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Myrmekion Myrmēkion (, ) was an ancient Greek colony in the Crimea, situated on the shore of the Cimmerian Bosporus, 4 kilometers to the north of Panticapaeum, the capital of the Bosporan Kingdom. It was founded in the mid-6th century BC as an independent polis, which soon became one of the richest in the region.
Myrmica tschekanovskii Myrmica tschekanovskii is a species of ant, one of around 200 known species of the genus Myrmica which is widespread throughout the temperate regions of the Holarctic. It was first described in 1994 by Dr Alexander Radchenko, of the Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology in Ukraine.
Myrmidon of Athens Myrmidon (in Greek MĎ…Ďμιδων; lived 4th century BC) was an Athenian who commanded a force of ten thousand men, which formed part of the armament sent by Ptolemy I Soter, the son of Lagus, under his brother Menelaus, to effect the reduction of Cyprus, 315 BC. He was afterwards despatched to the assistance of Asander in Caria, against the generals of Antigonus Monophthalmus.
Myrna Loy Myrna Loy (August 2 1905 – December 14 1993) was an American motion picture actress. Perhaps her most famous role was as Nora Charles, wife of detective Nick Charles (William Powell), in The Thin Man series of madcap detective films.
Myrna Smith Myrna Smith is a song writer who co-wrote many of the songs for Carl Wilson's 1981 solo album Carl Wilson as well as a few of the songs on his 1983 solo album Youngblood. She is also a member of the Sweet Inspirations, which previously served as Elvis Presley's backing group.
Myron "Pinky" Thompson Myron Bennett "Pinky" Thompson (February 29, 1924 - December 25, 2001) was a social worker and community leader in Hawaii and a cultural leader among the Native Hawaiians. He is best known for his work as a member of the Board of Trustees of Bishop Estate (now known as Kamehameha Schools).
Myron Cope Myron Cope (born January 23, 1929 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), whose given name is Myron Sydney Kopelman, was a color commentator for the Pittsburgh Steelers' radio broadcasts for 35 years. He is known for his nasal voice and a level of excitement rarely exhibited in the broadcast booth.
Myron Magnet Myron Magnet (b. 1944) is the editor of City Journal, the Manhattan Institute's quarterly journal of urban affairs, which focuses on endemic urban dilemmas such as housing, taxes, crime from a free-market, conservative perspective, as well as on culture and society.
Myron of Priene Myron of Priene was the author of an historical account of the first Messenian war, from the taking of Ampheia to the death of Aristodemus. His date cannot be ascertained accurately, but he belongs in all probability to the Alexandrine period, not earlier than the 3rd century BCE According to Pausanias he was an author on whose accuracy very little reliance could be placed.
Myron Sharaf Myron Ruscoll Sharaf (1927 – May 13, 1997) was an American writer and psychotherapist. He taught in the Department of Psychology at Harvard Medical School, and was the director of the Center for Sociopsychological Research and Education, Boston State Hospital and assistant clinical professor of psychology, Department of Psychiatry, Tufts University School of Medicine.
Myron Solberg Award The Myron Solberg Award has been awarded every year since 2004 by the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT). It is awarded for leadership in establishing, successfully developing, and continuing a cooperative organization involving academia, government, and industry.
Myron Tribus Myron Tribus was at the origin or promoted many concepts with often strong and sometimes less successful results. His career as a leader in engineering and management dates from World War II, when he did key pioneering work on aircraft ice prevention as a design-development officer at Wright Field.
Myron W. Krueger Myron Krueger (born 1942 in Gary, Indiana) is an American computer artist who developed early interactive works. He is also considered to be one of the first generation virtual reality and augmented reality researchers.
Myron Wolf Child Myron John (MJ) Wolf Child (born February 6, 1983) is a youth activist, public speaker and politician from the Kainai Nation in southern Alberta, Canada. His surname is sometimes reported as Wolfchild or WolfChild.
Myroslav Ivan Cardinal Lubachivsky Myroslav Ivan Cardinal Lubachivsky (; 24 June 1914, Dolyna, Ukraine - 14 December 2000, Lviv) was Bishop of Philadelphia, and from 1984 Major Archbishop of Lviv and head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church, first in exile and later in his native Ukraine after the Soviet authorities lifted the ban against the Church in 1989. He had been a Cardinal since May 1985.
Myroslav Skoryk Myroslav Skoryk (, born July 12, 1938 in Lviv) is a famous Ukrainian composer with very diverse and impressive compositions. His music is contemporary style but he borrows from Ukrainian folk literature and operas.
