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Houston gay and lesbian film festival The Houston Gay & Lesbian Film Festival (HGLFF) is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the media arts as a powerful tool for communication and cooperation among diverse communitieses by presenting films, videos, and programs by, about, or of interest to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) community.
Houston Galleria The Galleria is an upscale mixed-use urban development centrally located in the Uptown District of Houston, Texas, one of the largest business districts in the country, just outside the city's I-610 inner beltway. The shopping complex sits at one of the busiest road intersections in the country, Post Oak Boulevard at Westheimer Road.
Houston Greek Festival Houston's Greek Festival was started in 1966 by the members of Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church (later Cathedral). The three day festival is held annually on the first weekend in October and features Greek food, live Greek music and Greek folk dances, as well as a gift shop and tours of the Cathedral.
Houston highway construction Houston, Texas, USA, with a population of about 2.1 million, has undergone ongoing construction to serve the many thousands of cars using the major freeways, most built in the 1950s and 1960sInterstate 610, Katy Freeway, Interstate 45, and U.
Houston Harte Houston Harte, born in Missouri, was a prominent Texas newspaperman who founded a regional chain of newspapers which eventually became the media company Harte-Hanks. He also created the book, "In Our Image" along with Time Magazine illustrator, Guy Rowe, a collection of Bible stories published in 1949 by Oxford University Press.
Houston Hotshots The Houston Hotshots were a professional indoor soccer team in Houston, Texas. They played in the Continental Indoor Soccer League (CISL) from 1993 to 1997, and moved to the World Indoor Soccer League in 1999 after the CISL folded.
Houston Huskies The Houston Huskies were a minor league ice hockey team based in Houston, Texas. Formerly known as the Houston Skippers, they were a member of the United States Hockey League, and were active from 1947 to 1949.
Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, with attendance approaching over two and a half million visitors per year, is the world's largest livestock exhibition as well as the world's largest rodeo event, requiring the support of sixteen thousand volunteers. http://www.
Houston Museum of Natural Science The Houston Museum of Natural Science is a science museum located on the northern border of Hermann Park in Houston, Texas, USA. The museum was established in 1909 by the Houston Museum and Scientific Society, an organization whose goals were to provide a free institution for the people of Houston focusing on education and science.
Houston Noise Bands Over the past 35 years, Houston, TX has become one of the worlds leading centers for a particular brand of dark experimental music, ranging from psych-rock to industrial to distorted stripped down folk songs, to dance party mayhem, but all sharing a similar aesthetic sensibility rooted in dissonance and a flippant attitude towards sonic clarity and technical virtuosity. Together these groups fall under the heading of Houston Noise.
Houston Person Houston Person (born November 10th, 1934) is an American jazz tenor saxophonist and record producer. Although he has performed in the hard bop and swing genres, he is most experienced in and best known for his work in soul jazz.
Houston railway station Houston railway station was a railway station serving the villages of Brookfield and Houston, Renfrewshire, Scotland, originally as part of the Bridge of Weir Railway and later part of the Glasgow and South Western Railway.
Houston Riot (1917) The Houston Riot of 1917 was a mutiny by one hundred and fifty black soldiers of the Third Battalion of the (black) Twenty-fourth United States Infantry. It lasted one afternoon, and resulted in the deaths of four soldiers and fifteen civilians.
Houston Ship Channel The Houston Ship Channel in Houston, Texas is part of the Port of Houston—one of the United States's busiest sea ports. The channel is a conduit between the continental interior and the Gulf of Mexico for both petrochemical products and Midwestern grain.
Houston Skyline District The Houston Skyline District is a geographic area encompassing several blocks of downtown Houston, Texas. The term 'Skyline District' originated when downtown Houston was divided into a number of smaller districts: the Main Street Corridor, the Market Square Historical District, and the Houston Theater District.
Houston Stewart Chamberlain Houston Stewart Chamberlain (September 9, 1855 - January 9, 1927) was a British-born, naturalized German author of popular scientific books (amongst others about Richard Wagner, Immanuel Kant and Johann Wolfgang Goethe) as well as proponent of a nationalist, pangermanic and racist anti-Semitism. His book The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (1899) became one of the standards of the racist and ideological antisemitism in Germany of the early 20th century.
Houston Street (IRT Broadway-Seventh Avenue Line) Houston Street is a local subway station on the IRT Broadway-Seventh Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. There is no crossover or crossunder, although evidence of a sealed-up crossunder is present at the north end.
