Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Haven last week went Publisher Ogden Mills Reid of the New York Herald Tribune, to address the staff of the Yale Daily News, of which his son Whitelaw is a member. Publisher Reid told the college journalists the threadbare story of the publishers' fight against NRA for a "Free Press." Next day it took the Herald Tribune three full columns to report its owner's direful words...
Three days later the Herald Tribune was obliged to print an Associated Press dispatch to the effect that President Roosevelt thought Publisher Reid was making a silly spectacle of himself. The President's words: "Neither the millions and millions of people constituting the reading public nor the hundreds of individuals representing the overwhelming majority of newspaper publishers can, in any way, be concerned with or wrought up over the silly and wholly unjustified conversation on the part of a small minority who suggest that the freedom of the Press has been either destroyed or assailed." The President...
...Overseer of the College and a member of the Visiting Committee to the Department of History, Government, and Economics. In addition to the various books he has written such as "A Preface to Morals," he has won most of his fame as columnist on the New York Herald-Tribune...
...suppose that you want to know anything about my trip?" Said Miss Gillespie's mother: "The incident is closed. . . . The incident is closed. . . . The incident is closed. . . ." At a Manhattan auction of the furnishings of the home of the late great Mrs. Whitelaw Reid (New York Herald Tribune), a Gainsborough portrait brought $5,100, a pair of 16th Century Brussels tapestries, $8,000, the entire collection, $155,897.50. Following a threat on the life of Kentucky's Governor Ruby Laffoon, two guardsmen were placed on patrol duty between the executive mansion and the State Capitol at Frankfort. Said...
...Medford," and to the county as "The State of Paranoia." In February 1933 Editor Robert Waldo Ruhl of the Mail Tribune rose up in righteous anger against Editor Banks, who was nearly defeated already by his own misfortunes. Editor Ruhl, brother of Arthur Ruhl of the New York Herald Tribune, is everything that his enemy is not: tall, handsome, scholarly, a Harvardman (1903), Unitarian, Elk, Rotarian and Republican. The Medford upper crust approves of him highly, but the mass of Rogue River small orchardists and laborers regard him as a silk stocking. With an editorial entitled "TIME TO WAKE...