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The Crooked Hinge The Crooked Hinge is a novel (1938) by detective novelist John Dickson Carr, often counted among the greatest mysteries of the Golden Age. It combines a seemingly impossible throat-slashing with elements of witchcraft, an automaton modelled on Maelzel's Chess Player, and the story of the Tichborne Claimant.
The Crosby Boys The Crosby Boys were an American harmony singing group who were popular in nightclubs and on television during the 1950s and 1960s. They made a notable television appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show".
The Cross-Harbour (Holdings) The Cross-Harbour (Holdings) Ltd (formerly The Cross-Harbour Tunnel Company Ltd, , formerly 香港隧道有限公司) , founded in 1965, was the operator of Cross-Harbour Tunnel until 1999. It holds 37% (minority) stake in the Western Harbour Tunnel Company Limited, and runs a driving school.
The Crossing The Crossing is a term used in Egypt to refer to the west to east crossing of the Suez Canal by the Egyptian army at the start of the Yom Kippur War in 1973. It is also a term used by some Israelis to refer to the east to west counter-attack crossing of the Suez Canal by the Israeli army spearheaded by Colonel Danny Matt and his paratroop battalion later in that war.
The Crossing (film) The Crossing is a 2000 A&E film based on the novel of the same name by Howard Fast starring Jeff Daniels as George Washington. Also appearing in the film are Roger Rees as Hugh Mercer, Sebastian Roche as John Glover and Steven McCarthy as Alexander Hamilton.
The Crossroads of Destiny "The Crossroads of Destiny" is an episode from the animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender, which airs on Nickelodeon. It is the twentieth episode of the second season of the series, and in conjunction with episode nineteen, "The Guru", this episode forms the Season Two Finale.
The CrossWire Bible Society The CrossWire Bible Society is a virtual Bible society producing biblical study free software for various computing platforms and packaging biblical texts, commentaries, dictionaries and related books for its software. Its current efforts are known as The Sword Project.
The Crow: City of Angels (album) The original soundtrack of the 1996 motion picture The Crow: City of Angels, sequel to the 1994 film The Crow. The album includes a cover of the Fleetwood Mac song "Gold Dust Woman" by Hole, as well as tracks by other heavyweight artists such as White Zombie, Korn and Iggy Pop.
The Crow: Salvation The Crow: Salvation was the third movie based on The Crow comic by James O'Barr. It was directed by Bharat Nalluri and released direct to video in 2000 after its distributor cancelled the intended theatrical release.
The Crow: Salvation (album) The soundtrack to the third in the Crow film series, The Crow: Salvation album is once again compiled and produced by Jeff Most. As with the soundtrack to The Crow: City of Angels, Salvation includes an otherwise unavailable cover version by Hole: this time of Bob Dylan's "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue".
The Crow: Stairway to Heaven The Crow: Stairway to Heaven was a 1998 Canadian television series created by Bryce Zabel based on The Crow comic by James O'Barr starring Mark Dacascos in the lead role as Eric Draven, reprising the role originally played by Brandon Lee in the 1994 film The Crow. The series was intended as a follow-up to the 1994 film.
The Crowded Room The Crowded Room, based on the non-fiction book The Minds of Billy Milligan, is a movie project that has been "in the works" since the early 90s. James Cameron, after meeting with Billy Milligan personally and doing extensive research, wrote a script and had plans to make a low budget film.
The Crown Throughout the Commonwealth Realms The Crown is an abstract concept which represents the legal authority for the existence of any government. It evolved naturally as a separation of the literal crown and property of the nation-state from the person and personal property of the monarch.
The Crown Jewels The Crown Jewels is a box set by Queen which comprises their first eight studio albums (considered by many to be their finest) in sleeves replicating the original vinyl packaging. A lyric booklet is also included.
The Crows The Crows were an American doo-wop group. The group's one major hit, Gee (1953), was an important early rock-and-roll song and peaked at fourteenth and second respectively on the Billboard magazine pop and rhythm-and-blues charts.
The Crucible (film) The Crucible is a 1996 film, written by Arthur Miller and based on his play of the same name. It was directed by Nicholas Hytner and stars Daniel Day-Lewis as John Proctor, Winona Ryder as Abigail Williams, Paul Scofield as Judge Thomas Danforth, and Joan Allen as Elizabeth Proctor.
