Word: visualizing
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Maui in 1979, the Caribbean's pristine Lesser Antilles in 1980. In 1978 he and Photographer Carl Mydans were among the first journalists to travel as tourists through China. Their experiences became a cover story for TIME's international editions and later a book, China: A Visual Adventure...
...report placed the blame for many ailments associated with VDTs on such environmental factors as poor lighting and stressful office conditions. Summed up Panel Chairman Edward Rinalducci, a professor of psychology at the Georgia Institute of Technology: "Our general conclusion is that eye discomfort, blurred vision and other visual disturbances, muscular aches and stress reported among VDT workers are probably not due to anything inherent in VDT technology...
...Accompanied by music that sounds like game-show themes speeded up to 78 r.p.m., the show revels in glitzy, vertigo-inducing computer graphics. Says E.T. Director Steve Hirsen, a veteran of CBS News: "We're not heavy journalists, so we have more freedom. We can use visual flips and 'up' music, which you can't use after a story on the bombing of Beirut." The rapid-fire items are introduced by Anchors Ron Hendren and Mary Hart, who are both perky and chirpy enough to have sprung fresh from the set of a vintage Andy Howar...
...Anthony Higgins), has been commissioned by wily Mrs. Herbert (Janet Suzman) and her daughter Mrs. Talmann (Anne Louise Lambert) to execute a dozen architectural drawings of their estate. When not sharing their carnal favors, he is producing sketches that are precise, refined and troubling-for in them are tantalizing visual hints of a murder, perhaps of the master of the house. Will the draftsman's malefic ingenuity prevail over his hostesses' aristocratic arrogance...
...pretrial hearings by permitting judges to determine quickly if a confession is voluntary and can be used as evidence. They leave no doubts that the suspect was read his Miranda rights to remain silent and have an attorney, and that he waived them. The tapes also provide clear, tamperproof visual records for all trial participants. Another unanticipated benefit: defendants seem willing to confess when looking at the little red light. Brighton, for instance, pleaded guilty after making his statement on the tube and was sentenced to six to 18 years in prison. From the time of his arrest, the entire...