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Edwin Lutyens Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens, OM, KCIE (29 March 1869 – 1 January 1944) was a leading 20th century English architect who is known for imaginatively adapting traditional architectural styles to the requirements of his era. He designed many English country houses and was instrumental in the design and building of New Delhi.
Edwin M. Stanton Edwin McMasters Stanton (December 19, 1814 – December 24, 1869), was an American lawyer, politician, United States Attorney General in 1860-61 and Secretary of War through most of the American Civil War and Reconstruction era.
Edwin Manton Sir Edwin Manton (January 22, 1909 - October 1, 2005) was a driving force in the creation of the American International Group (AIG), a collector of paintings by John Constable and his contemporaries, and a generous benefactor to the arts, the church and medicine.
Edwin McCain Edwin McCain (born January 20, 1970 in Greenville, South Carolina) is an alternative and indie rock singer-songwriter. While his albums are released under his name, he does have a permanent band, referred to as the Edwin McCain Band.
Edwin Morgan Professor Edwin Morgan (born April 27, 1920) is a Scottish poet and translator who is associated with the Scottish Renaissance. He is widely recognised as one of the foremost Scottish poets of the 20th century.
Edwin Moses Edwin Corley Moses (born in Dayton, Ohio August 31, 1955) is an American track and field athlete who won gold medals in the 400-meter hurdles at the 1976 and 1984 Olympics. Between 1977 and 1987, Moses won 107 consecutive finals (122 consecutive races).
Edwin Muir Edwin Muir (15 May 1887 - 3 January, 1959) was a ScottishEncyclopædia Britannica, "one of the chief Scottish poets of his day"New Criterion "the Scottish poet Edwin Muir" poet, novelist and translator born on a farm in Deerness on the Orkney Islands in the remote northeast of Scotland. Remembered for his deeply felt and vivid poetry in plain, unostentatious language with few stylistic preoccupations, Muir is a relatively little known but significant modern poet.
Edwin Myers Edwin Earl Myers (December 18, 1896 - August 1978) was an American athlete who competed in the men's pole vault. He competed at the 1920 Summer Olympics and won bronze, behind Danish polevaulter Henry Peterson who won silver.
Edwin Nunez Edwin (Martinez) Nunez (born May 27, 1963 in Humacao, Puerto Rico) was a pitcher for the Seattle Mariners (1982-88), New York Mets (1988), Detroit Tigers (1989-90), Milwaukee Brewers (1991-92), Texas Rangers (1992) and Oakland Athletics (1993-94).
Edwin O. Ware, Sr. Edwin Oswald Ware, Sr. (October 29, 1853 -- December 6, 1933), was a Baptist clergyman and educator who is considered to have been the principal founder of Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana (Rapides Parish).
Edwin Odesseiron Edwin Odesseiron is a prominent fictional character in the classic Baldur's Gate series, a Dungeons & Dragons computer role-playing game created by Bioware, which takes place in the Forgotten Realms. Edwin is an evil mage, bent on his own agendas, rather than that of the player character, and in certain situations his personal goals and connections will play into the storyline.
Edwin R. Fellows Edwin R. Fellows (1865 - 1945) of Torrington designed the first flat turret lathe, and in 1896 built a gear shaper which permitted the manufacture of effective and reliable gear transmissions for the soon-to-come automobile industry.
Edwin RaĂşl Sandoval de la Torre Edwin Raul Sandoval de la Torre, (born in Mexicali, Baja California) is a Mexican actor and singer. Known by his stage name RaĂşl, he is best known by being one of the members of the first generation of La Academia, (Mexican version of American Idol), produced by TV Azteca
Edwin Ray Guthrie Edwin Ray Guthrie (9 January 1886 - 23 April 1959) was an American behavioral psychologist. Educated at the University of Nebraska and the University of Pennsylvania, he played an important role in the development of the contiguity theory of learning.
Edwin Rosario Edwin "El Chapo" Rosario (1961-1997) could be considered a boxing version of the Puerto Rican plant Mori-vivi (Mori-Vivi means dead-alive in Spanish). Unfortunately, his long battle with a suspected drug addiction caused him to die in truth at the age of 36.
Edwin Rumill Edwin Rumill was a prominent sportswriter in the Boston area for approximately 40 years. A member of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, he wrote articles and editorials for the Christian Science Monitor from 1932 until his retirement in 1972.
