Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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From 1936 until 1941, she served as columnist and political analyst for the New York Herald Tribune...
...been laid aside in favor of others curbing their activities. G.O.P. leaders promised another $50,000 for additional investigations. And the Communist Party, frantically calling for a "fighting fund" of $250,000, led off with a full-page ad for contributions in the "reactionary" New York Times and Herald Tribune (cost...
...Totalitarian arguments," huffed Robert R. McCormick's Chicago Tribune. A work of amateurs and professors, said Wilbur Forrest, president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors (which the report had criticized as a do-nothing group). But Forrest's own paper, the New York Herald Tribune (he is its assistant editor) argued that the commission's findings could not be dismissed as "mere professional whimsy." Said the Trib: the press does have a responsibility to its public, a responsibility that outweighs a publisher's caprices, and "this responsibility is often neglected or flouted...
...advertisement in the English-language Brazil Herald brought results. The owner wanted no key money; he did not want to sell any furniture. For a big living room, dining room, bedroom and tiny guest room we thought it a gift...
Printemps'), . . . The divagations from Stravinsky . . . are not of creative significance." Said the entranced World-Telegram: "He [Messiaen] seems to stand before a shrine, chanting the vision he beholds ... a sort of fluttering commotion spread over the music." Even the Herald Tribune's Virgil Thomson, who has labored to introduce Messiaen's music to the U.S., was slightly flummoxed. Wrote he: ". . . powerful and original music . . . it is our obligation as listeners ... to get inside [it], since [it does] not easily penetrate our customary concert psychology...