Word: kodak
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...page issue has a single advertiser, Eastman Kodak Co. To accompany the publication, TIME and Kodak have mounted a traveling exhibit of the photographs that premiered Oct. 20 in Washington, where President Bush attended the opening hosted by U.S. Publisher Louis A. Weil III. The show moves on to New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and Boston through June 1990. But you can find out which seven other photos we selected as the very best without waiting: just open your copy of the special edition to page...
Many companies are still trying to figure out how to use effectively the computers they bought during the go-go era of a few years ago. The head of Eastman Kodak's computer operations, Katherine Hudson, says her computer budget barely grew at all this year, in contrast to an increase of more than 15% last year. Rather than buy new hardware, she is "looking for ways to make past investments pay off first...
...issue will also be on sale at retail locations for the next month.) The topic is one that TIME has helped shape during much of its 66-year history -- especially in the past decade, when the magazine became a leading force in color news photography. The single advertiser is Kodak, another organization that has long been a major factor in photojournalism...
Publishing executive David Cohen, who had produced similar books on the U.S. and on the Soviet Union with Rick Smolan, dispatched 90 photographers throughout China one day last spring. Months of planning went into the project, which was sponsored by Eastman Kodak, Nikon, Northwest Airlines, BankAmerica, Holiday Inn and Federal Express. Says TIME picture editor Michele Stephenson, who helped supervise the project in Beijing: "As fate would have it, A Day in the Life of China captured a portrait of this sprawling nation hours before the beginning of the student revolt...
...convicted between 1975 and 1985 of serious crimes, from price fixing to illegal dumping of hazardous wastes. Executives at Beech-Nut tried to pass off flavored water as apple juice. Ivan Boesky and a ring of Wall Streeters traded on insider information. Even such an upstanding company as Eastman Kodak, which has won awards for its minority-hiring and other social programs, has felt the heat. Residents of Rochester, where Kodak is based, have accused the company of covering up its chemical contamination of the city's groundwater...