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❤️ George Hirliman 💀

"George Hirliman (1901–1952) was a film producer. Biography Hirliman was born September 8, 1901 in Fort Lee, New Jersey. He married Eleanor Hunt, an actress, and the couple adopted Georgelle Hirliman. He started his career at the Life Photo Film Corporation as an office boy and worked his way up to film director at Hirlagraph Motion Pictures, the largest film lab at that time. In 1924, his production company purchased the Solax Studios and renovated the two stages, and studios. The studio building was later destroyed in a fire. When he moved to Hollywood, he worked five years at Consolidated Films working on production and financing. During his tenure there, he made 30 feature films. In 1935, Hirliman produced De la Sarten a Fuego / From the Frying Pan into the Fire, an English and duel Spanish production. In 1936, he produced Reefer Madness and a series of four "G-Man" films starring his wife. In 1936, he patented Hirlicolor. It was a two-color process that didn’t need additional lighting and any color film lab could develop. During this time, he worked with Consolidated Film Industries. In 1941, he was working at the Colonnade Picture Studio in Miami. In 1943, Hirliman’s Film Classics contracted Hal Roach Studios to re-release much of the studios films where they also re- edited the films and threw away the title sequences. He died on March 30, 1952 in New York City, New York. Selected filmography * Men o’ War (1929) * Pack Up Your Troubles (1932) * Busy Bodies (1933) * From the Frying Pan into the Fire / De la Sarten a Fuego (1935) * Captain Calamity / El Capitan Tormenta (1935) * Reefer Madness (1936) * Yellow Cargo (1936) * The Devil on Horseback (1936) * El Carnival del Diablo (1937) * Navy Spy (1937) * Daniel Boone (1936) * Bank Alarm (1937) * El Dia Que Me Quieres (1938) External links * References American film producers 1901 births 1952 deaths "

❤️ Jules Gilliéron 💀

"Jules Gilliéron (December 21, 1854 – April 26, 1926) was a Swiss-French linguist and dialectologist. From 1883 until his death, he taught dialectology at the École pratique des hautes études in Paris. In 1887, he co-founded the Revue des patois gallo-romans (Journal of Gallo-Romance dialects), which was published until 1893. His most notable work was the monumental Atlas Linguistique de la France (Linguistic Atlas of France), published between 1902 and 1910. Selected works * La Faillite de l'étymologie phonétique: résumé de conférences faites à l'École pratique des hautes études (1919), Neuveville: Beerstecher. * Atlas Linguistique de la France (1902–1910) (with Edmond Edmont), Paris: E. Champion. * Pathologie et thérapeutique verbales (1921), Paris: E. Champion. * Les étymologies des étymologistes et celles du peuple (1922), Paris: E. Champion. * Ménagiana du XXe siècle (1922), Paris: E. Champion. * Thaumaturgie linguistique (1923), Paris: E. Champion. References Linguists Swiss-French people 1854 births 1926 deaths École Nationale des Chartes alumni "

❤️ Masum Khan 💀

"Masum Khan was a zamindar of East Bengal. He was the son and successor of Bara Bhuiyan leader Musa Khan and the grandson of Isa Khan. Rule Musa Khan died in April 1623. Bengal Subahdar Ibrahim Khan Fath-i-Jang chose his eldest son Masum Khan as successor of his estate. Khan served in the Siege of Hugli in 1632 by the Mughal army against the Portuguese. Again he took part in the Mughal invasion of Assam in 1636. References 1604 births 1623 deaths "

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