Word: sarnoff
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Vallee, Rod La Rocque, Owen Moore, Bebe Daniels, Betty Compson. Writers will include Ben Hecht, Charles McArthur, Eugene Walter, Viña Delmar. Thus among great film companies must be ranked Radio Corp., and to the list of cinema tycoons must be added the name of short, stocky David Sarnoff, Radio Corp.'s Vice President and General Manager. Inasmuch as Radio Corp. has in the past conducted many a merger, and since, like all young industries, Talking Cinema is much in the merger state, many have been the rumors that Radio Corp. will soon absorb one or another...
...concerned if the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. should take over Radio's newborn (TIME, April 1) subsidiary, R.C.A. Communications, Inc. So formal and so important was this friendly agreement that it at once was called an ACCORD. A price was mentioned, around $100,000,000. Vice President David Sarnoff of Radio and Nelson Dean Jay of Morgan's Paris house talked details. U. S. directors of both companies hastily met and approved...
Radio-Western Union. Last week David Sarnoff, vice president and general manager of Radio Corp., and Newcomb Carlton, president of Western Union, sailed for Europe on the Aquitania. The incident strengthened rumors concerning a Radio-Western Union merger. Chief obstacle to a union between Radio Corp. of America Communications, Inc., and the Western Union Telegraph Co. is the White Act, Federal law forbidding the merger of wire and radio companies. It is believed, however, that Radio and Western Union will soon conclude an operating agreement. Later an effort will be made to amend the White Act to permit a merger...
...lecture is one of a series on the radio industry which has been delivered in this course recently. Last week David Sarnoff, general manager of the Radio Corporation of America, addressed the members of the course on "The Development of the Radio Art and the Radio Industry since...
...Radio Corporation is now working to develop television. When perfected, it will be of great help to business firms as they will be able to send photographs of bonds and checks across the country and across the ocean. Looking into the future, Mr. Sarnoff saw a time when mail would be sent by television. Another field of experiment is the talking moving picture. Sarnoff concluded his lecture by stressing the fact that the radio is essential to modern business...