Word: printings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Some considered Carlo one of the most determined enemies of the Mussolini regime. He had preserved contact with his friends in Italy and was able to print information which the Rome Government found embarrassing." One kind of embarrassing information that Carlo continually published which very probably brought him to his death was stolen lists of daily instructions to the tightly controlled Italian press from the Propaganda Ministry. Few hours before the Roselli murders, last week in Manhattan Editor Girolamo Valenti of La Stampa Libera, also antiFascist. printed a five-month set of these instructions which he admitted came...
Jokes like these, peculiar to the Marx Brothers, are somehow as funny on the screen as they are unfunny in print. A Day at the Races, which took a year to make, is happily distinguished from previous Marx pictures in that it contains more of them. A wild, complex, totally implausible fable about a run-down sanatorium, its impudent porter (Chico), an imported horse-doctorphysician (Groucho) and the steeplechase in which a speechless jockey (Harpo) gets the money to pay off the sanatorium's debts through his brilliant ride on a horse who hates the gambler who is trying...
Then at the opening of the market one morning the Steam specialists could find no bids fit to print on the ticker. Stock Exchange officials went into a huddle with the specialists. Nearly an hour after the opening a quotation finally appeared on the ticker-70 bid, 90 asked. After nearly another hour the first sale appeared-$73, off 30½ points. But no bid could the specialists rustle up for the 6% series until 1:30 p. m., when the tape recorded the market as 50 bid, 75 asked. The first sale...
Such a sentiment finds itself in print in the Decennial Report just published by this one of the last of the Inflation Classes. In addition to life blanks and a statement of the class's status with regard to the Harvard Fund, principal interest of the book centers round a questionnaire of 69 questions. Adding up the answers Joseph C. Furnas '27 then comes out with the lead article, "Was It Worth While" and produces the conclusion first quoted...
...diversion Fred Snite has adjustable mirrors rigged over his upturned face. These enable him to read, play games and to see his meals when they are placed on a table immediately back of his head. When a page of print is laid with its top at his hair, two mirrors enable him to read precisely as though the type were directly before his eyes. A single mirror turns the type upside down for him, but like a printer he can read it that way, too, with great facility. Another new accomplishment: he speaks Chinese...