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Word: designate (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Graduate School of Design faculty voted 13-12 Wednesday to delay until next fall its resolution of the seven-year-old charges of a former faculty member that the GSD did not rehire him in 1969 for personal and political reasons...

Author: By Charles E. Shepard, | Title: GSD Delays Its Debate Of Hartman's Allegations | 5/28/1976 | See Source »

Whatever the material or the subject, the sense of design never falters. Nor the painstaking labor required of kimono makers. The most difficult technique was known as sō-hitta, or overall tie-dyeing. The word suggests rich hippies in blotchy homemade tank tops, but the Japanese craftsmen of the Edo period raised this system of knotting and immersion-dyeing to a most taxing pitch of subtlety. The furisode ("swinging sleeves" kimono), with its design of a lone pine tree running up the back, required hundreds of thousands of knots, each placed with fanatical precision so that the untied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Furisode and So-Hitta | 5/24/1976 | See Source »

Hard-drinking and imperious (he once stoned an offending electric sign because it ruined his view), Aalto blazed into prominence in the 1930s. His first celebrated works were a library in Viipuri and a tuberculosis sanatorium in Paimio. Their design was lean, clean, direct and even witty; in Aalto's hands, the meeting of an undulating ceiling and a wall could result in a line as playful and zesty as a Miro sketch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Man at the Center | 5/24/1976 | See Source »

...what Kramer does as well in "Haiku." Sitting on stage, cellist Ron Heifetz bows the trills of a Bach suite to no more than a half-dozen dance motifs. The choreography is skeletal, easily divisible into separate parts, and echoes the simplicity of the music's deep-down design...

Author: By Susan A. Manning, | Title: At the Still Point | 5/18/1976 | See Source »

...approach to unemployment: he's for the Humphrey-Hawkins bill. If ever there was a design for fascism, that's it. Fascism was really the basis for the New Deal. It was Mussolini's success in Italy, with his government-directed economy, that led the early New Dealers to say, "But Mussolini keeps the trains running on time." The Humphrey-Hawkins bill calls for the same kind of planned economy, and that would mark the end of the free marketplace in this country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: I've Had a Bum Rap | 5/17/1976 | See Source »

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