Word: interviews
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Unable to read English, therefore unable to read Farmer Campbell's book, Dictator Stalin had boiled over when some bungling Russian translator told him that the Man from Montana claims they talked from 1 p. m. "until the dawn." Actually Mr. Campbell wrote that the interview lasted from 2 p. m. "until well after dark, as the sun sets early in the northern country." Stalin's letter sharply denied all-night parleying, denied the claim (which Farmer Campbell did make) that Stalin clasped his guest's hand in both his own, finally held up to scorn this...
...forgery and obtaining $750,000 under false pretenses in Germany. Normano is being held in the East Cambridge House of Correction without ball pending investigation to discover whether is really Dr. Isaak Lewin, a German banker who absconded in 1929. Admittance was denied a CRIMSON reporter who attempted to interview him on Saturday...
...theory formulated not by a group of scientists carrying out investigations in a scientific way, but merely by a group of faddists, eager to put a few startling and unreliable figures before a depression struck people," said E. S. Mason, associate professor of Economics, in an interview yesterday. "It shows what a love of fads the people of the United States have, but you can't blame anyone for turning to any new panacea, however dubious, in a depression of this sort...
Reaching far underneath a bed for a stray sock tossed there by its owner, Mrs. E. Adelbert Jacobson, a maid in one of the Houses, ventured to speak a piece of her mind in an exclusive CRIMSON interview yesterday morning. "Now take this here sock," Mrs. Jacobson commented, "thrown way under here out of my reach, what do those boys think I am a lost and found department. Why, the work I have to do to keep these rooms in order! My lands, you'd think a cyclone had hit it every morning. Pajama tops here, and the bottoms...
...safe to say that the Harvard Engineering School is better known in Europe than is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology," said H. E. Clifford '89, dean of the Engineering School in an interview yesterday. "The very nature of the two schools accounts for this fact. I can probably best demonstrate their differentiating characteristics by a concrete example. If, upon being graduated, a Tech man and a Harvard man were placed before a machine, the Tech man would probably be the first to start the machine...