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Word: layout (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...running is done. On passes, it is much better to watch the receivers than the passer; you know what the latter will do and you can be sure that a pass thrown to the left or the right won't look very difficult at the start, but the layout of possible receivers and defenders is a very interesting and instructive sight. The manner of completion, interception or incompletion is what you want to see on most passes, and this can be done only by watching the receiving...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lining Them Up | 10/25/1930 | See Source »

...desirable qualities, a spirit of co-operation. He is, furthermore, a good sport. He can make the best of things. He had to the other day! The Transcript photographer, in pursuit of a half dozen interior views of the new Houses (they appeared Saturday) with which to supplement the "layout" of the exterior "shots" previously published in the Transcript (last Wednesday), arrived at the doorway of Mr. Hammond's beautifully finished and furnished suite simultaneously with a half dozen or more of the head tutor's friends who had been invited in for tea and to inspect the newly-inhabited...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 9/30/1930 | See Source »

...list of cities where, since the success of The New Yorker, local weekly smartchart, have been started, last fortnight was added New Orleans.† Like most of its contemporaries, The New Orleanian candidly follows The New Yorker pattern. Its first issue showed care of preparation, uncommon taste in typographical layout. Most famed contributor: Roark Whitney Wickliffe Bradford, author of Ol' Man Adam & His Chillun (source of Marc Connelley's Pulitzer prize play, The Green Pastures). Instead of "The Talk of the Town" (New Yorker), the New Orleanian's first pages were headed "Uptown-Downtown-Back of Town...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Hero Business | 9/22/1930 | See Source »

...year 1898 found Brother Bert in Thessaly, where Greece and Turkey were at war. The war-ravaged territory suggested the idea of a newspicture service. Bert worked his way back to Athens, developed his plates, sent the prints on to Brother Elmer in London. Elmer made a layout, sold it to the London Illustrated News for 60 guineas ($307). The idea was so novel that he got $300 more from a New York paper for the same scenes. Thus began the first newspaper picture service...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Picture Business | 8/25/1930 | See Source »

...original map was drawn in 1635 and shows the present Harvard Yard to be a piece of marshy ground. The land along the north side of the Charles River was also a strip of marsh. The layout of the streets was much more symmetrical than it is now so that only a few of the principal streets can be recognized: Brattle Square was then called the Market Place, Mount Auburn Street was known as Long Street. Boylston Street was then Wood Street and Dunster Street was Water Street. The map which will be on exhibit is a copy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Historic Sites to be Opened to Commencement Visitors in Connection With Tercentenary--Old Map on Exhibition | 5/20/1930 | See Source »

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