Myrra Malmberg Myrra Malmberg is a Swedish singer and musical artist, born in Chicago, USA. Among other she has played Maria in West Side Story (Gothenburg), Evita in Evita (Stockholm), Christine in the Phantom of the opera (London), Cosette in Les Misérable (London) and Estella in Great Expectations (London).
Myrrh Myrrh is a red-brown resinous material, the dried sap of the tree Commiphora myrrha, native to Somalia and the eastern parts of Ethiopia. The sap of a number of other Commiphora and Balsamodendron species are also known as myrrh, including that from Commiphora erythraea (sometimes called East Indian myrrh), Commiphora opobalsamum and Balsamodendron kua.
Myrrh Records Myrrh Records, founded in 1972 by Billy Ray Hearn as a division of Word Records, was one of the United States most successful Christian record labels. It was, of course, named for one of the three wisemen's gifts for baby Jesus.
Myrsina Myrsina is a Greek fairy tale collected by Georgios A Megas in Folktales of Greece.Heidi Anne Heiner, "Tales Similar to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" Other variants were collected by Anna Angelopoulou.
Myrtales The Myrtales are an order of flowering plants placed as a basal group within the rosid group of dicotyledons (not a member of eurosids I or eurosids II). The following families are typical of newer classifications:
Myrtha, Queen of the Wilis Myrtha, Queen of the Wilis (sometimes spelled Myrta) is a character from the famous Romantic ballet, Giselle which premiered at the Theatre de l’Academie Royale de Musique in Paris, France. This ballet was choreographed by Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot and the role of Myrtha, Queen of the Wilis was originated by ballerina Adele Dumilatre.
Myrtilla Miner Myrtilla Miner (born March 4, 1815, near Brookfield, New York; died December 17, 1864, Washington, DC) was an American educator and abolitionist whose school for African Americans, established against considerable opposition, grew to a successful and long-lived teachers institution.
Myrtle Avenue Line (surface) The Myrtle Avenue Line is a public transit line in Brooklyn and Queens, New York City, United States along Myrtle Avenue. It was the first horse car line in Brooklyn, built by the Brooklyn City Rail Road, and is now the B54 bus, operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority out of the Fresh Pond Bus Depot.
Myrtle Beach Air Force Base Myrtle Beach Air Force Base was a United States Air Force facility in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It was established in 1940 as a World War II training base and was also used for coastal patrols during the war.
Myrtle Beach Blue Jays The Myrtle Beach Blue Jays of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina began play in the South Atlantic League in 1986 after relocated from Florence, South Carolina (Florence Blue Jays). They played at Coastal Carolina College's stadium and were a minor league club of the Toronto Blue Jays.
Myrtle Beach Convention Center Myrtle Beach Convention Center is a 8,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It hosts various local concerts and sporting events for the area and was the home arena for the Myrtle Beach Stingrays of the National Indoor Football League in 2003.
Myrtle Beach Pavilion The Myrtle Beach Pavilion was an amusement park in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina expanded from the simple idea of a pavilion in 1948. It is on the corner of 9th Avenue and Ocean Boulevard, more or less the "heart" of Myrtle Beach, one block away from the beach itself, and surrounded by similar attractions, in a highly pedestrian-dominated area.
Myrtle Beach Thunderboltz The Myrtle Beach Thunderboltz are an ECHL team set to begin play for the 2007-08 season. YRT2 Arena is currently under construction in Conway, South Carolina to accommodate them and to provide a new basketball arena for the Coastal Carolina University Chanticleers.
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Myrtle Beach is a city in Horry County, South Carolina, United States. Myrtle Beach is located in a region known as the Grand Strand, that stretches from Georgetown, South Carolina to Calabash, North Carolina.
Myrtle Gonzalez Myrtle Gonzalez (born September 28, 1891 in Los Angeles, California; died October 22, 1918 in Los Angeles, California) was a popular American stage and screen actress during the early days of movies. Because she had grown up in Los Angeles, Gonzales was able to use the studios' massive shift to the area to her advantage and starred in many films.
Myrtle Maclagan Myrtle Ethel Maclagan MBE (born 2 April 1911 in Ambala, United Provinces, India; died 11 March 1993 in Surrey, England) was an English cricketer. She played in the first women's Test match in 1934, and was one of the best known women cricketers of her day, famous for making high scores against the Australians.
