Word: interviewer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
When Mrs. Ross went to interview the 99-year-old sage of Baker, Ore., she was introduced: "Papa, here's Nancy Ross come to see you from New York. Not Betsy, but her niece." The old man took one look at her nail polish and said: "Terrible wounded in every finger...
Nobody, least of all smart Franz von Papen, expected Britain to listen to Hitler's peace bid. Winston Churchill had already said flatly that Britain would never treat with a Nazi (TIME, Nov. 17). Ambassador von Papen's interview was given to the correspondent of a Barcelona newspaper and was directed at Spain and Turkey. Germany, he said, regarded Turkey as a "bastion of peace" at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, as Spain was in the west. This week Berne reported German troop movements as far south as northern Spain...
William S. Hart, flint-faced hero of the silent Westerns, gave an interview in Man hattan, observed: "It would be ill-becoming of me to say anything against the talkies. But it's my honest opinion that the old, silent pictures were superior." Buster Keaton was arrested for drunkenness, pleaded with the judge that he had asked cops to take care of him, therefore knew he needed aid, therefore was not drunk. Unconvinced, the judge fined...
...Ready to interview deserving undergraduates who need financial help. John P. Bunker '42, treasurer of the Student Council, announced yesterday that Student Council term-bill scholarships are now available...
Russia and England will destroy the Nazi war machine without the help of an American expeditionary force, and this downfall will come soon. Such is the opinion of James M. Landis, Dean of the Harvard Law School, expressed yesterday afternoon in a radio interview on the Boston Herald-Traveler Forum...