Word: interviews
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...correct bearing. He carried a walking stick. In the lapel of his neat tan suit bloomed a flaming carnation. He fussily flicked a speck of dust from his coat, coughed with the conviction of a man swearing, and walked into the Foreign Office's cavernous hall for an interview with Argentina's suave Foreign Minister, Dr. Juan Atilio Bramuglia...
Every weekday for the past 12½ years Mary Margaret McBride has brought to the air 45 minutes of what she calls "a good radio voice-the kind that pushes itself up against you." For the first 35 minutes she titters through an interview with a celebrity. In the last ten she really goes into her act-mugging through commercials for 13 sponsors (who pay her about $100,000 a year...
According to Network archives the first regularly-scheduled evening featured, as today, classical and popular music, but was spiced with an interview with French author Andre Maurois, a radio drama by the Workshop, and a program of the Instumental Club. In the remainder of the first week, Selective Service, Jimmy Lunceford, and a succession of Wellesley and Radcliffe girls were all presented to the College through the new medium...
...took Charlie a while to find himself. He drifted restlessly from job to job. Once he tried writing a column for a Negro weekly. After he had described an imaginary interview with Hitler, the editor demoted him to chauffeur. The outlook was gloomy when Charlie was caught signing a friend's name to a check...
Whether this will be good or bad is not at all clear. In Washington last week, small, blue-eyed Dr. Muller, glowing with the stimulation of his newly won Nobel Prize, gave a pessimistic interview. "Most mutations are bad," said he. "In fact, good ones are so rare that we can consider them all as bad." It would be "fortunate," he thought, if all those exposed to an atomic explosion (such as the people of Hiroshima) were to be made permanently sterile...