Myrtle Robertson, 11th Baroness Wharton Myrtle Olive Felix Robertson, 11th Baroness Wharton (20 February 1934 – sCJD 15 May 2000) was born the Honourable Myrtle Arbuthnot, known as Ziki. Daughter of David George Arbuthnot and Elisabeth, nee Kemeys-Tynte, 10th Baroness Wharton, she was brought up in South Africa but moved to England in her teens.
Myrtle Square Mall Myrtle Square Mall was the first enclosed shopping mall in Myrtle Beach, located in the heart of the city. It bordered the Myrtle Beach Convention Center, Kings Highway, Oak Street, and it was in very close proximity to residential neighborhoods and many oceanfront hotels.
Myrtle–Willoughby Avenues (IND Crosstown Line) Myrtle–Willoughby Avenues is a station on the New York City Subway's IND Crosstown Line. The north end has a crossunder and leads to Myrtle Avenue and the closed south exit with no crossover or crossunder leads to Willoughby Street.
Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues (New York City Subway) Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues is a New York City Subway station complex shared by the BMT Canarsie Line and the BMT Myrtle Avenue Lines. It is located at the intersection of Myrtle and Wyckoff Avenues in the Bushwick neighborhood of Brooklyn, and is served by the and trains at all times.
Myrtos Gulf The Myrtos Gulf (Greek: Κόλπος ΜύĎτου Kolpos Myrtou or -Mirtou), also Mirtos Gulf is a gulf that connects with the Gulf of Corinth to the west. The total length is approximately 10 km long and is approximately 10 km wide.
Mys-Tech Mys-Tech were a shadowy Faustian organisation who acted as the main villains in a range of, initially successful but shortlived comics, launched in the US by Marvel UK in the 1990s. Some of theses stories also were published in anthology form in the UK in the Marvel UK comic Overkill.
Myschievia Myschievia is a regional burn event that happens every year in early October in North Texas. It was inspired by, and operates similar to the Burning Man festival in Nevada, but is more akin to the Burning Flipside event outside of Austin, Texas.
Mysidacea The Mysidacea is a group of small, shrimp-like creatures including the species Neomysis americana (opossum shrimp), comprising the two related orders Mysida and Lophogastrida. They are sometimes referred to as opossum shrimps, though that name is also used for individual species.
Myside bias In psychology, the myside bias is the popular tendency not to seek evidence against one's existing position, and indeed to ignore such evidence. The term was coined by David Perkins, myside referring to "my" side of the issue under consideration.
Myson of Chenae Myson of Chenae (also Khenai or Chen; Greek: ) was an eminent Greek philosopher, known as, according to some accounts, one of the Seven Sages of Greece. He was "a husbandman of the Laconian town of Etia, and resided at a place called Chen in the same country".
Mysore district Mysore District (Kannada ಮŕłŕ˛¸ŕł‚ರŕł) is an administrative district located in Karnataka, India. It is bounded by Mandya district to the northeast, Chamrajnagar district to the southeast, Kerala state to the south, Kodagu district to the west, and Hassan district to the north.
Mysore Plateau The Mysore Plateau, also known as the South Karnataka Plateau, is one of the four geographically unique regions of the Indian state of Karnataka. The plateau has many undulations and is bounded on the west and south by the Western Ghats.
Mysore Silk Factory Karnataka produces 9000MT of mulberry silk out of which a total of 14000MT produced in the country,thus contributing to nearly 70% of the country's total Mulberry Silk. In Karnataka, silk is mainly grown in the Mysore district.
Mysore State The Kingdom of Mysore was one of the three largest princely states within the erstwhile British Empire of India. Upon India gaining its independence in 1947, the Maharaja of Mysore merged his realm with the Union of India.
Myst September 24, 1993 Windows 3.0 1994 Windows 95 1996 3DO 1995 Jaguar CD 1995 Saturn November 22, 1994 1995 October 27, 1995 PlayStation January 27, 1995 September 30, 1996 November 19, 1996 PSP June 15, 2006
Myst comic: The Book of Black Ships Myst: The Book of Black Ships was a scheduled four-issue comic book series published by Dark Horse Comics that attempted to shed light to the events happened before the Myst game, and explain all the malevolent actions of the two brothers, leading to their imprisonment in Atrus' books.
Myst franchise The Myst franchise consists of a series of computer games and novels, centering around the storyline of Atrus and his family, who are descendants of the fallen D'ni civilization - a subterranean city whose people could link to other universes by writing a descriptive book about that world.
