Word: interview
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...most obvious implication of the report sent by Albert C. Crawford, director of the Yale Burean of Appointments, to President Angell. An unscrupulous victimization of college men, which has not been confined to Yale, has made it "necessary in some degree to select the firms to whom interview privileges are extended and to refuse to companies unwilling to plan shead or to furnish in advance adequate data concerning their opportunities...
...later came an interview with Senator Underwood, and a few days thereafter, one with Jane Cowl. In each case the lowly candidate was a representative of the Harvard CRIMSON, the University daily, the only daily paper in a city of over 100,000 (Advt.). He was on an equal footing with veteran newspaper, men from the metropolitan papers, and he was treated with as much consideration...
...should like very much to see a University such as this in France", remarked Andre Maurois recently to a CRIMSON reporter in the course of an informal interview while he was being conducted about the University. "The seclusion and informality of the life at Harvard as it appears to me are far more conducive to study and to the forming of valuable friendships than is the extremely isolated and citified life at the Sorbonne and our other Universities...
Matters were left last week with a J. G. White representative, who sailed for England to interview the British Foreign Office in the hope of securing its consent to the undertaking; for it is held by the U. S. corporation that the Sudan has more to gain than to lose by the dam's construction...
Homer Croy, author of "West of the Water Tower" and the recent published "Fancy Lady", has spoken of modern religion with an agreeable un-assertiveness in an interview published yesterday in the Herald. Sounding the death knell of the clergyman and predicting the early disappearance of what he calls the "Sunday School kind of religion. Mr. Croy is the herald of a replacing social philosophy. This theory is especially interesting when he declares that Sinclair Lewis is not the only thinker to share it: rather, almost all the young American intelligentsia, even including members of the clergy like a John...