The Crucible (trilogy) The Crucible is a series of three historical fantasy novels written by Australian author Sara Douglass. The series is set around the adventures of English friar and nobleman Thomas Neville - who finds himself caught up between the eternal struggle of the angels of Heaven and the demons of Hell, all against the backdrop of England and Europe in the throes of the profound crisis of the Late Middle Ages.
The Crucified Lovers The Crucified Lovers, also known internationally by its Japanese title 'Chikamatsu Monogatari' ("A Story From Chikamatsu") is a film from 1954, directed by Kenji Mizoguchi. The film was adapted from Monzaemon Chikamatsu's 17th century play, hence the title.
The Crucifixion of Saint Andrew (Caravaggio) The Crucifixion of Saint Andrew, 1607, is a painting by the Italian master Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610). It is in the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art, which acquired it from the Arnaiz collection in Madrid in 1976, having been taken to Spain by the Spanish Viceroy of Naples in 1610.
The Cruel Sea (film) The Cruel Sea (1953), a Michael Balcon production out of Ealing Studios, directed by Charles Frend, was a British film starring Jack Hawkins and Donald Sinden, in his first film, with Denholm Elliott, Stanley Baker, Virginia McKenna and Moira Lister. It was based on the bestselling novel The Cruel Sea by Nicholas Monsarrat.
The Cruise (film) The Cruise (or The Trip Down the River) is the English title for Rejs, a Polish comedy film released in 1970, directed by Marek Piwowski who also co-wrote the screenplay with Janusz Głowacki. The score was composed by Wojciech Kilar.
The Crusade (Doctor Who) The Crusade is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from March 27 to April 17, 1965. The story is set in Palestine, near Jerusalem, during the Third Crusade.
The Crusade and Death of Richard I The Crusade and Death of Richard I, is a mid-13th century Anglo-Norman prose chronicle by an anonymous author. It tells of the journey of King Richard I ("the Lionheart") from England to the Holy Land on the Third Crusade (kings' Crusade) from 1190 to 1191.
The Crusaders The Crusaders are an American music group popular in the early 1970s known for their amalgamated Jazz, Pop and Soul sound. From 1961 to present more than forty albums have been credited to the group (some live and compilations), 19 of which were recorded under the name "The Jazz Crusaders" (1961-1970).
The Crusher (Looney Tunes) The Crusher is a Looney Tunes character who was featured only in two cartoon shorts, 1951's Bunny Hugged directed by Chuck Jones and Rabbit Punch. The character often played the role of either a vicious boxer or a professional wrestler in the Warner Bros.
The Crust Brothers The Crust Brothers, a band formed by Stephen Malkmus and members of Silkworm (Michael Dahlquist, Tim Midgett, and Andy Cohen), released one album, Marquee Mark, a live recording of their December 5, 1997, show at the Crocodile Cafe in Seattle, Washington. The show was a benefit for the Washington Wilderness Coalition.
The Cry of Love The Cry of Love is an album by guitar legend Jimi Hendrix. It was the first posthumous Hendrix release and the selected songs were designed to represent what his intended fourth studio album would have most likely been.
The Crying of Lot 49 The Crying of Lot 49 (1966) is a novel by the author Thomas Pynchon. The shortest of Pynchon's novels and often considered his most accessible, the book is about a woman, Oedipa Maas, possibly unearthing the centuries old conflict between two mail distribution companies, Thurn und Taxis and the Trystero (or Tristero).
The Crystal Bucephalus The Crystal Bucephalus is an original novel written by Craig Hinton and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the Fifth Doctor, Tegan, Turlough and Kamelion.
The Crystal Lake "The Crystal Lake" is a single by the American rock group Grandaddy, first released in 2000 shortly after the release of their second album, The Sophtware Slump. The single was re-released in several formats in early 2001.
The Crystal Maze The Crystal Maze was a game show, produced by Chatsworth Television and shown on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom from 1989 to 1995. Repeated episodes are often shown on digital television channels, most recently ftn in January 2007.
The Crystal Method The Crystal Method is an American electronic music duo consisting of Ken Jordan and Scott Kirkland. Along with The Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers and a few other lesser-known acts they were pioneers of the big beat electronic dance genre.
The Crystal of Cantus The Crystal of Cantus is a Big Finish Productions audio drama featuring Lisa Bowerman as Bernice Summerfield, a character from the spin-off media based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.
The Crystal Palace The Crystal Palace was an iron and glass building originally erected in London's Hyde Park to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. More than 14,000 exhibitors from around the world were gathered inside to display examples of the latest technology developed in the Industrial Revolution.
