Word: moose
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Dates: during 1951-1951
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After Ann Moos Remington took the stand last winter against her handsome ex-husband, William Remington, the Government's perjury case against him seemed to be nailed down tight. Remington, a onetime Department of Commerce economist, had denied ever being a Communist. But Mrs. Remington not only corroborated testimony...
A name that cropped up often during the Remington trial was back in the news. Mrs. Elizabeth Moos, Remington's former mother-in-law, was one of the five sponsors of the Peace Information Center, publicity agents for the Stockholm Peace Appeal, who were indicted by a federal grand...
From the mouth of Elizabeth Bentley, onetime courier for Soviet Spymaster Jacob Golos, came corroboration of the damaging testimony already given by Remington's divorced wife. Ann Moos Remington had told of their solemnly intellectual college romance; of how, when he proposed, she had exacted his promise that "he...
He and Ann Moos had given money to Miss Bentley, but it was for an antifascist organization. Flatly, he repeated that he had never been a member of the Communist Party. What about the story that he had passed on war secrets to Elizabeth Bentley? He did not deny that...
Conditions of Marriage. Economist Remington, testified quiet, sullen-mouthed Ann Moos Remington-looking directly at her ex-husband as he sat motionless and poker-faced at the counsel table-had been a Communist. So, she admitted, had she. Communism, in fact, had been the cement in their romance, which began...