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National Prize for Arts and Sciences (Mexico)
References
References
National Prize for Arts and Sciences (Mexico)
External links
External links Prize rules (2006), Secretaría de Educación Pública Category:National Prize for Arts and Sciences (Mexico) Category:Mexican awards Category:Mexican literary awards Category:Mexican science and technology awards
National Prize for Arts and Sciences (Mexico)
Table of Content
More citations needed, Linguistics and literature, Fine arts, History, Social Sciences, and Philosophy, Popular Arts and Traditions, Physics, Mathematics, and Natural Sciences, Technology and Design, See also, References, External links
Richmond Township, Illinois
Use mdy dates
Richmond Township is located in McHenry County, Illinois. As of the 2010 census, its population was 6,683 and it contained 2,685 housing units.
Richmond Township, Illinois
Geography
Geography According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of , of which (or 99.42%) is land and (or 0.58%) is water.
Richmond Township, Illinois
Demographics
Demographics
Richmond Township, Illinois
References
References
Richmond Township, Illinois
External links
External links City-data.com Illinois State Archives Category:Townships in McHenry County, Illinois Category:Richmond, Illinois Category:Townships in Illinois
Richmond Township, Illinois
Table of Content
Use mdy dates, Geography, Demographics, References, External links
Lafuma
Short description
thumb|250px|right|A Lafuma windbreaker with its hood stowed. Lafuma is a French company that specializes in outdoor equipment and clothing, such as backpacks, sleeping bags and footwear. It also offers a wide variety of other equipment, earning comparisons to United States companies such as Patagonia and Columbia Sportswear. Group brands include Eider, Millet and Oxbow. The Lafuma clothing brands have been personified by sports personalities and by the French actor and stuntman Karl E. Landler.
Lafuma
History
History The three Lafuma brothers – Victor, Alfred and Gabriel – founded Lafuma in 1930 producing backpacks. In 1936, the company invented the metal-frame braced backpack, which expanded the group considerably. Having produced products for both the French Army before World War II and during the occupation of France by Nazi Germany for the Wehrmacht, the company resumed production post-war. In 1954, Lafuma expanded into camping furniture. In 1984, the company went bankrupt, and was taken over by a grandson of the founders, Philippe Joffard. In 1985, the company expanded into sleeping bags and, in 1986, moved part of its production to Tunisia. In 1991, the company launched new clothing brands and, in 1992, opened production facilities in Hungary. This allowed the resumption of the production of the Millet and Le Chameau brands in 1995. The company was launched on the CAC Small second market in 1997, reducing the founding families' share to around a 15% share holding. Philippe Joffard remains chairman. In 2004, the company purchased the jeans brand Ober and, in 2005, Oxbow. In 2006, the company began co-branding winter clothing with Thierry Mugler. After a difficult year in 2007, Lafuma resumed production of the Eider brand, but by moving production from Éloise to overseas facilities. In 2012, Le Chameau was sold to Marwyn Management Partners, a UK-based private equity company.
Lafuma
Current
Current The group is still highly reliant on the domestic French market, with 60% of group turnover generated from French sales. The current brands of the group include (with reported sales percentages): Lafuma (44.1%) Oxbow Surfwear (28.2%) Millet (16.3%) Detailed figures for the licensing of the Killy trademark are not published. Turnover by product is broken down as: Clothing (62.5%) Accessories and equipment (12%) including: backpacks, sleeping bags, blankets, billfolds, mountaineering ropes, strollers Shoes and boots (13.1%) Camping furniture (12.4%) including: folding chairs, chairs, tables The group has eight production sites, in: France (4), Hungary (1), Tunisia (1), Morocco (1) and China (1).
Lafuma
References
References
Lafuma
External links
External links Lafuma's official website in English Lafuma's official website in French Category:Clothing companies established in 1930 Category:Manufacturing companies based in Paris Category:Companies based in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes Category:Climbing and mountaineering equipment companies Category:Manufacturing companies established in 1930 Category:French companies established in 1930 Category:French brands
Lafuma
Table of Content
Short description, History, Current, References, External links
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Infobox album
Dangerous Minds: Music from the Motion Picture is the official soundtrack to John N. Smith's 1995 film Dangerous Minds, composed primarily of hip hop and R&B music. It was released on July 11, 1995 through MCA Soundtracks. Production was handled by Cyrus Esteban, Franky J, Mr. Dalvin, Chris Stokes, Claudio Cueni, Doug Rasheed, Evil Dee, Michael J. Powell, Pimp C, The Bass Mechanics, Tre Black, Trevor Horn, and DeVante Swing, who also served as executive producer together with Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer. It features contributions from Rappin' 4-Tay, Static Major, 24-K, Aaron Hall, Big Mike, Craig Mack, Coolio, DeVante Swing, IMx, L.V., Mr. Dalvin, Sista, Tre Black, Wendy & Lisa. In the United States, the soundtrack peaked atop the Billboard 200 albums and number two on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts. On December 22, 1995, it was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, for shipments exceeding 3,000,000 copies in the US alone.
