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Francis Claud Cockburn (/ ˈ k oʊ b ər n / KOH-bərn; 12 April 1904 – 15 December 1981) was a British journalist. His saying "believe nothing until it has been officially denied" is widely quoted in journalistic studies, but he did not claim credit for originating it.
Francis Claud Cockburn (* 12. April 1904 in Peking, China; † 15. Dezember 1981 in Cork, Irland) (Pseudonym James Helvick, Frank Pitcairn) war ein britischer Journalist . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben und Tätigkeit. 1.1 Früher Werdegang. 1.2 Herausgeber der Week. 1.3 Zweiter Weltkrieg und späteres Leben. 2 Familie. 3 Schriften. 4 Literatur. 5 Weblinks
16. Dez. 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,...
Claud Cockburn. December 1, 1973. News for the Million. ClAUD COCKBURN is a friend and contemporary of Graham Greene, and for a time they both attended a school run by Graham Greene‘s...
Claud Cockburn: My father, the MI5 suspect. Claud Cockburn was a journalistic legend: a swashbuckling iconoclast with a taste for whisky and radical politics. Now, intelligence files...
31. Mai 2023 · Francis Claud Cockburn (April 12 1904 – December 15 1981) was an influential left-wing English journalist; also a novelist, short-story writer and autobiographer. His many pseudonyms include Frank Pitcairn and James Helvick .
Beat the Devil is a 1951 thriller written by Claud Cockburn under the pseudonym James Helvick. Cockburn used the pseudonym, though he had left the British Communist Party in 1947, he was still considered a "Red" during the early years of the Cold War, which was rife with anti-communist sentiment.