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...pennants in its day, but for the first time in many years, some rebuilding may be in order. Yet Arledge, after nearly 20 years as news-division president, may not be on the field to guide the team to a comeback. Last week ABC announced that Arledge, 65, will ascend to the newly created post of chairman of the news division. Replacing him as president--and eventual successor--is David Westin, 44, currently president of the television-network group, but a man with no news experience. (Westin will report to Arledge--who previously reported to Westin. Both jobs were described...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PRESS: ABC YA, ROONE | 3/17/1997 | See Source »

...Europe, Johnson is preparing for an anticipated shift from government-run pension plans to direct-contribution retirement systems like the 401(k) plan common in the U.S. Managing such plans in the U.S. has given Fidelity access to some $120 billion and provided the means for it to ascend to the top tiers of finance. The biggest target for expansion is Britain, where Fidelity established a beachhead in the summer of 1995. It now manages $170 million in assets there; by 2010, Fidelity group president Robert Reynolds predicts, funds in Europe, including Britain, will roughly equal those in the current...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NED JOHNSON: CHAIRMAN, FIDELITY INVESTMENTS; BOSTON | 3/3/1997 | See Source »

...lies before us in an outlandish, semi-transparent gauze dress by one of Madonna's favorite designers, Jean-Paul Gaultier. Her legs are slightly spread, but the voyeuristic gratification usually afforded us by such images is denied by our recognition of the opaque, flesh-toned tights which ascend from a seam at Sherman's toes. Here, Sherman subverts the salacious gaze that Ritts' photographs of naked male or female models never fail to satisfy...

Author: By Scott Rothkopf, | Title: MFA Shows More Than Just a Pretty Face | 2/6/1997 | See Source »

Ballet and opera, now further removed than Shakespeare from popular appreciation, actually took much longer to ascend to the ranks of "high culture." Opera actually took root in very few countries. Audiences had difficulty accepting dialogue in song, much the trouble some audiences have with Evita. But where opera and ballet were accepted, they were accepted by the masses as popular culture. Opera and ballet were not "high culture...

Author: By Tanya Dutta, | Title: 'High' Culture Once Was Pop | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

...there was an ethical draw-back: the Church refused to marry or bury actors and dancers. Thus the frequency of early ballerinas that entered nunneries to repent in their later years. In America, ballet was considered immoral up to the 20th century. Only at that point did ballet ascend the ranks into "high culture...

Author: By Tanya Dutta, | Title: 'High' Culture Once Was Pop | 2/3/1997 | See Source »

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