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Malcolm and Saville
In 1969 Malcolm Saville published an entry in his Lone Pine series of children's adventure novels titled Rye Royal set largely in Rye.
and serialisations of stories by children's authors such as Malcolm Saville, Rosemary Sutcliff and Arthur Ransome.
* Malcolm Saville, British author
Influenced by fellow student Malcolm Garrett, who had begun designing for the Manchester punk group, the Buzzcocks, and by Herbert Spencer's Pioneers of Modern Typography, Saville was inspired by Jan Tschichold, chief propagandist for the New Typography.
According to Saville: " Malcolm had a copy of Herbert Spencer's Pioneers of Modern Typography.
Leonard Malcolm Saville ( 1901-1982 ) was an English author born in Hastings, Sussex.
* The Flower-Show Hat ( short story originally published in 1950 and reprinted in 2000 by the Malcolm Saville Society )-currently in print.
* The Malcolm Saville Society
* Malcolm Saville Online
* Malcolm Saville archive at University of Worcester
sv: Malcolm Saville
The Stiperstones feature in the literary works of Mary Webb, who drew it as The Diafol ( translated from Welsh, " Devil's ") Mountain in her novel The Golden Arrow ( 1916 ), of children's author Malcolm Saville, and in a jazz work commissioned by Music at Leasowes Bank, written and performed by the Clark Tracey Quintet.
File: The Devil's Chair-geograph. org. uk-1194214. jpg | The Stiperstones feature in the literary works of Mary Webb and children's author Malcolm Saville
Lone Pine is a series of children's books written by Malcolm Saville.
* The Flower-Show Hat ( short story originally published in 1950 and reprinted in 2000 by the Malcolm Saville Society-currently in print.

Malcolm and 1901
Malcolm John MacDonald OM, PC ( 17 August 1901 11 January 1981 ) was a British politician and diplomat.
* Malcolm MacDonald ( 1901 1981 ), Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs, 1935 1939, Minister of Health, 1940 1941, Commissioner to Canada, 1941 1946, Governor-General of Malaya, 1946 1955, High Commissioner to India, 1955 1960, Governor of Kenya, 1963 1964, and High Commissioner to Kenya, 1964 1965
* Colonel Sir Malcolm Stoddart-Scott ( 1901 1973 ) Conservative MP

Malcolm and
* 1928 Malcolm Hilton, English cricketer ( d. 1990 )
* 1919 Malcolm Forbes, American publisher ( d. 1990 )
* 1958 Malcolm Marshall, Indian cricketer ( d. 1999 )
* 1931 Malcolm Browne, American journalist and photographer ( d. 2012 )
* 1959 Malcolm Oastler, Australian engineer and designer
* Malcolm Caldwell 1968 1970
Donald Malcolm Campbell, CBE ( 23 March 1921 4 January 1967 ) was a British speed record breaker who broke eight world speed records in the 1950s and 1960s.
* 1963 Devon Malcolm, English cricketer
* 1965 Malcolm X is assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom in New York City by members of the Nation of Islam.
* 1935 Malcolm Frager, American pianist
* 1943 Malcolm McDowell, English actor
* 1947 Malcolm Wicks, English politician ( d. 2012 )
* 1961 Malcolm Elliott, English cyclist
* 1970 Malcolm D. Lee, American actor, film director, and screenwriter
* 1923 Malcolm Boyd, American priest and author
* 1968 Malcolm Ingram, Canadian director
* 1946 Malcolm McLaren, British music manager ( d. 2010 )
* 1953 Malcolm Young, Scottish-born Australian guitarist ( AC / DC and Marcus Hook Roll Band )
* 1950 Malcolm Macdonald, English footballer
* 1909 Malcolm Lowry, English novelist ( d. 1957 )
* 1963 Malcolm Dunford, New Zealand footballer
* 1974 Malcolm O ' Kelly, Irish rugby player
* 1925 Sir Malcolm Campbell becomes the first man to break the land barrier at Pendine Sands in Wales.
** Malcolm Duncan's eldest son
Malcolm responds: “ He ’ s worth more sorrow you have expressed / And that I ’ ll spend for him ” ( 5. 11. 16 17 ).

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