Houston Street (Manhattan) Houston Street (pronounced "HOW-stin") is a major east-west thoroughfare in downtown New York City. It runs crosstown across the full width of the borough of Manhattan, from the Hudson River to the East River, and serves as the boundary between the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village and SoHo on the West Side, and the East Village and the Lower East Side on the East Side.
Houston Takers The Houston Takers is an American Basketball Association (ABA) expansion team in Sugar Land, Texas. The team was previously known as the Houston Undertakers, named after Houston native Mark Calaway, better known as the The Undertaker, a famous professional wrestler in the WWE.
Houston Texans The Houston Texans are a professional American football team based in Houston, Texas. They are currently members of the Southern Division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL).
Houston Theater District The Houston Theater District, a 17-block area in the heart of Downtown Houston, is home to Houston's nine world-class performing arts organizations, the 130,000 square-foot Bayou Place entertainment complex, restaurants, movies, plazas and parks.
Houston Toros Houston Toros were an American soccer team, founded in 2002, who were members of the United Soccer Leagues Premier Development League (PDL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, until 2003, after which the team left the league and the franchise was terminated.
Houston Wrestling Houston Wrestling is a now-defunct professional wrestling promotion that ran from the mid 1920's through 1987. Originally run by the Sigel family, it reached its highest point of popularity during its run under Paul Boesch.
Houston's Funniest Person Contest Houston's Funniest Person Contest is an annual competition held by The Laff Stop in Houston, Texas. Its format may vary, but is usually held as a series of rounds, once a week, where a number of comedians are eliminated each show.
Houston, Renfrewshire Houston is a small commuter village to the northwest of Paisley in Renfrewshire, Scotland. It houses a few small shops scattered between the old centre and the new, a number of public houses and is largely comprised of housing developments of different ages.
Hout Bay Hout Bay (Afrikaans: Houtbaai, from the Dutch for "Wood Bay") is the name of a coastal suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. It lies in a valley on the Atlantic Seaboard of the Cape Peninsula and is twenty kilometres south of the Central Business District of Cape Town.
Hout Bay Museum Hout Bay Museum is a museum on Andrews Road in Hout Bay near Cape Town, South Africa. The museum has displays on the history of the Hout Bay valley and its people, focusing on forestry, mining, and the fishing industry up to modern times.
Houtermans (crater) Houtermans is a lunar crater that is located beside the eastern limb of the Moon, in the region of the surface where visibility is affected by libration. It lies to the east of Kreiken crater, and south of the Helmert-Kao double-crater.
Hove amber cup The Hove Amber Cup was discovered in a great round barrow mound which was crudely excavated in 1852, in Hove, East Sussex, England. The barrow was of exceptional size and quality, after the fashion of mid-Bronze Age finds which represent a new people who migrated to Britain just before 1200 BC.
Hovea, Western Australia Hovea, Western Australia is a suburb in Mundaring Shire in Western Australia. It is bordered by the Railway Reserve Heritage Trail (formerly the Eastern Railway) to the North, and Glen Forrest and the Great Eastern Highway to the south.
Hovedstadens Lokalbaner Hovedstadens Lokalbaner is a Danish company which owns the trains and tracks of several local railways around Copenhagen: Frederiksværkbanen, Gribskovbanen, Hornbækbanen, Lille Nord, Nærumbanen and Østbanen. It leases trains and trackage rights to the operating companies DSB S-tog (for Lille Nord) and Lokalbanen (all other lines).
Hover ad Hover ads are a special type of pop-up ads created using Dynamic HTML, JavaScript and similar web browser technologies. Because they do not scroll with the web-page, they appear to "hover" over the page, usually obscuring the content.
Hover Bovver Hover Bovver is a 1984 game written by Jeff Minter released for the Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit and a Windows version for the PC was released by Idigicon Limited in 2002. Like many of Minter's other games, it is notable for its offbeat sense of humour.
Hovercraft A hovercraft, or air-cushion vehicle (ACV), is a vehicle or craft that can be supported by a cushion of air ejected downwards against a surface close below it, and can in principle travel over any relatively smooth surface, such as gently sloping land, water, or marshland, while having no substantial contact with it.
Hoveringham Hoveringham is a small village in Nottinghamshire about 10 miles northeast of Nottingham and on the west side of the River Trent, just off the A612 trunk road to Southwell. The adjacent area has extensive sand and gravel deposits which have been quarried there for many years.
