Word: heralders
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...press predictably gobbled it up. Both of the major morning Boston metropolitans, the Globe and Herald, ran front-page stories and supplemented them with more than a full page of additional details AEL> After all, there was not much they could do. The Inner Belt has been good copy for years; M.I.T.'s apparent fright constituted an undeniably significant story...
...answer to this argument came from Washington, where New York Herald Tribune Columnist Roscoe Drummond cited facts and figures suggesting that the Viet Cong are being beaten right now. The V.C. are so short of manpower, said Drummond, that they are impressing 15-year-olds and girls into service; the B-52 raids are mauling them badly and their losses are high. Another answer came from South Viet Nam, where Columnist Joseph Alsop explained that as he saw it, "the problem that has been examined at Honolulu is peculiarly clear. Provided that the President is willing to wage...
...feverish world," remained wedded only to elegance, which he took to be his taste in dress (top hat and morning suit), food (champagne and pate), railroads (which he glorified in books and in his private Pullman), and cafe society, whose doings he reported, first for the New York Herald Tribune and later for the San Francisco Chronicle; of a heart attack; in San Mateo, Calif...
Died. Lewis Stiles Gannett, 74, naturalist, author (Young China) and for 25 years book reviewer of the New York Herald Tribune, who reported on 7,500 books, wrote 6,000 columns on everything from beards to katydids, once mused that "the ideal book reviewer is a superficial sort of fellow"; of leukemia; in Sharon, Conn...
...general assignment reporter for Newsday, concentrated much of his effort and classes in the English department on such trade-related subjects as "The Romans in America"; Ralph Hancox, editor of the Peterborough, Ontario, Examiner, devoted most of his time to French and a social relations course; former New York Herald Tribune Moscow reporter David Miller could be found as often in fine arts and music courses as in those related to the Soviet Union; and one of this year's specialists among the Fellows never set foot, in a course related to his field during the first term...