Word: resnick
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Robert Resnick, president of the Association of Student Activities which reprimanded "thursday" for the article last Friday, said yesterday he was very surprised at the faculty decision...
Once a debtor has declared bankruptcy, he cannot do so again for six years. So lenders frequently offer new credit to a bankrupt, knowing that their bills cannot be canceled again soon. Last December David and Sally Resnick of Des Plaines, Ill., filed for a straight bankruptcy; before their case could even be heard, a department store to which they owed several hundred dollars that will never be paid sent them a shiny new charge card...
Charles H. Resnick '48, a Raytheon vice president and an alumni representative on the ACSR, abstained from the ACSR vote on the disclosure resolutions because of his affiliation with Raytheon and Harvard's ownership of Raytheon stock...
...more-fortunately. In isolation, Resnick's work has developed steadily, and it now stands at an exhilarating pitch of concentration. He may not be Monet's follower, but his pictures do bear similarities to the late Monet lily ponds, not only in format -they are usually long, narrow rectangles, which drench the viewer in a field of color-but also in their light and density of surface. Resnick is a quite traditional painter, to the extent that he works in intimate, stroke-by-stroke contact with his painting. Brush marks pile on one another, forming a layered...
Light drifts slowly up through the paint and glows silently on the surface. Paintings that seem monochrome - Resnick's work always has one dominant color, whether cobalt blue, pink or a peculiarly sensuous acid green - disclose, on study, fascinating inflections and qualifications. These nuances constitute a structure. Resnick's paintings, unlike those of some so-called "lyrical abstractionists" 20 years his junior, never go soft or flossy; they are controlled by an iron will to form. Except that the forms do not become explicit; they remain stored in the pigment like warmth in stone. · Robert Hughes