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...into the home. Air conditioners, using electronics, eliminating motors, blowers and compressors, and therefore noiseless, may lead a mighty procession." ¶In industry, "wherever danger, remoteness or discomfort preclude the presence of a human observer, the industrial television camera can take his place." ¶In education, "schools . . . may employ their TV sets to bring talks and demonstrations to the entire school or to selected classes, without the loss of time attendant upon a call to assembly." ¶In television itself, tape recordings of both pictures and sound "will obsolete the use of film . . . and reduce overall costs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ELECTRONICS: Sarnoff's Seven Years | 4/6/1953 | See Source »

Johnson's letter said the basis for the suspension was a Pennsylvania law called the state's loyalty oath. Under section 13, Johnson wrote Dunham, "Temple University is required to unequivocally set forth that the institution has no reason to believe any subversive persons are in its employ.' By your refusal to answer questions put to you by the congressional committee on the ground that to do so might be self-incriminating, you have deliberately created a doubt as to your loyalty status...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Reticent Prof Suspended by Temple Prexy | 3/2/1953 | See Source »

Government jobs are with the armed services and with civilian organizations like the National Advisory Committee. on Aeronautics, which maintains huge laboratories throughout the country. The services employ many civilians in their research programs. The Air Force's Cambridge Research Center, located in Boston, is presently involved in research of the most fundamental nature. Also, civilian engineers are employed at air bases to repair and service planes...

Author: By Ira J. Rimson, | Title: Aircraft Industry Swells With Postwar Boom | 2/27/1953 | See Source »

Jobs are available in offices, libraries, museums, and laboratories in all departments. Since the University will employ over 2,000 women next year, today's interviews at Radcliffe are the first of a series at 31 women's colleges this spring

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Interviews Radcliffe '53 for Jobs | 2/4/1953 | See Source »

...records justify every conclusion stated [in the paper's series] . . . [There are] no grounds whatever to sustain a conviction for contempt . . . The judge was utterly without power to require or compel publication . . . without pay [of the proof] he requested them to publish . . . If a worthy judge may employ contempt-of-court process to silence unjust criticism . . . then this same rule would enable an unworthy judge to silence the press in just criticism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Decision Reversed | 1/26/1953 | See Source »

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