Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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When he gives his second interview to the press (and let us pray that it maintains the miraculously high standard of the first; TIME, Feb. 17) let it be the occasion of an appended resume of his stormy career and some account of from whom he inherited his unique qualities of Royal Entertainer...
...value to the Party consisted chiefly in keeping well out of the spotlight, leaving the speech-making to professional leather-lungs. Practically unknown to the public at large, he went home to Crystal Falls to vote in the 1934 election. A local paper sent a reporter to interview him. Although that region had always elected a Republican to Congress, Mr. Hurja told the reporter that the Democratic candidate would be elected by a majority of about 3,460 votes. His prediction was published under the headline "The Crystal Gazer from Crystal Falls." The Democratic majority...
Considerably upset were these peace-lovers when Walter Millis, author of Road to War, text book of the Peace Bloc (TIME, Jan. 20), declared in a Scripps-Howard interview: "Extension of last year's arms embargo is about as far as we can proceed safely with a neutrality program at present. ... We must not forget that legislation may work in a quite unforeseeable fashion when an actual war arises. ... No man can say categorically how any neutrality program would function in the face of a real crisis such as a serious outbreak in Europe...
...book should convince the most stubborn mind, but apparently it has not convinced him. In his interview he seems to be trying to unconvince those of us who have our minds made...
...Well known college athletes find it much easier to get a start in a stage or screen career than the average graduate," said Toby Wing in an interview with the CRIMSON. "Your big football players, for instance, already have a reputation when they graduate...