Hoverspeed Great Britain Hoverspeed Great Britain is a 74 meter long, ocean-going catamaran built in 1990 by Incat, and owned by the UK company Hoverspeed. In 1990, she took the record for the fastest eastbound transatlantic journey held for nearly 40 years by the SS United States (see Blue Riband), making the run in 3 days 7 hours 54 minutes traveling at an average speed of 36.
Hovertank 3D Hovertank 3D is a first-person shooter computer game developed by id Software and published by Softdisk in April , 1991 that is sometimes claimed to be the first first-person shooter or even the first 3D game for MS-DOS (inaccurately - it was preceded by several years by Elite amongst others, which reached DOS in 1987). The game used the same combination of scaled sprites and drawn walls that would later show up in Catacomb 3D and Wolfenstein 3D, but the walls in Hovertank 3D were in solid colour, without any textures.
Hovertravel Hovertravel is a ferry company operating from Southsea, Portsmouth to Ryde, Isle of Wight, UK. They are the last company operating in Britain with passenger hovercraft, after Hoverspeed stopped using their craft in favour of catamarans.
Hoveton and Wroxham railway station Hoveton and Wroxham railway station is a railway station serving the town of Wroxham in the English county of Norfolk. The station is technically situated in the adjacent village of Hoveton, but the two settlements are usually regarded as one.
Hovgården Hovgården is an archaeological site on the island of Adelsö in Lake Mälaren in Sweden. It was occupied by the Vikings in the 10th and 11th centuries, being a part of Uppsala öd, a network of royal estates supporting the Kings of Sweden, and the speculated administrative centre for the settlement of Birka on the neighbouring island of Björkö.
Hovhannes Tumanyan Hovhannes Tumanyan (Ő€Ő¸ŐľŐ°ŐˇŐ¶Ő¶ŐĄŐ˝ ÔąŐ¸Ö‚Ő´ŐˇŐ¶ŐµŐˇŐ¶ in Armenian) ( born February 19, 1869 - died March 23, 1923), born in the village of Dsegh in Lorri, Armenia, is considered one of the greatest Armenian poets and writers. His work was mostly written in tragic form, often centering on the harsh lives of villagers in the Lorri region.
Hovis Presley Hovis Presley (3 August 1960 – 9 June 2005) was an English poet and stand-up comedian from Bolton noted for his down to earth humour. He was born Richard Henry McFarlane but took his stage name as a play on Elvis Presley and the brand of bread Hovis.
Hovmöller diagram A diagram is a commonly used way of plotting meteorological data to highlight the role of waves. The axes of a Hovmöller diagram are longitude (x-axis) and time (y-axis) with the value of some field represented by color or shade.
Hovnan Derderian Archbishop Hovnan Derderian is Primate of the Armenian Holy Apostolic Church's Western American Diocese, based in Burbank, California. He took office in California in 2003, after having served 10 years as head of the Canadian Diocese.
Hovnanian Enterprises Hovnanian Enterprises, Inc. incorporated in 1967, designs, constructs, markets and sells single-family detached homes, attached townhomes and condominiums, mid-rise and high-rise condominiums, urban infill and active adult homes in planned residential developments in the United States.
How (greeting) The word how is used frequently as a greeting in representations of Native American speech by Europeans or whites. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word was originally used by missionary Jean de Brébeuf to indicate an interjection of approval used by the Wyandot (or Huron in French uses); the OED gives the transcription haau.
How (Not) To Speak Of God How (Not) To Speak Of God is a non-fiction work by Peter Rollins, the co-ordinator of an emerging church group called Ikon. Influenced by Ikon services, the book aims to re-envisage faith in the postmodern world, moving away from dogmatic certainties and towards an appreciation of provisionality, fragility and fragmentation.
How Bizarre (song) "How Bizarre" is the first single by New Zealand group, OMC, released in 1995. The single was featured on the now defunct Blod Recordings 1990s compilation of the same name, and was covered by the Montreal band The Diskettes.
How Buildings Learn How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built is an illustrated book on the evolution of buildings and how buildings adapt to changing requirements over long periods. It was written by Stewart Brand and published by Viking Press in 1994.
How Can You Tell "How Can You Tell" is the seventh single by 1960s British girl singer Sandie Shaw. Released at the end of 1965 this uptempo Chris Andrews-penned track was the first Shaw single since her initial release not to make the UK Top 10 - peaking only at Number 21.
