Word: goulding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Philharmonic's Maestro Leonard Bernstein, 43, in his latest outburst of podium pedagogy. Answer: "Sometimes one, sometimes the other, but almost always the two manage to get together"-except in the case that prompted Lenny's musings: the latest Philharmonic appearance of intractable but talented Pianist Glenn Gould, 29. After explaining to the 2,800 in the audience that he disapproved of Gould's interpretation of Brahms's D Minor but would defend to the death an artist's right to experiment, Lenny democratically beckoned the intense Canadian to the stage. Gould-who considers...
...LAURENCE GOULD JR. San Marino, Calif. Reader is wrong. Says Mayor Yorty: "I certainly favor such a department...
Harry Bogen (Elliott Gould) is a fox in a chicken coop. He breaks his fellow shipping clerks' strike, raids his former employer's staff to start his own dress firm, ditches his loyal girl friend for a platinum-pated actress, rooks his partners out of their life savings, and check-bounces the firm into bankruptcy to keep his sleek chick's wrists warm (with bracelets). But most of the time Harry is too homey to be unwholesome. He rushes home to Mama (Lillian Roth), counts on her for cooking, and sweeps her into an Oedipalsy song...
Emancipated Tastes. The Goulds are gentle people, and they came to the Journal in a gentler time. Both Iowa-born, they met as students at the University of Iowa, were married in New York in 1923, and embarked on careers in journalism and writing. Man's Estate, a play they wrote together, ran 56 performances on Broadway in 1929-and paid for their 120-acre farm, Bedensbrook, near Hopewell, NJ. In 1934 Bruce Gould, who had already sold eight stories to the Saturday Evening Post, one of the magazines printed by Curtis Publishing Co. in Philadelphia, joined the Post...
...Journal's new editor, 33-year-old Curtiss M. Anderson, was hand-picked by the Goulds as their successor. A graduate of the University of Minnesota ('51), he spent nine years with Des Moines's Meredith Publishing Co. (Better Homes and Gardens). He joined the Journal in 1960 as an associate editor, moved up to managing editor last year. Well aware that he will have his hands full regaining the magazine's lost diadem, crew-cut Curt Anderson (he is now letting his hair grow out) is keeping his own counsel. "The Journal's basic...