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Stefan strelcyn

1918 births | 1981 deaths | orientalists | semitologists


Stefan Strelcyn (June 28 1918 - May 19 1981) was a Polish scholar of Ethiopian studies and a Semitist.

Life

Luigi Scaccianoce

1914 births | 1981 deaths | italian art directors | production designers | set decorators


Luigi Scaccianoce (July 12, 1914 - October 18, 1981) was an Italian production designer, art director and set decorator. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction for his work in The Gospel According to St. Matthew (1964).

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William Bourke

1913 births | 1981 deaths | australian labor party politicians | members of the australian house of representatives | members of the australian house of representatives for fawkner


William Meskill "Bill" Bourke (2 June 1913 - 22 May 1981), was an Australian politician.

Bourke was elected to the Australian House of Representatives seat of Fawkner at the 1949 election representing the Australian Labor Party. He was expelled from the Labor Party in 1955 for belonging to the Industrial Groups (Groupers) and joined the Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist), later renamed the Democratic Labor Party. He was defeated at the 1955 election by Peter Howson.

Mark Arnold-Forster

1920 births | 1981 deaths | british authors | british journalists | british writers | dead people | english columnists | guardian journalists | people from notting hill | people from swindon


Mark Arnold-Forster, journalist and author, was born on 16 April, 1920 at Cheriton Nursing Home, Westlecott Road, Swindon, UK, and died 25 December, 1981, Clarendon Road, Notting Hill, London, UK.

Early Years

He was the only son of William Edward Arnold-Forster (b. 1886, d. 1951), painter, publicist, and gardener, and his wife Katharine (Ka) Laird, née Cox (b. 1887, d. 1938). His parents' families included leading politicians and writers, among them Matthew Arnold and his mother had been close to Rupert Brooke and his group as well as to Virginia Woolf. Shortly after his birth his parents went to live in a picturesque Cornish house, Eagle's Nest, Zennor, Cornwall. They placed Mark at age 7 in a boarding-school in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, and at 9 in Kurt Hahn's school at Salem in Germany. When Hitler came to power in 1933 and drove Hahn into exile, Arnold-Forster was one of two British boys who followed Hahn to a new school in Scotland at Gordonstoun, Moray, and he stayed on until 1937. This upbringing made him fluent in French and German. Arnold-Forster won a place to study mechanical engineering at Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge, but he never took this up.

Corradino D'Ascanio

1891 births | 1981 deaths | alumni of the polytechnic university of turin | italian aerospace engineers | italian air force generals | italian soldiers | people from the province of pescara | piaggio group | recipients of the order of the crown of italy | university of pisa faculty


General Corradino D'Ascanio (born Popoli, Pescara February 1, 1891 - died Pisa, August 6, 1981) was an Italian aeronautical engineer. D'Ascanio designed the first production helicopter created by Agusta, and designed the first motor scooter for Ferdinando Innocenti, which after the two fell out he help Enrico Piaggio produce the original Vespa for.

Biography

D'Ascanio had an early passion for flight and design, where by aged 15 after studying flying techniques and the ratio between weight and wingspan of some birds, he built an experimental glider which he would launch from the hills near his home town.

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