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Word: herald (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...think we all realize we are playing Harvard," he told a Herald writer yesterday, "but I don't think anyone tooks at this game as more important than playing Colgate or Vermont or any other opponent. It wouldn't make much sense to beat Harvard and lose all our other games...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: Crimson Gridders Face Unbeaten B.U.Team | 10/4/1969 | See Source »

Harvard's backfield is small, but extremely elusive and hard-running. The Brown Daily Herald, however, proclaims the Bruin backs as the best in the East, and the claim may have some validity. Unless the Crimson can integrate its timing in practice, and if the scrum has similar problems with pursuit, it could lose again...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: Crimson Ruggers Lose Opener, 11-0 | 9/29/1969 | See Source »

...refused to comment on the contents of the 70-page typewritten report, now in its third draft, before he addresses the Faculty. But an article in yesterday's Boston Herald Traveler says the report will urge the establishment of an 18-member elected Faculty council, chaired by Dean Ford, which would replace the Committee on Educational Policy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Faculty to Meet Tomorrow On New Discipline Group | 9/29/1969 | See Source »

...journalists go, Dick Schaap has gone pretty far. He was city editor of the New York Herald Tribune at 29, and became a columnist for that paper less than a year later. He has written five newsbooks on his own, including Turned On, R.F.K., Mickey Mantle, and now, at 34, appears well on his way to becoming the single most prolific mass producer of new reading matter since Alexandre Dumas put his friends to work preparing plot outlines and sketching scenes-a bit of largesse that prompted a 19th century French journalist to remark: "No one has ever read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newsbooks: The Schaap Shop | 9/19/1969 | See Source »

Codified Concierges. But Gramont, a French count by birth and a Pulitzer prizewinning journalist by trade (via Yale and the New York Herald Tribune), is really offering a well-packaged literary supermarket. His hope, clearly, is that readers in need of predigested fact and opinion should search no farther. Furnished with a vast array of knowledge-much of it the result of his French secondary-school education -he includes generous helpings of statistics, history, philosophy and lore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Croutons in the Soup | 9/12/1969 | See Source »

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