Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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These are the conclusions of the Kirkland House G-Entry Mission," its directors stated in an interview yesterday. They form the basis of an extensive platform from which to work toward the ultimate goal: reform for Harvard...
...interview with President Conant tomorrow has been granted to the authors of the petition requesting an "explanation" of the dismissal of the assistant professors of the English and Government Departments it was learned through the President's secretary Saturday...
...full of the Zionist cause. This got her a job covering the Zionist conference in London for International News Service and made her a newspaperwoman. To her new career she brought the same mixture of romanticism and vitality that had made her a successful suffragette. She got the last interview with Hunger Striker Terence McSwiney before he struck out in Cork, Ireland. She got the only interview with Empress Zita in Budapest after the second Karlist putsch failed. She borrowed $500 from Sigmund Freud to go to Warsaw and covered the Pilsudski revolution in evening dress. She was almost shot...
...year-old ex-insurance man named Morris H. Siegel (M. H. to his 52 aides). Into M. H.'s Manhattan and Boston offices (Policyholders' Advisory Council) last year ventured some 40,000 persons with real or fancied insurance problems. Each of them paid $1 for the interview. Some 8,000 became clients-i. e., had their policies cashed or converted and cheaper insurance substituted, sometimes with a spot of recovered cash to boot. For these services, Siegel exacts an average fee of $25. Non-profit consumer groups also engaged in insurance counsel say the average case...
...made great progress in submarine rescue work," commented Chester H. J. Keppler, Captain, U.S. Navy, Professor of Science and Tactics and Naval Property Custodian, in an interview last night on the "Squalus" submarine disaster...