Well, perhaps it is because I'm jumping the gun and not waiting for the GCC / GLIBC files to go stable, but...
Loki99
You seem to missunderstand. There will be no need to mention it explicitly, since glibc automatically gets updated when you follow the instructions from the GCC update guide. The appropriate glibc will be made stable when gcc-4.1.1 becomes stable so there will be no need to unmask it.
Well, what seemed strange, which is why I started raising the question, is that when I emerged GCC, I did NOT see it pull down the GLIBC with it.
There were a couple of other libraries that Portage wanted to pull down, but not GLIBC. I also didn't see GLIBC listed among the files when I started doing the "emerge -eav system". I'll admit I didn't watch it every minute

but it didn't pull down the new GLIBC that I saw.
As further evidence, my observation has been that Portage doesn't pull down a file if you already have it (and haven't changed use flags or other stuff that would make it need to do a recompile) but once I unmasked it, portage did pull down the new sys-libs/glibc-2.4-r3, and showed it as a NEW file. (OTOH, just now when I repeated the command that got it for me last time, it said I had zero bytes to d/l)

Thus, AS CURRENTLY WRITTEN, following the GCC General Upgrade procedure apparently does NOT

upgrade the library, at least not as far as I've gotten in the procedure. According to my bash history, I've followed the process as given up through re-compiling system, but not world.
Given that, I assume that I need to do something to get the box to use the new GLIBC, but I'm not sure just what. Any Ideas
And if you are running testing, you are expected to know what you are doing.
It does help doesn't it?

I consider myself an intermediate level user, not a guru, and as such, I generally don't try to do testing level stuff. I went for this because I read that it was about to become a reccomended procedure, and wanted to get it over with before I downloaded any additional packages and thus made the process even longer. If you look back in the thread, you'll notice that I was very nervous about this, and asked several times about 'gotchas' in the process. I was repeatedly reassured by people who's tags should have indicated that they did know what they were talking about, that it was a straightforward matter of just following the instructions... When I tried to do that, I found a few holes (like this one).
Gooserider
Box 1: P2 Celeron 400, 320mb RAM, 80GB HD, Cirrus Logic 4614/22/24 sound card, ATI 3D RAGE PRO AGP 1X/2X (sound & video onboard)
Box 2: AMD Athlon 2500+ 512mb RAM, 80GB HD, Gigabyte K7 Triton (Nvidia) mobo, GeForce2 video