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Track listing
Track listing Sample credits Track 1 contains a sample from "Pastime Paradise" written and performed by Stevie Wonder. Track 7 contains elements from "Respect" written by Otis Redding. Track 8 contains elements from "Love Changes" performed by Mother's Finest. Track 10 contains elements from "I Want You Back" written by Freddie Perren, Alphonso Mizell, Berry Gordy and Dennis Lussier and performed by The Jackson 5.
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Personnel
Personnel Artis "Coolio" Ivey, Jr. – performer (track 1) Larry "L.V." Sanders – performer (track 1) Aaron Hall – performer (track 2) Michael "Big Mike" Barnett – performer (track 3) Anthony "Rappin' 4-Tay" Forté – performer (tracks: 4, 10) Dalvin "Mr. Dalvin" DeGrate – performer (track 5), producer (tracks: 2, 5) Stephen "Static Major" Garrett – performer (tracks: 5, 11) Tre Black – performer & producer (track 6) 24-K – performer (track 7) Immature – performer (track 8) Sista – performer (track 9) Craig Mack – performer (track 9) Donald "DeVante Swing" DeGrate, Jr. – performer & producer (track 11), executive producer Wendy Melvoin – performer (track 12) Lisa Coleman – performer (track 12) Doug Rasheed – producer (track 1) Chad "Pimp C" Butler – producer (track 3) Frank "Franky J" Hudson, Jr. – producer (tracks: 4, 10) Cyrus Esteban – producer (tracks: 4, 10) Michael J. Powell – producer (track 6) Johnny "Jay Ski" McGowan – producer (track 7) Van "Thrill Da Playa" Bryant – producer (track 7) Chris Stokes – producer (track 8) Claudio Cueni – producer (track 8) Ewart C. "DJ Evil Dee" Dewgarde – producer (track 9) Timothy "Timbaland" Mosley – additional producer (track 5) Brian Kinkead – engineering (track 2) Gerhard P. Joost II – engineering (track 11) Ross Donaldson – engineering (track 11) Trevor Horn – producer (track 12) Herb Powers Jr. – mastering Don Simpson – executive producer Jerry Bruckheimer – executive producer Vartan Kurjian – art direction Wilson Design Group – design Linda R. Chen – photography Robert Reives – A&R Bill Green – coordinator Kevin Breen – coordinator Lesley Allery – coordinator Sylvia Krask – coordinator Todd Homme – coordinator Christine Edwards – coordinator Sheryl Konigsberg – coordinator Karyl "Kap" Laws – coordinator Kathy Nelson – supervisor
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Charts
Charts
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Weekly charts
Weekly charts Chart (1995–1996) Peakposition
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Year-end charts
Year-end charts Chart (1995) Position Australian Albums (ARIA) 30 US Billboard 200 17 US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard) 22 Chart (1996) Position Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria) 33
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Certifications and sales
Certifications and sales
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
See also
See also List of top 25 albums for 1995 in Australia List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 1995
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
References
References
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
External links
External links Category:Hip-hop soundtracks Category:1995 soundtrack albums Category:Drama film soundtracks Category:Gangsta rap soundtracks Category:MCA Records soundtracks Category:Contemporary R&B soundtracks Category:Albums produced by Trevor Horn Category:Albums produced by DeVante Swing Category:Albums produced by Michael J. Powell Category:Albums produced by Chris Stokes (director) Category:Funk soundtracks Category:Soul soundtracks
Dangerous Minds (soundtrack)
Table of Content
Infobox album , Track listing, Personnel, Charts, Weekly charts, Year-end charts, Certifications and sales, See also, References, External links
Riley Township, Illinois
Use mdy dates
Riley Township is located in McHenry County, Illinois. As of the 2020 census, its population was 3,035 and it contained 1,070 housing units.
Riley Township, Illinois
Geography
Geography According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of , of which (or 99.81%) is land and (or 0.22%) is water.
