Word: reverts
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...over the past ten years has had much to do with the slow realization in America that serious art is indivisible, that the mere fact of being American does not conscript a painter into a doomed Oedipal struggle with his European ancestors, that the battlegrounds of art history soon revert to pastures. There is no secret about Motherwell's sources: cubist collage, surrealism, Matisse. In fact, his own collages -perhaps the most consistently beautiful body of work produced by any artist in the past five years-could not exist without the example of Matisse's découpages...
Just like the era it recaptured, the series had to end. Signs of entropy cropped up in the last 16 episodes, suggesting that the show would not hold much longer than the center of the household. After reruns of the final season, rights to all the episodes will revert to London Weekend Television, which has already sold the show for broadcast in nearly 50 other countries. Hopes for a marathon reshowing here of the whole saga sometime soon seem doomed by lack of funds. Upstairs, Downstairs will assuredly be seen in this country again, after separate sales to local stations...
Tomorrow the team flies to Orlando for a ten-day orgy of exercise. Last year three meets were included in the spring trip schedule; but this year, faced with encounters with powerhouses Princeton and Northeastern in the first week of the season, the coach decided to revert to the old McCurdy method of continuous, unrelenting training...
...educational trends closely, already notes a marked rise in the IQs of the ZPGeneration now in primary school. Verbal and linguistic skills, he finds, increase in inverse proportion to the size of the family; smaller families, as he puts it, are "more adult-oriented than sibling-oriented." Education may revert in part from classroom to living room. Children may again receive wisdom from respected, caring elders...
...estimated that only one out of three Americans will be a taxpayer, and that liened group should be more heavily composed of the middle aged. In contrast to the whiz-kid executive syndrome of the '70s-a direct result of the baby boom-the reins of power will revert to older hands. For the middle-age, middle-management sector, there will be fewer shots at the top, though there will be more titular promotions and merit raises to reward the faithful. On the positive side, lessened competition may result in heightened creativity. People may concentrate on doing what they...