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...short-wave broadcasters to arrange maximum world reception for a speech by President Roosevelt (TIME, May 26). The industry saw the drift, hired a liaison man in the person of Stanley P. Richardson, old A.P. correspondent, onetime secretary to Ambassador Joseph E. Davies in Russia and Belgium. Through Stan Richardson the broadcasters learned what the Government wanted, and vice versa. What the Government wanted, it soon moved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: The U.S. Short Wave | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

...News Editor Joseph Barnes at the desk. From the wire services-and from Washington's suggestions-Editor Barnes picked items of interest, tossed them to six key writer-researchers of such caliber as Edmond Taylor (The Strategy of Terror). Pointed or amplified, the items went next door to Stan Richardson's office. Richardson, checking for both State Department and industry, put them on a private teletype wire to receivers in each short-wave news room. Sample item...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: The U.S. Short Wave | 11/3/1941 | See Source »

Meanwhile, Winthrop and Dunster were struggling hard, taking turns pushing the ball up and down the field. The Puritans, minus powerful Stan Durwood, outplayed their rivals during the first half but were unable to score. With Durwood to carry the ball they might have been able to chalk up their first win instead of their second...

Author: By William J. Elser, | Title: Eliot Elephants Worry Bellboys But Lose 13-0; Winthrop and Dunster Battle Ends in Tie, 0-0 | 10/24/1941 | See Source »

After a layoff of only one day, the House football league again returns to action at 3:15 o'clock this afternoon when unbeaten Lowell eleven tang es with a thrice-defeated Eliot squad and the Dunster Funsters pit their strength against Stan Durwood and his Puritan cohorts...

Author: By William J. Elser, | Title: BELL BOYS TO BATTLE ELIOT | 10/23/1941 | See Source »

...Winthrop-Freshman game was an inconclusive affair that see-sawed back and forth around midfield, and proved nothing. At times the Yardlings would show flashes of brilliance, but they were repulsed by the Puritans, while Winthrop never could get started, although solid Stan Durwood powered his way through the '45 line, and Bill Eustis tossed several neat passes. Even though Durwood put his head down and charged, the Yardling forward wall would not crack open, and yielded but a few yards each try. Durwood kicks and plows through the line on the offense, but moves up into the tackle spot...

Author: By Dan H. Fenn jr., | Title: '45 J. V. Ties Winthrop, 0-0, Kirkland Tops Dorms 13-0 | 10/15/1941 | See Source »

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