Word: graphically
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...Bentinck-Smith '37 has done in the Harvard Book. The first book of its type, it is a skillful job of selection from the treasury of Harvard ore. Bentinck-Smith's official University title is Honorary Curator of Type Specimens and Letter design in the Department of Printing and Graphic Arts in the Harvard College Library, but this is just a cover for the fact that he is editor of the Alumni Bulletin and unusually interested in both Harvard and literature...
...their families back home were pictures taken in Korean prison camps by Associated Press's Pulitzer Prizewinning* Photographer Frank Noel. It was a strange sort of beat. Noel, himself a P.W. since his 1950 capture while covering the Marines at Chosin Reservoir, used a Speed Graphic and films forwarded by A.P. through the Panmunjom camp. Censored by both Chinese and U.S. military, his pictures of beaming C.I.s seemed at once good propaganda to the Communists and good news for the U.S. home front. Last week, when Frank Noel reached Panmunjom in a group of released prisoners, his unsought "scoop...
...coronation year, perhaps the most memorable picture taken with a Speed Graphic camera, which most newspaper photographers use, was the radiant shot of Queen Elizabeth waving from her carriage (TIME, Nov. 17). But last week, in Graflex's annual $10,000 contest, Charles Dawson's portrait of Elizabeth, for United Press, came in third ($200). Top honors went to a picture of a more universal and more timeless theme-a soldier coming home from the wars (see cut). James N. Keen of the Louisville Courier-Journal won the $500 first prize for his shot of Captain Darrell...
Donald J. Hurley, who drew up the bill for Governor Herter creating a state department of Industry and Commerce. Lombard C. Jones, graphic designer and cartoonist who served as managing editor for the New Yorker and American Mercury. Victor O. Jones, managing editor of the Boston Globe. Sargent Kennedy, Registrar of Harvard College...
Each autumn students enroll in Chemistry 2, expecting a tough and boring semester of inorganic chemistry. By January they know that they were right about the course's toughness, but few call it uninteresting. Associate Professor Leonard K. Nash enlivens his courses by sprinkling lectures with graphic experiments. Tinker toys show the electron configurations of the elements to Natural Science 4 students, and Nash proves the explosive quality of hydrogen by turning a flamcthrower on soap bubbles filled with...