Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

For two weeks in 1962, the world held its breath

KENT, Conn. — This is the 50th anniversary of the two weeks in October 1962 when it looked like the world was about to end. The standoff between Russia and the United States that came to be known as the Cuban Missile Crisis took place from Oct. 16 to 28 of that year. And Donald Connery is the last remaining working journalist who was in Moscow at the time.Connery, who has lived all over the world but now resides in Kent (with his wife, Leslie), has just published an electronic book that is a personal account and bird’s-eye-view of what it was like to be in Russia at the time of the colossal faceoff between the two nuclear superpowers.Surprisingly perhaps, Connery’s book (“Escape From Oblivion: A Moscow Correspondent’s Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis”) is not a high-tension drama, full of skullduggery, anxiety and sometimes-irrational world leaders.He focuses instead on what it was like to live and work in Russia shortly after the end of Stalin’s reign, during what many natives of the Soviet Union felt was a time of hope and optimism, especially about relations between the U.S. and the USSR.“Jack Kennedy was understood to be a radiant young man with a fresh outlook on world affairs,” Connery writes in the book’s prologue. “Their own reformist leader [Nikita Khrushchev], a crude but ebullient personality, was seen as a distinct improvement over Joseph Stalin and his long reign of terror and paranoia.”Unlike his predecessor, Khrushchev had traveled to the United States and toured it from coast to coast. American celebrities ranging from Benny Goodman to composer and emigré/exile Igor Stravinsky had come to Russia — and been greeted with an enthusiasm that bordered on adulation. Connery was stationed in the Moscow bureau of Time Inc. and working for Time and Life in 1962; the publishing giant had transferred him there from the Tokyo bureau. He was there to take over the Moscow office from longtime Russia hand Edmund Stevens.“Except for Ed Stevens and the UPI’s Henry Shapiro (both legendary),” Connery explained, “most Moscow correspondents in those early Cold War days were there for two-to-three-year assignments and were pretty much stuck in Moscow and seldom able to travel at any distance, certainly not to and through Siberia, because of Soviet restrictions on their movements and the need to be always alert to Kremlin news. “I was extraordinarily fortunate in being able in the journeys in 1961 and 1962 to see far, far more of the Soviet Union and its satellites than any of my Moscow colleagues and most if not all their predecessors. “Then, just as I was in the process of taking over the Time-Life bureau, the missile crisis struck and I found myself with an audience of tens of millions, via the combination of the foremost newsmagazine, the top picture magazine and NBC radio and TV, probably greater than any other foreign correspondent had ever experienced before or since.”A few months after his arrival, while still waiting for the government to give him official permission to be there, Connery began to hear from the United States about the standoff between the two governments over Khrushchev’s clandestine gamble that installed nuclear missiles and thousands of troops in Cuba — within striking distance of American targets — as a response to the U.S. installing missiles in Turkey, near the Russian border. That decision led to what Connery describes as “the most dangerous two weeks in human history.”“Escape From Oblivion” isn’t about the terror of nuclear annihilation that arose in the United States during that time, nor is it about the political gamesmanship that finally resolved the crisis, and caused Khrushchev to turn the ships around and return home.The book is a detailed memoir about what it was like to live in Russia at that time — a time when inhabitants of that vast nation were largely unaware that at any moment their lives could end, horribly.The Russians, Connery says, “calmly sailed through the storm even as tens of millions of Americans, some verging on panic, prepared themselves for a possible nuclear assault.” In his book, Connery explores and explains what life was like in a country where the government was keeping vital information from a population that, in his experience, seemed genuinely to believe that prosperity, equality and a better life were coming their way.This is Connery’s first non-print book. “I plunged into this wonderful world of fast-track publishing because I wanted this memoir to appear prior to Oct. 16 to 28, the exact 50th anniversary of the 1962 crisis,” he said.It is available online (with a cover design that uses a political cartoon from a 1962 edition of the Daily Mail newspaper) at Amazon for $2.99 (or free for some Amazon members). And even for those who lived through that tense time and still remember it, the book offers a reassuring thought.“Everyone always asks who won, the Russian government or the American government,” Connery said. “The answer is that we all won. We’re still here.”

Latest News

Yerger Johnstone

Yerger Johnstone

SHARON — Yerger Johnstone, former managing director in the mergers and acquisitions department at Morgan Stanley and a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, died on April 19, 2026, in Chelmsford, England. He was 86.

