Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...eleventh Assembly of the "League of Nations" is considering applications for membership from the "United States", "Mexico", "Turkey" and "Russia". The "United States" has applied for membership subject to eight reservations, which, after vigorous debate in the Sixth Committee, have been referred to a sub-committee, which will report to the Assembly today...
What therapeutic significance attaches to cathode rays was to be suggested shortly by a preliminary report of doctors at the Albany Medical College, now experimenting. Experts at Columbia University reported having tried cathode rays in cancer treatment and found them practically useless...
...report that school authorities in smoke-hung Birmingham, Eng., had investigated the hygienic qualities of window glass constructed to permit the passage of the ultraviolet rays of sunlight and found this glass so far superior to common panes that they had ordered it installed in all Birmingham schools (TIME, Oct. 18), had prime interest for U. S.* glass manufacturers. The Corning Glass Works (Corning, N. Y.), family company of U. S. Ambassador to Great Britain, Alanson B. Houghton, swiftly called attention (see LETTERS) to its recent perfection of a glass, soon to be produced commercially, which transmits 86% of sunlight...
...Bolivian Andes, 15,000 feet above sea level. Traces of tin have been found in Alaska on the edge of the Arctic Ocean but "no developments . . . justify any hope that the United States will eventually become independent of foreign sources of supply," according to the 1922 Tin report of the U. S. Tariff Commission. Practically no tin is found in continental U. S. Appreciable deposits exist in Cornwall (known since the time of the Phoenicians, the Philistines), Burma, Siam, China, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Portugal, Spain and scattered regions of Africa...
...Demand for oil is falling off with the approach of winter and the consequent lessening of motor driving. But oil production is now averaging about 2,250,000 barrels daily, due chiefly to a newly developed Oklahoma field (the Seminole). President Frank Phillips soothed their worries with his operating report. In July, August and September his earnings (before depletion and depreciation were deducted, were $10,626,579, a company record. His clear earnings for the first nine months of the year, with all deductions made, were $15,760,992-$6.55 for each of the 2,407,082 shares...