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Word: heraldic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Women sportswriters, used to be relegated to covering women's basketball, field hockey and sport fashions, but now work such brawny beats as football and boxing. Indeed, the demand for women writers may be outstripping the supply. Says Blackie Sherrod, sports editor of the Dallas Times-Herald: "I wish I had one. Everybody's looking for one. What I'd give for a good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Sultanas of Sweat | 7/12/1976 | See Source »

...charges, which remain sealed, are the outcome of the Bristol County district attorney's investigation into the beating of Martin G. Regan, according to this week's Boston Sunday Herald Advertiser...

Author: By Peter Frawley, | Title: Harvard's Coin Theft Detective Charged in Assault Indictment | 7/9/1976 | See Source »

...story of Ferdinand's, an old department store and the remains of what was once a suburban shopping center. Now Dudley is considered urban, not suburban, and there is ironic humor in a large painted sign on one of Ferdinand's walls, which reads, in barely legible letters, "BOSTON HERALD--MOST NEWS...

Author: By Lewis Clayton, | Title: Notes from Underground | 6/28/1976 | See Source »

Getting exclusive stories through the sponsorship of scientific investigations -and related feats of derring-do-is a grand but largely abandoned tradition of U.S. journalism.* It was the New York Herald that sent Henry M. Stanley on one of history's most celebrated man hunts ("Find Livingstone!" ordered Publisher James Gordon Bennett Jr. in 1869). The Times backed Commander Robert E. Peary in the 1908 North Pole race with $4,000 and got more for its money than the Herald, which put $25,000 behind Dr. Frederick Cook. In 1922 the Times bought U.S. rights to stories from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Coverage in Depth | 6/21/1976 | See Source »

...would've been more at home if I went to Harvard now," Robert C. Garrett '71, a reporter for the Boston Herald-American, said last week. "I don't consider myself arch-conservative, but I was concerned by the lax attitude in terms of education. A lot of the anti-war, counter-cultural protests rubbed off a bad way. People had the feeling that school wasn't that important...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky, | Title: Class of '71 Views 60's Turmoil As Positive, Mind-Opening Era | 6/14/1976 | See Source »

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