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  1. 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.

    • Journalist
  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,...

  3. Se cree que el creador de la primera newsletter fue Claud Cockburn, el clásico comunista inglés educado en Oxford que podría aparecer en una novela de Graham Greene —de hecho, ambos eran...

  4. Claud Cockburn. July 1, 1974. Evelyn Waugh's Lost Rabbit. The late writer’s cousin and close friend offers a bittersweet recollection of a man whose powers of acid insight were at odds with his...

  5. 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...

  6. 31 de may. de 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.

  7. Claud Cockburn. Writer: Beat the Devil. Educated at Universities of Oxford, Budapest & Berlin. Became New York & Washington correspondent for The Times newspaper in 1929. Resigned in 1933 to found his own news-sheet The Week, which achieved notoriety. Fought on Republican side in Spanish civil war, and was diplomatic correspondent for the Daily ...