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Graham and Greene
Other writers admired by Orwell included: Ralph Waldo Emerson, G. K. Chesterton, George Gissing, Graham Greene, Herman Melville, Henry Miller, Tobias Smollett, Mark Twain, Joseph Conrad and Yevgeny Zamyatin.
In Black Legion ( 1937 ), for a change, he played a good man caught up and destroyed by a racist organization, a movie Graham Greene called " intelligent and exciting, if rather earnest ".
* 1952 – Graham Greene, Canadian actor
Later in 1957, Cagney ventured behind the camera for the first and only time to direct Short Cut to Hell, a remake of the 1941 Alan Ladd film This Gun for Hire, which in turn was based on the Graham Greene novel A Gun for Sale.
In November 2010, one of Yeats works, A Horseman Enters a Town at Night, painted in 1948 and previously owned by novelist Graham Greene, sold for nearly £ 350, 000 at a Christie's auction in London.
* Graham Greene, Kim Philby's close friend, wrote the screenplay for The Third Man using Philby as a model for Harry Lime, one of the characters.
Introduction by Graham Greene.
Although he gained little popular success in his lifetime, his work was highly respected by his peers, and his friends included Dylan Thomas and Graham Greene.
On the advice of Graham Greene, who told him that paperback books were a passing fad that wouldn't last, Peake opted for the £ 10.
Gardiner Greene Hubbard became its first president and his son-in-law, Alexander Graham Bell, eventually succeeded him in 1897 following his death.
* The Quiet American ( 1955 ) by Graham Greene
* The Comedians ( 1966 ) by Graham Greene
Former British Intelligence officer Graham Greene examined the morality of espionage in left-wing, anti-imperialist novels such as The Heart of the Matter ( 1948 ) set in Sierra Leone, the seriocomic Our Man in Havana ( 1959 ) occurring in the Cuba of dictator Fulgencio Batista before his deposition by Fidel Castro's popular Cuban Revolution ( 1953 – 59 ), and The Human Factor ( 1978 ) about British support for the apartheid National Party government of South Africa, against the Red Menace.
Some post-attack period novels are about intelligence officers and the profession of intelligence, and some are by insiders ( as were W. Somerset Maughum and Graham Greene for their generations ).
* Graham Greene
Graham Greene wrote his Twenty-One Stories between 1929 and 1954.
To honor the NFL's 75th season, several former players who were named to the league's 75th Anniversary All-Time Team joined the coin toss ceremony: Otto Graham, Joe Greene, Ray Nitschke, and Gale Sayers.
** Graham Greene, English writer ( b. 1904 )
* Graham Greene relates in his first autobiography A Sort Of Life ( 1971 ) that he played Russian Roulette, alone, a few times as a teenager.
In short story, The Basement Room ( 1935 ), by Graham Greene, the ( sympathetic ) servant character, Baines, tells the admiring boy, son of his employer, of his African British colony service, " You wouldn't believe it now, but I've had forty niggers under me, doing what I told them to ".
His last film, an adaptation of the Graham Greene espionage novel The Human Factor ( 1979 ), had financial problems and was barely released.
Graham Greene praised the " heartbreaking and nostalgic melodies " of her faster-than-thought delivery.
The atmosphere of four-power Vienna is captured in the Graham Greene screenplay for the film The Third Man ( 1949 ), directed by Carol Reed.
Noted reviewer Graham Greene was effusive that this was Capra's finest film to date, describing Capra's treatment as " a kinship with his audience, a sense of common life, a morality ..." Variety noted " a sometimes too thin structure the players and director Frank Capra have contrived to convert (...) into fairly sturdy substance.
Noted novelists and playwrights nominated in this category include: George Bernard Shaw ( who shared an award for an adaptation of his play Pygmalion ), Graham Greene, Tennessee Williams, Vladimir Nabokov, James Hilton, Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Lillian Hellman, Irwin Shaw, James Agee, Norman Corwin, S. J.

