Word: schulman
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Those receiving Masters of Laws degrees were Joseph D. Block, Donald M. Cormie, James E. Cotter, Evans G. Fitts, Joseph S. Gill, and Alfred Schulman...
...start as a cameraman in 1923, when he was hired by International News Photos at $9 a week and bought his first Speed Graphic with snitched "train money." In 20 years Samuel Schulman has covered transatlantic flights, big murders (like the Lindbergh case), national political conventions, revolutions (in Cuba), war. Last week, in a 234-page book called Where's Sammy? (Random House; $2.50), he told the story of his life. (The book was really written by International News Service's Bob Considine, who also "edited" Captain Ted Lawson's recent Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo...
Brassy, cocky, seemingly born with a sixth sense, Sammy Schulman has had more than his share of news beats. He was the only "snapper" on the scene when Assassin Giuseppe Zangara shot at Franklin Roosevelt in Miami in 1933. Result: a memorable picture of fatally wounded Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak. Of all the U.S. photographers who tried, Sammy alone got into Rome's St. Peter's in 1939 for Pope Pius XII's coronation...
Where's Sammy? has a phony ring to it at times. There are other photographers besides Schulman and they are not all completely pedestrian. And I.N.P. does not always, as the book implies, come out on top in the race for what the trade calls "pix." But Where's Sammy? is highly readable, nevertheless. Sammy Schulman, 37, has trotted his five-by-five frame over much of the globe, seen a lot of history. He hopes to see more-Allied soldiers "walking down the Fifth Avenue of Tokyo," for example. Maybe he will. Luck seems to like...
...mechanic and hydroplant operator for a Southern Utility Corporation until 1939, when he became an international representative of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. Similar stories lie back of the other Fellows, Charles Connor, Samuel Hassen, Frederick Kelley, Lyle McKinney, Morris Paladino, Joseph Riley, Charles Scholl, Milton Schulman, Edward Wagenfeld, and Norman Johnson...