Word: ferrere
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...story examining the question "Can Capitalism Survive?"; another medal was awarded for our special 1776 issue. Associate Editor Frederic Golden received the American Institute of Physics' science writing prize for his Sept. 1 cover on earthquakes. Our June 30 examination of crime, written by Associate Editors Jose M. Ferrer III and James Atwater and Staff Writer John Leo, received the New York State Bar Association's Media Award in the national magazine category...
...Jose Ferrer impersonates Joe Stalin. John Houseman is Winston Churchill. Ed Flanders is Harry Truman. They were all gathered together on location outside Hamburg for a Hallmark Hall of Fame TV special entitled "Truman at Potsdam." "Truman was an honest, practical man of little intrigue," observed Flanders, best known for his 1974 Tony Award-winning role in A Moon for the Misbegotten. "I just had to stand up straight." Houseman, who won a 1973 Academy Award for his supporting role in The Paper Chase, learned to smoke cigars for his portrayal of Churchill and then picked up some of Winnie...
...arranged some of the testimony elicited from suspected Communists and fellow travelers by the House Un-American Activities Committee in the late '40s and early '50s. The witnesses are exclusively from the Hollywood and Broadway communities and include, among others, such figures as Larry Parks, Jose Ferrer, Abe Burrows, Elia Kazan, Jerome Robbins, Lillian Hellman, Lionel Slander, Arthur Miller and Paul Robeson. (Bentley seems no less inclined than HUAC to sprinkle Stardust in order to germinate publicity...
...Marshall) and last week the John Hancock Award for business writing. In addition, the American Bar Association has given TIME a Certificate of Merit for its coverage of the final year of the Watergate affair. Singled out for special recognition were Senior Writer Ed Magnuson, Associate Editor Jose Ferrer III and Staff Writer Donald Morrison...
...only character in search of an author. The redoubtable Richard Attenborough is on hand, as a titled English policeman. He seems willing to exchange barbs with Wayne, if any come to mind, as do Judy Geeson, as a detective, and Mel Ferrer, as the man in charge of the overly complicated fake kidnaping of the hood...