Word: heralds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Good reading, well selected, varied in mood and subject, an introduction to the great literature of the world--these facts account for the fame of that old-time Presbyterian college professor--"McGuffey." Those were the happy days. Boston Herald...
Deane W. Malott, associate professor of Business, will address the New York Herald-Tribune's Fourth Annual Conference on Current Problems at the Waldorf-Astoria this afternoon. Mr. Malott, who has been publicizing the Business School, will talk on "The Young College Man in the Depression." The speech will be put on the National Broadcasting Company's chain. Other speakers at the session will be Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Mayor LaGuardia, Will Irwin, Glenn Frank, Pearl Buck, Hugh Walpole, Dorothy Thompson, Emily Post, Dr. Stanley King, Miss Frances Perkins, and Robert M. LaFollette...
...case in point, Republicans promptly and bitterly complained, was Maine. Final returns from last fortnight's election there were heralded by Postmaster Farley as "proof ample that the New Deal meets with the majority of the people." In winning the first re-election of a Democratic Governor since the Civil War, Louis J. Brann had not let Maine's electorate forget that in the past two years $108,000,000 of Federal money had been pumped into the State, which was five times the Government largess given Republican New Hampshire. The arch-Republican New York Herald Tribune editorialized...
Bold and optimistic indeed is the man who sets up shop as a religious journalist. Small in number, his subscribers are choosy, opinionated. Few church magazines are currently given denominational subsidies. Almost no big advertisers buy space in them. (Exception: the homey, nondenominational Christian Herald.) With theological controversy and petty driblets of church news as his stock-in-trade, the religious editor must cut his thoughts to a consistent pattern. And of all denominations the one whose journalists are the most orthodox is the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. Its magazines are: The Presbyterian (conservative weekly), The Presbyterian...
...less loyal to His Majesty, the Laborite Daily Herald, while urging Parliament to start a similar inquiry in Britain, declared: "The use of such names [as the King's] in the intrigues of rival armament firms to sell weapons is further evidence of the complete lack of scruple which characterizes the methods of these 'merchants of death...