Edwin S. Broussard Edwin Sidney Broussard (December 4, 1874 - November 19, 1934) was a United States Senator from Louisiana. He was born in the village of Loureauville in Iberia Parish in the sugar-growing country of south Louisiana and attended the public schools.
Edwin Seroussi Edwin Seroussi is a leading contemporary musicologist. Currently professor of musicology and director of the Jewish Music Research Centre at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he examines Jewish musical traditions in North Africa and the Middle East, as well as Israeli popular music.
Edwin Shaughnessy Edwin Thomas "Ed" Shaughnessy (b. January 29, 1929) is a big band and jazz drummer best known for his long association with Doc Severinsen and the The NBC Orchestra on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.
Edwin Schlossberg Edwin Arthur Schlossberg, founder and principal of ESI Design, is an internationally recognized designer, author and artist. For more than 25 years, Schlossberg has been designing interactive, participatory experiences, beginning in 1977 with the first hands-on learning environment in the U.
Edwin Smith (photographer) Edwin Smith (1912 - 1971) was a British photographer known for his distinctive vignettes of English gardens, landscapes, and architecture. On his own or in partnership with his wife, the artist and writer Olive Cook, he authored or contributed to numerous books during his lifetime and his photographs are still regularly used today.
Edwin Smith papyrus The Edwin Smith papyrus is the world's earliest known medical document, written around the 17th century BCE, but thought to be based on material from as early as 3000 BCE. It is an ancient textbook on trauma surgery, and describes anatomical observations and the examination, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of numerous injuries in exquisite detail.
Edwin Stanton McCook Edwin Stanton McCook (March 26, 1837 – September 11, 1873) was a Union Army general during the American Civil War and a postbellum politician in the Dakota Territory. He was assassinated in office while serving as acting governor.
Edwin Stephenson Edwin "Ned" Stephenson, also erroneously called Edward, often Ned or Merry Ned, was wicket-keeper of the Yorkshire County Cricket Club in the 1850s and 1860s. He was born at Headford Street, Sheffield on 5 June 1832 and died at Tue Brook Asylum for Inebriates in Liverpool on 5 July 1898.
Edwin Sweetland Edwin Regur Sweetland (January 10, 1875 - October 21, 1951) was a coach and athletic administrator at several universities, including Syracuse, Ohio State, Colgate, Kentucky, Miami University, West Virginia, Tulane, and Alfred University. During his career he has been head coach of football, basketball, track and field and crew.
Edwin Tappan Adney Edwin Tappan Adney (July 13, 1868 in Athens, Ohio - October 10, 1950) was an artist, a writer, a photographer and the man credited with saving the art of birch bark canoe construction from oblivion. He built more than 100 models of different types, which are now housed at the Mariners' Museum in Newport News, VA.
Edwin Tennyson d'Eyncourt Admiral Edwin Clayton Tennyson d’Eyncourt CB RN (1813 - 14 January 1903) was a distinguished British naval officer. The second son of Charles Tennyson d'Eyncourt, and a first cousin of the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, he entered naval college in 1826 and became a lieutenant in 1837.
Edwin Thorne, II Edwin Thorne (20 December 1914, New York City - 15 October 2002, Grand Junction, Colorado) was born into a wealthy American family with family link to John Kerry. He attended the Harvard Business School Advanced Management Program.
Edwin Wakelin Edwin Wakelin (18 October 1880 - 13 August 1925) was an English cricketer who played a single first-class game, for Worcestershire against Essex in 1910; he scored a mere 6 in his only innings before being dismissed by Walter Mead.
Edwin Warfield Edwin Warfield (May 7, 1848 – March 31, 1920), a member of the United States Democratic Party, was the 45th Governor of Maryland in the United States from 1904 to 1908. He was born in 1848 in Oakdale, Howard County, Maryland, and died in 1920 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Edwin White Edwin White (born, South Hadley, Massachusetts 1817; died Saratoga Springs, New York 1877) was an American painter who studied in Paris, Rome, and Florence and later taught at the National Academy of Design, in New York.
Edwin Whitefield Edwin Whitefield (1816 – 1892) is a landscape artist who is best known for his lithographed views of North American cities and for a number of illustrated books on colonial homes in New England. See: pictorial maps
Edwin Wyndham-Quin, 3rd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl Edwin Richard Wyndham-Quin, 3rd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl (19 May 1812–6 October 1871) was a British Peer. The son of Windham Henry Quin, 2nd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, he succeeded to the Earldom on the death of his father.
