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Topic: Philip Gould


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In the News (Sun 6 Dec 09)

  
  Put ethics before corporate sponsorship - Tess Kingham MP   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Philip Gould is a key mem- ber of the inner group of unelected advisors around Peter Mandelson and Tony Blair who now dominate strategic thinking at the top of the Labour Party.
Gould’s starting point is the idea that, in his words, the Labour Party has ‘betrayed the people’, not merely in the 1983 general election when he claims ‘it had declared war on the values, instincts and ethics of the great majority of decent, hard-working voters’, but throughout most of its history.
Gould inadvertantly makes clear that the real purpose of cooperation with the Liberals is not any supposed need to build a common front against the Tories — who are in their worst crisis this century with no signs of recovery.
www.poptel.org.uk /scgn/articles/9902/page7.html   (770 words)

  
 Harvard University Press/Barbaric Traffic/Reviews   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Philip Gould is Professor of English at Brown University.
Gould's next move is to argue with reference to what he calls "the commercial jeremiad" that the very ideological discourse of civilization and savagery is rooted in trade.
Gould presents excellent interpretations of the Christian sentiments of Phillis Wheatley, of the under-interpreted political context of Slaves of Algiers, of the expose of the slave ship by the Philadelphian Mathew Carey, and of the racialized ambivalence attached to the yellow fever panic of 1793 in Philadelphia.
www.hup.harvard.edu /reviews/GOUBAR_R.html   (584 words)

  
 D'you say you want a revolution?
Gould was genuinely horrified by both the rhetoric and the consequences of Thatcherism, its social divisiveness and its 'get rich quick mentality', and he was determined to do something about it.
Gould says that Labour had 'failed to understand that the old working class was becoming a new middle class: aspiring, consuming, choosing what was best for themselves and their families'.
Gould's basic claim is that he has broken this circle by first and foremost addressing the needs and the concerns of the better off, presumably because, politically, the less well off have nowhere else to go.
www.democraticsocialist.org.uk /ds41rev.htm   (1416 words)

  
 Philip Gould   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Philip was one of the original members of Young Talent Time when it debuted in April 1971.
Philip has won international recognition for his leading roles in a string of hit shows such as 42nd Street, Street Scene, Showboat, Oklahoma, South Pacific, HMS Pinafore, Buddy and Crazy For You.
Philip’s other stage credits include Nightclub Confidential, La Belle Helene, Regina, Dames at Sea, Don’t Dress for Dinner, Ten Little Indians, The Mummy’s Tomb and Canterbury Tales, as well as television appearances in The Royal Variety Show, The Children’s Royal Variety Show, Royal Command performances and the British academy awards.
www.youngtalenttime.com /philipgould.html   (344 words)

  
 UK's Blair Reels From Another Embarrassing Memo Leak -- 07/19/2000
Gould, who was involved in polling and research for Clinton's 1992 and 1996 campaigns, was a key architect of Labor's makeover as "New Labor" ahead of Blair's successful 1997 election.
Gould has been associated with the Labor Party for 14 years, and he introduced the concept of "focus group" research in which small groups of people are asked detailed questions in an attempt to understand voter attitudes to politicians and politics.
Gould came to prominence in 1995 after authoring a memo calling for the party to establish a "unitary command structure leading directly to the party leader" - in other words a more presidential-style leadership - a recommendation that at the time angered Labor-affiliated trade unions.
www.cnsnews.com /ViewPrint.asp?Page=\Politics\archive\200007\POL20000719c.html   (880 words)

  
 Philip Gould - documentary photographer in Louisiana
Philip Gould is a documentary photographer who has made the Louisiana his home and favorite subject for over two decades.
Gould has also published numerous books including Louisiana's Capitols -- The Power and the Beauty, Cajun Music and Zydeco, Louisiana -- a Land Apart, Les Cadiens d'Asteur -- Today's Cajuns, Rythmes du Monde Francophone, among others.
Gould was also honored recently for his documentary photography with the 1996 Louisiana Governor's Arts Award for Professional Artist of the Year.
www.tabasco.com /arts_pavilion/louisiana_artist/phillip_gould_about.cfm   (265 words)

