Word: heralders
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...another poll, Julie herself for the first time joined the ranks of top box-office stars. The first ten, according to a Motion Picture Herald survey of U.S. exhibitors...
...Instead of Makeup. The strange disease was just about the only thing that ever subdued Maggie Higgins. A driving, headstrong girl, she made a name for herself by slogging through Germany as a New York Herald Tribune reporter in the waning days of World War II. She made an even bigger reputation in the Korean War as the only woman correspondent on the scene. At first, the U.S. Army wanted no women reporters at all and ordered her out of the country. Getting wind of this, a Soviet magazine gleefully ran a cartoon showing her being ejected from Korea...
...York Herald Tribune News Service, begun in 1931, shares a leased wire with the Chicago Daily News Service, but is otherwise autonomous. It does considerably more editing than the other services, trimming and tailoring Trib stories to meet the needs of its 60 U.S. clients. It also assigns Trib reporters to handle stories that appear only on the wire, mails features and columns to smaller papers that cannot afford the wire service...
Reaching more Protestant readers (454,000) than any other interdenominational publication, the 87-year-old Christian Herald has become a success by relating religion to the familiar problems of everyday life. In its intimate, folksy manner, with such articles as Why I Left Sunday School or How to Listen to a Sermon, the magazine was engaging but seldom provocative. Now the old order is changing. Last week the Rev. Daniel A. Poling, 81, announced that on Jan. 1 he will retire as editor after 40 years on the job. A conservative in his politics as well as his religion, Poling...
Under Poling, the Herald generally avoided the theological controversies roiling today's church; Stewart plans to plunge into some of them, possibly even giving space to the new "God is dead" theologians. The Herald will also carry more news, both religious and secular. "In the past," says Stewart, "there has been an unfortunate liaison between religion and nostalgia on the magazine. Because of the change in general climate of the Christian community, I do feel religious journalism is going to have to reflect this change and keep pace...