Word: couriers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...counsel table; his wife, Mrs. Ethel Green-glass Rosenberg, indicted with them as a fellow conspirator, was the calmest. These three, the Government charged, were part of the spy transmission belt for which Physicist Klaus Fuchs (see SCIENCE) was a prime source and Chemist Harry Gold a key courier. The Russian contact for the ring was Anatoli Yakovlev, who was wartime Soviet vice consul in New York. "The evidence of the treasonable acts of each of these three defendants is overwhelming," U.S. Attorney Irving Saypol told the jury...
...Rosenberg tore the back off a package of Jello, took a pair of scissors and snipped the cardboard in half. One-half he gave to Greenglass' wife, the other he kept. The next time Greenglass saw the other half, was in Albuquerque. It was in the hand of Courier Harry Gold-an identification card. Greenglass gave Gold another lens-mold sketch, he said...
...group, it seems that the editors themselves are promoting this sort of thing. A quiet poll shows that Frank J. Starzel, general manager of The Associated Press, said vis-a-vis at 8:23 p.m., Carroll Binder, of the Minneapolis Tribune at 9:27, Barry Bingham of the Louisville Courier Journal said it twice (unclocked) and Arthur Hays Sulzberger of the New York Times at 10:22 p.m. (but the meeting started late...
Died. William James Conners Jr., 55, publisher of the Buffalo Courier-Express (circ. 149,465), which he took over from his father in 1919; of a heart attack; in Buffalo...
This statement set the problem, "to whom and what are newspapers responsible," before the group: Erwin D. Canham, editor of the Christian Science Monitor, Bob Eddy, telegraph press editor of the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Nieman Fellow, Hugh Morris, state capital reporter for the Louisville Courier-Journal and Nieman Fellow, and Douglas M. Fouquet '51, ex-president of the CRIMSON...