Word: mayers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Brown: It's all in my new movie. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer...
...committee. The four of them were to form the committee, which would have power to select all plays for main stage performance. After a discussion with Robert Chapman, director of the Loeb, George Hamlin, associate director, and Daniel Seltzer, then on sabbatical and now associate director, they invited Timothy Mayer, president of the Harvard Gilbert and Sullivan Players, to join the committee as "best representing the dramatic community outside the Loeb." The five of them then prepared a one-page summary of their recommendations and asked President Mark H. Bramhall to call a meeting of the club...
Knowledge of the proposal had spread; the battle lines were already drawn before the meeting. Objections centered on the autonomy of the powerful executive committee. Speaking for the five students who proposed the plan, Mayer countered by saying that the Faculty would not accept an elective committee. Speaking for the five students who proposed the plan, Mayer countered by saying that the Faculty would not accept an elective committee. In a masterly speech, he described the poor condition of the club, agreed that free elections would be nice, but asserted that so long as the HDC wanted to work...
...they could haggle, through the Faculty directors of the Loeb, who are members of the committee. The proposed executive committee would select the plays and directors in consultation with the Faculty directors, who would have no vote. But the season still had to get the Faculty committee's approval. Mayer and company promoted the idea that the committee's self-perpetuating status, although unfortunate, was a necessary student concession to balance the grant of power they were to receive. But it was actually the Faculty directors who were using the fluid situation to consolidate their own influence. As before, they...
...other two shows produced next Fall will be Jan Giraudoux's The Duel of Angels, directed by Charles N. Ascheim II, 65-3, and William Shakespeare's The Tempest, directed by Timothy S. Mayer '66. Duel of Angels will run from Oct. 28-Nov. 3, and The Tempest...