Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Second Thought. In Dayton, the Journal Herald printed a want ad: "Would the man who was looking for a home for himself and his two boys in the early 1940s please call Mrs. Fogle again...
Ogden Rogers Reid, president and editor of the N.Y. Herald Tribune. LL.D...
...Hearst newsmen have headlined Moscow interviews, one of them far more tightly tailored to Kremlin preconditions, and the other deemed worthy of a Pulitzer Prize to William Randolph Hearst Jr. and Hearstmen Frank Conniff and Kingsbury Smith. Said Joseph Alsop, who last February interviewed Khrushchev for the New York Herald Tribune Syndicate: "Any news-gathering organization has a double duty, to make money for its stockholders, but above all, to present the important facts of the world in which we live to its audience. It seems to me very farfetched to mention the necessarily commercial character of our American news...
...afraid I will lean over backward and belt the hell out of CBS-that is the real problem." He expects no gripes from other networks. CBS TV Program Director Hubbell Robinson thinks that Crosby "is a man of sufficient integrity to handle both jobs very well." The Herald Tribune, which Crosby did not consult about the new job ("There was no reason to," he says), is also unperturbed. "It goes without saying," says Executive Editor George Cornish, "that he won't review his own show...
...maybe I could see it once a month when Ed Murrow will have our time on CBS." How will Crosby's readers get critical coverage of Seven Lively Arts, one of the new season's major shows? Well, Crosby thinks he may get somebody like the Herald Tribune's Drama Critic Walter Kerr to review it for him. One added complication: Critic Kerr works on the side for the competing Omnibus as dramatic consultant and sometime performer...