Riley Township, Illinois
Demographics
Demographics
Riley Township, Illinois
References
References
Riley Township, Illinois
External links
External links City-data.com Illinois State Archives Category:Townships in McHenry County, Illinois Category:Townships in Illinois
Riley Township, Illinois
Table of Content
Use mdy dates, Geography, Demographics, References, External links
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
short description
Romeo and Juliet () is a 1954 Argentine film directed by Enrique Carreras during the classical era of Argentine cinema. The screenplay was written by Rafael Beltrán, based on the plot by Miguel de Calasanz. It stars Alfredo Barbieri, Amelia Vargas, Esteban Serrador and Susana Campos and was released on March 16, 1954.
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
Plot
Plot An engaged couple rents an apartment that turns out to belong to someone else.
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
Cast
Cast Alfredo Barbieri Amelia Vargas Esteban Serrador Susana Campos Tito Climent Guido Gorgatti Domingo Márquez Aída Villadeamigo Enrique Lomi Esmeralda Agoglia Leo Bélico Arsenio Perdiguero
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
Reception
Reception Noticias Gráficas opined: "An argument that rests on equivocation, but without adding any detail that differentiates it from the innumerable number of plays that frivolous theater counts in its copious credit." Raúl Manrupe and María Alejandra Portela in their book Un diccionario de films argentinos (1930–1995) write (translated from Spanish): "A simple comedy to take advantage of the success of the protagonist couple.".
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
References
References
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films based on Romeo and Juliet Category:Argentine comedy films Category:1953 comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Films directed by Enrique Carreras
Romeo and Juliet (1954 Argentine film)
Table of Content
short description, Plot, Cast, Reception, References, External links
Ue... paisano!
Infobox film
Ue... paisano! is a 1953 Argentine film directed by Manuel Romero starring Susana Campos, Nicola Paone, Fidel Pintos and Vicente Rubino. Nicola Panoe sang a song with the same title. Ue... paisano! was the last film of Romero's extended career.
Ue... paisano!
References
References
Ue... paisano!
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:1950s Argentine films
Ue... paisano!
Table of Content
Infobox film , References, External links
The Black Vampire
Infobox film
The Black Vampire () is a 1953 Argentine film noir of the classical era directed by Román Viñoly Barreto, starring Olga Zubarry and Roberto Escalada. It is inspired by Fritz Lang's M.
The Black Vampire
Plot
Plot Amalia, a glamorous nightclub singer, witnesses, through a small barred window in her basement dressing room, the figure of a man dumping a small body into a storm drain in the alley behind the nightclub. The man, nicknamed the vampire serial killer by police, has been murdering little girls and disposing of their bodies without leaving a trace of his own identity. Government Prosecutor Dr. Bernard questions Amalia and she falsely denies having seen anything; if her occupation as a nightclub singer (a less-than-respectable job) is exposed, she could be deprived custody of her daughter. A merchant seaman seen furtively hiding in the dark environs of the crime is arrested as the first suspect, but he is merely an adulterer having an affair with a married woman. Dr. Bernard realizes he is not the guilty party. In the meantime, a peculiarly shy, self-effacing language teacher, Professor Ulber, who is always dressed in a black overcoat, is seen stalking a little girl. He disables the elevator in her apartment building and catches her on the stairs and kills her. The police set a trap for the killer by staking out a little girl on a sidewalk while they watch from a nearby car. The Professor, though tempted by this bait, narrowly evades it. By coincidence, however, the Professor is an admirer of Cora, one of Amalia’s co-workers at the nightclub, whom the Professor frequently visits, but only to stare at her because he is pathologically inhibited, and Cora merely tolerates while ridiculing him, which aggravates his deviant lust for children’s blood. Dr. Bernard, the Prosecutor, is very solicitous of his wheelchair-using wife, who exhibits the virtues of a saint. He is sexually frustrated, and when he questions Amalia again because he is sure she lied to him, he cannot resist the opportunity to seize and kiss her, although Amalia rebuffs him. Amalia does, however, admit to Dr. Bernard that she saw the vampire through her window and explains to him why she did not want to become involved. The police suspect that the owner of the nightclub, Gastón, has returned to trafficking in narcotics, and they stage a raid of his club in which he is shot and killed and the club is closed. Out of a job, Amalia brings her daughter home from school and one afternoon leaves her with Cora while she departs on an errand. It is at this point that Professor Ulber, the vampire, comes to visit Cora, who, not realizing that Ulber is the vampire, gets rid of him by telling him to take Amalia’s daughter out for a walk, during which Ulber takes her on rides at an amusement park, creating suspense that he may kill her too. Ulber has a habit of whistling a tune that he was heard whistling by some homeless street beggars while escorting one of the little girls he has already killed. The tune, not identified in the film, is one of the numbers from the Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg’s Peer Gynt Suite, “The Hall of the Mountain King.” One of the street beggars, a Norwegian, recognizes it, and when he hears it again while Ulber is walking by with Amalia’s daughter, he sounds the alarm and all the beggars as well as the police chase and catch Ulber, rescuing Amalia’s daughter in the process. Unlike the dénouement in the film “M” (which inspired this film), in which the outcome of the serial killer’s trial is left untold, Ulber is sentenced to death.