Edwina Booth Edwina Booth (September 13, 1909 - May 18, 1991) was an American actress born Josephine Constance Woodruff in Provo, Utah. She is best known for the 1931 film Trader Horn during the filming of which she contracted an illness which effectively ended her movie career.
Edwina Hart Edwina Hart AM MBE, (born 26 April 1957) is Welsh Assembly Minister for Social Justice and Regeneration and Labour Party assembly member for Gower. Edwina was born and raised in Gowerton where she attended Gowerton Girls Grammar School.
Edwina Hayes Edwina Hayes (born 6 June 1973, in Dublin, Ireland) is an English singer-songwriter. She grew up in Preston, Lancashire before moving to East Yorkshire where she gained her first musical experience playing cover versions.
Edwina Mountbatten, Countess Mountbatten of Burma Edwina Cynthia Annette Mountbatten, Countess Mountbatten of Burma, CI, GBE, DCVO (28 November 1901–21 February 1960) was an English heiress, socialite, relief-worker and the wife of the 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma.
Edwinxp EDWinXP or Electronic Design for Windows is a commercially available PCB design integrated CAD/CAE package. An electronic design engineer can use the computerized tools provided in EDWinXP to create an electronic circuit, design the PCB and fabricate PCBs.
Edwould "Edwould" was the third single from Larrikin Love, and the first to be taken from their debut album The Freedom Spark. It was also the band's first major label release and the first to receive full distribution, and subsequently reached number 49 on the UK charts.
Edythe Morahan de Lauzon Edythe Morahan de Lauzon (or Morahan-de Lauzon) was a Canadian poet who published Angels' Songs from the Golden City of the Blessed in 1918 and From The Kingdom Of The Stars in 1922. She lived in Quebec and was a committed Christian and spiritualist.
Edythe Wright Edythe "Dee Dee" Wright (born May 14, 1907 in Bayonne, New Jersey; died October 28, 1965) was a singer best known for her work with Tommy Dorsey. She worked in Dorsey's orchestra from 1935 to autumn of 1939.
ED Denson Eugene "ED" Denson (the capitalization of both letters in his first name is his own spelling!) is an American music group manager, producer, record label owner, and - later - lawyer, who has made notable contributions to folk, blues, and early San Francisco rock.
ED-209 The Enforcement Droid Series 209 (or ED-209) is a fictional law enforcement robot featured as one of the design and special effect highlights of the movie RoboCop (1987), and its two sequels. ED-209 serves as a heavily-armed obstacle and foil to RoboCop's title character and others throughout the series, as well as a source of comic relief due to its tendency to malfunction.
ED60 electric locomotive The Bo-Bo wheel arrangement ED60 class is generally considered the first of the so-called second-generation DC electric locomotive types featuring increased-power traction motors. Despite its diminutive size, the ED60 design offered performance comparable with the much larger EF15 1Co+Co1 design weighing almost twice as much.
EDA database An EDA database is a database specialized for the purpose of electronic design automation. These application specific databases are required because general purpose databases have historically not provided enough performance for EDA applications.
EDAG EDAG, which stands for Engineering + Design AG, is a German firm noted for its concept cars such as EDAG Biwak estate concept on the Beetle, the EDAG Pontiac Solstice Hardtop and the EDAG Show Car No. 8 based on smart mechanicals.
EDAT EDAT (or Engineering Design and Appropriate Technology) was an undergraduate university course offered at Warwick University since 1980, the final students of which will graduate in 2007. Although accredited by the Institute of Mechanical Engineers, EDAT's primary focus was on engineering development for third world countries and the impact of technologies on the environment.
EDeveloper eDeveloper by Magic Software Enterprises (Nasdaq:MGIC), is a composite application development environment that allows the rapid creation and customization of large-scale and complex distributed applications. In eDeveloper, complete application functionality - including data structures, business rules, program logic and presentation - is developed entirely in a table-driven, point-and-click programming environment.
EDEKA The EDEKA Group is the largest German supermarket corporation, currently holding a market share of 26%. Founded in 1898, it consists today of several cooperatives of independent supermarkets all operating under the umbrella organisation EDEKA ZENTRALE AG & Co KG, headquartered in Hamburg.
EDGAR EDGAR, the Electronic Data-Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system, performs automated collection, validation, indexing, acceptance, and forwarding of submissions by companies and others who are required by law to file forms with the U.S.
