Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Claiming that his native France "was not really beaten," 20-year old Parisian refugee Jean H. Dourif '44 said in an interview yesterday that "the German occupation will do the people a lot of good because it will tend to unite them once more. All they need now is a good leader...
First official to sound off was Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka, who has a big reputation for talking. In an interview given to International News Service's Larry Smith, the Foreign Minister was quoted as follows...
...until two days later, after Washington had unofficially called the interview an insult, that Foreign Minister Matsuoka decided that perhaps he had talked too much. The Japanese Foreign Office explained that Mr. Matsuoka had been talking off the record to a "magazine artist," gave its "official" version of the interview...
...Fifth Avenue office of Lecture Impresario William Colston Leigh next morning Newspapermen Knickerbocker and Sheean turned the tables on their own profession: granted an interview to the press. Like visiting diplomats (Sheean this week starts a ten-week lecture tour, Knickerbocker next week starts a four-month tour), they sat behind Mr. Leigh's massive desk and answered questions, while a dozen reporters leaned against the walnut-paneled walls...
...control of radio is inadequate for the pressing social needs of today and must be made a dynamic factor in the formation of public opinion," Charles Siepmann, formerly Director of Program Planning in the British Broadcasting Corporation, stated in an interview yesterday...