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...that, you get pictures. The black and white illustrations of "Epileptic" have a simple, cartoonish line without any cross-hatch shading. Instead, David B. puts the visual richness into mixing the literal with the metaphorical. Anything goes with comix. It's partly what makes them special. Freed from literal representation, the artist's only obligation is to meaning and David B. takes full advantage of this. People grow and shrink, or occasionally appear as animals. Backgrounds become patterns that reflect the mood of the scene rather than the location. One remarkable panel shows Jean-Christofe's head surrounded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spinning Art from Misery | 6/18/2002 | See Source »

...upon-a-time champ and fright figure explained the mutual-politeness pact between himself and Lewis by comparing it to the pigeons he now keeps in his spare time. They would scrap ferociously until they were fed, he said. Then they became placid and still. Intentionally or not, the metaphor carried over to the ring, where the issue had been joined and resolved, and the eight-figure purses enjoyed by both fighters had surely sated their appetites - at least for a while...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tyson-Lewis: Little Boy in the Ring | 6/10/2002 | See Source »

...idea is more metaphor than actual nervous system, but it is a metaphor wired into the "biology of business" Zeitgeist. Other industry thinkers have diagnosed the same problem and are competing for leadership with models of their own. Companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars each year paying technicians to regulate systems that theoretically could regulate themselves. Research at Big Blue has already led to products such as its Intelligent Resource Director software, which helps high-end zSeries mainframes allocate processing power where it is needed most. These products will offer big savings: It costs twice as much to manage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Board Of Technologists: High Tech Evolves | 6/10/2002 | See Source »

...physics, the exclusion principle holds that an electron within an atom, once in orbit, excludes any other particle from occupying exactly the same orbit. That may be as apt a metaphor as any for the unique odyssey of the collection of atoms that was Andrei Sakharov. The life of the dissident Russian physicist - acclaimed as both the creator of the Soviet H-bomb and the conscience of his country - spanned the years from Lenin to Gorbachev, the rise and fall of Soviet communism and the triumph of physics. Who but Sakharov could so personify such an age? Now, more than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Physics and Freedom | 6/9/2002 | See Source »

...documentary--sorry, reality mini-series!--a twist straight out of a soap opera: the night that high-powered publicist and society figure Lizzie Grubman allegedly backed her SUV into a crowd at a nightclub, reportedly after angrily calling a doorman "white trash." The case became the best automotive metaphor for class conflict on Long Island since Daisy Buchanan ran over Myrtle Wilson in The Great Gatsby. But, surprisingly, Kopple gives it only a few minutes. "One thing shouldn't take over the whole summer," she says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Beach-Blanket Verite | 6/3/2002 | See Source »

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