The Crystal Palace (novel) The Crystal Palace, published in 1988, is the second novel in the Book of Elementals series by Phyllis Eisenstein, the first novel of which was released in 1979 and the third of which is still being written. It was published by Signet originally and is now available as part of a 2002 omnibus which also includes the first book in the series, Sorcerer's Son.
The Crystal Palace Dinosaurs The Crystal Palace Dinosaurs are a series of models of Dinosaurs and extinct Mammals located in Crystal Palace, London designed and sculpted by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins and are officially Grade II Listed Buildings. They were commissioned in 1852 and unveiled roughly two years later and were the very first models of their kind, which now can be found in dozens of theme parks across the globe.
The Crystal Set The Crystal Set was a Sydney-based Australian indie rock band formed in the early 1980s featuring Russell Kilbey (bass and lead vocals), Phillip Maher (guitar & vocals), Davey Ray Moor (keyboards & vocals) and Tim Seckhold (drums).
The Crystal Star The Crystal Star is a 1994 bestselling fictional Star Wars novel written by Vonda McIntyre and published by Bantam Spectra. The novel is set ten years after the Battle of Endor in the Star Wars Expanded Universe.
The Cubby Creatures The Cubby Creatures are the musical arm of The Cubby, a San Francisco-based art collective devoted to doing the work of the Cubby, their higher power, which they say inspires them to create art, live art, and admire art for the sake of spiritual and thereby social revolution. One of their mottos is "Revolution through inspired living.
The Cube The Cube was an hour long teleplay that aired on NBC's weekly anthology television show NBC Experiment in Television February 23, 1969. The production was produced and directed by puppeteer Jim Henson, and was one of several experiments with the live-action film medium which he conducted in the 1960s, before focusing entirely on the Muppets and other puppet works.
The Cult The Cult are an English rock band. In the mid-1980s, the Cult was one of England's leading heavy metal revivalists, a hard rock band with slight psychedelic flourishes, influenced primarily by the Native American mysticism of The Doors and the hard guitar rock Led Zeppelin and AC/DC.
The Culture Show The Culture Show is a weekly hour-long topical arts program broadcast on BBC Two. Each week it features several articles by guest journalists with information, discussion and debate surrounding recent events in the fields of music, film, television, theatre and other art forms as well as political and biographic articles.
The Cumberland Sausage Show The Cumberland Sausage Show is a radio programme broadcast on British commercial station CFM (Carlisle) every Saturday between 10am-1pm and is presented by Pete Moss. It was first broadcast as a Saturday afternoon show on August 6, 2005 when the show was presented by Pete Moss and Andy Wood.
The Cunning Little Vixen The Cunning Little Vixen (Příhody Lišky Bystroušky, literally "The Adventures of Vixen Sharp-Ears," in Czech) is an opera by Leoš Janáček, with a libretto adapted by the composer from a serialized novella (daily comic) by Rudolf Těsnohlídek, which was first published in newspaper Lidové noviny. It was premiered on 6 November 1924 in Brno.
The Cup The Cup (Phörpa) is a 1999 film directed by Khyentse Norbu. The plot is about two young football-crazed Tibetan refugees in a remote Himalayan monastery who desperately try to sneak a television into the monastery to watch the 1998 World Cup finals.
The Cup of Life "The Cup of Life" is a song recorded by Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin that was included on his fifth album, Ricky Martin (1999). In 1998 (see 1998 in music), Martin released the song as a CD single, his second in the United States.
The Cure (1995 film) The Cure is a 1995 film starring Brad Renfro and Joseph Mazzello about two boys searching for the cure of AIDS, from which one of them is suffering. It was produced by Eric Eisner and Mark Burg, who has since gained fame as the producer behind the "Saw" films.
The Cure Complete Works Leo Asemota’s The Cure Complete Works (2003) is the first in a succession of three planned projects featuring the artist. The collection is made up of several drawings, photographs, sculptures, artist's book and a 33-minute film titled Cult, in its exploration of ideas in history, culture, religion and identity.
The Cure for Insomnia The Cure for Insomnia, directed by John Henry Timmis IV, is officially the world's longest movie, according to the Guinness Book of Records, as of its release in 1987. Running 5220 minutes (87 hours) in length, the movie has no plot, instead consisting of artist L.