The Black Vampire
Cast
Cast Olga Zubarry as Amalia / Rita Roberto Escalada as Dr. Bernard Nathán Pinzón as Teodoro Ulber, 'El profesor' Nelly Panizza as Cora Georges Rivière as Presunto culpable Pascual Pelliciota as Gastón Gloria Castilla as Sra. Bernard Mariano Vidal Molina as Lange Mathilde García Lange Enrique Fava as El noruego Ricardo Argemí as Juez Absalón Bernal Emma Bernal as Srta. Fermina Lucía Besse Alberto Barcel as defense lawyer
The Black Vampire
Reception
Reception This adaptation of Fritz Lang’s M is highly regarded but not widely known. The Film Noir Foundation regards it as “extraordinary in every respect.”
The Black Vampire
References
References
The Black Vampire
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Román Viñoly Barreto Category:Films shot in Buenos Aires Category:Argentine horror films Category:1953 horror films Category:1950s Argentine films
The Black Vampire
Table of Content
Infobox film , Plot, Cast, Reception, References, External links
Seneca Township, Illinois
Use mdy dates
Seneca Township is located in McHenry County, Illinois. As of the 2020 census, its population was 2,893 and it contained 1,102 housing units.
Seneca Township, Illinois
Geography
Geography According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of , of which (or 99.97%) is land and (or 0.03%) is water.
Seneca Township, Illinois
Demographics
Demographics
Seneca Township, Illinois
References
References
Seneca Township, Illinois
External links
External links Seneca Township official website City-data.com Illinois State Archives: McHenry County Fact Sheet Category:Townships in McHenry County, Illinois Category:Townships in Illinois
Seneca Township, Illinois
Table of Content
Use mdy dates, Geography, Demographics, References, External links
The Girl Cat
short description
The Girl Cat () is a 1953 Argentine film directed by Román Viñoly Barreto during the classical era of Argentine cinema.
The Girl Cat
Cast
Cast Adrianita as Nonó Adolfo Stray as Samuel Gorenstein Enrique Chaico as Padre de Nonó Hugo Lanzillotta as Daniel Beba Bidart as Olga Ernesto Bianco as Sr. Salas Susana Campos as María Elena Luis Mora as Sr. Campos Alberto Barcel as Sacerdote Fausto Padín as Chofer Luis de Lucía Carlos Cotto as Reducidor María Ferez Fernando Campos Adolfo Meyer Sergio Malbrán as Empleado en joyería Carlos Morasano as Portero
The Girl Cat
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Román Viñoly Barreto Category:Argentine comedy films Category:1953 comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films
The Girl Cat
Table of Content
short description, Cast, External links
El Muerto es un vivo
Short description
El Muerto es un vivo is a 1953 Argentine film directed by Yago Blass during the classical era of Argentine cinema.
El Muerto es un vivo
Cast
Cast Harry Mimmo Diana de Córdoba Ramón Garay María Esther Podestá Carlos Lagrotta Marisa Núñez Ángel Walk
El Muerto es un vivo
References
References
El Muerto es un vivo
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Argentine comedy films Category:1953 comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Films scored by George Andreani
El Muerto es un vivo
Table of Content
Short description, Cast, References, External links
State Council of East Germany
Refimprove
The State Council of the German Democratic Republic (German: Staatsrat der DDR) was the standing organ of the People's Chamber and functioned as the collective head of state of the German Democratic Republic, most commonly referred to as East Germany, from 1960 to 1990.
