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Gordon Waite Underwood
Navy Cross citation (first award)
Navy Cross citation (first award) left|40px Commander in Chief Pacific: Serial 07434 (December 10, 1944) The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting the Navy Cross to Commander Gordon Waite Underwood (NSN: 0-71439), United States Navy, for extraordinary heroism in the line of his profession as Commanding Officer of the U.S.S. SPADEFISH (SS-411), on the FIRST War Patrol of that submarine during the period 23 July 1944 to 24 September 1944, in enemy controlled waters of the Luzon Strait in the Philippine Islands. Through tenacious and highly aggressive actions Commander Underwood skillfully penetrated heavy and unusually alert escort screens, which included air support, to press home cleverly planned and well executed torpedo attacks which resulted in the sinking of six enemy ships totaling 40,000 tons and damaging two additional enemy ships totaling 14,500 tons. Subsequent heavy anti-submarine efforts by the enemy and their depth charging were skillfully evaded by his intelligent evasive tactics thus enabling him to escape and avoid severe damage to his ship. Through his experience and sound judgment Commander Underwood brought his ship safely back to port. His conduct throughout was an inspiration to his officers and men and in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.
Gordon Waite Underwood
Navy Cross citation (second award)
Navy Cross citation (second award) left|40px Commander in Chief Pacific: Serial 01690 (February 25, 1945) The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting a Gold Star in lieu of a Second Award of the Navy Cross to Commander Gordon Waite Underwood (NSN: 0-71439), United States Navy, for extraordinary heroism in the line of his profession as Commanding Officer of the U.S.S. SPADEFISH (SS-411), on the SECOND War Patrol of that submarine during the period 23 October 1944 to 12 December 1944, in enemy controlled waters of the East China Sea. By his superb skill, courage, and aggressiveness, Commander Underwood successfully launched well-planned and smartly executed attacks which resulted in sinking enemy ships totaling over 30,000 tons and damaging an additional large vessel. Through his experience and sound judgment Commander Underwood brought his ship safely back to port. His conduct throughout was an inspiration to his officers and men and in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.
Gordon Waite Underwood
Navy Cross citation (third award)
Navy Cross citation (third award) left|40px Commander in Chief Pacific: Serial 03555 (April 25, 1945) The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting a Second Gold Star in lieu of a Third Award of the Navy Cross to Commander Gordon Waite Underwood (NSN: 0-71439), United States Navy, for extraordinary heroism in the line of his profession as Commanding Officer of the U.S.S. SPADEFISH (SS-411), on the THIRD War Patrol of that submarine during the period 6 January 1945 to 13 February 1945, in enemy controlled waters of the East China Sea. Making six courageous attacks in the face of unusually numerous escorts, Commander Underwood coolly penetrated the defenses of four escort vessels each time and successfully concluded five attacks which resulted in sinking four enemy ships for a total of 16,400 tons and in damaging one ship for 7,500 tons. By his vast experience gained in previous depth charge attacks, he cleverly evaded extremely heavy countermeasures and brought his ship back to port. His skill, courage and unwavering devotion to duty were in keeping with the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.
Gordon Waite Underwood
References
References A portion of this text originated from the public domain ship's history of USS Underwood . Category:1910 births Category:1978 deaths Category:Recipients of the Navy Cross (United States) Category:United States Navy officers Category:United States Navy personnel of World War II Category:United States submarine commanders
Gordon Waite Underwood
Table of Content
Infobox military person , Early life, Naval career, Corporate career, Awards & Decorations, Navy Cross citation (first award), Navy Cross citation (second award), Navy Cross citation (third award), References
El barro humano
Multiple issues
El Barro humano is a 1955 Argentine film, directed and written by Luis César Amadori and based on the theater play by Luis Rodríguez Acassuso. The movie was released on May 2, 1955, and rated PG 16.
