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Guillermo Gonzalez Camarena - pioneered Mexican television and inventor of three color TV systems



Guillermo Gonzalez Camarena :
(Guadalajara, 1917 - Puebla, 1965) Mexican engineer who pioneered Mexican television and inventor of three color TV systems. Guillermo González Camarena He studied engineering at the National Polytechnic Institute, Mexico D. F, and he specialized in electronics.
In 1935 he began his research on television, which had already been successfully tested in Berlin in 1931 by Von Ardene and Loewe, although this did not stop his friends and family would question his sanity, for that experiment was not known to the public. González Camarena also built their cameras with waste materials.

Guillermo González Camarena
In 1940 he patented his system to transmit in color, although it had not yet experienced in practice. In 1945 he made the first television broadcasts in film Alameda, and managed to be granted its own channel, Channel 5. The transmitter was built with a small team, moved to a small office of a downtown building in the capital, Mexico Insurance. He only had two receivers, one located in the Mexican League of Radio Experimenters and other XEW station.


His company was far from being commercially competitive, so that was integrated into the company Telesistema Mexican, and González Camarena became responsible for research on signal transmission in color. His sense of patriotism led him toreject a significant financial investment from the United States, eager to enjoy the Mexican patent his invention.
In 1963 he made his first broadcast color system, which gave him great renown. The first international successes obtained during the broadcast of the Olympics in Japan in 1964.
González Camarena was also a great lover of folklore (got to compose some songs of merit), an amateur astronomer and an expert on the history of his country. His death in a car accident between the towns of Puebla Amozoc and when he was just 48 years plunged the country into a great matchu

José María Morelos y Pavón

Mexican priest and insurgent

He was born on September 30, 1765 in Valladolid, now Morelia (Michoacán).

Studied in this city and in his youth was a pupil of Don Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla in the College of San Nicolás, which Hidalgo was rector. At fourteen, he left the city of Valladolid to work in the San Rafael Tahuejo, Felipe Morelos property, his father's cousin. He also worked as a drover.

He taught grammar and rhetoric for two years in Uruapan. His wealthy grandfather, Pedro Pérez Pavón, left a natural son capital for Jose Antonio, who always ordered priest, but to marry the mother of Morelos, requested that capital spend his son and in 1797 was ordained and began to practice as a priest until he joined Hidalgo'srebellion in 1810.

Bridget was related to Almonte, Carácuaro, with which to Juan Nepomuceno Almonte was born in 1803, and Guadalupe Almonte, born in 1809, and although he was responsible for their upbringing and education, did not give his name.

He quickly gain control of a large territory in southern Mexico. The withdrawal of Cuautla, to break the siege on May 2, 1812, he fell from a mule provoking a wound that became infected and kept him sick weeks. On the death of Hidalgo, remained at the forefront of the revolution. In 1813 took Acapulco and, later that year, convened the Congress of Chilpancingo, which issued a declaration of independence, adopted a constitution and named Generalissimo insurgent government. He refused to be treated as 'Highness', proclaimed as 'Servant of the Nation'.

In December 1813, he defeated royalist forces in Santa Maria, so he was forced to stay in a defensive war. Congress dismissed him from his post as chief, and that was part of the triumvirate of the Supreme Government in Apatzingan. Beset by troops sent by the Viceroy Calleja, could not escape and was captured by the Royalists in November 1815, while protecting the Congress in his retreat to Tehuacan.

He was accused of heresy and was robbed of his habits by the Inquisition. José María Morelos y Pavón was handed over to the secularauthorities and executed on December 22, 1815 in San Cristóbal Ecatepec. Coerced by his executioners, retracted in exchange for receiving the sacraments before dying

Lionel Andrés 'Leo' Messi (Spanish pronunciation: [ljoˈnel anˈdɾes ˈmesi], born 24 June 1987) is an Argentine footballer who plays as a forward for La Liga club FC Barcelona and the Argentina national team. He serves as the captain of his country's national football team. By the age of 21, Messi had received Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year nominations. The following year, in 2009, he won his first Ballon d'Or[2] and FIFA World Player of the Year awards. He followed this up by winning the inaugural FIFA Ballon d'Or in 2010,[3] and again in 2011[4] and 2012.[5] He also won the 2010–11 UEFA Best Player in Europe Award. At the age of 24, Messi became Barcelona's all-time top scorer in all official club competitions.[6] At age 25, Messi became the youngest player to score 200 La Liga goals.[7][8]
Consistently rated by commentators, coaches and colleagues as the best footballer in the world and as one of the greatest players in the history of the game,[9][10][11][12][13] Messi is the first football player in history to win four FIFA/Ballons d'Or, which he won consecutively. Messi has won five La Ligas, two Copas del Rey, five Supercopas de España, threeChampions Leagues, two Super Cups and two Club World Cups. In March 2012, Messi made UEFA Champions League history by becoming the first player to score five goals in one match, achieving the feat in a 7–1 win over Bayer Leverkusen.[14] He also matched José Altafini's record of 14 goals in a single Champions League season.[15] Messi became the first player to top-score in four successive Champions League campaigns.[16][17] He set the European record for most goals scored in a season during the 2011–12 season, with 73 goals.[18] In the same season, he set the current goalscoring record in a single La Liga season, scoring 50 goals.[19] On 16 February 2013, Lionel Messi scored his 300th Barcelona goal against Granada.[20]
Messi was the top scorer of the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship with six goals. In 2006, he became the youngest Argentine to play in the FIFA World Cup and he won a runners-up medal at the Copa América tournament the following year, in which he was elected young player of the tournament 21] In 2008, he won his first international honour, an Olympic gold medal, with the Argentina Olympic football team. Sportspro has rated Lionel Messi as the third most marketable athlete in the world. [22] His playing style and stature have drawn comparisons to compatriot Diego Maradona, who himself declared Messi his 'successor'


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