Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...best are always the best, you realize as you turn these pages," writes Lewis Gannett of the New York Herald Tribune. "The best correspondents don't just see and hear and then trumpet; they feel and think before they write." . . . "These articles are not impersonal reports. They are experiences shared with the reader," says Harry Hansen...
...Japs had already offered to surrender when the New York Herald Tribune's solemn, bespectacled Homer Bigart last week climbed into a Japan-bound B29. He wanted to see how the flyers felt on such a mission...
Professorial-looking Bigart, who talks with a slight stammer, joined the Herald Tribune in 1929 as an office boy, in 1933 began writing church news, finally worked up to fires and murders. In early 1943, when papers began converting young police reporters into war correspondents, Bigart was sent to England...
...know it then, but the Herald Tribune had other ideas. His postwar assignment: Japan...
Duty Before Pleasure. Manhattan's tabloid Daily News, sharing its cameraman's pique, brushed off the wedding in a single sniffy paragraph. The good grey New York Times gave more space to the squabbling than to the wedding. Only the Herald Tribune, among all nine Manhattan papers, put duty before pleasure, and ran a fetching picture of the wedding- taken before the photographers walked...