Graham and dedicated
A large memorial to Ellington, created by sculptor Robert Graham, was dedicated in 1997 in New York's Central Park, near Fifth Avenue and 110th Street, an intersection named Duke Ellington Circle.
Graham Coxon recorded a string of solo albums, while Damon Albarn dedicated his time to Gorillaz, the animated band he had created with Jamie Hewlett.
The 1968 F1 Drivers ' Championship was subsequently won by his Lotus teammate Graham Hill, who pulled the heartbroken team together and held off Jackie Stewart for the crown, which he later dedicated to Clark.
Others are less complimentary and in the BBC series How We Used To Cook in an episode dedicated to Cradock and Graham Kerr, Keith Floyd and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, amongst others, were very disparaging in regard to her method and cooking skill.
Also appeared in the Horror film, " Blessed "( 2004 ) with Heather Graham in which the film was dedicated to him in his memory after a fatal heart attack while on set.
* " Ruthless Rhymes: A site dedicated to the poetry of Harry Graham and the myriad of morbid poets he inspired "
The video for the song " I'll Get By " from Eddie Money's album Right Here was dedicated to Graham.
She also dedicated her time and efforts toward the field of social housing, and was subsequently awarded the Graham Emslie Award for Community Development in Housing by the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association.
On October 14, 2010, Chicago Alderman Brendan Reilly, 42nd Ward, dedicated the streets to the south and east sides of the John Hancock Center – one of Graham ’ s most iconic achievements – as Honorary Bruce J. Graham Way.
The Surya temple is the only one dedicated to the Graham.
The completed line was dedicated on May 19, 1994, twelve years after the port opened, and was named after Little Rock lawyer Hershel Friday, counsel for Union Pacific, and George Graham, former UP Southern Region general manager and consultant for the city.

Graham and 1973
* 1973Graham Kavanagh, Irish footballer
* 1973Graham Robertson, American director and author
* Johnson, Graham, High Speed Digital Design, a Handbook of Black Magic, Prentice Hall, 1973, ISBN 0-13-395724-1
His younger brother Graham Jenkins opined it may have been guilt over this that caused Burton to start drinking very heavily, particularly after Ifor died in 1973.
Graham Anderson Martin ( 1912 – 1990 ) succeeded Ellsworth Bunker as United States Ambassador to South Vietnam in 1973.
He made a cameo appearance in the 1973 Billy Graham film Time to Run, performing his song I Love You.
Another peak of the Allmans ' success came on New Year's Eve, 1973, when promoter Bill Graham arranged for a nationwide radio broadcast of their concert from San Francisco's Cow Palace.
Translated from the French by Graham Webb, Hart-Davis MacGibbon, London, 1973
All of the band's original members from the 1973 — 80 " classic period ", namely Maurice White, Philip Bailey, Verdine White, Ralph Johnson, Al McKay, Larry Dunn, Andrew Woofolk, Fred White and Johnny Graham, attended the ceremony, at which the nine of them played together for the first time in 20 years, performing " Shining Star " and " That's The Way Of the World ".
* Graham Midgley, The Life of Orator Henley ( Oxford, 1973 ).
Up to now, the group's biggest success had been as a five-piece harmony, but it was around this time that they began to favour lead singers for their songs with title credits given to Marty Kristian for " Come Softly to Me " and Eve Graham for " Nevertheless ", but it was in late 1973 that this formula found its biggest success when Lyn Paul took the lead on the new single, " You Won't Find Another Fool Like Me ".
Caterham Cars had been a major Lotus 7 dealer during the 1960s, and its founder, Graham Nearn, purchased the rights to continue manufacture of the Seven design from Chapman in 1973, after Lotus announced its intention to discontinue the model.
Franklin Graham met Pierce in 1973, and they made several trips together to visit relief projects and missionary partners in Asia and elsewhere.
* Ben Graham ( football player ) ( born 1973 ), former Australian rules football player and an American football punter who currently plays for the Detroit Lions in the NFL
The heir apparent is James Graham, Marquess of Graham ( b. 1973 ), elder son of the 8th Duke
In 1973, the line up was Howard " Shep " Shepherd ( lead banjo ), Graham Shepherd and Mike Dexter ( banjos ), Tony Pritchard ( trombone ), Tony " Tosh " Kennedy ( sousaphone ) and Ged Martin ( drums ).
Graham was de facto publisher of the newspaper from 1963 onward, formally assuming the title in 1979, and chairman of the board from 1973 to 1991.
In 1973, Graham received the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award as well as an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Colby College.
* 1973Graham Central Station, Warner Bros.
* James Alexander, Marquess of Graham ( born 16 August 1973 )
* 1973 – 1974 Williamson, Heron, Le Maistre, Schnier, Ingram, Graham Forbes
* Eyelids of the Morning: The Mingled Destinies of Crocodiles and Men by Alistair Graham and Peter Hill Beard ; originally published in 1973 ( New York Graphic Society-ISBN 0-8212-0464-5 ).
1973 saw the release of Jacky Ickx's Ferrari 312 B2 ( 152 ) and the John Player Special Lotus 72 ( 154 ) of World Champion Emerson Fittipaldi, and in 1974 the Shadow F1 car was issued in both UOP livery ( 155 ) driven by Jackie Oliver, and as Graham Hill's Embassy Shadow ( 156 ).

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