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1919 and MacDonald
Although historically the river was not present on several official maps ( for example, according to David Leboff and Tim Demuth's book ; in 1907, 1908, and 1919 ), from 1921 it was absent for several years ( on pocket maps designed by MacDonald Gill ).
In November 1919 MacDonald joined her older sister, Blossom, in New York and landed a job in the chorus of Ned Wayburn's The Demi-Tasse Revue, a musical entertainment presented between films at the Capital Theatre on Broadway.
* Thomas Harris MacDonald, 19191953
He served as Paymaster-General under David Lloyd George from 1919 to 1922 and once again briefly in 1931 under Ramsay MacDonald.
In 1919, at age 27, he founded Preferred Pictures and built it around " American Beauty ", actress Katherine MacDonald.

1919 and became
* In 1919, the American NC-4 became the first seaplane to cross the Atlantic ( though it made a couple of landings on islands and the sea along the way, and taxied several hundred miles ).
He was habilitated in neurology in 1919 and in 1924 became professor of neurology.
By 1919, the SANNC was leading a campaign against passes but then became dormant in the mid-1920s.
In 1919, the May Fourth Movement began as a response to the terms imposed on China by the Treaty of Versailles ending World War I, but quickly became a protest movement about the domestic situation in China.
According to historian Christopher Moore, coalition governments in Canada became much less possible in 1919 when the leaders of parties were no longer chosen by elected MPs, but instead began to be chosen by party members.
It became the basis of the German Armistice ( really a surrender ) and the 1919 Paris Peace Conference.
Drexel's cornerstone of the career preparation, the cooperative education program, was introduced in 1919. The program became integral to the university's unique educational experience.
What became of it is unclear, and Neutral Moresnet was annexed to Belgium in the Treaty of Versailles, 1919.
After the Estonian War of Independence in 1919, the Estonian language became the state language of the newly independent country.
Their studio became the first independent company of directors since United Artists in 1919 whose goal was to make films without interference by studio bosses.
However, after 1919 titles of nobility were banned by law in Austria, and the " von Hayek " family became simply the Hayek family.
Hence, after 1919, Hayek's legal name became " Friedrich Hayek ", not " Friedrich von Hayek ".
In 1918, he started his own furniture factory, and changed the chair's colors after becoming influenced by the ' De Stijl ' movement, of which he became a member in 1919, the same year in which he became an architect.
Following the end of World War I, the Greater Poland Uprising ( 1918 – 1919 ) ensured that most of the region became part of the newly independent Polish state, forming most of Poznań Voivodeship ( 1921 – 1939 ).
In 1919, it became obvious that Bertrand would refuse to allow an open election to choose his successor.
Hamburg became a city-state within the North German Confederation ( 1866 – 71 ), the German Empire ( 1871 – 1918 ) and during the period of the Weimar Republic ( 1919 – 33 ).
John MacLean emerged as a key political figure in what became known as Red Clydeside, and in January 1919, the British Government, fearful of a revolutionary uprising, deployed tanks and soldiers in central Glasgow.
* Radio Amateur News — July 1919 to July 1920 — dropped the word " amateur " and became just Radio News
In August 1919, Hoover became head of the Bureau of Investigation's new General Intelligence Division — also known as the Radical Division because its goal was to monitor and disrupt the work of domestic radicals.
Jack Roosevelt " Jackie " Robinson ( January 31, 1919 – October 24, 1972 ) was an American baseball player who became the first black Major League Baseball ( MLB ) player of the modern era.
The three races offered the largest purse and in 1919 Sir Barton became the first horse to win all three races.
After the October Revolution ( 1917 ), Malevich became a member of the Collegium on the Arts of Narkompros, the Commission for the Protection of Monuments and the Museums Commission ( all from 1918 – 1919 ).
When Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus in Germany in 1919, Feininger was his first faculty appointment, and became the master artist in charge of the printmaking workshop.
In 1919 he became Lecturer in Medieval history at Strasbourg University, after the German professors were all expelled ; he was called to the Sorbonne in Paris in 1936 as professor of economic history.

