Word: interview
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...thing Mr. Boolba made clear to his interviewer from the start. Art was his concern, his hobby, his passion, and at this particular sitting, the substance of his interview. According to him, the purpose of Art is to interpret things as they are in nature. In order to be true Art, Art must be functional. It must not only reflect the people and their way of life, but its messages and meanings must be available and understandable to these very people. Of Salvador Dali, Mr. Boolba has this to say in his usual forthright manner: "His works...
...many other steel products. Of late it has moved to Nazi-land in increasing tonnage. Last week Turkey's Foreign Minister Numan Menomencioglu hardly took time to read an Allied protest before calling in the correspondents for a bout of oil-slick doubletalk. Said he: "I had an interview today with the British and American Ambassadors (Sir Hughe Montgomery Knatchbull-Hugessen and Laurence Steinhardt). They each gave me a note and we exchanged views in the most friendly spirit ... of collaboration which characterizes our relations.... I can say no more. . . . We will . . . aid the Allies to the limit...
What Says the King? When Marshal Pietro Badoglio heard of Umberto's interview he denied that it had occurred: Umberto's move threatened to precipitate a shakeup which the old Marshal has tried to avoid. Anti-Fascists, including outspoken Democrat Count Carlo Sforza and compromising Communist Palmiro Togliatti soon justified Badoglio's concern. They and other members of a six-party executive junta met at the Sorrento villa of Philosopher Benedetto Croce. They had been more inclined toward a regency around Umberto's six-year-old son, the Prince of Naples. Now they embraced Umberto...
Captain Barker who has been professor of Naval Science and Tactics for a total of four years at Harvard, said yesterday in a farewell interview, "This has been a most satisfactory tour of duty. I have experienced wonderful cooperation from the University for the establishment and operation of the several Naval Training Schools in this activity, which have been built up in the last two years form a few hundred officer-candidates to nearly 5000 commissioned officers and officer-candidates...
Beginning with an ordinary broadcasting procedure of a New York station, reports of explosions from the planet Mars break into the broadcast. An interview at a Princeton astronomical observatory is followed by a description of a scene nearby where the first Martian cylinder has landed and begins to spread destruction throughout New Jersey. From here the play depicts increasingly alarming incidents of destructive power of the Martians, and builds to a climax with an "eye-witness" destruction of New York City...