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Aesthetics aside, no U.S. video outlet, network or cable, has ever made a sustained effort to show films masked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: The Shapes of Things That Were | 8/30/1982 | See Source »

Radical change has occurred elsewhere in Cambridge as well. Elsie's, for example, now has an adjoining room devoted completely to these quarter-eating television sets. Store 24, once exclusively a food and conveniences outlet, now has two machines...

Author: By Jacob M. Schiesinger, | Title: Video Drivel | 7/13/1982 | See Source »

Businesses may soon have an information outlet in the wall just as they now have outlets for electricity and the telephone. This new one would be connected to a cable that ties together, for example, the personal computer in an executive's office with computers of other managers, his secretary's word processor and centralized files or duplication services. A businessman could thus call up information for a report, write it out, send it to duplication and then to the company files with the push of a few buttons. Experts predict that the equipment to tie these various...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You've Come a Long Way, Baby | 6/28/1982 | See Source »

...agreed to a schedule that permitted a week to present the radical view point Although this offer still gave radical thought less time than any other unit Marglin considered it a worthwhile start, three lectures and a set of readings. Previously, the optional radical sections had been the only outlet for radical thought. Then, as now, these classes had to devote most of their time to mainstream economics since the students had to take the coursewide final exam. Thus, the teachers were forced to squeeze in the radical theories as best they could, often by holding extra meetings. Currently sixty...

Author: By Michael S. Terris, | Title: Radical Isolation | 5/21/1982 | See Source »

Network television offers disgruntled audiences no outlet as effective as a newspaper's Op-Ed page, or even a correction box. Yet the need for access of dissenting views may be greater in TV news than in print journalism. The time for nightly network coverage is minimal, the emotional impact often maximal. Inevitably, many stories are excluded and others oversimplified...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Letting Viewers Talk Back | 5/10/1982 | See Source »

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