Word: loeb
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...arts, drama has probably fared best. Drama has the benefit of attractive and commodious headquarters, used exclusively for theatrical productions. The Loeb Drama Center is equipped with two theaters (the main stage seats about 550 and the experimental theater about 90), scene and costume shops, offices, and a regular professional staff. The Loeb Ex (experimental theater) is an improvised, intimate theater which is used weekly for the off-beat and smaller productions. Last year, the Loeb Ex was used for the performance of two original musicals written and composed by a Harvard freshman and performed by his classmates. While Harvard...
...Loeb Drama Center introductory meeting. The freshman avant garde will turn out en masse for this meeting. Because of a lack of interest and a general overproduction of shows freshmen can advance fast in Harvard dramatic circles. But most likely half the group that is kneeling on the theater rug in this jam-packed meeting is there simply to sign up to be ushers and get into the productions for free...
...young Bronfman has told investigators he is "sure" that one of his abductors was a woman. He recalls being pushed into the back seat of a car when the kidnapers seized him outside the unoccupied home of his mother, Ann Loeb Bronfman, in suburban Purchase, N.Y., in the early morning hours of Aug. 9. He is certain that Lynch sat beside him on the seat, and he believes a third person was seated next to Lynch. Bronfman thinks that it was a woman because at one point, the car stopped, someone got out, and he heard the rap of high...
Members of the family, learning the news, quickly gathered in Yorktown. Edgar Bronfman was firmly in charge. Flying back to be at his side was his former wife of some 20 years, Ann Loeb Bronfman, who had divorced him in 1973. Also present were three of their five children: Holly, 18, Matthew, 16, and Adam, 12. The fourth, Edgar Jr., 20, joined the family temporarily, then moved into his father's Fifth Avenue apartment to follow events from there. All through Saturday, there was no word from the kidnapers...
...each with his or her own memories, hopes, disappointments, etc. The play is certainly dated, but that's part of its charm. And this production sets the right tone, with a set that could serve as a museum model for a down-and-out bar in 1939. At the Loeb tonight and tomorrow and Monday through Saturday at 8 p.m., except Saturdays at 5 and 9. Tickets are $5.50 and $6.50 for normal people, $1 less for Harvard affiliates, and $3.75 for students who get there half an hour before showtime...