Word: print
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Father Coughlin: "Our thanks are due to Almighty God. . . ." Publisher Hearst preened himself on a legislative victory and a great journalistic stunt by taking a full page in Hearst-papers to print the names and faces of all 36 Senators who voted down the Court...
...aeronauticana. The Park Avenue lady proceeded to surround herself with Lindbergh portraits. She owns a cup & saucer used on the first Graf Zeppelin flight. Her name is Bella Landauer and she is the wife of Isidor Nathan Landauer who makes Sealpacker-chiefs. Last week at Manhattan's Old Print Shop Mrs. Landauer exhibited one of her prize possessions-a collection of aeronautical songs...
...Flemington, N. J. press photographers and newsreel cameramen were admitted on Judge Trenchard's condition that no pictures be taken while court was in session. To minimize confusion the five major newsreels-Paramount, Hearst Metrotone, Fox, Pathe, Universal- jointly operated a single sound-camera, each company receiving a print of all pictures taken. The camera, electrically controlled and housed in a soundproof hood, was lodged in the balcony, about 35 ft. from the judge's bench. A microphone was hidden behind an electric fan over the jury...
...pulls a lever, his finished picture, framed in light metal, drops out into a receptacle. This speed is accomplished by exposing three-inch circles of sensitized paper already framed. Immediately after exposure the discs are shot into a developing chamber, sprayed by six chemicals which develop a positive print. The print is not quite dry when the ejecting mechanism shoots it out to the customer...
...months ago the venerable Atlantic Monthly inaugurated a new advertising policy by which big companies could purchase 20 pages in the back of the magazine for $10,000, using eight pages to print stories about themselves and the other twelve for display advertising. Last month the first story to appear was an account of General Motors by Arthur Pound, whose chief point apparently was that General Motors is in business to stay. Last week President Alfred Sloan Jr. confirmed the fact by announcing earnings of $94,769,000 for 1934 as against $83,213,000 for 1933. World sales...