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1930s and Fleming
Westerners traveling in Xinjiang in the 1930s, like George W. Hunter, Peter Fleming, Ella K. Maillart, and Sven Hedin all referred to the Turkic Muslims of the region not as Uyghur, but as " Turki ", in their books.
Although the review compared Fleming in unflattering terms to the crime fiction writer of the 1930s and 1940s, Peter Cheyney, it concluded that From Russia, with Love was " exciting enough of its kind.
In the 1930s, Fleming often visited Kitzbühel in Austria to ski ; he once deliberately set off down a slope that had been closed because of the danger of an avalanche.
For the love interest in the story, Lisl, Fleming used the name of an ex-girlfriend from Kitzbühel in Austria, where he had travelled in the 1930s.
Fleming himself reportedly got the idea from a 1930s detective novel by Basil Thomson.
Since then Ian Fleming Publications has started a new series of Bond books, however, this time based on a young teenage James Bond in the 1930s.
Bond's cigarettes were also the same as Fleming's, who had been buying his custom-made by Morland since the 1930s ; Fleming added the three gold bands on the filter during the war to mirror his naval Commander's rank.
During the 1930s, when Fleming's anarchist politics was out of favour with the May Day Committee, then controlled by the Communist Party of Australia, Fleming started marching a block ahead with his red flag with Anarchy emblazoned in white, going so slowly the march caught up with him ; or sometimes he started back In the ranks and gradually edged to the front.
In the 1930s she started to write for Punch magazine, and this brought her to the attention of The Times newspaper, where Peter Fleming asked her to write a series of columns for the paper, about " an ordinary sort of woman who leads an ordinary sort of life-rather like yourself ".

1930s and
The song had been inspired by Joel Dorn s son and reflected McLean s interest in 1930s music.
The traditional public art program began during the Depression in the 1930s when Iowa State College s President Raymond Hughes envisioned that " the arts would enrich and provide substantial intellectual exploration into our college curricula.
As for the contradiction between German rearmament and his message of peace, Ribbentrop argued to whoever would listen that the German people had been “ humiliated ” by the Versailles treaty, that Germany wanted peace above all, and German violations of Versailles were part of an effort to restore Germany's " self-respect " By the 1930s, much of British opinion had been convinced that the treaty was monstrously unfair and unjust to Germany, so as a result, many in Britain like Thomas Jones were very open to Ribbentrop s message that if only Versailles could be done away with, then European peace would be secured.
In the 1930s, the CIO grabbed many of their member s attention through victorious strikes.
A struggle between laughter for laughter s sake and entertainment with a clear ideological message would define the golden age of the Soviet musical of the 1930s and 1940s.
As early as the 1930s, Heidegger was giving lectures on Nietzsche s thought.
In the previous decade she had become one of the century s most famous feminist writers with three more novels, and a series of essays including the moving late memoir “ Sketch of the Past ”, It was also in the 1930s that Desmond MacCarthy became perhaps the most widely read – and heard – literary critic with his columns in The Sunday Times and his broadcasts with the BBC.
Among other younger members were Lytton s niece the writer Julia Strachey, and the diarist Frances Partridge who had married into Lytton Strachey s ménage in the 1930s.
The story of Hermann s descent into madness is juxtaposed against the rise of National Socialism in Germany of the 1930s
In the 1930s Beckett read Wolfgang Köhler s book, The Mentality of Apes about the colony of apes in Tenerife, where experiments were conducted in which the apes also placed cubes on top of another in order to reach a banana ” and is clearly referenced in this piece.
In the late 1930s and early 40s, the Rattlers, with their big man Ken “ Arky ” Croswell ( B. A.
Brock ( an old story book illustrator ), Gene Ahern s comic strips, George Baker ( Sad Sack ), Isadore Freleng's drawings for the early Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes of the 1930s, Sidney Smith ( The Gumps ), Rube Goldberg, E. C.
The neoliberal economists around Ludwig Erhard could draw on the theories they had developed in the 1930s and 1940s and contribute to West Germany s reconstruction after the Second World War.
After Cox s death in the 1930s, the Cox family sold the Hartford City News to the owners of Hartford City s Times-Gazette, and the combined entity became the Hartford City News-Times.
The 1930s saw the arrival of a dozen B westerns, including four visits from silent film idol turned talkie cowboy star George O Brien and the only Hopalong Cassidy film ever shot outside California.
Henry Cowell adopted Ives s ideas during the 1930s, in such works as the Mosaic Quartet ( String Quartet No. 3, 1934 ), which allows the players to arrange the fragments of music in a number of different possible sequences.
The 2012 Festival, had Oliver Knussen as Artist in Residence, and the typically eclectic progamme included new productions by Netia Jones of Knussen s Where the Wild Things Are and Higglety Pigglety Pop !, a concert series exploring the work of Helmut Lachenmann, recitals by Menahem Pressler, Ian Bostridge, Peter Serkin, Miklós Perényi, Dezsö Ránki and the Arditti and Keller Quartets, the CBSO with the UK premiere of a work by Elliott Carter, as well as dramatised performances with film at the Leiston Long Shop Museum, the complete screening with live accompaniment of Britten s 1930s film scores, a promenade performance of John Cage s Song Books in the Hoffmann Building under the banner of # Faster than Sound, and open-air community events on Aldeburgh Beach.
During the depression in the 1930s, Anangu became involved in dingo scalping with ‘ doggers who introduced Anangu to European foods and ways.
The O Reilly family established a guesthouse near the park in 1926, now named O ' Reilly's Rainforest Retreat, and founding members of the National Parks Association of Queensland built Binna Burra Lodge next to the park in the 1930s.

