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Word: abstractedly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Rosen said that student were dissatisfied with the Big Green because it was too abstract. "The force of tradition is a big part of our problem be said adding. We have a lot of school spirit and the students want a distinct rallying point...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., | Title: Indian Symbol Dispute Resurfaces at Dartmouth | 11/23/1983 | See Source »

...Krasner is finally getting her due, and the power of received ideas in American taste is so strong that not too many people sense what the due is. Everyone, of course, has heard of her late husband, Jackson Pollock, the mythic hero (one still reads such inflationary phrases) of abstract expressionism. But Krasner's painting is less well known, the proof being that she is only now getting her first full retrospective. Curated by Art Historian Barbara Rose, it opened late last month at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts: 152 paintings and drawings, the distillation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Bursting Out of the Shadows | 11/14/1983 | See Source »

Krasner always wanted to paint big pictures, ones that stretched arm and eye, surfaces that rose to the challenge of scale that was embedded in abstract expressionism. But she was able to find a way of rapid gestural drawing that did not depend on the skeining and overlay of thrown paint from edge to edge that Pollock had perfected. It was the brush that counted for her, and when she did fling or dribble liquid pigment on the surface, it only looked like a mannerism. But her sense of drawing was so ingrained that she could cover a huge surface...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Bursting Out of the Shadows | 11/14/1983 | See Source »

...purely a theorist. "We have never before awarded the prize for contributions of such pure basic research," said Assar Lindbeck, chairman of the five-member Nobel committee. Notes Bent Hanson, chairman of the Berkeley economics department: "Gerard Debreu is an economist's economist. His work is very abstract, very fundamental. But everyone in the profession quotes him and must demonstrate that they know his work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nobel Prize Winner Gerard Debreu: An Economist's Economist | 10/31/1983 | See Source »

...constitutional rights of American schoolchildren, then why not let petty authoritarian dictators paternally cattle prod their "child-like" political dissidents. That suck logic seens so natural rather than perversely twisted underlines a certain national moral psychosis. A student's right is a distinct set of projections, not just an abstract concept for memorization and regurgitation on the civics exam. If schools and the courts forget that, they can easily produce the most mathematical geniuses and moral fools--all with the discipline to make 1984 ring true...

Author: By Clark J. Freshman, | Title: Civil Rights in the Classroom | 10/26/1983 | See Source »

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