Word: interviews
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...work through churches. . . . We hold meetings and agitate through literature. The agitation rests on the basis that alcohol is a habit-forming drug and should be suppressed. . . . Sometimes we interview Senators and Representatives. . . . We don't write bills [for Congress]. . . .We obtain reports about candidates for appointments and give the President the information. . . . We never permit the League to be maneuvered into assuming responsibility for any appointee...
Lewis Mumford's statement in the interview published in yesterday's Sun that the "colleges are spending enormous sums on buildings and nothing on men" is exceedingly important in the ever-raging controversy that surrounds educational trends...
...threatened him with arrest on sight "like any common hoodlum.'' Capone, distressed, insisted he had legal rights "like any other citizen." At the Hotel Lexington he opened "business headquarters." At 3 a.m. a reporter for the London Daily Express called him on the transoceanic telephone for an interview but central could not supply Capone's private number. To newsmen Capone carefully explained that his name is pronounced in two syllables (Capone...
...last interview, Elizabeth gives him a talisman, a ring by means of which he may, if he wishes, secure her pardon. In his last hour, he entrusts this to the Queen's messenger, a court lady whose love he has spurned. She betrays him, informs Elizabeth that he is still arrogant, has made no mention of the token. When the Queen learns the truth, the axe has fallen. As it has cleaved the neck of Essex, so it splits Elizabeth's aged, remorseful heart...
Atterbury. In an American Magazine interview published last week P. R. R.'s president, General William Wallace Atterbury prophesied that from eight to ten billion dollars would be spent in railroad improvements in the next ten years, that a 14-hour schedule between Chicago and Manhattan would be developed...