Word: duos
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...year he edges a little farther away. In the old days, he forgot to put articles in his English ("I had best steak of my life in Cleveland airport"); now he speaks it fluently. He has recently gone out of his way to make a second career as a duo pianist, sharing the billing with St. Louisian Malcolm Frager. And though still wryly withdrawn, he has lately come to admit that he likes Americans in general: "The applause is so nice; American audiences are so very, very warm...
Died. Russel Grouse, 73, the plumper half of Broadway's dynamic duo, Lindsay and Grouse, whose 32 years of cooperative writing produced such star-spangled hits as Life with Father, State of the Union and The Sound of Music; of pneumonia; in Manhattan. Grouse was a press agent in 1934 when Playwright Howard Lindsay asked his help on a rewrite of Cole Porter's Anything Goes. "We don't complement, we supplement each other," said Lindsay afterward, and the two went on to conceive twelve plays and musicals locked together in a room, the impeccable, reserved Lindsay...
...Angeles repeats, it will have to be with the same old faces, all a year older, Maybe Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale won't be hurt by their extra weeks of vacation, and the young pitchers can hold things together until the duo is ready to go. Phil Regan and 20-year old Don Sutton should add depth to last year's rather thin mound corps...
...Dynamic Duo. The reason that they feel they have a chance is that without them the Dodgers have a pitching staff that puts fear only into the hearts of teammates who must stand in the way of the batted balls. By week's end, the 1965 World Champions had lost their first six spring-training games, giving up 33 runs and 55 hits. The Dodgers have offered $105,000 to Koufax (who made $70,000 last season) and $95,000 to Drysdale (who made $75,000), are willing to haggle some more on money. On the other two issues...
Without the Dodgers, of course, Koufax and Drysdale cannot play baseball -unless they are traded. Nonetheless, the "dynamic duo," as sportswriters like to call them, so far are not budging. In fact, they claim that they are not even training, which means that they could not be ready to play until well past the season opener next month. Last week, in a display designed to prove that failure to eat out of O'Malley's hand does not mean starvation, they signed with Paramount Pictures to work in a movie (Drysdale as a TV commentator, Koufax...