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...immortal Independents could very well say. There were too many queer ones, new ones, sad ones, naughty ones, for a measured judgment. There was, for instance, a picture by a Russian, one David Burliul, in which he visualized the vibrations of modern city life in what he defined as "radio style." Eitaro Ishigaki, a Japanese, drew a picture of a phantom on the point of being crushed by a thousand falling elevated trains and run over by a horde of cockroach taxicabs. It was a "satire on the U. S. flapper." Noboru Foujioka painted some dejected cretins playing at cards...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Independent Artists | 3/15/1926 | See Source »

...Hughes, John W. Davis, Elihu Root, Vernon L. Kellogg, Colonel Edward M. House, et al.?and one and all are agreed that time and money should be laid aside to guard and fan sparks of the kind that have lately blazed up into the automobile, airplane and radio. The broadest powers are to be given to an administrating board with Mr. Hoover in the chair. It is impossible to say what may some day result?trips to the moon? Invisibility? Synthetic babies? Immortality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Work Begins | 3/15/1926 | See Source »

Manager J. B. Fyffe announced yesterday that the first trip of the Freshman Glee Club will take place this spring when the club goes to Springfield on April 13, in order to broadcast over the radio at Station WBZ. This will mark the formal opening of a very promising season for the Freshmen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOLD COAST ORCHESTRA AND 1929 GLEE CLUB BROADCAST | 3/13/1926 | See Source »

Anning S. Prall, Democratic Congressman from Staten Island, N. Y., recently spoke by radio. His friends crowded around to congratulate him, declaring that by radio his voice was an exact reproduction of President Coolidge's. The discovery is not without its serious aspects-or would be if Congressman Prall were not an honorable man. At least it is good material for a new story on "How My Double Undid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Double | 3/8/1926 | See Source »

Last week, Professor Karl T. Compton reported that he had put molecular hydrogen into a tungsten tube, heated it to 2,800 degrees Centigrade, thereby dissociating it into atomic hydrogen, and shot into this a current of electrons from a hot filament similar to those used in a radio tube. The energy of this current was readily reckoned in volts, and as the voltage was increased things began to happen to the hydrogen atoms it encountered. Suddenly they began to emit radiation of a definite wavelength, measurable as a single line in a light spectrum. The hydrogen atoms had been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Hydrogen | 3/1/1926 | See Source »

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