Word: winslow
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...standards high." There are three days of rehearsal for each show, more rehearsal time than is used for any other radio program, and as much as is used on many TV shows. Whenever possible, the original stage casts are used on the air. In some cases, as with The Winslow Boy, a play goes on radio soon after it concludes its Broadway run. The only movie actors the Guild uses, says Armina Marshall bluntly, are "those...
...fund of Mrs. Sarah Winslow pays the Treasurer to look after it. (Fifty shillings for every hundred pounds --$5.28 in this case.) Otherwise the will is more complicated, but otherwise no different from the rest...
...Sound Barrier in England,. Breaking Through is described by Director David (Brief Encounter, Great Expectations) Lean as "a modern adventure story." It is also a stunning film flight into the unknown, an imaginatively told movie about the human imagination exploring the whole new realm of the air. Terence (The Winslow Boy) Rattigan's screenplay examines both flight and flyers: the stresses & strains, mechanical as well as human, of its theme. A pioneer aviation magnate (played with consummate craft by Ralph Richardson) is dedicated to penetrating the sound barrier. Before his "evil vision" is vindicated, his son (Denholm Elliott...
...years he gave graduate courses to physicians, physiologists, bacteriologists, epidemiologists, nutritionists, mental hygienists and engineers working on water supply, sewerage and housing, forever emphasizing how all these specialties met in the common purpose of protecting and improving the public health. Today, more than a thousand Winslow men are spread across the U.S., in city, county, state and national health agencies, and around the world, preaching his gospel that in the long run the price of health is far less than the cost of sickness...
...technically retired seven years ago, Dr. Winslow has not slowed down a bit. Slight, stooped, and a nervous chain-smoker, he still edits the American Journal of Public Health, has just finished the second of five volumes on public health. Says his Yale successor, Dr. Ira Hiscock: "Winslow is still so young that young people go to him for new, young ideas...