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Ivens and continued
Ivens concentrated on his own project Dive, and Verhaeghen continued as Klinik ( dropping the definite article from the bandname at this point ); sometimes as a solo project, sometimes with various other members.
Both Ivens and Stevens have continued work on Sonar to this date, but also devote time to their other projects.
Soon after their departure, however, they parted company, Capello and Ivens turning northward whilst Serpa Pinto continued eastward.

Ivens and editor
In 1948, he married Bryna Ivens, an editor of Seventeen magazine.

Ivens and Labour
* William Ivens was a DLP and then an Independent Labour Party MLA in Manitoba from 1920 to 1926.
Among the new Labour MLAs were William Ivens, then serving a prison sentence, and Albert E. Smith, who later joined Communist Party of Canada.
While still in prison, Ivens ran as a candidate of the Dominion Labour Party in the provincial election of 1920, and was elected in the city of Winnipeg.
Dixon, Ivens, Woodsworth and most others on the left of the DLP founded the new Independent Labour Party.
The province's various working-class and left-wing parties ran a united campaign in the city, and were rewarded with four seats out of ten: Dixon and William Ivens were elected from the Dominion Labour Party, George Armstrong from the Socialist Party, and John Queen from the Social Democratic Party.

Ivens and during
Ivens was directly involved in labour activism during this period.

Ivens and Winnipeg
Only three party members were elected in 1927, all from Winnipeg -- Queen, William Ivens and Seymour J.
Winnipeg, at the time, elected ten members by preferential balloting ; Ivens finished fifth on the first count and was declared elected on the second after receiving transfers from DLP leader Fred Dixon.
Ivens, Armstrong, Queen and Russell were all serving prison sentences at the time of their election, resulting from their activities in the Winnipeg General Strike.

Ivens and 1919
When the Canadian government suppressed the strike in June 1919, Ivens was arrested on charges of seditious libel and conspiracy ( J. S.

Ivens and Special
* Joris Ivens Special Jury Award International Documentary Festival, Amsterdam

Ivens and .
That same year, Marker organized the omnibus film Loin du Vietnam, a protest against the Vietnam War with segments contributed by Marker, Jean-Luc Godard, Alain Resnais, Agnès Varda, Claude Lelouch, William Klein, Michele Ray and Joris Ivens.
Leftist filmmakers Joris Ivens and Henri Storck directed Borinage ( 1931 ) about the Belgian coal mining region.
Later, Hemingway, Dos Passos, Lillian Hellman and others founded the company Contemporary Historians, which produced another film called The Spanish Earth ( 1937 ), directed by Joris Ivens and edited by van Dongen.
Joris Ivens ( left ) with Ernest Hemingway ( middle ) and Ludwig Renn in the Spanish civil war, 1936 / 37.
Joris Ivens ( 18 November 1898, Nijmegen – 28 June 1989, Paris ) was a Dutch documentary filmmaker and committed communist.
Born Georg Henri Anton Ivens into a wealthy family, Ivens went to work in one of his father's photo supply shops and from there developed an interest in film.
In 1929, Ivens went to the Soviet Union and, to his astonishment, was invited to direct a film on a topic of his own choosing which was the new industrial city of Magnitogorsk.
This was the first film where Ivens and Eisler worked together on.
It was a propaganda film about this new industrial city which was mainly built by forced labourers, who however were portrayed by Ivens as communist volunteers.
With Henri Storck, Ivens made Misère au Borinage ( Borinage, 1933 ), a moving and militant documentary on life in a coal mining region.
From 1936 to 1945, Ivens was based in the United States.
Ivens was, however, known for his anti-fascist and other propaganda films, including The Spanish Earth, for the Spanish loyalists, co-written with Ernest Hemingway and music by Marc Blitzstein and Virgil Thomson.
Spanish Earth was shown at the White House on July 8, 1937 after Ivens, Hemingway, Martha Gellhorn, had had dinner with President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry Hopkins.
In 1944, Ivens made Know Your Enemy: Japan for Frank Capra's U. S. War Department film series Why We Fight.
A combination of not being in step with the Truman Administration and owing to the emerging ' red scare ' on known or suspected Communists by the US government after Roosevelt's death made Ivens leave the United States.
Ivens ' politics also put the kibosh on his first feature film project which was to have starred Greta Garbo.
* 1898 – Joris Ivens, Dutch filmmaker ( d. 1989 )
* November 18 – Joris Ivens, Dutch director ( d. 1989 )
* June 28 – Joris Ivens, Dutch filmmaker ( b. 1898 )
* June 12 – Roberto Ivens, Portuguese explorer of Africa ( d. 1898 )
Other famous Dutch film directors are Dick Maas ( De Lift ), Fons Rademakers ( The Assault ), Jan de Bont ( Speed ), documentary maker Bert Haanstra and Joris Ivens.