The Cure: Trilogy The Cure: Trilogy is a double live album video, released on two double layer DVD-9 discs. It is an effort by Robert Smith to appease fans that had been asking for years for a concert in which the band's three similarly-themed albums, Pornography (1982), Disintegration (1989) and Bloodflowers (2000) be played live in concert.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time is a novel written by Mark Haddon which won the 2003 Whitbread Book of the Year. Its title is a quotation of a remark made by the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1893 short story, "Silver Blaze".
The Current (song) "The Current" is a song by Blue Man Group, released as the first single from their 2003 album The Complex and featuring the guest vocals of Gavin Rossdale of Bush. The song deals with urban and occupational isolation, two key themes from the album.
The Curse of Capistrano The Curse of Capistrano is a 1919 novella by Johnston McCulley and the first work to feature the fictional character Zorro. After the enormous success of The Mark of Zorro (1920 film), the story was republished under that name.
The Curse of Monkey Island The Curse of Monkey Island (CMI) is the third game in the Monkey Island series of computer adventure games by LucasArts, following the successful games The Secret of Monkey Island and Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge. CMI is the twelfth and last game to use the SCUMM engine, which was extensively upgraded for its last outing before being replaced by the GrimE engine for the next game in the series, Escape from Monkey Island.
The Curse of Naar The Curse of Naar is the twentieth book in the award-winning Lone Wolf book series created by Joe Dever. This is the final book in the "Grand Master" series, and the last one released in North America.
The Curse of Scotland The curse of Scotland, also known as the Scourge of Scotland, is a term used in poker, bridge and various other card games for the nine of diamonds. The exact origins of the term is disputed but several theories exists.
The Curse of the Daleks [Curse Of The Daleks is a Dalek] stage play, written by [[David Whitaker and Terry Nation, which appeared for one month at the Wyndham's Theatre in London, beginning on December 21 1965. It is notable for being Terry Nation's first live-action attempt to exercise his ownership of the Dalek concept independently of the BBC.
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion The Curse of the Jade Scorpion is a 2001 film directed, written by, and starring Woody Allen. The cast also features Dan Aykroyd, Elizabeth Berkley, Helen Hunt, John Schuck, Wallace Shawn, David Ogden Stiers, and Charlize Theron.
The Curse of the Pharaohs (book) The Curse of the Pharaohs is a novel by Elizabeth Peters, the second in the Amelia Peabody series of novels; it takes place in the excavation season of 1892-93. Emersons are at home in England, aching to return to Egypt, but finding no excuse to return until Lady Baskerville asks them to finish the excavation started by her husband, who died mysteriously just before opening a tomb in Luxor].
The Cursed Earth The Cursed Earth is the second extended storyline of the Judge Dredd character to appear in 2000 AD, and the first to exceed twenty episodes: as such it is sometimes called the first Judge Dredd epic. Written by Pat Mills, the series added many core elements to the backstory of the world of Mega-City One.
The Cursed Ring The Cursed Ring is a structure of ideas which Danish author Peter Kjærulff believes to found to be behind Plato's "The Ring of Gyges" (mentioned in Plato's Republic), Richard Wagner's "Der Ring des Nibelungen" and J. R.
The Curtain Society Constructing masterful junctions in between pop, shoegazing, Dream pop and the most alternative options of rock & roll, the Curtain Society formed in Southbridge, MA, in 1988. Like some of their early musical contemporaries, The Ocean Blue, The House of Love, and The Stone Roses, the band managed to blend the blurry atmospheres of the popular 4AD scene with traditional rock and pop songwriting.
The Curved Glass The Curved Glass, an album by Hopewell, is a collection of spacey pop songs consisting of complex layers of instrumentation intermixed with bloops and bleeps. This makes sense, as the band shares members with Mercury Rev, among others.
The Custard Boys The Custard Boys is a 1961 British novel by John Rae, focusing on the lives of children in a small village in World War II England dealing with an influx of war refugees. It is sometimes compared to Lord of the Flies, and was adapted to make the film Reach for Glory in 1962, and again for a second film carrying the original name in 1979, directed by Colin Finbow.
The Custom House The Custom House is a neoclassical 18th century building in Dublin, Ireland which houses the Department of Environment, Heritage and Local Government. It is located on the north bank of the River Liffey, on Custom House Quay between Butt Bridge and Talbot Memorial Bridge.
The Custom of the Country (1647 play) The Custom of the Country is a play written by English playwrights John Fletcher and Philip Massinger circa 1619-23, and published in 1947. In the title, the term 'custom' refers to the money a master had to paid to get a girl's maidenhead.
