Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...opinions were at the same time not those of Rengo but of a naval critic in Tokyo from whom Rengo obtained an interview as part of a special feature service on the naval issue which it was requested to provide for a group of provincial member papers. Through the error of an inexperienced translator, the interview was improperly credited and consequently was published by the Tokyo Japan Advertiser on Dec 20 as representing the views of Rengo. Rengo's denial was telegraphed to the U. S. by the Associated Press on the same day and it was also duly...
Broadcast from Manhattan was an interview with James Lin, Columbia graduate student, son of China's President Lin Sen (TIME, March 18). Excerpt...
...discuss the vexed question of "reselling" the Stock Exchange to the public. Perhaps, newshawks reasoned, he had been hired to take over that job. When later that day the committee refused to say what had happened at the meeting, newshawks trooped over to No. 1 Wall Street to interview Mr. Bernays himself...
Five days before the opening of the National Academy of Design's noth annual exhibition President Jonas Lie gave an elaborately rehearsed interview over a coast-to-coast network, in which he announced the winners of the $4,400 worth of assorted prizes that the N. A. has assembled through the years. Nobody could see the pictures last week, but from the names and reputations of the winners all the U. S. art world knew that the long-awaited rejuvenation of the National Academy was under way. Except for elderly, conservative Frederick Judd Waugh of Provincetown, Mass...
Chocolate Earnings. He abhors signing his name, writes no personal checks, no letters. He never gives an interview. lives in two rooms over a country club. At 19 he cooked caramels in an alley, peddled them around in Philadelphia, was ruined when a street car smashed his wagon. At 46 he built a $1,000,000 chocolate factory in a Pennsylvania cornfield. As there was no town for miles around, he built one. Today every child knows the name of ruddy, thickset Milton Snavely Hershey of Hershey Chocolate Corp. who, at 77, still walks through his 50 acres of factory...