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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- They are sprinkled through TIME every week: clever, colorful
- charts and diagrams that grab the eye, tantalize the brain and
- make one want to read the story. This week's issue is no
- exception. To illuminate the cover stories on particle physics,
- artist Joe Lertola created a series of arresting graphics that
- make even so intricate a subject attractive to the reader.
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- To do so, Lertola, a native of Morristown, N.J., who
- graduated from Pratt Institute's School of Art and Design in
- Brooklyn in 1978, has traded in his old technical pens for the
- zip and click of an electronic mouse and a computer screen. To
- create or alter an illustration or to add color, he simply taps
- commands into the keyboards of his sophisticated Macintosh and
- IBM machines. Says Lertola, a science-fiction buff: "With so
- many computers, I sometimes feel as if I'm operating a
- spaceship."
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- As helpful as they are, however, computers are not creative
- -- at least not yet. Lertola still does all preliminary doodles
- with a pencil. What the computer does, he says, is "get artwork
- ready for printing a lot quicker than two years ago." On paper
- or on the computer, Lertola has been designing graphics for
- most sections of TIME since 1983, but his special fascination
- is with things scientific. He has been called upon to diagram
- such arcana as Halley's comet and the human immune system.
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- Few have been as tough to illustrate, however, as this
- week's cover story on the smallest particles in the universe.
- Sciences editor Charles Alexander asked Lertola to diagram both
- the family tree of matter and the difference between types of
- gigantic underground colliders, the huge machines in which
- subatomic particles are accelerated to fantastic speeds. "Each
- assignment has its own challenge," says Lertola. "The image has
- to get an idea across in a clever way. This time the devil was
- in the detail: colors, shapes and contrasts."
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- Particle physics holds another fascination for him: "It
- shows that the world is not really the way we see it." As if
- to illustrate the point, the computer screen on his table
- suddenly erupts in tiny bursts of colorful sparks without any
- special prompting. Glancing at it, Lertola, ever the sci-fi
- fan, says, "I'd like to look 100 years into the future and see
- how sophisticated equipment will be then."
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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