Word: heralding
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Thus asked the New York Herald Tribune News Syndicate in a large advertisement last week in the Editor and Publisher. Knowing that such questions as these have long plagued humanity, the Herald Tribune was happy to announce that it was at last able to answer them. An oracle had been secured who would devote a column a day to dealing with these and other trifling topics. In response to the query "Who?" the Herald Tribune proudly answered...
...those who entertained any lingering doubts about the omniscience of Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, the Herald Tribune appended a list of sample questions and answers...
...York Herald-Tribune: "There could be nothing more significant than the stand taken by the representatives of the undergraduates of half a dozen colleges in conference at Middletown, Conn. In so far as this group works to purge the sport of its hippodroming, ballyhooing features, we are in full sympathy, though we cannot accept all their suggestions for attaining their objective...
...Boston Herald: "If the evil has not been exaggerated. What is the remedy? And what do the students say for themselves? At the Wesleyan University conference they were agreed that football needs to be curtailed in the interest of education. . . . And if college athletics really need revision, what more promising sign could there be than the undertaking of the task by the students themselves...
Died. Heyward Hall McAllister, '65, last surviving son of famed Manhattan social arbiter, the late Ward McAllister, who coined the phrase "the 400," by remarking to a reporter, "After all, there are only about 400 persons in Society"; at Mentone, French Riviera. The New York Herald-Tribune concluded his obituary notice with the words: "The name of Heyward Hall McAllister is not in the 'Social Register...