Word: inked
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Bald, cantankerous Rudolph E. Leppert is not only art editor of The Literary Digest but a draughtsman in his own right. Weeks ago he sent a pen & ink drawing of President Roosevelt to the exhibition of Manhattan's Salmagundi Club, an organization of elderly esthetes. Last week the Salmagundi hanging committee accepted the Leppert drawing, stuck it up behind a door. Rudolph E. Leppert also happens to be a rampant admirer of the New Deal. As he saw it, the Salmagundi Club was guilty of a "slur at the President...
Vincent Palmer '35, Art Editor of the Lampoon last year, has sent several contributions from Nonsuch Island, where he is working with Dr. Beebe. Besides colored drawings of Dr. Beebe's new home, there is a pen and ink drawing of a hand crumpling a piece of paper, sketched in Palmer's old Lampoon style...
...shake hands. Then Gilda Gray danced for the same real estate company." In the 1924 Democratic convention Bryan was a delegate from Florida (after the Hollywood, Fla., News had suggested that ''that would give Miami two or three million dollars' worth of printer's ink free"). The Great Commoner suggested Dr. A. A. Murphree, president of the University of Florida, as a candidate. Mr. Werner states that Bryan later confessed that "he had never been so humiliated in his life" as at the convention. He suggests, however, that Bryan may have received consolation in this letter...
...Bankruptcy Act. Its prime provision, which became Section 77b of the Bankruptcy Act, authorized Federal judges to approve and make binding on corporate minorities any reorganization plan acceptable to two-thirds of each class of a company's creditors and a majority of each class of its stockholders. Ink was hardly dry on the new law before corporation lawyers crowded into Federal Courts all over the land to start reviving old bankrupt companies or to stave off the crash of concerns close to trouble. In Manhattan the first to apply for reorganization under Section 77b was Radio-Keith-Orpheum. Last...
Soon money began to pour into Walter Sheaffer's ink-stained hands. His crowning achievement was an $8.75 Lifetime pen, introduced in 1921. It was the first standard high-priced fountain pen launched on what had always been a low-priced market. Next Walter Sheaffer streamlined his pens. Then in quick succession he introduced the Sheaffer desk set with universal socket (which seals the tip of the pen and keeps it moist), the Feathertouch nib, the special Sheaffer pencil which "propels, repels and expels the lead," the Sheaffer Vacuum-Fil pen. By 1929 the company's gross sales...