Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...quick to note that the riot was strictly a native affair; no one seemed mad at the white population of Rabaul. "My friends will be green with envy," said an Australian woman as she posed in the middle of a crowd of weapon-waving natives. But the Sydney Morning Herald took a less lighthearted view. "This outburst of savagery," said an irate editorial, "should provide a convincing answer to those members of the United Nations Trustee Council who last month voted for immediate independence for Papua and New Guinea...
From a guest pulpit in the New York Herald Tribune, Author William Saroyan, a longtime tax-impelled expatriate, unburdened himself of a sermon on the sins of the U.S. theater. Among his targets: "fishy" audiences ("The real people almost never get to the theater"), captious critics ("If they were reviewing the world, the show would close after two performances"), and that revered Broadway training ground, the Actors' Studio ("The supreme achievement at this new church is to divorce from any of its members even the faintest condition of peopleness"). The gist of Saroyan's complaint: "Everybody is kind...
...rule of journalism." But Tell has some ideas of his own, plans to expand East. The paper already sells more than 2,000 weekly copies east of the Mississippi, mostly to New Yorkers who remember Beebe from his days as a café society columnist for the New York Herald Tribune...
...York Herald Tribune dismissed the exchange as "all puff and no pith," but ABC was-and is-happy. Says Network News Vice President James C. Hagerty, who signed Lisa to a one-year contract in May: "She works like a beaver. She'll be tops." Not all appraisals are so kind. "This dame has an irresistible urge to talk about herself," says a female rival. Complains Lisa: "I have to fight certain things because I look...
...best of these is the Washington Post and Times Herald's liberal Herbert Block (Herblock), 51, an implacable, fire-breathing enemy of all conservatives; he once drew Richard M. Nixon climbing out of a sewer. Herblock was slowed down by a 1959 heart attack, and later by his respect for John F. Kennedy. But the Herblock brickbats still land with thudding regularity-even if they rarely hit the Administration. England's David Low, whose brilliant wartime cartoons nominated him as the greatest cartoonist of the century, is far off form at 70. "The war," observed a Low friend...