Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...midtown newsstands, dealers are returning twice as many unsold papers as usual, and sales are off 12.5%. The fat Times is faring best, say the dealers, with a dropoff of only 5%-not bad considering the fact that it has doubled its newsstand price to 10?. As for the Herald Tribune, which also hiked its price by a nickel, circulation is off-but just how much will not be known until the Audit Bureau of Circulation releases its next official, semiannual report sometime after Sept. 30. "It has held up better than we anticipated," says Trib President Walter Thayer cautiously...
...college bands she played the oboe and the bagpipe. From the State University of Iowa, she got a B.A. in art, an M.A. in oil painting, and a Phi Beta Kappa key. There, too, she married Composer John Gruen, now an art and music critic for the New York Herald Tribune. They have one crayon-crazy daughter, aged four...
...Russell Wiggins, editor and executive vice-president of the Washington Post and Times-Herald, will give the Phi Beta Kappa oration. Wiggins, who has been in the newspaper business for more than 40 years, has worked for the Post and the New York Times. He is the author of Freedom Or Secrecy...
...sensibilities and sense of fair play of the rank and file of Americans." Stepping out of his field, he predicted that the marriage could cost Rockefeller "three to five million votes" if he becomes the Republican nominee for President. Said Dr. Daniel A. Poling, editor of the Protestant Christian Herald: "I agree with those, and there are many, who will see him as a man who broke up a family in which there were four young children. As of here and now, I could not vote for him." Said the Rev. Dr. Benjamin Browne, president of the American Baptist Convention...
...Baptist; Happy, raised as an Episcopalian, recently became a Presbyterian. Both frequently attended Smith's interdenominational church in Pocantico Hills. Irrelevant? General press reaction was far less critical than that of the clergy. Many of the nation's newspaper editors seemed to agree with the New York Herald Tribune, which declared: "Governor Rockefeller's remarriage has no relevance to his qualifications for high government office." New York Times Columnist James Reston, however, argued that "newspapers are not a very reliable guide to the true feelings of the people." Wrote he: "The presidency is a model standing...