Word: herald
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...contemplate a settlement in which everyone was dissatisfied, yet satisfied that his dissatisfaction was balanced by that of the others, may have been a brand new idea to the Russians. At first, the smallest and vaguest deals were blown up into diplomatic triumphs. The N. Y. Herald Tribune joyously reported "the first break in the log-jam." What was it? Merely that "a private meeting appointed a committee to study a plan to postpone the [Italian] colonial question for a year...
Like many a war correspondent, the New York Herald Tribune's Pulitzer Prizewinner Homer Bigart feared that postwar reporting would seem dull. But last week, in his new post in Poland, he was in no danger of being bored. Bigart, who describes his own politics as "left-of-center," expected to be welcomed in Warsaw. Instead, he found himself in the thick of a fight...
...starry-eyed debutante daughter of the sports world's Terrific Twenties, and by the same sire, World War, will be given her official coming out party in a great al fresco soiree under the flood lights of the Yankee Stadium here tomorrow night. Bill Cunningham in the Boston Herald, June 19. ...Al fresco, ad infinitum, ad nauseam...
Last Resort. In Miami, a desperate ad appeared in the Herald: "Harvard graduate, age 20, B.S. in chemistry. . . . Willing to work for a Yaleman...
...arrived in Washington a quarter century ago from Anamosa, Iowa to catch on briefly with the Washington Herald before landing a small job with Pathfinder (a news weekly which circulates mostly to farmers), where he ran a question & answer column that predated the radio quiz shows. Other reporters who had vaulted to fame and fat contracts wondered what kept...