Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...critical. What did the President think? Again, he refused to rise to the bait. He had, he said, thought Sidey's book "critical." As for Lasky's hatchet job, he had only read the first part, but he had seen it praised by the New York Herald Tribune's columnist, Roscoe Drummond, and by New York Times Pundit Arthur Krock. And so, said the President, he was "looking forward to reading it, because the part I read was not as brilliant as I gather the rest of it is, from what they say about...
...There has been a great deal of speculation as to who will be the Republican candidate for President," wrote Art Buchwald for the New York Herald Tribune and 180 other papers. "But no one has given any thought as to who will be the Democratic candidate. The way we see it, the race is wide open. As convention time grows near, worried Democratic leaders are trying to come up with a candidate who is young, has experience, is known to the American public, and can appeal to the independent voter. The big question is, can the Democrats develop anybody...
Plenty of guys are not all bad. Three U.S. Congressmen have read samples of his work into the Congressional Record; President Kennedy, who threw the Herald Tribune out of the White House,* went right on reading Buchwald in the Washington Post. In his one year in Washington, Buchwald has added 75 newspapers to his syndication and doubled his income, to $80,000 a year. By a considerable margin, that makes Art Buchwald the most successful humorous columnist...
...expansion program-most of which, according to the paper's commuter train ads, will go into a new Sunday magazine and a TV program guide. The Daily News is bidding for new readers, presumably bilingual, over the city's Spanish-language radio stations. The New York Herald Tribune is busy preparing new supplements for its Sunday edition. But no one expects the road back to be short or easy. Says Tribune President Walter Thayer: "It wouldn't surprise me if it took about a year for the circulation of all seven papers to return to the prestrike...
When Dior's Marc Bohan took the plunge in evening dresses for his latest collection, fashion writers had something to write home about. The bosom was not only seen, said one, but "almost heard," and the staid New York Herald Tribune found the new neckline "positively clinical...