Myst III: Exile May 7, 2001 June 28, 2001 August 21, 2001 September 21, 2001 (Mac) May 7, 2001 (PS2) September 19, 2002 October 4, 2002 March 20, 2003 (Xbox) May 02, 2002 September 17, 2002 September 26, 2002 October 4, 2002
Myst Online: Uru Live Myst Online: Uru Live is a computer game developed by Cyan Worlds and published by Turner Broadcasting System, featuring several diverse D'ni Ages designed in the style of the Myst game series. Although Uru and the Myst series share the theme of the D'ni civilization and culture, Uru takes place in the present day, as if the entire story of the Myst saga were discovered to be true.
Myst: The Book of D'ni The Book of D'ni (1998) is the third book in the Myst series of novels; it is currently the last book in the series, although two more books are planned for release. The book is set in the same universe as the Myst computer games and was written by Rand Miller in collaboration with David Wingrove.
Myst: The Book of Marrim Myst: The Book of Marrim is the planned fourth novel in the Myst series of novels, which supplements the storylines of the Myst computer game series. As originally announced, the book will be written by Rand Miller, with assistance from David Wingrove and some of the other staff at Cyan Worlds.
Myst: The Book of Ti'ana The Book of Ti'ana (1996) by Rand Miller, Robyn Miller, and David Wingrove is the second novel of the Myst series, but chronologically comes first. Set in the fictional D'ni Universe based on the popular computer game Myst, Book of Ti'ana details the origins of Atrus's family.
Mystara Mystara is a campaign setting for the Dungeons & Dragons role playing game. It originated as the Known World, a semi-generic setting used in early adventure modules, first mentioned in the Module X1, Isle of Dread, which was expanded upon in various D&D modules and sources, particularly a series of Gazeteers.
Mystère (Cirque du Soleil) Mystère is a Cirque du Soleil show in permanent residence at the Treasure Island Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. It is one of five resident Cirque du Soleil shows in Las Vegas, the others being O, Kà , LOVE, and Zumanity, as well as Le Reve, now at Wynn Las Vegas.
Mystera Mystera is a series of compilation albums produced by the label Polystar in Germany. The Mystera compilations include a variety of genres, including ambient, celtic, classical, electronica, industrial, new age, and world music.
Mysteries of the Unknown Mysteries of the Unknown was a series of books about the paranormal, published by Time-Life Books from 1987 through 1991. Each book focused on a different topic, such as ghosts, UFOs, psychic powers and dreams.
Mysterious appearances and disappearances Charles Fort coined the term "teleportation" to cover mysterious appearances and disappearances of people or objects. He suggested that there might be a connection between these two phenomena, with objects and people who disappear in one place or time appearing elsewhere.
Mysterious Canada: Strange Sights, Extraordinary Events, and Peculiar Places Mysterious Canada: Strange Sights, Extraordinary Events, and Peculiar Places is a reference book written by John Robert Colombo (ISBN 0-385-25150-5), chronicling the paranormal in Canada. Published in 1988 by Doubleday Canada Limited of Toronto, it said of itself that it posed more questions than it answered.
Mysterious duality In theoretical physics, mysterious duality is a set of mathematical similarities between some objects and laws (and perhaps all of them, if the conjecture is extended appropriately) describing M-theory on k-dimensional tori (i.e.
Mysterious Island (1941 film) Mysterious Island (Russian: ТаинŃтвенный ĐľŃтров) is a USSR film adaptation of the 1874 novel by Jules Verne, The Mysterious Island (L'ĂŽle mystĂ©rieuse). The story is a follow-up to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.
Mysterious Island (1961 film) Mysterious Island (UK: Jules Verne's Mysterious Island) is a film made in 1961 by Morningside Productions. Based upon the book The Mysterious Island (L'Île mystérieuse) by Jules Verne, it was produced by Charles Schneer and Ray Harryhausen.
Mysterious Order of the Veiled Prophet of the Enchanted Realm The Mystic Order of Veiled Prophet of the Enchanted Realm is the Pittsburgh chapter of "the Grotto", an appendant body of the Masons, a nationwide fraternal organization. The Grotto tends to emphasise fun and philanthropy and are largely a North American phenomenon.
Mysterious Skin Mysterious Skin is California filmmaker Gregg Araki's eighth film. Debuting at the Venice Film Festival in 2004 (however it did not see a semi-wide release until 2005), it is based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Scott Heim, and concerns the effect of childhood sexual abuse on two boys from Hutchinson, Kansas, a city of about 40,000 people.
Mysterious Skin - Music from the Film Mysterious Skin - Music from the Film is an album of music composed and performed by Robin Guthrie and Harold Budd for the film Mysterious Skin. The music was published on a CD inside a digipak containing images from the film.