How Did It Ever Come to This? How did it ever come to this? signals a return to the singles market for easyworld, nearly six months after the release of their second album Kill the Last Romantic, and contains none of the tracks that brought them such critical acclaim.
How Did You Know How Did You Know is an extened play single by electronic dance music producer and remixer, Kurtis Mantronik. The EP was released in 2003 on the Southern Fried Records label, and featured female British singer Mim on vocals.
How Dirty Girls Get Clean (The Rehab Demos) How Dirty Girls Get Clean is the working title for the forthcoming sophomore solo album by American rock singer Courtney Love. A release date is not certain at this point, however Love has stated a March 1, 2007 release is desired.
How Do You Talk to an Angel "How Do You Talk to an Angel", the single version of the theme for the TV series The Heights, featuring Jamie Walters as lead singer, hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in early November 1992, one week before the series was canceled.
How Girls Can Help to Build Up the Empire The Handbook for the Girl Guides or How Girls Can Help to Build Up the Empire is the full title of the book more commonly known simply as How Girls Can Help to Build up the Empire. It was the first handbook for Girl Guides.
How Great Is Our God How Great Is Our God is the 2005 album recorded live at Passion 05, a conference held yearly in January in Nashville, TN. The Passion conference was initially called the 268Generation Conference and has now changed to Passion Conference
How Great Thou Art (Hymn) How Great Thou Art is Christian Hymn written by Carl Gustav Boberg in Swedish in 1885, translated into English by Stuart Hine. It was popularized by George Beverly Shea and Cliff Barrows during Billy Graham crusades.
How Green Was My Valley How Green Was My Valley is a novel of 1939, by Richard Llewellyn. The author's claims to have based it on his own knowledge of the Gilfach Goch area were proven false, as Llewellyn was English-born and spent little time in Wales, but gathered his facts from conversations with local mining families.
How Hedley Hopkins Did a Dare, robbed a grave, made a new friend who might not have really been there at all, and while he was at it committed a terrible sin which everyone was doing even though he didn't know it How Hedley Hopkins Did a Dare, robbed a grave, made a new friend who might not have really been there at all, and while he was at it committed a terrible sin which everyone was doing even though he didn't know it (ISBN 0-14-132043-5) is a children's book written by Australian author Paul Jennings, and published by Puffin Books in May 2005. The story covers a short time in the life of young Hedley Hopkins, an English immigrant to Australia in the 1950s.
How High (song) How High is a highly popular song about cannabis smoking by rappers Method Man & Redman. It performed better on the Billboard Hot 100 than any other song that Redman ever released and only one song that Method Man released.
How I Conquered Your Planet How I Conquered Your Planet (ISBN 0-9755799-4-0) is a comedic novel written by American writer John Swartzwelder, better known as a writer for the animated television series The Simpsons. The novel was published in 2006.
How I Could Just Kill a Man "How I Could Just Kill a Man" is a controversial song by Cypress Hill from their album Cypress Hill and was their first major hit in 1991. It was released as a double A-side to "The Phuncky Feel One" and the music video featured a cameo by Q-Tip from A Tribe Called Quest and Ice Cube (who B-Real would later feud with).
How I Learned to Love the Bootboys How I Learned To Love The Bootboys was the fourth and final album by The Auteurs, the band of Luke Haines. Sporting a more electronica-orientated influence on its typical indie/glam sound after the incendiary rock of After Murder Park, the album is not frequently cited as The Auteurs' best, but has nevertheless spawned a series of fan favourites, including single The Rubettes and Future Generation, on which Haines predicted that one day The Auteurs would be rediscovered and gain the commercial success that had always eluded them.
How I Won the War How I Won the War is a 1967 black comedy film directed by Richard Lester. The film features Michael Crawford as the inept World War II commander Earnest Goodbody, with John Lennon and Roy Kinnear as soldiers under his orders.
How Ian Direach got the Blue Falcon How Ian Direach got the Blue Falcon is a Scottish fairy tale, collected by John Francis Campbell in Popular Tales of the West Highlands. He recorded it from a quarryman in Knockderry, Roseneath, named Angus Campbell.
How Images Think How Images Think is a book by Ron Burnett published by MIT Press in 2004 and reprinted in 2005 which deals with New Media and many changes that digital technologies have made possible both in modern western culture and in society as a whole.
How late it was, how late How late it was, how late is a 1994 stream of consciousness novel written by Scottish writer James Kelman. The Glasgow-centred work is written in a working class Scottish dialect, and follows Sammy, a shoplifter and ex-convict.