1919 and Commissioner
A Norwegian diplomat, working with the League of Nations as a High Commissioner for Refugees beginning in 1919, proposed the idea of a forced population transfer modeled on the earlier post Balkan-war Greek-Bulgarian mandatory population transfer of Greeks in Bulgaria to Greece, and Bulgarians in Greece to Bulgaria.
" The move mimicked the decision Major League Baseball had made in hiring judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis as League Commissioner the previous year to quell questions about the integrity of baseball in the wake of the 1919 World Series gambling scandal ; The New York Times even called Hays the " screen Landis ".
Until on 9 September 1922, when Greece lost Smyrna to Turkey, it had a Greek High Commissioner ( 21 May 1919 – 8 September 1922 ): Aristeidis Stergiadis ( b. 1861 – d. 1950 )
* Following World War I, Rear Admiral Mark Lambert Bristol served as United States High Commissioner for Turkey from 1919 to 1927.
* Jim Lees ( 1919 – 2004 ), Commissioner of the New South Wales Police
It was bought in 1919 by Scout Commissioner William de Bois Maclaren and given to the Scout Association of the United Kingdom to provide camping to London Scouts, and training for Scouters.
He also served as Hylan's Commissioner of Purchase and took part in greeting ceremonies, including the welcome of General John J. Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces, in 1919.
The German-speaking minority was mostly settled in the ' Eastern Cantons ', several Prussian municipalities ceded to Belgium by the 1919 Treaty of Versailles and administered from 1920 to 1925 by a Belgian military High Commissioner.
William Wallace Cory ( June 16, 1865-1943 ) was Commissioner of the Northwest Territories from June 27, 1919 to February 17, 1931.
Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick D. White ( February 16, 1847-) was the first Commissioner of the Northwest Territories from August 24, 1905, to June 27, 1919 and former commander of the North-West Mounted Police.
Sir Charles was appointed Assistant Commissioner in Assam in 1919, becoming Director of Land Records in 1932.
He joined the Association in 1919 and became very active, rising from ordinary membership to the successive positions of lieutenant of the African Legions, commissioner of the State of New York, Commissioner of the State of Ohio, High Chancellor of the Parent Body ( when the Parent Body was located in London, England ), Confidante of Mr. Garvey, and division president.
On September 9, 1919, when Police Commissioner Edwin Upton Curtis refused to allow the creation of a police union, 1, 117 BPD officers went on strike.
When the soviet republic was proclaimed on 7 April 1919 against the elected government of Johannes Hoffmann, Landauer became Commissioner of Enlightenment and Public Instruction.
James Travers " Jim " Lees QPM ( 1919 – 2004 ) was the Commissioner of the New South Wales Police from 1979 to 1981.
From January 1919 to July 1922 he was the High Commissioner of Spanish Morocco.
* " Annual report of the Police Commissioner for the City of Boston, Year ending November 30, 1919 ", 15 – 6 </ ref >
* " Official records of the Office of the Police Commissioner, Boston, MA, 1919 "
Attended school in Balaoan, Vigan, San Fernando, and was appointed government student to the United States in 1905 ; graduate of the Western Illinois State Teachers College at Macomb in 1908 ; attended the University of Chicago, in 1906 and 1907 ; graduated from Columbia University in New York City, and from the Teachers College of New York City in 1910 ; first Filipino superintendent of schools in 1915 and 1916 ; assistant director of education 1917-1921 ; member of the first Philippine mission to the United States in 1919 and 1920 ; lecturer at the University of the Philippines 1919-1921 ; president of the National University 1921-1936 ; elected a member of the Philippine Senate in 1925 ; elected as a Resident Commissioner to the United States in 1928 ; reelected in 1931 and served from March 4, 1929, until January 3, 1935, when his term expired ; member of the Constitutional Convention in 1934 ; member of the first National Assembly in 1935 ; member of the Economic Mission to the United States in 1939 ; chairman of Educational Mission 1938-1941 ; chairman of National Council of Education in 1941 ; director of publicity and propaganda until January 1942 ; chairman of National Cooperative Administration in 1941 ; subsequently assistant commissioner of the Department of Education, Health, and Public Welfare, then Minister of Education of the Philippines until 1945 ; chancellor of Osias Colleges ; elected to the Philippine Senate in 1947 for the term expiring in 1953 ; served as minority and majority floor leader and then elected president of the Philippine Senate ; Philippine representative to the Interparliamentary Union in Rome and to the International Trade Conference in Genoa in 1948 ; elected to the Philippine Senate, 1961-1967, and served as president pro tempore ; a resident of Mandaluyong, Rizal, Philippines, until his death in Manila on May 20, 1976.
The Commissioner of the Commonwealth Police Force from 1917 to 1919 was William Anderson, a retired New South Wales Police Inspector.
In July 1919 he became Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet also serving as British High Commissioner in Constantinople during Autumn 1919.
In August 1919 Bristol also received the diplomatic appointment of U. S. High Commissioner, responsible to the State Department for diplomatic matters in Turkey.
As NL president again from 1918 to 1934, he hired the Elias brothers to maintain as official keeper of playing statistics ( 1919 ), and he pushed for the selection of Kenesaw Mountain Landis as Commissioner of Baseball ( 1921 ), realizing the importance of an official who could keep the owners in check.

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