Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Late in 1931, Tony Gaudio had a spat with Director Lewis Milestone during the filming of The Front Page, walked off the set in a huff. For a year he couldn't get a job or even an interview despite his standing as one of the top cameramen in town. When Brother Jack Warner, whom he calls "Mr. Warner Brothers," finally hired him to shoot screen tests, Tony discovered the cold shoulder came from a whispering campaign that his eyesight was failing-the kiss of death for any cameraman. The rumor finally dispelled, Tony is now well back...
...This snow storm is the luckiest break we could have," exclaimed Harvard's new ski coach, Bill Halsey, first year Architectural School student and graduate of Dartmouth last spring, in an interview in the locker room after yesterday's first cross-country practice. "I'm pleased and surprised at today's turnout; we'll have a fighting chance against Dartmouth this winter, but we have to work on the cross-country and jumping...
Lounging in Boston's Ritz-Carlton this week. Ambassador Joseph Patrick Kennedy talked to Louis M. Lyons of the Boston Globe, two other newsmen, was mightily wroth when he saw Reporter Lyons' bylined story of the interview. Excerpt: "Democracy [said Kennedy] is finished in England. . . . It's all an economic question. I told the President in the White House last Sunday, 'Don't send me 50 admirals and generals, send me a dozen real economists.' . . . It's all a question of what we do with the next six months. The whole reason...
Quick was Joe Kennedy to try to square himself with the Administration, his British friends for undiplomatic garrulity. His principal explanation in a formal statement given the press: the interview was supposed to be off the record; Reporter Lyons' story "creates a different impression entirely than I would want to set forth." Moaned the U. S.'s Ambassador to the Court of St. James's: "Mr. Lyons made no notes during the visit. . . . Many of [his statements] were inaccurate...
Charles Edmundson of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, a Nieman Fellow now at Harvard, was also present at the interview but refused to comment whether Kennedy had stated that what he said was not for publication...