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Nicolae Ceaușescu (left), his parents (center) and his wife, Elena (right), in 1968. Nicolae Ceaușescu, who led Romania from 1965 to 1989, served as General Secretary of the Romanian Communist Party. Ceaușescu had a large family, several members of which wielded influence in Communist Romania. Below are given outlines of his immediate family ...
Ceaușescu was born in the small village of Scornicești, Olt County, being the third of nine children of a poor peasant family (see Ceaușescu family). Based on his birth certificate, he was born on 23 January [ O.S. 5 February] 1918, [ 6 ] [ 7 ] rather than the official 26 January [ O.S. 8 February] 1918—his birth was registered with a ...
A few days before the premiere at the Odeon Theatre in Bucharest [43] in 2010, Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu's son-in-law Mircea Oprean (the widower of Zoia, who died in 2006), forced his way into rehearsals, saying that he and his brother-in-law Valentin Ceaușescu had registered the name "Ceaușescu" as a trademark in 2008, and it could not be ...
In the film, Dragoş is trying to understand how his family were able to leave Romania in the early 80s, during the most oppressive period of Nicolae Ceausescu’s rule. Dragoş also seeks to ...
Family Guy is an American animated sitcom created by Seth MacFarlane for the Fox Broadcasting Company.The series premiered on January 31, 1999, following Super Bowl XXXIII, with the rest of the first season airing from April 11, 1999.
"Road to Europe" (originally called "European Road Show" [1]) is the 20th episode of the third season of the animated comedy series Family Guy, and the 48th episode overall. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on February 7, 2002.
"Road to Germany" is the third episode of Family Guy´s seventh season. It was written by Patrick Meighan who had written "Road to Rupert". The episode was directed by series regular Greg Colton, who had worked on "Brian Goes Back to College", "No Meals on Wheels" and also "8 Simple Rules for Buying My Teenage Daughter". [2]
"Breaking Out Is Hard to Do" is the first Family Guy episode to be written by Tom Devanney. [3] When Stewie attempts to asphyxiate himself in the supermarket, he was originally meant to state "Either I was a C-section or you're Stretch Vagstrong", which would have been a reference to the Stretch Armstrong action figure, but broadcasting standards prohibited them from showing it.