1930s and s
However, horror remained Karloff's primary genre, and he gave a string of lauded performances in 1930s Universal horror films, including several with Lugosi, his main rival as heir to Lon Chaney, Sr .' s status as the top horror film star.
One of Pea Ridge s most enduring businesses has been Webb s Feed and Seed, established in the 1930s by Hugh and Nell Webb.
More than 3, 000 wells produced during the 1930s, and the influx of workers dramatically increased the city s population.

1930s and trials
Baughn two-wheel-drive outfits were so successful in trials events in the early 1930s that there were attempts to have the ACU ban them from competition.
Charged with the standard crimes of wrecking, espionage, Trotskyism, and conspiracy, Yagoda was a defendant at the Trial of the Twenty-One, the last of the major Soviet show trials of the 1930s.
Elena was sister to Nikolai Krylenko, the Soviet Commissar of Justice and the organizer of many of Joseph Stalin's infamous " show trials " of the 1930s.
Such a reversion was a rare episode in the show trials of the late 1930s.
Georges Tanret identified an alkaloid from this plant, galegine, that was less toxic, and this was evaluated in unsuccessful clinical trials in patients with diabetes in the 1920s and 1930s.
In this capacity, he reported on the show trials of the later 1930s.
With repairs undertaken the fort slipped into obscurity until trials with gun laying radar were undertaken at the Fort in the late 1930s.
Throughout the remainder of the 1930s Gerard continued to compete in trials and sprint races, and after purchasing a 1½ litre Riley Sprite he also began to participate in circuit racing.
In the late 1930s, he was one of the few writers associated with the Left Book Club, the New Statesman and Tribune who was consistently critical of the Soviet show trials.
The city is known for the Shakhty Trial of 1928, a precursor of the show trials of the 1930s, and for being the scene of many of Andrei Chikatilo's murders.
Massing said in her memoir that she had left the Soviet intelligence apparatus in the late 1930s after a period of disillusionment with her Russian handlers and the Stalinist trials.
Upon the arrival of the invasion forces the defendants would sabotage Soviet industry and create chaos in the transportation networks ( charges of this kind were to become standard in later show trials of the 1930s ).
He had been suggesting the spread of both seed and fertiliser for erosion control and aerial spreading of trace minerals since the 1930s, but had not conducted trials until he met Pritchard.
Their biography " The Triumph of John and Betty Stam " inspired a generation of missionaries to follow in the same steps of service despite the trials of war and persecution that raged in China in the 1930s and 1940s.

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