Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...want to be hot at ping-pong, start training on scotch and soda early in life," James M. Jacobson 1B, former national table tennis champion advised ping-pong hopefuls in an interview yesterday...
Arthur O. Lovejoy, one of the most eminent philosophers alive today and this year here as visiting instructor from Johns Hopkins, in an interview with a CRIMSON editor yesterday announced he plans to retire from active teaching this June...
Freedom of the press notwithstanding, almost everything said and done at the annual Washington convention of the American Society of Newspaper Editors is off the record. Farthest off the record is the informal "interview" with the President. But last week, when the nation's editors left the White House, their uncommon exhilaration revealed something of what had been said inside. The President had doffed the good humor which he invariably shows to the editors' reporters. What was to have been an interview became a lecture with the editors on the receiving end. The President told his callers that...
...better opportunity than in 1924" is the way that Arthur N. Holcombe '06, professor of Government and chairman of that department, described the chances of the new Progressive Party, being established by the LaFollettes, in an interview yesterday...
...scholars in various sections of the country. This means that accurate knowledge must be secured of regional marking standards, College Board training, and teaching emphasis, in order that school achievement may be translated into Harvard grades. It means that Dr. Gummere must be given enough assistants to determine by interview the personality of every applicant without recourse to welfare agencies or university clubs...