Born in Mobile, Alabama, on March 7, 1940, Mr. Johnstone was the son of architect Henry Inge Johnstone, architect, and Kathleen Yerger Johnstone, the noted nature writer and civic leader after whom Alabama’s state seashell, Johnstone’s Junonia, is named. He graduated from Murphy High School in Mobile in 1958, received his bachelor’s degree from the University of the South at Sewanee in 1962, and earned his M.B.A. from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business in 1964.

Keep ReadingShow less

Richard R. Stover

Richard R. Stover

WEST CORNWALL — Richard R. Stover, 82, of West Cornwall, died peacefully at Noble Horizons on May 26, 2026.

Son of the late Robert and Leona (Heinbockel) Stover, Rick was born Feb. 6, 1944 in Edina, Minnesota. He attended the University of Pennsylvania where he majored in Economics and was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

Keep ReadingShow less

Floyd Irving Isham

Floyd Irving Isham

SHARON — Floyd Irving Isham Jr., 87, a longtime area resident, died Tuesday, May 26, 2026, at Sharon Health Care Center in Sharon. Mr. Isham worked for the Tri-Wall Container Corp. in Wassaic, New York, for fifteen years and also worked as a self-employed private caretaker for over twenty-five years, caring for local estates in Shekomeko, Pine Plains and Ancramdale, New York, prior to his retirement.

Born Aug. 25, 1938, in St. George, Vermont, he was the son of the late Floyd Irving and Hazel (Thompson) Isham, Sr. Following his high school years, he enlisted in the United States Navy and served from 1958 until his honorable discharge in 1961. Mr. Isham also served in the Vermont National Guard. On Aug. 11, 1990, in Dover Plains, New York, he married Nancy L. Cross. Mrs. Isham died on July 8, 2005.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Pauline King Garfield

Pauline King Garfield

EAST CANAAN — Pauline K. (King) Garfield, 94 of 77 South Canaan Rd. formerly of East Canaan, died Sunday May 24, 2026, at Geer Village. She was the wife of the late Duane Garfield who passed August 14, 2017. Pauline was born April 3, 1932 in North Canaan,in the former Geer Hospital. She was the daughter of the late Charles and Rose (Van Vlack) King.

Pauline spent her career at Becton Dickinson in Canaan, after being a stay-at-home mother for many years.She was employed at Becton Dickinson for 23 years. She enjoyed bus trips with her late husband Duane to the Casinos, spending time with her family watching the grandchildren grow up. Recently she made a comment to care givers that was “wait until I see that husband of mine for leaving me here, I am going to read him the riot act.” Over the years she enjoyed many crafts, but her favorite was crocheting gifts for everyone.

Keep ReadingShow less
Great Country Mutt Show returns as animal shelter surrenders rise

Great Dane “Axel” with owner Sage Breyette in the Best Lap Dog Over 40 lbs. contest at last year’s Great Country Mutt Show

Aly Morrissey

Tail wags, floppy ears and a healthy dose of canine charm will take center stage June 7 as The Little Guild hosts its annual Great Country Mutt Show at Lime Rock Park in Falls Village.

Last year’s Great Country Mutt Show attracted more than 200 dogs and 800 people. Founded by renowned designer Bunny Williams as a benefit for the Little Guild, the tongue-in-cheek, Westminster-style event has grown into one of the organization’s signature annual fundraisers and community celebrations. The show remains free and open to the public, and adoptable dogs may attend when appropriate.

Keep ReadingShow less

Savannah Stevenson’s second act

Savannah Stevenson’s second act

Savannah Stevenson as Mrs. Paroo and Elliott Andrews who plays Harold Hill in the nationally touring production of “The Music Man.”

Marshall Meadows
Sharing laughter, tears, music and dancing through stories that illuminate our common humanity touches us in a way that builds connection, empathy and genuine community.
— Savannah Stevenson

Savannah Stevenson has lived enough lives already to make most people feel lazy.

She grew up in Atlanta in a musical family, with a father who played “The Sound of Music” cassette tapes in the car and a mother who played hymns on the piano. She went to Carnegie Mellon to study musical theater, moved to New York afterward and, for a while, imagined a life onstage.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.