State Council of East Germany
Origins
Origins When the German Democratic Republic was founded in October 1949, its constitution specified the form of a parliamentary democracy, though the government was actually highly authoritarian in terms of control. One of the "bourgeois" features of the constitution (in Article 66) was the office of President, which was filled by Wilhelm Pieck, formerly the leader of the eastern branch of the Communist Party of Germany and now one of the two chairmen of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED). However, from the start, the East German government was completely controlled by the SED, and over time its actual power structure grew closer to the model of the Soviet Union. When Pieck died on 7 September 1960, the SED opted against electing a successor, instead opting for a Soviet-style collective head of state. The constitution was amended on 12 September 1960 by the Law concerning the formation of the State Council, which created a collective body in place of the presidency. The same constitutional amendment also acknowledged the role of the recently formed National Defense Council (Nationaler Verteidigungsrat) in GDR defense policy. The State Council remained virtually unchanged in the 1968 constitution, which formally defined the GDR as a socialist state under the leadership of the SED. Its official role was later downplayed in the 1974 constitutional amendments.
State Council of East Germany
Election
Election thumb|left|260px|Session of the State Council, 25 June 1981 The State Council was elected by the People's Chamber, the East German parliament. Its term was originally four years, but was later changed to five years. The body consisted of a chairman, several deputy chairmen (usually six), further members (usually sixteen) and a secretary. Members were taken from the political parties and mass organizations affiliated to the SED-controlled National Front. Occasionally an otherwise prominent citizen was also included. Outside of East Germany, the chairman's post was reckoned as being equivalent to that of president. On paper, the Chairman of the State Council was the second highest ranking state official in East Germany, following the Chairman of the Council of Ministers. In practice, however, the chairmanship was occupied by the leader of the SED for all but a few years of its existence. The sole exceptions were the period of transition from the leadership of Walter Ulbricht to Erich Honecker from 1971 to 1976 and the immediate aftermath of the SED's collapse in 1989. The leaders of the smaller parties in the National Front served as deputy chairmen on the council.
State Council of East Germany
Constitutional powers
Constitutional powers Powers of the State council included to call elections to the People's Chamber and other parliamentary bodies to appoint members to the National Defense Council to grant pardon, amnesty and reprieves to ratify international treaties to grant diplomatic accreditation to grant decorations and awards to sponsor families with many children Originally, the State Council also could issue statutory decrees and legally-binding interpretations of the constitution and laws. The diplomatic role of head of state solely rested with the chairman. Both the body's legislative and judicial powers and the chairman's special diplomatic status were formally abolished in 1974. Though the Council formally exercised its functions collectively, it was dominated by its chairman, especially if the chairman was also leader of the SED. In contrast, the predecessor post of president was a relatively weak position. However, the body had some importance as an advisory and decision-making body under Walter Ulbricht. When Ulbricht lost power in the early 1970s, the body was reduced to a ceremonial role. The 1974 amendments reflected this development; when Honecker became chairman in 1976, he derived virtually all of his power from his post as leader of the SED. The secretariat of the State Council was of some practical importance as its approximately 200 employees since 1961 dealt with citizens' petitions. Authorities in government and economics were obliged to cooperate with the secretariat on this.
State Council of East Germany
Abolition
Abolition thumb|right|260px|State Council Building, East Berlin When Egon Krenz, Honecker's successor as leader of the SED, failed in his bid to preserve Communist rule in East Germany, he resigned from his offices in party and government, including as Chairman of the State Council. To mark the end of the SED's monopoly on power, LDPD leader Manfred Gerlach was elected chairman. However, the body ceased to be of political importance and merely oversaw the transition to the parliamentary elections of March 1990. The new People's Chamber, the first that emerged from free elections, met for the first time on 5 April 1990. Among its first measures was an amendment to the constitution abolishing the State Council. As provided in the constitution, the Presidium of the People's Chamber, headed by President Sabine Bergmann-Pohl, served as interim head of state until reunification with West Germany on 3 October.
