Word: interviews
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...Richard Eaton (a Harvard graduate), described as a newspaper correspondent of The Daily Mail, London, and Le Matin, Paris, in an interview in Manhattan, disclosed the base, black treachery of one War Lord Léon Trotsky...
...Last Talks with Woodrow Wilson," an article in the Saturday Evening Post of March 29, by James Kerney, described Wilson's last press interview, given to Mr. Kerney on December 7, 1923. The former President, signatory of the Versailles Treaty, according to Keynes and Poincare the proponent of many of the reparations terms which have since been found unworkable, said to his interviewer: "I should like to see Germany clean up France, and I should like to meet Jusserand [French Ambassador to the U. S.] and tell him that to his 'face." Mr. Kerney added: "He was plainly...
President Obregon received Mr. Warren to the strains of The Star Spangled Banner. The American walked up the diplomatic stairway beneath archos of flowers to the golden reception room. In an interview with the President the Ambassador declared, under instructions from President Coolidge: "The relations we desire with this republic do not infringe in any way upon its nationality. Nations arise from deep causes that well up in individuals possessing common spiritual qualities and ideals. Your people possess theirs and we possess ours." He disclaimed any intention of aggrandizement on the part of the U. S., or a desire...
...correctly reported in your interview in the CRIMSON this morning, I think that you must be laboring under a misapprehension. You speak an if the Trustees--at Harvard we call them Governing Boards-- decided who should speak at the Harvard Union. The Harvard Union is an association of students and graduates, over which the Governing Boards exercise no more control than the authorities of Oxford and Cambridge do over the question of who shall speak, or what shall be said, in the Oxford and Cambridge Unions...
...results of a wide-spread movement towards liberalism," Mr. Russell summed up as he prepared to end the interview, "especially in American universities, would be inestimable. I admit, of course, that a reformer who sits at a desk and evolves Utopian theories is, in the final estimate, useless. But once a student has achieved liberty of thought, his next step is to stump the country trying to convert people, and then he becomes a factor in the progress of civilization...