The Cutthroats 9 The Cutthroats 9 was a band formed by Chris Spencer of Unsane when he moved to California after Unsane went on hiatus in 2000. Their first single "You should be dead"/"Can't Do a Thing" was releasd on the Man's Ruin Record label with Spencer on guitar/vocals, Mark Laramie (or Laramee) on Bass and Will Carroll on Drums.
The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold The Cutting Edge: Going for the Gold (2006) is an American drama/romance film that follows the 1992 film The Cutting Edge. The film (working title: The Cutting Edge 2) was produced for the ABC Family cable channel in 2005 and was released on DVD in March 2006.
The CW Plus The CW Plus is a group of primarily non-broadcast cable television outlets or digital subchannels for The CW Television Network, for markets below the top 100 television media markets in the United States. Dayparts with no CW programming are programmed by the network.
The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, sometimes called The Woodlands Pavilion or simply The Pavilion, is a concert amphitheatre located in The Woodlands, Texas. It caters to both the performing arts and contemporary artists and is also available for rental.
The Czar of the Style Invitational The Czar was, until December of 2003, the man behind the Style Invitational, the Washington Post's weekly humor contest. He chose all the winners - calling the contest the "last pure meritocracy on earth" - and ruthlessly controlled all aspects of the contest from his hidden lair.
The Czech Year The Czech Year (), also called A Treasury of Fairy-Tales, is a 1947 stop-motion-animated feature film from Czechoslovakia. It was the first feature film directed by Jiří Trnka, and it proceeded to win several international awards and make his name famous in the animation world.
The da Vinci Medallion The Leonardo da Vinci Society for the Study of Thinking and the da Vinci Medallion were created by the University of Advancing Technology (UAT) to award scholarship in the realm of human thinking. The name was chosen to honor Leonardo da Vinci, the archetypal Renaissance man.
The decoder ring design concern The Decoder Ring Design Concern is a multidisciplinary design partnership founded in 2004 with roots in music and retail identity, design and promotion. Founded on a boldly simple mission statement, "Do work we love for clients we admire," the DRDC has grown in a relatively short time to become a celebrated and respected force in the creative industry.
The development of the port of New-Orleans "The development of the port of New-Orleans" is the title of a short geography/economic thesis presented in 1954 by Jacques Chirac (as of 2006 president of French republic) to the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), which he had entered three years before.
The dfg Corporation (band) British-based dfg are more of an eclectic arts collective than simply a band. The dfg 'corporation' is comprised of three core members (Brian, Clive and Keith - the 'board of directors') and a variety of fellow collaborators, creating a postmodern, avant-garde, alt.
The dozens The dozens is an African American oral tradition in which two people go head-to-head in a contest of often good-natured, ribald "trash-talk". They take turns insulting; "burning", "capping", "pooping", "heating", "ranking", "sparking", "sunning", "janking", "snapping", "checking", "riding", "frying", or even "projectoring" — on one another, their adversary's mother, or other family member until one of them has no comeback.
The Da Vinci Code (film) The Da Vinci Code is a 2006 feature film based on the bestselling 2003 novel The Da Vinci Code, by author Dan Brown. It was one of the most anticipated films of 2006, and was previewed at the opening night of the Cannes Film Festival on May 17, 2006.
The Da Vinci Code (video game) The Da Vinci Code is a video game for PlayStation 2, Xbox and Microsoft Windows based on the novel by Dan Brown. It is not associated with the film, and as such the characters have no resemblance to their movie counterparts.
The Da Vinci Code WebQuests The Da Vinci Code WebQuests (also called The Da Vinci Code Challenges) are a series of web-based puzzles related to the bestselling 2003 novel The Da Vinci Code, as well as the 2006 film. There have been several web quests, none of which directly related to any other.
The Daddy of Rock 'N' Roll The Daddy of Rock 'n' Roll is a documentary by Daniel Bitton following around the late musician Wesley Willis in his daily tasks, trials and tribulations in autumn 2000. It features footage of Willis, a musician of African-American origin, challenged by a weight disorder as well as a schizophrenic personality disorder, writing his unique yet virtually identical songs, playing a show, and attending to daily chores.
The Daemon Lover "The Daemon Lover", also known as "James Harris", "James Herries", or "The House Carpenter" (Roud 14, Child 243) is a popular ballad from Britain. It tells the story of a man (usually the Devil), who returns to a former lover after a very long absence, and finds her with a husband (usually a carpenter) and a baby.
