Word: heralding
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Krishnamurti, whom Mrs. Besant brought to England in 1908 to be educated at Oxford and nurtured in pious humility. This Messiah-designate is now 30 and before and after his transfiguration will tour the world with twelve 'apostles" chosen by and including Mrs Besant. A publicity corps will herald his comings, echo his goings. Last week, by way of preparing the world to receive him, he said...
...first of a series of articles to be published in the Boston Herald each Sunday by different college comic publications, beginning next week, will be written by the Harvard Lampoon, it was announced yesterday by A. G. Cooke, '26, president of the Lampoon...
...played all of Beethoven's 32 sonatas in a series of eight concerts, a feat which she alone of women has performed. As an artist she had perfect training, having studied under Jedliczka, Reimann, Boise; at her debut in 1905 all the critics guessed safely with the Boston Herald: "Here is a woman with emotions and with a soul ... a brilliant future"; as a performer she has never had the ecstatic devotion of multitudes, but has always found amply appreciative audiences in half the cities of the U. S. And, without doubt, she is intellectually the peer of any virtuoso...
...weeks ago he sailed unostentatiously from the U. S. to attend the Madras conference, leaving behind him in the Philosophers' Book Shop, Manhattan, one Captain R. L. Jones, full of faith. To a reporter of the New York Herald Tribune, the bookish Captain hinted that the reincarnation of Christ in Mr. Krishnamurti would occur quite soon, he being now 30 years of age?again reminiscent. And this information the Herald Tribune reporter expansively divulged to the public...
Other questions, other answers, were printed in the Herald Tribune's advertisement of its new oracle. But a doubt remained, for although Dr. Cadman's many thousand admirers were quite ready to concede that he must "use his vast store of knowledge on innumerable topics with amazing facility," and that he was, as advertised, "WISE, WHIMSICAL, EDUCATIONAL, HELPFUL," there were some who wondered whether his all-embracing wisdom did not permit him to detect the offense proffered to his personal dignity and to his cloth by the ill taste of that circus-barker advertisement...