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Word: fax (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Along with a clutch of lurid nudie magazines, the film was introduced as evidence of the kind of material that the Supreme Court, with Fortas in agreement, has found to be not legally obscene. Senator Thurmond branded the nudist magazines, such as Nudi-Fax, Friendly Female and Weekend Jaybird, as "foul, putrid, filthy, repulsive, objectionable and obnoxious...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Senate: Judgment and The Justice | 8/2/1968 | See Source »

...Scourge. Last week "Fax" Cone took a step toward his own retirement. The agency's ruling triumvirate, consisting of Cone, Board Chairman Robert F. Carney, 61, and President Rolland W. Taylor, 59, announced a new management generation that will take over next January. Richard W. Tully, 49, head of Foote, Cone's Western operations, will become board chairman; Chicago Office Chief Charles S. Winston, 47, will be president; and New York-based William E. Chambers Jr., 47, will be operations-committee chairman. Cone himself will turn over his job as chairman of the executive committee to Carney. Though...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: Up the Elevator | 12/9/1966 | See Source »

...Chaucer, a Milton or a Goethe could feel just as much at home at a civil servant's desk as in a poet's leafy glade. No more. Washington, no less than other world capitals, is a city of prose-in triplicate, quadruplicate, or burnt brown Thermo-Fax. In such surroundings, Katie Louchheim stands out as clearly as a lyric line, for she is one of the last survivors of a lost race: the poet-bureaucrat or bureaucrat-poet. Which comes first is hard to say, for last week, just a few days after she was promoted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Capital: With Pen & Dream | 10/14/1966 | See Source »

...competitive business, whose sales of $600 million are rising 20% annually. Into the field last week came another major manufacturer: Los Angeles' huge Litton Industries (fiscal 1965 sales: $916 million). As the first of what will ultimately become a whole family of copiers, Litton introduced the desktop Roy fax 7, which spins out seven dry copies a minute, reproduces documents as varied as 51-in. invoices and 362-ft. seismographic tapes. Introducing a tantalizing gimmick, Litton plans to install the machines for nothing, make its money by selling zinc oxide-coated paper for them at 4? per letter-size...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Industry: What's New, Copycat? | 11/5/1965 | See Source »

...devised a method of making copies of documents by using infrared radiation which literally bakes images onto heat-sensitive paper. The company christened the process Thermo-Fax, and it has carried 3M into second place behind Xerox in the rapidly expanding copying-machine field, has led it to acquisitions of such firms as Revere Camera, Dynacolor film and, last summer, Italy's leading photographic firm, Ferrania...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Up from Scratch | 11/6/1964 | See Source »

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