Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Last week Stanley Hoflund High, one-time foreign correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, member of the staff of the Christian Herald, tried to run these evil rumors to ground in Washington. He talked to newshawks and others who had seen the President recently. He had an interview with the President at which the "whispering campaign" came up for discussion. Then Stanley High went on the air, broadcast to the U. S. the solemn news...
...chief of the New York Tribune's European bureaus. Result is that, at 52, Brooklyn-born Arthur Draper sports a Guards mustache, fancies burly tweeds, puffs a briar pipe, boasts a son educated at Cambridge and is a firm believer in Tradition. Consequently his colleagues on the Herald Tribune, to which he had returned as assistant editor, were somewhat surprised when in 1933 Mr. Draper took over the editorship of The Literary Digest with the announcement: "Its columns offer unusual opportunities at this time of profound change...
...great dome which tarnishes above the defunct New York World's offices in Park Row no longer has any significance, and the owls whose illuminated eyes once ogled Herald Square from the old Herald Building only appear now at "alumni" dinners. But across the continent last week the hoary symbol of another great newspaper settled down on its third perch atop a brand new building. For the great bronze eagle of the 54-year-old Los Angeles Times is the mascot of a publishing property still very much alive...
...first thing President Roosevelt does each morning when he wakes in the White House is to read in bed the New York Times, the New York Herald Tribune, the Baltimore Sun, the Washington Post. Then his breakfast of orange juice, cereal, eggs, toast & coffee is brought to him on a tray. One morning last week the President lay abed reading things in the newspapers that might well have taken away his appetite for breakfast. The Press was fairly bellowing with indignation at him because it appeared that he was cocked & primed to ramrod his social reform tax bill through Congress...
...nearly four months was the average time to spend in preparing an important tax bill. "It took Six Days to Make the World!" warned the Roosevelt-loving New York Daily News. Crudest cut of all, the President got from his favorite and usually sympathetic columnist, Walter Lippmann in the Herald Tribune, when he read...