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...office copiers for sale. Evanston's American Photocopy Equipment Co. and Eastman Kodak Co. with its Verifax dominated the "wet copying'' field, which uses chemical developers; Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. had its fast-selling Thermo-Fax, a dry method that uses heat from an infra-red lamp to form an image on specially coated papers. But the Xerox machine had a special appeal. It is a dry method that needs no chemicals, can duplicate anything from grease pencil to ballpoint pen, though it is more successful in copying type than photographs. The 914 makes copies by projecting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Fortune in Facsimile | 4/12/1963 | See Source »

...three events added in the spring are the javelin and discuss throws and the hop, step and jump. In his wildest dreams no Ivy League coach would dare hope for the strength Harvard has in the javelin. Hobie Armstrong, Hank Hatch, Tom Holcombe, and Peter Lamp all consistently fling the spear over 200 ft., with sophomore Lamp holding the University record of 212 ft., 6 in. The Crimson is not as strong in the discus, but McCurdy can count on quite a few points from John Bakkensen who set a freshman record in that event last year. Hobie Armstrong will...

Author: By Mark C. Kumen, | Title: Young Blood Boosts Track Team; Awori to Lead Harvard Runners | 3/28/1963 | See Source »

Controls & Ceilings. As Europe's economies get stronger, their demands on the U.S. capital market steadily mount. Last year European countries borrowed nearly twice as much in the U.S. as they did from one another. The French South European Pipeline Company raised $40 million; Holland's Philips Lamp sold an $80 million stock offering; West German electrical equipment maker Siemens & Halske borrowed $25 million, and the European Coal and Steel Community took another $25 million. Most of them would have been hard-pressed to raise as much at home. Britain has a long line of municipalities waiting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investment: A Very Delicate Question | 3/22/1963 | See Source »

...street corner in down town Atlanta, Georgia, there stands a nineteenth century lamp post with a marker describing it as "The Eternal Flame of the Confederacy." A fluttering gas light which, according to local story, has burned continuously since the earliest weeks of the Civil War, it embodies "the spirit, the traditions, the way of life" that were the escutcheon of the Old South...

Author: By Russell B. Roberts, | Title: The New Reconstruction: Moderatism and the South | 3/15/1963 | See Source »

Keating is an affable man with a snowy thatch of hair and a ruddy complexion that he cultivates relentlessly under sun and sun lamp. He was born in Lima, N.Y., in 1900, the son of a grocer. He got his bachelor's degree at the University of Rochester at 19, taught high school Latin and won a law degree at Harvard in 1923. He built a profitable practice in Rochester as a trial lawyer, and in 1946 won at his first try for public office: Congressman from New York's 40th Congressional District. As a member...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: New York's Keating: FROM A POOLSIDE CHAT, A CUBA CRITIC | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

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