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Village Squire, 1973-09, Page 20Keith's Kolumn/ by Keith Roulston On being interviewed If you're a dentist used to looking hour after hour into someone's mouth, it must be strange when it comes time for you to visit a dentist yourself and have som-nre look into your mouth. The same goes for barbers. And the same goes for writers. In six years of professional writing your's truly has interviewed many a person and pounded out hundreds of thousands if not millions of words on my old typewriter. It felt strange then last month to be on the other end of the operation. Don Murray of the London Free Press called up one day and asked if he could do a story on Village Squire for the big daily newspaper. I must say I felt a little flattered just as many of the people I've interviewed for various pub- lications in the past few years must have. Driving over to meet Don I must say I practically wrote the article for hi.m about three times in my head. The same thing happened when we sat down to talk over a cup of coffee. The problem with being interviewed when you do a lot of interviewing yourself is that you can almost answer the ques- tions before they're asked. You get to know just about exactly what will be asked next. I think it must be even harder from the other end, however. I remember the first interview I ever conducted back in college when I interviewed Jim Proudfoot, now the sports editor of the Toronto Daily Star and then one of the papers top sports reporters on the nation's biggest newspaper. The shy, rookie student -reporter from Western Ontario talking to a busy man who daily spoke to a million readers. Man was I scared. Every question had to be thought out seven times before being asked because who would want to say something stupid in front of such an important person. He was a wonderful guy however and soon relaxed me. Now Don wasn't interviewing some awesomely important figure but it must have made hien a little nervous to know I was sitting there knowing just what questions he was going to ask. It may have made him work a little harder to come up with a ques- tion that would surprise me. We had a good talk, though and the story worked out well. He spelled the name right and in journalism, that's often all that really matters. EXTRA DISCOUNT SALE !11,'IIv \\ . . ML 1' p p i' wll •'I 111111 III111,` rN.:,-ic�•41F.Iiir En • MOS r1 i. "" °iI7�Ci �1V111111ur} i 1 1 •' 1 1 ii l P I 1 11111/111 ,- -. TL1 10111 CHESTERFIELD SUITES wrote OVERSTOCKED {O, TO Clear sur Overcrowded Showroom WE'RE DISCOUNTING OUR REGULAR LOW DISCOUNT PRICES A Furter 1 O% SONE TO CLEAII AT COST BLACKSTONE FURNITURE VW STREET, OODERICH 20 VILLAGE SQUIRE/SEPTEMBER 1973