Word: prints
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...unedited film) in color film 24 hours after it was taken and at a cost of only 20 to 25% more than black & white film. Moreover, the movies could be taken with ordinary film cameras and with black & white film plus special filters. Technicolor needed about four days to print rushes, needed special cameras and technicians to handle them, thus cost some 40% more than black & white. True, Cinecolor had only two colors, thus could not mix all shades. Technicolor, with its three colors, had a complete palette. Artistically Technicolor was far superior. But in the sudden public demand...
...Communist paper print an article entitled "Allow Us to Err"? A newspaper in the Ukraine, where the new Soviet purge is at its peak, dared to do so last week. "Absurd," thundered Pravda. "This theory of the right to err really means . . . the right to be free from criticism. . . . Workers' officials who are unable to review their work critically are unable to go forward and are cowards and provincials...
...brilliant piece of journalism. The New Yorker's editors had practically stumbled into it. Originally, they planned to print Hersey's report in four articles. Then able, shy co-managing editor Bill Shawn, suggested running the whole thing at once. It took a while to convince Harold Ross, the New Yorker's terrible-tempered editor, a man given to juvenile and profane tantrums, and intuitive, often shrewd judgments. Ross is convinced that everyone on his staff but himself is in danger of going holy. One factor helped decide him: most of the magazine's regular departments...
...institution-cluttered Boston, the hundredth birthday of almost anyone or anything is back-page stuff. But last week a freshly turned centenarian made the headlines-though it had to print them itself. Having hit the century mark, Boston's morning Herald told the world (or at least the hub of it) all about...
...This brisk, colorful history, first published in 1909 and now reissued, has been so long out of print that it will seem new to most readers. It will remind others of the part played by a flat-bottomed river steamer in the bloodiest little land battle in U.S. annals...