Word: atkinson
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Others in the cast include: S. J. Gilman, Jr. '44 as Bertrand de Poulanger, Clyde Eagleton '48 as the Steward, Robert P. Atkinson '50 as Gilles de Rais, Whitley Y. Dresser '50 as Captain La Hire, David F. Wheeler '47 as D'Estivet, Richard Robbins '50 as De Courcelles, Thomas H. Philips '47 as the Executioner, Edward T. Kenyon '50 as Gentleman of 1920, and Robert E. Rockman '46 as Due de Tremouille...
...newspaper correspondent in Moscow, the trick was to write dispatches with tongue in cheek, which the Soviet censors wouldn't notice, but any U.S. reader would. The New York Times's soft-voiced, scholarly Brooks Atkinson was a master at it. Drew Middleton, his chubby, aggressive successor in Moscow, has proved equally adept...
...beat the Princeton captain Russ Randall in a gruelling 8 to 5 decision for the 155-pound bout while Jim Howard lost to Princeton wristlock specialist Bud Wood in the 165-pound class by a pin in 5:43. Bob Clafin dropped the 175-pound slot to Tiger Mat Atkinson by a 5 to 1 margin...
...Besides its big naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the U.S., by terms of the overage destroyer deal, has a 99-year right to use six island bases in the British West Indies and Atkinson Field in British Guiana...
...knows how many million Russians have been killed, since 1917, by purges, terror and other Government repressive measures. Certainly, the grim total must be numbered in millions. Brooks Atkinson, former N.Y. Times correspondent in Moscow, believes that ten to 15 million Russians are in Soviet jails, forced labor camps or exile. For the leaders of the Soviet Government are possessed by fanatical dogmas which they mean to make live at all costs. And the patient Russian people, who merely want to live, are possessed body & soul by their Government. The struggle between them, however hidden, is ceaseless. Purges indicate...