State Council of East Germany
List of members
List of members Chairman Political party Took office Left officeWalter UlbrichtSED12 September 19601 August 1973State Council elected 12 September 1960 Deputy chairmen: Otto Grotewohl (SED) Johannes Dieckmann (LDPD) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Hans Rietz (DBD) Members:Günter Christoph (SED), Erich Correns (KB), Friedrich Ebert (SED), Luise Ermisch (SED), Erich Grützner (FDGB), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Bernard Koenen (SED), Otto Krauss (LDPD), Bruno Leuschner (SED), Karl Mewis (SED), Irmgard Neumann (DBD/DFD), Karl Polak (SED), Karl Rieke (SED), Hans Rodenberg (SED), Horst Schumann (FDJ), Peter Adolf Thiessen (non-affiliated) Secretary: Otto Gotsche (SED)State Council elected 13 November 1963 Deputy chairmen: Otto Grotewohl (SED, died 21 September 1964) Johannes Dieckmann (LDPD) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Hans Rietz (DBD) Members:Erich Correns (KB), Friedrich Ebert (SED), Erich Grützner (SED), Lieselott Herforth (FDGB), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Bernard Koenen (SED), Else Merke (DBD), Günter Mittag (SED), Christel Pappe (FDGB), Karl Rieke (SED), Hans Rodenberg (SED), Horst Schumann (FDJ), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED), Christian Steinmüller (NDPD), Willi Stoph (SED), Paul Strauß (SED) Secretary: Otto Gotsche (SED)State Council elected 13 July 1967 Deputy chairmen: Willi Stoph (SED) Johannes Dieckmann (LDPD, died 22 February 1969) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Hans Rietz (DBD) Members:Erich Correns (KB), Friedrich Ebert (SED), Erich Grützner (SED), Brunhilde Hanke (SED), Lieselott Herforth (FDGB), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Else Merke (DBD), Günter Mittag (SED), Anni Neumann (FDGB), Karl Rieke (SED), Hans Rodenberg (SED), Maria Schneider (FDGB), Horst Schumann (SED), Hans-Simon Schneider (NDPD), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED), Paul Strauß (SED)elected 1969: Bruno Thalmann (LDPD) Secretary: Otto Gotsche (SED)State Council elected 26 November 1971 Deputy chairmen: Friedrich Ebert (SED, acting chairman 1 August – 3 October 1973) Willi Stoph (SED) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Hans Rietz (DBD) Members:Kurt Anclam (LDPD), Friedrich Clermont (SED), Erich Correns (KB), Willi Grandetzka (DBD), Erich Grützner (SED), Brunhilde Hanke (SED), Lieselott Herforth (FDGB), Erich Honecker (SED), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Margarete Müller (SED), Hans Rodenberg (SED), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED), Paul Strauß (SED), Ilse Thiele (DFD), Paul Verner (SED), Rosel Walther (NDPD), Herbert Warnke (SED) Secretary:Heinz Eichler (SED)Willi StophSED 3 October 1973 29 October 1976Composition see above.Erich HoneckerSED 29 October 1976 24 October 1989State Council elected 29 October 1976 Deputy chairmen: Friedrich Ebert (SED, died 4 December 1979) Willi Stoph (SED) Horst Sindermann (SED) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Ernst Goldenbaum (DBD) Members:Kurt Anclam (LDPD), Erich Correns (KB), Willi Grandetzka (DBD, died 14 April 1979), Kurt Hager (SED), Brunhilde Hanke (SED), Lieselott Herforth (FDGB), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Margarete Müller (SED), Albert Norden (SED), Bernhard Quandt (SED), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED), Paul Strauß (SED), Ilse Thiele (DFD), Harry Tisch (SED), Paul Verner (SED), Rosel Walther (NDPD)elected 1979: Werner Seifert (DBD) Secretary: Heinz Eichler (SED)State Council elected 25 June 1981 Deputy chairmen: Willi Stoph (SED) Horst Sindermann (SED) Paul Verner (SED) Gerald Götting (CDU) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD) Ernst Goldenbaum (DBD) Members:Kurt Anclam (LDPD), Werner Felfe (SED), Kurt Hager (SED), Brunhilde Hanke (SED), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Egon Krenz (FDJ), Günter Mittag (SED), Margarete Müller (SED), Alois Pisnik (SED), Bernhard Quandt (SED), Werner Seifert (DBD), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED), Paul Strauß (SED), Ilse Thiele (DFD), Harry Tisch (SED), Johanna Töpfer (FDGB), Rosel Walther (NDPD), Secretary: Heinz Eichler (SED)State Council elected 16 June 1986 Deputy chairmen: Willi Stoph (SED, resigned 16 November 1989) Horst Sindermann (SED, resigned 16 November 1989) Egon Krenz (SED, elected chairman 24 October 1989, resigned 6 December 1989) Günter Mittag (SED) Gerald Götting (CDU, dismissed 7 November 1989) Heinrich Homann (NDPD) Manfred Gerlach (LDPD, elected chairman 6 December 1989) Günther Maleuda (DBD) Members:Eberhard Aurich (FDJ, resigned 29 January 1990), Fritz Dallmann (VdgB), Werner Felfe (SED, died 7 September 1988), Kurt Hager (SED, resigned 16 November 1989), Brunhilde Hanke (SED), Leonhard Helmschrott (DBD), Friedrich Kind (CDU), Eveline Klett (DFD), Lothar Kolditz (KB), Peter Moreth (LDPD), Margarete Müller (SED), Alois Pisnik (SED), Bernhard Quandt (SED), Klaus Sorgenicht (SED, resigned 29 January 1990), Paul Strauß (SED), Ilse Thiele (DFD), Harry Tisch (SED, resigned 16 November 1989), Johanna Töpfer (FDGB), Rosel Walther (NDPD), Monika Werner (SED)elected 1988: Peter Florin (SED), Werner Krolikowski (SED, resigned 16 November 1989)elected 17 November 1989: Manfred Mühlmann (NDPD), Gerhard Lindner (LDPD) Secretary: Heinz Eichler (SED, resigned 16 November 1989)Egon KrenzSED 24 October 1989 6 December 1989Composition see above.Manfred Gerlach LDPD 6 December 1989 5 April 1990Composition see above.