continued and editor
Over decades, she has continued to write while employed in a wide variety of jobs — as book reviewer, economic graphanalyst, editor, EKG technician, food analyst, laboratory technician in penicillin research, nurse's aide, office manager, payroll bookkeeper, photographer, pollster, public relations, publicist and store detective.
Jugend: Münchner illustrierte Wochenschrift für Kunst und Leben () was a magazine initiated during 1896 by Georg Hirth ( Hirth remained editor until his death during 1916, and the magazine continued to be published until 1940 ).
Moore gave up the editorship in 1990 to become deputy editor of The Daily Telegraph, though he continued to write a column for the magazine.
The following Spring the magazine was renamed Freedom Magazine, and Browne continued as its editor until February 1964 when he turned his full-time attention to the American Way Features, Inc.
The Shadow, set in our modern era, was continued the following year, in 1987, as a monthly DC comics series by writer Andy Helfer ( editor of the mini-series ), and was drawn primarily by artists Bill Sienkiewicz ( issues 1-6 ) and Kyle Baker ( issues 8-19 and two Shadow Annuals ).
The " Magnolia Herald " was established by Luke W. Conerly in 1875 and he continued as its proprietor and editor until 1878.
Coe Finch took over the paper in the 1880s and continued until John Wildrick became editor in 1900.
Cosmopolitans circulation continued to decline for another decade until Helen Gurley Brown became chief editor in 1965 and remodeled the magazine as New Cosmopolitan.
Returning to England in 1861 he worked as a journalist on the staff of the Daily Telegraph, a newspaper with which he continued to be associated as editor for more than forty years, and later became its editor-in-chief.
Though the paper became a publicly listed company in 1900, the family continued to hold a majority shareholding until the 1960s ( even after the family lost control, the great-grandson of the original purchaser was the paper's London editor ).
Even with this censorship, calypsos continued to push boundaries, with a variety of ways to slip songs past the scrutinizing eyes of the editor.
His first issue was dated July 1952, and he continued as editor on the masthead for some years.
The new editor was Ejler Jakobsson, though Pohl continued to be listed as editor emeritus on the masthead until the July – August 1970 issue.
The two continued to work together at Yale, with Hadden as chairman and Luce as managing editor of The Yale Daily News.
In 1883 he succeeded Leslie Stephen as editor of the Cornhill Magazine and continued in the post until the breakdown of his health in 1896.
Herriman's continued with Hearst until June 1905, when he left the paper, possibly due to the new sports editor being unsympathetic to cartoonists.
From 1920 until his death, Nabokov was the editor of the Russian émigré newspaper Rul (" The Rudder "), which continued to advocate a pro-Western democratic government in Russia.
As editor of the weeklies Die vernünftigen Tadlerinnen ( 1725-26 ) and Der Biedermann ( 1727 ), Gottsched started on his career of untiring critical activity, continued later in other literary journals.
He continued to write and publish throughout his career, and also served as editor of the magazine Christianity and Crisis from 1941 through 1966.
As early as 1836, with Hoffmann von Fallersleben, he started the Altdeutsche Blätter, which in 1841 gave place to the Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum, of which he continued editor till his death.
Karlgren had been in close contact with Andersson for many years, and also succeeded Andersson as editor of the museum's journal, the Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities ( BMFEA, 1929 -) and continued in this position until the 1970s.
It was during this decline that 3W continued its publication of S & T ( specifically issues 112 to 139 ), and James Dunnigan returned for a brief stint as editor of the magazine ( Keith Poulter was the editor from issues # 112 to # 119, Ty Bomba from # 120 to # 129, James Dunnigan from # 130 to # 139 ).
The premise, original story outlines, and the original characters were devised by David Sale who also wrote the scripts for the first episodes and continued as script editor for much of the show's run.

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