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  1. The Week (1933) The Week. (1933) The Week was a radical British newspaper from 1933 until 1941. Marxist journalist Claud Cockburn launched the first British publication known as The Week as a newsletter in the spring of 1933, after he had returned from reporting on Germany. It focused on the rise of fascism.

  2. 16 de dic. de 1981 · Claud Cockburn, a British journalist and social critic whose lively style made him something of a cult figure on the British political left, died yesterday at St. Sinbarr's Hospital in Cork, Ireland.

  3. 9 de abr. de 2021 · Claud Cockburn was born in Peking (now Beijing) in 1904. His father, “a younger son of Lord Cockburn, the great Scottish advocate and judge who shone so brightly in the golden age of Edinburgh ...

  4. Francis Claud Cockburn (* 12. April 1904 in Peking, China; † 15. Dezember 1981 in Cork, Irland) (Pseudonym James Helvick, Frank Pitcairn) war ein britischer Journalist Leben und Tätigkeit. Früher Werdegang. Cockburn wurde als Sohn des Henry Cockburn und seiner Ehefrau Elizabeth Gordon, geb. Stevenson, in der britischen Botschaft in Peking ...

  5. Journalist. Claud Cockburn the British journalist photographed by Duffy for Vogue Magazine on the 17th March 1959. This was Duffy's first known portrait, published in Vogue along with his first cover image in May 1959. His famous saying " Believe nothing until it has been officially denied " is often quoted to this day.

  6. Book Source: Digital Library of India Item 2015.462262dc.contributor.author: Cockburn, Clauddc.date.accessioned: 2015-09-22T15:36:57Zdc.date.available:...

  7. ClAUD COCKBURN is a friend and contemporary of Graham Greene, and for a time they both attended a school run by Graham Greene‘s father. After his graduation from Oxford, ...