Word: heralding
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...York Tribune compared the play with "Tip Top" and found the Pudding burlesque fully as entertaining as Fred Stone's production. The New York Sun praised the "ladies" of the cast and Chorus whom they reported "kept the entertainment going with a zip and a bang". The New York Herald said the play "enabled Harvard to claim one more victory" and gave the following general comment on the performance: "More and more do college theatrical productions approximate the Broadway standard, and the annual show of the Hasty Pudding Club, called "It's Only Natural", which was given at the Plaza...
Boston's port, according to the Herald, is "lapsing into a condition of innocuous desuetude." And Professor Ripley, in urging the rehabilitation of New England railroads, says: "This must take place through a mustering of all the financial resources of the region, public as well as private, if necessary. The industrial preservation of New England demands it. The present plight is avowedly critical...
...again under fire. During vacation, a minor barrage has been set off by various groups of collegiate authorities in congress assembled, who are fearful that the present tendency of over-emphasis on "big" athletics will make college sports professional in spirit even though amateur in letter. The Boston Herald comments editorially at some length. It is feared that "Victories may come to cost more than they are worth, more in money and more also in the dulling of the fine edge of moral sensitiveness that makes the charm of so many college boys today..... The great end is to keep...
...Christmas spirit is contagious, old Scrooge found that out; and so do we all as the great day approaches. We find ourselves humming snatches of tune, and surprised roommates catch fragments like "God rest ye merry, Gentlemen," "Silent night," and "Hark the herald . . ." The Christmas carols are the good old outlet for Christmas spirit. People have sung them ever since "thou" and "thee" were in everyday conversation. In the old days little bands of waits went from house to house to sing before the lighted candle. Nowadays we set up artificial evergreens in public parks, and whole communities gather round...
...There is a romance connected with newspaper photography that has made me always consider it the most interesting and fascinating of professions", said Mr. James A. Jones, photographer for the Boston Herald, when interviewed yesterday by a CRIMSON reporter...