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Word: visualizes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Piper's pilot, who was not required to filea flight plan, was flying under visual rules,Culver said. The Piper was flying about 15 milesnorth of a straight line between Boston andPoughkeepsie...

Author: By Andrew L. Wright, | Title: Two MIT Students Die In Plane Crash | 11/24/1993 | See Source »

...sweet little piece for children has been inflated to epic vulgarity. The revival that opened on Broadway last week stars a sphinx somewhat shinier and more purple than the original, plus smaller versions of the pyramids and New York City's Chrysler Building. There's one lively visual joke: after a famine, the sheep Joseph's family tended reappear as skeletons. On the human scale, the show stars Michael Damian's pectoral muscles, which are on all but nonstop display. That is just as well because the rest of his talents range from innocuous to boring. He is a major...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forward to The Past | 11/22/1993 | See Source »

Nevertheless, he imagined the paintings as integrally connected -- a single work of art, no less united than a mural is, but portable. Migration has the effect of a visual ballad, with each painting a stanza: taut, compressed, pared down to the barest requirements of narration. No. 10, They Were Very Poor, takes the elements of a Southern sharecropper's life down to the static minimum: a man and a woman staring at empty bowls on a bare brown plane, an empty basket hung on the wall by an enormous nail -- the sort of nail you imagine in a crucifixion. There...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stanzas From a Black Epic | 11/22/1993 | See Source »

Rubens, Bellange, Rebrandt; European Graphic Art, 1580 - 1660. Through Feb. 6. Ninety prints, drawings and illustrated books explore the rich variety and visual extravagance of European graphich art from the final phases of the Renaissance through the apogee of Baroque...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Not at Harvard | 11/18/1993 | See Source »

...free expression of thoughts and emotions, but they simply can't compare to traditional communication. Because much of the electronic mail system is an illusion. It seems easy to make real acquaintances simply by "talking" to people over the network. But e-mail leaves no lasting aural or visual record of a person. When you shut off your computer, your electronic personality vanishes like dust in the wind. One day a computer program will surely be able to simulate an e-mail conversation even more "real" than ones carried on by humans...

Author: By Ethan M. Tucker, | Title: Get Yourself Connected | 11/13/1993 | See Source »

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