Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...following is an interview conducted at Harvard last week dealing with social and political problems of Latin America. Questions appear in italic type...
...Greedy. Even Humphrey, known for his often uncritical and generally outspoken support of Great Society innovations, seemed to be having some second thoughts. "Those programs," he said in an interview, "aren't going to be fulfilled in any one year. I've told a number of my friends, don't look upon the Great Society as if it is a smorgasbord, where you have to come and fill yourself to a point where you are literally ill at the first feast. There will still be plenty if you continue to take it in reasonable amounts year after...
...impulse-prestige auto dealers. What's more, only the elite with Rothschild bank accounts will be eligible for the cards, and those accounts are rather hard to get. To be accepted, Rothschild clients must be personally recommended by a Rothschild family member or survive a cold-eyed interview in the bank's paneled, 19th century-style Paris offices-and keep a minimum balance...
...pivotal interview was the one with Mrs. Kennedy. For more than ten hours during two days in April 1964, Manchester taped her recollections at her Georgetown home in Washington. In his foreword he wrote: "Mrs. Kennedy asked but one question before our first taping session. 'Are you just going to put down all the facts, who ate what for breakfast and all that, or are you going to put yourself in the book, too?' I replied that I didn't see how I could very well keep myself out of it. 'Good,' she said emphatically...
...discuss changes. Kennedy agents told Look that they had to approve the articles, but Look rejected the suggested changes. Through the autumn, Kennedy advisers met frequently, zeroing in finally on two major objections: the book was still too anti-Johnson, and much of the material from Manchester's interview with Jackie was mawkishly handled. Copies of the Look galleys were sent to the White House, where Bill Moyers read them but offered no suggestions...