The Dagger of Amon Ra Laura Bow 2: The Dagger of Amon Ra (usually just called The Dagger of Amon Ra) is a computer game published by Sierra On-Line in 1992. The game is the second and final installment in the Laura Bow Mysteries line of adventure games, the first of which was The Colonel's Bequest.
The Daily Beacon The Daily Beacon is the editorially independent student newspaper of The University of Tennessee. The paper publishes 15,000 copies a day, five days a week and has a staff of over 100 which includes an editorial team of 14, more than 60 staff writers, photographers, copyeditors, and other staff members during the Fall and Spring semesters.
The Daily Californian The Daily Californian (or Daily Cal) is an independent, student-run newspaper that serves the University of California, Berkeley campus and its surrounding community. It is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, and twice a week during the summer.
The Daily Campus The Daily Campus, founded in 1896, is a student-run newspaper at the University of Connecticut that has a circulation run of 10,000 copies weekdays during the school year and twice during the summer. Since its creation, the newspaper has undergone several name changes.
The Daily Collegian (Massachusetts) The Daily Collegian is the student-operated newspaper at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, it was founded in 1890. The Daily Collegian is published Monday through Friday during the University of Massachusetts' calendar semester.
The Daily Gamecock The Daily Gamecock (formerly the The Gamecock) is the daily editorially independent newspaper of the University of South Carolina. It primarily serves the main campus of the University in Columbia and regional campuses of the University of South Carolina System, in the state of South Carolina.
The Daily Iowan The Daily Iowan is an independent, 20,500-circulation daily paper serving Iowa City and the University of Iowa community. It has consistently won a number of collegiate journalism awards, including multiple National Pacemaker Awards, and is generally regarded as one of the finest student newspapers in the country.
The Daily Journal Corporation The Daily Journal Corporation (Nasdaq: DJCO) publishes newspapers and web sites for California, Nevada and the California Lawyer Magazine. The Company produces several specialized information services, in both print and online, including Court Rules, Judicial Profiles, Bankruptcy and Real Estate services.
The Daily Local News The Daily Local News is a daily newspaper that covers events in Chester County, Pennsylvania, with limited coverage in neighboring Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and Delaware County, Pennsylvania due to school districts and interscholastic league coverage in these two neighboring counties. First published in West Chester, Pennsylvania in the 1800s, the newspaper is currently owned by the Journal Register Company.
The Daily Mirror (Australia) The Daily Mirror was an afternoon paper in Sydney, Australia from 1941 until it merged with its morning sister paper The Daily Telegraph on October 8, 1990 to form The Daily Telegraph-Mirror, which in 1996 reverted to The Daily Telegraph, in the process removing the last vestige of the old Daily Mirror.
The Daily Nation (Barbados) The Barbados Daily Nation ("Nation Newspaper") is the most dominant daily newspaper in the country of Barbados. First established in 1973 the Barbados Daily Nation Newspaper is printed daily in colour and distributed at many points around the country.
The Daily News (Memphis) The Daily News is a business and legal newspaper covering Shelby County, Tennessee, including the largest city in the county, Memphis, Tennessee. The Daily News, which is published Monday through Friday, is the paper of record for the county.
The Daily News (Natal) The Daily News is a newspaper owned by Independent_News_and_Media and published in Durban, South Africa. It was called Ilanga Lase Natal or Natal Daily News between 1936 and 1962 and The Natal Advertiser prior to 1936 going back to the 19th century.
The Daily Northwestern The Daily Northwestern is a student newspaper at Northwestern University that is published on weekdays during the academic year. Established in 1881 and published in Evanston, Illinois, it is run entirely by undergraduates, many of whom are students at Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism.
The Daily of the University of Washington The Daily of the University of Washington, formerly known as The University of Washington Daily and usually referred to in Seattle simply as The Daily, is the student newspaper of the University of Washington in Seattle, USA.
The Daily Politics The Daily Politics is a British television show launched by the BBC in 2003. Presented by Andrew Neil, the programme takes an in-depth and sometimes irreverent look at the daily goings on in Westminster and other areas across the UK, and includes interviews with leading politicians and political commentators.
The Daily Princetonian The Daily Princetonian is the daily independent student newspaper of Princeton University. It is published five days a week when classes are in session and three days a week during the University's Reading Period in January and May.
The Daily Reveille The Daily Reveille is the student newspaper for Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in the United States. It prints Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters, and twice a week (Tuesdays and Thursdays) during the summer semester with a daily circulation of about 13,500 copies.
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