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...reluctance to let Krag handle the musical direction of Fiorello! alone is due to her being a woman is "debatable," says Krag, and she cites her inexperience and the fact that Grant-in-Aid has worked with Posner before as more important factors. "Right now I'm much happier I did it with John. I learned so much from him....Fiorello! really worked. I got on really well with the orchestra and they thought I taught them...

Author: By Susan Cooke, | Title: Low-Key Conducting | 3/4/1975 | See Source »

...very against the general idea of it." Krag is getting credit for conducting Princess Ida, however, through a Music 91r, sponsored by Luise Vosgerchian, professor of Music. Vosgerchian is one member of the Music Department for whom Krag has high praise. "The more I can talk to her, the happier I'll be, because she just knows so much." Unlike some music professors, who approach music as literature, something purer when read than heard, "she can inspire anyone to love music...

Author: By Susan Cooke, | Title: Low-Key Conducting | 3/4/1975 | See Source »

Haldeman, who is wealthy, will await the appeals results in California, where he boats, plays tennis and is working on a book about the happier aspects of the years of the Nixon presidency. As he left the courtroom, he autographed a huge photo of Nixon for a group of youths. Ehrlichman, who claims to be $400,000 in debt already to his lawyers, came away with only one marginal break from Judge Sirica: if all appeals fail, he will be allowed to serve his new prison term concurrently with a 20-month minimum sentence for conspiracy in the Daniel Ellsberg...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WATERGATE: Paying for Serving Richard Nixon | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

Lawyers are happier with the ruling than psychiatrists. The president of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, Robert E. Cartwright, who believes the ruling is defined narrowly enough to be workable, dismissed the argument that patients will drop out of therapy or hide their intentions from therapists. "People in a violent frame of mind," said he, "don't read court decisions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Therapists and Threats | 1/20/1975 | See Source »

...group of people most of whom would unhesitatingly call you crazy if, one day, you wore two socks that didn't match to work. But when Hopkins proves to the audience that incomprehensibly different from our own as the boy's state of mind may be, he may be happier than we are, he's not calling forth a hypocritical reaction. What's happening is the most that ever happens in a theater, something that happens so infrequently in Broadway hits that it is always to be encouraged: Carried away by the eloquence of a speech, the virtuosity...

Author: By Paul K. Rowe, | Title: They Blind Horses, Don't They? | 1/9/1975 | See Source »

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