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Word: blankly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

This year the results are often tonic, enjoyable and full of hope. Some shoots of real vitality have been emerging from the conceptual rubble of late modernism. Although there is nostalgia for the arid pieties of yesteryear-Peter Lodato's two blank 11-ft.-high rectangles at the Whitney, for instance-the general tone is unsystematic, quirkish and opposed to movements. So much so, indeed, that curatorial bias gets in the way. No one is likely to miss minimal art, but the total exclusion of color-field painting reflects as much bigotry as its absolute dominance did ten years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Quirks, Clamors and Variety | 3/2/1981 | See Source »

Mind gone blank, eh? That's not surprising, since the hoopsters have never--no joke--been in that position. That's since 1901, sports...

Author: By Mark H. Doctoroff, | Title: Ivy Hoop Title, Here? | 2/27/1981 | See Source »

With Northeastern constantly swarming in the crease when they pressured the Harvard zone, six of the seven following redlighters were either tip-ins or deflections which Tate had little chance to stop. The freshman goalie looked impressive at times, steering aside 32 Northeastern drives, frequently on point blank rebounds...

Author: By Wlliam A. Danoff, | Title: Huskies Rout Icewomen in Consolation; B.U. Captures Its First-Ever Beanpot | 2/21/1981 | See Source »

...produce a perfectly limpid art in which the world would be mirrored. There is everything in common between the relentless detail in which the boredom and pointlessness of Emma Bovary's life was built up, and the minutely articulated jumble of reflections behind the blank-faced nana in Manet's Bar at the Folies-Bergère, 1882. Both works, in a sense, point forward to the "objective," molecular constellations of dabbed light from which Seurat assembled his figures on the speckled lawn of the Grande Jatte. If the origins of one aspect of the avant-garde...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: A Farewell to the Future That Was | 2/16/1981 | See Source »

Like an artist making the first brush marks on a blank canvas, President Reagan last week set out the initial signs of his Administration's economic program. In three swift strokes, he decontrolled domestic oil prices, abolished the moribund Council on Wage and Price Stability, and placed a 60-day freeze on about 100 pending federal regulations that were issued in the final days of the Carter Administration. None of those steps will make an indelible imprint on the economy, but taken together they show that the new Administration intends to translate the program outlined during the presidential campaign...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taming the Monster | 2/9/1981 | See Source »

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