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This is a list of people and other topics appearing on the cover of Time magazine in the 1930s. Time was first published in 1923. As Time became established as one of the United States' leading news magazines, an appearance on the cover of Time became an indicator of notability, fame or notoriety. Such features were accompanied by articles ...
Fortnight Magazine - Northern Irish political magazine; Gralton magazine - leftist magazine [2] Red Patriot and Voice of Revolution - Maoist, anti-clerical, pro-Irish republican magazines published by the Communist Party of Ireland (Marxist–Leninist) [3] The Ripening of Time - Marxist magazine [3] [4] Kiss (Irish magazine)
August–January 1935: Brian O'Nolan publishes the magazine Blather in Dublin. 18 October – release of Robert J. Flaherty's fictional documentary film Man of Aran in the United States. Adolf Mahr is appointed Director of the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin. Samuel Beckett publishes his prose collection More Pricks Than Kicks.
Troops are deployed on the streets of Northern Ireland, marking the start of the Troubles. 1972: March: The Parliament of Northern Ireland is prorogued (and abolished later the following year). 1973: 1 January: Ireland joins the European Community along with the United Kingdom and Denmark. 1973: June: The Northern Ireland Assembly is elected ...
1930 in Northern Ireland Other events of 1930 List of years in Ireland: Events from the year 1930 in Ireland. Incumbents. Governor-General: James McNeill;
Literary magazine Ireland Today, edited by Frank O'Connor, begins publication (June 1936 – March 1938). The Dawn is released; directed by Tom Cooper, it is the first sound film made in Ireland by an Irish company.
Ireland as a result experienced sharp emigration of around 50,000 per year during the decade and the population of the state fell to an all-time low of 2.81 million. [52] The policies of protectionism and low public spending which had predominated since the 1930s were widely viewed to be failing.
13 October – Orson Welles makes his first professional stage debut, age 16, at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, with a leading rôle in an adaptation of Jew Süss. 25 October – Ireland's first all-concrete Art Deco church, the Church of Christ the King, is opened at Turners Cross, Cork, designed by Chicago architect Barry Byrne with sculptor John Storrs.