Word: sokolov
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...unbelievable rushing average of 15.4 yards per carry; quarterback Frederic L. Ballard can pass that buck like no one else in the business; fullback Chollie Bevard, in Russin's own words, will always "catch you off guard"; and linemen Robert "Speed" Gordon, Richard "King" Cotton, Raymond "The Sage" Sokolov, Andrew "The Rock" Weil and Lee "Flash" Auspitz are just, well, Some Of The Greats...
...SOKOLOV REPLIES: Now, gentlemen, one at a time please. First, Ivy Films. As to your troubles with the Brattle, with these I condole. As to your technical information, I suggest you check it. My impression from conversations with Richard Leacock and with the immediate past president of your organization is that Drasin did indeed borrow synch-sound equipment first conceived by Leacock...
Raymond A. Sokolov, Jr.'s waspish review in Friday's CRIMSON accused the Brattle Theatre of failing to advertise the showing of Dan Drasin's Sunday. The Brattle did in fact advertise Sunday in ads in the CRIMSON (Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday), the Globe, the Herald and Traveler, the Record-American, the Christian Science Monitor (Thursday-Friday-Saturday), and on WCRB. In addition, the Brattle sent out special news releases on Sunday which were printed by the Globe (in entirety) and the Herald (in part...
...Washington last week, Soviet Press Attaché Oleg Sokolov turned to his American luncheon companion and asked sourly: "Who's Kohler?" Sokolov knew perfectly well, since Foy David Kohler, 54, just named by President Kennedy to replace Llewellyn E. Thompson Jr. as Ambassador to the Soviet Union, has been at the center of East-West negotiations over Berlin-probably the knottiest, longest-standing tangle in the cold war. But if the Russian was simply expressing predictable skepticism, quite a few Americans were asking the same question about the man who is about to take over...
...single rime, I hope to avoid the further wrath of my literary superiors. If this course of action meets with Mr. Sokolov's approval, might I respectfully suggest as well that villanelles were written long before that of Jean Passerat in 1006, from which the present form is derived, and that the art of poetry is a trifle more capacious than his rules? Richard Sommer Teaching Fellow in English