State Council of East Germany
See also
See also Council of Ministers of East Germany
State Council of East Germany
References
References Category:Government of East Germany Category:1960 establishments in East Germany Category:1990 disestablishments in East Germany Category:Collective heads of state
State Council of East Germany
Table of Content
Refimprove, Origins, Election, Constitutional powers, Abolition, List of members, See also, References
La mejor del colegio
short description
La Mejor del colegio (The best girl of college) is a 1953 Argentine musical comedy film of the classical era of Argentine cinema, directed by Julio Saraceni and starring Lolita Torres and Teresita Pagano.
La mejor del colegio
Cast
Cast Lolita Torres: María del Carmen Vallejo / María del Carmen Pérez / mother of María del Carmen Teresita Pagano: Aurora / Aurora Pérez (friend of María del Carmen) Francisco Álvarez: mr. Martín (grandfather of María del Carmen) Alberto Dalbés: Doctor Marcelo Carracedo Bertha Moss: Patricia Nelly Lainez: Antonia (false wife of doctor Carracedo) José Comellas: Gervasio Vallejo (father of María del Carmen) María Armand: mrs. Mercedes (grandmother of María del Carmen) Pedro Pompillo: mr. Bernardo Ramón Garay: inspector Saporiti Vicente Rubino: Valentín Teresa Blasco: pupil of the college Egle Martin: Nélida Roberto Bordoni: manager of the Hotel Arsenio Perdiguero: resident of the apartment number 150
La mejor del colegio
References
References
La mejor del colegio
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Julio Saraceni Category:1953 musical comedy films Category:Argentine musical comedy films Category:Tango films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Spanish-language musical comedy films
La mejor del colegio
Table of Content
short description, Cast, References, External links
Highfield Church
More citations needed
Highfield Church is a parish church in the Highfield district of Southampton, England. It is an Anglican Church in the Diocese of Winchester.
Highfield Church
History
History
Highfield Church
Early history
Early history The foundation stone for Highfield Church was laid on 12 September 1846 and it was consecrated on 17 September 1847, by the Right Reverend Charles Sumner, the Bishop of Winchester. The first Minister was the Reverend Philip Raulin Robin. The legal name of the church is Christ Church, Portswood but it became commonly known as Highfield Church in 1883.
Highfield Church
World Wars
World Wars During the First World War (1914–1918) quite a number of the men from the parish went to the battlefields. Within the parish boundaries about of land were being developed for housing so a western extension was built to accommodate the extra congregation. A First World War memorial was erected near the south door in 1921. During the Second World War (1939–1945) Southampton was bombed heavily and there were direct hits on the parish and much loss of life. Throughout this period the clergy and members of the church kept watch on the church with a stirrup pump, buckets and shovels. The windows were given a coating of a rubber solution to lessen the danger of splintering glass. The neighbouring church of St Barnabas was destroyed in 1940 and the two churches were temporarily merged until the rebuilding of the church at St Barnabas in 1957. In 1941 there was an air raid where incendiary bombs fell near to the church. There was no serious structural damage to the church but windows in both the east and west ends of the church were shattered and the caretaker's quarters were destroyed. Despite the roof requiring 7000 new tiles, the morning matins went ahead. The church replaced those eastern windows that were destroyed in the Blitz and these were the church's memorial to those who died in the Second World War.
