Word: heraldic
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Such changes have moved the rejuvenated paper out of a dead heat with the rival Herald-Traveler only two years ago into a widening 58,000 circulation lead (374,000 v. 316,000). Says Winship: "I'm trying to make the paper damn courageous and really not afraid of sacred cows...
That was an opening for U.D.I.'s opponents, and they made the most of it. The Rhodesia Herald demanded a plebiscite. Three former Prime Ministers spoke out publicly to urge caution. The Tobacco Trade Association and the Chamber of Commerce warned that U.D.I, would bring "catastrophe," and a delegation of business and farm leaders went to Smith to argue against it. In prominent newspaper ads calling on all who opposed U.D.I, to send in their names to be counted, the Rhodesian Constitutional Association observed acidly that "no evidence has been given to the electorate that failure to get independence...
When Jeannine died in 1946, partially of malnutrition, De Staël settled into a black period that ended just as his third dealer, Jacques Dubourg, began to find an audience for his work. One of the first to herald him was Cubist Georges Braque, who announced: "De Staël has a true sense of painting." He seemed to be tearing strips off nature, but he put them back on canvas in his brutal abstract cityscapes...
...husband may be in that line of work, but the lady will have none of it. "In Detroit," said Mrs. Henry Ford II, 37, to the New York Herald Tribune's Eugenia Sheppard, "I am known as the bicycle girl. I can't drive a car." Not one of those things her husband makes, anyway. "I used to drive in Italy with a small, little car," explained the former Maria Cristina Vettore Austin, "but over here I don't even try. American cars look too big on me." Nowadays Cristina just leaps onto Stepson Edsel...
...join the U.S.O. tour, had just missed the first first night of his 40 since entering show business in 1954. The show was Pickwick, and it was a critical bust (see THEATER). Smarting from the reviews, which had been phoned to him in Tokyo,* the splenetic producer tore into Herald Tribune Critic Walter Kerr with an intemperance to match Radio Hanoi. Kerr (who is a Roman Catholic), said Merrick, "panned Pickwick because the Pope was saying Mass at Yankee Stadium that night, and Walter was simply sore that he had to be at the opening instead. Someone ought to send...