EDHEC Business School EDHEC or École De Hautes Études Commerciales du Nord is a French business school founded in 1906. It has three campuses, one in Lille, one in Nice, where it absorbed the Theseus International Management Institute, and the latest was founded in 2006 in Paris' business district, La Défense.
EDisplay eDisplay srl is a software development company in Sardinia, Italy with offices in Milan, Italy. Founded in 1998, they specialize in web development tools; they have been developing web productivity software since 2001 and are among the leaders in the e-commerce industry in Italy.
EDINA EDINA, based at Edinburgh University Data Library, is a JISC-funded national datacentre. It offers the UK tertiary education and research community networked access to a library of data, information and research resources.
EDIY Software eDIY Software Web Site Builder is a hosted web publishing application (also known as content management system) written in Visual Basic using a MSSQL database backend. eDIY Software is used to create, publish and manage e-commerce and service business web sites.
EDNS EDNS is an extension of the DNS protocol which allows more flags, label types and return codes to be defined, and enhances the transport of DNS data in UDP packets. The version of EDNS specified by RFC 2671 is known as EDNS0.
EDonkey network The eDonkey network (also known as eDonkey2000 network or eD2k) is a peer-to-peer file sharing network used primarily to exchange audio and video files and computer software. Like most file sharing networks, it is decentralized; files are not stored on a central server but are exchanged directly between users based on the peer-to-peer principle.
EDRAM eDRAM stands for "embedded DRAM", a capacitor-based dynamic random access memory usually integrated on the same die or in the same package as the main ASIC or processor, as opposed to external DRAM modules and transistor-based SRAM typically used for caches.
EDRMS The initialism EDRMS stands for Electronic Document and Records Management System. It describes the combined technologies of an Electronic document management system and an Electronic Records Management System as a complete integrated system.
EDS Byron Nelson Championship The EDS Byron Nelson Championship is a golf tournament on the PGA Tour. The tournament is held in May at the Four Seasons Resort and Club in the master-planned communities of Las Colinas of Irving, Texas, a suburb of Dallas.
EDSA III EDSA III (pronounced EDSA Tres) was a very large protest rally that was sparked by the arrest in April 2001 of newly deposed President Joseph Estrada of the Philippines. The rally was held for several days in a major highway in Metro Manila, the Epifanio de los Santos Avenue or EDSA, which eventually culminated in an attempt to storm the Malacanang presidential palace.
EDSA Micro Corp. EDSA is a privately-held developer of electrical power system design and simulation software; the Company is credited with the emerging new power systems science called "Power Analytics." Headquartered in San Diego, California, EDSA has worldwide operations that include 30 sales, distribution, and support offices located throughout North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
EDSA Revolution of 1986 The EDSA Revolution, also referred to as the People Power Revolution and the Philippine Revolution of 1986, was a mostly nonviolent mass demonstration in the Philippines. Four days of peaceful action by millions of Filipinos in Metro Manila led to the downfall of the authoritarian regime of President Ferdinand Marcos and the installation of Corazon Aquino as president of the Republic.
EDSA Revolution of 2001 The EDSA Revolution of 2001, also called by the local media as EDSA II (pronounced as Edsa dos) or the Second People Power Revolution, is the common name of the four-day popular revolution that peacefully overthrew Philippine president Joseph Estrada in January 2001. He was succeeded by his then vice president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.
EDSA Shrine The EDSA Shrine (official name: Our Lady of Peace Quasi-Parish) is a small church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila located at the intersection of Ortigas Avenue and Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA) in Quezon City. The shrine, built in 1989 originally to commemorate the memories of the First People Power Revolution and its peaceful outcome, stands on the site of two peaceful demonstrations that toppled Philippine presidents Ferdinand Marcos (the First People Power Revolution or EDSA I) and Joseph Estrada (the Second People Power Revolution or EDSA II).
EDSAC EDSAC (Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator) was an early British computer (one of the first computers to be created). The machine, having been inspired by John von Neumann's seminal EDVAC report, was constructed by Professor Sir Maurice Wilkes and his team at the University of Cambridge Mathematical Laboratory in England.
EDSBS EDSBS is the acronym for a college football blogsite named "Every Day Should Be Saturday". The site was founded by two self-proclaimed University of Florida Gator football fans using the aliases "Orson Swindle" and "Stranko Montana".
EDUCAUSE EDUCAUSE is a nonprofit association whose mission is to advance higher education by promoting the intelligent use of information technology. Membership is open to institutions of higher education, corporations serving the higher education information technology market, and other related associations and organizations.