Highfield Church
Later history
Later history The church celebrated its centenary in September 1947 with services by two previous vicars. Windows on the East side of the church building destroyed during World War Two were replaced in 1952. The church building was listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England in October 1981.Highfield Church, Southampton: A brief history of the Church and parish Accessed 4 April 2007.
Highfield Church
Architecture
Architecture The church originally had a nave, a small chancel with clerestory windows, a south aisle, and a tower with a broached oak shingled spire, which contained one bell. The architect was Joshua Brandon, who died before the building was completed and is buried in the churchyard. The walls of the church are of Purbeck Stone with mouldings of Caen Stone and the painted glass windows were created by Nixon and Ward. The church has been built onto and altered many times since it was first built. In 1852 a parsonage was added and used as a vicarage, In 1855 the north aisle was added, In 1863 gas lighting was installed (candles had been used in the church before this time), In 1869 the chancel was rebuilt, the spire restored, and the windows raised, In 1885 gas regulators and burners were installed throughout the church, In 1915 the western extension was built, In 1921 a First World War memorial was erected near the south door, In 1955 a west porch was designed by Ernest Berry Webber (who was the architect of the Civic centre of Southampton) and dedicated to Sir Sidney Kimber and his son. In 2011, the pews were replaced with soft seating and the building renovated and updated
Highfield Church
Area
Area Highfield Church is at the junction of Highfield Lane and Church Lane in the Highfield area of Southampton. Next to the church is the Church Centre, which is used by the church and the community for events, for example, adult education classes. Adjacent to the church is the main Highfield campus of the University of Southampton. The Highfield Church of England School building stands next to Highfield Church.
Highfield Church
References
References
Highfield Church
External links
External links Satellite image of Highfield Church and Church Centre Map showing location of the Highfield Church building HighfieldHistory.co.uk including information on the graves and memorials of Highfield Church Category:Churches completed in 1847 Category:19th-century Church of England church buildings Category:Church of England church buildings in Hampshire Category:Churches in Southampton Category:Grade II listed churches in Hampshire Category:1847 establishments in England
Highfield Church
Table of Content
More citations needed, History, Early history, World Wars, Later history, Architecture, Area, References, External links
The Black Market (film)
short description
The Black Market (Spanish:Mercado negro) is a 1953 Argentine crime film of the classical era of Argentine cinema, directed by Kurt Land and starring Olga Zubarry, Santiago Gómez Cou and Mario Passano.Elena & Lopez p.169 The film's sets were designed by Carlos T. Dowling. A policeman discovers that his girlfriend's father heads a drug smuggling outfit.
The Black Market (film)
Cast
Cast Olga Zubarry as Laura Santiago Gómez Cou as Inspector Alfredo Herrera Fausto Padín as Camionero Eduardo de Labar as Don Ramón Mario Passano Nelly Panizza Luis Otero José De Angelis Miguel Ligero Félix Rivero José María Pedroza Mario Lozano César Fiaschi Carlos Cotto Fernando Labat Carlos Fioriti Antonio Capuano Perla Molina Luis Mora Salvador Sinai Tito Perlat Oscar Llompart Alfredo Almanza Carlos Guisone Horacio de Bello Jorge Arias Arsenio Perdiguero Elena Cruz Alberto Barcel Alberto Bello Amalia Bernabé
The Black Market (film)
References
References
The Black Market (film)
Bibliography
Bibliography Elena, Alberto & Lopez, Marina Diaz. The Cinema of Latin America. Columbia University Press, 2013.
The Black Market (film)
External links
External links Category:1953 films Category:1953 crime films Category:Argentine crime films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Kurt Land Category:1950s Argentine films
The Black Market (film)
Table of Content
short description, Cast, References, Bibliography, External links
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets of JINXTENGU
[[Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets]]
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets
Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets of JINXTENGU
Table of Content
[[Category:Wikipedia sockpuppets]]
La pasión desnuda
short description
La pasión desnuda (Naked Passion) is a 1953 Argentine film of the classical era. It was written and directed by Luis César Amadori and starred María Félix, Carlos Thompson and Eduardo Cuitiño. The Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences gave Cuitiño the award for outstanding male performance in this film.
La pasión desnuda
Cast
Cast María Félix as Malva Rey Carlos Thompson as Pablo Valdes Eduardo Cuitiño Héctor Calcaño Diana Ingro Milagros de la Vega Diana Miriam Jones Margarita Burke José Comellas Gloria Ferrandiz Daniel Tedeschi
La pasión desnuda
References
References