Word: herald
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...then became a reporter for the Bridgeport, Conn., Telegram. He was fired, he recalled, for "writing too goddam much purple prose," and went to the old Brooklyn Eagle as Washington correspondent. Luce hired him in 1928 as TIME'S capital stringer to succeed a New York Herald Tribune reporter, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. A year later, Billings became national affairs editor and in 1933 managing editor...
...Eldridge Cleaver seeking legitimate business associates to finance and organize marketing of his revolutionary design in male pants;" read the advertisement in the International Herald Tribune. Had the fugitive Black Panther decided to go straight? Hardly. The distinguishing feature of Cleaver's new pants turned out to be an enormous, codpiece-like set of external genitalia. "I want to solve the problem of the fig leaf mentality," explained Cleaver, who now lives in the Latin Quarter of Paris after spending four years in Algeria. "Clothing is an extension of the fig leaf; it puts our sex inside our bodies...
...over the paper last September with a $5 million payment to descendants of the Adams, Kauffmann and Noyes families that have owned it since 1867, plus a $5 million loan to the paper. He brought in James Bellows, 52, the highly regarded former editor of the old New York Herald Tribune and associate editor of the Los Angeles Times, to put some light back into the burnt-out Star...
...Holmberg, with a problem. Holmberg, a silver-haired man with long sideburns who is the Summer School's registrar, has come into Crook's Holyoke Center office just after Crooks himself has gotten there: Crooks has barely had time to glance approvingly at the rave review in the morning Herald of the previous night's concert...
...Guild's withdrawal is being interpreted by NLRB negotiators as a formal end of the 90-month strike, and the agency now recognizes the new group as the Herald's official union. Except, that is, for a couple of further complications. Herald executives, mindful of the paper's 42% drop in circulation since the original strike began and reluctant to face another walkout, are appealing the NLRB decision. Though most of the 1967 strikers have long since found other jobs, the Guild is still holding out for a settlement. But the scabs' union hopes to negotiate...