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...Canadian Navy won 3-0 as Ken Batchelor, a veteran of the Canadian profootball league, scored the only touchdown...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Rugby Wins in Bermuda | 4/6/1959 | See Source »

...Princeton team is one of the best in the East, as it was last year, and could bring some trouble. Brown, however, led by Harry Batchelor, has a considerably week team, which has lost to Boston College, Wesleyan, and Williams. The Crimson defeated Williams last week...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Golfers To Meet Brown, Princeton Today | 4/25/1958 | See Source »

...Farm (Louis de Rochemont Associates). George Orwell's political fable, the famous animallegory about Communism, has been rendered as an animated cartoon, at feature length (75 minutes), by a team of 100 artists, working in Britain under the direction of John Halas, a Hungarian, and his wife Joy Batchelor. It was three years in the making-more than 300,000 colored drawings are assembled in the final print-and it has been made, in all technical respects, quite as good as good Disney. In every other sense the picture is about as remote from Mickey Mouse as Moscow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Jan. 17, 1955 | 1/17/1955 | See Source »

...these virtues is, moreover, a greater virtue. They demonstrate what Disney's dominance in the field has made moviemakers as well as moviegoers forget: that the animated film is not necessarily a subdivision of slapstick. Though one or two U.P.A. cartoons have suggested the possibility, Halas and Batchelor prove with this picture that animation can cope with serious subjects as well as with slight ones. Next H. & B. production: a feature treatment of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Jan. 17, 1955 | 1/17/1955 | See Source »

Corporal Claude J. Batchelor, 22, one of the 23 "progressive" prisoners who decided to stay with the Communists in Korea, changed his mind and came back-partly because of letters from his Japanese wife. But he still boasted of the Reds' "high regard for me." He deserved their esteem. According to witnesses, he played the Communist game, informed on one American fellow prisoner and recommended that another be shot. Last week in San Antonio, an Army court-martial gave Batchelor the stiffest sentence yet imposed on any American collaborationist: life imprisonment. In Tokyo his wife, still writing letters, said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Letters & Life | 10/11/1954 | See Source »

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