Home / Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. / Passage

Graphic Presentation

Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. 255 words

It is still an effective method of presenting percentage analysis.

GRAPHIC NARRATIVE

Opponents

mAHHATTAn'S REVERSE Run

no3 <><ksscs s*t.L

TO NO* art FAKt SPIN

Nrw York Journnl and American. SCALE S

A. Famous Football Plays: Manhattan College Reverse Run.

An explanation of a football play, either before a game or after a game, is a well-known form of graphic narrative. Players on each side are indicated by squares, circles, or other distinctive symbols, and the movements of the various players are indicated by arrows.

The HHarvard-Yale Game of 1937. The Score Was 13 to 6 in Favor of Harvard.

After the "game," spectators often would like to have a picture of the various plays before them so that any confusion as to what actually did occur may be seen at a glance.

The work sheets from which the above chart was made were of heavy cardboard and easy to handle at the game. It may be possible that standards for this type of chart will evolve in the future.

FIRST HALF

O lO 20 30 40 so 40 30 ZO 10 G

SECOND HALF

« ID 20 30 40 so 40 30 20 lO G

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• MA(?VARO O YALE CfOc^JH Victor O Jones, Sports Editor, Boston Globe.

GRAPHIC PRESENTATION

Compare the charts in this chapter With those in "Pictorial Unit Bar Charts," pages 121-131.

Redrawn from Fortune Magazine, February 1932.

The Use of Segments of Fruit to Represent Quantities.