Word: ronder
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Director Paul Ronder submitted three plays for the Fall of '62. But when he returned to Harvard at the end of the Summer, he had decided to do Long Day's Journey Into Night, which had not been on his original list. The rights to Long Day's Journey were unavailable, so Ronder chose Ulysses in Nighttown as an alternate; this the Faculty Committee rejected, calling it unfeasible...
Also chosen were: Mark H. Mullin, of Dunster House and Mount Carroll, Ill.; Joseph N. Onek, of Kirkland House and Forest Hills, N.Y.; John W. Price, of Quincy House and Fort Smith, Ark., Paul S. Ronder, of Adams House and Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Clarke R. Slater, of Quincy House and Cambridge; Jack R. Stauder, of Eliot House and Las Cruces...
John M. McKenzie, Cyrus D. Cantrell, Matthew D. Edel, Judd L. Kahn, Michael J. Piore, Peter W. Stanley, David G. Gullette, Steven M. Goldman, Paul S. Ronder, Michael D. Rohr, William I. Bennett, James J. Fox, William C. Taubman, and Martin Lampe also won scholarships...
...Faculty Committee on Theater met Tuesday and approved three undergraduate productions for the Loeb's main stage, plus a Poet's Theater offering. Accepted by the Committee were the Harvard Dramatic Club's two proposals: Ulysses in Nighttown, to be directed by Paul S. Ronder'62, and Synge's Playboy of the Western World, which will be staged by George Hamlin, assistant Director of the Loeb...
While time was running out, Charles W. Hayford '63, president of the HDC, and other club members, still felt obligated to put three shows on the boards, and urged Ronder to attempt a small-scale production. The director then selected Pirandello's Six Characters In Search of an Author, but cancelled his plans as he encountered difficulty in assembling an adequate cast and production staff...