Word: talentedly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Barnum-Sized Bushel. As the first building completed in the 14-acre, $142 million Lincoln Center complex, Philharmonic Hall attracted to its stage last week a Barnum-sized bushel of musical talent. On opening night, Conductor Bernstein used not only the Philharmonic but also three choruses (the Juilliard, Schola Cantorum, and Columbus Boychoir) and twelve top-priced soloists, including Tenors Richard Tucker and Jon Vickers, Soprano Eileen Farrell and Mezzo-Soprano Shirley Verrett-Carter. The Philharmonic was followed in later programs by the Boston, the Philadelphia and the Cleveland orchestras, by the New York Pro Musica, the Juilliard String Quartet...
...remembered as a collector. Every top dealer on both sides of the Atlantic knows the bustling little (5 ft. 4 in.) figure with the torrent of enthusiasm. And scores of U.S. artists who are now prosperous and famous remember him as the man who had enough faith in their talent to buy their work before anyone else. For Hirshhorn never buys out of charity, nor does he depend on the advice of hired connoisseurs. He buys only what he likes-and what he likes is almost always the best...
Munro substituted freely throughout the contest, showing a depth of talent that should come in handy when the inevitable injuries start to mount. At inside left, Munro has Sewall and junior John Thorndike who played well yesterday until he was injured midway through the third period...
Columbia entertains Brown in the only all Ivy game. The Bruins upset Colgate last week (a event which caused a minor riot among Brown's unbelieving but deliriously happy student body), but they don't appear to have the talent to upand Columbia. The game's chief interest will probably be the performance of highly touted Lion quarterback Archie Roberts. If he is as good as they say, Columbia will win by three or more...
...Bohrod is concerned, abstractionism has had it. Says he: "There never was any real love for the idiom, and now the art world is bored to tears with it. Not. of course, the abstract painters themselves, who with a minimum outlay of talent and energy have had their fun for a long time, . nor the dealers who have made money out of it. nor those museum people who have committed themselves so deeply that no graceful or easy exit is open to them...