Word: printings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Tuskegee from all over the South. They work on and around the campus to pay for their keep and the small tuition: $31 for students in the high school department, $52 for those in the college. When they leave Tuskegee they know how to run a farm, lay bricks, print a newspaper, make a suit of clothes or cook a dinner. Few win fame as doctors, lawyers, clergymen...
...forbidden comic strips next day. But its Sunday color pages, already made up, included those features. "Cissy" Patterson asked Publisher Meyer's permission to publish them that one last time, sparing her the expense of a last-minute change. Hesitantly Mr. Meyer agreed on condition that the Herald print a front-page box acknowledging the Post's courtesy. "Cissy" Patterson asked time to consider. The deadline came & went, with no further word from "Cissy." Thereupon the Post published its own announcement that the Herald would appear next day with Sunday comics by special courtesy of the Post. After...
Southern Mammy, by oldtime William H. Zerbe of the New York Herald Tribune, one of the few U. S. newscameramen who are also associates of the Royal Photographic Society. His print was a pleasant unaffected portrait of an old Negro woman puffing a clay pipe, her face gleaming with high lights like a figure of carved mahogany...
...Clay Dalzell's suave bar manners are much more stimulating than the mystery which he solves in Star of Midnight, and it will be no surprise to the thirsty audience to learn that a barfly is responsible for the crime. Cinemaddicts who enjoyed The Thin Man, recognized master print for all cocktail and wisecrack crime cinemas, should find Star of Midnight an entertaining and not too sedulous copy. Good shot: Clay Dalzell getting gaily...
Unless you have too many lectures of this type, I wish you would print this one I am writing to let some of the 'big shots' around the University know how the "other half" feels about President Conant's new athletic policy...