Eugene Burns
Eugene Burns was an American author and war correspondent (b. Eugene Burnstein in Estonia). He died on July 15, 1958, at the age of 52, during a street mob revolt in Baghdad, Iraq.[1]
Personal
Burns was born in Moscow. Before working in Iraq, Burns lived in Sausalito, California.[1] Burns was married to Olga Burns.[1] They had twin daughters, Carol Eugenia Burns and Stephanie Olga Burns, born in 1944.
Career
He started out his career as a newsman and later worked as a correspondent for the Associated Press in the Soviet Union, China, and Pacific during World War II.[2] He also wrote books on animals and fishing, and was the author of the column, "Is That So?", which covered wildlife.[1]
Bibliography
- The Last King of Paradise (Pellegrini and Cudahy, 1952)
- Then There Was One: The U.S.S. Enterprise and the first year of war (1944)
gollark: If you wanted to actually deploy them as, you know, solar panels, you would need more space than that.
gollark: If it wasn't for horrible cost problems (apparently mostly due to regulatory badness) you could basically just get arbitrary amounts of power from nuclear.
gollark: Solar is not that "based". You require unreasonable amounts of space and solar panels.
gollark: Heavy elements are from supernovae.
gollark: True, true, if you already have tons of heat then it makes sense.
References
- "The Bulletin - Google News Archive Search". The Bulletin. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
- Press, Associated. "AP WAS THERE: 75 years ago, the AP reported on Pearl Harbor". Daytona Beach News-Journal Online.
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