the much heralded play, j "The Man Who Came to Dinner." Din-ner." It is the play which the BYU cast is taking to the Far East to perform for servicemen audiences, leaving Feb. 2. The curtain rises at 8:30 3 3 p.m. and tickets may be pro-,99cured pro-,99cured at Anderson's, SOS, Brookside Market or at the rdoor, although there is no ."promise of seats available at the door. John Judd, who is directing publicity for the performance here, said there is an efficient cast of near professionals numbering num-bering thirteen, together with five others on the production end, and 13 technical staff members. All cast members have appeared in BYU productions produc-tions during the year. The play's wit is. reported to be gleamingly cutthroat |