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...Painted by California-born Artist Albert Sheldon Pennoyer. In the central foreground is the slender figure of young Henry Ford in blue overalls and shirt sleeves. Single-handed he is pushing something that looks like a buggy without shafts. A number on the red shed in the central background fixes the scene at No. 56 Bagley Street, now the site of 14-story Michigan Theatre building, then on the fringe of Detroit's residential district, two blocks west of Grand Circus Park. A bronze tablet at the theatre's entrance preserves the record of what happened there. The Fords then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Motion For Sale | 1/18/1932 | See Source »

...forward end of the exhibition room is a tableau depicting an overnight camp on the ice. Such camps were necessary when a party went out from Little America to explore or gather scientific data. A tent accommodating two men stands in the center of the display; in the foreground is the powerful radio with which the party transmitted its daily report of the condition of the men, dogs, and food supply back to Little America. The Nansen cooker and the device for melting snow into drinking water are also shown...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Byrd's Ship, on Inspection Tour, Offers Intimate Glimpse of Living in Antarctic | 10/2/1931 | See Source »

...Westchester Racing Association, in Manhattan's Hotel Biltmore. The ballroom on the 19th floor of the hotel was made to look like Belmont Park. L. I., famed racecourse of which Mr. Widener is principal owner. Around the walls ran a pictured panorama of the course. In the foreground, near the tables occupied by some 300 guests in evening dress, was an actual reproduction of a corner of the park, complete to turf, a stretch of straightaway, white-painted railing, de luxe box stalls, striped water buckets. Here performed prize mounts of Manhattan's police, a local...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Sep. 28, 1931 | 9/28/1931 | See Source »

...first time that a mystery melodrama has been put on a wide screen. It is not a completely successful idea. There are times when the big background gives chances for suspense that an ordinary screen would have lost, as when, with the whole cast assembled in the foreground, the camera does not have to look away from them to show the horrible manifestation that has frightened them. But in scenes involving only one or two people, the big screen makes an ordinary room look like an amphitheatre. Size is the only new thing about The Bat Whispers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Jan. 26, 1931 | 1/26/1931 | See Source »

Several engravings present College scenes preceding those of Fisher while one stained and yellowed "plan of Cambridge" antedates the founding of Harvard. Of these early prints of the Colleges at Cambridge, the Massachusetts one is of particular interest in that there is represented in the foreground what is evidently a cricket match, a sign of the English influence which played so important a role during the formative period of the University. An engraving of a "birdseye view of Harvard. America's first and greatest University" gives an accurate and detailed panorama of the Yard-which summarizes the early period...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Collections and Critiques | 9/27/1930 | See Source »

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