Word: taylors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Boston; Louis J. Dunham, Jr., of Dorchester; Elisha R. Greenhood, Jr., of Wellesley Hills; Charles A. Hill, of Worcester; Joseph Levine, of Dorchester; Philip Levine, of Dorchester; Sotirios Papafrangos, of Springfield; Edward T. Powers, of Boston; Leon N. Satenstein, of Malden; Maurice Steinberg, of Whitman; and Harold R. Taylor, of Somerville...
...Some biographers disagree with Ambassador Troyanovsky; they would attribute this remark to Phineas Taylor Barnum...
...last week no one announced wide-scale television for next week, next month or next year. In Manhattan, however, lean young Philo Taylor Farnsworth, one of the two top U. S. televisors, announced to the Institute of Radio Engineers a new cold-cathode amplifier which he believed would be immensely useful to radio in general, to television in particular. Mr. Farnsworth, who despite his flair for electronics has learned to talk like a tycoon, calls his new tube the multipactor. Ordinary thermionic tubes generate electrons by boiling them from a hot filament. The multipactor takes advantage of the fact that...
...Philo Taylor Farnsworth, 30, failed ten years ago as a radio repairman. To George Everson, well-to-do San Francisco bachelor, he submitted his scheme for electronic television, no blueprints. When radio engineers assured Mr. Everson that the Farnsworth idea seemed feasible, he put up money for experiments, got addi tional backing from officials of San Fran cisco's Crocker First National Bank. Hard-working young Farnsworth twice threw equipment worth $25,000 out the window, started over again. Finally successful demonstrations were made at Phila delphia's Franklin Institute. Philco Radio &; Television Corp. bought U. S. rights...
...identification of themselves with Christ through pain and penance. The Mother Church deplores the Penitentes, has been able to do little about them. Secretive, savage toward meddling outsiders, the blood brothers practiced their rites for hundreds of years without molestation. When near Albuquerque last month a writer named Carl Taylor was murdered by his house boy, it was suggested that the killing was in retribution for an article written by Taylor on the Penitentes and subsequently published in Today. Nevertheless, in recent years the Penitentes have been photographed, and on Good Friday many a tourist in New Mexico goes "Penitente...