Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Entries for the tennis tournament, which heads off the Yardling program, are already being made at the Union and the Tennis and Squash Shop, Samborski said in an interview yesterday. The tournament, which will begin Monday, September 30, and will be played off during the week, will be held under the supervision of Freshman tennis coach, Dick Dorson. Dorson will probably select his Yardling team on the basis of the tournament showings...
...York newsmen held a mass interview last week with refugees of the war. Aboard the S.S. Samaria when she steamed into New York Harbor were 138 British children, tagged, labeled, carrying knapsacks, duffle bags, copies of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, gas-mask containers crammed with tuppenny treasures, dolls, souvenirs. Reporters and officials who boarded the Samaria at Quarantine found the refugees assembled on the tourist-class afterdeck. While they gazed at the skyline of Manhattan, they were singing There'll Always Be an England...
Slam: London correspondents wanted an account of Mr. Cudahy's recent travels through Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal. Mr. Kennedy, as the ranking ambassador, first demurred, then permitted the interview, on the understanding that Mr. Cudahy would confine himself to innocuous remarks. Ambassador Cudahy had just begun to talk when Ambassador Kennedy slammed down a window. Mr. Cudahy continued to talk. Mr. Kennedy slammed again, violently. As Mr. Cudahy continued to talk, Joe Kennedy announced that the reporters had heard enough, urgently ushered them out of the embassy. Voluble John Cudahy...
...will question the sincerity of the Ambassador's sympathetic interest in the . . . Belgian people, an interest which is shared by the people of the United States. Nevertheless, the interview given was in violation of standing instructions of the Department of State . . . views expressed by the Ambassador are not . . . the views of this Government. . . . By direction of the President, Ambassador Cudahy has been requested to return . . . immediately for consultation." Said John Cudahy, packing in London for a quick trip to Lisbon and thence to the U. S. by Clipper: "I know I am going home to be crucified...
...Herald Tribune's, libel reporter is tense, grizzled, fun-loving Jay Racusin. Inquisitive Newsman Racusin, now 47, has been with the Herald Tribune since 1918. As a cub he was the first (and only) newspaperman to interview J. P. Morgan after World War I. Reporter Racusin (known as "Rack") gets plenty of other assignments that call for a passionate curiosity about the lives of his fellow men, a plain-clothes man's eye for significant details. Six weeks ago the Herald Tribune's lanky City Editor Lessing Engelking called Rack and gave him a special assignment...