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Word: eyestraining (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Eyestrain will be diminished with indirect lighting from a combination of fluorescent and incandescent lamps mounted in a cove about two feet from the ceiling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Homes of the Future | 4/5/1943 | See Source »

...instance, he said absolutely nothing to imply that "Accurate vision without eyestrain is of front-line importance," or even that "best performance comes from Shuron Shurset Full-Vue glasses of Quality Beyond Question." And he left it for some enlightened advertising manager to warn: "Don't be a Public Enemy. Be patriotic and smother sneezes with Kleenex...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "In Times Like These" | 5/25/1942 | See Source »

Sculptor Maillol started sculpture seriously at the age of 40, when six months of blindness due to eyestrain forced him to give up his previous work as a tapestry designer and weaver. By the time World War I broke out, Aristide Maillol was already one of the best-known sculptors in France. His famed Action in Chains, a buxom female nude commemorating the French revolutionary Socialist Louis Auguste Blanqui, stood in Puget Theniers, near Grenoble. At his summer studio at Marly, near Paris, he was working on a memorial (another female figure) to France's great painter Paul Cezanne...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Maillol's Women | 12/8/1941 | See Source »

There are the white jumpers of the airplane workers and the hodgepodge aprons of the fuse makers, who put together the intricate detonators of bombs and shells. "Of course there is eyestrain and fatigue," says one. "But after all, sitting here at work is not like being up at the Maginot Line in the snow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Women At Work | 2/12/1940 | See Source »

This report, American Recommended Practice of School Lighting, was based on a study sponsored by the Illuminating Engineering Society and American Institute of Architects. It declared many schoolchildren had so little light for their work that they suffered from eyestrain, irritability, headaches. Even on a bright day children in the darkest part of a classroom may get only five foot-candles,* one-twentieth as much light as those near the windows, and on a dark day illumination of their desks may drop as low as one footcandle. The investigators claimed tests showed children did 28% better in reading when they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Light & Heat | 3/28/1938 | See Source »

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