How Much for Happy How Much for Happy is Canadian singer-songwriter Cassie Steele's debut album. Cassie Steele is also a cast member playing a fan-favorite character, Manny, on Degrassi: The Next Generation, the Canadian teen-cult hit.
How Not to Decorate How Not To Decorate was a television series which aired on Five in the United Kingdom in which designers Colin McAllister & Justin Ryan helped redecorate notoriously ugly or unstylish homes, in a format similar to the What Not to Wear series. The series centered heavily around McAllister and Ryan's trademark banter and fussiness.
How Now Stakes The How Now Stakes is a Group 3 Australian thoroughbred horse race held under handicap conditions, for mares aged 4 years old and upwards, over a distance of 1200m. It is held at Caulfield Racecourse in Melbourne.
How Obelix Fell into the Magic Potion When he was a Little Boy How Obelix Fell into the Magic Potion When he was a Little Boy is an Asterix story written by René Goscinny and originally published in Pilote issue 291 in 1965 with only a few drawings. In 1989 it was fully illustrated by Albert Uderzo and published in an album as a text story with illustrations.
How Should We Then Live? How Should We Then Live: The Decline of Western Thought and Culture is a major Christian cultural and historical documentary film series and book. The book was written by presuppositionalist theologian Francis A.
How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You) "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)" is a 1965 hit single, written and produced by the Motown songwriting team of Holland-Dozier-Holland and was originally recorded by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. The song became one of the most enduring and mostly played in Gaye´s huge music canon.
How the Devil Married Three Sisters How the Devil Married Three Sisters is an Italian fairy tale collected by Thomas Frederick Crane in Italian Popular Tales.Thomas Frederick Crane, Italian Popular Tales, "How the Devil Married Three Sisters" It is Aarne-Thompson type 311.
How the García Girls Lost Their Accents How the García Girls Lost Their Accents is a novel of acculturation by Julia Álvarez first published in 1992. Told in reverse chronological order and from shifting points of view, the novel, which consists of 15 interconnected short stories, covers more than 30 years in the lives of four sisters very close in age who, together with their parents, are forced out of Trujillo's Dominican Republic and start a new life in New York City.
How the Mind Works How the Mind Works (ISBN 0-393-31848-6) is a book by American cognitive scientist Steven Pinker, published in 1997. The book attempts to explain some of the human mind's poorly understood functions and quirks in evolutionary terms.
How the Self Controls Its Brain How the Self Controls Its Brain is a book by Sir John Eccles, proposing a theory of philosophical dualism, and offering a justification of how there can be mind-brain action without violating the principle of the conservation of energy.
How the Sith Stole Christmas How the Sith Stole Christmas is an animated fan film from that made its debut on the internet in December 2002. Written and directed by Ted Bracewell, the film tells the story of the Emperor's plans to invade the North Pole and take Santa Claus prisoner.
How the UK National Grid is presently controlled The National Grid is the high-voltage electric power transmission network in Great Britain, connecting power stations and major substations to ensure that electricity generated anywhere in Great Britain can be used to satisfy demand elsewhere. There are also undersea connections to northern France (HVDC Cross-Channel), Northern Ireland (HVDC Moyle), and the Isle of Man (Isle of Man to England Interconnector).
How the West Was Fun How the West was Fun is a 1994 TV movie about two twin girls played by Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen whose mother has died. A letter invites them to come to their grandmother's dude ranch, where they prevent a real estate developer from taking possession of the ranch while gaining insight into their family history.
How the West Was Won (film) How the West Was Won is an epic 1962 western film which follows several generations of a family (starting as the Prescotts) as they move ever westward, from western New York state to the Pacific Ocean. It was produced in the Cinerama widescreen process.
How to be Good How to be Good is a novel by English writer Nick Hornby. It centers on the characters of Katie Carr and her husband, David Grant, and the events that unfold when David stops being "The Angriest Man In Holloway" and begins to be "good", with his spiritual healer, DJ Goodnews.
How to be: Emo How to be: Emo was originally a student film project directed by Christian Bretz, written by Brennan Reed and produced by Kevin Dumler, Trent Tiegen, Angel Orlando and Chris Barrett. The concept was to create a satirical instructional film meant to teach kids how to be emo.
How to Be an Extremely Reform Jew How to Be an Extremely Reform Jew (Avon Books, 1994) is a book by David M. Bader, the author of Haikus for Jews: For You a Little Wisdom (Harmony Books, 1999), Zen Judaism: For You a Little Enlightenment (Harmony Books, 2002), and Haiku U.