El barro humano
Cast
Cast Zully Moreno as Mercedes Romero de Vargas Peña Carlos López Moctezuma as Eduardo Vargas Peña Juan José Míguez as Octavio Reyes Jorge Salcedo as Fiscal Nelly Panizza as Elisa Márbiz Felisa Mary as Clara Héctor Calcaño as Felipe Romero Ricardo Galache as Néstor Rómulo Domingo Sapelli as Presidente del tribunal
El barro humano
References
References
El barro humano
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Luis César Amadori Category:Argentine romantic drama films Category:1955 romantic drama films Category:1950s Argentine films
El barro humano
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Cast, References, External links
Category:Tourist attractions in Tanzania
Commons category
Tanzania Tanzania Category:Tourism in Tanzania
Category:Tourist attractions in Tanzania
Table of Content
Commons category
Canario rojo
Multiple issues
Canario rojo (English: The Red Canary) is a 1955 black-and-white Argentine film written and directed by Julio Porter. The film is based on the play Carlos III y Ana by Austria by Manfried Rössner. It premiered on July 21, 1955.
Canario rojo
Plot
Plot After failing her exam, a young student accosts her professor.
Canario rojo
Cast
Cast Elder Barber Alberto Dalbés Héctor Calcaño Luis Dávila Morenita Galé Beatriz Bonnet Don Pelele Fernando Siro Amalia Bernabé Luis García Bosch Marcos Zucker Vassili Lambrinos Amalia Britos Víctor Martucci Pascual Nacarati
Canario rojo
References
References
Canario rojo
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Julio Porter Category:Argentine comedy films Category:1955 comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Films scored by George Andreani
Canario rojo
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Plot, Cast, References, External links
Gloster F9/37
#
redirect Gloster F.9/37
Gloster F9/37
Table of Content
#
The Stork Said Yes
Infobox film
The Stork Said Yes (La cigüeña dijo ¡Sí!) is a 1955 Argentine comedy film directed by Enrique Carreras, from a script by Alejandro Casona based on a Carlos Llopis play. It stars Lola Membrives, Tomás Blanco, Esteban Serrador and Susana Campos and premiered on April 22, 1955. It was the last of Lola Membrives' few incursions into cinema. In 1971, Carreras remade the film based on the same play as La familia hippie, starring Palito Ortega.
The Stork Said Yes
Plot
Plot A mature married couple happily receives the news of pregnancy while a young couple has the disappointment of a frustrated attempt.
The Stork Said Yes
Cast
Cast Lola Membrives as Doña Antonina Tomás Blanco as Don Eduardo Esteban Serrador as Claudio Susana Campos as Pilar Hugo Pimentel as Solís Paquita Más as Felisa Delfy Miranda Antonio Martiánez as Dr. Fernández Pérez Elder Barber
The Stork Said Yes
Reception
Reception The critic Manuel Rey, known as "King", said that the film was: "A successful comedy". La Nación wrote that its "festive tone is achieved with communicative grace...its light plot has counted with good effect situations."
The Stork Said Yes
References
References
The Stork Said Yes
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Enrique Carreras Category:1955 comedy films Category:Argentine comedy films Category:Spanish-language comedy films
The Stork Said Yes
Table of Content
Infobox film , Plot, Cast, Reception, References, External links
Chico Viola Não Morreu
Multiple issues
Chico Viola Não Morreu is a 1955 Argentine film directed by Román Viñoly Barreto.
