Word: schoenberger
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Winthrop's John Hey took the 157-lb. match from Bob Schoenberg of Eliot to score the Puritan's only win. Dave Royce of Lowell pinned Kirkland's Marshall Berman in 1:45 of the second period to win the 123-lb. title...
...class John Cole and Bob Wilbur, both of Eliot, will square off in the first match. Dennis Ury of Adams House will meet last year's champ, Bill Schoeberlin of Eliot House, in the second match. In the 157 lb. division, Bob Schoenberg of the Elephants will meet Leverett's Ray Gallo and John Hey of Winthrop will face Burton Hersh of Dunster. In the 167 lb. pairings, Charley Harding of Lowell House will meet Jeff Ball of the Funsters, and Bill Miller of Dunster will wrestle Ken Swan of Kirkland...
...railway station, from which it is "possible to get to any destination in the shortest possible time . . ." He adds, "It became stale . . . not only because later composers abused its sensational nature but also because as a harmonic device it represents a line of least resistance." ¶ Schoenberg's once highly controversial twelve-tone system is recognized as a technique of worldwide significance in 20th century composition...
...Schoenberg: Gurre Lieder (chorus, orchestra and soloists conducted by Rene Leibowitz; Haydn Society, 3 LPs). Lush, early work-written before his atonal period-by the late Austrian composer in a performance that is not likely to be surpassed for precision and clarity...
...Roger B. Lustrand, a bachelor, "having discovered that most of the children on his Christmas list possess large collections of such records as Quacky Clarinet and Otto the Ophicleide*. . . makes a habit of bringing them LPs of the most recondite sort of music: Schoenberg, neoclassic Stravinsky, or Varèse ... A few of the modern parents in Roger's circle actually rear their children on such music. For them, Lustrand thoughtfully provides a present of the Terry the Timpani variety, the most banal he can find, which inevitably becomes the favorite item in the nursery library...