Word: heralding
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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There was doubtless no subtle innuendo in this statement by the Times, whose motto is "All the news that's fit to print," although the motto of the Times's rival, the New York Herald Tribune, is "Complete news plus the best features." Generous, imperturbable, the Times can well afford to be. Despite much thunderous prophecy, the Herald Tribune's latest milestone, announced as passed last week, is only 300,000. Though 100,000 people represent only about 1% of the potential newspaper market in Manhattan and vicinity, 100,000 bona fide readers represent a very considerable...
Taking his share of the capital and "handsome profit" derived by the sale of the Birmingham Age-Herald (TIME, March 21) Frederick I. Thompson, publisher of all the newspapers in Mobile, Ala., last week bought an Evening Times, and thereby became publisher of all the evening newspapers in his state's capital, Montgomery. He merged the Evening Times with his Montgomery Evening Journal. Publisher Thompson's onetime partners in Birmingham, onetime Governor Braxton Bragg Comer and son Donald Comer, were not associated with him in the new purchase, their interest in newspapers having been purely industria-political. Save...
Robert Lincoln O'Brien, Editor of the Boston Herald; David Lawrence, Editor of the United States Daily, of Washington, D. C.; and Professor A. T. Miles, of the School of Journalism, Ohio State University will be the judges of this year's New York Times Current Events Prize Contest, it was announced yesterday by Professor A. N. Holcombe '06, who is the representative of the University on the national committee...
...oldtime pigtailed Chinese who is in revolt against the foreigner, but instead modern, pigtailless, Chinese soldiers and intellectuals. 1New York Herald Tribune. 25t. Paul Pioneer Press. 3Dayton Daily News...
...Boston Herald of March 23, Mr. Philip Hale expends over five paragraphs, and much space in the Symphony program, in attempting to prove his contention that Beethoven's "Missa Solomnis" has little spiritual value after all. To Mr. Hale part of the Mass gives "an effect of infinite labor and vain endoavor and is not an uplifting of the hearer's soul." One almost expects him to say that the music might just as well have been written to the words of almost any Gerruan folk song...