-
In the former, Robert and Edward Skidelsky, a father-and-son pair of British academics, take as their text an essay written in 1930 by John Maynard Keynes.
ECONOMIST: Two new books probe the limits of capitalism
-
So now, out of the original 80, only four Raiders remain: Dick Cole (Doolittle's co-pilot on the Tokyo raid), Robert Hite, Edward Saylor and David Thatcher.
CNN: A final toast for the Doolittle Raiders
-
The director of 1973 horror film The Wicker Man has praised the work of Robert Burns and actor Edward Woodward's Gaelic singing.
BBC: Robert Burns 'perfect' for The Wicker Man says Hardy
-
Twilight stars Harry Potter actor Robert Pattinson as the vampire Edward Cullen and Kristen Stewart as the bookish schoolgirl Bella Swan.
BBC: Twilight director breaks record
-
Isabella Swan (Kristen Stewart), a lovely, slender, self-possessed high-school junior, moves to a new school in rainy Washington State and sees a tall, inordinately pale boy, Edward Cullen (the square-jawed Robert Pattinson), glowering at her in despair.
NEWYORKER: Twilight
-
In 1987 Senators Edward Kennedy (Democrat-Massachusetts) and Robert Kasten (Republican-Wisconsin) sponsored the Visual Artists Rights Act, which included a resale levy.
FORBES: Global Life
-
The donation of the money helped to fund a new professorship called the Edward Stocks Massey chair of Electrotechnics, with Robert Beattie as the first holder.
BBC: If you live in Burney, you must have heard of Massey's.
-
Think it can't happen in the U.S.? In 1987 Senators Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Robert Kasten (R-Wis.) sponsored the Visual Artists Rights Act, which included a resale levy.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
James Douglas (male, age range: 25-35), a Scottish Knight with a personal vendetta against Edward I for killing his father, and one of Robert the Bruce's trusted lieutenants.
BBC: Bannockburn centre searches for virtual warriors
-
An intelligent and rather overcivilized caper movie, set in Montreal, which features three generations of great male actors: Marlon Brando (sounding like his long-ago nemesis Truman Capote) as an upper-class aesthete and fence with exquisite manners, Robert De Niro as a saturnine jazz-club owner and safecracker who never takes risks, and Edward Norton as a brilliant but willful young con man and criminal.
NEWYORKER: The Score