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Alsop, who combines with his brother Stewart in a daily syndicated column, was a naval officer, a Flying Tiger, and a war prisoner of the Japanese during the war. He is one of the few foreign correspondents who has been granted an interview with Stalin and is expected to support a "get tough with Russia" policy for the State Department...
Radio station WCOP will broadcast an Ann Arbor-recorded interview between Boston Globe correspondent Vern Miller '42 and Coach Valpey tonight at 6 o'clock...
...parley follows on the heels of an announcement by the Office that representatives of two national advertising agencies will arrive here later this term to interview students for several positions in their firms...
...interview added two footnotes to presidential history. The first was Harry Truman's answer to Russian protests after Winston Churchill's historic speech at Fulton, Mo. The President, said Nover, sat down and penned a personal note to Stalin with his own hand. He offered to send the battleship Missouri to bring Stalin to the U.S., promised to accompany him to the University of Missouri at Columbia (20 miles from Fulton) for "exactly the same kind of reception, the same opportunity to speak his mind." Stalin's answer, as usual: "Nyet...
...receive all these congratulations? . . . The time was when whatever I said, the masses followed. But today I am a lone voice in India." In November, a TIME correspondent went to see him. Gandhi said: "Can you squat?" The reporter squatted. Gandhi at one point in the interview said: "Three hundred years is as nothing." He returned to the present: "The fear haunts me that India must yet go through a deeper blood bath." The government which he had dominated came closer & closer to open war on Pakistan. Only Gandhi's fast last month checked the drift toward open hostilities...