How to Be Rich, Nigga How to Be Rich, Nigga (ISBN 1-59196-711-2) is a 2004 book by African-American businessman and motivational speaker Gerard Dunbar Spinks, who became a successful businessman in California's Silicon Valley and a successful writer after he lost his job and home after losing valuable contacts in that field.
How to Commit Marriage How to Commit Marriage is a 1969 comedy film featuring Bob Hope and Jackie Gleason in their only movie together. The film also stars Jane Wyman as Hope's wife, Tina Louise as record-producer Gleason's love interest, Leslie Nielsen as the straight man, and Irwin Corey.
How to dress for war How to Dress for War are an independent alternative rock band from Sydney, Australia. The band formed out of the remnants of several other Sydney outfits including Love Letter Scandal and Dusted Eye in Novemeber of 2005.
How to Design Programs How to Design Programs (HTDP) is a textbook by Matthias Felleisen, Robert Bruce Findler, Matthew Flatt and Shriram Krishnamurthi on the systematic design of computer programs from MIT Press. The book introduces the concept of a design recipe, a six-step process for creating programs from the problem statement.
How to Draw Manga How to Draw Manga (マンガの描き方) is a series of instructional books on drawing manga published by Graphic-sha, by a variety of authors. Originally in Japanese for the Japanese market, many volumes have been translated into English and published in the US.
How to Eat Fried Worms How to Eat Fried Worms is the title of a children's book written by Thomas Rockwell, first published in 1973. It was later turned into a CBS Storybreak episode in the mid-1980s, and a movie of the same name in 2006.
How to Get Out Alive How to Get Out Alive is a 5-song EP released by the band Lucky Boys Confusion on June 20 2006. The band released it on their own label Townstyle Music after their previous record label Elektra dropped them from their catalogue in 2005.
How to Irritate People How to Irritate People is a 1968 television mockumentary written by John Cleese. It also features future Monty Python collaborators Michael Palin, Graham Chapman, and Connie Booth, as well as comic actor Tim Brooke-Taylor, later to become one of The Goodies.
How to keep an idiot busy for hours How to keep an idiot busy for hours refers to a joke often involving sending a person in a circle trying to find out "how to keep an idiot busy for hours", the implication being that the person is an idiot. This can take many forms, including questions with no possible answer or activities with no apparent conclusion or objective.
How to Kill a Mockingbird How to Kill a Mockingbird is a parody of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird. Created by Stanford undergraduates Anthony Scodary and Nico Benitez in November of 2004, it is the most popular content on their humor website, AwesomeFunny.
How to Live on 24 Hours a Day How to Live on 24 Hours a Day (1910), written by Arnold Bennett, is part of a larger work entitled How to Live. In this volume, he offers practical advice on how one might live (as opposed to just existing) within the confines of 24 hours a day.
How to Make a Monster (2001 film) How to Make a Monster is 2001 sci-fi action thriller TV b-movie which stars Steven Culp, Clea DuVall, Tyler Mane, Jason Marsden, Karim Prince, Danny Masterson & Colleen Camp. The movie also has a cameo by Julie Strain.
How to Make Love Like a Porn Star: A Cautionary Tale How to Make Love Like a Porn Star: A Cautionary Tale is the autobiography of adult film star Jenna Jameson, published August 17, 2004. It was co-written with Neil Strauss, a contributor to the New York Times and Rolling Stone, and published by ReganBooks, a division of HarperCollins.
How to Make Money Like a Porn Star How to Make Money Like a Porn Star is the first graphic novel published by ReganBooks/HarperCollins, written by Neil Strauss and illustrated by artist Bernard Chang. Strauss and Chang have collaborated on two previous books, How to Make Love Like a Porn Star (the autobiography of porn queen Jenna Jameson) and The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists.
How to Marry a Millionaire How to Marry a Millionaire is a 1953 film, directed by Jean Negulesco and starring Lauren Bacall, Marilyn Monroe, and Betty Grable as fortune hunters. The film was first ever to be filmed in the new CinemaScope wide-screen process, and the second released, after The Robe.
How to Rob a Bank How To Rob A Bank is an independent film in which a slacker (Nick Stahl) and a bank employee (Erika Christensen) become caught in a bank robbery, and they are the ones who set out to arbitrate the intense situation. The film finished filming in March 2006 and is set for an early 2007 release
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