Mysterious Stranger Mysterious Stranger: A Book of Magic by street magician David Blaine was published on October 29, 2002 by Random House. Part autobiography, part history, and part armchair treasure hunt, the book also includes instructions on how to perform basic card tricks and illusions.
Mysterious Walker Frederick Mitchell "Mysterious" Walker (born March 21, 1884, in Utica, Nebraska – died February 1, 1958, in Oak Park, Illinois) was a Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher. He is an alumnus of the University of Chicago.
Mysterium Mysterium is the main yearly convention of fans of the Myst franchise of computer games, which was first held in 2000. It was originally a small group of fans who just wanted to meet face to face but as they invited more and more people the actual convention went from a small group to over 100 people showing up in Spokane, Washington at Cyanworlds' headquarters.
Mysterium Cosmographicum Mysterium Cosmographicum, (The Sacred Mystery of the Cosmos [Explained]) (alternately translated Cosmic Mystery, The Secret of the World or some variation) is an astronomy book by the German astronomer Johannes Kepler, published at TĂĽbingen in 1596 and in a second edition in 1621. Kepler proposed that the distance relationships between the six planets known at that time could be understood in terms of the five Platonic solids, enclosed within a sphere that represented the orbit of Saturn.
Mysterium fidei (Latin phrase) Mysterium fidei (Latin phrase meaning mystery of faith) is a Christian theological term for an article of faith or doctrine which defies man’s ability to grasp. It can also refer to a belief which while it can be understood, deeper meaning can be gathered from meditating upon it (See Mysteries of the Rosary).
Mystery The word mystery is etymologically derived from the Greek verb myein (“to close”), referring to the lips and the eyes. In common usage, a mystery is a description for something which is inconceivable, unknown or unexplainable.
Mystery (seduction guru) Mystery (whose real name is Erik Von Markovik, legally changed from Erik James Horvat-Markovic in his early 20'sis the creator of the Mystery Method] and one of the pioneers of the [[Seduction Community|seduction community, and a main character in the non-fiction book The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists, by Neil Strauss. Von Markovik was born and raised in Toronto, CanadaSaturday Night Magazine.
Mystery airship The Mystery Airships were unidentified flying objects reported in newspapers in western states of the US, starting in 1896 and continuing into 1897. The reported ships were usually said to be a type of dirigible, and were usually differentiated from gliders or hot air balloons.
Mystery Babylon Mystery Babylon is the title of a series of shortwave radio broadcasts made by former naval intelligence officer and author Milton William Cooper, which originally aired on his show The Hour of the Time, on WWCR in 1993-94. The title refers to mystery religions, and the Biblical figure the Whore of Babylon.
Mystery Bay State Park Mystery Bay State Park is a 10 acre (40,000 m²) Washington state park on Mystery Bay, a small inlet off of Scow Bay/Kilisut Harbor on the western side of Marrowstone Island. It has 685 feet (209 m) of moorage space and is primarily intended for the use of boaters.
Mystery Castle Mystery Castle is located in the city of Phoenix, Arizona in the foothills of South Mountain Park. It was built in the 1930s by Boyce Gulley (died 1945) for his daughter Mary Lou Gulley, who as of 2005 still resides there and personally leads tours.
Mystery Circle Mystery Circle is a Tetris-like game that takes place in the distant future. Instead of using the blocks to clear the playing board, the player uses his starship to make an outline of the floating shapes in order to make this disappears.
Mystery Dinner Playhouse Mystery Dinner Playhouse is a Virginia-based dinner theatre company that began in 1993. They offer shows in four cities: Williamsburg, Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Alexandria, Virginia.
Mystery fiction Mystery fiction is a loosely-defined term that is often used as a synonym of detective fiction – in other words a novel or short story in which a detective (either professional or amateur) solves a crime. The term "mystery fiction" may sometimes be limited to the subset of detective stories in which the emphasis is on the puzzle element and its logical solution (cf.
Mystery film Mystery film is a sub-genre of the more general category of crime film. It focuses on the efforts of the Detective, private investigator or amateur sleuth to solve the mysterious circumstances of a crime by means of clues, investigation, and clever deduction.
Mystery House Mystery House is a 1980 game for the Apple II by Roberta and Ken Williams. Although it had no sound, no color (other than black and white), and no animation, it did have one feature that would make it part of computer gaming history: graphics.