Chico Viola Não Morreu
Cast
Cast Alexandre Amorim Paulo Gilvan Bezerril Blecaute Wilza Carla eArnóbio Carvalho Inalda de Carvalho Jacy de Oliveira Sérgio de Oliveira Moacyr Deriquém Cleonir dos Santos Cyl Farney ... Francisco Alves Edson França Geny França Wilson Grey Heloísa Helena Joe Lester Vera Lúcia Magalhães Laís Maria Avany Maura José Melo Tupiara Molina Paulo Montel Francisco moreno João Costa Neto D'Andréa Netto Domingos Pereira João Péricles Walter Quinteiro Maria Luiza Raposo Ruy Rey Frederico Schlee Túlio Varga Derek Wheatley Eva Wilma
Chico Viola Não Morreu
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Román Viñoly Barreto Category:Argentine drama films Category:1955 drama films Category:1950s Argentine films
Chico Viola Não Morreu
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Cast, External links
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Drug dynamization
<div class="boilerplate metadata vfd xfd-closed" style="background-color: #F3F9FF; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px solid #AAAAAA;"> :''The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page. The result was keep, any possible merges are left as an editorial decision. Seraphimblade Talk to me 10:10, 15 March 2007 (UTC) Drug dynamization – (View AfD)(View log) POV fork of a section of Homeopathy, though it might be an appropriate subject for an article if it wasn't a POV fork. Adam Cuerden talk 12:54, 7 March 2007 (UTC) I agree, but that's why I say weak keep in case the article can be salvaged. ObtuseAngle 17:49, 7 March 2007 (UTC) Weak keep per Talk:Homeopathy. Jim Butler(talk) 22:06, 9 March 2007 (UTC) Delete POV fork, any remaining NPOV info can be merged into Homeopathy. Skinwalker 14:17, 12 March 2007 (UTC) Weak keep. The POV issue is probably (possibly?) correctible. I would suggest a selective merge to homeopathy, but that article is long and controversial enough. I've tagged this article for POV just in case. -- Black Falcon 01:34, 13 March 2007 (UTC) The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Seraphimblade (talk • contribs) 10:10, 15 March 2007 (UTC).
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Drug dynamization
Table of Content
<div class="boilerplate metadata vfd xfd-closed" style="background-color: #F3F9FF; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px solid #AAAAAA;"> :''The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review
Cuando los duendes cazan perdices
Multiple issues
Cuando los duendes cazan perdices is a 1955 Argentine film.
Cuando los duendes cazan perdices
Cast
Cast
Cuando los duendes cazan perdices
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:1950s Argentine films
Cuando los duendes cazan perdices
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Cast, External links
Keezo Kane
short description
Keezo Kane (born Keith Moore, 7 June 1979) is an American hip-hop producer. In 2004, he signed to Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music label.
Keezo Kane
Production credits
Production credits Right About Now (Talib Kweli album, 2005) : "The Beast" (featuring Papoose) Firewater (Tha Alkaholiks album, 2006) : "Popular Demand" Todd Smith (LL Cool J album, 2006) : "Preserve The Sexy" (featuring Teairra Mari) MTV Presents: My Block Chicago Soundtrack (MTV album, 2006) : "Let's Get It Poppin'" (performed by GLC) Finally Famous Vol.1 (Big Sean mixtape, 2007) : "Dreams" Don't Quit Your Day Job! (Consequence album, 2007) : "Who Knew My Luck Would Change" Shine (Estelle album, 2008) : "More Than Friends" True to the Game (Stadium Entertainment Corp album, 2009) : "The Big Screen" (performed by GLC featuring Kanye West) Love, Life, & Loyalty (GLC album, 2010) : "So Real" (featuring BJ the Chicago Kid) Love, Life, & Loyalty (GLC album, 2010) : "I Did It" To Mars (Trey Diggz album, 2011) : "I'm on Fire"
Keezo Kane
References
References Category:Hip-hop record producers Category:American record producers Category:Living people Category:1976 births
Keezo Kane
Table of Content
short description, Production credits, References
El Curandero
Multiple issues
El Curandero is a 1955 Argentine film directed by Mario Soffici.
El Curandero
Synopsis
Synopsis After arriving in a small town, a doctor pretends to be a healer to earn the trust of the locals.
