Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Following the interview with Whipple, McEnary held a consultation yesterday afternoon with Victor H. Kramer '35, President of the Liberal Club. According to Kramer, the discussion centered on "Mr. Hearst's tactics for ascertaining the extent of secret communist propaganda in Harvard College, and I assured him that Mr. Hearst is entirely misinformed if he feels that there are any members of the Faculty who are plotting the violent overthrow of the American Government. I also assured him that the Liberal Club is in no way communistic or fascistic and that it abhors all forms of violence and bloodshed...
Thus far the efforts of the Boston American to interview Harvard professors for the purpose of asking them to make statements supporting communism have met with little success, since the publicity which has attended the recent Hearst attacks on communism at Syracuse and Columbia has put college professors throughout the country on the alert against falling victim to such newspaper tactics...
When the S.S Rex steamed into New York harbor one evening last week reporters clambered aboard to interview a celebrated passenger. They found a nervous little man who wore spats, a bright checkered scarf and a fur-lined overcoat which, for no apparent reason, he kept putting on & taking off. Once he had located the spectacles perched on the top of his head, he gladly gave his autograph. He used Russian letters but he set them down vertically, like Chinese. Deciphered, they read: '"Igor Stravinsky...
Whether he though they added more than the work of college students and professors to the betterment of the race was a question the master could not answer. Giving his tie a final pat and pulling his dressing room Mr. White man closed the interview with a few remarks about dancing...
Before the lecture a group of reporters went to interview Dr. Einstein at the home of his host, Nathaniel Spear, Pittsburgh furniture tycoon. They found him sitting at ease by a gas-log fire, not nearly so nonplused and frightened by the U. S. Press as he was four years ago. He understood the questions perfectly, groped now and then for an English word or phrase but seldom for a reply. Mr. Spear, confined to bed upstairs, sent down a request that the eminent man should pose for photographs beside a bust of Socrates in the parlor...