During the summer of 1966, we traveled to the Isle of Manhattan for a visit with a few of my mother’s relatives. Knowing the Intertype Corporation was located across the East River in Brooklyn, I made arrangements to visit. The following available light photos were taken, and we had a fine time. Intertype machines compose lines of type out of a molten lead, tin, and antimony alloy. A predecessor of the Intertype is the Linotype, a word created from the phrase, “line of type.” Both machines produce such lines that are used in printing newspapers, books, magazines et al. Since I was employed as an Intertype operator in Pasadena City College’s print shop, and my dad was a precision machinist, we both enjoyed the tour. I worked at the PCC print shop for fourteen years, after which I was hired to teach courses in audio controls and master control radio broadcast operations at the college. Always will I remember this NY adventure.