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MULTILEVEL PLATFORMS. Architect Michael Black was called in by Harold Slavkin, a Los Angeles molecular biologist, to plan a vacation house. He disposed of all furniture, building a complex of multilevel platforms covered with carpeting. Now guests sit, lie or sprawl, and flop from one tier to another as conversations catch their interest. "In a 10-ft. by 12-ft. area," says Slavkin's wife Kay, "we've had as many as twelve people in practically as many postures." Black also revamped the Slavkins' staid, traditional Los Angeles house. "The problem," he says, "was a cold, formal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: The New Room: No Furniture | 4/26/1971 | See Source »

Environmental pollution is really a problem for everyone. It now turns out that even the nation's astronomers are bothered. With urban sprawl rapidly closing in on their lonely mountain observatories, the astronomers are faced with a problem of first magnitude: the glare of city lights is threatening to put some of the country's largest optical telescopes out of business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Blinding the Big Eyes | 4/12/1971 | See Source »

EVEN its defenders admit that El Monte is an eyesore, a blur of suburban sprawl 14 miles from downtown Los Angeles. Its boundaries meander without obvious aim or purpose. Tiny houses, usually stucco and rarely worth more than $30,000, are jumbled together with tacky businesses along its dismal streets. Some 70,000 people call it home, but only a city father could love it. "This is a lower-middle-class workingman's community," says City Administrator Kenneth Bolts. Unnecessarily, he adds: "We will never be a Beverly Hills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cover Story: LOW-INCOME GROWING El Monte, Calif. | 3/15/1971 | See Source »

...Most serious is the lack of strong national standards for planning. This might well leave the field to weak state standards favoring assorted special interests. Moreover, the bill now requires the states to control only big developments and new projects in special areas; elsewhere, wasteful land uses involving urban sprawl and roadside slurbs could easily continue. Nonetheless, most conservationists agree that the Administration has taken a vital step by merely identifying land use as a key national problem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: A Vital Step on Land Use | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

...sculpture," he recently declared, "is derived from my feeling of despair. Realism is best suited to convey the frightening idiosyncrasies of our time." So his work makes up a chamber of all-American horrors: lifesize, startlingly real figures cast in Fiberglas and polyester resin. A group of Bowery winos sprawl filthily on a littered sidewalk; a dead motorcyclist, hideously mangled, lies pinned under his wrecked machine. In Tourists, Hanson extends his distaste to Mr. and Mrs. Middle America on vacation somewhere in the sun: he with his Hawaiian shirt and baggy Bermuda shorts and festooned camera equipment, she with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Out of the Junkyard | 1/4/1971 | See Source »

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