Word: trib
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Back to the People. Such stepped-up local interest is the Trib's most recent attempt to find a niche for itself among powerful competitors. It can hardly hope to match the Times's massive concern with foreign and national news; it would be equally hard put to compete with the brisk, once-over-lightly coverage of the Daily News. As for the afternoon papers, the Trib is not about to join their flashy-headline hunt for the attention of the harried commuter. But by concentrating on local news, says Trib Editor James G. Bellows, the paper...
...past few months, local news has earned its way onto the Trib's front page. New recruits to the paper's team of columnists have run down much of their material within the confines of the city. A revamped Sunday magazine, New York, keeps on top of the city's fast-changing fads and fashions; one recent article gave city housewives much the best of it in comparison with their sisters in suburbia. Most impressive of all, for the past eight weeks the Trib has been running an incisive daily series on New York's brutal...
...Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, Beverly toured the world in 1961, did so well as a freelance correspondent that she showed up later in Saigon as a stringer for Newsweek and for the London Daily Express. On the strength of her first interview with Khanh, the Trib hired her. By now, she has developed resources and contacts that largely obviate the need for getting along with the embassy, or even with Saigon's somewhat clubby and introspective press corps. What she does not know she can usually get from her two Vietnamese assistants, both wise...
...expected at the polls in November," predicted the News. "Most voters used up their apathy watching the conventions." Could it be, Marsh wondered, that the lusterless campaign had provided a setting for editorial whimsy? By last week, with publication of the second of two editorial samplers, the Trib's Marsh had made his point: ∙The Louisville Courier-Journal noted that a local Republican office-seeker was blaming Lyndon Johnson for everything- from the mess in the Congo to De Gaulle's recognition of Red China: "Our candidate has not yet mentioned that it was during the Kennedy...
...California primary, decided to stand by individual liberty, private enterprise and Barry Goldwater, thus remaining in the G.O.P. column for its 84th year. The New York Herald Tribune, with an even longer record-more than 100 years-as a Republican stalwart, said: WE CHOOSE JOHNSON. Confessed the Trib: "Travail and torment go into those simple words. But we find ourselves as Americans, even as Republicans, with no other acceptable course...