  
 Amazon.co.uk: The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party: Books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Philip Gould, Labour's most prominent pollster of the last 10 years, is the master of the focus group and one of the key architects of the transformation of the Labour Party.
Philip Gould gives one the perfect insight into the world of New Labour: from the horrendous days of 1983 and Thatcherism up to the present day.
Gould's book is an insider account of New Labour's electoral strategy, written by a key political consultant to the party from the dog days of the 1980s to the electoral triumph of 1997.
www.amazon.co.uk /exec/obidos/ASIN/0349111774   (1075 words)

  
 Gould - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George Jay Gould I, (1864-1923) president of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad and the Western Pacific Railroad
George Jay Gould II (1888-1935) champion tennis player
This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Gould   (105 words)

  
 THE COMPANY HISTORY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Goulds of Dorchester was established in April 1902 by the grandparents of the present directors Roger, Stephen and Philip Gould.
Mrs Florence Gould was the driving force behind the company during the first fifty years and she, her husband and the family lived opposite the shop at number 42 High East Street.
Ronald and Arthur Gould took over the directing of the company, and it was as a result of their enthusiasm and vision that the foundations were laid for today’s successful family business.
www.gouldsstores.co.uk /hISTORY.htm   (1057 words)

  
 House of Commons - Science and Technology - Minutes of Evidence
Clearly through the early part of 1998 the shareholding community, we were advised through investors, had lost faith in terms of Mr Travers as Chairman of the company, and it was becoming difficult to raise capital finance, which is essential for our industry in terms of moving the company forward.
Dr Gould, you said that when you joined the company you were told that products were in late stage development.
Chairman: Dr Gould, we have got an unexpected division and the standing orders of the select committees are that you must adjourn when there is a division.
www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk /pa/cm199899/cmselect/cmsctech/332/9033109.htm   (2293 words)

  
 BBC News | UK POLITICS | New Labour's focused architect
Philip Gould is regarded as one of the most important architects of New Labour and one of Tony Blair's most influential advisers.
Mr Gould distils their comments into key phrases and insights, which are then used to help guide strategists efforts to draw up policies which will chime with the public mood.
And headlines were memorably hit when Mr Gould suggested to the perennially-bearded former health secretary Frank Dobson that he should shave his beard off.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/uk_politics/840542.stm   (259 words)

  
 Philip Gould, Natchitoches and Louisiana’s Timeless Cane River   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
This stunning gallery of photographs by Philip Gould, along with edifying articles, documents the varying cultures of the Cane River region, one of the state’s oldest and most historically French areas.
Gould celebrates the music, food, folklore, architecture, and landscape of this vibrant multiethnic community — which originated with a French planter and a former slave.
Philip Gould is a documentary and architecture photographer who has made Louisiana his home and favorite subject for nearly three decades.
www.lsu.edu /lsupress/Books/fall2002/books/Gould_Natchitoches.html   (446 words)

  
 Communication Training and Education - IABC Washington D.C. 2005 International Conference
As Europe’s leading strategist in politics and public affairs, Lord Philip Gould is a central figure in the modernization of the British Labour Party and advises Prime Minister Tony Blair on a regular basis.
Gould has served as strategic and polling advisor to the Prime Minister since 1994 and has unique insight on Blair’s communication and leadership approach.
Gould has conducted opinion leader research, focus gropus and quantitative polling in almost every country in Europe in the last year as well as in the U.S. and worldwide.
www.iabc.com /education/conf2005/10-62-260-00.html   (1765 words)

