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Word: heraldic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...committee that selected the architectural firm to design the latter. “I would think that would be a very significant conflict of interest,” Allston resident and self-described community activist Tim McHale said in a phone interview yesterday. Last week, a Boston Herald article reported that Krieger, who is also professor of Literature and Arts B-20: “Designing the American City,” was being considered by insiders as a top candidate to fill the role. But while the Harvard professor’s name is rumored...

Author: By Laura A. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Prof To Design City? | 2/12/2007 | See Source »

Drew Gilpin Faust’s expected election as the 28th President of Harvard College will spark a flurry of attention. Worldwide, headlines will herald Harvard’s first female leader in its 371-year history. But as the world takes note of Harvard’s milestone, it will likely ignore the far more significant crossroads at which Harvard finds itself today...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: President Drew Gilpin Faust | 2/9/2007 | See Source »

...south. Akinola, born into the Yoruba tribe, itself divided by the two faiths, was shaped in a crucible of the religious strife that has by now taken thousands of lives on both sides. That experience, combined with his naturally combative and entrepreneurial nature, made him a fearless herald of Christ. Starting when he became a bishop in 1989, Akinola developed Nigeria's hewn-from-the-forest capital, Abuja, into a great Anglican center. Later, he habitually sent bishops to non-Christian areas to preach the Gospel. Muslims sometimes responded violently, but the church gained a presence in the north. Notes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At the Center of a Schism | 2/8/2007 | See Source »

...glass of hindsight, we see that the elite should have embraced the very first significant comics artist. That was McCay, who, just 100 years and a month before the Los Angeles museum show opened, published his first full-color page of Little Nemo in Slumberland in the New York Herald. Here was a popular art at its onset and apogee: not a primitive Lascaux cave painting but a Sunday-supplement Hieronymus Bosch - a glorious other-world of dreamscapes as phantasmagorical as they were funny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Does Mad Need a Museum? | 2/3/2007 | See Source »

...McCay did some marketing of the Nemo brand (sandals) and in 1908 put the boy on Broadway, in a spectacle with music by Victor Herbert. But the strip didn't achieve great popularity; it was not syndicated nationally, running only in the New York Herald, then in the New York American. Decades would pass before a new generation of connoisseurs saw the art in Little Nemo. (Original pages can sell for $30,000 today.) The fish with the same name in the 2003 Pixar film is surely a tribute to McCay's pioneering lushness of imagination and precision of design...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Does Mad Need a Museum? | 2/3/2007 | See Source »

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