Word: interviewer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Hamburg-American's Reliance last week churned across the Celebes and Sulu Seas, a tiny, moving island of German territory on a world cruise, a bitter little passenger's war raged inside. A U. S. citizen of substance had given an interview at Singapore on Germany's violations of the Treaties of Versailles and Locarno: "I don't see how anybody can make any agreements of any kind with Germany, because she regards agreements as scraps of paper...
...natural." Daughter of a Methodist minister, she tried social service, advertising, found neither satisfactory, joined the bustling exodus of young U. S. literati who went abroad in the early 1920's. First reporting Miss Thompson did was freelance work for London papers. When she brought in the last interview given by famed Irish Hunger-Striker Terence McSweeney, Fleet Street began to take Miss Thompson seriously. Soon a roving correspondent for the Philadelphia Public Ledger, she achieved another resounding scoop by interviewing ex-Emperor Karl of Austria at the climax of his second attempt to regain the Hapsburg throne...
...Colmery Gibson '37 is in charge of selecting candidates and will be at the CRIMSON between 7 and 8 o'clock evenings until Friday to interview men interested in entering the competition, which will take place on Thursday, April...
Editor Hartman's interview concluded thus: ''This much is settled,' he said to me, 'we are through forever with Hinduism. We are going somewhere, but are not ready yet to say in what direction 'Yes,' I answered, 'you are not strong enough yet to announce a decision. If you compromise with the Hindus, all is lost; if you choose Mohammedanism, the Hindus will crush you; if you go Christian, both the Hindus and the Moslems will be on your back...
...money whose source remains as obscure as the biography of Father Divine himself. In the interest of religious history, smallish, baldish Dr. Robert Ernest Hume, professor of the History of Religions at Union Theological Seminary, set out one Sunday last month to get the Divine record straight. The resulting interview was printed fortnight ago in The Spoken Word, Divine newsorgan. Of more interest to psychologists than theological historians, the Divine revelations rolled forth in a strange, unworldly babble. Samples...