Word: malick
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Relations); Barry I. Forman, of Brookline (Philosophy); Jay A. Frogel, of Spring Valley, N.Y. (Astronomy); Stephen M. Gelber, of Los Angeles, Calif, (History and Literature); Allan S. Haley, of Nevada City, Calif, (Music); James H. Kettner, of Saginaw, Michigan (History); Kevin C. McMahon, of Scarsdale, N.Y. (History); Terrence F. Malick, of Bartlesville, Okla. (Philosophy); Alexander J. Nagel, of New York City (Mathematics); Barry F. O'Connell, of Moravia, N.Y. (History and Literature); Rand E. Rosenblatt, of Rome, Italy (Social Studies); Peter H. Weiner, of Los Angeles, Calif. (Social Studies), and Peter B. Windhorst, of Minneapolis, Minn. (History and Literature...
Also chosen were Curtis A. Hessler '66 of Leverett House and Woodland Hills, Calif., John W. Roper Jr. '66 of Lowell House and Twin Falls, Idaho, William F. White '66 of Winthrop House and Canton, Miss., and Terrence F. Malick '66 of Adams House and Bartlesville, Okla...
Andrew E. Newman '66 was elected president of Harvard Radio Broadcasting Co. Tuesday. Other new WHRB officers include Claude R. Canizares '66, vice-president; Edward L. Malick '66, treasurer; William J. Kasch '66, station manager and T'ing C. Pel '65, member of the administrative board at large. Christine Mercier '66 was elected clerk while Fred R. Levy '67 was appointed general mangaer of Harvard Radio Recordings...
Other actors, however, help to take the edge off the moralizing tone. As the coolie, Armand Pohan is properly oriental, properly obsequious, and even manages to sound natural when forced to mouth Marxist slogans. Rand Rosenblatt, the Judge, utters capitalist sophistries with deep-throated authority. And Terry Malick inadvertenly adds much-needed "ah-so" humor as a kimono-clad, Ernie Kovacs-like innkeeper...
...each other. His crew of patches works together as if it had been training in vaudeville for years; maybe the mechanicals don't laugh hard enough at those gay old parochial Elizabethan jokes abous syphilis and sonnets, but their sense of timing and horseplay is just superb. Terry Malick's Bottom, who "gleeks on occasion" with wonderfully oafish conceit, and Philip Traci's absurdly studied Quince are the true leaders of this lot, and a grining David Riggs makes an enchanting Thisby in the interlude...