  
 Gould, Cajun Music and Zydeco   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Gould photographs many of the venues in which these musicians have performed, including El Sid O’s Club and Hamilton’s Place, in Lafayette; La Poussière and Mulate’s, in Breaux Bridge; and Tipitina’s, in New Orleans — not to mention Carnegie Hall.
Philip Gould first came to Louisiana in 1974, just as the revival of Cajun music and zydeco was beginning to take shape.
Philip Gould’s previous books of photographs are Les Cadiens D’Asteur/Today’s Cajuns, Louisiana: A Land Apart, The Louisiana Houses of A. Hays Town and Louisiana Faces: Images from a Renaissance.
www.lsu.edu /lsupress/Books/1992/Gould_Cajun_Music.htm   (384 words)

  
 Erie Railroad Biography - Philip Gould   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Born in South Owego, New York, on March 14, 1841, Philip K. Gould went to school in winter and worked in the summer until he was 20 years of age.
He was then transferred to the Susquehanna Division, where he began to fire in 1871, being promoted to engineer in 1881, and is now pulling No. 86, the fast freight.
Gould was married on March 20, 1872, to Miss Helen Edson, of Corning, New York, and has been a member of the B. of L. since August, 1887.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~sponholz/biopgould.html   (197 words)

  
 New Orleans Magazine : Capitol assets. (photographer Philip Gould photographs the capitols of Louisiana)(Interview) @ ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The answering machine in Philip Gould's Arnaudville, Louisiana home first greets the caller in English and then in Cajun French.
I think at least I learned a sense of cultural and geographic curiosity, and a very strong sense of wanderlust." It was this wanderlust that brought him to Louisiana in the mid '70s, and now he calls the state home.
This month, a collection of Gould's photographs from his latest book "Louisiana's Capitols: The Power and the Beauty" will be on display in the Prints and Drawings Galleries of the New Orleans Museum of Art.
static.elibrary.com /n/neworleansmagazine/september011995/capitolassetsphotographerphilipgouldphotographsthe/index.html   (240 words)

  
 Philip Gould -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Philip Gould -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Philip Gould, Baron Gould of Brockwood is a (The people of Great Britain) British political adviser closely linked with (Click link for more info and facts about The Labour Party) The Labour Party and (British statesman who became prime minister in 1997 (born in 1953)) Tony Blair.
He was strategy and polling advisor to the party in the run-up to the (Click link for more info and facts about 1997 general election) 1997 general election.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/P/Ph/Philip_Gould.htm   (112 words)

  
 Philip Fruytiers (1610 - 1666) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Philip Fruytiers first studied humanities at the Jesuit College in Antwerp.
Philip Gilbert Hamerton, The Sylvan Year by Philip Gilbert Hamerton (London: Seeley, Jackson, and Halliday, 1876), 1876
Philip Gilbert Hamerton, The Art of the American Wood-Engraver by Philip Gilbert Hamerton (New York: Charles Scribner*s Sons, 1894), 1894
wwar.com /masters/f/fruytiers-philip.html   (349 words)

  
 BBC NEWS | Politics | Philip Gould: What 'permanent campaign'?
But Philip Gould, Tony Blair's polling adviser, says they have got it wrong.
Philip Gould is strategic polling adviser to the prime minister and author of The Unfinished Revolution (Little, Brown).
Disclaimer: The BBC will put up as many of your comments as possible but we cannot guarantee that all e-mails will be published.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/hi/uk_politics/2499061.stm   (1342 words)

  
 Blurred vision from atop the greasy poll
Even now, when Blair has a positive rating of 84 per cent, Gould is having his regular sessions with hand-picked swing voters, testing their reactions.
For Gould, Labour has become the party of ideas while the Tories are just pathetic, he thinks.
According to Gould, the Tories must shave off the vote-losing barnacles, without abandoning their principles.
www.telegraph.co.uk /htmlContent.jhtml?html=/archive/1998/10/26/tlbor26.html   (812 words)

  
 BBC - collective - Philip Gould
Philip Gould's reviews and conversations are linked to from this page.
Links to other pages that Philip Gould publishes on Collective will appear here.
Philip Gould's latest weblog entry will appear here.
www.bbc.co.uk /dna/collective/U1577144   (330 words)

