Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Although warning may be a handicap in the world of musical comedy, lively minds aren't. Through Mr. Segal and Mr. Raposo the new Harvard generation may move into broadway as authoritatively as its predecessors have swarmed into Washington." Most captious of the reviewers was Judith Crist of the Herald-Tribune, who complained that the musical reminded her of a Hasty Pudding show. The perspicacious Miss Crist then added, "Erich Segal and Joseph Raposo, two Harvard men.... did indeed concoct the Hasty adding...
...York Herald Tribune, the big move was "a sorting out of round pegs and square holes." The Detroit News found that "apparently the State Department needed a housecleaning." The Tampa Tribune hoped that the changes would improve things, but doubted it. "Otherwise," editorialized the Tribune glumly, "the shake-up means only that State Department memos will be handled with great efficiency-and that the mountain of memos will continue to produce the mice of policy." The Christian Science Monitor urged Kennedy to press on: "The streamlining of State ought to continue. And it should reach much further down into...
Died. James Andrew Hagerty, 85, longtime dean of U.S. political reporters who in 44 years on the old New York Herald and New York Times scored some of journalism's most notable beats (including one on the lamplight swearing-in of President Coolidge in Vermont), a ruggedly independent newsman who advised his son to steer clear of political press-agentry but came to take high pride in "Young Jim's" performance as Dwight Eisenhower's press secretary; of a heart attack; in Manhattan...
Barnaby C. Keeney, President of Brown, members of the faculty, and students have since been planning moves to test the legality of Nugent's move. A week ago two undergraduates advertised in the Brown Daily Herald copies of Tropic for sale; Nugent will investigate them, if he finds that they have violated a state...
...John B. Olson, 41, who was hired away from the St. Petersburg, Fla., Times to take charge in Los Angeles, will be more managerial than editorial. Like the Times's Paris-based international edition (which in a year has scarcely put a dent in the New York Herald Tribune's solidly established European edition, also headquartered in Paris), the Western Times will be written almost entirely in New York. The whole operation will be bossed from New York by Assistant General Manager Andrew Fisher, 40. Borrowing a practice long used by national magazines, the Times will transmit stories...