El Curandero
Cast
Cast Mario Soffici Élida Gay Palmer José de Ángelis Jorge De La Riestra Florindo Ferrario Carmen Giménez Ubaldo Martínez Duilio Marzio Fernanda Mistral Pilar Gómez Carmen Monteleone Jorge Morales Mario Perelli Jesús Pampín Blanca Tapia
El Curandero
References
References
El Curandero
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Mario Soffici Category:1950s Argentine films
El Curandero
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Synopsis, Cast, References, External links
La delatora
Use dmy dates
La delatora [The Informant] is a 1955 Argentine crime film directed by Kurt Land. It was theatrically released in Argentina on 18 June 1955.
La delatora
Cast
Cast Arturo Arcari Alberto Bacigaluppi Virgilio Barbatti Alberto Bello Amalia Bernabé Luis Boldoni Susana Campos Domingo Carlos Carlos D'Agostino Carlos Estrada Víctor Ferreyra Carmen Giménez Francisco Lizzio Diana Maggi Víctor Martucci Lautaro Murúa Miguel A. Olmos Nathán Pinzón Julio Portela Georges Rivière Fada Santoro Jaime Saslavsky Osvaldo Terranova Félix Tortorelli Luis Veilat Enrique Waiss
La delatora
References
References
La delatora
External links
External links On YouTube Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Kurt Land Category:Argentine crime films Category:1955 crime films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Spanish-language crime films
La delatora
Table of Content
Use dmy dates, Cast, References, External links
Wikipedia:WikiProject Film/Peer review/Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
<noinclude>{{Wikiproject peer review a}}</noinclude>
Wikipedia:WikiProject Film/Peer review/Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
[[Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan]]
Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan Article has received Good Article status, but I am interested in possibly getting this to A-class or Featured status. I know there's a fact tag, I added it in a rewrite to add some information without being accused of anti-Semitism. --Lenin and McCarthy | (Complain here) 12:54, 7 March 2007 (UTC) Why don't you put it on film peer review, where you'll get more informed critiques? Daniel Case 17:44, 7 March 2007 (UTC) I thought I had. --Lenin and McCarthy | (Complain here) 18:15, 7 March 2007 (UTC) Sorry, missed that. Daniel Case 18:26, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia:WikiProject Film/Peer review/Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
Daniel Case
Daniel Case Some comments based on a quick perusal. And a disclosure that, long ago, I added the material about "Everbody's Talkin'" and "Born To Be Wild" as allusions to Midnight Cowboy and Easy Rider, so I have some small claim to authorship. But it is so little that I can review this impartially. First, get rid of all the international release dates save those for English-speaking countries. It makes the infobox go on way too long. This is the English Wikipedia and that's the primary audience. Release dates for non-English speaking nations can be mentioned in the article if need be. Take a look at what I did in another article under review, The Devil Wears Prada. Maybe you could subdivide that section on participants' responses a little? It's a bit long even if it is thematically unified. More later. Daniel Case 19:50, 7 March 2007 (UTC) OK. I'm sitting down going through a hard copy with a red pen to catch all the usual copy errors and I'll do a copy edit later. I would add: Move the tag to the end of the production section. You have spoilers there, too. "By reviewers" and "At the box office" should be renamed "Critical" and "Commercial" as the equivalent subsections in other film articles are. "...the 41st best opening week earnings in the UK at that time." Is that really notable? Only if it were in the top ten, IMO. The German comedy award is perhaps not relevant on the English Wikipedia. You don't need to mention, much less link, Midnight Cowboy and "Everybody's Talkin'" twice in the same sentence. OK, I've gone through, did my copyedit and even made some of these changes. I have left some things to you to defend (the German comedy award, the 41st best opening week in Britain). But two more suggestions: I think you could replace the table on the week-by-week gross (not really encylopedic info) with (the film ratings in each country where that info is available). You could probably do more with the criticism of the movie as anti-American. A lot of conservative commentators sounded off on this one; David Brooks and John Tierney put it on the New York Times op-ed page, and Christopher Hitchens has this interesting take at Slate if you can't or don't want to get behind the Times registration firewall. Daniel Case 16:40, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia:WikiProject Film/Peer review/Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan
