Word: screenings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...this reason that we in our work have mechanized and visualized the higher mathematics not with any thought of displacing the conventional treatment but rather to free it from that smoke screen of detailed processes which obscure the prodigious ability of its machinery...
...husband chases her to Paris. Amusing in spots and affecting in others, Rebound is likely to be over-appreciated by the minority of cinemad dicts, tolerated by the rest. Both classes will be appalled to note that Ina Claire, hitherto a best-dressed lady of U. S. stage & screen, wears an unflattering gown through a long portion of the picture...
...Evansville, Ind.. Virginia Lynenback, nervous about leaving her window open, put a revolver under her pillow before going to sleep. A thief cut through the window-screen, entered the room, stole Virginia Lynenback's watch, purse, revolver...
...causes": first the winning by an Eastern people of the Russo-Japanese war; second the sending of black troops against white in the World War; and third the influence on the Indian mind of motion pictures, "particularly with reference to the appearance and activities of white women upon the screen": i. e. an Indian instinctively scorns a man who does not show mastery of his wife, something seldom shown in movies...
Last March Photoplay (monthly) printed an article about Funnyman Arbuckle called "Just Let Me Work," quoted the chief Arbuckle ambition: "I want to go back to the screen. I think I can entertain and gladden the people. . . ." Editor James R. Quirk of Photoplay gave a radio talk, asked his listeners whether they thought Funnyman Arbuckle should be permitted to return to the screen under his own name. Last week, in the July Photoplay James R. Quirk gave the answer. He had received 3,000 letters from people who thought Arbuckle should be permitted to resume cinemacting; among the letter-writers...