Word: goldberg
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Councillor Bernard Goldberg introduced an amendment to the Vellucci order asking Cambridge police, University police, and "security forces" from Radcliffe and M.I.T. to form a committee "to review the various and sundry problems that exist in the Harvard Square area...
Grindle and Aides David Goldberg, 34, Sally Saltonstall, 23, niece of the Massachusetts Senator, and Caroline Williams, 23, work out of a barnlike two-story building in Portland, embellished with huge portraits of Lodge as a combat officer, at the U.N., with Ike, and with a wounded G.I. in Viet Nam. The Lodge organizers throw fancy titles around to volunteer workers with abandon, which inspires pride and makes for impressive letterheads. Explains Goldberg: "We don't care what they call themselves. Anyone who wants a title can have...
That left the fellow whom the Portland Journal sniffed at and called "the Mail-Order Bride." According to the Oregonian's poll, Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge still led the field with 40% of the vote. Lodge's Oregon campaign chief, David Goldberg, sent out a broadside promotion mailer to 353,000 Republicans, and within a week got back 22,000 pledge cards. "That's already a better percentage than we had in New Hampshire," he said happily. Thus, barring a last-minute surge on someone's part, it still looked as if Oregon were about...
Maybe Better. In the early '30s, the comics themselves began to turn serious, and Goldberg's Lala Palooza, Boob McNutt and company fell out of favor. In 1938, with some reluctance, their creator turned editorial cartoonist for the old New York Sun and, ultimately, for Hearst's New York Journal-American. The assignment did not suit him, although he showed occasional flashes of style. One of his best cartoons, done in 1950 after the Russians had accused the U.S. of starting the Korean war, was deliberately run upside down. It was a portrait of Stalin exhibiting...
...hate to say it," says Goldberg, "but political cartooning was kind of an interlude, and I'm relieved that it's over. I can't stay mad. I got a little tired of standing on a pedestal and preaching." This decision to move on was expedited by visits to Manhattan art galleries with his elder son, Thomas Reuben, 45, an abstract painter. Goldberg recalls the sculpture he saw there with undiminished astonishment. "Some of it was literally junk-old car parts, old tires. I said to myself, 'Maybe I can do better...