Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...expect business to be a darn sight better here than it was down there," Keezer said in an interview, explaining that people did not like to be seen buying used clothing, which is his principal stock in trade...
Edwin G. Boring, professor of Psychology, in an interview last night was inclined to doubt the accuracy of Lee's description, crediting him with more knowledge of the Boston schoolboy's mind than of the Harvard student...
Munich crowds, which had cheered Mussolini and then Daladier to the echo as they departed, went wild with shrieks, roars and tears of joy as Neville Chamberlain finally returned to his hotel and gave-what correspondents termed almost unprecedented for a British Prime Minister-an informal interview. Incredulous at this break, newshawks found Neville Chamberlain seated at a desk, sipping a cup of coffee and rolling a cigar between his lips with evident satisfaction. He shoved across the desk a copy of a communiqué to be issued in the names of himself and Adolf Hitler: "We regard the agreement...
...Germany and all of Europe is a more fertile field for neurotics and suicide than America which is still quite calm," said Kurt Goldstein, William James lecturer and clinical professor of Neurology at Columbia University in an interview yesterday...
...leaders are cutting off their own noses to spite their faces by allying themselves with our worst enemies, as represented by the American Manufacturers Association, in the present A. F. of L. C. I. O. squabble," Paul M. Sweezy '31, instructor in Economics, said in an interview yesterday...