Word: heralders
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After a while, a woman peered her head in to call Matthews to the phone. "That was Larry Claflin from the Herald," he said when he hung up. "He wanted two seats in the stands. I told him they were all sold out. So he said, 'Ask Joe the next time you see him."' Matthews laughed. So did his assistant, Bob Donovan, who had accompanied Matthews and Restic to lunch...
...World folded into a merger with the New York Telegram in 1931; on the afternoon of the announcement, Ogden Reid, owner of the nation's most influential Republican paper, asked Lippmann to write two columns a week for the New York Herald Tribune. The switch startled many, and some of Lippmann's liberal friends accused him of selling out to the conservative opposition. Their suspicions seemed to be confirmed later when Lippmann blasted the "collectivism" of the New Deal. In the 1936 election, Lippmann supported Alfred Landon...
Lippmann went on to a career in journalism that saw him attain almost the status of an oracle in the course of publishing over 4000 columns, mostly for a syndicate headed by The New York Herald Tribune...
...other Hard Times, back in 1929, there was what Columnist Russell Baker called a "boom in love." Now, millions of families are finding that they have to stay home and save rather than go out and spend. It may not herald a new epoch of romance, but the New Hard Times-together with newly conservative sexual mores-may solidify more families than they dissolve...
...another 1.4 million children were born into a world that already contains nearly half a billion starving people. In the sobering context of these statistics, U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger delivered a keynote address that he considered one of the most important speeches of his career. History may herald the speech as signaling the start of a new era of international cooperation. But to many of the delegates in Rome last week, no rhetoric, however sublime, seemed sufficient acknowledgment of the human misery that had brought them to the Eternal City...