Mystery in Space Mystery in Space was a science fiction comic book published by DC Comics from 1951 to 1966, and later in 1980/81 (issues #111-117). It featured artwork by Murphy Anderson, Gil Kane, and many others, stories by John Broome, Gardner Fox, and others.
Mystery Ink Mystery Ink is a website devoted to reviews of mystery and thriller novels, interviews with authors, and reference information. It is also the home of the Gumshoe Awards, which are presented each year to honor excellence in crime fiction.
Mystery meat Mystery meat is a disparaging term for ground meat products such as döner kebabs, Salisbury steaks, or any similarly prepared ground meat patty that comprises the main course of an American public school lunch, often served with gravy. This type of meat acquired the name because it is often difficult to identify its primary ingredient.
Mystery meat navigation Mystery meat navigation (also abbreviated MMN) is a term coined and popularized by author, web designer, and usability analyst Vincent Flanders to describe user interfaces (especially in websites) in which it is inordinately difficult for users to discern the destinations of navigational hyperlinks—or, in severe cases, even to determine where the hyperlinks are. The typical form of MMN is represented by menus composed of unrevealing icons that are replaced with explicative text only when the mouse cursor hovers over them.
Mystery Magical Special Mystery Magical Special is an American television special aired on the Nickelodeon television network. Advertised as a Halloween-themed program, the special was originally produced in 1986, but continued air, often multiple times, every October for several years afterward.
Mystery Meat "Mystery Meat" is the first, and subsequently the pilot episode of the animated series Danny Phantom. Danny must confront the ghost of a lunch lady while dealing with his two best friends Tucker and Sam over the lunch menu changes.
Mystery Mile Mystery Mile is a crime novel by Margery Allingham, first published in 1930, in the United Kingdom by Jarrolds Publishing, London and in the United States by Doubleday Doran, New York. Following his first, supporting appearance in The Crime at Black Dudley (1929), it is the first of many novels starring the mysterious Albert Campion, and introduces his butler/valet/bodyguard Magersfontein Lugg.
Mystery of Dalarö The Mystery of Dalarö was the title of a promotional campaign from Volvo that occurred during the end of 2003 and the beginning of 2004. It was considered an unusual way, at the time, to promote the launch of the new Volvo S40 using a documentary-style video approach.
Mystery of Mamo Lupin III: The Mystery of Mamo (Japanese title: Rupan sansei, Rupan tai Kuroon, & Rupan sansei: Mamo karano chousen) was a 1978 movie directed by Soji Yoshikawa and written by Atsushi Yamatoya and Soji Yoshikawa. It was the first animated movie based on the Lupin III character created by Monkey Punch.
Mystery of Murasame Castle Mystery of Murasame Castle (謎ă®ćť‘雨城 - Nazo no Murasame jo) is a video game software developed and released by Nintendo for the Famicom Disk System on April 14, 1986. It was only released in Japan because Japanese culture wasn't too interesting to people in other countries.
Mystery of the Mummy Mystery of the Mummy is a graphical adventure game for Microsoft Windows computers. You play as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's renowned inspector Sherlock Holmes, investigating the mysteriously abandoned mansion of a British archeologist.
Mystery of the Nile Mystery of the Nile is an IMAX film documenting the first successful expedition to navigate the entire length of the Blue Nile and Nile from its source in Ethiopia to the Mediterranean sea. The expedition was lead by geologist Pasquale Scaturro.
Mystery play Mystery plays are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe. Their origin is obscure, but the most common theory is that they developed from the representation of Bible stories in churches as tableaux with accompanying antiphonal song, such as the quem quaeritis, a short musical performance set at the tomb of the risen Christ.
Mystery Play of Elx The Elche Mystery Play is a lyrical drama dating from the Middle Ages being represented and celebrated in the Basilica de Santa MarĂa in the city of Elche on the 14 and 15 of August of each year. In 2001, UNESCO declared it a Masterpiece of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity.
Mystery Price Mystery Price was a pricing game on the American television game show, The Price Is Right. Lasting from September 26, 1973's show to February 21, 1974, it was played for a prize package (usually two or three prizes), and used small prizes.
Mystery religion A mystery religion is any religion with an arcanum, or secret wisdom. In a mystery religion, an inner core of beliefs, practices, and the religion's true nature, are revealed only to those who have been initiated into its secrets.
Mystery shopping Mystery shopping is a tool used by market research companies as a tool to measure quality of retail service. Companies send mystery shoppers to 'act' as shoppers or to legitimately shop in return for some combination of cash, store credit, purchase discounts, or the goods or services purchased.
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