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Word: scans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...made witness to the process of painting: how this too obtrusive yellow is cut back, leaving the ghost of itself along a charcoal line; how that 45° cut is sharpened, then blurred, then hidden by veils of overpainting. To scan the sur face of a big Ocean Park is to watch these inflections become a kind of transparency, bathing the text...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: California in Eupeptic Color | 6/27/1977 | See Source »

Sevcenko said that competing committees have been established to scan candidates for the chair in other fields, particularly history...

Author: By Anemona Hartocollis, | Title: Professor May Leave Greece to Fill Modern Greek Studies Chair in Fall | 5/27/1977 | See Source »

Flaky Skin. Close's mixture of size and precision is disorienting. Faces would look like this to a louse, if lice could scan them: a fleshy landscape, dried salt pans of flaky skin, monstrous glittering folds of mucous membrane, each wrinkle a canyon, the nose a mountain, lakes for eyes. The effect is both real and hallucinatory at once, and it has a lot to offer on how we scan, decode and see the most ordinary configurations. Held in memory. Close's por traits marginally change every face one glimpses in the subway, or in a mirror...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Blowing Up the Closeup | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

...sunrises have given way to vodka martinis, love beads to lustrous pearls. We buy lettuce and grapes either because we've forgotten that we shouldn't or because Cesar Chavez's cause seems hopeless or because we've ceased to care about California's farm workers. And when we scan a semi-crowded subway car, we unconciously choose a seat next to a member of our own race. Slogans linger but they no longer resound with passion. Instead, they splash across slick Madison Avenue advertisement. "Eat our yogurt. Rediscover nature...

Author: By Joanne L. Kenen, | Title: A California Eden | 4/25/1977 | See Source »

...finger to see which way the wind was blowing, U.S. aviation has been trying with increasing success to spot weather hazards and route pilots around them. Today's commercial airlines get a steady stream of up-to-the-minute weather reports, including data gleaned by satellites that scan the earth. Indeed, the combination of advanced meteorological techniques and the toughness of the modern jet airliner has largely eliminated the danger that planes will be caught in the kind of massive storms that have been called the "anvil of the gods." "Wind shear," created by colliding air masses, was listed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AVIATION: Clawed by the Hook in the Sky | 4/18/1977 | See Source »

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