Atom-Bombed Children in Hiroshima (1952 Film)
DVD: www.amazon.com thefilmarchive.org Children of Hiroshima (Japanese: 原爆ã®å, Japanese: Genbaku no ko) is a 1952 Japanese film directed by Kaneto ShindÅ. It was entered into the 1953 Cannes Film Festival. Cast Nobuko Otowa – Takako Ishikawa Osamu Takizawa – Iwakichi Niwa Saito – Natsue Morikawa Tsuneko Yamanaka Shinya Ofuji Takashi ItÅ Chikako Hosokawa – Setsu, Takako’s mother Masao Shimizu – Toshiaki, Takako’s father Yuriko Hanabusa – Oine Tanie Kitabayashi – Otoyo Tsutomu Shimomoto – Natsue’s husband Eijirô Tono Taiji Tonoyama – Owner of a ship Jukichi Uno – Koji (scenes deleted) Kaneto ShindÅ (æ–°è—¤ 兼人 ShindÅ Kaneto?, born April 28, 1912), Hiroshima, Japan) is a Japanese film director and screenwriter. Born in Hiroshima, ShindÅ first joined the film developing lab of ShinkÅ Kinema in 1934. He later moved to the art department and began writing scripts on his own. He worked with Kenji Mizoguchi on several films, most notably being in charge of the sets for The 47 Ronin. He made his debut as a screenwriter with the film Nanshin josei in 1940. Moving to ShÅchiku, he began writing scripts for KÅzaburÅ Yoshimura, scoring a critical hit with A Ball at the Anjo House in 1947. ShindÅ and Yoshimura left ShÅchiku in 1950 to form the independent production company Kindai Eiga KyÅkai. In 1951, he made his debut as a director with Aisai monogatari. ShindÅ has often made films dealing with Hiroshima or the atomic bomb, such as Children of Hiroshima, Lucky Dragon No. 5, and …
Posse da Coordenação do Fórum de Educação Étnico Racial da Cidade de Olinda

Oil Discovery and Distribution of Wealth in Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates (1968)
thefilmarchive.org Proven oil reserves in Saudi Arabia are the second largest claimed in the world, estimated to be 267 billion barrels (42×109 m3) (Gbbl hereafter) including 2.5 Gbbl in the Saudi-Kuwaiti neutral zone. These reserves were the largest in the world until Venezuela announced they had increased their proven reserves to 297 Gbbl in January 2011. The Saudi reserves are about one-fifth of the world’s total conventional oil reserves, a large fraction of these reserves comes from a small number of very large oil fields, and past production amounts to 40% of the stated reserves. Oil reserves in the United Arab Emirates, according to its government, are about 98 billion barrels (15.6×109 m3), almost as big as Kuwait’s claimed reserves. Of the emirates, Abu Dhabi has most of the oil with 92 billion barrels (14.6×109 m3) while Dubai has 4 billion barrels (640×106 m3) and Sharjah has 1.5 billion barrels (240×106 m3). Most of the oil is in the Zakum field which is the third largest in the Middle East with an estimated 66 billion barrels (10.5×109 m3). The UAE produces about 2.9 million barrels per day (460×103 m3/d) of total oil liquids, but has stated its intention to increase this to 5 million barrels per day (790×103 m3/d) by 2014. The UAE’s reserves-to-production is about 93 years. The petroleum industry includes the global processes of exploration, extraction, refining, transporting (often by oil tankers and pipelines), and marketing petroleum products. The largest …