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...claims can produce copies at half the cost and twice the speed of Xerox machines but that require special paper. American Photocopy demonstrated its new "Dial-A-Copy," which has a telephone-like dial on which the user can order from one to ten copies, and SCM (Smith Corona-Marchant) showed its similar, dial-operated Model 44. 3M displayed six specialized machines that produce by means of heat and light sensitivity; one turns out single copies on heat-sensitive paper for about 310, and another produces 40 copies a minute on ordinary paper for about 10 each...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Industry: The Copy Break | 10/30/1964 | See Source »

...their teachers when they go asking for a job. With U.S. business hungering for specialized talent, such top scholars as New York University Economist Marcus Nadler earn up to $300 a day as consultants to management. University of Pittsburgh Chancellor Edward H. Litchfield is also chairman of Smith-Corona Marchant and a director of Studebaker and Avco Corp. The hub of this extracurricular activity is Boston, where some 1,000 space-age companies have grown up since World War II, most of them started there to exploit readily available brain power and many of them founded by Massachusetts Institute...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Industry: Profit-Minded Professor | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

Litchfield is probably the only man in academic life who can buzz off for the weekend to his own 600-acre farm in his own airplane, a two-engine Aero Commander. Along with running Pitt, he is chairman of Smith-Corona Marchant's board of directors, a member of Stude baker's executive committee, a director of Avco Corp., and founder-chairman of Washington's Governmental Affairs Institute. Pitt pays him $45,000 a year, plus expenses. His extracurricular activities boost that to roughly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Pitt's Big Thinker | 9/7/1962 | See Source »

...Gallup, director of Princeton's American Institute of Public Opinion, deployed a journalistic crew of seven in accordance with Gallup's advice. All told, Réalités' writers asked 25,000 questions in more than 3,000 interviews. On the Eastern seaboard, Reporter Pierre Marchant spent two weeks talking to 60 U.S. educators, business executives, politicians and clergymen. He posed to them all the single leading, loaded question: "Is there anything about the U.S. that worries you?" With only this priming, some of Marchant's subjects talked for four hours. From his miles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: America on Trial | 8/3/1962 | See Source »

...part because "there was a substantial increase in outright sales of data-processing equipment." (By contrast, MINNEAPOLIS-HONEYWELL, which rents most of its computers instead of selling them, and thus must wait longer to earn back its heavy development costs, reported earnings off 5% to $25 million.) SMITH-CORONA MARCHANT managed to buck a slow market for its typewriters by swinging into production of small computers and by automating its assembly lines; the company boosted profits to $1,600,000 in the last half of 1961, up 147% from the same period in 1960. Automation actually made jobs at Smith...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: State of Business: Automation's Dividends | 2/9/1962 | See Source »

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