Word: broadcasting
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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Ambassador Jones, having rid himself of amateur restrictions (TIME, Nov. 24), last week announced he will broadcast weekly golf lessons for 26 weeks (NBC) for Lambert Pharmacal Co. (''Listerine...
...hours. To correspondents, some of the men sentenced to death looked "broken," others "nervous," as OGPU police took them to their cells. Were they really going to die? Occidental observers have been suspicious from the first that the trial was supreme propaganda, rehearsed in advance by prosecutor and prisoners, broadcast throughout Russia to convince peasants and proletarians that if the Soviet Government seems to get poor results at times the blame should be placed on "foreign plotters.'' A public shooting of all those condemned to death, an execution witnessed by all the occidental correspondents in Moscow would have...
...more enthusiastic, are at least more numerous; for since 1900 Harvard has graduated its yearly half thousand. In order that these old friends may hear Copey's voice and imagine his personal touch, one is inclined to endorse the Herald's suggestion and to hope that a broadcast may be arranged. The Harvard family to whom Copey each year reads Christmas stories would thus be united. A place in it would not be usurped, for only those who have known him will be listening to the real Copey when they hear him over the radio. The others will hear only...
Racehorse Lady Broadcast, property of Banker Rogers Caldwell, head of Caldwell & Co. whose recent crash precipitated bank failures throughout the South (TIME, Dec. 1), ran second in a race at Bowie (Md.) track on Thanksgiving Day. It was the last race in which the Caldwell colors will appear. Banker Caldwell is selling his stables, turning farmer...
Suggestion for "The Trial of Vivienne Ware," which was promptly adopted for other Hearstpapers, came from the American's busy, owlish Editor Edmond D. ("Cobbie") Coblentz, longtime publisher of the San Francisco Examiner. He plucked the idea from a small news item from Copenhagen telling of the broadcast of a murder trial there. Writer Kenneth Ellis of the American's radio-news staff wrote the scenario, packed into it the stuff of which city editors' dreams are made: the knife thrown at Dancer Dolores Divine as she walks to the witness chair; the disappearance of the "mystery...