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York Evening: Reuben Lucius Goldberg was born in San Francisco on July 4, 1883. After graduating from the University of California, in 1904, he drew sports cartoons for San Francisco newspapers until 1907 and for the New York Evening Mail from 1907 to 1921. He started syndication work in 1915, developing such features as "Boob Mc-Nutt," "Foolish Questions," and "Crazy Inventions." From 1938 he did editorial cartoons for the New York Sun and then for the New York Journal American.
42.The Photo-Secession, no. I (1902), p. 1.
43. Alfred Stieglitz, "The Photo-Secession at the National Arts Club, New York," Photograms of the Year, pp. 17-20.
44. New York Evening Sun; reprinted in Camera Notes, vol. 6 (1902), p. 39.
45. Photography, vol. 7 (1904), p. 243.
46. The Photo-Secession, no. 5 (1904), p. 2.
47. Photography News, vol. 53 (1908), p. 268.
48. Frederick H. Evans to Alfred Stieglitz, December 6, 1908, Stieglitz Archives, The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
In the courts and on the bastions of the Venetian castle there is now a remarkable "evening life." In the Courtyard of the Guards open-air opera and symphony concerts draw up to 10,000 people on many summer evenings. The Round Bastion becomes, each summer, an afternoon and evening cafe with a glorious prospect.
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