Word: herald
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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HISS MUST STILL ATONE FOR CRIME COLUMNIST DAVID LAWRENCE in the New York Herald Tribune...
...utility average (up a fraction of a point to 60.75) was more than 80 points below its high. Among other standard Wall Street guides, there were similar discrepancies. The New York Times average of 50 representative stocks, at 253.55, was 50 points below the 1929 high, while the Herald Tribune average of 100 stocks, at 175.72 was 33.15 points below its top. On the other hand. Standard & Poor's index of 50 stocks, which had been setting new highs for three years, was 100 points above the old peak...
...monopoly. New competition by abler and more socially minded newspapermen will displace and supersede it." Some of the best papers in the U.S., says he, have no competition in their morning or evening local field, e.g., St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Milwaukee Journal, Philadelphia Inquirer, Washington Post, Miami Herald...
...Hearst's Los Angeles Herald & Express, the headlines at first called him DR. SAMUEL SHEPPARD. Then the name was shortened to DR. SHEPPARD. By last week it was simply DR. SAM or just SAM. He needed no further identification. The same thing happened in other papers. For the last month the case of Dr. Samuel Sheppard, the Cleveland osteopath charged with murdering his pregnant wife TIME, Aug. 30), has been the biggest murder story in the U.S. press since the rial of Bruno Hauptmann in 1935. Said Herald & Express Managing Editor Herbert H. Krauch: "It's been...
...courtroom sketches). Scripps-Howard followed suit with its own crew, including Inspector Robert Fabian of Scotland Yard, who, repelled by the Hollywood-like atmosphere of the trial, wrote icily: "In the staid atmosphere of the Old Bailey, this would not have been allowed." Even the conservative New York Herald Tribune sent a specialist: Margaret Parton, whose literate, low-keyed reporting, the first such crime reporting she has ever done, was probably the best on the trial. Newsmen, assigned to the story by papers all over the U.S., filled almost every spectator seat in the courtroom...