Word: gustav
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...this, young (35) Dr. Progoff, now practicing "depth psychology" in Manhattan, attempts a bold task: reconciling the often violently discordant views of modern psychology's major prophets-Sigmund Freud, Alfred Adler, Carl Gustav Jung and Otto Rank. Says Progoff: "When we make allowances for the areas where they overlap, repeat each other, or say the same thing in different words, and when we balance out the personal facts that led to undue emphasis in one direction or another, there remains a fundamental con-isistency in the development of [their] thought and practice." As Progoff sees it, Freud took...
Joining her for the first part of the recital was violinist David Hurwitz. After a nicely balanced performance of a Bach aria with obbligato, they presented Gustav Holst's Four Songs for Voice and Violin. Holst wrote these to please a friend who said she liked to sing as she fiddled, but on presenting them to her the composer was told, "I can only hum when I play." As long as two performers are necessary, Holst could have wished none better than Hurwitz and Miss Smith to present his simple, modal settings...
Alexander, Gustav O.; Borkenhagen, David M.; Boulris, Chester J.; Cappiello, David L.; Crosby, Robert S.; Cullen, Albert F., Jr.; Dashen, Roger F.; David, Robert T.; Eliades, Peter G.; Evarts, Prescott, Jr.; Framke, Carl A. III (Captain); Garrison, John R.; Halaby, Samuel, Jr.; Hauge Christopher W.; Hughes, Donald E.; Kaltreider, Henry B.; Keohane, Harold J.; King William B.; Kirk, Paul G., Jr.; Leamy, Charles D.; Marmor, Theodore R.; McDonald, Romeo M.; Pohlig, Bradley R.; Robbins, Theodore B.; Righter, John F.; Rhodes, C.; Sakowitz, Robert T.; Soderberg, Jon R.; Vultaggio, Phillip A.; Waterman, George H. III; Walker, Chauncey L.; Barber, John...
Died. Emma Jung, 73, wife of pioneer Psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung (TIME, Feb. 14), and onetime vice president of the C. G. Jung Institute in Zurich; of a heart attack; in Kiisnacht, Switzerland...
Magic Flute (1791) has Vienna witnessed the premiere of a major opera by an Austrian composer, but under such directors as Gustav Mahler, Richard Strauss, Clemens Kraus, it provided a unique climate for performance, fusing Italian fire, Teutonic thunder and Slavic melancholy into a mellowness all its own. For years, Vienna considered itself Richard Wagner's second Bayreuth; it took Bizet's Carmen and Massenet's Manon to its heart after Paris had cold-shouldered them...