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Good Is Modern. At 80, Goldberg took up sculpture. He approached his new career in a satiric frame of mind. Disgusted with the avantgarde, Goldberg, who was haunted by modernity, wrote recently in Esquire: "Today you buy a bucket of paint and you're an artist, caress a microphone and you're a singer, gyrate your crotch and you're a dancer, take off your clothes and you're an actor, dump a ton of cement on the floor and you're a sculptor. Doing your own thing is all right for a genius...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Death of a Master Machinist | 12/21/1970 | See Source »

...What did Sal eat more of than she put in the bucket...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NOSTALGLA Can You Name The Bobbsey Twins? | 11/18/1970 | See Source »

...music insists on gut-bucket lyrics that embody the simple, almost parabolic forces behind rural southern culture. In the liquor-making, nigger-hating, broad-fucking, communities that spawned country music they wanted to hear it straight and with guts and if that meant doing away with qualifying, complicating details that...

Author: By Robert Crosby, | Title: The Gut-Bucket Sound And a Little Slice of Hick | 10/19/1970 | See Source »

...just another Friday morning in the handsome executive offices of a large East Chicago aluminum company. Sharon, the receptionist, glanced up from her switchboard to see "a nice-looking man, about 35, dressed in slacks, a lightweight jacket and sports shirt." He was carrying a bucket-but then, as Sharon explained, "people come in all the time with samples to analyze...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Kane County Pimpernel | 10/5/1970 | See Source »

...visitor handed her an envelope. "Would you please see that the president gets this?" he asked. Then he stepped back and announced: "Here's a gift for all of you from the Aurora area." Across the gleaming black slate lobby floor sloshed the contents of his bucket: a bouillabaisse of river muck and the carcasses of fish, a rat and a bird. The Fox, mysterious Scarlet Pimpernel of pollution, had struck again. His note explained all. A long doggerel rewrite of Coleridge's Kubla Khan, it ended with the lines: "We have begged you for mercy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Kane County Pimpernel | 10/5/1970 | See Source »

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