Word: heraldings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...revival will not take place," wrote Columnist Walter Lippmann last week in the New York Herald Tribune, "just because Mr. Krock of the New York Times is able to imply that Mr. Joseph Kennedy and Mr. Jesse Jones are seeing the President rather more often these days than Messrs. Corcoran and Cohen.'' What Mr. Lippmann apparently wanted the President to do and what the National Association of Manufacturers (see p. 11) certainly wanted him to do was to make unmistakably clear the New Deal's willingness, now and henceforth to cooperate with Business. Franklin Delano Roosevelt last...
...titled The Thibaults. Its little-known writer was Roger Martin du Gard. The imposing boxed edition was made to look even less exciting by quotations from reviews that compared the book vaguely to the works of Balzac, Romain Rolland and Marcel Proust. Martin du Gard, said the New York Herald Tribune loftily, "reconciles at once the fastidious preciosity of Proust and Rolland's passionate evangelism with the traditional body of art." In a year when best sellers included Sorrell and Son, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Beau Geste, Martin du Gard's masterpiece was so thumping a publishing failure that...
...spring of 1896 James Gordon Bennett cabled from Paris instructions to W. C Reick, his editorial representative of the New York Herald, to select a staff member to make a survey of horseless vehicles then under construction in the U. S. and to cover fully the development of motor manufacture and sport in this country as a daily and Sunday feature of the Herald...
...statesmen to learn something about economics and apply what they learn toward easing the world's stresses & strains, instead of holding endless conferences in terms of politics & prestige. King Leopold last summer made a public appeal for action along these lines so trenchant that the London Laborite Daily Herald said it "may alter world history." and the London Conservative Morning Post declared: "The very least that countries to which the appeal was directed can do is to give the proposal their urgent and sympathetic consideration." The proposal of His Majesty (TIME...
...mounted the stage of a skyscraper auditorium and talked with characteristic author's abandon about themselves, their books, literature and each other. In Boston for six days nearly 60 authors followed each other on the platform of an improvised exhibition hall on the top floor of the Boston Herald-Traveler Building. Reason for this heavy concentration of literary talent was that the New York Times was sponsoring its second National Book Fair, the Herald-Traveler its first Boston Book Fair. The Manhattan show, held on the 38th and 39th floors of the International Building in Rockefeller Center, could claim...