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    African-American Related Articles in the Tyler Morning Telegraph, January 1930-December 1941

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    Chronological index to newspaper articles from the Tyler Morning Telegraph related to African-Americans, January 1930-December 1941

    Escualdunac [Manuscrito]: basque peasant tales

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    Manuscrito fechado en 1930Mecanografiado (con correcciones autógrafas)El verso de cada h. en blancoCopia digital. Madrid. Vitoria-Gasteiz : Ministerio de Cultura, Subdirección General de Coordinación Bibliotecaria : Fundación Sancho el Sabio, 2009Rústic

    Перыядызацыя дзяржаунай палiтыкi у кнiгавыдавецкай справе БССР

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    PERIODIZATION OF STATE POLICY IN BSSR BOOK PUBLISHING (1919 – 1941) / А. SUMKOРазглядаецца накіраванасць дзяржаўнай палітыкі з 1919 па 1941 год у кнігавыдавецкай справе БССР з вылучэннем асноўных этапаў: у 1919 – 24 гадах суіснавалі дзяржаўная, кааператыўная, прыватная формы кнігавыдавецтва; у 1925 – 1929 – адбывалася ўмацаванне дзяржаўнага сектара, аднак за выдавецтвамі захоўвалася пэўная доля самастойнасці; у 1930 – 1935 – удасканальваўся механізм падсправаздачнасці выдавецтваў партыйна-дзяржаўным органам; у 1936 – 1941 – была канчаткова створана цэнтралізаваная кнігавыдавецкая сістэма. Накіраванасць і змястоўнасць кнігавыдавецкай палітыкі ў БССР залежылі ад грамадска-палітычнай і эканамічнай сітуацыі ў краіне, установак камуністычнай партыі аб ролі і месцы літаратуры ў сацыялістычным грамадстве

    America Abandoned: German-Jewish Visions of American Poverty in Serialized Novels by Joseph Roth, Sholem Asch, and Michael Gold

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    In 1930, Hungarian- born Jewish author Arthur Holitscher’s book Wiedersehn mit Amerika: Die Verwandlung der U.S.A. (Reunion with America: The Trans-formation of the U.S.A.) was reviewed by one J. Raphael in the German- Jewish Orthodox weekly newspaper, Der Israelit. This reviewer concluded: “Despite its good reputation, America is a strange country. And Holitscher, whose relationship to Judaism is not explicit, but direct, has determined that to be the case for American Jews as well.” The reviewer’s use of the word “strange” (komisch) offers powerful insight into the complex perceptions of America held by many German- speaking Jews, which in 1930 were at best mixed and ambivalent. An earlier travel book by Arthur Holitscher (1869– 1941) from 1912 depicts America more favorably, though it is widely believed to have provided inspiration for Franz Kafka’s unfinished novel, Amerika: Der Verschollene (Amerika or The Man who Disappeared, published posthumously in 1927), which famously opens with a description of the Statue of Liberty holding aloft a sword rather than a torch. [excerpt

    [Review of] Neshnabek: The People

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    The Potawatomi Indians (Prairie Band) of Kansas are portrayed in this film which has been some forty to fifty years in the making. The original footage was taken by Floyd A. Schultz, an amateur anthropologist, between 1930 and 1941. These scenes have been supplemented by historical still shots, maps, and other archival documents assembled from various sources in the 1960s and 1970s. During the summers of 1978 and 1979 Donald Stull, a professor of anthropology presently at the University of Kansas, conducted field interviews with some of the originally-photographed Potawatomi along with their friends and relatives. Portions of those interviews provide the primary soundtrack for the resulting film entitled Neshnabek: The People

    The Law School 1930-1941

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    Chapter 7 in: The Golden Gate University Story, Volume One, pp. 69-82. (Golden Gate University Press, 1982.

    The Law School 1930-1941

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    Chapter 7 in: The Golden Gate University Story, Volume One, pp. 69-82. (Golden Gate University Press, 1982.
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