EDX London EDX London Ltd is a derivatives exchange managed by the London Stock Exchange. The market was set up in 2003 to combine the liquidity and expertise of the LSE with advanced derivatives technology offered by OMX AB.
Ee ja nai ka was a complex of carnivalesque religious celebrations and communal activities which occurred in many parts of Japan from June 1867 to May 1868, at the end of the Edo period and the start of the Meiji restoration. In West Japan, it appeared at first in the form of dancing festivals, often related to public works, rain magic, or dances for the dead.
Eef Barzelay Eef Barzelay is a American musician, born in Israel. Most notably known as the principal songwriter and singer of alt country band Clem Snide, he has performed in a number of Boston-based bands, as well as toured as a solo act, both as headliner and as international support for artists such as Ben Folds.
Eefke Mulder Eefke Mulder (born on October 13, 1977 in Nijmegen, Gelderland) is a Dutch field hockey player, who playd as a midfielder for Dutch club Nijmegen. She made her debut for the Netherlands national team on June 2, 1997 at the Champions Trophy in Berlin.
Eega Beeva Eega Beeva (full name: Pittisborum Psercy Pystachi Pseter Psersimmon Plummer-Push) is an alien human from the future from the fictional Mickey Mouse universe. He first appeared in the Mickey Mouse comic strip adventure titled The Man of Tomorrow.
Eegee's eegee's is a chain of fast food restaurants in Tucson, Arizona. It specializes in submarine sandwiches, but it is most famous for its frozen slush drinks, officially called "eegee's drinks" but colloquially known simply as "eegees.
Eel Brook Common Eel Brook Common is a park in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, close to Fulham Broadway Tube, and its southern boundary on Kings Road, Chelsea. It is not particularly remarkable, but for the fact that in 1883 and 1891 a then local amateur football team - now Fulham F.
Eel catfish The eel catfish, Channallabes apus, the only member of its genus Channallabes, is found in the muddy swamps of the tropics of western Africa. The fish is 30 - 40 cm long and is notable for the ability to propel itself out of the water to catch prey.
Eel ladder An eel ladder is type of fish ladder designed to help eels swim past barriers, such as dams and weirs or even natural barriers, to reach upriver feeding grounds. (Many eels are catadromous, living in fresh water but spawning at sea.
Eel Pie Island Eel Pie Island, in the River Thames at Twickenham in London, can be reached only by footbridge or boat. Eel Pie Island was earlier called Twickenham Ait and, before that, The Parish Ait; even earlier the island was three separate aits.
Eel River (California) The Eel River is a major river system of the northern Pacific coast of California in the United States. Approximately 200 mi (322 km) long, it drains a rugged area in the Coast Ranges between the Sacramento Valley and the ocean, flowing northwest parallel to the coast for most of its course.
Eel River Converter Station The Eel River Converter Station is the designation of the first operative HVDC system equipped with thyristors. The Eel River Converter Station was the first operating solid-state HVDC converter station in the world.
Eelco van Asperen On the first webpages created by Tim Berners-Lee, Eelco van Asperen was credited as having contributed to the "WWW project". Asperen "ported the line-mode browser the PC under PC-NFS; developed a curses version.
Eelpout The eelpouts are a family (Zoarcidae) of perciform ray-finned fish. As the name suggests, they are somewhat eel-like in appearance, with elongate bodies and the dorsal and anal fins continuous with the caudal fin.
Eeltail catfish The eeltail catfish are a family (Plotosidae) of catfish whose tails are elongated in an eel-like fashion. Native to the Indo-West Pacific area (Japan/Australia/Fiji), the family of about 36 species in 10 genera includes both freshwater and marine types.
Eemian interglacial The Eemian interglacial era (known as the Sangamon interglacial in North America, the Ipswichian interglacial in the UK, and the Riss-WĂĽrm interglacial in the Alps) is the second-to-latest interglacial era of the Ice Age. It began about 131,000 years ago.
Eemian sea The Eemian sea was a body of water located approximately where the Baltic sea is now during the last or Eemian interglacial, MIS 5e, roughly 130,000 to 115,000 BP. Sea level was 5 to 7 meters higher globally than it is today, due to the prior release of glacial water.
Een Ander Joods Geluid Een Ander Joods Geluid (A Different Jewish Voice) (EAJG) is a Dutch-Jewish organisation founded in May 2001 to promote the public debate concerning Israel. It wants to break the perceived silence in the Dutch-Jewish community concerning the occupation of the Palestinian Territories by Israel, and strives to support peace activities in this same area.