Table of Content
<noinclude>{{Wikiproject peer review a}}</noinclude>, [[Borat! Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan]], Daniel Case
André Boniface
Short description
André Boniface (14 August 1934 – 8 April 2024) was an international rugby union player for France. His usual position was either on the wing or in the centres. His Test career for France, 1954 through to 1966, included 48 caps and 44 points. Boniface was inducted into the International Rugby Hall of Fame in 2005. Both he and his younger brother Guy Boniface were inducted into the IRB Hall of Fame in March 2011. Boniface died on 8 April 2024, at the age of 89. left|thumb|upright|A statue of André Boniface in Mont-de-Marsan
André Boniface
References
References
André Boniface
External links
External links Category:1934 births Category:2024 deaths Category:Rugby union players from Landes (department) Category:French rugby union players Category:20th-century French sportsmen Category:Rugby union centres Category:Rugby union wings Category:World Rugby Hall of Fame inductees Category:France international rugby union players Category:Stade Montois Rugby players
André Boniface
Table of Content
Short description, References, External links
At Night You Also Sleep
Infobox film
At Night You Also Sleep (De noche también se duerme) is a 1956 Argentine comedy film directed by Enrique Carreras and written by Abel Santacruz. It stars Ana Mariscal, Jorge Rivier, Roberto Escalada and Olga Zubarry, and premiered on 19 January.
At Night You Also Sleep
Plot
Plot A divorced couple find their path to reuniting complicated by another couple. Elvira (Zubarry) swallows some powder and passes out. The doctor (Escalada) is called.
At Night You Also Sleep
Cast
Cast Ana Mariscal as Rosalía Olga Zubarry as Elvira Jorge Rivier as Miguel Roberto Escalada as Dr. Juan Carlos Carreño Francisco Álvarez as Don Ramiro Tono Andreu as Gervasio Héctor Armendáriz as Vicente Elcira Olivera Garcés as Carmen Emilio Vieyra María Esther Podestá as Doña Beba Julia Dalmas Roberto Lombard Nina Marqui Irma Román Fernando Reynal Raquel Beney Gogó Andreu Irma Álvarez
At Night You Also Sleep
Reception
Reception La Nación called the film "equivocal and entangled in smiling comedy". El Mundo wrote: "Enrique Carreras takes the straightest and most comfortable path."
At Night You Also Sleep
References
References
At Night You Also Sleep
External links
External links Category:1956 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Argentine comedy films Category:1956 comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films Category:Films directed by Enrique Carreras
At Night You Also Sleep
Table of Content
Infobox film , Plot, Cast, Reception, References, External links
File:Prelude to space.jpg
Summary
Summary Dust-jacket of Prelude to Space, by Arthur C. Clarke to illustrate an article
File:Prelude to space.jpg
Rationale
Rationale
File:Prelude to space.jpg
Licensing
Licensing Category:Science fiction book cover images
File:Prelude to space.jpg
Table of Content
Summary, Rationale, Licensing
Category:Museums in Tanzania
CatAutoTOC
Category:Entertainment in Tanzania Category:Tourist attractions in Tanzania Tanzania Category:Buildings and structures in Tanzania by type Tanzania Category:Cultural organisations based in Tanzania Category:Educational organisations based in Tanzania
Category:Museums in Tanzania
Table of Content
CatAutoTOC
Requiebro
Multiple issues
is a 1955 Argentine film directed by Carlos Schlieper, starring Carmen Sevilla and Ángel Magaña.
Requiebro
Cast
Cast Carmen Sevilla Ángel Magaña Ricardo Castro Ríos Luis Dávila Manuel Perales Irma Roy Amalia Sánchez Ariño
Requiebro
References
References
Requiebro
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Carlos Schlieper Category:1955 musical comedy films Category:Argentine musical comedy films Category:1950s Argentine films
Requiebro
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Cast, References, External links
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
short description
Maybank Tower () is a skyscraper in Pudu, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The tower serves as the headquarters of Maybank and houses the Maybank Numismatic Museum.
