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  1. Dorothy Thompson creates a wide range of woven products, from functional tote bags and rugs, to double-woven coverlets and tablecloths, to intricate afghans and stoles, to many smaller items. She possesses a keen analytical eye and can quickly spot the minute errors in her students' warps gone wrong. She is steeped in tradition, while at the ...

  2. Dorothy Thompson. The outspoken conservative American journalist Dorothy Thompson (1894-1961) was one of the earliest women in her field. Her commentaries reached a very large audience in print and radio from the 1930s through the 1950s. Dorothy Thompson was born in Lancaster, New York, on July 9, 1894. When she was ten her mother died, and she ...

  3. Dorothy Thompson. Dorothy Thompson (July 9, 1893 - January 30, 1961) was an American journalist who gained international celebrity when she became the first journalist to be expelled from Nazi Germany in 1934. In 1939, Time magazine called her one of the two most influential women in America, second only to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.

  4. 19 de jul. de 2023 · In seinem Gesicht findet sich keine Spur von innerem Konflikt oder von Selbstdisziplin: Dorothy Thompsons Buch über ihre Begegnung mit Hitler 1931 liegt erstmals vollständig auf Deutsch vor.

  5. 16 de jun. de 2023 · Dorothy Thompson, née Towers (1923–2011), known to her friends as Dotty, was a highly distinctive person and historian. She was a prominent member of the Communist Party Historians Group in Britain, which included such renowned figures as Christopher Hill, John Saville, and Eric Hobsbawm. After leaving the Communist Party in response to the ...

  6. By Dorothy Thompson. WHEN a drastic revolution occurs in a society the change in atmosphere and behavior is so overwhelming that one cannot believe one’s eyes and ears. This is not the society with which one was familiar, the place where one felt so much at home. The old society had a face which one knew and trusted.

  7. The decades of the 1930s and the 1940s are known as the “golden age” of American journalism. American foreign correspondents working for print publications and radio networks reported on the rise of the Nazi regime in Germany. American war correspondents covered the fighting in Europe and the Pacific, but also the murder of the European Jews.