Word: telegrapher
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...weaker papers that had space to spare. With the end of newsprint restrictions. British admen, like their Madison Avenue cousins, began to concentrate their ads in dailies that give them either mass circulation, such as the Daily Express (circ. 4,042,334), or class circulation, e.g., the Daily Telegraph (1.075,565). Commercial TV had also lured advertisers from the smaller-circulation dailies...
TRANS-OCEAN TV will go from Florida to Cuba. FCC okayed American Telephone & Telegraph Co. plan to send U.S. programs to Cuba via "scatter propagation" system, which deflects TV waves off particles high in atmosphere, transmits them over horizon without relays...
...Frederick Marcus Farwell, 50, resigned as president and chief executive officer of ailing (first-quarter deficit: $624,978) typewriter-maker Underwood Corp., moved on to a new job as an executive vice president of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. Chicago-born, Yale-educated ('28) Farwell was an executive at International Business Machines and waxmaker S. C. Johnson & Son before taking over Underwood's presidency in 1955 with the job of reorganizing the company from top to bottom. When the company continued to lose money and Underwood's board of directors turned down a proposed merger with National Cash...
...their coverage of Dr. John Bodkin Adams' trial on a charge of murder, five London newspapers-the Daily Mail, News Chronicle, Daily Telegraph, Evening Standard and Daily Mirror-had libel writs from Dr. Adams' lawyers...
...nation's lignite mining, 50% of its. iron-ore mining, 20% of its hard-coal mining plus much of its production of aluminum (70%), lead (42%), zinc (28%), oil (18%) and steel (5%). The state also controls 100% of the German railway (total employment: 500,000) and telegraph systems...