Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...assurances of further German support for the Whites. Simultaneously about 10,000 additional Italians landed in Spain to join up with Generalissimo Franco- this mere 10,000 being what II Duce last week meant by "going easy" (see p. 20). In London the anti-Fascist and pro-Socialist Daily Herald raged: "There is a Levantine streak in the man [Mussolini] which delights in such sharp practices...
...noticed in a recent Herald that the Harvard student council is commencing an investigation of the numerous tutoring schools in and around Harvard square, in an effort to find out whether or not they are "ethical" and "worth-while...
...admirer of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, at whose initiative last winter the Conference was proposed, is the arch-Republican New York Herald Tribune, but its Leland Stowe cabled from Buenos Aires last week a tribute in the best tradition of impartial U. S. journalism: "It is agreed that the prestige of the United States has never been so high among its 20 sister American republics as at present, and the goodwill dividends of [the President's] Good Neighbor policy should be a great asset in the next few years, especially if Europe goes to the brink...
...keep KVOS fans up to the minute on world affairs? For advertising, there was the business of Bellingham merchants who would pay for interspersed announcements. For an editor, there was L. H. Darwin, who had once published a Bellingham paper. For news, there were the columns of the Bellingham Herald and the Seattle Times and Post-Intelligencer, all members of the far-flung Associated Press...
Soon Mr. Darwin and Rogan Jones, the stocky, breezy owner of KVOS, had agreed on a contract, arranged to split profits from the "Newspaper of the Air." Listeners liked the newscasting, the "fighting" editorials which the radio station directed against the Bellingham Herald and other political foes. First trouble for KVOS came when the A. P. asked for an injunction to prevent the broadcasters from appropriating its news as it appeared in member papers. Financial support came, to KVOS from the National Association of Broadcasters, representatives of a notoriously timid yet greedy industry, glad to find an obscure test case...