Word: print
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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With the water-colors, which are hung in the print room, there are also prints by nineteenth century artists--Turner, Meryon, Seymour Haden, and Whistler, and the etching by Benson owned by the Museum...
...competitions are avowedly arduous, but the work is at most times congenial. To the CRIMSON candidate comes the thrill of seeing his handiwork in print and of filling a responsible part in a constantly moving organization. Responsibility increases with advancement on the CRIMSON and as a candidate advances in position, his ideas and originality are more and more counted on and developed...
...title of the film was orginally advertised as Scraps, until Joseph M. Schenck and Douglas Fairbanks saw the working print. In the gospel according to St. Luke, there are passages about the lowly sparrow who is not lost sight of in the eyes of God. In the film Mary gathers her little "sparrows" to her heart. Said Mr. Fairbanks: "Even without Miss Pickford it would still be a great picture...
...next morning, repentant of the sins of his lower self, 'Dr. Jekyll' emerges from the metamorphosic sleep, rushes to the nearest newsstand to buy the Times. Then, as he sips his breakfast coffee, he reads in neat, encyclopaedic columns -all the news that's fit to print.' But when the day's work is done, when the mind of Dr. Jekyll is weak and tired, then Mr. Hyde leaps up within him, overwhelms him. . . . Then there is the inevitable purchase of the Evening Graphic...
...being on the inside and learning just why the wheels go round. There is the fun of sitting at the press box at a football or baseball game and exchanging opinions with the other sports writers. Above all, there is the inevitable mental heave out of seeing in print the things that one has written...