Word: interview
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...country. They compete for news pertaining to the University in much the same manner that professional newspaper men scout for sensational "scoops". The work touches every phase of University life. The reporting of athletics plays a large part in the duties of the candidate. He must cover games, interview coaches, keep in touch with other athletic teams. The Crimson candidate, moreover, comes in contact with many prominent people in every phase of activity. Actresses, prominent lecturers and political men are interviewed...
...FLAMING YOUTH." Subtitle: "His Mania Causes Peculiar Love for Young Girls-Alienist." Text: "A famous [anonymous] alienist . . . diagnoses his case as 'pathological pedophilia,' a symptom of a disease of the brain classified as a sexual aberration. . . ." The Mirror, too, strove for features to please child minds-an "interview" (in mixed dialects) with Mr, Browning's pet African goose; a history of the case in prize fight vernacular. Stenographers and clerks were asked to vote on which was worse, Mr. or Mrs. Browning. Each day a different verdict was manufactured...
Harvard Square is more dangerous than the wilds of Liberia", stated Dr. G. M. Allen '01, professor of zoology and curator of mammals at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at the University in an interview with a Crimson reporter. Dr. Allen recently returned from Liberia where he spent four months as a member of the expedition headed by Dr. R. P. Strong '16 of the Harvard Medical School. Dr. Allen is the only member of the expedition which left last May, who has yet returned. The other members of the party are making their way across the continent...
...interview with a CRIMSON reporter yesterday afternoon T. N. Carver, Professor of Political Economy in the University, briefly outlined the reasons for the United States taking steps to arbitrate with Mexico its controversy over the alien property laws...
Last week in London, Viscountess Rhondda, feminist, business woman, editress (with Rebecca West and others) of Time and Tide (weekly), declared in an interview: "The 'smart set' is not a tiny fraction of society playing about in Mayfair. Every suburb and provincial city has its smart set now - its gossip of leisured, idle, irresponsible women. . . . They permeate society with the ideals of the harem. . . . Sex is their profession. So they put an enormous value on sex, on sex discussion and 'problems,' on the high importance of sex attraction. . . . They have become a menace...