Word: heralds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...awfully pleased at the piece you did on my column in the Boston Herald [Jan. 4]. At the risk of seeming captious, however, I must say that I think you did the Herald an injustice when you described it as dreary. Not that there isn't a dreary paper in this town, but it is the Christian Science Monitor, which is dull, dull, dull-and such a sacred cow, such a status symbol, that though people cannot stand it, they nevertheless call it a great newspaper. It's a terrible bore, really. The same cannot be said...
While reading through the Boston Herald the other day, we noticed that Edward M. Kennedy '54, junior Senator from Massachusetts, has given his first speech in Washington...
Teddy's remarks were "the hit of the evening," the Herald reported...
...company with the Los Angeles Times, he pasted together a news syndicate (TIME. July 13) with the second biggest news bureau in Washington (after the New York Times) and an impressive spread of foreign correspondents. On the private preserve of John Hay Whitney, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, he went poaching for big game and bagged two handsome specimens: Pundits Walter Lippmann. now under contract, and Joseph Alsop, who will sign up later this year. Adding insult to injury. Graham then suggested that Whitney melt the Trib's 14-man Washington bureau into Graham's huge...
...Sleeve. And Field had yet another ace up his sleeve: Jock Whitney. For more than a year. Field had argued that two such ardent Republicans as he and the Herald Trib's boss were a natural pair, one that certainly made more sense than Graham's oil-and-water mixture of Norman and Otis Chandler's conservative Los Angeles Times and the liberal Washington Post. Whitney finally agreed to tie the Herald Trib's small though distinguished syndicate (54 papers) to Marshall Field's big one-a union that, once consummated, will put Field very...