Een Beetje Een Beetje (sometimes `n Beetje, English translation: "A Bit", or "A Little Bit" more accurately) was the winning song of the Eurovision Song Contest 1959 performed in Dutch by Teddy Scholten representing the Netherlands, the second Dutch victory in the first four years of the Contest.
Eenadu Eenadu (ఈనాడు), headquartered in Hyderabad, India, is the largest circulated Telugu news daily in the state of Andhra Pradesh. According to NRS (National Readership Studies) 2005 it has got a readership of 1,13,49,000 and is the third most read daily in India.
Eendracht (1615 ship) The Eendracht was an early 17th Century Dutch ship, launched in 1615 in the service of the Dutch East India Company. It was captained by Dirk Hartog when he made the second recorded landfall by a European on Australian soil, in 1616.
Eendracht (1655 ship) The Eendracht or Eendragt ("Concord" - often less precisely translated as "Unity") was the usual flagship of the confederate navy of the United Provinces (a precursor state of The Netherlands) between 1655 and 1665. Eendragt was the more common spelling in the 17th century; Eendracht is the modern Dutch standard spelling.
Eenie Meenie Records Eenie Meenie Records is an independent record label that specializes in signing indie pop, indie rock and electronica artists, such as The Faraway Places, From Bubblegum to Sky, Seksu Roba and Troubled Hubble. Notably, the label has also released albums from side bands of The Apples in Stereo members; 010 by Ulysses and Songs About the Ocean by The High Water Marks (containing Apples members Robert Schneider and Hilarie Sidney, respectively).
Eeny, meeny, miny, moe Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, which can be spelled a number of ways, is a children's counting rhyme, used to select "it" for games and similar purposes. The rhyme has been around in various forms since the 1850s or earlier, and is common today in many countries.
Eeolas Institute The Eeolas Institute is a joint venture between Dublin City University and Citywest Business Campus created to help transform the academic & enterprise relationship in Ireland. It is located near Saggart in southwest Dublin.
Eerie Eerie was a magazine of horror comics introduced in 1966 by Warren Publishing, however by around issue #80 it leaned more toward science fiction/adventure fantasy (with a horror theme). The first issue, in early 1966, had only a small limited 200-issue run of an "ashcan" edition.
Eerie Publications Eerie Publications was a publisher of black-and-white, horror-anthology comics magazines. Less well-known and more downscale than the field's leader, Warren Publishing (Creepy, Eerie, Vampirella), the New York City-based company was one of several related publishing ventures run by comic-book artist and 1970s magazine entrepreneur Myron Fass.
Eerik Siikasaari Eerik Siikasaari, born in 1957, is a Finnish jazz bassist who is probably best known as a member of Trio Töykeät, a Finnish jazz trio. He is also the bassist of Espoo Big Band, and actively teaches music in Espoo-based Pop/Jazz-school Ebeli.
Eero Koivistoinen Eero Koivistoinen (born 13 January 1946) is a Finnish jazz musician and saxophone player, who started his career in the mid-1960s. Koivistoinen has worked as a musician, composer, arranger, conductor, producer and educator.
Eero Yli-Vakkuri Eero Yli-Vakkuri (born February 3, 1981, in Helsinki, Finland) is a contemporary Finnish artist. His pluralistic practice spans a broad range of media including performance, video, happenings, and projects using sound&music.
Eerste Kamer The Eerste Kamer (literally First Chamber in Dutch) is the Upper House or Senate of the Netherlands parliament, the States-General. (The Netherlands calls its Upper House the "First Chamber" and its Lower House the "Second Chamber", reversing the normal usage in other democracies.
Eerste Nederlandse Pop Encyclopedie The Eerste Nederlandse Pop Encyclopedie ('First Dutch Pop Encyclopedia') is a Dutch encyclopedia on pop music, published by the Dutch pop music magazine Muziekkrant Oor since 1977, with a new edition coming out roughly every three years. Over the years, the size hasn't increased.
Eersterivier Secondary School Eersteriver Secondary School (Afrikaans: Eersterivier SekondĂŞre Skool) is an Afrikaans-medium school in Eerste Rivier, a suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. It was established in 1995 and as of 2006 it had some 1,443 students and 43 educators In 2006 the Western Cape Education Department] designated it one of 10 "Arts and Culture focus schools" to be set up over the following three years.
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