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...training of undergraduate fraternity leaders. Most serious are its general sessions, where discussions of ritual, scholarship, fraternity history and purposes do not let undergraduate delegates forget the great social aims and accomplishments of college fraternalism. Not unlike, other fraternities is SAE in its convention program. Here COLLEGIATE DIGEST presents typical scenes from a typical college fraternity convention taken at the SAE meeting in Evanston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Picture Program of a Fraternity Convention | 10/8/1937 | See Source »

...issue of the late Literary Digest was a strange looking creation. Due to a compositors' strike, the magazine used typewriters to prepare its columns of editorial matter, photographed the final copy, made line-cuts from the photographs and went to press on schedule. The appearance of the magazine was ragged because the right-hand edge of the typewritten copy could not be evenly aligned. The Literary Digest, at this time, was offering a prize of $100,000 to anybody who would figure out a way to make typewritten copy square up like printed matter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Typewriter Printing | 8/23/1937 | See Source »

...Ryan, 38, is editor of a highly profitable 136-page magazine called Oral Hygiene, sent free to 68,000 dentists each month* and of a 58-page monthly called Dental Digest to which 22,000 dentists subscribe. Instead of using his own magazines to present his Plan, and thus risk offending the profession, Dr. Ryan used the Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, issued last week. To implement his Plan he required a chart of the human mouth which all dentists in the U. S. might understand. None of the 38 dental schools of this country had such a chart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Telltale Teeth | 8/9/1937 | See Source »

...product, called The Digest, will appear on July 17 as a weekly.* Its publisher, Albert Shaw Jr., son of Founder Dr. Shaw, announced: "We propose to publish an interpretative digest of everything in print that is important-and to do it every week." Dr. Shaw, now almost 80, who was away on vacation with his 26-year-old second wife, quickly returned to New York to take editorial charge of the new magazine. It will consist of three sections: a lead called "The Story of a Week," a centre filled with picture layouts, a back-of-the-book dedicated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Digested Digest | 6/28/1937 | See Source »

...initial print order of 600,000 is planned for the combined magazine. Before Literary Digest mispredicted a Landonslide last year it alone had 685,537 circulation. The Digest will accept liquor advertising, something which Literary Digest never did. The firm of Funk & Wagnalls will continue in the book and dictionary publishing business under the management of Robert J. Cuddihy & sons, who own 60% of its stock. President Wilfred John Funk, son of Founder Dr. Funk and 40% stockholder, is reported to have an idea for a new magazine up his sleeve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Digested Digest | 6/28/1937 | See Source »

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