found: Ḥayāh mawwārah, 1991:t.p. (Muḥammad ʻAlī Dūs) p. 7, etc. (1866-1944, Duse Mohamed [in rom.], Dūs Muḥammad ʻAlī, Duse Mohammad, Ali [in rom.], b. 11, 21, 1866 in al-Iskandarīyah, d. 25 Yūniyū, 1945 in Lagos, Nigeria)
found: LC in RLIN, 7-26-95(hdg.: Duse Mohamed, 1866-1945 )
found: NUC pre-56(hdg.: Duse Mohamed, 1866-1945; usage: Duse Mohamed)
found: The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought, accessed November 1, 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database:(Ali, Duse Mohamed; Duse Mohamed Ali; nationalist, magazine and journal editor / publisher, dramatist, stage / screen actor; born 21 November 1866 in Alexandria, Egypt; visited the United States with the theatrical group (1886) and (1893-1898); strongly criticized President Roosevelt for his racist Mansion House speech in London in which he condemned as unfit for self-government the Egyptian nationalist party that he supported; his third visit to America was in 1920s; he reestablished contact with Marcus Garvey, now the president of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) and African Communities League; after the collapse of the Garvey movement, he moved to St. Louis and then to Detroit; traveled to India, Japan, China (1920s); settled in Lagos (1931); resumed his career as a journalist, working for The Nigerian Daily Times and later as proprietor and editor of The Comet, Nigeria; served Africa through his newspapers in London and Lagos and his initiatives in African trade and investment; died 25 June 1945 in Lagos, Nigeria)
notfound: Ziriklī;Kaḥḥālah;Brockelmann.