American cinematographer (Jan-Dec 1926)

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February, 1D2G AMERICAN CINE M ATOGR APHBR Eleven i With these developments in the air, this publication has decided, as is announced elsewhere in this issue, to devote a department to amateur cinematography, with liberal attention being paid to legitimate questions and answers. It is hoped in this way to contribute materially to the progress of amateur cinematography, which promises a verv full future indeed. CThe Projector Consolidation CflThe consolidation of the manufacturers of the Powers, Simplex and Acme projectors is being looked on generally as a move which should prove ultimately of great advantage to the motion picture industry as a whole. Reduction of overhead, the combining of facilities under one centralized head, and the aggregate experience of the respective organizations are viewed as making for a body of workers who will maintain, in the greatest way, high projector manufacturing standards. CJ The consolidation will be known as the International Projector Corporation, which will have headquarters in a ten-story building at 90 Gold street, New York City. The companies, which were merged in the new corporate identity, include the Nicholas Power Company, the Precision Machine Company of New York and the Acme Motion Picture Projector Company of Chicago.