  
 Philip Marlowe in Film, Television and Radio
Robert Altman's quirky, rabble-rousing 1973 ode to Chandler's immortal Philip Marlowe is either a grievous insult, or a perfect update, depending on where you stand.
Philip Carey, a big, tough and usually watchable actor, would seem to have been a decent choice to play Marlowe in 1959.
Carey's Marlowe differed from the books in at least two (and probably more) ways in that he sported a scar on one cheek and apparently had a marina apartment and his own boat.
www.thrillingdetective.com /marlow2.html   (2101 words)

  
 2 Reviews for Philip Gould, The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party
Philip Gould, The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party
Philip Gould, The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party - From an historical point of view, this is extremely interesting reading.
Philip Gould, The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party is a very good book, which highlights Labour's inadaquecy in the early days to adapt to change, to recognise a new emerging middle class, and failing to understand what was good for the public.
www.reviewcentre.com /reviews-all-33745.html   (164 words)

  
 Philip Gould Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
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www.karr.net /search/encyclopedia/Philip_Gould   (147 words)

  
 Alibris: Philip Gould
The photographs are accompanied by passages culled from a variety of sources that broaden the reader's understanding of Cajun life.
This photographic celebration of an arts renaissance that is sweeping Louisiana captures in images and words the personalities of not only the artisans but the ordinary people who inform the art through their daily rhythms.
Berry compliments Gould's images with an essay that explores the parallels between life and art.
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Philip_Gould   (781 words)

  
 Harvard University Press/Barbaric Traffic
This is the argument Philip Gould advances in Barbaric Traffic.
A major work of cultural criticism, the book constitutes a rethinking of the fundamental agenda of antislavery writing from pre-revolutionary America to the end of the British and American slave trades in 1808.
A challenge to the premise that objections to the slave trade were rooted in modern laissez-faire capitalism, Gould's work revises--and expands--our understanding of antislavery literature as a form of cultural criticism in its own right.
www.hup.harvard.edu /catalog/GOUBAR.html   (225 words)

  
 Discount Brass & Percussion: Morton Gould, John Philip Sousa CD CD - FindUsedCDs.com - Compare Music CD Prices.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
What stands out about Morton Gould's presentations of the splendid marches--especially those by Sousa--is his refusal to engage in the kind of excessive showmanship that so many others have resorted to in an effort to stir the soul.
As a young boy in 1952, I thoroughly enjoyed seeing the motion picture, Stars and Stripes Forever, the story of--you guessed it, John Philip, who was portrayed by the inimitable Clifton Webb.
Gould comes closer than anyone else I have ever heard in approximating the sound of Sousa in that movie I fell in love with 51 years ago.
wwww.findusedcds.com /090266125524/Brass__Percussion_Morton_Gould_John_Philip_Sousa_Morton_Gould_Ed/default.aspx   (379 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Louisiana Faces: Images from a Renaissance   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Phillip Gould has been an astute and quirky observer of Louisiana life for a couple of decades.
They stand as a testament to a place and its cultures-- a singular place at that, fiercely individual cultures to boot; a world and its folkways that still tenaciously remain undiluted into the general American homogeneity.
Gould's reportorial eye is keen and witty, his pictures are trenchant and lambent and are destined to imprint and remain.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/0807126217   (416 words)

  
 The Long Goodbye (1973)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Plot Outline: Detective Philip Marlowe tries to help a friend who is accused of murdering his wife.
Altman was on a roll by 1973 when he chose to film Leigh Brackett's screenplay of Raymond Chandler's "The Long Goodbye", which is considered his last great novel.
But Altman decided to transmogrify the novel's serious hard-nosed private eye, Philip Marlowe into a bumbling "Rip Van Winkle" type character who has figuratively been asleep for the last two decades and has missed all the psychedelia of the Sixties and the dark cloud descended in the Seventies.
www.imdb.com /title/tt0070334   (509 words)

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