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In the 1960s pioneering professionals like that of Herman Feifel (1959), Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1969), and Cicely Saunders (1967) encouraged behavioral scientists, clinicians, and humanists to pay attention and to study death-related topics. This initiated the death-awareness movement and began the widespread study of death-related behavior ...
Medical Heritage Library b21536569 (User talk:Fæ/IA books#Fork10) (batch 1751-1899 #52698) File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
Cómo Será La Mujer; Pajarillo Montañero; El Día Que Seas Para Mí; Me Voy Pa'l Pueblo; Venus; Novio Celoso; El Amor Que Se Alejó; Si Supiera Ella; Acapulco, Eres Mi Amor; Quizás, Quizás, Quizás; In 2003, this album was re-released in CD format by Univision Music Group with a different track listing: [1] Cómo Será La Mujer; Pajarillo ...
The Institute of Women (Instituto de las Mujeres, formerly Instituto de la Mujer) is a Spanish autonomous agency attached to the Ministry of Equality. [3] It was established in 1983, "with its main aim ... the promotion of conditions to facilitate social equality between the sexes and the participation of women in political, cultural, economic and social life".
The plot is set in a futuristic 2011 Madrid, capital of the 3rd (Spanish) Republic. [2] Extremely ugly woman Lola Otero is transformed into a beauty in the wake of an experiment carried out by a mad scientist, thereby going into a killing rampage to take revenge for all the humilliations she has suffered.
A Woman Is a Woman (French: Une femme est une femme) is a 1961 French experimental [3] musical romantic comedy film written and directed by Jean-Luc Godard, starring Jean-Paul Belmondo, Anna Karina and Jean-Claude Brialy.
Autopsy (1890) by Enrique Simonet. Thanatology is the scientific study of death and the losses brought about as a result. It investigates the mechanisms and forensic aspects of death, such as bodily changes that accompany death and the postmortem period, as well as wider psychological and social aspects related to death.
La Mujer Moderna was a Mexican weekly feminist magazine founded by Hermila Galindo and published between 1915 and 1919. Between September 16, 1915 and September 16, 1919, 102 issues were published in México City, México. [1] The magazine had weekly, then monthly publications. The name La Mujer Moderna was changed to Mujer Moderna as time ...