Word: interviews
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...masking the words which he did wish to reach the public by having them issue from the mouth of that journalistic ragdoll, "the White House Spokesman." Now, said they, in the name of all that was printable, why had Mr. Coolidge wrought this evil upon them- given his best interview of all time, not to one of their number, but to an angelic interloper from another estate? An interloper who had then sold his treasure to their newspapers, via the Associated Press! Through ever-ready Secretary Everett Sanders, President Coolidge made answer as best he could to the "boys...
...connection with the social service work now being planned on an extensive scale at the Philips Brooks House, T. A. Gibson, of Trinity Church, an authority on social welfare work, made the following statement in an interview with the CRIMSON yesterday; "Boys' clubs are not so troublesome to manage as is generally believed, if a few definite principles on running games are observed. A supervisor should be persistent in providing a varied program at each gathering of his club. If this presented in a regular fashion, no disorder need be anticipated...
...successful in business, and especially in the merchant marine business, should start to work at 16 and not at 24, as most college graduates do," said Captain Robert Dollar, owner of the Dollar Line and the original of Peter B. Kyne's "Cappy Ricks", in an interview yesterday...
...Many men cannot realize the opportunities that there are for them in class football," declared M. A. Check '26, in an interview last night. It is under his direction that Coaches E.S. Daniel '26, F.K. Kernan '24 L. B. Lockwood '24, K. S. Pfaffman '24, and R. S. Scott '27, are working with the class teams each afternoon on Soldiers Field. C.E. Bald win '26 is expected to join the staff soon...
Most respectable of all was "The Man's Magazine," Beau, which interlarded "The Secret of Making Good Coffee" by George Moore, a haberdashery and gifts-for-women page, theatre talk, an excellent London book letter by J. Middleton Murray, a dull Shaw interview, a note on bridge and a note on the return to Manhattan of nag-drawn victorias, all of which somewhat offset a nude story by Paul Morand, a discussion of Broadway females, some "daring" art work and a letter-the original of which is possessed by the U. S. State Department-to a Man with...