Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...trust" has been taking a political beating of late, the need of specialized authorities in our governmental agencies remains more evident than ever. In no other way can a permanent, non-partisan personnel be created which will function with the efficacy and morale of the British civil service. --Boston Herald...
Happy is it indeed that the wide comment occasioned by the hanging of this portrait of a Harvard graduate, painted by a Harvard graduate, and presented by a Harvard graduate, should be almost unanimously in praise of its acceptance by the University. As the Boston Herald puts it in an editorial quoted elsewhere in full in this issue. "A university as large as Harvard, with graduates scattered throughout the world and attached to all manner of political religions, and economic causes, cannot draw strict lines as to whom it will and will not cherish," on any basis of dogma...
...requirements. Like his classmate. Senator Cutting, whose career was out short a fortnight ago by an airplane accident, Reed died with the ardor of youth still burning in him. To many a contemporary, grown cautious and disillusioned, his memory will recall great days, rich in hope and expectancy. --Boston Herald. Wednesday...
...less cause by oversensitive legislators, Harvard at least can say, "We appeal to college men who are expected to be mature enough to think for themselves, requiring university advisors, not mental policemen." Again Harvard shows a clear and sensible attitude, rather than a follow the leader impulse. Brown Daily Herald...
Next day the Herald Tribune said: "There were tired lines about her face." Reported the Times: "There were no lines of fatigue." Miss Earhart announced that her next program would be: "Sleep, sleep and more sleep...