Word: goldstein
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...reporting for this week's story was largely the responsibility of New York Bureau Correspondent Mary Cronin, who spent several days interviewing Gould at his Greenwich Village home. She also talked with Gould's mother Lucille. Researcher Patsy Beckert added further insight by interviewing his father, Bernard Goldstein, and people from his early show business days. West Coast Correspondents David Whiting and Martin Sullivan rounded out the report to Jay Cocks, who wrote the finished story, and Peter Bird Martin, who edited...
Elliott's father, Bernard Goldstein, had been a Broadway paper boy back in the old days when Eddie and Ida Cantor would come over after the final curtain of Whoopee at the New Amsterdam to buy a copy of the morning edition...
...done wrong. When his father would tire after tossing the boy in the air and catching him, little Elliott would say, "I sorry, Daddy," throw his arms around his father and give him a conciliatory kiss. At the height of World War II, when Elliott was 51, Goldstein was drafted into the Army. He promptly fractured an ankle, contracted pneumonia and spent eight months in the hospital with a collapsed lung. Lucille made ends meet by selling artificial flowers to neighborhood beauty shops, while Elliott, saddened and confused by his father's sudden departure, spent a lot of time...
Actually, the total number of employed people rose slightly last month, but 500,000 more started looking for jobs, which the economy could not provide. An unusually high proportion of the newcomers were women. They entered the labor force, explained Harold Goldstein of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, "either because the cost of living makes them want to earn more money or because of increasing unemployment of their husbands...
...Goldstein's bearish presence (6 ft., 210 lbs.) and avuncular manner shield a sternness that repels some students. He admits that he is not one "who wants to give everything the students ask for whenever they ask for it." Still, he has the overwhelming support of the faculty, including Pollak, who says that Goldstein is "one of the great men of American law." Another faculty member views him as "a big, strong, tough fellow who wants to do things, wants to move things." As dean, Goldstein will have ample opportunity to do just that...