Word: ingrams
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...violence. It began shortly after noon the next day. Connor's cops were relaxed, eating sandwiches and sipping soft drinks. They were caught by surprise when the doors of the 16th Street church were flung open and 2,500 Negroes swarmed out. The Negroes surged across Kelly Ingram Park, burst through the police line, and descended on downtown Birmingham. Yelling and singing, they charged in and out of department stores, jostled whites on the streets, paralyzed traffic. Recovering, the police got reinforcements. Firemen hooked up their hoses. Motorcycles and squad cars, sirens blaring, rushed into the area. Two policemen...
...reaction, and people apparently lost their confidence. But that seems to be behind us now." Samuel A. Groves, president of Boston's United-Carr Fastener Corp., now sees the stage set for a move "pretty steadily-if slowly-upward." He is seconded by Raytheon Financial Vice President George Ingram Jr., who looks for "a gradual improvement this year...
Died. Sir Bruce Ingram, 85, working editor since 1900 of Britain's Illustrated London News; of a heart attack; in Chesham, Buckinghamshire. Given a trial as editor of the well-bred journal his grandfather began in 1842, Ingram established himself at the age of 23 with an unparalleled scoop of Queen Victoria's funeral; he stationed 24 artists along the route to Windsor Castle, matched their drawings into 24 double-truck spreads and hit the newsstands within three days. Said Ingram, when photography replaced the sketches, and sepia-tinted rotogravure became the News's trademark: "A pity...
Thomson's new British staffs have learned to respect their boss. When chirpy Sir Bruce Ingram, 84-year-old editor of the Illustrated London News, learned of the change in command, he expressed the timorous hope that Thomson might keep him on: "I have a lot of good ideas-and editing keeps you young." Sir Bruce is likely to stay young. Says Roy Thomson: "We don't replace but just reinforce editors when we take over...
...very real sense, the Special Artist was the product of the Civil War, although he had appeared on the 19th century scene some two decades before the war began. In 1842 Herbert Ingram, an English newspaperman, established the Illustrated London News, the world's first successful pictorial news weekly. Ingram's staff artists sent crude sketches from the field that were then engraved, in a leisurely way, to appear as illustrations alongside the printed accounts of important events. By 1860, the U.S. had three successful examples of graphic journalism: Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, Harper...