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
History
History The construction of Maybank Tower commenced in 1984 on Court Hill, over the site of a colonial era Sessions Court building, and was completed in 1988. Before the construction of the Petronas Twin Towers in 1995, Maybank Tower was the tallest building in Kuala Lumpur as well as Malaysia, at , around half the height of Petronas Twin Towers. The tower remains a prominent part of the city's skyline.
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
Architecture
Architecture thumb|none|400px|Massing model showing the shape of the top of the Maybank Tower. The floor plan of the tower consists of two square-based blocks that interlock each other at one of their corners. Each of the two block features a roof and lower base that slant at a direction opposite its other block, while the midsection stands in a perpendicular angle. The main access points of the tower are at the two corners of the structure that feature a space formed from the combination of the structure's two blocks, covered by tiered triangular roofs. The architecture takes inspiration from the shape of an upward-pointing sheathed kris, and becomes among the iconic modern Malaysian architecture incorporating traditional elements. Its appearance also inspired the building Jadyn's Tower in SimCity 3000 Unlimited, although altered slightly in height.
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
Transportation
Transportation The tower is accessible within walking distance north of LRT station (which is an interchange with MRT station) or southwest of LRT station of Rapid Rail. A major bus hub is located across Jalan Tun Perak from the tower.
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
See also
See also List of tallest buildings in Kuala Lumpur
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
References
References
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
Further reading
Further reading Category:Office buildings completed in 1987 Category:1987 establishments in Malaysia Category:Skyscraper office buildings in Kuala Lumpur Category:Maybank Category:Buildings and structures in Kuala Lumpur
Maybank Tower (Malaysia)
Table of Content
short description, History, Architecture, Transportation, See also, References, Further reading
Reportaje a un cadáver
Multiple issues
Reportaje a un cadáver is a 1955 Argentine film.
Reportaje a un cadáver
Cast
Cast
Reportaje a un cadáver
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1950s Spanish-language films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Films directed by Belisario García Villar Category:Argentine drama films Category:1955 drama films Category:1950s Argentine films
Reportaje a un cadáver
Table of Content
Multiple issues, Cast, External links
Para vestir santos (film)
Short description
Para vestir santos is a 1955 Argentine romantic drama film directed by Leopoldo Torre Nilsson, from a screenplay by Sixto Pondal Ríos and Carlos Olivari. It stars Tita Merello, Jorge Salcedo, Tomás Simari, José de Ángelis, Myriam de Urquijo and Beatriz Taibo. left|thumbnail|Beatriz Taibo and Tita Merello in the film.
Para vestir santos (film)
Cast
Cast Tita Merello as Martina Brizuela Jorge Salcedo as José Luis Ordóñez Tomás Simari as Don Aldo José de Ángelis Myriam de Urquijo Beatriz Taibo as Carlota Brizuela Frank Nelson as Pichín Brizuela Alba Mujica as Donata
Para vestir santos (film)
External links
External links Category:1955 films Category:1955 romantic drama films Category:Argentine black-and-white films Category:Argentine romantic drama films Category:Films directed by Leopoldo Torre Nilsson Category:1950s Argentine films
Para vestir santos (film)
Table of Content
Short description, Cast, External links
Pecadora (song)
Use mdy dates
"Pecadora" is the second single and title track of Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs's third Spanish album Pecados y Milagros. The song was written by Lila Downs and Paul Cohen, and was released on November 21, 2011. "Pecadora" was announced as the second single from the album on November 19, 2011, via Lila Downs's official fan site.
Pecadora (song)
References
References
Pecadora (song)
External links
External links Lanza Lila Downs Pecadora como 2° Sencillo de Pecados y Milagros Category:2011 singles Category:Ska songs
Pecadora (song)
Table of Content
Use mdy dates, References, External links
Los peores del barrio
Expand language
Los peores del barrio is a 1955 Argentine film directed by Julio Saraceni.
Los peores del barrio
Plot
Plot