Word: darkroom
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Manhattan's Waldorf-Astoria one day last week, big wheels of the U.S. publishing industry watched a research engineer photograph a colleague. Just 45 seconds later, the engineer handed them a photograph, "developed" without a darkroom, chemicals, negative, or sensitized paper...
...pictures faster, and often got a better play in the press, than either of its rivals. A.P. lost time by developing and transmitting its pictures at the Philadelphia Bulletin (published by A.P. President Robert McLean), a mile and a half from Convention Hall. Hearst's I.N.P. used a darkroom at the University of Pennsylvania, about a quarter of a mile away...
Rooms are perhaps the physical key to Eliot. They are almost without exception large, while a good percentage front on the airy, if often chilly, Charles. Eliot also boasts the best darkroom photographers will find anywhere in the University...
...downs. The paper in my day was up. The Board which I was lucky enough to join doubled and trebled the size of the CRIMSON it inherited. We bought a new press--with our own earnings. We added a pictorial supplement, literary and dramatic columns, a photographic darkroom. Though today's CRIMSON editors would doubtless think us a pretty conservative lot (we even supported Harding for President!), we were, I think, to be credited with more innovations than any other board in these seventy-five years...
...Chicago. "I was only four then," he explains. "Too young for photography. And as a matter of fact I still paint once in a while. There's a sensuous gratification in handling the tools. Cameras, on the other hand, are cold machinery, developing chemicals smell bad, and the darkroom is torture...