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Deadly workplace shooting in Amory leads to high-speed chase that ends in Columbus, murder suspect found hiding in the bushes - Home - WCBI TV

Deadly workplace shooting in Amory leads to high-speed chase that ends in Columbus, murder suspect found hiding in the bushes - Home - WCBI TV
wcbi.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wcbi.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Tenn-Tom Conference Set For August 11–13 - The Waterways Journal

Tenn-Tom Conference Set For August 11–13 - The Waterways Journal
waterwaysjournal.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from waterwaysjournal.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bayard Rustin, Britain s Nuclear Weapons, and the Global Struggle for Peace and Justice

Bayard Rustin, Britain s Nuclear Weapons, and the Global Struggle for Peace and Justice
armscontrol.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from armscontrol.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Timely release for Breaking Blake

Barnaby Kay’s gripping drama explores what really happened during 1966 prison breakout by Russian spy 14 January, 2021 — By Lucy Popescu BREAKING Blake opens in October 1966 with a memorable football match – England against Northern Ireland – and a prison breakout. George Blake (Michael Maloney), a Russian spy, has just escaped from Wormwood Scrubs. It was initially assumed that the KGB had masterminded his escape, but Barnaby Kay’s gripping drama explores what really happened. In 1961, two anti-nuclear campaigners, Michael Randle (Elliot Levey) and Pat Pottle (Tony Gardner), were imprisoned after entering a US air force base in Essex. They were charged under the official secret acts – for attempting to stop nuclear weapons being loaded onto a plane – and received 18-month sentences.

FROSTY S RAMBLINGS The springing of George Blake

IT WAS one of those gloriously serendipitous coincidences. In the Morning Star of December 28 late last year Nick Wright gave us an analytical obituary of spy and novelist John Le Carre and the writer’s undoubted deep understanding of the Cold War. In the same edition, on the paper’s news pages was the report that George Blake, one of Russia’s best known spies in Britain, had died in his Moscow “dacha,” or country cottage at the age of 98. The news item reported tributes to the former Soviet spy and Russian national hero George Blake and outlined the basics of Blake’s amazing story. 

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