Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...doubts of the continued personal popularity of President Roosevelt," generously admitted the Republican New York Herald Tribune, "the enthusiastic nation-wide celebration of his 53rd birthday ought to end them...
...Hearst lobbyist is John A. Kennedy, who went from Iowa to get a job on Hearst's Washington Herald, work up to his Universal Service. Plausible and pontifical, he is equally adept at slapping Congressmen on the back or awing them with suave dinners at the Metropolitan Club. Nominally a newshawk, he resigned temporarily from the Congressional Press Galleries in 1932 to swing around the country coaxing antiWorld Court commitments from Congressional candidates, lately resigned again to head the latest Hearst offensive against the Court...
Dean Gauss described his position on the Princeton faculty as that of a man who knows too much to be president and not enough to be professor. --New York Herald-Tribune report of a recent speech by the Princeton Dean...
...Similar booklets, less popularly compiled, are published by the New York Times, the New York Herald Tribune...
...recurrence in English, French and German newspapers about every six-months for the past 25 years. Nearly always it is issued from, some remote town in Eastern Europe. Two weeks after the Woollcott-Williams conversation, the same old story landed on the front page of the New York Herald Tribune as an Associated Press dispatch from Warsaw, with the headline: PARENTS KILL RICH SON POSING AS A STRANGER Pole, Home After 18 Years In the U. S., Goes Unrecognized...