Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...interview over the Crimson Network at 9:45 o'clock tonight sports columnist George Carens of the Boston Traveler staff will discuss his open letter to President Conant concerning the use of Soldiers Field by the Army and Navy for their September football game...
...give Carens the opportunity to expose the University to his ideas and arguments in the matter, the Network has substituted the interview for the usual Faculty Views program. Bernard G. Glassman '44 will interview...
...loudest complainers was Columnist Arthur Krock, who used to be a White House favorite himself, won a Pulitzer Prize (1938) for an exclusive interview with President Roosevelt. Though Mr. Krock's words might be a cluster of sour grapes, they were filled with the seeds of righteousness. Said Krock: "An administration which is operating under the most democratic form of Government in the world has once again told its story through unofficial spokesmen instead of telling the story itself...
...dubbed "Rommel Africanus." Since the eleventh edition of Rommel's Infantry Attacks had all but disappeared from German bookshops, Dr. Goebbels commanded that Germany's paper-saving regulations be relaxed to permit a twelfth edition. Goebbels' biggest scoop was a German soldier-correspondent's interview with Rommel six hours after he had entered Tobruk. As if to answer Italian newspapers, which had crowed that the victory belonged to "Italian and German troops," Marshal Rommel remarked dryly: "What we did could have been done only by German troops...
Newsmen write almost anything. They scour the University for interesting or queer professors. They can cover athletics, talk to coaches. They interview backstage. They probe and investigate and expose. All this is open to the news candidate...